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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11402 ***
+
+[Illustration: He was leaning forward, aware of nothing in the
+world but the forthcoming crisis.
+FRONTISPIECE.]
+
+
+
+
+ THE SKY LINE
+ OF SPRUCE
+
+ By EDISON MARSHALL
+
+
+
+ AUTHOR OF
+
+"The Voice of the Pack," "The Strength of the Pines,"
+"The Snowshoe Trail," "Shepherds of the Wild," etc.
+
+
+
+ 1922
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+PART ONE
+THE WAKENING
+
+PART TWO
+THE WOLF-MAN
+
+PART THREE
+THE TAMING
+
+
+
+
+
+PART ONE
+
+THE WAKENING
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+The convict gang had a pleasant place to work to-day. Their road
+building had taken them some miles from the scattered outskirts of Walla
+Walla, among fields green with growing barley. The air was fresh and
+sweet; the Western meadow larks, newly come, seemed in imminent danger
+of splitting their own throats through the exuberance of their song.
+Even the steel rails of the Northern Pacific, running parallel to the
+stretch of new road, gleamed pleasantly in the spring sun.
+
+The convicts themselves were in a genial mood, easily moved to wide
+grins; and with a single exception they looked much like any other road
+gang at work anywhere in the land. An expert might have recognized
+purely criminal types among them: to a layman they suggested merely the
+lower grades of unskilled labor. Some of the faces were distinctly
+brutal; there was the sullen visage of a powerful negro who, with
+different environment, might have been a Congo prince; but the face of
+"Plug" Spanos, a notorious gunman who was by far the worst character in
+the gang, might have been that of an artless plow-boy in a distant land
+under a warm sun. There remained, however, the "exception." Curiously
+enough, whenever the warden's thought dwelt upon the inmates of his
+prison, classifying them into various groups, there was always one
+wind-tanned, vivid face, one brawny, towering form that seemed to demand
+individual consideration. The man who was listed on the records as Ben
+Kinney was distinctly an individual. He some way failed to classify
+among the groups of his fellows. Because he had been sent out to-day
+with the road gang the two armed guards had an interesting subject of
+conversation.
+
+In the first place he habitually did two men's work. He did not do it
+with any idea of trying to ingratiate himself with his keepers: no
+inmate of the institution at Walla Walla made any such mistake as that.
+He did it purely because he could not tone down his mighty strength and
+energy to stay even with his fellows. To-day Sprigley, the guard in
+first command of the gang, had placed him opposite Judy, the burly
+negro, but the latter was being driven straight toward absolute
+exhaustion. Yet Kinney at least knew how to subdue and direct the
+pouring fountain of his vitality and energy, for the robust blows of his
+pick fell with the regularity of a tireless machine. It was as if a wild
+stallion, off the plains, had been trained to draw the plow. His great
+muscles moved with marvelous precision; but for all the monotony and
+rhythm of his motions he conveyed no image of stolidity and dullness.
+
+He was a great, dark man, his skin darkly brown from exposure; his
+straight hair showed almost coal black in spite of the fact that it had
+but recently been clipped close; his eyebrows were similarly black; and
+black hairs spread down his hands almost to the finger nails and
+cropped up from his chest at his open throat. It was a mighty, deep,
+full chest, the chest of a runner and a fighter, sustained by a strong,
+flat abdomen and by powerful, sturdy legs. Yet physical might and
+development were not all of Ben Kinney. The image conveyed was never one
+of sheer brutality. For all their black hair, the large, brawny hands
+were well-shaped and sensitive; he had a healthy, good-humored mouth
+that could evidently, on occasion, be the seat of a most pleasant,
+boyish smile. He had a straight, good nose, rather high cheek bones, and
+a broad, brown forehead, straight rather than sloping swiftly like that
+of the negro opposite. But none of his features, nor yet his brawny
+form, caught and held the attention as did his vivid, dark-gray eyes.
+They were deeply dark, even against his deeply tanned face, yet now and
+then one caught distinct surface lights, denoting the presence of
+unmeasured animal spirits, and perhaps, too, the surprising health and
+vitality of the engine of his life. They were keen eyes, alert, fiery
+with a zealot's fire: evidently the eyes of a steadfast, headstrong,
+purposeful man. Some complexity of lines about them, hard to trace,
+indicated a recklessness, too; a willingness to risk all that he had for
+his convictions.
+
+"That's the queerest case we ever had here at Walla Walla," Sprigley
+told his fellow guard, as they watched the man's pick swing in the air.
+"Sometimes I wonder whether he ought to be here or not. Look at that
+face--he hasn't any more of a criminal face than I have."
+
+The other guard, Howard, scanned his companion's face with mock care.
+"That ain't sayin' so much for him," he observed. But at once he began
+to evince real interest. "I maintain you can't tell anything from their
+faces," he answered seriously. "There's nothin' in it. The man's a
+crook, isn't he? Wasn't he caught red-handed?"
+
+"Let me tell you about it. I was interested in the case and found out
+all I could concerning it. He apparently showed up in Seattle some time
+during the summer of 1919, a crook of the crooks, as you say. No one
+knows where he came from--and that's queer in itself. You know very well
+that his face and form are going to be remembered and noticed, yet he
+wasn't in any rogue's gallery, in any city. Desperate crook though he
+was, no one had ever heard of him before he showed up in Seattle.
+
+"The crooks down there called him 'Wild' Kinney, and were pretty well
+scared of him. Swanson, one of the lieutenants of the Seattle force,
+whom I know well as I know you, told me that he was a power, sort of a
+king in the underworld from the very first, largely because he was
+afraid of nothing, absolutely desperate, and willing to take any chance.
+He wasn't a hop-head, yet they all looked at him as sort of queer;
+though ready to follow him to the last ditch, yet some way they thought
+him off his head. And Swanson believes that his career of crime started
+_after_ he reached Seattle, not before--that he hadn't grown up to crime
+like most of the men in his gang. He didn't know anything about the
+'profession'--as far as skill went he was a rank amateur, but he made it
+up with daring and cunning. Once or twice he got in a fight down there,
+and they all agree he fought like a mad man, the most terrible fighter
+in the whole district, and it took about a half dozen to stop him."
+
+"You don't have to tell me that. Anybody who can swing a pick like
+that--"
+
+"Now let me tell you how they happened to catch him. Maybe you heard--he
+and Dago Frank were in the act of breaking into the Western-Danish
+Bank. Part of this I'm giving you now came straight from Frank himself.
+He says that they were in the alley, in the act of jimmying a window,
+and all at once Kinney straightened up as if something had hit him and
+let the jimmy fall with a thump to the pavement. Frank said he thought
+that the man had 'gone off his nut,' but it's my private opinion that he
+had been somewhat deranged all the time he was in Seattle, and he just
+came to, more or less, that minute. The man hardly seemed to know what
+he was doing. 'Have you lost your guts, Kinney?' Frank asked him; and
+Kinney stood there, staring like he didn't know he was being spoken to.
+He put his hands to his head, then, like a man with a headache. And the
+next instant a cop came running from the mouth of the alley.
+
+"Kinney was heeled, but he didn't even pull his gun. He still stood with
+his hands to his head. All his pards in the underworld always said he'd
+die before he'd give up, but he let the cop take him like he was a baby.
+Frank got away, but they got him, you remember, three weeks later. After
+some kind of a trial Kinney was sent down here."
+
+Sprigley paused and shifted his gun from his right to his left shoulder.
+"You'll say that's all common enough," he went on. "Now let me tell you
+another queer thing. You know, the chief has started a system here to
+keep track of all the prisoners, with the idea of making them good
+citizens when they get out. He has them all fill out a card. Well, when
+this man Kinney turned in his card, he had written 'Ben' on it, but the
+rest was absolutely blank.
+
+"Mr. Mitchell thought at first that the man couldn't write. It turned
+out, though, that he can write--an intelligent hand, and spell good too.
+Then Mitchell decided he was just sulking. But his second guess was no
+better than his first. I haven't got Mitchell persuaded yet, and maybe
+never will have him persuaded, but I'm confident I know the answer. The
+reason he didn't fill out that card was because he couldn't remember.
+
+"He couldn't remember where or when he was born, or who were his folks,
+or where he had come from, or how he had spent his life. He knew that
+'Ben,' his first name, sounded right to him, but 'Kinney' didn't--the
+reason likely being that Kinney was an alias adopted during his life as
+a criminal. I suppose you've noticed that queer, bewildered look he has
+when any one calls him Kinney. What his real name is he doesn't know. He
+can't even remember that. And the explanation is--complete loss of
+memory.
+
+"You mark my words, Howard--that man hasn't been a criminal always.
+Something got wrong with his head, and he turned crook--you might say
+that the criminal side that all of us has simply took possession of him.
+That night in the alley he came to himself--only his mind was left a
+blank not only in regard to his life as a criminal, but all that had
+gone before."
+
+"Then why don't you do something about it--besides talk? Mitchell says
+you're gettin' so you talk of nothin' else."
+
+"It's not for me to do anything about it. The man was a criminal. The
+State can't go any further than that. I suppose if every man was set
+free who wasn't, in the last analysis, responsible for his crimes, we
+wouldn't have anybody left in the penitentiary. He's in for five
+years--considering what he'll pick up here, it might as well be for
+life. Amnesia--that's what the doctors call it--amnesia following some
+sort of a mental trouble. In the end you'll see that I'm right."
+
+Sprigley was right. To Ben Kinney life was like a single pale light in
+a long, dark street. Complete loss of memory prevented him from looking
+backward. Complete loss of hope kept him from looking ahead.
+
+It had been this way for months now--ever since the night the policeman
+had found him, the "jimmy" dropped from his hands, in the alley. Heaven
+knows what he had done, what madness had been upon him, before that
+time. But as Sprigley had said, that night had marked a change. It was
+true that so far as facts went he was no better off: when he had come to
+himself he had found his mind a blank regarding not only his career of
+crime, but all the years that had gone before. Even his own name eluded
+him. That of Kinney had an alien sound in his ears.
+
+The past had simply ceased to exist for him; and because it is some way
+the key to the future, the latter seemed likewise blank,--a toneless
+gray that did not in the least waken his interest. Indeed the only light
+that flung into the unfathomable darkness of his forgetfulness was that
+which played in his dreams at night. Sometimes these were inordinately
+vivid, quite in contrast to the routine of prison life.
+
+He felt if he could only recall these dreams clearly they would
+interpret for him the mystery of his own life. He wakened, again and
+again, with the consciousness of having dreamed the most stirring,
+amazing dreams, but what they were he couldn't tell. He could only
+remember fragments, such as a picture of rushing waters recurring again
+and again--and sometimes an amazing horizon, a dark line curiously
+notched against a pale green background.
+
+They were not all bad dreams: in reality many of them stirred him and
+moved him happily, and he would waken to find the mighty tides of his
+blood surging fiercely through the avenues of veins. Evidently they
+recalled some happiness that was forgotten. And there was one phase, at
+least, of this work in the road gangs that brought him moving, intense
+delight. It was merely the sight of the bird life, abounding in the
+fields and meadows about the towns.
+
+There had been quite a northern migration lately, these late spring
+days. The lesser songsters were already mating and nesting, and he found
+secret pleasure in their cheery calls and bustling activity. But they
+didn't begin to move him as did the waterfowl, passing in long V-shaped
+flocks. That strange, wild wanderer's greeting that the gray geese
+called down to their lesser brethren in the meadows had a really
+extraordinary effect upon him. It always caught him up and held him,
+stirring some deep, strange part of him that he hardly knew existed.
+Sometimes the weird, wailing sound brought him quite to the edge of a
+profound discovery, but always the flocks sped on and out of hearing
+before he could quite grasp it. When the moon looked down, through the
+barred window of his cell, he sometimes felt the same way. A great,
+white mysterious moon that he had known long ago. It was queer that
+there should be a relationship between the gray geese and the cold,
+white satellite that rode in the sky. Ben Kinney never tried to puzzle
+out what it was; but he always knew it with a knowledge not to be
+denied.
+
+The last of the waterfowl had passed by now, but the northern migration
+was not yet done. The sun still moved north; warm, north-blowing winds
+blew the last of the lowering, wintry clouds back to the Arctic Seas
+whence they had come. And because the road work the convicts were doing
+brought them, this afternoon, in sight of the railroad right-of-way, Ben
+now and then caught sight of other wayfarers moving slowly, but no less
+steadily, toward the north. The open road beckoned northward, these
+full, balmy, late-April days, and various tattered men, mostly vagabonds
+and tramps, passed the gang from time to time on this same, northern
+quest.
+
+Ben thought about them as birds of passage, and the thought amused him.
+And at the sight of a small, stooped figure advancing toward him up the
+railroad right-of-way he paused, leaning on his pick.
+
+Because Ben had paused, for the first time in an hour, his two guards
+looked up to see what had attracted his attention. They saw what seemed
+to them a white-haired old wanderer of sixty years or more; but at first
+they were wholly at a loss to explain Ben's fascinated look of growing
+interest.
+
+It was true that the old man scarcely represented the usual worthless,
+criminal type that took to vagabondage. As he paused to scrutinize the
+convict gang neither insolence nor fear, one of which was certainly to
+be expected, became manifest in his face. They had anticipated certain
+words in greeting, a certain look out of bleary, shifty eyes, but
+neither materialized. True, the old man was following the cinder trail
+northward, but plainly he did not belong to the brotherhood of tramps.
+They saw that he was white-haired and withered, but upright; and that
+undying youth dwelt in his twinkling blue eyes and the complexity of
+little, good-natured lines about his mouth. Poverty, age, the hardships
+of the cinder trail had not conquered him in the least. He was small
+physically, but his skinny arms and legs looked as if they were made of
+high-tension wire. His face was shrewd, but also kindly, and the gray
+stubble on his cheeks and chin did not in the least hide a smile that
+was surprisingly boyish and winning. And when he spoke his cracked
+good-natured voice was perfectly in character, evidently that of a man
+possessing full self-respect and confidence, yet brimming over with easy
+kindliness and humor.
+
+Both guards would have felt instantly, instinctively friendly toward him
+if they had been free to feel at all. Instead they were held and amazed
+by the apparent fact that at the first scrutiny of the man's outline,
+his carriage and his droll, wrinkled face, the prisoner Kinney was moved
+and stirred as if confronted by the risen dead.
+
+The old man himself halted, returning Kinney's stare. The moment had,
+still half concealed, an unmistakable quality of drama. In the contagion
+of suppressed excitement, the other prisoners paused, their tools held
+stiffly in their hands. Kinney's mind seemed to be reaching, groping for
+some astonishing truth that eluded him.
+
+The old man ran, in great strides, toward him. "My God, aren't you Ben
+Darby?" he demanded.
+
+The convict answered him as from a great distance, his voice cool and
+calm with an infinite certainty. "Of course," he said. "Of course I'm
+Darby."
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+For the moment that chance meeting thrilled all the spectators with the
+sense of monumental drama. The convicts stared; Howard, the second
+guard, forgot his vigilance and stared with open mouth. He started
+absurdly, rather guiltily, when the old man whirled toward him.
+
+"What are you doing with Ben Darby in a convict gang?" the old wanderer
+demanded.
+
+"What am I doin'?" Howard's astonishment gave way to righteous
+indignation. "I'm guardin' convicts, that's what I'm a-doin'." He
+composed himself then and shifted his gun from his left to his right
+shoulder. "He's here in this gang because he's a convict. Ask my friend,
+here, if you want to know the details. And who might you be?"
+
+There was no immediate answer to that question. The old man had turned
+his eyes again to the tall, trembling figure of Ben, trying to find
+further proof of his identity. To Ezra Melville there could no longer be
+any shadow of doubt as to the truth: even that he had found the young
+man working in a gang of convicts could not impugn the fact that the
+dark-gray vivid eyes, set in the vivid face under dark, beetling brows,
+were unquestionably those of the boy he had seen grow to manhood's
+years, Ben Darby.
+
+It was true that he had changed. His face was more deeply lined, his
+eyes more bright and nervous; there was a long, dark scar just under the
+short hair at his temple that Melville had never seen before. And the
+finality of despair seemed to settle over the droll features as he
+walked nearer and took Darby's hand.
+
+"Ben, Ben!" he said, evidently struggling with deep emotion. "What are
+you doing here?"
+
+The younger man gave him his hand, but continued to stare at him in
+growing bewilderment. "Five years--for burglary," he answered simply.
+"Guilty, too--I don't know anything more. And I can't remember--who you
+are."
+
+"You don't know me?" Some of Ben's own bewilderment seemed to pass to
+him. "You know Ezra Melville--"
+
+Sprigley, whose beliefs in regard to Ben had been strengthened by the
+little episode, stepped quickly to Melville's side. "He's suffering loss
+of memory," he explained swiftly. "At least, he's either lost his memory
+or he's doing a powerful lot of faking. This is the first time he ever
+recalled his own name."
+
+"I'm not faking," Ben told them quietly. "I honestly don't remember
+you--I feel that I ought to, but I don't. I honestly didn't remember my
+name was Darby until a minute ago--then just as soon as you spoke it, I
+knew the truth. Nothing can surprise me, any more. I suppose you're kin
+of mine--?"
+
+Melville gazed at him in incredulous astonishment, then turned to
+Sprigley. "May I talk to you about this case?" he asked quietly. "If not
+to you, who can I talk to? There are a few points that might help to
+clear up--"
+
+Ordering his men to their work, Melville and Sprigley stood apart, and
+for nearly an hour engaged in the most earnest conversation. The
+afternoon was shadow-flaked and paling when they had finished, and
+before Sprigley led his men back within the gray walls he had arranged
+for Melville to come to the prison after the dinner hour and confer with
+Mitchell, the warden.
+
+Many and important were the developments arising from this latter
+conference. One of the least of them was that Melville's northward
+journey was postponed for some days, and that within a week this same
+white-haired, lean old man, dressed in the garb of the cinder trail, was
+pleading his case to no less a personage than the governor of the State
+of Washington in whom authority for dealing with Ben's case was
+absolutely vested. It came about, from the same cause, that a noted
+alienist, Forest, of Seattle, visited Ben Darby in his cell; and finally
+that the prisoner himself, under the strict guard of Sprigley, was taken
+to the capital at Olympia.
+
+The brief inquisition that followed, changing the entire current of Ben
+Darby's life, occurred in the private office of McNamara, the Governor.
+McNamara himself stood up to greet them when they entered, the guard and
+the convict. Ezra Melville and Forest, the alienist from Seattle, were
+already in session. The latter conducted the examination.
+
+He tried his subject first on some of the most simple tests for sanity.
+It became evident at once, however, that except for his amnesia Ben's
+mind was perfectly sound: he passed all general intelligence tests with
+a high score, he conversed easily, he talked frankly of his symptoms. He
+had perfect understanding of the general sweep of events in the past
+twenty years: his amnesia seemed confined to his own activities and the
+activities of those intimately connected with him. Where he had been,
+what he had done, all the events of his life up to the night of his
+arrest remained, for all his effort to remember them, absolutely in
+darkness.
+
+"You don't remember this man?" Forest asked him quietly, indicating
+Ezra Melville.
+
+Again Ben's eyes studied the droll, gray face. "With the vaguest kind of
+memory. I know I've seen him before--often. I can't tell anything else."
+
+"He's a good friend of your family. He knew your folks. I should say he
+was a _very_ good friend, to take the trouble and time he has, in your
+behalf."
+
+Ben nodded. He did not have to be told that fact. The explanation,
+however, was beyond him.
+
+Forest leaned forward. "You remember the Saskatchewan River?"
+
+Ben straightened, but the dim images in his mind were not clear enough
+for him to answer in the affirmative. "I'm afraid not."
+
+Melville leaned forward in his chair. "Ask him if he remembers winning
+the canoe race at Lodge Pole--or the time he shot the Athabaska Rapids."
+
+Ben turned brightly to him, but slowly shook his head. "I can't remember
+ever hearing of them before."
+
+"I think you would, in time," Forest remarked. "They must have been
+interesting experiences. Now what do these mean to you?--Thunder
+Lake--Abner Darby--Edith Darby--MacLean's College----"
+
+Ben relaxed, focusing his attention on the names. For the instant the
+scene about him, the anxious, interested faces, faded from his
+consciousness. Thunder Lake! Somewhere, some time, Thunder Lake had had
+the most intimate associations with his life. The name stirred him and
+moved him; dim voices whispered in his ears about it, but he couldn't
+quite catch what they said. He groped and reached in vain.
+
+There was no doubt but that an under-consciousness had full knowledge
+of the name and all that it meant. But it simply could not reach that
+knowledge up into his conscious mind.
+
+Abner Darby! It was curious what a flood of tenderness swept through him
+as, whispering, he repeated the name. Some one old and white-haired had
+been named Abner Darby: some one whom he had once worshipped with the
+fervor of boyhood, but who had leaned on his own, strong shoulders in
+latter years. Since his own name was Darby, Abner Darby was, in all
+probability, his father; but his reasoning intelligence, rather than his
+memory, told him so.
+
+The name of Edith Darby conjured up in his mind a childhood playmate,--a
+girl with towzled yellow curls and chubby, confiding little hands....
+But these dim memory-pictures went no further: there were no later
+visions of Edith as a young woman, blossoming with virgin beauty. They
+stopped short, and he had a deep, compelling sense of grief. The child,
+unquestionably a sister, had likely died in early years. The third name
+of the three, MacLean's College, called up no memories whatever.
+
+"I can hardly say that I remember much about them," he responded at
+last. "I think they'll come plainer, though, the more I think about
+them. I just get the barest, vague ideas."
+
+"They'll strengthen in time, I'm sure," Forest told him. "Put them out
+of your mind, for now. Let it be blank." The alienist again leaned
+toward him, his eyes searching. There ensued an instant's pause,
+possessing a certain quality of suspense. Then Forest spoke quickly,
+sharply. "_Wolf_ Darby!"
+
+In response a curious tremor passed over Ben's frame, giving in some
+degree the effect of a violent start. "_Wolf_ Darby," he repeated
+hesitantly. "Why do you call me that?"
+
+"The very fact that you know the name refers to you, not some one else,
+shows that that blunted memory of yours has begun to function in some
+degree. Now think. What do you know about 'Wolf' Darby?"
+
+Ben tried in vain to find an answer. A whole world of meaning lingered
+just beyond the reach of his groping mind; but always it eluded him. It
+was true, however, that the name gave him a certain sense of pleasure
+and pride, as if it had been used in compliment to some of his own
+traits. Far away and long ago, men had called _him_ "Wolf" Darby: he
+felt that perhaps the name had carried far, through many sparsely
+settled districts. But what had been the occasion for it he did not
+know.
+
+He described these dim memory pictures; and Forest's air of satisfaction
+seemed to imply that his own theories in regard to Ben's case were
+receiving justification. He appeared quite a little flushed, deeply
+intent, when he turned to the next feature of the examination. He
+suddenly spoke quietly to old Ezra Melville; and the latter put a small,
+cardboard box into his hands.
+
+"I want you to see what I have here," Forest told Ben. "They were your
+own possessions once--you sent them yourself to Abner Darby, your late
+father--and I want you to see if you remember them."
+
+Ben's eyes fastened on the box; and the others saw a queer drawing of
+the lines of his face, a curious tightening and clasping of his fingers.
+There was little doubt but that his subconsciousness had full cognizance
+of the contents of that box. He was trembling slightly, too--in
+excitement and expectation--and Ezra Melville, suddenly standing erect,
+was trembling too. The moment was charged with the uttermost suspense.
+
+Evidently this was the climax in the examination. Even McNamara, the
+Governor, was breathless with interest in his chair; Forest had the rapt
+look of a scientist in some engrossing experiment. He opened the box,
+taking therefrom a roll of white cotton. This he slowly unrolled,
+revealing two small, ribboned ornaments of gold or bronze.
+
+Ben's starting eyes fastened on them. No doubt he recognized them. A
+look of veritable anguish swept his brown face, and all at once small
+drops of moisture appeared on his brow and through the short hairs at
+his temples. The dark scar at his temple was suddenly brightly red from
+the pounding blood beneath.
+
+"The Victoria Cross, of course," he said slowly, brokenly. "I won it,
+didn't I--the day--that day at Ypres--the day my men were trapped--"
+
+His words faltered then. The wheels of _his_ memory, starting into
+motion, were stilled once more. Again the great darkness dropped over
+him; there were only the medals left in their roll of cotton, and the
+broken fragments of a story--of some wild, stirring event of the war
+just gone--remaining in his mind. Yet to Forest the experiment was an
+unqualified success.
+
+"There's no doubt of it!" he exclaimed. He turned to McNamara, the
+Governor. "His brain is just as sound as yours or mine. With the right
+environment, the right treatment, he'd be on the straight road to
+recovery. In a general way of speaking he has recovered now, largely,
+from the purely temporary trouble that he had before."
+
+McNamara focused an intent gaze first on Ben, then on the alienist. "It
+is, then--as you guessed."
+
+"Absolutely. The night of his arrest marked the end of his trouble; you
+might say that his brain simply snapped back into health and began to
+function normally again, after a period of temporary mania from
+shell-shock. It is true that his memory was left blank, but there
+doesn't seem to be any organic reason for it to be blank--other than
+lack of incentive to remember. Catch me up, if you don't follow me. In
+other words, he has been slowly convalescing since that night: under the
+proper stimuli I have no doubt that everything would come back to him."
+
+"And our friend here--Melville--offers to supply those stimuli."
+
+"Exactly. And it's up to you to say whether he gets a chance."
+
+Thoughtfully the executive drummed his desk with his pencil. Presently a
+smile, markedly boyish and pleasant, broke over his face. More than
+once, in the line of duty imposed by his high office, he had been
+obliged to make decisions contrary to every dictate of mercy. He was all
+the more pleased at this opportunity to do, with a clear conscience, the
+thing that his kindness prompted. He turned slowly in his chair.
+
+"Darby, I suppose you followed what the doctor said?" he asked easily.
+
+"Fairly well, I think."
+
+"I'll review it, if I may. It seems, Ben, that you have been the victim
+of a strange set of unfortunate circumstances. Due to the efforts of an
+old family friend--a most devoted and earnest friend if I may say
+so--we've looked up your record, and now we know more about you than you
+know about yourself. You served in France with Canadian troops and
+there, you will be proud to know, you won among other honors the highest
+honor that the Government of England can award a hero. There you were
+shell-shocked, in the last months of the war.
+
+"You did not return to your home. Shell-shock, Forest tells me, is a
+curious thing, resulting in many forms of mania. Yours led you into
+crime. For some months you lived as a desperate criminal in Seattle. You
+came to yourself in the act of breaking into a bank, only to find that
+your memory of not only your days of crime but all that had gone before
+was left a blank. That night, as you know, marked your arrest.
+
+"Forest has just explained that you are organically sound--that the
+recovery of your memory is just a matter of time and the proper stimuli.
+Now, Ben, it isn't the purpose of this State to punish men when they are
+not responsible for their deeds. Melville tells me that your record, in
+your own home, was the best; your war record alone, I believe, would
+entitle you to the limit of mercy from the State. I don't see how we can
+hold you responsible for deeds done while you were mentally disabled
+from shell-shock.
+
+"All you need for complete recovery, to call everything back in your
+mind, is the proper stimuli. At least that is the opinion of Doctor
+Forest. What those proper stimuli are of course no one knows for
+sure--but Doctor Forest has a theory; and I think he will tell you that
+he will share the credit for it with the same man who has been your
+friend all the way through. They think they know what is best for you.
+The final decision has been put up to me as to whether or not they shall
+be permitted to give it a trial.
+
+"This good friend of yours has offered to try to put it through. He has
+a plan outlined that he'll tell you of later, that will not only be the
+best possible influence toward recalling your memory, but will also give
+you a clean, new start in life. A chance for every success.
+
+"So you needn't return to Walla Walla, Darby. I'm going to parole
+you--under the charge of your benefactor. Melville, from now on it's up
+to you."
+
+The little, withered gray man looked very solemn as he rose. The others
+were stricken instantly solemn too, surprised that the droll smile they
+were so used to seeing had died on the homely, kindly face. Even his
+twinkling eyes were sobered too.
+
+Vaguely amused, yet without scorn, McNamara and Forest got up to shake
+his hand. "I'll look after him," Melville assured them. "Never fear for
+that."
+
+Slight as he was, wasted by the years, his was a figure of unmistakable
+dignity as he thanked them, gravely and earnestly, for their kindness in
+Ben's behalf. Soon after he and his young charge went out together.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+There was a great house-cleaning in the dome of the heavens one
+memorable night that flashed like a jewel from the murky desolation of a
+rainy spring. The little winds came in troops, some from the sea, some
+with loads of balsam from the great forests of the Olympic Peninsula,
+and some, quite tired out, from the stretching sage plains to the east,
+and they swept the sky of clouds as a housekeeper sweeps the ceiling of
+cobwebs. Not a wisp, not one trailing streamer remained.
+
+The Seattle citizenry, for the first time in some weeks, recalled the
+existence of the stars. These emerged in legions and armies, all the way
+from the finest diamond dust to great, white spheres that seemed near
+enough to reach up and touch. Little forgotten stars that had hidden
+away since Heaven knows when in the deepest recesses of the skies came
+out to join in the celebration. Aged men, half blind, beheld so many
+that they thought their sight was returning to them, and youths saw
+whole constellations that they had never beheld before. They continued
+their high revels until a magnificent moon rose in the east, too big and
+too bright to compete with.
+
+It was not just a crescent moon, about to fade away, or even a rain
+moon--one of those standing straight up in the sky so that water can run
+out as out of a dipper. It was almost at its full, large and nearly
+round, and it made the whole city, which is rather like other cities in
+the daylight, seem a place of enchantment. It was so bright that the
+electric signs along Second Avenue were not even counter-attractions.
+
+No living creature who saw it remained wholly unmoved by it. Wary young
+men, crafty and slick as foxes, found themselves proposing to their
+sweethearts before they could catch themselves; and maidens who had
+looked forward to some years yet of independent gaiety found themselves
+accepting. Old tom-cats went wooing; old spinsters got out old letters;
+old husbands thought to return and kiss their wives before venturing
+down to old, moth-eaten clubs. Old dogs, too well-bred to howl, were
+lost and absent-minded with dreams that were older than all the rest of
+these things put together.
+
+But to no one in the city was the influence of the moon more potent than
+to Ben Darby, once known as "Wolf" Darby through certain far-spreading
+districts, and now newly come from the State capital, walking Seattle's
+streets with his ward and benefactor, Ezra Melville. No matter how
+faltering was his memory in other regards, the moon, at least, was an
+old acquaintance. He had known it in the nights when its light had
+probed into his barred cell; but his intimate acquaintance with it had
+begun long, long before that. Not even the names that the alienist,
+Forest, had spoken--the names of places and people close to his own
+heart--stirred his memory like the sight of the mysterious sphere
+rolling through the empty places of the sky. It recalled, clearer than
+any other one thing, the time and place of his early years.
+
+He could not put into words just how it affected him. From first to
+last, even through his days of crime, it had been the one thing
+constant--the unchanging symbol--that in any manner connected his
+present with his shadowed past. It had served to recall in him, more
+than any other one thing, the fact that there was a past to look
+for--the assurance that somewhere, far away, he had been something more
+than a reckless criminal in city slums. The love he had for it was an
+old love, proving to him conclusively that his past life had been
+intimately associated, some way, with moonlight falling in open places.
+Yet the mood that was wakened in him went even farther. It was as if the
+sight of the argent satellite stirred and moved deep-buried instincts
+innate in him, in no way connected with any experience of his immediate
+life. Rather it was as if his love for it were a racial love, reaching
+back beyond his own life: something inborn in him. It was as if he were
+recalling it, not alone from his own past, but from a racial existence a
+thousand-thousand years before his own birth. His memory was strangely
+stifled, but, oh, he remembered the moon! Forest had spoken of stimuli!
+The mere sight of the blue-white beams was the best possible stimulus to
+call him to himself.
+
+Ezra Melville and he walked under it, talking little at first, and
+mostly the old, blue twinkling eyes watched his face. Seemingly with no
+other purpose than to escape the bright glare of the street lights they
+walked northward along the docks, below Queen Anne Hill, passed old Rope
+Walk, through the suburb of Ballard, finally emerging on the Great
+Northern Railroad tracks heading toward Vancouver and the Canadian
+border. For all that Ben's long legs had set a fast pace Melville kept
+cheerfully beside him throughout the long walk, seemingly without trace
+of fatigue.
+
+They paused at last at a crossing, and Ben faced the open fields.
+Evidently, before crime had claimed him, he had been deeply sensitive to
+nature's beauty. Ezra saw him straighten, his dark, vivid face rise; his
+quiet talk died on his lips. Evidently the peaceful scene before him
+went home to him very straight. He was very near thralldom from some
+quality of beauty that dwelt here, some strange, deep appeal that the
+moonlit realm made to his heart.
+
+For the moment Ben had forgotten the old, tried companion at his side.
+Vague memories stirred him, trying to convey him an urgent message. He
+could all but hear: the sight of the meadows, ensilvered under the moon,
+were making many things plain to him which before were shadowed and
+vague. The steel rails gleamed like platinum, the tree tops seemed to
+have white, molten metal poured on them. It was hard to take his eyes
+off those moonlit trees. They got to him, deep inside; thrilling to him,
+stirring. Perhaps in his Lost Land the moon shone on the trees this same
+way.
+
+There were no prison walls around him to-night. The high buildings
+behind him, pressing one upon another, had gone to sustain the feeling
+of imprisonment, but it had quite left him now. There were no cold,
+watchful lights,--only the moon and the stars and an occasional mellow
+gleam from the window of a home. There was scarcely any sound at all;
+not even a stir--as of prisoners tossing and uneasy in their cells. His
+whole body felt rested.
+
+The air was marvelously sweet. Clover was likely in blossom in nearby
+fields. He breathed deep, an unknown delight stealing over him. He stole
+on farther, into the mystery of the night--ravished, tingling and almost
+breathless from an inner and inexplicable excitement. Melville walked
+quietly beside him.
+
+Forest had given over the case: it was Melville's time for experiments
+to-night. All the way out he had watched his patient, sounding him,
+studying his reactions and all that he had beheld had gone to strengthen
+his own convictions. And now, after this moment in the meadows, the old
+man was ready to go on with his plan.
+
+"Let's set down here," he invited casually. Ben started, emerging from
+his revery. The old man's cheery smile had returned, in its full charm,
+to his droll face. "You'll want to know what it's all about--and what I
+have in mind. And I sure think you've done mighty well to hold onto your
+patience this long."
+
+He sat himself on the rail, and Ben quietly took a seat beside him.
+"There are plenty of things I'd like to know," he admitted.
+
+"And plenty of things I ain't goin' to tell you, neither--for the reason
+that Forest advised against it," Ezra went on. "I don't understand
+it--but he says you've got a lot better chance to get your memory
+workin' clear again if things are recalled to you by the aid of
+'stimuli' instead of having any one tell you. I've agreed to supply the
+'stimuli.'
+
+"I don't see any harm in tellin' you that the guesses you've already
+made are right. Your name is Ben Darby--and you used to be known as
+'Wolf' Darby--for reasons that sooner or later you may know. Abner Darby
+was your father. Edith Darby was your sister that ain't no more. You
+went awhile to MacLean's College, in Ontario.
+
+"Now, Ben, I'm going to put a proposition up to you. I'm hoping you'll
+see fit to accept it. And I might as well say right here, that while
+it's the best plan possible to bring you back your memory, and that
+while it offers just the kind of 'stimuli' you're supposed to need,
+neither 'stimuli' nor stimulus or stimulum has got very much to do with
+it. I argued that point mighty strong because I knew it would appeal to
+Forest, and through him, to the governor. I don't see it makes a whale
+of a lot of difference whether you get your memory back or not.
+
+"Maybe you don't foller me. But you know and I know you're all right
+now, remembering clear enough everything that happened since you was
+arrested, and I don't see what difference it makes whether or not you
+remember who your great-aunt was, and the scrapes you got in as a kid.
+You can talk and walk and figger, get by in any comp'ny, and you suit me
+for a buddy just as you are. However, Forest seemed to think it was
+mighty important--and it may be.
+
+"The reason I'm goin' to take you where I'm goin' to take you is for
+your own good. I'm sort of responsible for you, bein' your folks are
+dead. I know you from head to heel, and I think I know what's good for
+you, what you can do and what you can't do and where you succeed and
+where you fail. And I'll say right here you wasn't born to be no gangman
+in a big city like Seattle. You'll find that isn't your line at all."
+
+"I'm willing to take your word for that, Mr. Melville," Ben interposed
+quietly.
+
+"And I might say, now a good time as any, to let up on the '_Mister_.'
+My name is Ezra Melville, and I've been known as 'Ezram' as long as I
+can remember, to my friends. The Darbys in particular called me that,
+and you're a Darby.
+
+"I'll say in the beginning I can't do for you all I'd like to do, simply
+because I haven't the means. The first time you saw me I was walkin'
+ties, and you'll see me walkin' some more of 'em before you're done. I
+know you ain't got any money, and due to the poker habit I ain't got
+much either--in spite of the fact I've done two men's work for something
+over forty years. On this expedition to come we'll have to go on the
+cheaps. No Pullmans, no hotels--sleeping out the hay when we're caught
+out at night. Maybe ridin' the blinds, whenever we can. I'm awful sorry,
+but it jest can't be helped. But I will say--when it comes to work I can
+do my full share, without kickin'."
+
+Ben stared in amazement. It was almost as if the old man were pleading a
+case, rather than giving glorious alms to one to whom hope had seemed
+dead. Ben tried to cut in, to ask questions, but the old man's words
+swept his own away.
+
+"To begin at the beginning, I've got a brother--leastwise I had him a
+few weeks ago--Hiram Melville by name," Ezram went on. "You'd remember
+him well enough. He was a prospector up to a place called Snowy Gulch--a
+town way up in the Caribou Mountains, in Canada. Some weeks ago, herdin'
+cattle in Eastern Oregon, I got a letter from him, and started north,
+runnin' into you on the way up. The letter's right here."
+
+He drew a white envelope from his coat pocket, opening it slowly. "This
+is a real proposition, son," he went on in a sobered voice. "I'm mighty
+glad that I've got something, at least worth lookin' into, to let you in
+on. I only wish it was more."
+
+"Why should you want to let me in on anything?" Ben asked clearly.
+
+The direct question received only a stare of blank amazement from Ezram.
+"Why should I--" he repeated, seemingly surprised out of his life by the
+question. "Shucks, and quit interruptin' me. But I'll say right here
+I've got my own ideas, if you must know. Didn't I hear that while you
+was rampin' around the underworld, you showed yourself a mighty good
+fighter? Well, there's likely to be some fightin' where we're goin', and
+I want some one to do it besides myself. If there ain't fightin', at
+least they'll be worklots of work. Maybe I'm gettin' a little too old
+to do much of it. I want a buddy--some one who will go halfway with me."
+
+"Therefore I suppose you go to the 'pen' to find one," Ben commented,
+wholly unconvinced.
+
+"I'm going to make this proposition good," Ezram went on as if he had
+not heard, "probably a fourth--maybe even a third--to you. And I ain't
+such a fool as I look, neither. I know the chances of comin' out right
+on it are twice as good if somebody young and strong, and who can fight,
+is in on it with me. Listen to this."
+
+Opening the letter, he read laboriously:
+
+ Snowy Gulch, B.C.
+
+ DEAR BROTHER EZRA:--
+
+ I rite this with what I think is my dying hand. It's my will too.
+ I'm at the hotel at Snowy Gulch--and not much more time. You know
+ I've been hunting a claim. Well, I found it--rich a pocket as any
+ body want, worth a quarter million any how and in a district where
+ the Snowy Gulch folks believe there ain't a grain of gold.
+
+ It's yours. Come up and get it quick before some thieves up hear
+ jump it. Lookout for Jeffery Neilson and his gang they seen some of
+ my dust. I'm too sick to go to recorder in Bradleyburg and record
+ claim. Get copy of this letter to carry, put this in some safe
+ place. The only condition is you take good care of Fenris, the pet I
+ raised from a pup. You'll find him and my gun at Steve Morris's.
+
+ I felt myself going and just did get hear. You get supplies horses
+ at Snowy Gulch go up Poor Man Creek through Spruce Pass over to Yuga
+ River. Go down Yuga River past first rapids along still place to
+ first creek you'll know it cause there's an old cabin just below and
+ my canoe landing. Half mile up, in creek bed, is the pocket and new
+ cabin. And don't tell no one in Snowy Gulch who you are and where
+ you going. Go quick brother Ez and put up a stone for me at Snowy
+ Gulch.
+
+ Your brother
+
+ HIRAM MELVILLE.
+
+There was a long pause after Ezram's voice had died away. Ben's eyes
+glowed in the moonlight.
+
+"And you haven't heard--whether your brother is still alive?"
+
+"I got a wire the hotel man sent me. It reached me weeks before the
+letter came, and I guess he must have died soon after he wrote it. I
+suppose you see what he means when he says to carry a copy of this
+letter, instead of the original."
+
+"Of course--because it constitutes his will, your legal claim. Just the
+fact that you are his brother would be claim enough, I should think, but
+since the claim isn't recorded, this simplifies matters for you. You'd
+better make a copy of it and you can leave it in some safe place. And of
+course this claim is what you offered to let me in on."
+
+"That's it. Not much, but all what I got. What I want to know is--if
+it's a go."
+
+"Wait just a minute. You've asked me to go in with you on a scheme that
+looks like a clear quarter of a million, even though I can't give
+anything except my time and my work. You found me in a penitentiary,
+busted and all in--a thief and a gangster. Before we go any further,
+tell me what service I've done you, what obligation you're under to me,
+that gives me a right to accept so much from you?"
+
+It might have been in the moonlight that Ezram's eyes glittered
+perceptibly. "You're in my charge," he grinned. "I guess you ain't got
+any say comin'."
+
+"Wait--wait." Ben sprang to his feet, and caught by his earnestness,
+Ezram got up too. "I sure--I sure appreciate the trust you put in me,"
+Ben went on slowly. "For my own part I'd give everything I've got and
+all I'd hope to ever get to go with you. It's a chance such as I never
+dared believe would come to me again--a chance for big success--a chance
+to go away and get a new start in a country where I feel, instinctively,
+that I'd make good. But that's only the beginning of it."
+
+The dark vivid eyes seemed to glow in the soft light. "Forgive me if I
+talk frank; and if it sounds silly I can't help it," Ben continued.
+"You've never been in prison--with a five-year sentence hanging over
+you--and nobody giving a damn. For some reason I can't guess you've
+already done more for me than I can ever hope to repay. You got me out
+of prison, you wakened hope and self-respect in me when I thought they
+were dead, and you've proved a friend when I'd given up any thought of
+ever knowing human friendship again. I was down and out, Ezram. Anything
+you want me to do I'll do to the last ditch. You know I can fight--you
+know how a man can fight if it's his last chance. I've got some bonus
+money coming to me from the Canadian Government--and I'll put that in
+too, because we'll be needing horses and supplies and things that cost
+money. But I can't take all that from a stranger. You must know how it
+is. A man can't, while he's young and strong, accept charity--"
+
+"Good Lord, it ain't charity!" the old man shouted, drowning him out.
+"I'm gettin' as much pleasure out of it as you." His voice sank again;
+and there was no line of mirth in his face.
+
+"It was long ago, in Montreal," Ezram went on, after a pause. "I knew
+your mother, as a girl. She married a better man, but I told her that
+every wish of hers was law to me. You're her son."
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+Night is always a time of mystery in Snowy Gulch--that little cluster of
+frame shacks lost and far in the northern reaches of the Caribou Range.
+Shadows lie deep, pale lights spring up here and there in windows, with
+gaping, cavernous darkness between; a wet mist is clammy on the face. At
+such times one forgets that here is a town, an enduring outpost of
+civilization, and can remember only the forests that stretch so heavy
+and dark on every side. Indeed the town seems simply swallowed up in
+these forests, immersed in their silence, overspread by their gloom, and
+the red gods themselves walk like sentries in the main street.
+
+The breath that is so fragrant and strange between the fronting rows of
+shacks is simply that of the forest: inept the woodsman who would not
+recognize it at once. The silence is a forest silence, and if the air is
+tense and electric, it is because certain wilderness forces that no
+white man can name but which surely dwell in the darker thickets have
+risen and are in possession.
+
+It is not a time when human beings are at their best and strongest.
+There is an instinctive, haunting feeling which, though not fear, wakens
+a feeling of inadequacy and meekness. Only a few--those who have given
+their love and their lives to the wild places--have any idea of
+sympathetic understanding with it. Among these was Beatrice Neilson, and
+she herself did not fully understand the dreams and longings that swept
+her ever at the fall of the mysterious wilderness night.
+
+The forest had never grown old to her. Its mystery was undying. Born in
+its shadow, her love had gone out to it in her earliest years, and it
+held her just as fast to-day. All her dreams--the natural longings of an
+imaginative girl born to live in an uninhabited portion of the
+earth--were inextricably bound up in it; whatever plans she had for the
+future always included it. Not that she was blind to its more terrible
+qualities: its might and its utter remorselessness that all foresters,
+sooner or later, come to recognize. Her thews were strong, and she loved
+it all the more for the tests that it put to its children.
+
+She was a daughter of the forests, and its mark was on her. To-night the
+same moon that, a thousand miles to the south, was lighting the way for
+Ben and Ezram on their northern journey, shone on her as she hastened
+down the long, shadowed street toward her father's shack, revealing her
+forest parentage for all to see. The quality could be discerned in her
+very carriage--swift and graceful and silent--vaguely suggesting that of
+the wild creatures themselves. But there was no coarseness or ruggedness
+about her face and form such as superficial observation might have
+expected. Physically she was like a deer, strong, straight-limbed,
+graceful, slender rather than buxom, dainty of hands and feet. A perfect
+constitution and healthful surroundings had done all this. And good
+fairies had worked further magic: as she passed beneath the light at the
+door of the rude hotel there was revealed an unquestioned and rather
+startling facial beauty.
+
+It seemed hardly fitting in this stern, rough land--the soft contour and
+delicacy of the girl's features. It had come straight from her mother, a
+woman who, in gold-rush days, had been the acknowledged beauty of the
+province. Nor was it merely the attractive, animal beauty that is so
+often seen in healthy, rural girls. Rather its loveliness was of a
+mysterious, haunting kind that one associates with old legends and far
+distant lands.
+
+Perhaps its particular appeal lay in her eyes. They seemed to be quite
+marvelously deep and clear, so darkly gray that they looked black in
+certain lights, and they were so shadowed and pensive that sometimes
+they gave the image of actual sadness. For all the isolation of her home
+she was no stranger to romance; but the romance that was to be seen,
+like a gentleness, in her face was that of the great, shadowed forest in
+which she dwelt.
+
+Pensive, wistful, enthralled in a dreamy sadness,--what could be nearer
+the tone and pitch of the northern forest itself? There might have been
+also depths of latent passion such as is known to all who live the full,
+strong life of the woods. The lines were soft about her lips and eyes,
+indicating a marked sweetness and tenderness of nature; but these traits
+did not in the least deny her parentage. No one but the woodsman knows
+how gentle, how hospitably tender, the forest may be at times.
+
+She had fine, dark straight brows that served to darken her eyes, dark
+brown hair waving enough to soften every line of her face, a girlish
+throat and a red mouth surprisingly tender and childish. As might have
+been expected her garb was neither rich nor smart, but it was pretty and
+well made and evidently fitted for her life: a loose "middy," blue
+skirt, woolen stockings and rather solid little boots.
+
+As she passed the door of the hotel one of the younger men who had been
+lounging about the stove strode out and accosted her. She half-turned,
+recognized his face in the lamplight, and frankly recoiled.
+
+She had been lost in dreams before, vaguely pensive, for Beatrice had
+been watching the darkness overspread and encompass the dark fringe of
+the spruce forest that enclosed the town. Now, because she recognized
+the man and knew his type--born of the wild places even as herself, but
+a bastard breed--the tender, wistful half-smile sped from her childish
+mouth and her eyes grew alert and widened as if with actual fear. She
+halted, evidently in doubt as to her course.
+
+"Going home?" the man asked. "I'm going up to see your pop, and I'll see
+you there, if you don't mind."
+
+Ray Brent's voice had an undeniable ring of power. It was deeply bass,
+evidently the voice of a passionate, reckless, brutal man. The covetous
+caress of his thick hand upon her arm indicated that he was wholly sure
+of himself in regard to her.
+
+She stared with growing apprehension into his even-featured, not
+unhandsome face. Evidently she found it hard to meet his eyes,--eyes
+wholly lacking in humor and kindliness, but unquestionably vivid and
+compelling under his heavy, dark brows. "I'm going home," she told him
+at last. "I guess, if you're going up to see Pop, you can walk along
+too."
+
+The man fell in beside her, his powerful frame overshadowing hers. It
+was plain at once that the manner of her consent did not in the least
+disturb him. "You're just letting me because I'm going up there anyway,
+eh?" he asked. "I'll walk along further than that with you before I'm
+done."
+
+The girl paused, as if in appeal. "Ray, we've thrashed that out long
+ago," she responded. "I wish you wouldn't keep talking about it. If you
+want to walk with me--"
+
+"All right, but you'll be changing your mind one of these days." Ray's
+voice rang in the silence, indicating utter indifference to the fact
+that many of the loungers on the street were listening to the little
+scene. "I've never seen anything I wanted yet that I didn't get--and I
+want you. Why don't you believe what your pop says about me? He thinks
+Ray Brent is the goods."
+
+"I'm not going to talk about it any more. I've already given you my
+answer--twenty times."
+
+The man talked on, but the girl walked with lifted chin, apparently not
+hearing. They followed the board sidewalk into the shadows, finally
+turning in at a ramshackle, three-room house that was perched on the
+hillside almost at the end of the street at the outer limits of the
+village.
+
+The girl turned to go in, but the man held fast to her arm. "Wait just a
+minute, Bee," he urged. "I've got one thing more to say to you."
+
+The girl looked into his face, now faintly illumined by the full moon
+that was rising, incredibly large and white, above the dark line of the
+spruce tops. For all the regularity of his rather handsome features, his
+was never an attractive face to her, even in first, susceptible
+girlhood; and in the moonlight it suddenly filled her with dread. Ray
+Brent was a dangerous type: imperious willed, slave to his most
+degenerate instincts, reckless, as free from moral restraint as the most
+savage creatures that roamed his native wilds. Now his facial lines
+appeared noticeably deep, dark like scars, and curious little flakes of
+iniquitous fire danced in his sunken eyes.
+
+"Just one minute, Bee," he went on, wholly rapt in his own, devouring
+desires. The dark passions of the man, always just under the skin,
+seemed to be getting out of bounds. "When I want something, I don't know
+how to quit till I get it. It's part of my nature. Your pop knows
+that--and that's why he's made me his pardner in a big deal."
+
+"If my father wants men like you--for his pardners, I can't speak for
+his judgment."
+
+"Wait just a minute. He's told me--and I know he's told you too--that
+I'd suit him all right for a son-in-law. He and I agree on that. And
+this country ain't like the places you read about in your story
+books--it's a man's country. Oh, I know you well enough. It's time you
+got down to brass tacks. If you're going to be a northern woman, you've
+got to be content with the kind of men that grow up here. Up here, the
+best man wins, the hardest, strongest man. That's why I'm going to win
+you."
+
+Because he was secretly attacking her dreams, the dearest part of her
+being, she felt the first surge of rising anger.
+
+"You're not the best man here," she told him, straightening. "If you
+were, I'd move out. You may be the strongest in your body, and certainly
+the hardest, going further to get your own way--but a real man would
+break you in two in a minute. Some one more than a brute to beat horses
+to death and jump claims. I'm going in now. Please take away your hand."
+
+"One thing more. This is the North. We do things in a man's way up
+here--not a story-book way. The strong man gets what he wants--and I
+want you. And I'll get you, too--just like I get this kiss."
+
+He suddenly snatched her toward him. A powerful man; she was wholly
+helpless in his grasp. His arms went about her and he pressed his lips
+to hers--three times. Then he released her, his eyes glowing like red
+coals.
+
+But she was a northern girl, trained to self-defense. As he freed her,
+her strong, slender arm swung out and up--with really startling force.
+Her half-closed hand struck with a sharp, drawing motion across his
+lips, a blow that extinguished his laughter as the wind extinguishes a
+match-blaze.
+
+"You little--devil!"
+
+The tempest of the forest was upon her, and her eyes blazed as she
+hastened around the house.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+Jeffery Neilson and Chan Heminway were already in session when Ray
+Brent, his face flushed and his eyes still angry and red, joined them.
+Neilson was a tall, gaunt man, well past fifty--from his manner
+evidently the leader of the three. He had heavy, grizzled brows and
+rather quiet eyes, a man of deep passions and great resolve. Yet his
+lean face had nothing of the wickedness of Brent's. There had evidently
+been some gentling, redeeming influence in his life, and although it was
+not in the ascendancy, it had softened his smile and the hard lines
+about his lips. Notorious as he was through the northern provinces he
+was infinitely to be preferred to Chan Heminway, who sat at his left
+who, a weaker man than either Ray or Neilson, was simply a tool in the
+latter's hand,--a smashing sledge or a cruel blade as his master wished.
+He was vicious without strength, brutal without self-control. Locks of
+his blond hair, unkempt, dropped over his low forehead into his eyes.
+
+"Where's Beatrice?" Neilson asked at once. "I thought I heard her
+voice."
+
+Ray searched for a reply, and in the silence all three heard the girl's
+tread as she went around the house. "She's going in the back door.
+Likely she didn't want to disturb us."
+
+Ray looked up to find Neilson's eyes firmly fixed upon his face. Try
+hard as he might he couldn't restrain a surge of color in his cheeks.
+"Yes, and what's the rest of it?" Neilson asked.
+
+"Nothing--I know of."
+
+"You've got some white marks on your cheeks--where it ain't red. The kid
+can slap, can't she--"
+
+Ray flushed deeper, but the lines of Neilson's face began to deepen and
+draw. Then his voice broke in a great, hearty chuckle. He had evidently
+tried to restrain it--but it got away from him at last. No man could
+look at him, his twinkling eyes and his joyous face, and doubt but that
+this soft-eyed, strong-handed daughter of his was the joy and pride of
+his life. He had heard the ringing slap through the ramshackle walls of
+the house, and for all that he favored Ray as his daughter's suitor, the
+independence and spirit behind the action had delighted him to the core.
+
+But Ray's sense of humor did not run along these lines. The first danger
+signal of rising anger leaped like a little, hot spark into his eyes.
+Many times before Ray had been obliged to curb his wrath against
+Neilson: to-night he found it more difficult than ever. The time would
+come, he felt, when he would no longer be obliged to submit to Neilson's
+dictation. Sometime the situation would be reversed; he would be leader
+instead of underling, taking the lion's share of the profit of their
+enterprises instead of the left-overs, and when that time came he would
+not be obliged to endure Neilson's jests in silence. Neilson himself, as
+he eyed the stiffening figure, had no realization of Ray's true attitude
+toward him. He thought him a willing helper, a loyal partner, and he
+would not have sat with such content in his chair if he could have
+beheld the smoldering fires of jealousy and ambition in the other's
+breasts The time would come when Ray would assert himself, he
+thought--when Beatrice was safe in his hands.
+
+"It may seem like a joke to you, but it doesn't to me," he answered
+shortly. Nor was he able to keep his anger entirely from his voice.
+"Everything that girl does you think is perfect. Instead of encouraging
+her in her meanness you ought to help me out." His tones harshened, and
+he lost the fine edge of his self-control. "I've stood enough nonsense
+from that little--"
+
+Seemingly, Neilson made no perceptible movement in his chair. What
+change there was showed merely in the lines of his face, and
+particularly in the light that dwelt in the gray, straightforward eyes.
+"Don't finish it," he ordered simply.
+
+For an instant eyes met eyes in bitter hatred--and Chan Heminway began
+to wonder just where he would seek cover in case matters got to a
+shooting stage. But Ray's gaze broke before that of his leader. "I'm not
+going to say anything I shouldn't," he protested sullenly. "But this
+doesn't look like you're helping out my case any. You told me you'd do
+everything you could for me. You even went so far as to say you'd take
+matters in your own hands--"
+
+"And I will, in reason. I'm keeping away the rest of the boys so you can
+have a chance. But if you think I'm going to tie her up to anybody
+against her will, you're barking up the wrong tree. She's my daughter,
+and her happiness happens to be my first object." Then his voice
+changed, good-humored again. "But cool down, boy--wait till you hear
+everything I've got to tell you, and you'll feel better. Of course, you
+know what it's about--"
+
+"I suppose--Hiram Melville's claim."
+
+"That's it. Of course we don't know that he had a claim--but he had a
+pocket full of the most beautiful nuggets you ever want to see. No one
+knows that fact but me--I saw 'em by accident--and I got 'em now. You
+know he's always had an idea that the Yuga country was worth
+prospecting, but we always laughed at him. Of course it is a pocket
+country; but it's my opinion he found a pocket that would make many a
+placer look sick, before he died."
+
+"But he might have got the nuggets somewheres else--"
+
+"Hold your horses. Where would he get 'em? There's something else
+suspicious too. He wrote a letter, the day before he died, and addressed
+it to Ezra Melville, somewhere in Oregon. He must just about got it by
+now--maybe a few days ago. He had the clerk mail it for him, and got him
+to witness it, saying it was his will--and what did that old hound have
+to will except a mine? Next day he wrote another letter somewhere
+too--but I didn't find out who it was to. If I'd had any gumption I'd
+got ahold of 'em both. The point is--I'm convinced it's worth a trip, at
+least."
+
+"I should say it was worth a trip," Ray agreed. "And a fast one, too.
+There might be some competition--"
+
+"There won't be a rush, if that's what you mean. Everybody knows it's a
+pocket country, and the men in this town wouldn't any more get excited
+about the Yuga River--"
+
+"True enough--but that Ezra Melville will be showin' up one of these
+days. We want to be settin' pretty when he comes."
+
+"You've got the idea. It ought to be the easiest job we ever did. It's
+my idea he had his claim all laid out, monuments up and everything, and
+was on his way down to Bradleyburg to record it when he died. He just
+went out before he could make the rest of the trip. All we'll have to do
+is go up there, locate in his cabin, and sit tight."
+
+"Wait just a second." Ray was lost in thought. "There's an old cabin up
+that way somewhere--along that still place--on the river. It was a
+trapping cabin belonging to old Bill Foulks."
+
+"That's true enough--but it likely ain't near his mine. Boys, it's a
+clean, open-and-shut job--with absolutely nothing to interfere. If his
+brother does come up, he'll find us in possession--and nothing to do but
+go back. So to-morrow we'll load up and pack horses and light out."
+
+"Up Poor Man creek, through Spruce Pass--"
+
+"Sure. Then over to the Yuga. Old Hiram was hunting down some kind of a
+scent in the vicinity of that old cabin you speak of, last heard of him.
+And I wouldn't be surprised, on second thought, if it wasn't his base of
+operations."
+
+"All easy enough," Ray agreed. He paused, and a queer, speculative look
+came into his wild-beast's eyes. "But what I don't see--how you can
+figure all this is going to help me out with Beatrice."
+
+Jeffery Neilson turned in his chair. "You can't, eh? You need
+spectacles. Just think a minute--say you had fifty or sixty thousand all
+your own--to spend on a wife and buy her clothes and automobiles. Don't
+you think that would make you more attractive to the feminine eye?"
+
+At first Ray made no apparent answer. He merely sat staring ahead. But
+plainly the words had wakened riot in his imagination. Such a sum meant
+_wealth_, the power his ambitious nature had always craved, idleness and
+the gratification of all his lusts. He was no stranger to greed, this
+degenerate son of the North. "It'd help some," he admitted in a low
+voice. "But what makes you think it would be worth that much?"
+
+"Because old Hiram talked a little, half-delirious, before he died. 'A
+quarter of a million,' he kept saying. 'Right there in sight--a quarter
+of a million.' If he really found that much stowed away in the rocks,
+that's fifty or sixty apiece for you and Chan."
+
+Ray's mind worked swiftly. Sixty thousand apiece--and that left one
+hundred and thirty thousand for their leader's portion. The old rage and
+jealousy that had preyed upon his mind so long swept over him, more
+compelling than ever. "Go on," he urged. "What's the rest of it?"
+
+"The second thing is--we'll need some one to cook, and look after us,
+when we get up there. Who should it be but Beatrice? She wouldn't want
+to stay here; you know how she loves the woods. And if you know anything
+about girls, you know that nothing counts like having 'em alone. There
+wouldn't be any of the other boys up there to trouble you. You'd have a
+clear field."
+
+Ray's dark eyes shone. "It'd help some," he admitted. "That means--hunt
+up an extra horse for her to-morrow."
+
+"No. I don't intend she should come up now. Not till we're settled."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Think a minute, and you'll see why not. You know how she regards this
+business of jumping claims. She's dead against it if any one could
+be--bless her heart!"
+
+"Don't go getting sentimental, Neilson."
+
+"And don't let that mouth of yours get you into trouble, either." Once
+more their eyes locked: once more Ray looked away. "I hope she'll always
+stay that way, too. As I say, she's dead against it, and she's been a
+little suspicious ever since that Jenkins deal. Besides, it wouldn't be
+any pleasure for her until we find a claim and get settled. When she
+comes up we'll be established in a couple of cabins--one for her and me
+and one for you two--and she won't know but that we made the original
+find."
+
+"How will she know just where to find us?"
+
+"We're bound to be somewhere near that old cabin on the Yuga. We'll set
+a date for her to come, and I can meet her there."
+
+It was, Ray was forced to admit, a highly commendable scheme. He sat
+back, contemplating all its phases. "It's slick enough," he agreed. "It
+ought to do the trick."
+
+But if he had known the girl's thoughts, as she sat alone in the back
+part of the house, he wouldn't have felt so confident. She was watching
+the moon over the spruce forest, and she was thinking, with repugnance
+in her heart, of the indignity to which she had been subjected at her
+father's door. Yet the kisses Ray had forced on her were no worse than
+his blasphemy of her dreams. The spirit of romance was abroad
+to-night--in the enchantment of the moon--and she was wistful and
+imaginative as never before. This was just the normal expression of her
+starved girlhood--the same childlike wistfulness with which a Cinderella
+might long for her prince--just as natural and as wholesome and as much
+a part of youth as laughter and happiness.
+
+"I won't believe him, I won't believe him," she told herself. Her
+thought turned to other channels, and her heart spoke its wish.
+"Wherever he is--sometime he'll come to me."
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+At a little town at the end of steel Ben and Ezram ended the first lap
+of their journey. They had had good traveling these past days. Steadily
+they had gone north, through the tilled lands of Northern Washington,
+through the fertile valleys of lower British Columbia, traversing great
+mountain ranges and penetrating gloomy forests, and now had come to the
+bank of a north-flowing river,--a veritable flood and one of the monarch
+rivers of the North. Every hour their companionship had been more close
+and their hopes higher. Every waking moment Ben had been swept with
+thankfulness for the chance that had come to him.
+
+They had worked for their meals and passage--hard, manual toil--but it
+had seemed only play to them both. Sometimes they mended fence,
+sometimes helped at farm labor, and one gala morning, with entire good
+will and cheer, they beat into cleanliness every carpet in a widow's
+cottage. And the sign of the outcast was fading from Ben's flesh.
+
+The change was marked in his face. His eye seemed more clear and
+steadfast, his lips more firm, the lines of his face were not so hard
+and deep. His fellows of the underworld would have scarcely known him
+now,--his lips and chin darkening with beard and this new air of
+self-respect upon him. Perhaps they had forgotten him, but it was no
+less than he had done to them. The prison walls seemed already as if
+they hadn't been true. He loved every minute of the journey, freshness
+instead of filth, freedom instead of confinement, fragrant fields and
+blossoming flowers. Ever the stars and the moon, remembered of old,
+yielded him a peace and happiness beyond his power to tell. And his
+gratitude to Ezram grew apace.
+
+Besides self-confidence and the constant, slow unraveling of his memory
+problems, each day yielded rich gifts: no less than added trust in each
+other. Always they found each other steadfast, utterly to be relied
+upon. Ezram never regretted for a moment his offer to Ben. The young man
+had seemingly developed under his eye and was a real aid to him in all
+the problems of the journey.
+
+As the days passed, the whole tone and key of the land had seemed to
+change. They were full in the mountains now, snow gleaming on the
+heights, forests blue-black on the slopes; and Ben's response was a
+growing excitement that at first he could not analyze. The air was
+sweeter, more bracing, and sometimes he discerned a fleeting, delicate
+odor that drew him up short in his talk and held him entranced. There
+was a sparkle and stir in the air, unknown in the cities he had left;
+and to breathe it deeply thrilled him with an unexplainable happiness.
+
+Some way it was all familiar, all dear to him as if it had once been
+close to his life. The sparkle in the air was not new, only recalled:
+long and long ago he had wakened to find just such a delicate fragrance
+in his nostrils. But the key hadn't come to him yet. His memory pictures
+were ever stronger of outline, clearer in his mind's eye, yet they were
+still too dim for him to interpret them. In these days Ezram watched him
+closely, with a curious, intense interest.
+
+It was no longer pleasant to sleep out in the hay. For the sake of
+warmth alone they were obliged to hire their night's lodging at cheap
+hotels. Spring was full in the land they had left: it was just
+beginning here. The mountains, visible from the village of Saltsville
+where they left the railroad, were still swept with snow.
+
+Ben felt that he would have liked to take a day off at this point and
+venture with his companion into the high, wooded hills that fronted the
+town, but he agreed with Ezram that they could not spare the time. They
+swiftly made preparations for their journey down-river. A canoe was
+bought for a reasonable sum--they were told they had a good chance of
+selling it again when they left the river near Snowy Gulch--and at the
+general store they bought an axe, rudimentary fishing tackle, tobacco,
+blankets, and all manner of simpler provisions, such as flour, rice,
+bacon, coffee, canned milk, and sugar. And for a ridiculously small sum
+which he mysteriously produced from the pocket of his faded jeans Ezram
+bought a second-hand rifle--an ancient gun of large caliber but of
+enduring quality--and a box of shells to match.
+
+"Old Hiram left me a gun, but we'll each need one," Ezram explained.
+"And they tell me there's a chance to pick up game, like as not, goin'
+down the river."
+
+They would have need of good canoe-craft before the journey's end, the
+villagers told them. Ezram had not boasted of any such ability, and at
+first Ben regarded the plan with considerable misgivings. And it was
+with the most profound amazement that, when they pushed off, he saw
+Ezram deliberately seat himself in the bow, leaving the more important
+place to his young companion.
+
+"Good heavens, I'll capsize you in a minute," Ben said. "How do you dare
+risk it----"
+
+"Push off and stop botherin' me," Ezram answered. "There's a paddle--go
+ahead and shoot 'er."
+
+The waters caught the canoe, speeding it downstream; and in
+apprehension of immediate disaster Ben seized the paddle. Swiftly he
+thrust it into the streaming water at his side.
+
+He was not further aware of Ezram's searching gaze. He did not know of
+the old man's delight at the entire incident--first the anxious, hurried
+stroke of the paddle, then the movement of Ben's long fingers as he
+caught a new hold, finally the white flame of exultation that came into
+his face. For himself, Ben instantly knew that this was his own sphere.
+He suddenly found himself an absolute master of his craft: at the touch
+of the paddle controlling it as a master mechanic controls a delicate
+machine.
+
+The white waters were no more to be feared. He found that he knew, as if
+by instinct, every trick of the riverman's trade,--the slow stroke, the
+fast stroke, the best stroke for a long day's sail, the little half-turn
+in his hands that put the blade on edge in the water and gave him the
+finest control. It was all so familiar, so unspeakably dear to him.
+Clear, bright memories hovered close to him, almost within his grasp.
+
+"Do you remember when you shot the Athabaska Rapids?" Ezram had asked.
+It was all clear enough. In that life that was forgotten he had
+evidently lived much in a canoe, knowing every detail of river life.
+Perhaps he had been a master canoeist; at least he felt a strange,
+surging sense of self-confidence and power. He understood, now, why the
+image of rushing waters had come so often into his dreams. Dim pictures
+of river scenes--cataracts white with foam, rapids with thunderous
+voices, perilous eddies, and then, just beyond, glassy waters where the
+shadow of the canoe was unbroken in the blue depths--streamed through
+his mind, but they were not yet bright enough for him to seize and hold.
+
+He enjoyed the first few hours of paddling, but in the long, warm
+afternoon came indolence, and they were both willing to glide with the
+current and watch the ever-changing vista of the shore. For the first
+time since they had come into the real North, Ben found opportunity to
+observe and study the country.
+
+Already they were out of sight of the last vestige of a habitation; and
+the evergreen forests pushed down to the water's edge. From the middle
+of the stream the woods appeared only as a dark wall, but this was
+immeasurably fascinating to Ben. It suggested mystery, adventure; yet
+its deeper appeal, the thing that stirred him and thrilled him to the
+quick, he could neither understand nor analyze.
+
+Sometimes a little clump of trees stood apart, and from their shape he
+identified them as the incomparable spruce, perhaps the most
+distinguished and beautiful of all the evergreens. He marked their great
+height, their slender forms, their dark foliage that ever seemed to be
+silvered with frost; and they seemed to him to answer, to the fullest
+extent, some vague expectation of which he had scarcely been aware.
+
+The wild life of the river filled him with speechless delight. Sometimes
+he saw the waters break and gleam at the leap of a mighty salmon--the
+king fish of the North on his spring rush to the headwaters where he
+would spawn and die--and often the canoe sent flocks of waterfowl into
+flight. Ben dimly felt that on the tree-clad shores larger, more
+glorious living creatures were standing, hiding, watching the canoe
+glide past. The thought thrilled him.
+
+Late afternoon, and they worked closer to the shore. They were watching
+for a place to land. But because the shadows of twilight were already
+falling, the forest itself was hardly more vivid to their eyes. Once it
+seemed to Ben that he saw the underbrush move and waver at the water's
+edge, and his heart leaped; but whatever stirred kept itself concealed.
+And now, in the gray of twilight, Ezram saw the place to land.
+
+It was a small lagoon into which a creek emptied, and beyond was an open
+meadow, found so often and so unexpectedly in the North woods. Swiftly
+Ben turned the canoe into shore.
+
+Ezram climbed out and made fast, and so busy was he with his work that
+he did not glance at Ben, otherwise he might have beheld a phenomenon
+that would have been of keen interest to the alienist, Forest. His young
+charge had suddenly grown quite pale. Ben himself was neither aware of
+this nor of the fact that his heart was hammering wildly in his breast
+and his blood racing, like wild rivers, through his veins: he was only
+thrilled and held by a sense of vast, impending developments. Every
+nerve tingled and thrilled, and why he did not know.
+
+Ezram began to unload; but now, his blue eyes shining, he began a covert
+watch of his young companion. He saw the man from prison suddenly catch
+his breath in inexpressible awe and his eye kindle with a light of
+unknown source. A great question was shaping itself in Ben's mind, but
+as yet he could not find the answer.
+
+All at once Ben knew this place. Here was nothing strange or new: it was
+all as he had known it would be in his inmost heart. All of it spoke to
+him with familiar voice, seemingly to welcome him as a son is welcomed
+after long absence. There was nothing here that had not been known and
+beloved of old. Vivid memories, bright as lightning, swept through him.
+
+He had always known this wholesome, sweet breath that swept into his
+face. It was merely that of the outdoors, the open places that were his
+own haunts. It was wholly fitting and true that the silence should lie
+over the dark spruce that ringed about him, a silence that, in its
+infinite harmony with some queer mood of silence in his own heart, was
+more moving than any voice. All was as he had secretly known: the hushed
+tree aisles, the gray radiance--soft as a hand upon the brow--of the
+afterglow; the all-pervading health and peace of the wilderness. Except
+for an old and trusted companion, he was alone with it all, and that too
+was as it should be. Just he and the forest, his companion and the
+gliding river.
+
+He didn't try to understand, at first, the joy and the wonder that
+thrilled him, nor could he speak aloud the thoughts that came to him.
+Ravished and mystified, he walked softly to the dark, still edge of the
+forest, penetrated it a distance, then sat down to wait.
+
+For the first time in years, it seemed to him, he was at peace. A
+strange sense of self-realization--lost to him in his years of
+exile--climbed like fire through him; and with it the return of a lost
+virility, a supreme vigor tingling each little nerve; a sense of
+strength and power that was almost blinding.
+
+He sat still. He saw the twilight descending, ever heavier, over the
+forest. The sharp edges of the individual trees faded and blended, the
+trunks blurred. He turned one fleeting glance of infinite, inexpressible
+gratitude toward Ezram--the man who had brought him here and who now was
+busily engaged in unpacking the canoe and making camp--then looked back
+to his forests. The wind brought the wood smells,--spruce and moldering
+earth and a thousand more no man could name. The great, watchful,
+brooding spirit of the forest went in to him.
+
+All at once his heart seemed to pause in his breast. He was
+listening,--for what he did not know. His eyes strained into the
+shadows. Brush wavered, a twig cracked with a miniature explosion. And
+then two figures emerged into the beaver meadow opposite him.
+
+They were only creatures of the wild, an old cow moose, black and
+ungainly, and her long-legged, awkward calf. Yet they supplied the
+detail that was missing. They were the one thing needed to complete the
+picture--the crowning touch that revealed this land as it was--the
+virgin wilderness where the creatures of the wild still held full sway.
+
+But it did more. All at once a great clarity seemed to take possession
+of his mind. Here, in these dark forests, were the _stimuli_ of which
+Forest, the alienist, had spoken; and his brain seemed to leap, as in
+one impulse, to the truth. Suddenly he knew the answer to all the
+questions and problems that had troubled him so long.
+
+Many times, in the past years, he had seen logs jammed in the water, a
+veritable labyrinth that defied dissolution. Suddenly, as if by magic,
+the key log would be ejected, and the whole jam would break, shatter
+down in one stupendous crash, settle and dissolve, leaving at last only
+drift logs floating quietly in the river. Thus it was with the confusion
+in his brain. All at once it seemed to dissolve, the tangled skeins
+straightened out, the association areas of his mind stirred full into
+life once more. As he sat there, pale as the twilight sky, the mists of
+amnesia lifted from him. He was cured as if by the touch of a holy man.
+
+No wonder these forests depths were familiar. His boyhood and early
+manhood, clear until the vortex of war had engulfed him, had been spent
+amid just such surroundings, in just such silences, on the banks of
+just such wilderness rivers. The same sky line of dark, heaven-reaching
+spruce had fronted him of old. He sprang up, his eyes blazing. "I
+remember everything," an inaudible voice spoke within him. Then he
+whispered, fervently, to his familiar wilds. "And I have come home."
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+Everything was as it should be, as he and Ezram made the camp. He
+himself cut the boughs for their beds, laid them with his remembered
+skill, spread the blankets, and kept the fire blazing while Ezram
+cooked; afterwards he knew the indescribable peace of a pipe smoke
+beside the glowing coals. He saw the moon come up at last, translating
+the spruce forest into a fairy land.
+
+Of course he had remembered the moon. How many times had he watched for
+its argent gleam on the sky line, the vivid, detailed silhouette of the
+spruce against it; and then its slow-spreading glory through the still,
+dark forests! The spires of the trees grew ensilvered, as always;
+immense nebulous patches lay between the trunks, shadows stole
+mysteriously, phantoms met, lingered, and vanished.
+
+This was his own North! The stir and vigor in the very air told him
+that. This was the land he had dreamed of, under the moon; the primeval
+forests that had tried him, tested him, staked their cruel might against
+him, but yet had blessed him with their infinite beneficence and
+hospitality. It was ever somber, yet its dusky beauty stirred him more
+than any richness he had seen in bright cities. He knew its every mood:
+ecstasy in spring; gentleness in summer; brooding melancholy in the gray
+days of fall; remorseless, savage, but unspeakably beautiful in the
+winter. He felt his old pity for the spring flowers, blossoming so
+hopefully in this gentle season. How soon they would be covered with
+many feet of snow!
+
+"It's all come clear again," he told Ezram. And the two men talked over,
+quietly and happily, old days at Thunder Lake. He remembered now that
+Ezram had always been the most intimate friend of his own family: a spry
+old godfather to himself and young sister, a boon companion to his once
+successful rival, Ben's father. Ben did not wonder, now, at his own
+perplexity when Forest had spoken of "Wolf" Darby. That was his own name
+known throughout hundreds of square miles of forest and in dozens of
+little river hamlets in an Eastern province. Partly the name was in
+token of his skill as a woodsman and frontiersman, partly in recognition
+of certain traits that his fellow woodsmen had seen and wondered at in
+him. It was not an empty nickname, in his case. It was simply that the
+name suited him.
+
+"The boys had reason a-plenty for callin' you that," Ezram told him. "Up
+here, as you know, men don't get no complimentary epithets unless they
+deserve 'em. Some men, Ben, are like weasels. You've seen 'em. You've
+seen human rats, too. As if the souls they carried around with 'em was
+the souls of rats. Of course you remember 'Grizzly' Silverdale? Did you
+ever see any one who in disposition and looks and walk and everything
+reminded you so much of a grizzly bear? I've known men like sheep, and
+men with the faithful souls of dogs. You remember when you got in the
+big fight in the Le Perray bar?"
+
+"I don't think I'll ever forget it again."
+
+"That's the night the name came on you, to stay. You remember how you'd
+drive into one of them, leap away, then tear into another. Like a wolf
+for all the world! You was always hard to get into a fight, but you
+know as well as I do, and I ain't salvin' you when I say it, that you're
+the most terrible, ferocious fighter, forgettin' everything but blood,
+that ever paddled a canoe on the Athabaska. Some men, Ben, seem to have
+the spirit of the wolf right under their skins, a sort of a wild
+instinct that might have come straight down from the stone age, for all
+I know. You happen to be one of 'em, the worst I ever saw. Maybe you
+don't remember, but you took your bull moose before you was thirteen
+years old."
+
+Ben sat dreaming. The Athabaska Rapids was not an empty name to him now.
+He remembered the day he had won the canoe race at Lodge Pole. Other
+exploits occurred to him,--of brutal, savage brawls in river taverns, of
+adventures on the trail, of struggling with wild rivers when his canoe
+capsized, of running the great logs down through white waters. It was
+his world, these far-stretching wildernesses. And he blessed, with all
+the fervency of his heart, the man who had brought him home.
+
+He went to his bed, but sleep did not at once come to him. He lay with
+hushed breathing, listening to the little, secret noises, known so well,
+of the wilderness night. He heard the wild creatures start forth on
+their midnight journeys. Once a lynx mewed at the edge of the forest;
+and he laughed aloud when some large creature--probably a moose--grunted
+and splashed water in the near-by beaver meadow.
+
+Thus ended the first of a brilliant succession of joyous days,
+descending the stream in the daylight hours and camping on the bank at
+night. Every day they plunged deeper into the heart of the wilderness,
+and every hour Ben felt more at home.
+
+It was only play for him,--to meet and shoot successfully the rapids of
+the river. In the long stillnesses he paddled hour upon hour, not only
+to make time but to find an outlet for his surging energy. His old-time
+woodsman's pleasures were recalled again: shooting waterfowl for their
+mess in the still dawns, racing the swimming moose when they ran on him
+in the water. One day, fish hungry, he rigged up the elementary fishing
+tackle that they had brought from Saltsville and tried for a salmon.
+
+To a long, tough rod cut on the river bank he attached thirty feet of
+cheap, white cord, and to the cord he fastened a bright spoon hook--the
+spinner that salmon fishers know. He had no leader, no reel, no
+delicately balanced salmon rod--and Ezram was full of scorn for the
+whole proceeding. And it was certainly true that, by all the rules of
+angling, Ben had no chance whatever to get a bite.
+
+The cord was visible in the clear water, and the spoon itself was
+scarcely more than twenty feet from the rear of the boat. But this
+northern stream was not at all like the famous salmon rivers known to
+sportsmen. In years to come, when the lines of communication are better
+and tourist hotels are established on its banks, the river may then
+begin to conform to the qualifications of a conventional fishing stream,
+and then Ben's crude tackle will be unavailing. But at present the
+salmon were not so particular. As fishermen came but rarely, the fish
+were in countless numbers; and in such a galaxy there were bound to be
+few misguided fish that did not know a sportsman's tackle from a dub's.
+
+The joy of angling, once known, dwells in the body until death, and Ben
+was a born fisherman. The old delight that can never die crept back to
+him the instant he felt the clumsy rod in his hands and the faint throb
+of the line through the delicate mechanism of his nerves. And
+apparently for no other reason than that the river hordes wished to
+welcome him home, almost at once a gigantic bull salmon took his spoon.
+
+Ezram's first knowledge of it was a wild yell that almost startled him
+over the side--the same violent outcry that old anglers still can not
+restrain when the fish takes hold, even after a lifetime of angling.
+When he recovered himself he looked to see Ben kneeling frantically in
+the stern, hanging for dear life to his rod and seemingly in grave
+danger of being pulled overboard.
+
+No man who has felt that first, overpowering jolt of a striking salmon
+can question the rapture of that first moment. The jolt carried through
+all the intricacies of the nerves, jarred the soul within the man, and
+seemingly registered in the germ plasm itself an impression that could
+be recalled, in dreams, ten generations hence. Fortunately the pole
+withstood that first, frantic rush, and then things began to happen in
+earnest.
+
+The great trout seemed to dance on the surface of the water. He tugged,
+he swam in frantic circles, he flopped and darted and sulked and rushed
+and leaped. If he hadn't been securely hooked, and if it had not been
+for a skill earned in a hundred such battles, Ben would not have held
+him a moment.
+
+But the time came at last, after a sublime half-hour, when his steam
+began to die. His rushes were less powerful, and often he hung like a
+dead weight on the line. Slowly Ben worked him in, not daring to believe
+that he was conquering, willing to sell his soul for the privilege of
+seeing the great fish safe in the boat. His eyes protruded, perspiration
+gleamed on his brow, he talked foolishly and incessantly to Ezram, the
+fish, the river-gods, and himself. Ezram, something of an old Isaac
+Walton himself, managed the canoe with unusual dexterity and chuckled in
+the contagion of Ben's delight. And lo--in a moment more the thing was
+done.
+
+"You'd think you never had a rod in your hand before," Ezram commented
+in mock disgust. "Such hollerin' and whoopin' I never heard."
+
+Ben grinned widely. "That's fishing--the sport that keeps a man an
+amateur all his days--with an amateur's delight." His vivid smile
+quivered at his lips and was still. "That's why I love the North; it can
+never, never grow old. You're just as excited at the close as at the
+beginning. Ezram, old man, it's life!"
+
+Ezram nodded. Perhaps, in the moment's fire, Ben had touched at the
+truth. Perhaps _life_, in its fullest sense, is something more than
+being born, breathing air, consuming food, and moving the lips in
+speech. _Life_ is a thing that wilderness creatures know, realized only
+when the blood, leaping red, sweeps away lifeless and palsied tissue and
+builds a more sentient structure in its place; invoked by such forces as
+adventure and danger and battle and triumph. For the past half-hour Ben
+had lived in the fullest sense, and Ezram was a little touched by the
+look of unspeakable gratitude with which his young companion regarded
+him.
+
+But the journey ended at last. They saw the white peak they had been
+told to watch for, and soon after they came to a green bank from which
+the forest had been cut away. Softly, rather regretfully, they pushed up
+and made landing on the banks of a small stream, tributary to the great
+river, that marked the end of the water route.
+
+This stream, Ezram knew, was Poor Man's Creek, the stream of which his
+brother had written and which they must ascend to reach Spruce Pass.
+Only five miles distant, in a quartering direction from the river, was
+Snowy Gulch, the village where they were to secure supplies and, from
+Steve Morris, the late Hiram's gun and his pet, Fenris.
+
+For a time, at least, they had left the utter solitudes of the wild. Men
+had cut away the forest and had built a crude wagon road to Snowy Gulch.
+And before they were fully unpacked they made out the figure of a
+middle-aged frontiersman, his back loaded, advancing up the road toward
+them.
+
+Both men knew something of the ways of the frontier and turned in
+greeting. "Howdy," Ezram began pleasantly.
+
+"Howdy," the stranger replied. "How was goin'?"
+
+"Oh, good enough."
+
+"Come all the way from Saltsville?"
+
+"Yes. Goin' to Snowy Gulch."
+
+"It's only five miles, up this road," the stranger ventured. "I'm goin'
+up Saltsville way myself, but I won't have no river to tow me. I've got
+to do my own paddlin'. Thank the lord I'm only goin' a small part of the
+way."
+
+"You ain't goin' to swim, are you? Where's your boat."
+
+"My pard's got an old craft, and he and I are goin' to pack it out next
+trip." The stranger paused, blinking his eyes. "Say, partners--you don't
+want to sell your boat, do you?"
+
+Ben started to speak, but the doubtful look on Ezram's face checked him.
+"Oh, I don't know," the old man replied, in the discouraging tones of a
+born tradesman. In reality the old Shylock's heart was leaping gayly in
+his breast. This was almost too good to be true: a purchaser for the
+boat in the first hour. "Yet we might," he went on. "We was countin' on
+goin' back in it soon."
+
+"I'd just as leave buy it, if you want to sell it. In this jerked-off
+town there ain't a fit canoe to be had. Our boat is the worst tub you
+ever seen. How much you want for it?"
+
+Ezram stated his figure, and Ben was prone to believe that he had
+adopted a highwayman for a buddy. The amount named was nearly twice that
+which they had paid. And to his vast amazement the stranger accepted the
+offer in his next breath.
+
+"It's worth something to bring it up here, you dub," Ezram informed his
+young partner, when the latter accused him of profiteering.
+
+After the sale was made Ezram and the stranger soon got on the intimate
+terms that almost invariably follow a mutually satisfactory business
+deal, and in the talk that ensued the old man learned a fact of the most
+vital importance to their venture. And it came like a bolt from the
+blue.
+
+"So you don't know any folks in Snowy Gulch, then?" the stranger had
+asked politely. "But you'll get acquainted soon enough--"
+
+"I've got a letter to a feller named Morris," Ezram replied. "And I've
+heard of one or two more men too--Jeffery Neilson was one of 'em--"
+
+"You'll find Morris in town all right," the stranger ventured to assure
+him. "He lives right next to Neilson's. And--say--what do you know about
+this man Neilson?"
+
+"Oh, nothin' at all. Why?"
+
+"If you fellows is prospectin', Jeffery Neilson is a first-class man to
+stay away from--and his understrapers, too--Ray Brent and Chan Heminway.
+But they're out of town right now. They skinned out all in a bunch a
+few weeks ago--and I can't tell you what kind of a scent they got."
+
+Ezram felt cold to the marrow of his bones. He glanced covertly at Ben;
+fortunately his partner was busy among the supplies and was not
+listening to this conversation. Yet likely enough it was a false alarm!
+Doubtless the ugly possibility that occurred to him had no justification
+whatever in fact. Nevertheless, he couldn't restrain the question that
+was at his lips.
+
+"You don't know where they went, do you?" he asked.
+
+"Not exactly. They took up this creek here a ways, through Spruce Pass,
+and over to Yuga River--the country that kind of a crazy old chap named
+Hiram Melville, who died here a few weeks ago, has always prospected."
+
+The stranger marvelled that his old listener should have suddenly gone
+quite pale.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+Ezram had only a moment's further conversation with his new friend. He
+put two or three questions--in a rather curious, hushed voice--and got
+his answer. Yes, it was true that the shortest way to go to the Yuga
+River was to follow up the creek by which he was now standing. It was
+only out of the way to go into Snowy Gulch: they would have to come back
+to this very point. And yes, a pedestrian, carrying a light pack, could
+make much better time than a horseman with pack animals. The horses
+could go no faster than a walk, and the time required to sling packs and
+care for the animals cut down the day's march by half.
+
+These things learned, Ezram strolled over to his young partner. And at
+that moment he revealed the possession of a talent that neither he nor
+any of his friends had ever suspected. The stage had lost an artist of
+no mean ability when Ezra Melville had taken to the cattle business.
+Outwardly, to the last, little lines about his lips and eyes, he was his
+genial, optimistic, droll old self. His eye twinkled, his face beamed in
+the gray stubble, his voice was rollicking with the fun of life the same
+as ever. And like Pagliacci in his masque there was not the slightest
+exterior sign of the fear and despair that chilled his heart.
+
+"What have you and your poor victim been talking about, all this time?"
+Ben asked.
+
+"Oh, just a gab-fest--a tat-i-tat as you'd call it. But you know, Ben,
+I've got a idea all a-sudden." Ben straightened, lighted his pipe, and
+prepared to listen.
+
+"This old boy tells me that we'd save just twelve miles by striking off
+front here, instead of goin' into town. Snowy Gulch is six miles, and we
+have to come back to this very place. What's the use of goin' into town
+at all?"
+
+"Good heavens, Ez? Have you forgotten we've got to get supplies? And
+your brother's gun--and his dog?"
+
+"How do you know he's got a dog?"
+
+"He said a pup, didn't he? But it may be an elephant for all I know. Of
+course, we've got to go on in."
+
+"Yes, I know--one of us has. But, Ben, it seems to me that one of us
+ought to strike off now and figure out the way and sort of get located.
+One of us could take a little food and a couple of blankets and make it
+through in less than a day. Half a day, almost. Then we could have the
+cabin all ready, and everything laid out for to begin work. He could
+blaze any dim spots in the trail and save time for the other feller,
+comin' with the horses."
+
+"Oh, it would be all right," Ben began rather doubtfully. "I don't see
+that much is to be gained by it. But I'll strike off on foot, if you
+want me to."
+
+Ezram's mind was flashing with thoughts like lightning, and his answer
+was ready. "Ben, if you don't mind, I'll do that," he said. "I can get
+along without gazin' at the sky-scrapers of Snowy Gulch, and to tell the
+truth, that twelve miles of extra walkin' don't appeal to me one bit.
+I'd as soon have you tend to all the things in town."
+
+"But you'd get a ride, if you waited--"
+
+"I hate a horse, anyway--"
+
+"You've surely changed a lot since the war."
+
+"I was thrown off not long ago--and have been leery of the dum things
+ever since. I'd walk, sooner than ride, even if I did have a horse. So
+you roll me that big Hudson Bay blanket and give me a couple of day's
+rations. I'll make a pack for my back that I can't feel. Then you strike
+off into town."
+
+Without especial enthusiasm Ben agreed. Ezram gave a great sigh of
+satisfaction. He had put through the deal: Ben's secret thought was that
+Ezram's curiosity--always a pronounced trait with the old--had mastered
+him, and he could not wait longer to explore the mine. Not one glimpse
+of the truth as to Ezram's real reason for desiring to push on alone as
+much as occurred to him.
+
+Ezram was wholly deliberate. He knew what waited him on arrival at his
+brother's claim. Jeffery Neilson and his gang had assembled there, had
+already jumped the claim just as his brother had warned him that they
+would do; and coolly and quietly he had resolved to face them alone.
+They were desperate men, not likely to be driven from the gold by
+threats or persuasion only. But there was no law in his life, no precept
+in his code, whereby he could subject his young partner to the risk.
+
+It was true that the desire to arrive on the scene at the earliest
+possible moment had been a factor in his decision. One of them could
+hurry on, unimpeded by the pack animals, and the other must linger to
+secure their supplies; and there could really be no question, in Ezram's
+mind, which should go and which should stay. He had known perfectly that
+if Ben had realized the true need for haste, he would never have
+submitted so tamely to Ezram's will. The old man knew Wolf Darby. The
+strong dark eyes in the lean, raw-boned face reassured him as to this
+knowledge. Ben would go too, if he knew the truth. Likely he would
+insist on going alone.
+
+Ezram had decided the whole thing in a flash, realizing that a lone
+pedestrian would be practically as effective in dealing with the
+usurpers as two horsemen, impeded by the pack animals. If they didn't
+shoot to kill at first sight of him Ezram would have time in plenty to
+seek refuge in the forest and do a sharpshooter's business that would
+fill his old heart with joy. And there really wasn't any question as to
+which of the two should go. Their partnership was of long duration;
+their comradeship was deep; Ben was young, and Ezram himself was old!
+
+Ezram made his decision entirely casually, and he would have been
+surprised out of his wits if any one had expressed wonder of it. He knew
+no self-pity or sentimentality, only the knowledge that he did not
+desire that his young buddy should be shot full of holes in the first
+moment of play. The only fear that had visited him was that Ben might
+catch on and not let him go. And now he could scarcely restrain his
+triumphant chuckles in Ben's hearing.
+
+He made his pack--a few simple provisions wrapped in his blanket--and a
+knife and camp axe swung on his belt. He took his trusted pipe--because
+he knew well that he could never acquit himself creditably in a fight
+without a few lungfuls of tobacco smoke first--and he also took his
+rifle. "You'll be gettin' my brother's gun when you get to Snowy Gulch,"
+he explained, "and I may see game on the way out. And you keep this copy
+of the letter." He handed Ben the copy he had made of Hiram's will. "I'm
+the worst hand for losin' things you ever seen."
+
+"You're sure you've got the directions straight?"
+
+"Sure.--And I guess that's all."
+
+They said their simple good-bys, shaking hands over a pile of stores.
+"I've only got one decent place to keep things safe," Ezra confided,
+"and that ain't so all-fired decent, either. When I get any papers that
+are extra precious, I always stick 'em down the leg of these high old
+boots, between the sock and the leather. But it's too much work to take
+the boot off now, so you keep the letter."
+
+"I suppose you've got a million-dollar bank note hidden down there now,"
+Ben remarked.
+
+"No, not a cent. Just the same, if ever I get shuffled off all of a
+sudden--rollin' down one of these mountains, say--I want you to look
+there mighty careful. There may be a document or two of
+importance--letter to my old home, and all that."
+
+"I won't forget," Ben promised.
+
+"See that you don't." They shook hands again, lightly and happily. "So
+good-by, son, and--'_take keer of yerself_!'"
+
+The old man turned away, and soon his withered figure vanished into the
+thickets farther up the river. He was following a fairly well-worn moose
+trail, and he went swiftly. Soon he was out of hearing of the sound of
+the great river.
+
+Then the little woods people--marten and ermine and rodent and such
+other small forest creatures that--who can say?--might watch with
+exceeding interest the travelers on the trails, could have thought that
+old Ezram was already fatigued. He sat down beside a tree and drew a
+soiled sheet of paper from his pocket. Searching further he found then
+the stub of a pencil. Then he wrote.
+
+Having written he unlaced his boot on the right foot, folded the paper,
+and thrust it into the bootleg. Then, relacing the shoe, he arose and
+journeyed blithely on.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+On arriving in Snowy Gulch, Ben's first efforts were to inquire in
+regard to horses. Both pack and saddle animals, he learned, were to be
+hired of Sandy McClurg, the owner of the general store and leading
+citizen of the village; and at once he made his way to confer with him.
+
+"Most of my mustangs are rented out," the merchant informed him when
+they met in the rear of the general store, "but if you can get along
+with three, I guess I can fix you up. You can pack two of 'em, and ride
+the third."
+
+"Good enough," Ben agreed. "And after I once get in, I'd like to turn
+back two of them, and maybe all three--to save the hire and the bother
+of taking care of them. I suppose, after the fashion of cayuses, they'll
+leg it right home."
+
+"Just a little faster than a dog. Horses don't much care to grub their
+food out of them spruce forests. They're good plugs, so of course I
+don't want to rent 'em to any one who'll abuse 'em, or take 'em on too
+hard trips. Where are you heading, if the question's fair?"
+
+"Through Spruce Pass and down into the Yuga River."
+
+"Prospecting, eh? There's been quite a movement down that way lately,
+considering it never was anything but a pocket country. By starting
+early you can make it through in a day. And you said your name was--"
+
+"Darby. Ben Darby."
+
+The merchant opened his eyes. "Not the Ben Darby that took all the
+prizes at the meet at Lodge Pole--"
+
+Ben's rugged face lit with the brilliancy of his smile. "The same
+Darby," he admitted.
+
+"Well, well! I hope you'll excuse them remarks about abusing the horses.
+If I had known who you was, 'Wolf' Darby, I'd have known you knew how to
+take care of cayuses. Take 'em for as long as you want, or where you
+want. And when did you say you was going?"
+
+"First thing to-morrow."
+
+"Well, you're pretty likely to have companionship on the road, too.
+There is another party that is going up that way either to-morrow or the
+day after. Pretty lucky for you."
+
+"I'm glad of it, if he isn't a tenderfoot. That must be a pretty thickly
+settled region--where I'm heading."
+
+"On the contrary, there's only three human beings in the whole
+district--and there's a thousand of square miles back of it without even
+one. These three are some men that went up that way prospecting some
+time ago, and this other party will make four." He paused, smiling.
+"Yes, I think you will enjoy this trip to-morrow, after you see who it
+is. I'd enjoy it, and I'm thirty years older than you are."
+
+Ben's thought was elsewhere, and he only half heard. "All right--I'll be
+here before dawn to-morrow and get the horses. And now will you tell
+me--where Steve Morris lives? I've got some business with him."
+
+"Right up the street--clear to the end of the row." McClurg's humor had
+quite engulfed him by now, and he chuckled again. "And if I was you,
+I'd stop in the door just this side--and get acquainted with your fellow
+traveler."
+
+"What's his name?" Ben asked.
+
+"The party is named Neilson."
+
+Unfortunately the name had no mental associations for Ben. It wakened no
+interest or stirred no memories. He had read the letter the copy of
+which he carried but once, and evidently the name of the man Ezram had
+been warned against had made no lasting impression on Ben's mind.
+
+"All right. Maybe I'll look him up."
+
+Ben turned, then made his way up the long, straggly row of unpainted
+shacks that marked the village street. A few moments later he was
+standing in the Morris home, facing the one friend that Hiram Melville
+had possessed on earth.
+
+Ben stated his case simply. He was the partner of Hiram's brother, he
+said, and he had been designated to take care of Fenris and such other
+belongings as Hiram had left. Morris studied his face with the quiet,
+far-seeing eyes of a woodsman.
+
+"You've got means of identification?" he asked.
+
+Ben realized with something of a shock that he had none at all. The
+letter he carried was merely a copy without Hiram's signature; besides,
+he had no desire to reveal its contents. For an instant he was
+considerably embarrassed. But Morris smiled quietly.
+
+"I guess I won't ask you for any," he said. "Hiram didn't leave
+anything, far as I know, except his old gun and his pet. Lord knows, I'd
+let anybody take that pet of his that's fool enough to say he's got any
+claim to him, and you can be sure I ain't going to dispute his claim."
+
+"Fenris, then, is,--something of a problem?"
+
+"The worst I ever had. His old gun is a good enough weapon, but I'm
+willing to trust you with it to get rid of Fenris. If you don't turn out
+to be the right man, I'll dig up for the gun--and feel lucky at that. I
+won't be able to furnish another Fenris, though, and I guess nobody'll
+be sorry. And if I was you--I'd take him out in a nice quiet place and
+shoot him."
+
+He turned, with the intention of securing the gun from an inner room. He
+did not even reach the door. It was as if both of them were struck
+motionless, frozen in odd, fixed attitudes, by a shrill scream for help
+that penetrated like a bullet the thin walls of the house.
+
+Instinctively both of them recognized it, unmistakably, as the piercing
+cry of a woman in great distress and terror. It rose surprisingly high,
+hovered a ghastly instant, and then was almost drowned out and
+obliterated by another sound, such a sound as left Ben only wondering
+and appalled.
+
+The sound was in the range between a growl and a bay, instantly
+identifying itself as the utterance of an animal, rather than a human
+being. And it was savage and ferocious simply beyond power of words to
+tell. Ben's first thought was of some enormous, vicious dog, and yet his
+wood's sense told him that the utterance was not that of a dog. Rather
+it contained that incredible fierceness and savagery that marks the
+killing cries of the creatures of the wild.
+
+He heard it even as he leaped through the door in answer to the scream
+for aid. His muscles gathered with that mysterious power that had always
+sustained him in his moments of crisis. He took the steps in one leap,
+Morris immediately behind him.
+
+"Fenris is loose," he heard the man say. "He'll kill some one----!"
+
+Ben could still hear the savage cries of the animal, seemingly from
+just behind the adjoining house. A girl's terrified voice still called
+for help. And deeply appalled by the sounds, Ben wished that the rifle,
+such a weapon as had been his trust since early boyhood, was ready and
+loaded in his hands.
+
+He raced about the house; and at once the scene, in every vivid detail,
+was revealed to him. Pressed back against the wall of a little woodshed
+that stood behind her house a girl stood at bay,--a dark-eyed girl whose
+beautiful face was drawn and stark-white with horror. She was screaming
+for aid, her fascinated gaze held by a gray-black, houndlike creature
+that crouched, snarling, twenty yards distant.
+
+Evidently the creature was stealing toward her in stealthy advance more
+like a stalking cat than a frenzied hound. Nor was this creature a
+hound, in spite of the similarity of outline. Such fearful, lurid
+surface-lights as all of them saw in its fierce eyes are not
+characteristic of the soft, brown orbs of the dog, ancient friend to
+man, but are ever the mark of the wild beast of the forest. The fangs
+were bared, gleaming in foam, the hair stood erect on the powerful
+shoulders; and instantly Ben recognized its breed. It was a magnificent
+specimen of that huge, gaunt runner of the forests, the Northern wolf.
+Evidently from the black shades of his fur he was partly of the Siberian
+breed of wolves that beforetime have migrated down on the North American
+side of Bering Sea.
+
+A chain was attached to the animal's collar, and this in turn to a stake
+that had been freshly pulled from the ground. This beast was
+Fenris,--the woods creature that old Hiram Melville had raised from
+cubdom.
+
+There could be no doubt as to the reality of the girl's peril. The
+animal was insane with the hunting madness, and he was plainly stalking
+her, just as his fierce mother might have stalked a fawn, across the
+young grass. Already he was almost near enough to leap, and the girl's
+young, strong body could be no defense against the hundred and fifty
+pounds of wire sinew and lightning muscle that constituted the wolf. The
+bared fangs need flash but once for such game as this. And yet, after
+the first, startled glance, Ben Darby felt himself complete master of
+the situation.
+
+No man could tell him why. No fact of his life would have been harder to
+explain, no impulse in all his days had had a more inscrutable origin.
+The realization seemed to spring from some cool, sequestered knowledge
+hidden deep in his spirit. He knew, in one breathless instant, that he
+was the master--and that the girl was safe.
+
+He seemed to know, again, that he had found his ordained sphere. He knew
+this breed,--this savage, blood-mad, fierce-eyed creature that turned,
+snarling, at his approach. He had something in common with the breed,
+knowing their blood-lusts and their mighty moods; and dim, dreamlike
+memory reminded him that he had mastered them in a long war that went
+down to the roots of time. Fenris was only a fellow wilderness creature,
+a pack brother of the dark forests, and he had no further cause for
+fear.
+
+"Fenris!" he ordered sharply. "Come here!" His voice was commanding and
+clear above the animal's snarls.
+
+There followed a curious, long instant of utter silence and infinite
+suspense. The girl's scream died on her lips: the wolf stood tense,
+wholly motionless. Morris, who had drawn his knife and had prepared to
+leap with magnificent daring upon the wolf, turned with widening eyes,
+instinctively aware of impending miracle. Ben's eyes met those of the
+wolf, commanding and unafraid.
+
+"Down, Fenris," Ben said again. "Down!"
+
+Then slowly, steadily, Ben moved toward him. Watching unbelieving,
+Morris saw the fierce eyes begin to lose their fire. The stiff hair on
+the shoulders fell into place, tense muscle relaxed. He saw in wonder
+that the animal was trembling all over.
+
+Ben stood beside him now, his hand reaching. "Down, down," he cautioned
+quietly. Suddenly the wolf crouched, cowering, at his feet.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+Ben straightened to find himself under a wondering scrutiny by both
+Morris and the girl. "Good Lord, Darby!" the former exclaimed. "How did
+you do it--"
+
+Now that the suspense was over, Ben himself stood smiling, quite at
+ease. "Can't say just how. I just felt that I could--I've always been
+able to handle animals. He's tame, anyway."
+
+"Tame, is he? You ought to have had to care for him the last few weeks,
+and you'd think tame. Not once have I dared go in reach of his rope. And
+there he is, crouched at your feet! I was always dreading he'd get
+away--" Morris paused, evidently remembering the girl. "Beatrice, are
+you hurt?"
+
+The girl moved toward them. "No. He didn't touch me. But you came just
+in time--" The girl's voice wavered; and Ben stepped to her side. "I'm
+all right now--"
+
+"But you'd better sit down," Ben advised quietly. "It was enough to
+scare any one to death--"
+
+"Any one--but you--" the girl replied, her voice still unsteady. But she
+paused when she saw the warm color spread over Ben's rugged, brown face.
+And his embarrassment was real. Naturally shy and unassuming, such
+effusive praise as this always disturbed him--just as it would have
+embarrassed any really masculine man alive. Women, more extravagant in
+speech and loving flattery with a higher ardor, would have found it hard
+to believe how really distressed he was; but Morris, an outdoor man to
+the core, understood completely. Besides, Ben knew that the praise was
+not deserved. Excessive bravery had played no part in the scene of a
+moment before. He had been brave just as far as Morris was brave,
+leaping freely in response to a call for help: the same degree of
+bravery that can be counted on in most men, over the face of the earth.
+Bravery does not lie alone in facing danger: there must also be the
+consciousness of danger, the conquest of fear. In this case Ben had felt
+no fear. He knew with a sure, true knowledge that he was master of the
+wolf. He knew the wolf's response to his words before ever he spoke. And
+now all the words in the language could not convey to these others
+whence that knowledge had come.
+
+He vaguely realized that this had always been some way part of his
+destiny,--the imposition of his will over the beasts of the forest. He
+had never tried to puzzle out why, knowing that such trial would be
+unavailing. He had instinctively understood such creatures as these.
+To-day he felt that he knew the wild, fierce heart beating in the lean
+breast as a man might know his brother's heart. The bond between them
+was hidden from his sight, something back of him, beyond him, enfolded
+within a secret self that was mysterious as a dream, and it reached into
+the countless years; yet it was real, an ancient relationship that was
+no less intimate because it could not be named. In turn, the wolf had
+seemed to know that this tall form was a born habitant of the forests,
+even as himself, one that would kill him as unmercifully as he himself
+would kill a fall, and whose dark eyes, swept with fire, and whose cool,
+strong words must never be disobeyed.
+
+"You never seen this wolf before?" Morris asked him, calling him from
+his revery.
+
+"Never."
+
+"Then you must be old Hiram's brother himself, to control him like you
+did. Lord, look at him. Crouching at your feet."
+
+Suddenly Ben reached and took the wolf's head between his hands. Slowly
+he lifted the savage face till their eyes met. The wolf growled, then,
+whimpering, tried to avert its gaze. Then a rough tongue lapped at the
+man's hand.
+
+"There's nothing to be afraid of, now," he told the girl.
+
+"He's right, Beatrice," Morris agreed. "He's tamed him. Even I can see
+that much. And I never saw anything like it, since the day I was born."
+
+It was true: as far as Ben was concerned, the terrible Fenris--named by
+a Swedish trapper, acquaintance of Hiram Melville's, for the dreadful
+wolf of Scandinavian legend--was tamed. He had found a new master; Ben
+had won a servant and friend whose loyalty would never waver as long as
+blood flowed in his veins and breath surged in his lungs. "Lay still,
+now, Fenris," he ordered. "Don't get up till I tell you."
+
+It seems to be true that as a rule the lower animals catch the meaning
+of but few words; usually the tone of the voice and the gesture that
+accompanies it interpret a spoken order in a dog's brain. On this
+occasion, it was as if Fenris had read his master's thought. He lay
+supine, his eyes intent on Ben's rugged face.
+
+And now, for the first time, Ben found himself regarding Beatrice. He
+could scarcely take his eyes from her face. He knew perfectly that he
+was staring rudely, but he was without the power to turn his eyes. Her
+dark eyes fell under his gaze.
+
+The truth was that Ben's life had been singularly untouched by the
+influence of women. Mostly his life had been spent in the unpeopled
+forest, away from women of all kinds; and such creatures as had admired
+him in Seattle's underworld had never got close to him. He had had many
+dreams; but some way it had never been credible to him that he should
+ever know womanhood as a source of comradeship and happiness. Love and
+marriage had always seemed infinitely apart from his wild, adventurous
+life.
+
+In his days in prison he had given up all dream of this happiness; but
+now he could begin to dream again. Everything was changed now that he
+had come home. The girl's regard for him was friendly, even somewhat
+admiring, and the speculations of ripening womanhood were in her eyes.
+He returned her gaze with frankest interest and admiration. His senses
+had been made sharp in his wilderness life; and his respect for her grew
+apace. She was not only innocent and girlish; she had those traits,
+innate, that a strong man loves in women: such worth and depth of
+character as he wishes bequeathed to his children.
+
+Ben drew a long breath. It was good to be home. He had not only found
+his forests, just as he had left them, but now again he was among the
+forest people. This girl was of his own breed, not a stranger; her
+standards were his; she was a woods girl no less than he was a woodsman.
+It is good to be among one's own people, those who can follow through
+and understand. She too knew the urge of unbridled vitality and spirit,
+common to all the woods children; and life's vivid meaning was her
+inheritance, no less than his. Her arms and lips were warm from
+fast-flowing blood, her nerves were vibrant and singing like his own. A
+virgin still, her eyes were tender with the warmheartedness that is such
+a dominant trait of frontier peoples; but what fire, what passion might
+burn in them to-morrow! They were dark, lovely eyes, rather somber now
+in their earnestness, seeming shadowed by the dark shadows of the spruce
+themselves.
+
+No human face had ever given him such an image of beauty as that of this
+dark-eyed forest child before him. Yet she was not piquant, demure, like
+the girls he had met in France; not stylish and sophisticated like those
+of the great cities he had visited since his return. Her garb became
+her: simple, not holding the eye in itself but calling attention to the
+brunette beauty of her throat and face, the warm redness of her childish
+mouth, and the brown, warm color of her arms. She had dark, waving hair,
+lovely to touch, wistful red lips. Because he was the woodsman, now and
+always, he marked with pleasure that there was no indication of
+ill-health or physical weakness about her. Her body was lithe and
+strong, with the grace of the wild creatures.
+
+It would be good to know her, and walk beside her in the tree aisles.
+All manner of delectable possibilities occurred to him. But all at once
+he checked his dreams with an iron will.
+
+There must be no thought of women in his life--for now. He still had his
+way to make. A few hours more would find him plunging deeper into the
+forest, perhaps never to see her again. He felt an all-pervading sense
+of regret.
+
+"There's nothing I can say--to thank you," the girl was murmuring. "I
+never saw anything like it; it was just as if the wolf understood every
+word you said."
+
+"Old Hiram had him pretty well trained, I suspect." The man's eyes fell
+to the shaggy form at his feet. "I'm glad I happened along Miss--"
+
+"Miss Neilson," the girl prompted him. "Beatrice Neilson. I live here."
+
+Neilson! His mind seemed to leap and catch at the name. Just that day he
+had heard it from the lips of the merchant. And this was the house next
+door where dwelt his fellow traveler for the morrow.
+
+"Then it's your father--or brother--who's going to the Yuga--"
+
+"No," the girl answered doubtfully. "My father is already there. I'm
+here alone--"
+
+Then the gray eyes lighted and a smile broke about Ben's lips. Few times
+in his life had he smiled in quite this vivid way.
+
+"Then it's you," he exulted, "who is going to be my fellow traveler
+to-morrow!"
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+Ben found, rather as he had expected, that the girl was not at all
+embarrassed by the knowledge that they were to have a lonely all-day
+ride together. She looked at the matter from a perfectly natural and
+wholesome point of view, and she could see nothing in it amiss or
+improper. The girls of the frontier rarely feel the need of chaperones.
+Their womanhood comes early, and the open places and the
+fresh-life-giving air they breathe give them a healthy confidence in
+their ability to take care of themselves. Beatrice had a pistol, and she
+could shoot it like a man. She loved the solitude of the forest, but she
+also knew it was good to hear the sound of a human voice when journeying
+the lonely trails.
+
+The frontier had also taught her to judge men. Here foregathered many
+types, strong-thewed frontiersmen whose reverence for women surpassed,
+perhaps, that of any other class of men on earth, as well as the most
+villainous renegades, brutish offspring of the wilds, but she knew them
+apart. She realized from the first that this tall woodsman would have
+only kindness and respect for her; and that he was to be trusted even in
+those lonely forest depths beyond Spruce Pass.
+
+Ben knew the wild beasts of the field better than he knew women, so her
+actual reception of the plan was lost to him. He felt that she was not
+displeased: in reality the delight and anticipation she felt were beyond
+any power of hers to tell. She had been tremendously thrilled and
+impressed by his dominance over the wolf. She liked his bright, steady,
+friendly eyes; because she was a woods girl her heart leaped at the
+sight of his upright, powerful body; but most of all she felt that he
+was very near indeed to an ideal come true, a man of terrific strength
+and prowess yet not without those traits that women love best in
+men,--courage and character and gentleness.
+
+"I'm surely glad I'm going to have a companion," he told her. "I won't
+miss Ez--"
+
+But just then remembrance came to him, cutting the word off short. The
+letter he carried in his pocket contained certain advice in regard to
+silence, and perhaps now was a good time to follow it. There was no need
+to tell the people of Snowy Gulch about Ezram and the claim. He
+remembered that he had been warned of the danger of claim jumpers.
+
+For an instant his mind seemed to hover at the edge of a more elusive
+memory; but he could not quite seize upon it. He only knew that it
+concerned the matter in hand, and that it left him vaguely troubled.
+
+"You were saying," the girl prompted him.
+
+"Nothing very important--except how glad I am you are going my way. The
+woods are certainly lonesome by yourself. I suppose you'll be willing to
+make an early start."
+
+"The earlier the better. I've got a long way to go."
+
+They made their plans, and soon they parted to complete preparations for
+the journey. The girl went into her house: Ben took the rifle, and
+followed by the wolf, struck down the main street of the village.
+
+It can be said for Ben that he aroused no little conjecture and interest
+in the minds of the townspeople, striding through the street with the
+savage woods creature following abjectly at his heels. Evidently Ben's
+conquest was complete: the animal obeyed his every command as quickly
+as an intelligent dog. It was noticeable, however, that even the
+hardiest citizens kept an apprehensive eye on the wolf during the course
+of any conversation with Ben.
+
+He bought supplies--flour and salt and a few other essentials--simple
+tools and utensils such as are carried by prospectors, blankets, shells
+for his rifle, and a few, simple, hard-wearing clothes. He went to bed
+dead tired, his funds materially reduced. But before dawn he was up,
+wholly refreshed; and after a hasty breakfast went to pack his horses
+for the trip.
+
+Beatrice came stealing out of the shadows, more than ever suggestive of
+some timid creature of the forest, and the three of them saddled and
+packed the animals. As daylight broke they started out, down the
+shadowed street of the little town.
+
+"The last we'll see of civilization for a long, long time," the girl
+reminded him.
+
+The man thrilled deeply. "And I'm glad of it," he answered. "Nothing
+ahead but the long trail!"
+
+It was a long trail, that which they followed along Poor Man's creek in
+the morning hours. The girl led, by right of having some previous
+acquaintance with the trail. The three pack horses walked in file
+between, heads low, tails whisking; and Ben, with Fenris at his horse's
+hoofs, brought up the rear. Almost at once the spruce forest dropped
+over them, the silence and the gloom that Ben had known of old.
+
+This was not like gliding in a boat down-river. The narrow, winding
+trail offered a chance for the most intimate study of the wilderness.
+From the river the woodsfolk were but an occasional glimpse, the stir of
+a thicket on the bank: here they were living, breathing
+realities,--vivid pictures perfectly framed by the frosty green of the
+spruce.
+
+From the first mile these two riders were the best of companions. They
+talked gaily, their voices carrying to each other with entire ease
+through the still glades. He found her spirited, warm-hearted,
+responding with an eager gladness to every fresh manifestation of the
+wild; and in spite of his gay laughter she read something of the dark
+moodiness and intensity that were his dominant traits. But he was kind,
+too. His attitude toward the Little People met with on the trail--the
+little, scurrying folk--was particularly appealing: like that of a
+strong man toward children. She saw that he was sympathetic,
+instinctively chivalrous; and she got past his barrier of reserve as few
+living beings had ever done before.
+
+She saw at once that he was an expert horseman. Riding a half-broken
+mustang over the winding, brush-grown moose trails of the North is not
+like cantering a thoroughbred along a park avenue, and a certain amount
+of difficulty is the rule rather than the exception; but he controlled
+his animal as no man of her acquaintance had ever done. He rode a bay
+mare that was not, by a long way, the most reliable piece of horseflesh
+McClurg owned, yet she gave him the best she had in her, scrambling with
+a burst of energy on the pitches, leaping the logs, battling the mires,
+and obeying his every wish. The joy of the Northern trails depends
+largely upon the service rendered by the horse between one's knees, and
+Ben knew it to the full.
+
+Before the first two hours were past Beatrice found herself thrilling
+with admiration at Ben's woodcraft. Not only by experience but by
+instinct and character he was wholly fitted for life in the waste
+places. Just as some artists are born with the soul of music, he had
+come to the earth with the Red Gods at his beck and call; the spirit of
+the wild things seemed to move in his being. She didn't wholly
+understand. She only knew that this man, newly come from "The States,"
+riding so straight and talking so gaily behind her, had qualities native
+to the forest that were lacking not only in her, but in such men as her
+father and Ray Brent. Seemingly he had inherited straight from the
+youngest days of the earth those traits by which aboriginal man
+conquered the wild.
+
+The first real manifestation of this truth occurred soon after they
+reached the bank of Poor Man's creek. All at once he had shouted at her
+and told her to stop her horse. She drew up and turned in her saddle,
+questioning.
+
+"There's something stirring in the thicket beside you. Don't you hear
+him?"
+
+Beatrice had sharp ears, but she strained in vain for the sound that,
+forty feet farther distant, Ben heard easily. She shook her head, firmly
+believing his imagination had led him astray. But an instant later a
+coyote--one of those gray skulkers whose waging cries at twilight every
+woodfarer knows--sprang out of his covert and darted away.
+
+Beatrice was amazed. The significance of the incident went further than
+the fact of mere good hearing. The coyote, except when he chooses to
+wail out his wrongs at the fall of night, is one of the forest shadows
+for silence--yet Ben had heard him. It meant nothing less than that
+strange quickening of the senses found in but few--master woodsmen--that
+is the especial trait and property of the beasts themselves.
+
+Now that they climbed toward Spruce Pass their talk died away, and more
+and more they yielded themselves to the hushed mood of the forest. Their
+trail was no longer clearly pronounced. It was a wilderness
+thoroughfare in the true sense,--a winding path made by the feet of the
+great moose journeying from valley to valley.
+
+Wild life became ever more manifest. They saw the grouse, Franklin's
+fowl so well beloved by tenderfeet because of their propensity to sit
+still under fire and give an unsteady marksman a second shot. Fool hens,
+the woodsman called them, and the motley and mark of their weak
+mentality were a red badge near the eye. The fat birds perched on the
+tree limbs over the trail, relying on their mottled plumage, blending
+perfectly with the dull grays and browns of the foliage, to keep them
+out of sight. But such wiles did not deceive Ben. And once, in provision
+for their noon lunch, a fat cock tumbled through the branches at
+Beatrice's pistol shot.
+
+The pine squirrels seemed to be having some sort of a competitive field
+meet, and the tricks they did in the trees above the trail filled the
+two riders with delight. They sped up and down the trunks; they sprang
+from limb to limb; they flicked their tails and turned their heads
+around backward and stood on their haunches, all the time chattering in
+the greatest excitement. Once a porcupine--stupid, inoffensive old Urson
+who carries his fort around on his back--rattled his quills in a near-by
+thicket; and once they caught a glimpse of a mule deer on the hillside.
+This was rather too cold and hard a country, however, to be beloved by
+deer. Mostly they dwelt farther upriver.
+
+All manner of wild creatures, great and small, had left signs on the
+trails. There were tracks of otter and mink, those two river hunters
+whose skins, on ladies' shoulders, are better known than the animals
+themselves. They might be only patches of fur in cities, but they were
+living, breathing personages here. Particularly they were personages to
+the trout. Ben knew perfectly how the silver fish had learned to dart
+with such rapidity in the water. They learned it keeping out of the way
+of the otter and the mink.
+
+They saw the tracks of marten--the mink that has gone into the tree tops
+to live; the doglike imprints of a coyote at which Fenris whimpered and
+scratched in excitement (doubtless wishing to run him down and bite him,
+as is the usual reception to the detested coyote by the more important
+woods creatures) and once the fresh mud showed that an old grizzly--the
+forest monarch, the ancient, savage despot of the woods of which all
+foresters, near and far, speak with deep respect--had passed that way
+but a few minutes before. Foresters both, the two riders had every
+reason to believe that the old gray tyrant was lurking somewhere in the
+thickets beside the trail, half in anger, half in curiosity watching
+them ride past. And of course the tracks of moose, and of their fellows
+of mighty antlers, the caribou, were in profusion.
+
+To all these things Beatrice responded with the joy of a true nature
+lover. Her heart thrilled and her eyes were bright; and every new track
+was a fresh surprise and delight. But Ben was affected more deeply
+still. The response he made had its origin and font in deeply hidden
+centers of his spirit; mysterious realms that no introspection could
+reveal or words lay bare.
+
+He knew nothing of Beatrice's sense of constant surprise. In his own
+heart he had known that all these woodspeople would be waiting for
+him--just as they were--and he would have known far greater amazement to
+have found some of them gone. And instead of sprightly delight he knew
+only an all-pervading sense of comfort, as a man feels upon returning to
+his home country, among the people whom he knows and understands.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+At the very headquarters of Poor Man's Creek, where the stream had
+dwindled to a silver thread between mossy banks, Beatrice and Ben made
+their noon camp. They were full in the heart of the wild, by now, and
+had mounted to those high levels and park lands beloved by the caribou.
+They built a small fire beside the stream and drew water from the deep,
+clear pools that lay between cascade and cascade.
+
+Ben Darby slowly became aware that this was one of the happiest hours
+of his life. He watched, with absorbed delight, the deft, sure motions
+of the girl as she fried the grouse and sliced bread, while Ben
+himself tended to the coffee. Already the two were on the friendliest
+terms, and since they were to be somewhere in the same region, the
+future offered the most pleasing vistas to both of them. When the
+horses were rested and Ben's pipe was out, they ventured on. Following
+a caribou trail, they ascended a majestic range of mountains--a trail
+too steep to ride and which the pack horses accomplished only with
+great difficulty--emerging onto a high plateau of open parks and small
+clumps of the darkest spruce. It was, of course, the most scenic part
+of the journey; and the inclination to talk died speedily from the
+lips.
+
+They rode in silence, watching. Both of them were sure that words, no
+matter how beautiful and eloquent, could be only a sacrilege. The very
+tone of the high ranges is that of silence vast and eternal beyond scope
+of thought, and the only sounds that can fittingly shatter that mighty
+breathlessness are the great, calamitous phenomena of nature,--the
+thunder crashing in the sky and the avalanche on the slope. The forests
+they had just left were deeply silent, but the far hush had been
+alleviated by the soft noises of wild creatures stirring about their
+occupations; perhaps also by the feeling that the thickets were full of
+sound pitched just too high or just too low for human ears to hear; but
+even this relief was absent here. The high peaks stretched before them,
+one after another, until they faded into the horizon,--majestic, aloof,
+utterly and grandly silent.
+
+The snow still lay deep over the plateau, packed to the consistency of
+ice, and the marmots had not yet emerged to welcome the spring with
+their shrill, joyous whistling. From their high place they could see the
+hills spread out below them,--fold after fold as of a great cloak,
+deeply green, seemingly infinite in expanse, broken only by the blue
+glint of the Agnes lakes, like two great twin sapphires hidden in the
+forest. But they couldn't make out a single roof top of Snowy Gulch. The
+forest had already claimed it utterly.
+
+This was the caribou range; wherever they looked they saw the tracks of
+the noble animals in the snow. Later they caught a glimpse of the
+creatures themselves, a small herd of perhaps half a dozen swinging
+along the snow in their indescribable pacing gait. They were in fitting
+surroundings, their color inexpressibly vivid against the snow, and
+Ben's heart warmed and thumped in his breast at the sight.
+
+But the trail descended at last into the great valley of the Yuga. Mile
+after mile, it seemed to them, they went down, leaving the snow, leaving
+the open glades, into the dark, still glens of spruce. At last they
+paused on the river bank.
+
+Ben was somewhat amazed at the size of the stream when it emerged below
+the rapids. It was, at its present high stage, fully one hundred and
+fifty yards across, such a stream as would bear the traffic of commerce
+in any inhabited region. They turned down the moose trail that followed
+its bank.
+
+But it was not to be that this journey should hold only delight for Ben.
+A half-mile down the river he suddenly made a most momentous and
+disturbing discovery.
+
+He had stopped his horse to reread the copy of Hiram Melville's letter,
+intending to verify his course. In the shadow of the tall, dark
+spruce--darkening ever as the light grew less--his eye sped swiftly over
+it. His gaze came to rest upon a familiar name.
+
+"Look out for Jeff Neilson and his gang," the letter read. "They seen
+some of my dust."
+
+Neilson--no wonder Ben had been perplexed when Beatrice had first spoken
+her name. No wonder it had sounded familiar. And the hot beads moistened
+his brow when he conceived of all the dreadful possibilities of that
+coincidence of names.
+
+Yet because he was a woodsman of nature and instinct, blood and birth,
+he retained the most rigid self-control. He made no perceptible start.
+At first he did not glance at Beatrice. Slowly he folded the letter and
+put it back into his pocket.
+
+"I'm going all right," he announced. He urged his horse forward. His
+perfect self-discipline had included his voice: it was deep, but wholly
+casual and unshaken. "And how about you, Miss Neilson?"
+
+He pronounced her name distinctly, giving her every chance to correct
+him in case he had misunderstood her. But there was no hope here. "I'm
+going all right, I know."
+
+"It seems to me we must be heading into about the same country," Ben
+went on. "You see, Miss Neilson, I'm going to make my first permanent
+camp somewhere along this still stretch; I've had inside dope that
+there's big gold possibilities around here."
+
+"It has never been a gold country except for pockets, some of them
+remarkably rich," she told him doubtfully, evidently trying not to
+discourage him. "But my father has come to the conclusion that it's
+really worth prospecting. He's in this same country now."
+
+"I suppose I'll meet him--I'll likely meet him to-night when I take you
+to the cabin on the river. You said his name was--"
+
+"Jeffery Neilson."
+
+For all that he was prepared for it, the name was a straight-out body
+blow to Ben. He had still dared to hope that this girl was of no blood
+kin of the claim-jumper, Jeffery Neilson. The truth was now only too
+plain. By the girl's own word he was operating in Hiram Melville's
+district and unquestionably had already jumped the claim. His daughter
+was joining him now, probably to keep house for him; and for all that
+Ben knew, already possessing guilty knowledge of her father's crime.
+
+It was hard to hold the head erect, after that. Already he had builded
+much on his friendship with this girl, only to find that she was allied
+with the enemy camp. He saw in a flash how unlikely it would be that
+Ezram and himself could drive the usurpers out: the claim-jumper is a
+difficult problem, even when the original discoverer is living and in
+possession, much more so when he is silent in his grave.
+
+Ben had known the breed since boyhood, and he hated them as he hated
+coyotes and pack-rats. They lacked the manhood to brave the unknown in
+pursuit of the golden fleece; they waited until after years of grinding
+labor the strike was made and then pounced down upon the claim like
+vultures on the dead. Ben was glad he had not obeyed his impulse to tell
+the girl of his true reason for coming to the Yuga. He knew now, with
+many foes against him, he could best operate in the dark.
+
+His thought flashed to Ezram. The recovery of the mine had been the old
+man's fondest dream, the last hope of his declining years, and this
+setback would go hard with him. The blow was ever so much more cruel on
+Ezram's account than his own. Ben could picture his downcast face,
+trying yet to smile; his sobered eyes that he would try to keep bright.
+But there would be certain planning, when they met again over their camp
+fire. And there were three of them allied now. Fenris the wolf had come
+into his service.
+
+He glanced back at the gray-black creature that followed at the heels of
+his horse; and now, at twilight's graying, he saw that a significant and
+startling change had come over him. He no longer trotted easily behind
+them. He came stalking, almost as if in the hunt, his ears pointing, his
+neck hairs bristling, and there were the beginnings of curious, lurid
+lightnings in his eyes. There could be but one answer. He had been swept
+away in the current of madness that sweeps the forest at the fall of
+darkness: the age-old intoxication of the wilderness night. The hunting
+hours were at hand. The creatures of claw and fang were coming into
+their own. Fenris was shivering all over with those dark wood's passions
+that not even the wisest naturalist can fully understand.
+
+The air was tingling and electric, just as Ben recalled it a thousand
+nights. Everywhere the hunters were leaving their lairs and starting
+forth; grasses moved and brush-clumps rustled; blood was hot and savage
+eyes were shot with fire. The mink, with unspeakable savagery, took the
+trail of a snow-shoe rabbit beside the river-bed; a lynx with pale,
+green, luminous eyes began his stalk of a tree squirrel, and various of
+Fenris' fellows--pack brothers except for his own relations with
+men--sang a song that was old when the mountains were new as they raced,
+black in silhouette against the paling sky, along a snowy ridge.
+
+Ben felt a quickening of his own senses, not knowing why. _His_ blood,
+too, spurted inordinately fast through his veins, and his flesh seemed
+to creep and tingle. There could be no surer proof of his legitimacy as
+a son of the wilderness. The passions that maddened the first men, near
+to the beasts they hunted in their ancient forests, returned in all
+their fullness. The dusk deepened. The trail dimmed so that the eye had
+to strain to follow it.
+
+Complex and weird were the passions invoked to-night, but not even to
+the gray wolf that is, beyond all other creatures, the embodiment of the
+wilderness spirit, did there come such a madness, such a dark and
+terrible lust, as that which cursed a certain wayfarer beyond the next
+bend in the river. This was not one of the forest people, neither the
+lynx, nor the hunting otter, nor even the venerable grizzly with whom no
+one contests the trail. It was a human being,--a man of youthful body
+and strong, deeply lined, yet savage face.
+
+A close observer would have noticed the faintest tremor and shiver
+throughout his body. His eyes were very bright, vivid even in the dying
+day. He was deeply lost in his own mood, seemingly oblivious to the
+whole world about him. He carried a rifle in his hands.
+
+He was on his way to report to his chief; and just what would be
+forthcoming he did not know. But if too much objection were raised and
+affairs got to a crucial stage, he had nothing to fear. He had learned a
+certain lesson--an avenue to triumph. It was strange that he had never
+hit upon it before.
+
+His blood was scalding hot, and he was swept by exultation. Not for an
+instant had he hesitated, nor Would he ever hesitate again. There was no
+one in the North of greater might than he! No one could bend his will
+from now on. He had found the road to triumph.
+
+Ray Brent had discovered a new power within himself. Perhaps even his
+chief, Jeffery Neilson, must yield before his new-found strength.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+As twilight darkened to the full gloom of the forest night, Ben and
+Beatrice rode to a lonely cabin on the Yuga River,--one that had been
+built by Hiram Melville years past and was just at the mouth of the
+little creek on which, less than a half-mile distant, he had his claim.
+They had seen a lighted window from afar, marking the end of Beatrice's
+hard day's ride.
+
+"Of course you won't try to go on to-night?" she asked Ben. "You'll stay
+at the cabin?"
+
+"There likely won't be room for three," he answered. "But it's a clear
+night. I can make a fire and sleep out."
+
+It was true. The stars were emerging, faint points of light through the
+darkening canopy of the sky; and to the East a silver glint on the
+horizon forecast the rising moon.
+
+They halted at last; and Beatrice saw her father's form, framed in the
+doorway. She hastened into his arms: waiting in the darkness Ben could
+not help but hear his welcome. Many things were doubtful; but there
+could be no doubt of the love that Neilson bore his daughter. The
+amused, half-teasing words with which he received her did not in the
+least disguise it. "The joy and the light of his life," Ben commented to
+himself. The gray old claim-jumper had this to redeem him, at least.
+
+"But why so many horses, Beatrice?" he asked. "You--brought some one
+with you?"
+
+Ben was not so far distant that he failed to discern the instant change
+in Neilson's tone. It had a strained, almost an apprehensive quality
+such as few men had ever heard in his voice before. Plainly all visitors
+in this end of the mountains were regarded with suspicion.
+
+"He's a prospector--Mr. Darby," the girl replied. "Come here, Ben--and
+be introduced." She turned toward her new-found friend; and the latter
+walked near, into the light that streamed over him from the doorway.
+"This is my father, Mr. Darby--Mr. Neilson. Some one told him this was a
+good gold country."
+
+Ben had already decided upon his course of action and had his answer
+ready. He knew perfectly that it would only put Neilson on his guard if
+he stated his true position; and besides, he wanted word of Ezram. "I
+may have a wrong steer, Mr. Neilson," he said, "but a man I met down on
+the river-trail, out of Snowy Gulch, advised me to come here. He said
+that he had some sort of a claim up here that his brother left him, and
+though it was a pocket country, he thought there'd soon be a great rush
+up this way."
+
+"I hardly know who it could have been that you met," Neilson began
+doubtfully. "He didn't tell you his name--"
+
+"Melville. I believe that was it. And if you'll tell me how to find him,
+I'll try to go on to-night. I brought him some of his belongings from
+Snowy Gulch--"
+
+"Melville, eh? I guess I know who you mean now. But no--I don't know of
+any claim unless it's over east, beyond here. Maybe further down the
+river."
+
+Ben made no reply at once; but his mind sped like lightning. Of course
+Neilson was lying about the claim: he knew perfectly that at that moment
+he was occupying one of Hiram Melville's cabins. He was a first-class
+actor, too--his voice indicating scarcely no acquaintance with or
+interest in the name.
+
+"He hasn't come up this way?" Ben asked casually.
+
+"He hasn't come through here that I know of. Of course I'm working at my
+claim--with my partners--and he might have gone through without our
+seeing him. It seems rather unlikely."
+
+Ben was really puzzled now. If Ezram had already made his presence known
+and was camping somewhere in the hills about, there was no reason
+immediately evident why Neilson should deny his presence. Ben found
+himself wondering whether by any chance Ezram had been delayed along the
+trail, perhaps had even lost his way, and had not yet put in an
+appearance.
+
+"He told me, in the few minutes that I talked to him, that his cabin was
+somewhere close to this one--I thought he said up this creek."
+
+"There is a cabin up the creek a way," Neilson admitted, "but it isn't
+the one he meant. It's on my claim, and my two partners are living in
+it. But when he said near to this one, he might have meant ten miles.
+That's the way we Northern men speak of distance."
+
+There was nothing more to say, nothing to do at present. He said his
+farewells to the girl, refused an invitation to pass the night in the
+cabin, and made his way to the green bank of the stream. Four hundred
+yards from the cabin, and perhaps a like number from the cabin of Ray
+and Charley--obscured from both by the thickets--he pitched his camp.
+
+In the cabin he had left Jeffery Neilson catechized his daughter, trying
+to learn all he could concerning Ben. It was true that he carried the
+dead Hiram's rifle, and that the latter's pet wolf followed at his
+heels, but it was wholly probable that the old man, Hiram's brother,
+with whom he had conversed at the river, had designated him to get them.
+He had been courteous and respectful throughout the journey to the Yuga,
+Beatrice said, and he had also saved her from possible death in the
+fangs of the wolf the evening previous. Neilson decided that he would
+take no steps at present but merely wait and watch developments.
+
+Meanwhile Ben had made his fire and unpacked his horses. He confined his
+riding horse with a picket rope; the others he turned loose. Then he
+cooked a simple meal for himself and the gaunt servant at his heels.
+
+When the night had come down in full, and as he sat about the glowing
+coals of his supper fire, he had time to devote serious thought to the
+fate of Ezram. It occurred to him that perhaps the old man had
+discovered, at a distance, the presence of the claim-jumpers; and was
+merely waiting in the thickets for a chance to take action. If such were
+the case, sooner or later they could join their fortunes again. It was
+also easy to imagine that Ezram had lost his way on the journey out.
+
+He stood at the edge of the firelight, gazing out into the darkened
+forest. The wolf crouched beside him: alert, watching his face for any
+command. It was wholly plain that the gaunt woods creature had accepted
+him at once as his master; and that the bond between them, because of
+some secret similarity of spirit, was already far closer than between
+most masters and their pets.
+
+Ben sensed another side of the forest to-night because of his inborn
+love of the waste places not often seen. The thickets were menacing,
+sinister to-night. The spruce crept up to the skyline with darkness and
+mystery: he realized the eternal malevolence that haunts their silent
+fastnesses. They would have tricks in plenty to play on such as would
+lose their way on their dusky trails! Oh, they would have no mercy or
+remorse for any one who was lost, _out there_, to-night! Ben felt a
+heavy burden of dread!
+
+Even now, old Ezram might be wandering, vainly, through the gloomy,
+whispering woods, ever penetrating farther into their merciless
+solitudes. And no homes smoked in the clearings, no camps glowed in the
+immensity of the dark--out there. This was just the beginning of the
+forest; clear into the shadow of the Arctic Circle, where the woodlands
+gave way to the Weary wastes of barrens, there was no break, no tilled
+fields or fisher's villages, only an occasional Indian encampment which
+not even a wolf, running through the night, might find. His supply of
+food would quickly be exhausted, fatigue would break his valiant spirit.
+Ben planned an extensive search for his tracks as soon as the morning
+light permitted him to see.
+
+He missed the old man's comradeship with a deep and fervid longing. They
+had come to count on each other, these past weeks. It wasn't alone
+infinite gratitude that he felt for him now. The thing went too deep to
+tell. Yet there was no use seeking for him to-night.
+
+He turned to the wolf and dropped his hand upon the animal's shoulder.
+Fenris started, then quivered in ecstasy. "I wish I had your nose,
+to-night, old boy," Ben told him. "I'd find that old buddy of mine. I
+wish I had your eyes to see in the dark, and your legs to run. Fenris,
+do you know where he is?"
+
+The wolf turned his wild eyes toward his master's face, as if he were
+trying to understand.
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+Impelled by an urge within himself Ben suddenly knelt beside his lupine
+friend. He could not understand the flood of emotion, the vague sense of
+impending and dramatic events that stirred him to the quick. He only
+knew, with a knowledge akin to inspiration, that in Fenris lay the
+answer to his problem.
+
+The moment was misted over with a quality of unreality. In the east rose
+the moon, shining incredibly on the tree tops, showering down through
+the little rifts in the withholding branches, enchanting the place as by
+the weaving of a dream. The moon madness caught up Ben like a flame,
+enthralling him as never before. He knew that white sphere of old. And
+all at once he realized that here, at his knees, was one who knew it
+too,--with a knowledge as ancient and as infinite as his own. Not for
+nothing had the wolf breed lived their lives beneath it through the long
+roll of the ages. Its rising and its setting had regulated the hunting
+hours of the pack time without end; its beams had lighted the game
+trails where the gray band had bayed after the deer; its light had
+beheld, since the world was young, the rapturous mating of the old pack
+leader and his female. Fenris too knew the moon-madness; but unlike Ben
+he had a means of expression of the wonder and mystery and vague longing
+that thrilled his wild heart. No man who has heard the pack song to the
+moon could doubt this fact. It is a long, melancholy wail, poignant with
+the pain of living, but it tells what man can not.
+
+Ben knew, now, why he was a forester, a woodsman famed even among
+woodsmen. Most of his fellows had been tamed by civilization; they had
+lived beneath roofs instead of the canopy of heaven, and they had almost
+forgotten about the moon. Ben, on the other hand, was a recurrence of an
+earlier type, inheriting little from his immediate ancestors but
+reverting back a thousand centuries to the Cave and the Squatting Place.
+His nature was that of prehistoric man rather than that of the son of
+civilization; and in this lay the explanation for all that had set him
+apart from the great run of men and had made him the master woodsman
+that he was. And because his spirit was of the wildwood, because he also
+knew the magic of the moon, he was able to make this wildwood thing at
+his feet understand and obey his will.
+
+The world of to-day seemed to fade out for him and left only the wolf,
+its fierce eyes on his own. Time swung back, and this might have been a
+scene of forgotten ages,--the wolf, the human hunter, the smoldering
+camp fire, the dark, jagged line of spruce against the sky. It was thus
+at the edge of the ice. Wolf and man--both children of the wild--had
+understood each other then; and they could understand each other now.
+
+"Fenris, old boy," the man whispered. "Can you find him for me, Fenris?
+He's out there somewhere--" the man motioned toward the dark--"and I
+want him. Can you take me to him?"
+
+The wolf trembled all over, struggling to get his meaning. This was no
+creature of subordinate intelligence: the great wolf of the North. He
+had, besides the cunning of the wild hunters, the intelligence that is
+the trait of the whole canine breed. Nor did he depend on his sense of
+hearing alone. He watched his master's face, and more than that, he was
+tuned and keyed to those mysterious vibrations that carry a message from
+brain to brain no less clearly and swift than words themselves,--the
+secret wireless of the wild.
+
+"He's my buddy, old boy, and I want you to find him for me," Ben went
+on, more patiently. He searched his pockets, drawing out at last the
+copy of the letter Ezram had given him that morning, and, because the
+old man had carried it for many days, it could still convey a message to
+the keen nose of the wolf. He put it to the animal's nostrils, then
+pointed away into the darkness.
+
+Fenris followed the motion with his eyes; and presently his long body
+stiffened. Ben watched him, fascinated. Then the wolf sniffed at the
+paper again and trotted away into the night.
+
+In one leap Ben was on his feet, following him. The wolf turned once,
+saw that his master was at his heels, and sped on. They turned up a
+slight draw, toward the hillside.
+
+It became clear at once that Fenris was depending upon his marvelous
+sense of smell. His nose would lower to the ground, and sometimes he
+tacked back and forth, uncertainly. At such times Ben watched him with
+bated breath. But always he caught the scent again.
+
+Once more he paused, sniffing eagerly; then turned, whining. Just as
+clearly as if they had possessed a mutual language Ben understood: the
+animal had caught the clear scent at last. The wolf loped off, and his
+fierce bay rang through the hushed forest.
+
+It was a long-drawn, triumphant note; and the wild creatures paused in
+their mysterious, hushed occupations to listen. It was also significant
+that it made certain deadly inroads in the spirit of Ray Brent, sitting
+in his distant cabin. He marked the direction of the sound, and he
+cursed, half in awe, under his breath. He had always hated the gray
+rangers. They were the uncanny demons of the forest.
+
+Ben followed the running wolf as fast as he could; and in his eagerness
+he had no opportunity for conjecture as to what he would find at the end
+of the pursuit. Yet he did not believe for an instant this was a false
+trail. The wolf's deep, full-ringing bays were ever more urgent and
+excited, filling the forest with their uproar. But quite suddenly the
+silence closed down again, seemingly more deep and mysterious than ever.
+
+Ben's first sensation was one of icy terror that crept to the very
+marrow of his bones. He knew instantly that there was a meaning of
+dreadful portent in the abrupt cessation of the cries. He halted an
+instant, listening, but at first could hear no more than the throb of
+his heart in his breast and the whisper of his own troubled breathing.
+But presently, at a distance of one hundred yards, he distinguished the
+soft whining of the wolf.
+
+Fenris was no longer running! He had halted at the edge of a distant
+thicket. The cold sweat sprang out on Ben's forehead, and he broke into
+a headlong run.
+
+There was no later remembrance of traversing that last hundred yards.
+The hillside seemed to whip under his feet. He paused at last, just at
+the dark margin of an impenetrable thicket. The wolf whined
+disconsolately just beyond the range of his vision.
+
+"Ezram!" he called, a curious throbbing quality in his voice. "Are you
+there, Ez? It's me--Ben."
+
+But the thickets neither rustled nor spoke. The cracked old voice he had
+learned to love did not speak in relief, in that moment of unutterable
+suspense. Indeed, the silence seemed to deepen about him. The spruce
+trees were hushed and impassive as ever; the moon shone and the wind
+breathed softly in his face. Fenris came whimpering toward him.
+
+Together, the man and the wolf, they crept on into the thicket. They
+halted at last before a curious shadow in the silvered covert. Ben knew
+at once he had found his ancient comrade.
+
+He and Ezram had had their last laugh together. He lay very still, the
+moonlight ensilvering his droll, kindly face,--sleeping so deeply that
+no human voice could ever waken him. An ugly rifle wound yawned darkly
+at his temple.
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+The first effect of a great shock is usually a semi-paralysis of the
+entire mental mechanism and is, as a rule, beneficent. The brain seems
+to be enclosed in a great preoccupation, like a wall, and the messages
+of pain and horror brought by the nerves batter against it in vain. The
+senses are dulled, the perceptions blunted, and full realization does
+not come.
+
+For a long time, in which time itself stood still, Ben sat beside the
+dead body of his old counselor and friend as a child might sit among
+flowers. He half leaned forward, his arms limp, his hands resting in his
+lap, a deep wonder and bewilderment in his eyes. Dully he watched the
+moon lifting in the sky and felt the caress of the wind against his
+face, glancing only from time to time at the huddled body before him.
+The wolf whined softly, and sometimes Ben reached his hand to caress the
+furry shoulder.
+
+But slowly his wandering faculties returned to him. He began to
+understand. Ezram was dead--that was it--gone from his life as smoke
+goes in the air. Never to hear him again, or see him, or make plans with
+him, or have high adventures beside him along the lonely trails. Fenris
+had found him in the darkness: here he lay--the old family friend, the
+man who had saved him, redeemed him and given him his chance, his old
+"buddy" who had brought him home. The thing was not credible at first:
+that here, dead as a stone, lay the shell of that life that had been his
+own salvation. He studied intently the gray face, missed its habitual
+smile and for really the first time his gaze rested upon the yawning
+wound in the temple.
+
+He gazed at it in speechless, growing horror, and something like an
+incredible cold descended upon him. The entire hydraulic system of his
+blood seemed to be freezing. His hands were cold, his vitals icy and
+lifeless. There was, however, the beginning of heat somewhere back of
+his eyes. He could feel it but dimly, but it was increasing, slowly,
+like a smoldering coal that eats its way into wood and soon will burst
+into a flame. Slowly he began to grow rigid, his muscles flexing. His
+face underwent a tangible change. The lines deepened, the lips set in a
+hard line, the eyes were like those of a reptile,--cold, passionless,
+unutterably terrible. His face was pale like the paleness of death, but
+it appeared more like hard, white metal than flesh. His mind began to
+work clear again; he began to understand.
+
+Ezram had been shot, murdered by the men who had jumped his claim.
+Beatrice's father, who had talked to him, had probably committed the
+crime: if not he, one of his understrappers at his order. He found
+himself recalling what Jeffery Neilson had said. Oh, the man had been
+sharp! Believing that in the depth of the forest the body would never be
+discovered, he had tried to send Ben farther into the interior in search
+of him.
+
+He arose, wholly self-mastered, and with hard, strong hands made a
+detailed examination of Ezram's wound. He had evidently been shot by a
+rifle of large caliber, probably at close range. Ezram's own gun lay at
+his feet, loaded but not cocked.
+
+"They shot you down in cold blood, old boy, didn't they?" he found
+himself asking. "You didn't have a chance!"
+
+But the gray lips were setting with death, and could not answer. Ben
+had forgotten for the instant; he must keep better hold of himself. The
+time was not ripe to turn himself loose. But he did wish for one more
+word with Ezram, just a few little minutes of planning. They could
+doubtless work out something good together. They could decide what to
+do.
+
+From this point his mind naturally fell to Ezram's parting advice to
+him. "I've only got one decent place to keep things safe, and that ain't
+so all-fired decent," the old man had told him. "I always put 'em down
+my bootleg, between the sock and the leather. If I ever get shuffled
+off, all of a sudden, I want you to look there careful."
+
+Still with the same deathly pallor he crept over the dead leaves to
+Ezram's feet. His hands were perfectly steady as he unlooped the laces,
+one after another, and quietly pulled off the right boot. In the boot
+leg, just as Ezram had promised, Ben found a scrap of white paper.
+
+He spread it on his knee, and unfolded it with care. The moonlight was
+not sufficiently vivid, however, for him to read the penciled scrawl. He
+felt in his pocket for a match.
+
+Because his mind was operating clear and sure, his thoughts flashed at
+once to his enemies in their cabins along the creek. He did not want
+them to know he had found the body. His first instinct was to work in
+the dark, to achieve his ends by stealth and cunning! It was strange
+what capacity for cunning had come upon him. Oh, he would be
+crafty--sharp--sure in every motion.
+
+It was unlikely, however, that the faint glare of a match could carry so
+far. To make sure he walked behind the covert, then turned his back to
+the canyon through which the creek flowed. The match cracked,
+inordinately loud in the silence, and his eyes followed the script.
+Ezram had been faithful to the last:
+
+ To WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
+
+ In case of my death I leave all I die possessed of including my
+ brother Hiram's claim near Yuga River to my pard and buddy, Ben
+ Darby.
+
+ (Signed) EZRA MELVILLE.
+
+The document was as formal as Ezram could make it, with a carefully
+drawn seal, and for all its quaint wording, it was a will to stand in
+any court. But Ezram had not been able to hold his dignity for long. He
+had added a postscript:
+
+ Son, old Hiram made a will, and I guess I can make one too. I just
+ found out about them devils that jumped our claim. I left you back
+ there at the river because I didn't want you taking any dam fool
+ risks till I found out how things lay.
+
+ I just got one thing to ask. If them devils get me--get them. My
+ life ain't worth much but I want you to make them pay for the little
+ it is worth. Never stop till you've done it.
+
+Ben lighted match after match until he had absorbed every word. Then he
+folded the paper and placed it in his pocket; but the action did not in
+the least take his eyes from the words. He could still see them, written
+in fire. They were branded on his spirit.
+
+He stood wholly motionless for a space of almost a minute, as if
+listening. The heat back of his eyes was more intense now. The red coals
+were about to burst into flame. All the blood of his huge body seemed to
+be collecting there, searing his brain.
+
+The moon was no longer white in the sky. It had turned a fiery red. The
+stars were red too,--all of them more red than the Star of War. "I want
+you to make them pay," a voice said clearly in his ears. "Never stop
+till you've done it."
+
+And now Ben was no longer pale. His face was no longer hard and set.
+Rather it was dark--dark as dark earth. His eyes glowed like coals
+beneath his black brows. He was not standing still and lifeless now. He
+was shivering all over with the blackest hate, the most deadly fury.
+
+"Make them pay," he said aloud again, "and never stop till you've done
+it."
+
+A sudden snarl from the lips of the wolf drew his eyes downward. Heaven
+help him; for the moment he had forgotten Fenris! But he must not forget
+him again. They had work to do, the two of them.
+
+Fenris was no longer whining disconsolately. His master's fury had
+passed to him, and Ben looked and saw before him not the docile pet, but
+the savage beast of the wild. The hair was erect on his shoulders, his
+lips were drawn, too; he was crouched as if for battle. The eyes, sunken
+in their sockets, were red and terrible to see. Yet he was still Ben's
+servant. That quality could never pass from him. The eyes of two
+met,--the wolf and the man.
+
+At that instant the little tongue of flame that had been mounting in
+Ben's brain burst into a dreadful conflagration. It was the explosion at
+last, no less terrible because of its silence--because the sound of the
+least, little wind was still discernible in the distant thickets. He
+dropped to his knees before the wolf, seizing its head in a terrific
+grasp. He half jerked it off its feet, till he held it so that its eyes
+burned straight into his.
+
+"Fenris, Fenris!" he breathed. "We've got to make them pay. And we must
+not stop till we're done."
+
+It was more than a command. It had the quality of a vow. And now, as
+they knelt, eyes looking into eyes, it was like a pagan rite in the
+ancient world.
+
+Their separate identities were no longer greatly pronounced. They were
+not man and beast, they were simply the wolves of the forest. The old
+qualities most often associated with manhood--gentleness, forbearance,
+mercy--seemed to pass away from Ben as a light passes into darkness.
+Only the Wolf was left, the dominant Beast--that darker, hidden side of
+himself from which no man can wholly escape and which civilization has
+only smothered, as fresh fuel smothers a flame. Not for nothing had his
+fellows known him as "Wolf" Darby; and now the name was true.
+
+The Beast that dwells under every man's skin, in a greater or less
+degree, was in the full ascendancy at last. The unnamable ferocity that
+marks the death-leap of the wild hunters was in his face. In his eyes
+was cunning,--such craft as marks the pack in its hunting. All over him
+was written that unearthly rage that is alone the property and trait of
+the woods creatures: the fury with which a she-wolf fights for her cubs
+or a rattlesnake avenges the death of its mate. Mercy, remorse,
+compassion there was none.
+
+And the demon gods of the wilderness rejoiced. For uncounted thousands
+of years the tide of battle had flowed against them; and it was long and
+long since they had won such a victory as this. Mostly their men
+children had forsaken their leafy bowers to live in houses. They tilled
+the ground rather than hunt in the forest. The cattle that had once run
+wild in the marshes now fed dully in enclosed pastures; the horses--that
+mighty breed that once mated and fought and died in freedom on the high
+lands--pulled lowly burdens in the cultivated fields. Even some of the
+canine people too--first cousins to the wolves themselves--had sold
+themselves into slavery for a gnawed bone and a chimney corner. But
+to-night the wild had claimed its own again.
+
+Here was one, at least, who had come back into his own. The forest
+seemed to whisper and thrill with rapture.
+
+
+
+
+
+PART TWO
+
+THE WOLF-MAN
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+As a wolf might plan a hunt in the forest, Ben planned his war against
+Neilson and his subordinates. He knew perfectly that he must not attempt
+open warfare. The way of the wolf is the way of cunning and stealth: the
+stalk through the thicket and the ferocious attack upon the
+unsuspecting; and such example must guide Ben in his operations. He
+could not be too careful, too furtive.
+
+His foes were three against one, and they were on their own ground. They
+knew the trails and the lay of the country; and as always, in the
+science of warfare, this was an advantage hardly to be overcome. Ben
+knew that his only hope lay in the finest strategy. First he must make a
+surprise attack, and second, he must utilize all natural advantages.
+
+He was well aware that he could lie in ambush, close to the mine, and
+probably send one man to a speedy death with a rifle bullet. But he did
+not have one enemy; he had three. The survivors of the first shot would
+immediately seek shelter--probably returning shot for shot--and that
+would insert an element of uncertainty into the venture. At the distance
+he would be obliged to shoot, he would possibly only succeed in wounding
+one of his enemies, and he might miss him altogether. Such a plan as
+this was wholly too uncertain for adoption.
+
+There must be no sporting chances in his strategy. The way of the wolf
+is to cover every opening, to prepare for every contingency that his
+brute mind can foresee. He would give and receive no quarter, and the
+ancient fairness and honor must be likewise forgotten. He must take no
+risk with his own life until the last of the three was down. What
+happened thereafter did not greatly concern him. The world could shatter
+to atoms after that for all he would care. He was a son of forest
+solitude; and he had but one dream left in life.
+
+It was not his aim to give his foes the least chance to fight back, the
+slightest hope of battle. He would use any advantage, descend to any
+wile. This was not to be a sportsmen's war, but a grim battle to the
+death, inexorable and merciless.
+
+These things were all fully known to him before ever he left the
+hillside, and like a man asleep, walked down to his camp. The fire had
+burned down to coals--sullen and angry--but he heaped on fuel, and they
+broke into a blaze. Then, Fenris at his side, he squatted on the ground
+beside the dancing flame.
+
+He watched it, fascinated; mostly silent but sometimes muttering and
+whispering half-enunciated words. His red eyes and the black hair,
+matted about his lips and shadowing the backs of his hands, gave him a
+wild, fierce look; and it was as if the primal blood-lust and hatred
+that seared him had literally swept him back into the forgotten
+centuries,--the first, savage human hunter at the edge of the retreating
+glaciers. The scene had not changed: dark spruce and the red glow of
+fire; and there was atavism in his very posture. The first men had
+squatted beside their camp fires this same way, their wolfine pets
+beside them, as they made their battle plans.
+
+The eager flames held Ben's fascinated gaze as a crystal ball might hold
+the eyes of a seer. They seemed to have a message for him if he could
+just grasp it, a course whereby he might achieve success. Oh, they could
+be cruel, relentless--mercilessly eating their way into sensitive flesh.
+They were no respecters of persons, these creeping, leaping tongues. Nor
+must _he_ have any scruples or qualms as to how he gained his ends. He
+too must be merciless, and if necessary, strike down the innocent in
+order to reach the guilty.
+
+As he watched certain knowledge reached him of life and death. The
+conclusion slowly came to him that just blind killing was not enough.
+For all he knew death might bring instant forgetfulness--and thus not
+constitute in itself a satisfactory measure of vengeance. The _fear_ of
+death was a reality and a torment: for all he knew, the thing itself
+might be a change for the better. It might be that, suddenly hurled out
+of this world of three dimensions, his enemies would have no knowledge
+nor carry no memories of the hand that struck them down. There could be
+no satisfaction in this. To murder from ambush might be a measure of
+expedience, but never one of self-gratification. When Ben struck he
+wanted them to know who was their enemy, and for what crime they were
+laid low.
+
+The best way of all, of course, was to strike indirectly at them,
+perhaps through some one they loved. Soon, perhaps, he would see the
+way.
+
+He went to his blankets, but sleep did not come to him. The wolf stood
+on guard. Beatrice Neilson had fallen into happy dreams long since, but
+there was further wakefulness in Hiram Melville's newer cabin, farther
+up-creek. Ray Brent and Chan Heminway still sat over their cups, the
+fiery liquid running riot in their veins, but slumber did not come
+easily to-night. And when Beatrice was asleep, Neilson stole down the
+moonlit moose trail and joined his men.
+
+"I've brought news," he began, when the door had closed out the stars
+and the breath of the night. Chan, his small eyes glazed from strong
+drink, staggered to his feet to offer his chair to his chief. Brent,
+however, was in no mood for servility to-night. He had done man's work
+in the early evening; and his triumph and his new-found sense of power
+had not yet died in his body. Perhaps he had learned the way to all
+success. There was a curious sullen defiance in the blearing gaze over
+his glass.
+
+"What's your news?" Ray's voice harshened, possessing a certain quality
+of grim levity. "I guess old Hiram's brother hasn't come to life again,
+has he?"
+
+It was a significant thing that both Chan and Neilson looked oppressed
+and uneasy at the words. Like all men of low moral status they were
+secretly superstitious, and these boasting words crept unpleasantly
+under their skins. It is never a good thing to taunt the dead! Ray had
+spoken sheerly to frighten and shock them, thus revealing his own
+fearlessness and strength; yet his voice rang louder than he had meant.
+He had no desire for it to carry into the silver mystery of the night.
+
+"The less you say about Hiram's brother the better," Neilson answered
+sternly. "We've thrashed it out once to-night." He straightened as he
+read the insolence, the gathering insubordination in the other's
+contemptuous glance; and his voice lacked its old ring of power when he
+spoke again. "Jumpin' claims is one thing and murder is another."
+
+Ray, spurred on by the false strength of wickedness, drunk with his new
+sense of power, was already feeling the first surge of deadly anger in
+his veins. "I suppose if you had been doin' it, you'd let that old whelp
+take back this claim, worth a quarter million if it's worth a cent. Not
+if I know it. It was the only way--and the safe way too."
+
+"Safe! What if by a thousandth chance some one would blunder on to that
+body you left in the brush? What if some sergeant of mounted police
+would say to his man, 'Go get Ray Brent!' Where would you be then?
+You've always been a murderer at heart, Brent--but some time you'll slip
+up--"
+
+"Only a fool slips up. Don't think I didn't figure on everything. As you
+say, there's not one chance in a thousand any one will ever find him. If
+they do, there wouldn't be any kind of a case. Likely the old man hasn't
+got a friend or relation on earth. I've searched his pockets--there's
+nothing to tell who he is. We'll have our claim recorded soon, and it
+would be easy to make him out the claim-jumper rather than us--"
+
+"Wait just a minute before you say he ain't got any friends, or at least
+acquaintances. That's what I came to see you about to-night." Neilson
+paused, for the sake of suspense. "Beatrice came up to-night, as agreed,
+and she had a prospector with her--and he knew old Hiram's brother."
+
+A short, tense silence followed his words, and Ray stared into his cup.
+It might be that just for an instant the reckless light went out of his
+eyes and left them startled and glazing. Then he got to his feet. "Then
+God Almighty!" he cried. "What you waiting for? Why don't you croak him
+off before this night's over?"
+
+"Wait, you fool, till you've heard everything," Neilson replied.
+"There's no hurry about killing. As I told you, the less work of that
+kind we do, the more chance we've got of dying in our beds. It may be
+reasonable for one prospector to disappear, but some one's going to be
+suspicious if two of 'em do. I think I've already handled the matter."
+
+"I'd handle it, and quick too," Ray protested.
+
+"You'd handle yourself up a gallows, too. He doesn't seem to be a close
+friend of this old man; he just seems to have met up with him at the
+river, and the old man steered him up here. He asked me where the old
+man's claim was, and said he wanted to go over and see him. He was
+taking Hiram's wolf and his gun up to him. I told him I hadn't heard of
+the claim, that it must be farther inside, and I think I put it over. He
+ain't got the least suspicion. What he'll do is hang around here a
+while, I suppose, prospecting--and likely enough soon forget all about
+the old devil. I just came down here to tell you he was here and to
+watch your step."
+
+"Then the first thing up," Chan Heminway suggested, "is to bury the
+stiff."
+
+"Spoke up like a fool!" Ray answered. "Not till this man is dead or out
+of the country. It's well hidden, and don't go prowling anywheres near
+it. If he's the least bit suspicious, or even if he's on the lookout for
+gold, he'd likely enough follow you. But there's one thing we can
+do--and that quick."
+
+"And what's that?"
+
+"Start Chan off to-morrow to the office in Bradleyburg and record this
+claim in our names. We've waited too long already."
+
+"Ray, you're talking like a man now," Neilson agreed. "You and I stay
+here and work away, innocent as can be, on the claim. Chan, put that
+bottle away and get to bed. Take the trail down first thing to-morrow.
+Then we can laugh at all the prospectors that want to come."
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+Soon after the break of dawn Ben put his pick and shovel on his
+shoulder, and leisurely walked up the creek past Ray's cabin. Since Chan
+Heminway had already departed down the long trail to Bradleyburg--a town
+situated nearly forty miles from Snowy Gulch--Ray alone saw him pass;
+and he eyed him with some apprehension. Daylight had brought a more
+vivid consciousness of his last night's crime; and a little of his
+bravado had departed from him. He moved closer to his rifle.
+
+Yet in a moment his suspicions were allayed. Ben was evidently a
+prospector, just as he claimed to be, and was venturing forth to get his
+first "lay of the land." The latter continued up the draw, crossed a
+ridge, halted now and then in the manner of the wild creatures to see if
+he were being followed, and finally by a roundabout route returned to
+the lifeless form of his only friend. The wolf still trotted in silence
+behind him.
+
+The vivid morning light only revealed the crime in more dreadful detail.
+The withered form lay huddled in the stained leaves; and Ben stood a
+long time beside it, in deep and wondering silence, even now scarcely
+able to believe the truth. How strange it was that this old comrade
+could not waken and go on with him again! But in a moment he remembered
+his work.
+
+Slowly, laboriously, with little outward sign of the emotion that rent
+his heart, he dug a shallow grave He knew perfectly that this was a
+serious risk to his cause. Should the murderer return for any purpose,
+to his dead, the grave would of course show that the body had been
+discovered and would put him on his guard against Ben. Nevertheless, the
+latter could not leave these early remains to the doubtful mercy of the
+wilderness: the agents of air and sun, and the wild beasts.
+
+He threw the last clod and stood looking down at the upturned earth.
+"Sleep good, old Ez," he murmured in simple mass for the dead. "I'll do
+what you said."
+
+Then, at the head of the grave, he thrust the barrel of Ezram's rifle
+into the ground, a monument grim as his own thoughts. The last rite was
+completed; he was free to work now. From now on he could devote every
+thought to the work in hand,--the payment of his debts.
+
+By the same roundabout route he circled back to his camp, cooked his
+meager lunch, and in the afternoon ventured forth again. But he was
+prospecting in earnest this time, though the prospects that he sought
+were those of victory to his cause, rather than of gold. He was seeking
+simply a good, general idea of the nature and geography of the country
+so that he might know better how to plan his attack.
+
+His excursion took him at last to the wooded bank of the river. He stood
+a long time, quite motionless, listening to the water voices that only
+the wise can understand. This was really a noble stream. It flowed with
+such grandeur in its silence and solitude; old and gray and austere, it
+was a mighty expression of wilderness power,--resistless, immortal,
+eternally secretive. The waters flowed darkly, icy cold from the melting
+snow; but like a sleeping giant they would be quick to seize upon and
+destroy such as would try to brave their currents, likely never to
+yield them up again. Flowing forever through the uninhabited forest no
+man would ever know the fate of those the river claimed.
+
+He was above the camp when he descended to its banks, but he worked his
+way down through the thickets toward Jeffery Neilson's cabin. The river
+flowed quietly here, a long, still stretch that afforded safe boating.
+Yet the smooth waters did not in the least alleviate Ben's haunting
+sense of their sinister power and peril. The old gray she-wolf is not to
+be trusted in her peaceful moments. His keen ears could distinctly hear
+the roar and rumble of wild waters, just below.
+
+The river was of great depth as well as breadth,--one of the king rivers
+of the land. Ben found himself staring into its depths with a quickening
+pulse. He had a momentary impression that this great stream was his
+ally, a mighty agent that he could bend to his will.
+
+He approached the long, sloping bank on which stood Neilson's cabin; and
+he suddenly drew up short at the sight of a light, staunch canoe on the
+open water. It was a curious fact that he noticed the craft itself
+before ever he glanced at its occupant. A thrill of excitement passed
+over him. He realized that this boat simplified to some degree his own
+problem, in that it afforded him means of traversing this great
+water-body, certainly to be a factor in the forthcoming conflict. The
+boat had evidently been the property of Hiram Melville.
+
+Then he noticed, with a strange, inexplicable leap of his heart, that
+its lone occupant was Beatrice Neilson. His eye kindled at the
+recognition, and the beginnings of a smile flashed to his lips. But at
+once remembrance came to him, crushing his joy as the heel crushes a
+tender flower. The girl was of the enemy camp, the daughter of the
+leader of the triumvirate of murderers. While she herself could have had
+no part in the crime, perhaps she already had guilty knowledge of it,
+and at least she was of her father's hated blood.
+
+He had builded much on his friendship with this girl; but he felt it
+withering, turning black--like buds under frost--in his cold breast.
+There could be no friendly words, except in guile; no easy comradeship
+between them now. They were on opposite sides, hated foes to the last.
+Perhaps she would be one of the innocents that must suffer with the
+guilty; but he felt no remorse. Not even this lovely, tender wood child
+must stand in his way.
+
+Nevertheless, he must not put her on guard. He must simulate friendship.
+He lifted his hat in answer to her gay signal.
+
+She wore a white middy blouse, and her brown, bare forearms flashed
+pleasantly in the spring sun. Her brown hair was disarranged by the wind
+that found a passway down the river, and her eyes shone with the sheer,
+unadorned love of living. Evidently she had just enjoyed a brisk paddle
+through the still stretches of the river. With sure, steady strokes she
+pushed the craft close to the little, board landing where Ben stood. She
+reached up to him, and in an instant was laughing--at nothing in
+particular but the fun of life--at his side.
+
+The man glanced once at Fenris, spoke in command, then turned to the
+girl. "All rested from the ride, I see," he began easily.
+
+Her instincts keyed to the highest pitch, for an instant she thought she
+discerned an unfamiliar tone, hard and hateful, in his voice. But his
+eyes and his lips were smiling; and evidently she was mistaken. "I never
+get tired," she responded. She glanced at the tools in his arms. "I
+suppose you've found a dozen rich lodes already this morning."
+
+"Only one." He smiled, significantly, into her eyes. Because she was a
+forest girl, unused to flattery, the warm color grew in her brown
+cheeks. "And how was paddling? The water looks still enough from here."
+
+"It's not as still as it looks, but it is easy going for a half-mile
+each way. If you aren't an expert boatman, however--I hardly think--I'd
+try it."
+
+"Why not? I'm fair enough with a canoe, of course--but it looks safe as
+a lake."
+
+"But it isn't." She paused. "Listen with those keen ears of yours, Mr.
+Darby. Don't you hear anything?"
+
+Ben did not need particularly keen ears to hear: the far-off sound of
+surging waters reached him with entire clearness. He nodded.
+
+"That's the reason," the girl went on. "If something should happen--and
+you'd get carried around the bend--a little farther than you meant to
+go--you'd understand. And we wouldn't see any more of Mr. Darby around
+these parts."
+
+Her dark eyes, brimming with light and laughter, were on his face, but
+she failed to see him slowly stiffen to hide the sudden, wild leaping of
+his heart. Could it be that he saw the far-off vision of his triumph?
+
+His eyes glowed, and he fought off with difficulty a great preoccupation
+that seemed to be settling over him.
+
+"Tell me about it," he said at last, casually. "I was thinking of making
+a boat and going down on a prospecting trip."
+
+"I'll tell you about it, and then I think you'll change your mind. The
+first cataract is the one just above where we first saw the
+river--coming in; then there's this mile of quiet water. From that
+point on the Yuga flows into a gorge--or rather one gorge after another;
+and sometime they'll likely be almost as famous as some of the great
+gorges of your country. The walls are just about straight up on each
+side, and of course are absolutely impassable. I don't know how many
+miles the first gorge is--but for nearly two hundred miles the river is
+considered impassable for boats. Two hundred and fifty miles or so below
+there is an Indian village--but they never try to go down the river from
+here. A few white men, however, have tried to go down with canoe-loads
+of fur."
+
+"And all drowned?" Ben asked.
+
+"All except one party. Once two men went down when the river was
+high--just as it is now. They were good canoeists, and they made it
+through. No one ever expected they would come out again."
+
+"And after you've once got into the rapids, there's no getting out--or
+landing?"
+
+"Of course not. I suppose there are places where you might get on the
+bank, but the gorge above is impassable."
+
+"You couldn't follow the river down--with horses?"
+
+"Yes, in time. Of course it would be slow going, as there are no trails,
+the brush is heavy, and the country is absolutely unexplored. You see it
+has never been considered a gold country--and of course the Indians
+won't go except where they can go in canoes. Some of the hills must be
+impassable, too. I've heard my father speak about it--how that if any
+criminal--or any one like that--could take down this river in a canoe in
+high water--and get through into that great, virgin, trackless country a
+hundred miles below, it would be almost impossible to get him out.
+Unless the officers could chase him down the same way he went--by
+canoe--it would take literally weeks and months for them to get in, and
+by that time he could be hidden and located and his tracks covered up."
+
+"And with good ambushes, able to hold off and kill a dozen of them, eh?"
+Ben's hands shook, and he locked them behind him. "They call that
+country--what?"
+
+"'Back There.' That's all I've ever heard it called--'Back There.'"
+
+"It's as good a name as any. Of course, the reason they were able to
+make it through in high water was due to the fact that most of the rocks
+and ledges were submerged, and they could slide right over them."
+
+"Of course. Many of our rivers are safer in high water. But you
+seriously don't intend to take such a trip--"
+
+He looked up to find her eyes wide and full upon his. Yet her concern
+for him touched him not at all. She was his enemy: that fact could never
+be forgotten or forgiven.
+
+"I want to hear about it, anyway. I heard in town the river is higher
+than it's been for years--due to the Chinook--"
+
+"It _is_ higher than I've ever seen it. But it's reached its peak and
+has started to fall, and it won't come up again, at least, till fall.
+When the Yuga rises it comes up in a flood, and it falls the same way.
+It's gone down quite a little since this morning; by the day after
+to-morrow no one could hope to get through Devil's Gate--the first
+cataract in the gorge."
+
+"Not even with a canoe? Of course a raft would be broken to pieces."
+
+"Not a canoe, either, in two or three days, if the river falls like it
+usually does. But tell me--you aren't serious--"
+
+"I suppose not. But it gets my imagination--just the same. I suppose a
+man would average better than twenty miles an hour down through that
+gorge, and would come out at _Back There_."
+
+Their talk moved easily to other subjects; yet it seemed to Ben that
+some secondary consciousness held up his end of the conversation. His
+own deeper self was lost in curious and dark conjectures. Her
+description of the river lingered in his thoughts, and he seemed to be
+groping for a great inspiration that was hovering just beyond his
+reach--as plants grope for light in far-off leafy jungles. He felt that
+it would come to him in a moment: he would know the dark relation that
+these facts about the river bore to his war with Neilson. It was as if
+an inner mind, much more subtle and discerning than his normal
+consciousness, had seen great possibilities in them, but as yet had not
+divulged their significance.
+
+"I must be going now," the girl was saying. "Father pretty near goes
+crazy when I stay away too long. You can't imagine how he loves me and
+worries about me--and how fearful he is of me--"
+
+His mind seemed to leap and gather her words. It was true: she was the
+joy and the pride and the hope of the old man's life. All his work, his
+dreams were for her. And now he remembered a fact that she had told him
+on the outward journey: that Ray Brent, the stronger of Neilson's two
+subordinates, loved her too.
+
+"To strike at them indirectly--through some one they love--" such had
+been his greatest wish. To put them at a disadvantage and overcome his
+own--to lead them into his own ambushes. And was it for the Wolf to care
+what guiltless creatures fell before his fangs in the gaining of his
+dreadful ends? Was the gratification of his hate to be turned aside
+through pity for an innocent girl? Mercy and remorse were two things
+that he had put from him. It was the way of the Wolf to pay no attention
+to methods, only to achieve his own fierce desires. He stood lost in
+dark and savage reverie.
+
+"Good-by," the girl was saying. "I'll see you soon--"
+
+He turned toward her, a smile at his lips. His voice held steady when he
+spoke.
+
+"It'll have to be soon, if at all," he replied. "I've got to really get
+to work in a few days. How about a little picnic to-morrow--a grouse
+hunt, say--on the other side of the river? It's going to be a beautiful
+day--"
+
+The girl's eyes shone, and the color rose again in her tanned cheeks.
+"I'd think that would be very nice," she told him.
+
+"Then I'll meet you here--at eight."
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+Alone by the fire Ben had opportunity to balance one thing with another
+and think out the full consequences of his plan. As far as he could
+discern, it stood every test. It meant not only direct and indirect
+vengeance upon Neilson and his followers; but it would also, past all
+doubt, deliver them into his hands. That much was sure. When finally
+they came to grips--if indeed they did not go down to a terrible death
+before ever that time came--he would be prepared for them, with every
+advantage of ground and fortress, able to combat them one by one and
+shatter them from ambush. Best of all, they would know at whose hands,
+and for what crime, they received their retribution.
+
+One by one he checked the chances against him. First of all, he had to
+face the great chance of failure and the consequent loss of his own
+life. But there was even recompense in this. He would not die unavenged.
+The blow that he would thereby deal to his enemies would be terrible
+beyond any reckoning, but he would have no regrets.
+
+There were two outstanding points in his favor, one of them being that
+the river was rapidly falling. By the time a canoe could be built the
+river would be wholly unnavigable. There were no canoes procurable in
+Snowy Gulch, if indeed a lightning trip could be made there and back to
+secure one, before the river fell. The conversation with the
+frontiersman at the river bank brought out this fact. Lastly, a raft
+could not live a moment in the rapids.
+
+Very methodically he began to make his preparations. He untied his
+horse, leaving it free to descend to Snowy Gulch. Then he packed a few
+of his most essential supplies, his gun and shells, such necessary camp
+equipment as robes, matches, soap and towels, cooking and table ware, an
+axe and similar necessaries. In the way of food he laid out flour, rice,
+salt, and sugar, plus a few pounds of tea--nothing else. The entire
+outfit weighed less than two hundred pounds, easily carried in three
+loads upon the back.
+
+In the still hour of midnight, when the forest world was swept in
+mystery, he carried the equipment down to the canoe that Beatrice had
+left the evening before. He loaded the craft with the greatest care,
+balancing it now and then with his hands at the sides, and covering up
+the food supplies with robes and blankets. Then he drew from his pocket
+a sheet of paper--evidently a paper sack that had once held provisions,
+cut open and spread--and wrote carefully, a long time, with a pencil.
+
+He had no envelope to enclose it, no wax to seal it. He did, however,
+carry a stub of a candle--a requisite to most northern men who are
+obliged to build supper fires in wet forest. Folding his letter
+carefully, he sealed it with tallow. Then wrapping one of his blankets
+about him, he prepared to wait for the dawn. Fenris growled and murmured
+in his sleep.
+
+Ben himself had not slept the night before; and moved and stirred by his
+plan of the morrow, slumber did not come easily to him now. He too
+murmured in his sleep and had weird, tragic dreams between sleep and
+wakefulness. But the shadows paled at last. A ribbon of light spread
+along the eastern horizon; the more familiar landmarks emerged--ghosts
+at first, then in vivid outline, the wooded sky line strengthened; the
+nebulous magic of the moon died in the forest. Birds wakened and sang;
+the hunting creatures crept to their lairs; sleeping flowers opened.
+Morning broke on a clear, warm day.
+
+Ben devoured a heavy breakfast--all that he could force himself to
+swallow--then prepared to wait for Beatrice. He knew perfectly that
+explanations would be difficult if Neilson or one of his followers found
+him with the loaded boat. It was not likely, however, that any of his
+enemies--except, of course, Beatrice herself--would venture down that
+way.
+
+Just before eight he saw her come,--first the glint of her white blouse
+in the green of the forest, and then the flash of her brown arms. Her
+voice rang clear and sweet through the hushed depths as she called a
+greeting. A moment later she was beside him.
+
+"Go back and get your heavy coat," he commanded. "I've already been out
+on the water, and it'll freeze you stiff."
+
+He was not overly pleased with himself for speaking thus. He had
+resolved to put mercy from him; and he was taking a serious risk to his
+own cause by the delay of sending her back for her warmer garments. She
+smiled into his eyes, but she came of a breed of women that had learned
+obedience to men, and she immediately turned. But Ben had builded better
+than he thought. His eyes were no longer on her radiant face. They had
+dropped to the pistol, in its holster, that she carried in her hands,
+preparatory to strapping it about her waist. It was disconcerting that
+he had forgotten about her pistol. It was one of those insignificant
+trifles that before now have disrupted the mightiest plans of nations
+and of men. His mind sped like lightning, and he thanked his stars that
+he had seen it in time. This pistol and a small package, the contents
+of which he did not know, were the only equipment she had.
+
+"It's going to be a bright day," the girl said hesitatingly. "I don't
+think I'll need the fur coat--"
+
+"Get it, anyway," Ben advised. "The wind's keen on the river. Leave your
+pistol and your package here--and go up and back at top speed. I'll be
+arranging the canoe--"
+
+She laid down the things, and in a moment the thickets had hidden her.
+Swiftly Ben reached for the gun, and for a few speeding seconds his
+fingers worked at its mechanism. He was busy about the canoe when the
+girl returned.
+
+Evidently Beatrice was in wonderful spirits. The air itself was
+sparkling, the sun--beloved with an ardor too deep for words by all
+northern peoples--was warm and genial in the sky; the spruce forest was
+lush with dew, fragrant with hidden blossoms. It was a Spring
+Day--nothing less. Both of them knew perfectly that miracle was abroad
+in the forest,--flowers opening, buds breaking into blossoms, little
+grass blades stealing, shy as fairies, up through the dead leaves; birds
+fluttering and gossiping and carrying all manner of building materials
+for their nests.
+
+Spring is not just a time of year to the forest folk, and particularly
+to those creatures whose homes are the far spruce forests of the North.
+It is a magic and a mystery, a recreation and a renewed lease on life
+itself. It is hope come again, the joy of living undreamed of except by
+such highly strung, nerve-tingling, wild-blooded creatures as these; and
+in some measure at least it is the escape from Fear. For there is no
+other name than Fear for the great, white, merciless winter that had
+just departed.
+
+High and low, every woods creature knows this dread, this age-old
+apprehension of the deepening snow. Perhaps it had its birth in eons
+past, when the great glaciers brought their curse of gold into the
+temperate regions, locking land and sea under tons of ice. Never the
+frost comes, and the snow deepens on the land, and the rivers and lakes
+are struck silent as if by a cruel magician's magic, but that this old
+fear returns, creeping like poison into the nerves, bowing down the
+heart and chilling the warm wheel of the blood. For the rodents and the
+digging people--even for the mighty grizzly himself--the season means
+nothing but the cold and the darkness of their underground lairs. For
+those that try to brave the winter, the portion is famine and cold; the
+vast, far-spreading silence broken only by the sobbing song of the wolf
+pack, starving and afraid on the distant ridges. Man is the conqueror,
+the Mighty One who can strike the fire, but yet he too knows the creepy,
+haunting dread and deep-lying fear of the northern winter. But that
+dread season was gone now, yielding for a few happy months to a gay
+invader from the South; and the whole forest world rejoiced.
+
+Both Beatrice and Ben could sense the new wakening and revival in the
+still depths about them. The forest was hushed, tremulous, yet vibrant
+and ecstatic with renewed life. The old grizzly bear had left his winter
+lair; and good feeding was putting the fat again on his bones; the old
+cow moose had stolen away into the farther marshes for some mystery and
+miracle of her own. Everywhere young calves of caribou were breathing
+the air for the first time, trying to stand on wobbly legs and pushing
+with greedy noses into overflowing udders. The rich new grass yielded
+milk in plenty for all these wilderness nurslings. Even the she-wolf
+forgot her wicked savagery to nurse and fondle her whelps in the lair;
+even the she-lynx, hunting with renewed fervor through the branches,
+knew of a marvelous secret in a hollow log that she would be torn to
+scraps of fur rather than reveal.
+
+The she-ermine, her white hair falling out, was brooding a litter of
+cutthroats and murderers in a nest of grass and twigs, and each one of
+them was a source of pride and joy to her mother heart. Even the
+wolverine had some wicked-eyed little cubs that, to her, were precious
+beyond rubies; but which would ultimately receive all the oaths in the
+language for stealing bait on the trap lines out from the settlements.
+
+Beatrice, a woods creature herself, knew the stir and thrill of spring;
+but there were also more personal, more deeply hidden reasons why she
+was happy to-day. She was certainly a very girlish-girl in most ways,
+with even more than the usual allowance of romance and sentiment, and
+the idea of an all-day picnic with this stalwart forester went straight
+home to her imagination. She had been tremendously impressed with him
+from the first, and the day's ride out from Snowy Gulch had brought him
+very close to her indeed. And what might not the day bring forth! What
+mystery and wonder might come to pass!
+
+Her dark eyes were lustrous, and the haunting sadness they often held
+was quite gone. Her face was faintly flushed, her red lips wistful,
+every motion eager and happy as a child's. But Ben looked at her
+unmoved.
+
+Coldly his eye leaped over her supple, slender form. He saw with relief
+that she was stoutly clad in middy and skirt of wool, wool stockings,
+and solid little boots. The heavy coat she had brought was not
+particularly noteworthy in these woods, but it would have drawn instant
+admiration from knowing people of a great city. It was not cut with
+particular style, neither was it beautifully lined, but the fabric
+itself was plucked otter,--the dark, well-wearing fur of many lights and
+of matchless luster and beauty.
+
+"For goodness sake, Mr. Darby," the girl cried. "What have you got in
+this boat? Surely that isn't just the lunch--" She pointed to the pile
+of supplies, covered by the blankets, in the center of the craft.
+
+"It looks like we had enough to stay a month, doesn't it?" he laughed.
+"There's blankets there, of course--for table cloths and to make us
+comfortable--and the lunch, and a pillow or two--and some little
+surprises. The rest is just some stores that I'm going to take this
+opportunity to put across the river--to my next camp. Now, Miss
+Neilson--if you'll take the seat in the bow. Fenris is going to ride in
+the middle--"
+
+The girl's eyes fell with some apprehension on the shaggy wolf. "I
+haven't established very friendly relations with Fenris--"
+
+"I'd leave him at home, but he won't stand for it. Besides I'd like to
+teach him how to retrieve grouse. Lie down, old boy." Ben motioned, and
+Fenris sprawled at his feet. "Now come here and pet him, Miss Neilson.
+His fur, at this season, is wonderful--"
+
+Reluctant to show her fear before Ben, the girl drew near. The wolf
+shivered as the soft hand touched his side and moved slowly to his
+fierce head; but he gave no further sign of enmity.
+
+"He understands," Ben explained. "He realizes that I've accepted you,
+and you're all right. Until he's given orders otherwise, he'll treat you
+with the greatest respect."
+
+She was deeply and sincerely pleased. It did not occur to her, in the
+least, little degree, that occasion could possibly arise whereby
+contradictory orders would be given. Ben started to help her into the
+boat.
+
+"You've not forgotten anything?" he asked casually.
+
+"Nothing I can think of."
+
+"Got plenty of extra shells?"
+
+"Part of a box. It's a small caliber automatic, you see, and a box holds
+fifty."
+
+"It is, eh?" Ben's tone indicated deep interest. "May I see 'em a
+minute? I think I had a gun like it once. Not the gun--just the box of
+shells."
+
+She had strapped the weapon around her waist, by now, so she didn't
+attempt to put it in his hands. From her pocket she procured a small box
+of shells, and these she passed to him. He examined them with a great
+show of interest, balancing their weight in the palm of his hand; then
+he carelessly threw the box down among the duffle in front of the stern
+seat. Presently he started to push off.
+
+"You're not taking the other paddle?" the girl asked curiously.
+
+"No. I don't believe in letting young ladies work when I take 'em on an
+outing. You are just to sit in the bow and enjoy yourself. Fenris, sit
+still and don't rock the boat!"
+
+Just one moment more he hesitated. From his pocket he drew a piece of
+paper, carefully folded and sealed with tallow. This he inserted into a
+little crack in the blade of the second paddle--the one that was to be
+left at the landing.
+
+"Just a little note for your father," he explained, "to tell him where
+we are, in case he worries about you."
+
+"That's very considerate of you," the girl answered in a thoughtful
+voice.
+
+She wondered at the curious glowings, lurid as red coals, that came and
+went in his eyes.
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+After the manner of backwoods fathers Jeffery Neilson had offered no
+objections to his daughter's all-day excursion with Ben. The ways of the
+frontier are informal; and besides, he had every confidence in her
+ability to take care of herself. The only unfortunate phase of the
+affair concerned Ray. The latter would look with no favor upon the
+venture; and in all probability a disagreeable half-hour would ensue
+with him if he found it out.
+
+The control of Ray Brent had been an increasingly difficult problem.
+Always sullen and envious, once or twice he had not been far from open
+rebellion. There is a certain dread malady that comes to men at the
+sight of naked gold, and Ray's degenerate type was particularly subject
+to it. Every day the mine had shown itself increasingly rich, and Ray's
+ambition had given way to greed, and his greed to avarice of the most
+dangerous sort. For instance, he had a disquieting way of gathering the
+nuggets into his hands, fondling them with an unholy love. Neilson
+realized perfectly, now, that the younger man would not be content with
+a fourth share or less; and on the other hand he resolutely refused to
+yield any of his own, larger share. Sometime the issue would bring them
+to grips. Ray's dreadful crime of a few days past had given him an added
+insolence and self-assurance that complicated the problem still further.
+The leopard that has once tasted human flesh is not to be trusted again.
+Finally, there remained this matter of Beatrice.
+
+Neilson's love for his daughter forbade that he should force her to
+receive unwelcome attentions. Ray, on the other hand, had always
+insisted that his chief allow him a clear field. He would be infuriated
+when he heard of the trip she was taking with Ben to-day. Neilson
+straightened, resolving to meet the issue with old-time firmness.
+
+When he heard his daughter's voice on the canoe landing, one hundred
+yards below, he was inordinately startled. She had not told him that
+their picnic would take them on to the water. The reason had been, of
+course, that Beatrice knew her father's distrust of the treacherous
+stream and either feared his refusal to her plan or wished to save him
+worry. Even now they were starting. He could hear the first stroke of
+the paddle through the hushed woods.
+
+He turned toward the door, instinctively alarmed; then hesitated. After
+all, he could not tell her to come back. Beatrice would be mortified;
+and besides, there was nothing definite to fear. The river was almost as
+still as a lake for a long stretch immediately in front of the landing;
+even a poor canoeist could cross with ease. It was true that rapids,
+mile after mile of them past counting, lay just below, but surely the
+canoeists would stay at a safe distance above them. And if by any chance
+this young prospector had no skill with a canoe, Beatrice herself was an
+expert.
+
+Yet what, in reality, did he know of Ben Darby? He had liked the man's
+face: whence he came and what was his real business on the Yuga he had
+not the least idea. All at once a baffling apprehension crept like a
+chill through his frame.
+
+He could not laugh it away. It laid hold of him, refusing to be
+dispelled. It was as if an inner voice was warning him, telling him to
+rush down to the river bank and check that canoe ride at all costs. It
+occurred to him, for the moment, that this might be premonition of a
+disastrous accident, yet vaguely he sensed a plot, an obscure design
+that filled him with ghastly terror. Once more the man started for the
+door.
+
+Unaware of his ground, he did not hurry at first. He hardly knew what to
+say, by what excuse he could call Beatrice back to the landing. His
+heart was racing incomprehensibly in his breast, and all at once he
+started to run.
+
+At the first step he fell sprawling, and stark panic was upon him when
+he got to his feet again. And when he reached the landing the canoe was
+already near the opposite shore, heading swiftly downstream.
+
+He saw in one glance that the craft was rather heavily laden, Fenris
+atop the pile of duffle, and that Ben was paddling with a remarkably
+fast, easy stroke. "Come back, Beatrice," he shouted. "You've forgotten
+something."
+
+The girl turned, waving, but Ben's voice drowned out hers. "We'll see
+you later," he called in a gay voice. "We can't come back now."
+
+"Come back!" Neilson called again. "I order you--"
+
+He stared intently, hoping that the man would turn. Already they were
+practically out of hearing; and not even Beatrice was dipping her paddle
+in obedience to his command. Looking more closely, he saw that the man
+only was paddling.
+
+Then his eye fell to the landing on which he stood, instinctively trying
+to locate the second paddle. It lay at his feet. A foolhardy thing to
+do, he thought, a broken paddle, out there above the rapids, would mean
+death and no other thing. Helpless in the current, the canoe could not
+be guided through those fearful gates of peril below. If by a
+thousandth chance it escaped the rocks, it would be carried for
+unnumbered miles into a land unknown, a territory that could be entered
+only by the greatest difficulty--packing day after day over range and
+through thicket with a great train of pack horses--and from which the
+egress, except by the same perilous water route, would be almost
+impossible. But the thought passed as he discerned the white paper that
+had been fastened in the paddle blade.
+
+He bent for it with eager hand. He knew instinctively that it contained
+an all-important and sinister message for him. His eyes leaped over the
+bold writing on the exterior.
+
+"To Ezra Melville's murderers," Ben had written. And with that reading
+Jeffery Neilson knew a terror beyond any experienced in the darkest
+nightmare of his iniquitous life.
+
+It did not occur to him to bring the note, unopened, to Ray Brent. As
+yet he did not fully understand; yet he knew that the issue was one of
+seconds. _Seconds_ must decide everything; his whole world hung in the
+balance. His hand ripped apart the sealed fold, and he held the sheet
+before his eyes.
+
+Possessing only an elementary education Jeffery Neilson was not,
+ordinarily, a fast reader. Usually he sounded out his words only with
+the greatest difficulty. But to-day, one glance at the page conveyed to
+him the truth: from half a dozen words he got a general idea of the
+letter's full, dread meaning. Ben had written:
+
+ TO NEILSON AND HIS GANG:--
+
+ When you get this, Beatrice will be on her way to Back There--either
+ there or on her way to hell.
+
+ Ezra Melville was my pard. A letter leaving his claim to me is in my
+ pocket, and I alone know where Hiram's will is, leaving it to Ezram.
+ Your title will never stand as long as those papers aren't
+ destroyed. If you don't care enough about saving your daughter from
+ me, at least you'll want those letters. Come and get them. I'll be
+ waiting for you.
+
+ BEN DARBY.
+
+As the truth flashed home, Neilson's first thought was of his rifle. He
+was a wilderness man, trained to put his trust in the weapon of steel;
+and if it were only in his hands, there might yet be time to prevent the
+abduction. One well-aimed bullet over the water, shooting with all his
+old-time skill, might yet hurl the avenger to his death in the moment of
+his triumph. Just one keen, long gaze over the sights,--heaven or earth
+could not yield him a vision half so glorious as this! For all his
+terror he knew that he could shoot as he had never shot before, true as
+a light-ray. His remorseless eyes for once could see clear and sure. One
+shot--and then Beatrice could seize the paddle and save herself. And he
+cursed himself, more bitterly than he had ever cursed an enemy, when his
+empty hands showed him that he had left his rifle in his cabin.
+
+His pistol, however, was at his belt, and his hand reached for it. But
+the range was already too far for any hope of accurate pistol fire. His
+hard eyes gazed along the short, black barrel. His steady finger pressed
+back against the trigger.
+
+The first shot fell far short. The pistol was of large caliber but small
+velocity; and a hundred yards was its absolute limit of point-blank
+range. He lifted the gun higher and shot again. Again he shot low. But
+the third bullet fell just a few feet on the near side of the canoe.
+
+He had the range now, and he shot again. It was like a dream, outside
+his consciousness, that Beatrice was screaming with fear and amazement.
+She was already too far to give or receive a message: all hope lay in
+the pistol alone. The fifth shot splashed water beyond the craft.
+
+Once more he fired, but the boat was farther distant now, and the bullet
+went wild. The pistol was empty. Like a moose leaping through a marsh he
+turned back to his cabin for his rifle.
+
+But already he knew that he was lost. Before ever he could climb up the
+hundred yards to the cabin, and back again, the craft would be around
+the bend in the river. Heavy brush would hide it from then on. He
+hastened frantically up the narrow, winding trail.
+
+
+
+XX
+
+Ben was fully aware, as he pushed the canoe from landing, that the
+success of his scheme was not yet guaranteed. Long ago, in the hard
+school of the woods, he had found out life; and one of the things he had
+learned was that nothing on earth is infallible and no man's plans are
+sure. There are always coincidents of which the scheming brain has not
+conceived: the sudden interjection of unexpected circumstances. The
+unforeseen appearance of Beatrice's father on the landing had been a
+case in point.
+
+Most of all he had been afraid that Beatrice herself would leap from the
+canoe and attempt to swim to safety. He had learned in his past
+conversations with her that she had at least an elementary knowledge of
+swimming. Had she not confessed at the same time fear of the water, his
+plan could have never been adopted. The northern girls have few
+opportunities to obtain real proficiency in swimming. Their rivers are
+icy cold, their villages do not afford heated natatoriums. Yet he
+realized that he must quiet her suspicions as long as possible.
+
+"I've got the landing picked out," he told her as they started off.
+"I've been all over the river this morning. It is quite a way
+down--around the bend--but it's perfectly safe. So don't be afraid."
+
+"I'm not afraid--with you. And how fast you paddle!"
+
+It was true: in all her days by rivers she had never seen such perfect
+control of a canoe. He paddled as if without effort, but the streaming
+shore line showed that the boat moved at an astonishing rate. He was a
+master canoeist, and whatever fears she might have had vanished at once.
+
+She talked gayly to him, scarcely aware that they were heading across
+and down the stream.
+
+When her father had appeared on the bank, calling, she had not been in
+the least alarmed. Ben's gay shouts kept her from understanding exactly
+what he was saying. And when the old man had drawn his pistol and fired,
+and the bullet had splashed in the water some twenty yards toward shore,
+her mind had refused to accept the evidence of her senses.
+
+The second shot followed the first, and the third the second, resulting
+in, for her part, only the impotence of bewilderment. Her first thought
+was that her father's fierce temper, long known to her, had engulfed him
+in murderous rage. Trusting Ben wholly, the real truth did not occur to
+her.
+
+She screamed shrilly at the fourth shot; and Ben looked up to find her
+pale as the foam from his flashing paddle. "Turn around and go back,"
+she cried to Ben. "He'll kill you if you don't! Oh, please--turn
+around--"
+
+"And get in range of him so he _can_ kill me?" Ben replied savagely.
+"Can't you see he's shooting at me?"
+
+"Then throw up your hands--it's all some dreadful mistake. Can't you
+hear me--turn and go back."
+
+The fifth and sixth shots were fired by now; and Neilson had gone to his
+cabin for his rifle. Ben smiled grimly into her white face.
+
+"We'd better keep on going to our landing place," he advised. "There's
+no place to land above it--I went all over the shore this morning. That
+will give him time to cool down. I only want to get around this curve
+before he comes with his rifle."
+
+She stared at him aghast, too confused and terrified to make rational
+answer. He was pale, too; but she had a swift feeling that the cold,
+rugged face was in some way exultant, too. The first chill of fear of
+him brushed her like a cold wind.
+
+But they were around the bend by now, and Ben's breath caught as if in a
+triumphant gasp. Already all opportunity for the girl to swim to shore
+was irremediably past. While he could still control the canoe with
+comparative ease, the river was a swift-moving sheet of water that would
+carry any one but the strongest swimmer remorselessly into the rapids
+below. Ben smiled, like a man who has come into a great happiness, and
+rested on his paddle.
+
+"Push into shore," the girl urged. "The home shore--if you can. Then
+I'll go and find him and try to quiet him. He'll kill you if you don't."
+
+A short pause followed the girl's words. The man smiled coldly into her
+eyes.
+
+"He'll kill me, will he?" he repeated.
+
+The response to the simple question was simply unmitigated terror, swift
+and deadly, surging through the girl's frame. It caught and twisted her
+throat muscles like a cruel hand; and her childish eyes widened and
+darkened under his contemptuous gaze.
+
+"What do you mean?" she asked breathlessly. "What--are you going to do?"
+
+"He won't kill me," Ben went on. "I may kill him--and I will if I
+can--but he won't kill me. See--we're going faster all the time."
+
+It was true. Strokes of the paddle were no longer necessary to propel
+the craft at the breakneck pace. It sped like an arrow--straight toward
+the perilous cataracts below.
+
+The girl watched him with transcending horror, and slowly the truth went
+home. The supplies in the boat, her father's desperate attempt to rescue
+her, even at the risk of her own life and the cost of Ben's, this white,
+exultant face before her, more terrible than that of the wolf between,
+the cold reptile eyes so full of some unhallowed emotion,--at last she
+saw their meaning and relation. Was it _death_--was _that_ what this mad
+man in the stern had for her? She remembered what she had told him the
+day before, her description of the cataracts that lay below. She
+struggled to shake off the trance that her terror had cast about her.
+
+"Turn into the shore," she told him, half-whispering. There was no
+pleading in her tone: the hard eyes before her told her only too plainly
+how futile her pleas would be. "You still have time to steer into shore.
+I'll jump overboard if you don't."
+
+He shook his head. "Don't jump overboard, Beatrice," he answered, some
+of the harshness gone from his tones. "It isn't my purpose to kill
+you--and to jump over into this stream only means to die--'for any one
+except the most powerful swimmer. You'd be carried down in an instant."
+
+The girl knew he spoke the truth. Only death dwelt in those cold and
+rushing waters. "What do you mean to do?" she asked.
+
+Her tone was more quiet now, and he waited an instant before he
+answered. The canoe glided faster--ever faster down the stream. Somewhat
+afraid, but still trusting in the imperial mind of his master, the wolf
+raised his head to watch the racing shore line.
+
+"It's just a little debt I owe your father--and his gang," Ben
+explained. "I'll tell you some time, in the days to come. It was a debt
+of blood--"
+
+The girl's dark eyes charged with red fire. "And you, a coward, take
+your payment on a woman. Turn the canoe into the bank."
+
+"The payment won't be taken from you," he explained soberly. "You'll be
+safe enough--even the fate that Neilson fears for you won't happen. I
+hate him too much to take _that_ payment from you. I'd die before I'd
+touch the flesh of his flesh to mine! Do you understand that?"
+
+His fury had blazed up, for the instant, and she saw the deadly zeal of
+a fanatic in his gray eyes. A hatred beyond all naming, a bitterness and
+a rage such as she had never dreamed could blast a human heart was
+written in his brown, rugged face. Her woman's intuition gave her added
+vision, and she glimpsed something of the fire that smoldered and seared
+behind his eyes. They were of one blood, this man in the stern and the
+wolf on the duffle.
+
+"Then why--"
+
+"You're safe with me--the daughter of Jeff Neilson can't ever be
+anything but safe with me--as far as the thing you fear is concerned.
+Don't be afraid for that. I'm simply paying an honest debt, and you're
+the unfortunate agent. Don't you know the things he's fearing now are
+more torment to him than anything I could do to his flesh? If we should
+be killed in these rapids that are coming, it will be fair enough too;
+he'll know what it is to lose the dearest thing on earth he has. For you
+and me it will only be a minute that won't greatly matter. For him it
+will be weeks--months! But that's only a part of it. I hope to bring you
+through. The main thing is--that sooner or later they'll come for
+you--into a country where I'll have every advantage. Where there won't
+be any escape or chance for them. Where I can watch the trails, and
+shatter them--every one--as slow or as fast as I like. Where they'll
+have to hunt for me, week on week and month on month, their fears eating
+into them. That's my game, Beatrice. There will be discomfort for
+you--and some danger--but I'll make it as light as I can. And in another
+moment--"
+
+"You've still got time to turn back," the girl answered him, seemingly
+without feeling. "Glide into shore, and we'll try to catch an
+overhanging limb. It's my last warning."
+
+It was true that a few seconds remained in which they might, with heroic
+effort, save themselves. But these were passing: already they could see
+the gleaming whitecaps of the cataract below.
+
+The roar of the wild waters was in their ears. Ahead they could see
+great rocks, emerging like fangs above the water, sharp-edged and wet
+with spray. The boat was shuddering; the water seemed to covet them, and
+a great force, like the hand of a river god, reached at them from
+beneath as if to crush them in a merciless grasp. A hundred yards
+farther the smooth, swift water fell into a seething, roaring
+cataract--such a manifestation of the mighty powers of nature as checks
+the breath and awes the heart--a death stream in which seemingly the
+canoe would be shattered to pieces in an instant.
+
+Ben shook his head. The girl's white hand flashed to her side, then rose
+sure and steady, holding her pistol. "Turn quick, or I'll fire," she
+said.
+
+He felt that, if such action were in her power, she told the truth. No
+mercy dwelt in her clear gaze. His eye fell to the box of cartridges,
+now fallen safely among the duffle. Presently he smiled into her eyes.
+
+"Your gun is empty, Beatrice," he told her quietly. He heard her sob,
+and he smiled a little, reassuringly. "Never mind--and pray for a good
+voyage," he advised. "We're going through."
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+The craft and its occupants were out of sight by the time Jeffery
+Neilson reached the river bank with his rifle. The flush had swept from
+his bronze skin, leaving it a ghastly yellow, and for once in his life
+no oaths came to his lips. He could only mutter, strangely, from a
+convulsed throat.
+
+Like an insane man he hastened down the river bank, fighting his way
+through the brush. The thickets were dense, ordinarily impenetrable to
+any mortal strength except to that mighty, incalculable power of the
+moose and grizzly; yet they could not restrain him now. The tough
+clothes he wore were nearly torn from his body; his face and hands were
+scratched as if by the claws of a lynx; but he did not pause till he
+reached the bank of the gray river.
+
+Only one more glimpse of the canoe was vouchsafed him, and that glimpse
+came too late. He saw the light barge just as it hovered at the crest of
+the rapids. Even if he could have shot straight at so great a range and
+had killed the man in the stern, no miracle could have saved his
+daughter. She would have been instantly swept to her death against the
+crags.
+
+Some measure of self-control returned to him then, and he made his way
+fast as he could toward the claim. Sensing the older man's distress, Ray
+straightened from his work at the sight of him.
+
+The face before him was drawn and white; but there was no time for
+questions. Hard hands seized his arm.
+
+"Ray, do you know of a canoe anywhere--up or down this river?"
+
+"There's one at the landing. None other I know of."
+
+"Think, man! You don't know where we can get one?"
+
+"No. Old Hiram's canoe was the only one. What's the matter?"
+
+"Do you think there's one chance in a million of getting down through
+those rapids on a raft?"
+
+Ray's eyes opened wide. "A raft!" he echoed. "Man, are you crazy? Even
+at this high water a canoe wouldn't have a chance in ten of making it.
+The river's falling every hour--"
+
+"I know it. Do you suppose there's a canoe in town?"
+
+"No! Of course there isn't--one that you could even dream about shooting
+those rapids in. Besides, by the time we got there and packed it up--it
+would take two days to pack it the best we could do--the river would be
+too far down to tackle the trip at all. And it won't come up again till
+fall--you know that. Tell me what's the matter. Has Beatrice--"
+
+"Beatrice has gone down, that's all."
+
+"Then she's dead--no hope of anything else. Only an expert could hope to
+take her through, and there's nothing to live on Back There. What's the
+use of trying to follow--?"
+
+Neilson straightened, his eyes searching Ray's. "She's got food, I
+suppose. And she's got an expert paddler to take her there."
+
+Ray's face seemed to darken before his eyes. His hands half closed,
+shook in his face, then caught at Neilson's shoulders. "You don't
+mean--she's run away?"
+
+"Don't be a fool. Not run away--abducted. The prospector I told you
+about--Darby--was the old man's partner. He's paying us back. Heaven
+only knows what the girl's fate will be--I don't dare to think of it.
+Ray, I wish to God I had died before I ever saw this day!"
+
+Ray stared blankly. "Then he found out--about the murder?" he gasped.
+
+"Yes. Here's his letter. Take time--and read it. There's no use to try
+to act before we think--how to act. If I could only see a way--"
+
+Ray read the letter carefully, crumpling it at last in savage wrath.
+"It's your fault!" he cried. "Why didn't you save her for me as I've
+always asked you to do; why did you let her go out with him at all? I'll
+bet she wanted to go--"
+
+"I'd rather she had, instead of being taken by force!" The older
+man--aged incredibly in a few little minutes--slowly straightened. "But
+don't storm at me, Ray!" he warned, carefully and quietly. "I've stood a
+lot from you, but to-day I'd kill you for one word!"
+
+They faced each other in black disdain, but Ray knew he spoke the truth.
+There was no toying with this man's wrath to-day.
+
+"And if you'd let me croak this devil like I wanted to, it wouldn't have
+happened either. But there's no use crying about either one. The girl's
+a goner, sure; she's deep in the rapids by now."
+
+"Yes, and it's part of this man's hellish plan to take her clear through
+to Back There. You see, he dares us to come for her--and he'll be
+waiting and ready for us, mark my words. My God, she's probably
+dead--smashed to pieces--already!"
+
+"He says he's got the old man's letter, leaving the claim to him. That
+messes up things even worse."
+
+"I wish I'd never heard of the claim. There's only one thing to do, and
+that's to rush into Snowy Gulch and get a big outfit--all the horses and
+supplies we can find--and go after her by land."
+
+"Yes, and walk right into his trap. Think again, Neilson. It would take
+weeks and months to get in that way. Besides, what would happen to the
+claim while we're gone?"
+
+"You needn't fear for the claim! Of course, I'd expect you to think of
+that first--you who loved Beatrice so dearly!" Neilson's face was white
+with disdain. "It'll be recorded in our names, by then--likely Chan is
+already in Bradleyburg--and Darby himself is the only man on earth we
+have to fear." He paused, putting his faith in desperate craft. "If you
+want to cinch the claim, the first thing to do is go and stamp the life
+out of Darby; otherwise he'll turn up and make us trouble, just as he
+says."
+
+"He can't do much if the claim's recorded in our names!"
+
+"He can make us plenty of trouble. If you want the girl, Ray--don't lose
+a minute. Put your things together as fast as you can. We'll try to get
+some men in Snowy Gulch to come with us--to join in the hunt--and we'll
+hire every pack horse in the country. Get busy, and get busy quick."
+
+Reluctant to leave his gold, yet seeing the truth in Neilson's words,
+Ray hastened to his cabin to get such few supplies as would be needed
+for the day's march into Snowy Gulch. In less than five minutes they
+were on their way--tramping in file down the narrow moose trail.
+
+They crossed the divide, thus reaching the headwaters of Poor Man's
+Creek; then took the trail down toward the settlements. But the two
+claim-jumpers had not yet learned all the day's ill news. Half-way to
+the mouth of the stream they met Chan Heminway on his way back to the
+claim.
+
+At the first sight of him, riding in the rear of a long train of laden
+pack horses, they could hardly believe their eyes. It was not to be
+credited that he had made the trip to Bradleyburg and back in the few
+days he had been absent. Only an aeroplane could have made so fast a
+trip. Could it be that in spite of his definite orders he was returning
+with the duty of recording the claim still unperformed? To Neilson,
+however, the sight of the long pack train brought some measure of
+satisfaction. Here were horses laden with the summer supplies that Chan
+had been told to procure, and they could be utilized in the pursuit of
+Beatrice. Two days at least could be saved.
+
+"What in the devil you coming back for?" Ray shouted, when Chan's
+identity became certain.
+
+Chan rode nearer as if he had not heard. He checked his horse
+deliberately, undoubtedly inwardly excited by the news he had to tell
+and perhaps somewhat triumphant because he was its bearer. "I'm coming
+back because there ain't no use in staying at Snowy Gulch any longer,"
+he answered at last. "I've got the supplies, and I'm packin' up to the
+claim, just as I was told."
+
+"But why didn't you go to Bradleyburg and record the claim?" Ray
+stormed. "Don't you know until that's done we're likely to be chased off
+any minute?"
+
+Chan looked into his partner's angry eyes, and his own lips drew in a
+scowl. "Because there wasn't any use in goin' to Bradleyburg."
+
+Ray was stricken with terror, and his words faltered. "You mean you
+could tend to it in Snowy Gulch--"
+
+"I don't mean nothing of the kind. Shut up a minute, and I'll tell you
+about it. A few days ago Steve Morris got a letter addressed to old
+Hiram Melville--in care of Steve. He opened it and read it, and I heard
+about it soon as I got into town. There ain't no use of our trying to
+record that claim."
+
+"For God's sake, why?"
+
+"Because it's already recorded, that's why. We all felt so sure, and we
+wasn't sure at all. Before old Hiram died he wrote a letter--one of them
+two letters you heard about, Neilson--and which you wished you'd got
+hold of. Who that letter was to was an official in Bradleyburg--an old
+friend of Hiram's--and in it was a description of the claim. This letter
+Morris got was a notice that his claim was all properly filed in
+his--Hiram's--name. Whatever formalities was necessary was cut out
+because the old man had been too sick to make the trip--the recorder got
+special permission from Victoria. To be plain, I didn't file the claim
+because it's already filed, and I didn't want to show myself up as a
+claim-jumper quite as bad as that."
+
+"It's all over town--about the claim?"
+
+"Sure, but there won't be a rush. There's quite a movement over
+Bradleyburg way for one thing; for another, this is a pocket country,
+once and for always."
+
+For some seconds thereafter his partners could make no intelligent
+response. This bitter blow had been anticipated by neither. But Ray was
+a strong man, and his self-control quickly returned to him.
+
+"You see what that means, don't you?" he asked Neilson.
+
+"It means we've lost!"
+
+The eyes before him narrowed and gleamed. "So that's what it means to
+you! Well, I don't look at it just that way. It means to me that we've
+got to take these supplies and these pack horses and start out and find
+Ben Darby--and never stop hunting till we've found him."
+
+"Of course we've got to rescue Beatrice--"
+
+"Rescuing Beatrice isn't all of it now, by a long shot. For the Lord's
+sake, Neilson--use your head a minute. Didn't old Hiram leave a will,
+giving this claim to his brother Ezra? If the claim wasn't recorded that
+will wouldn't mean much--but it is. And hasn't this Ben got a letter
+from Ezra leaving the claim to him? Now do you want to know who owns
+that claim? Ben Darby owns it, and as long as he can kick, that quarter
+of a million in gold can never be ours."
+
+"You mean we've got to find him--and destroy that letter--"
+
+"We've got to; that's all. He wrote us he had it, just to taunt us, and
+we've got to burn that up whether we find the girl or not. But that
+ain't all we've got to destroy--that piece of paper. You see that, don't
+you?"
+
+Neilson breathed heavily. "It's all plain enough."
+
+"I want it to be plain, so next time I want to let daylight through a
+man you won't stand in the way. It ain't just enough to burn up that
+letter. We've got to get the man who owns it, too. If we don't he'd
+still have a good enough case against us--with a good lawyer. Likely
+enough lots of people knew of their partnership, maybe have seen the
+letter--and they'd all be good witnesses in a suit. Our reputation ain't
+so good, after that Jenkins deal, that we'd shine very bright in a suit.
+Even if he couldn't prove his own claim, he could lug out the will old
+Hiram left--he alone knows where it's hid--and then his next nearest
+relatives would come in and get the claim. On the other hand, if we
+smash him, the thing will all quiet down; there'll be no claimants to
+work the mine; and after a few months we can step in and put up our own
+notices. But we've got to do that first--smash him wide-open as soon as
+we can catch up with him. He'll be way out in Back There, and no man
+would ever know what became of him, and there'd be nobody left to oppose
+us any more. But we can't be safe any other way."
+
+Neilson nodded slowly. His subordinate had put the matter clearly; and
+there was truth in his words. In Ben's murder alone lay their safety.
+
+He had always been adverse to bloodshed; but further reluctance meant
+ruin. Ben was one whom he could strike down without mercy or regret. And
+the blow would not be for expediency alone. There would be a personal
+debt to pay after the long months of searching. He could not forget that
+Beatrice was helpless in his hands.
+
+"The thing to do is to turn back with Chan, at once," he said.
+
+"Of course," Ray agreed. "That plan of yours to get help in chasing 'em
+down don't go any more. We don't want any spectators for what's ahead of
+us. Here's grub and horses a-plenty, and we needn't lose any time."
+
+So they turned back toward the Yuga, on their quest of hate.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+Beatrice Neilson was a mountain girl, with the strong thews of Jael, yet
+she hid her face as the canoe shot into the crest of the rapids. It
+seemed incredible to her that the light craft should buffet that wild
+cataract and yet live. She was young and she loved life; and death
+seemed very near.
+
+The scene that her eyes beheld in that last little instant in which the
+boat seemed to hang, shuddering, at the crest of the descent was branded
+indelibly on her memory. She saw Ben's face, set like iron, the muscles
+bunching beneath his flannel sleeves as he set his paddle. He was
+leaning forward, aware of nothing in the world but the forthcoming
+crisis. And in that swift flash of vision she saw not only the steel
+determination and the brutal savagery of the avenger. A little glimpse
+of the truth went home to her, and she beheld something of the
+misdirected idealism of the man, the intensity and steadfastness that
+were the dominant traits of his nature. She could not doubt his belief
+in the reality of his cause. Whether fancied or real the injury, deep
+wells of emotion in his heart had broken their seals and flowed forth.
+
+The wolf crouched on the heap of supplies, fearful to the depths of his
+wild heart of this mighty stream, yet still putting his faith in his
+master in the stern. Beatrice saw his wild, frightened eyes as he gazed
+down into the frightful whirlpools. The banks seemed to whip past.
+
+Then the rushing waters caught the craft and seemed to fling it into
+the air. There was the swift sense of lightning and incredible movement,
+of such incalculable speed as that with which a meteor blazes through
+the sky, and then a mighty surging, struggle; an interminable instant of
+ineffable and stupendous conflict. The bow dipped, split the foam; then
+the raging waters seized the craft again, and with one great impulse
+hurled it through the clouds of spray, down between the narrow portals
+of rocks.
+
+Beatrice came to herself with the realization that she had uttered a
+shrill cry. Part of the impulse behind it was simply terror; but it was
+also the expression of an intensity of sensation never before
+experienced. She could have understood, now, the lure of the rapids to
+experienced canoeists. She forced herself to look into the wild
+cataract.
+
+The boat sped at an unbelievable pace. Ben held his paddle like iron,
+yet with a touch as delicate as that of a great musician upon piano
+keys, and he steered his craft to the last inch. His face was still like
+metal, but the eyes, steely, vivid, and magnetic, had a look of triumph.
+The first of the great tests had been passed.
+
+Sudden confidence in Ben's ability to guide her through to safety began
+to warm the girl's frozen heart. There were no places more dangerous
+than that just past; and he had handled his craft like a master. He was
+a voyageur: as long as his iron control was sustained, as long as his
+nerve was strong and his eye true she had every chance of coming out
+alive. But they had irremediably cast their fortunes upon the river,
+now. They could not turn back. She was in his whole charge, an agent of
+vengeance against her own father and his confederates.
+
+Hot, blinding tears suddenly filled her eyes. Her frantic fear of the
+river had held them back for a time; but they flowed freely enough now
+the first crisis was past. In utter misery and despair her head bowed in
+her hands; and her brown hair, disheveled, dropped down.
+
+Ben gazed at her with a curious mingling of emotions. It had not been
+part of his plan to bring sorrow to this girl. After all, she was not in
+the least responsible for her father's crimes. He had sworn to have no
+regrets, no matter what innocent flesh was despoiled in order that he
+might strike the guilty; yet the sight of that bowed, lovely head went
+home to him very deeply indeed. She was the instrument of his vengeance,
+necessary to his cause, but there was nothing to be gained by afflicting
+her needlessly. At least, he could give her his pity. It would not
+weaken him, dampen his fiery resolution, to give her that.
+
+As he guided his craft he felt growing compassion for her; yet it was a
+personal pity only and brought no regrets that he had acted as he did.
+
+"I wish you wouldn't cry," he said, rather quietly.
+
+Amazed beyond expression at the words, Beatrice looked up. For the
+instant her woe was forgotten in the astounding fact that she had won
+compassion from this cast-iron man in the stern.
+
+"I'll try not to," she told him, her dark eyes ineffably beautiful with
+their luster of tears. "I don't see why I should try--why I should try
+to do anything you ask me to--but yet I will--"
+
+Further words came to him, and he could not restrain them. "You're sort
+of--the goat, Beatrice," he told her soberly. "It was said, long ago,
+that the sins of the father must be visited upon the children; and maybe
+that's the way it is with you. I can't help but feel sorry--that you had
+to undergo this--so that I could reach your father and his men. If you
+had seen old Ezram lying there--the life gone from, his kind, gray old
+face--the man who brought me home and gave me my one chance--maybe you'd
+understand."
+
+They were speechless a long time, Beatrice watching the swift leap of
+the shore line, Ben guiding, with steady hand, the canoe. Neither of
+them could guess at what speed they traveled this first wild half-hour;
+but he knew that the long miles--so heart-breaking with their ridges and
+brush thickets to men and horses--were whipping past them each in a few,
+little breaths. Ever they plunged deeper into the secret, hushed heart
+of the wild--a land unknown to the tread of white men, a region so still
+and changeless that it seemed excluded from the reign and law of, time.
+The spruce grew here, straight and dark and tall, a stalwart army whose
+measureless march no human eyes beheld. Already they had come farther
+than a pack train could travel, through the same region, in weary days.
+
+Already they were at the border of Back There. They had cut the last
+ties with the world of men. There were no trails here, leading slowly
+but immutably to the busy centers of civilization; not a blaze on a tree
+for the eyes of a woodsman riding on some forest venture, not the ashes
+of a dead camp fire or a charred cooking rack, where an Indian had
+broiled his caribou flesh. Except by the slow process of exploration
+with pack horses, traveling a few miles each day, fording unknown rivers
+and encircling impassable ranges, or by waiting patiently until the fall
+rains swelled the river, they might never leave this land they had so
+boldly entered. They could not go out the way they had come--over those
+seething waters--and the river, falling swiftly, would soon be too low
+to permit them to push down to its lower waters where they might find
+Indian encampments.
+
+Nothing was left but the wilderness, ancient and unchanged. The spruce
+forest had a depth and a darkness that even Ben had never seen; the wild
+creatures that they sometimes glimpsed on the bank stared at them wholly
+without knowledge as to what they were, and likely amazed at the
+strength whereby they had braved this seething torrent that swept
+through their sylvan home. Here was a land where the grizzly had not yet
+learned of a might greater than his, where he had not yet surrendered
+his sovereignty to man. Here the moose--mightiest of the antlered
+herd--reached full maturity and old age without ever mistaking the call
+of a birch-bark horn for that of his rutting cow. Young bulls with only
+a fifty-inch spread of horns and ten points on each did not lead the
+herds, as in the more accessible provinces of the North. All things were
+in their proper balance, since the forest had gone unchanged for time
+immemorial; and as the head-hunters had not yet come the bull moose did
+not rank as a full-grown warrior until he wore thirty points and had
+five feet of spread, and he wasn't a patriarch until he could no longer
+walk free between two tree trunks seventy inches apart. Certain of the
+lesser forest people were not in unwonted numbers because that fierce
+little hunter, the marten, had been exterminated by trappers; the otter,
+yet to know the feel of cold iron, fished to his heart's content in
+rivers where an artificial fly had never fallen and the trout swarmed in
+uncounted numbers in the pools.
+
+Darting down the rapids Ben felt the beginnings of an exquisite
+exhilaration. Part of it arose from the very thrill and excitement of
+their headlong pace; but partly it had a deeper, more portentous origin.
+Here was his own country--this Back There. While all the spruce forest
+in which he had lived had been his natural range and district--his own
+kind of land with which he felt close and intimate relations--this was
+even more his home than his own birthplace. By light of a secret
+quality, hard to recognize, he was of it, and it was of him. He felt the
+joy of one who sees the gleam of his own hearth through a distant
+window.
+
+He _knew_ this land; it was as if he had simply been away, through the
+centuries, and had come home. The shadows and the stillness had the
+exact depth and tone that was true and right; the forest fragance was
+undefiled; the dark sky line was like something he had dreamed come
+true. He felt a strange and growing excitement, as if magnificent
+adventure were opening out before him. His gaze fell, with a queer sense
+of understanding, to Fenris.
+
+The wolf had recovered from his fear of the river, by now, and he was
+crouched, alert and still, in his place. His gaze was fast upon the
+shore line; and the green and yellow fires that mark the beast were
+ablaze again in his eyes. Fenris too made instinctive response to those
+breathless forests; and Ben knew that the bond between them was never so
+close as now.
+
+Fenris also knew that here was his own realm, the land in which the
+great Fear had not yet laid its curse. The forest still thronged with
+game, the wood trails would be his own. Here was the motherland, not
+only to him but to his master, too. They were its fierce children: one
+by breed, the other because he answered, to the full, the call of the
+wild from which no man is wholly immune.
+
+Ben could have understood the wolf's growing exultation. The war he was
+about to wage with Neilson. would be on his own ground, in a land that
+enhanced and developed his innate, natural powers, and where he had
+every advantage. The wolf does not run into the heart of busy cities in
+pursuit of his prey. He tries to decoy it into his own fastnesses.
+
+A sudden movement on the part of Beatrice, in the bow of the canoe,
+caught his eye. She had leaned forward and was reaching among the
+supplies. His mind at once leaped to the box of shells for her pistol
+that he had thrown among the duffle, but evidently this was not the
+object of her search. She lifted into her hands a paper parcel, the same
+she had brought from her cabin early that morning.
+
+He tried to analyze the curious mingling of emotions in her face. It was
+neither white with disdain nor dark with wrath; and the tears were gone
+from her eyes. Rather her expression was speculative, pensive. Presently
+her eyes met his.
+
+His heart leaped; why he did not know. "What is, it?" he asked.
+
+"Ben--I called you that yesterday and there's no use going back to last
+names now--I've made an important decision."
+
+"I hope it's a happy one," he ventured.
+
+"It's as happy as it can be, under the circumstances. Ben, I came of a
+line of frontiersmen--the forest people--and if the woods teach one
+thing it is to make the best of any bad situation."
+
+Ben nodded. For all his long training he had not entirely mastered this
+lesson himself, but he knew she spoke true.
+
+"We've found out how hard Fate can hit--if I can make it plain," she
+went on. "We've found out there are certain powers--or devils--or
+something else, and what I don't know--that are always lying in wait for
+people, ready to strike them down. Maybe you would call it Destiny. But
+the Destiny city men know isn't the Destiny we know out here--I don't
+have to tell you that. We see Nature just as she is, without any gay
+clothes, and we know the cruelty behind her smile, and the evil plans
+behind her gentle words."
+
+The man was amazed. Evidently the stress and excitement of the morning
+had brought out the fanciful and poetic side of the girl's nature.
+
+"We don't look for good luck," she told him. "We don't expect to live
+forever. We know what death is, and that it is sure to come, and that
+misfortune comes always--in the snow and the cold and the falling
+tree--and when we have good luck we're glad--we don't take it for
+granted. Living up here, where life is real, we've learned that we have
+to make the best of things in order to be happy at all."
+
+"And you mean--you're going to try to make the best of _this_?" His
+voice throbbed ever so slightly, because he could not hold it even.
+
+"There's nothing else I can do," she replied. "You've taken me here and
+as yet I don't see how I can get away. This doesn't mean I've gone over
+to your side."
+
+He nodded. He understood _that_ very well.
+
+"I'm just admitting that at present I'm in your hands--helpless--and
+many long weeks in before us," she went on. "I'm on my father's side,
+last and always, and I'll strike back at you if the chance comes. Expect
+no mercy from me, in case I ever see my way to strike."
+
+The man's eyes suddenly gleamed. "Don't you know--that you'd have a
+better chance of fighting me--if you didn't put me on guard?"
+
+"I don't think so. I don't believe you'd be fooled that easy.
+Besides--I can't pretend to be a friend--when I'm really an enemy."
+
+For one significant instant the man looked down. This was what he had
+done--pretended friendship when he was a foe. But his was a high cause!
+
+"I'm warning you that I'm against you to the last--and will beat you if
+I see my way," the girl went on. "But at the same time I'm going to make
+the best of a bad situation, and try to get all the comfort I can. I'm
+in your hands at present, and we're foes, but just the same we can talk,
+and try to make each other comfortable so that we can be comfortable
+ourselves, and try not to be any more miserable than we can help. I'm
+not going to cry any more."
+
+As she talked she was slowly unwrapping the little parcel she had
+brought. Presently she held it out to him.
+
+It was just a box of homemade candy--fudge made with sugar and canned
+milk--that she had brought for their day's picnic. But it was a peace
+offering not to be despised. A heavy load lifted from Ben's heart.
+
+He waited his chance, guiding the boat with care, and then reached a
+brown hand. He crushed a piece of the soft, delicious confection between
+his lips. "Thanks, Beatrice," he said. "I'll remember all you've told
+me."
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+It is a peculiar fact that no one is more deeply moved by the great
+works and phenomena of nature than those who live among them. It is the
+visitor from distant cities, or the callow youth with tawdry clothes and
+tawdry thoughts who disturbs the great silences and austerity of
+majestic scenes with half-felt effusive words or cheap impertinences.
+Oddly enough, the awe that the wilderness dweller knows at the sight of
+some great, mysterious canyon or towering peak seems to increase, rather
+than decrease, with familiarity. His native scenes never grow old to
+him. Their beauty and majesty is eternal.
+
+Perhaps the reason lies in the fact that the native woodsman knows
+nature as she really is: living ever close to her he knows her power
+over his life. Perhaps there is a religious side to the matter, too. In
+the solitudes the religious instincts receive an impulse that is
+impossible to those who know only the works of man. The religion that
+this gives is true and deep, and the eye instinctively lifts in
+reverence to the manifestations of divine might.
+
+When the swirling waters carried the canoe down into the gorge of the
+Yuga both Ben and Beatrice were instinctively awed and stilled. Ever the
+walls of the gorge grew more steep, until the sunlight was cut off and
+they rode as if in twilight. The stone of the precipices presented a
+marvellous array of color; and the spruce, almost black in the subdued
+light, stood in startling contrast. Ben saw at once that even were they
+able to land they could not--until they had emerged from the
+gorge--climb to the highlands. A mountain goat, most hardy of all
+mountaineers, could scarcely scale the abrupt wall.
+
+During this time of half-light they saw none of the larger forest
+creatures that at first had gazed at them with such wonder from the
+banks. The reason was simply that they could not descend and ascend the
+steep walls.
+
+Mostly Ben had time only for an occasional glimpse at the colossus above
+him. His work was to guide the craft between the perilous boulders.
+Occasionally the river slackened its wild pace, and at such times he
+stretched his arms and rested his straining eyes.
+
+Both had largely forgotten the danger of the ride. Because she was
+trying bravely to make the best of a tragic situation Beatrice had
+resolved to keep danger from her thoughts. Ben had known from the first
+that danger was an inevitable element in his venture, and he accepted it
+just as he had considered it,--with entire coldness. Yet both of them
+knew, in their secret thoughts, that the balance of life and death was
+so fine that the least minor incident might cast them into darkness. It
+would not have to be a great disaster, a wide departure from the
+commonplace. They were traveling at a terrific rate of speed, and a
+sharp rock too close to the surface would rip the bottom from their
+craft. Any instant might bring the shock and shudder of the end.
+
+There would scarcely be time to be afraid. Both would be hurled into the
+stream; and the wild waters, pounding against the rocks, would close the
+matter swiftly. It awed them and humbled them to realize with what
+dispatch and ease this wilderness power could snuff out their mortal
+lives. There would be no chance to fight back, no element of
+uncertainty in the outcome. Here was a destiny against which the
+strength of man was as thistledown in the wind! The thought was good
+spiritual medicine for Ben, just as it would have been for most other
+men, and his egoism died a swift and natural death.
+
+One crash, one shock, and then the darkness and silence of the end! The
+river would rage on, unsatiated by their few pounds of flesh, storming
+by in noble fury; but no man would know whither they had gone and how
+they had died. The walls of the gorge would not tremble one whit, or
+notice; and the spruce against the sky would not bow their heads to show
+that they had seen.
+
+But the canyon broke at last, and the craft emerged into the sunlight.
+It was good to see the easy slope of the hills again, the spruce
+forests, and the forms of the wild creatures on the river bank, startled
+by their passing. Noon came and passed, and for lunch they ate the last
+of the fudge. And now a significant change was manifest in both of them.
+
+Psychologists are ever astounded at the ability of mortals, men and
+animals, to become adjusted to any set of circumstances. The wax of
+habit sets almost in a day. The truth was, that in a certain measure
+with very definite and restricted limits, both Ben and Beatrice were
+becoming adjusted even to this amazing situation in which they found
+themselves. This did not mean that Beatrice was in the least degree
+reconciled to it. She had simply accepted it with the intention of
+making the best of it. She had been abducted by an enemy of her father
+and was being carried down an unknown and dangerous river; but the
+element of surprise, the life of which is never but a moment, was
+already passing away. Sometimes she caught herself with a distinct
+start, remembering everything with a rage and a bitter load on her
+heart; but the mood would pass quickly.
+
+It is impossible, through any ordinary change of fortune, for a normal
+person to lose his sense of self-identity. As long as that remains
+exterior conditions can make no vital change, or make him feel greatly
+different than he felt before. The change from a peasant to a
+millionaire brings only a moment's surprise, and then readjustment.
+Beatrice was still herself; the man in the stern remained Ben Darby and
+no one else. Very naturally she began to talk to him, and he to answer
+her.
+
+The fact that they were bitter foes, one the victim of the other, did
+not decree they could not have friendly conversation, isolated as they
+were. From time to time Ben pointed out objects of interest on the
+shore; and she found herself remarking, in a casual voice, about them.
+And before the afternoon he had made her laugh, in spite of herself,--a
+gay sound in which fear and distress had little echo.
+
+"We're bound to see a great deal of each other in the next few weeks,"
+he had said; and this fact could not be denied. The sooner both became
+adjusted to it the better. Actual fear of him she had none; she
+remembered only too well the steel in his eyes and the white flame on
+his cheeks as he had assured her of her safety.
+
+In mid-afternoon Ben began to think of making his night's camp. From
+time to time the bank became an upright precipice where not even a tree
+could find foothold; and it had occurred to him, with sudden vividness,
+that he did not wish the darkness to overtake him in such a place. The
+river rocks would make short work of him, in that case. It was better to
+pick out a camp site in plenty of time lest they could not find one at
+the day's end.
+
+In one of the more quiet stretches of water he saw the place--a small
+cove and a green, tree-clad bank, with the gorge rising behind. Handling
+his canoe with greatest care he slanted toward it. A moment later he had
+caught the brush at the water's edge, stepped off into shallow water,
+and was drawing the canoe up onto the bank.
+
+"We're through for the day," he said happily, as he helped Beatrice out
+of the boat. "I'll confess I'm ready to rest."
+
+Beatrice made no answer because her eyes were busy. Coolly and quietly
+she took stock of the situation, trying to get an idea of the
+geographical features of the camp site. She saw in a glance, however,
+that there was no path to freedom up the gorge behind her. The rocks
+were precipitate: besides, she remembered that over a hundred miles of
+impassable wilderness lay between her and her father's cabin. Without
+food and supplies she could not hope to make the journey.
+
+The racing river, however, wakened a curious, inviting train of thought.
+The torrent continued largely unabated for at least one hundred miles
+more, she knew, and the hours that it would be passable in a canoe were
+numbered. The river had fallen steadily all day; driftwood was left on
+the shore; rocks dried swiftly in the sun, cropping out like fangs above
+the foam of the stream. Was there still time to drift on down the Yuga a
+hundred or more miles to the distant Indian encampment? She shut the
+thought from her mind, at present, and turned her attention to the work
+of making camp.
+
+With entire good humor she began to gather such pieces of dead wood as
+she could find for their fire.
+
+"Your prisoner might as well make herself useful," she said.
+
+Ben's face lighted as she had not seen it since their outward journey
+from Snowy Gulch. "Thank God you're taking it that way, Beatrice," he
+told her fervently. "It was a proposition I couldn't help--"
+
+But the girl's eyes flashed, and her lips set in a hard line. "I'm doing
+it to make my own time go faster," she told him softly, rather slowly.
+"I want you to remember that."
+
+But instantly both forgot their words to listen to a familiar clucking
+sound from a near-by shrub. Peering closely they made out the plump,
+genial form of Franklin's grouse,--a bird known far and wide in the
+north for her ample breast and her tender flesh.
+
+"Good Lord, there's supper!" Ben whispered. "Beatrice, get your
+pistol--"
+
+Her eyes smiled as she looked him in the face. "You remember--my pistol
+isn't loaded!"
+
+"Excuse me. I forgot. Give it to me."
+
+She handed him the little gun, and he slipped in the shells he had taken
+from it. Then--for the simple and sensible reason that he didn't want to
+take any chance on the loss of their dinner--he stole within twenty feet
+of the bird. Very carefully he drew down on the plump neck.
+
+"Dinner all safe," he remarked rather gayly, as the grouse came tumbling
+through the branches.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+Quietly Beatrice retrieved the bird and began to remove its feathers.
+Ben built the fire, chopped sturdily at a half-grown spruce until it
+shattered to the earth, and then chopped it into lengths for fuel. When
+the fire was blazing bright, he cut away the green branches and laid
+them, stems overlapping, into a fragrant bed.
+
+"Here's where you sleep to-night, Beatrice," he informed her.
+
+She stopped in her work long enough to try the springy boughs with her
+arms; then she gave him an answering smile. Even a tenderfoot can make
+some sort of a comfortable pallet out of evergreen boughs--ends
+overlapping and plumes bent--but a master woodsman can fashion a
+veritable cradle, soft as silk with never a hard limb to irritate the
+flesh, and yielding as a hair mattress. Such softness, with the
+fragrance of the balsam like a sleeping potion, can not help but bring
+sweet dreams.
+
+Ben had been wholly deliberate in the care with which he had built the
+pallet. He had simply come to the conclusion that she was paying a high
+price for her father's sins; and from now on he intended to make all
+things as easy as he could for her. Moreover, she had been a sportswoman
+of the rarest breed and merited every kindness he could do for her.
+
+He was not half so careful with his own bed, built sixty feet on the
+opposite side of the fire. He threw it together rather hastily. And when
+he walked back to the fire he found an amazing change.
+
+Already Beatrice had established sovereignty over the little patch of
+ground they had chosen for the camp,--and the wilderness had drawn back.
+This spot was no longer mere part of the far-spreading, trackless wilds.
+It had been set off and marked so that the wilderness creatures could no
+longer mistake it for part of their domain. Over the fire she had
+erected a cooking rack; and water was already boiling in a small bucket
+suspended from it. In another container a fragrant mixture was in the
+process of cooking. She had spread one of the blankets on the grass for
+a tablecloth.
+
+As twilight lowered they sat down to their simple meal,--tea, sweetened
+with sugar, and vegetables and meat happily mingled in a stew. It was
+true that the vegetable end was held up by white grains of rice alone,
+but the meat was the white, tender flesh of grouse, permeating the
+entire dish with its tempting flavor. As a whole, the stew was greatly
+satisfying to the inner man.
+
+"I wish I'd brought more tea," Ben complained, as he sipped that most
+delightful of all drinks, the black tea beloved of the northern men.
+
+"You a woodsman, and don't know how to remedy that!" the girl responded.
+"I know of a native substitute that's almost as good as the real
+article."
+
+About the embers of the fire they sat and watched the tremulous wings of
+night close round them. The copse grew breathless. The distant trees
+blended into shadow, the nearer trunks dimmed and finally faded; the
+large, white northern stars emerged in infinite troops and companies,
+peering down through the rifts in the trees. Here about their fire they
+had established the domain of man. For a few short hours they had routed
+the forces of the wilderness; but the foe pressed close upon them. Just
+at the fluctuating ring of firelight he waited, clothed in darkness and
+mystery,--the infinite, brooding spirit of the ancient forest.
+
+They had never known such silence, broken only by the prolonged chord of
+the river, as descended upon them now. It was new and strange to the
+conscious life of Ben, himself, the veritable offspring of the woods;
+although infinitely old and familiar to a still, watching, secret self
+within him. It was as if he had searched forever for this place and had
+just found it, and it answered, to the full, a queer mood of silence in
+his own heart. The wind had died down now. The last wail of a
+coyote--disconsolate on a far-away ridge--had trembled away into
+nothingness; the voices of the Little People who had chirped and rustled
+in the tree aisles during the daylight hours were stilled with a
+breathless, dramatic stillness. Such sound as remained over the
+interminable breadth of that dark forest was only the faint stirrings
+and rustlings of the beasts of prey going to their hunting; and this was
+only a moving tone in the great chord of silence.
+
+To Ben the falling night brought a return of his most terrible moods.
+Beatrice sensed them in his pale, set face and his cold, wolfish eyes.
+The wolf sat beside him, swept by his master's mood, gazing with deadly
+speculations into the darkness. Beatrice saw them as one breed to-night.
+The wild had wholly claimed this repatriated son. The paw of the Beast
+was heavy upon him; the softening influences of civilization seemed
+wholly dispelled. There was little here to remind her that this was the
+twentieth century. The primitive that lies just under the skin in all
+men was in the ascendancy; and there was little indeed to distinguish
+him from the hunter of long ago, a grizzled savage at the edge of the
+ice who chased the mammoth and wild pony, knowing no home but the
+forest and no gentleness unknown to the wolf that ran at his heels....
+The tenderness and sympathy he had had for her earlier that day seemed
+quite gone now. She searched for it in vain in the dark and savage lines
+of his pale face.
+
+Because it has always been that the happiness of women must depend upon
+the mood of men, her own spirits fell. The despair that descended upon
+her brought also resentment and rage; and soon she slipped away quietly
+to her bed. She drew the blankets over her face; but no tears wet her
+cheeks to-night. She was dry-eyed, thoughtful--full of vague plans.
+
+She lay awake a long time, until at last a little, faint ray of hope
+beamed bright and clear. More than a hundred miles farther down the
+Yuga, past the mouth of Grizzly River, not far from the great,
+north-flowing stream of which the Yuga was a tributary, lay an Indian
+village--and if only she could reach it she might enlist the aid of the
+natives and make a safe return, by a long, roundabout route, to her
+father's arms. The plan meant deliverance from Ben and the defeat of all
+his schemes of vengeance,--perhaps the salvation of her father and his
+subordinates.
+
+She realized perfectly the reality of her father's danger. She had read
+the iron resolve in Ben's face. She knew that if she failed to make an
+immediate escape from him, all his dreadful plans were likely to
+succeed: his enemies would follow him into the unexplored mazes of Back
+There to effect her rescue and fall helpless in his trap. What quality
+of mercy he would extend to them then she could readily guess.
+
+Just to get down to the Indian village: this was her whole problem. But
+it was Ben's plan to land and enter the interior somewhere in the vast
+wilderness between, from which escape could not be made until the flood
+waters of fall. The way would remain open but a few hours more, due to
+the simple fact that the waters were steadily falling and the
+river-bottom crags, forming impassable barriers at some points, would be
+exposed. _If she made her escape at all it must be soon._
+
+Yet she could not attempt it at night. She could not see to guide the
+canoe while the darkness lay over the river. Just one further chance
+remained--to depart in the first gray of dawn.
+
+She fell into troubled sleep, but true to her resolution, wakened when
+the first ribbon of light stretched along the eastern horizon. She sat
+up, laying the blankets back with infinite care. This was her chance:
+Ben still lay asleep.
+
+Just to steal down to the water's edge, push off the canoe, and trust
+her life to the doubtful mercy of the river. The morning soon would
+break; if she could avoid the first few crags, she had every chance to
+guide her craft through to deliverance and safety. By no conceivable
+chance could Ben follow her. He would be left in the shadow of the
+gorge, a prisoner without hope or prayer of deliverance. There was no
+crossing the cliffs that lifted so stern and gray just behind. Before he
+could build any kind of a craft with axe and fire, the waters would fall
+to a death level, beyond any hope of carrying him to safety. The tables
+would be turned; he would be left as helpless to follow her as Neilson
+had been to follow him.
+
+The plan meant deliverance for her; but surely it meant _death_ to him.
+Starvation would drive him to the river and destruction, before men
+could ever come the long way to rescue him. But this was not her
+concern. She was a forest girl and he her enemy: he must pay the price
+for his own deeds.
+
+She got to her feet, stalking with absolute silence. She must not waken
+him now. Softly she pressed her unshod foot into the grass. He stirred
+in his sleep; and she paused, scarcely breathing.
+
+She looked toward him. Dimly she could see his face, tranquil in sleep
+and gray in the soft light; and an instantaneous surge of remorse sped
+through her. There was a sweetness, a hint of kindly boyishness in his
+face now, so changed since she had left him beside the glowing coals.
+Yet he was her deadly enemy; and she must not let her woman's heart cost
+her her victory in its moment of fulfillment. She crept on down to the
+water.
+
+She could discern the black shadow of the canoe. One swift surge of her
+shoulders, one leap, the splash of the stern in the water and the swift
+stroke of the paddle, and she would be safe. She stepped nearer.
+
+But at that instant a subdued note of warning froze her in her tracks.
+It was only a small sound, hushed and hardly sharp enough to arouse Ben
+from his sleep; but it was deadly, savage, unutterably sinister. She had
+forgotten that Ben did not wage war alone. For the moment she had given
+no thought to his terrible ally,--a pack brother faithful to the death.
+
+A great, gaunt form raised up from the pile of duffle in the canoe; and
+his fangs showed ivory white in the wan light. It was Fenris, and he
+guarded the canoe. He crouched, ready to spring if she drew near.
+
+The girl sobbed once, then stole back to her blankets.
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+Ben wakened refreshed, at peace with the world as far as he could ever
+be until his ends were attained; and immediately built a roaring fire.
+Beatrice still slept, exhausted from the stress and suspense of her
+attempt to escape. When the leaping flames had dispelled the frost from
+the grass about the fire Ben stepped to her side and touched her
+shoulder.
+
+"It's time to get up and go on," he said. "We have only a few hours more
+of travel."
+
+It was true. The river had fallen appreciably during the night. Not many
+hours remained in which to make their permanent landing. Although the
+river was somewhat less violent from this point on, the lower water line
+would make traveling practically as perilous as on the preceding day.
+
+The girl opened her eyes. "I'd rather hoped--I had dreamed it all," she
+told him miserably.
+
+The words touched him. He looked into her face, moved by the girlishness
+and appeal about the red, wistful mouth and the dark, brimming eyes.
+"It's pretty tough, but I'm afraid it's true," he said, more kindly than
+he had spoken since they had left the landing. "Do you want me to cook
+breakfast and bring it to you here?"
+
+"No, I want to do that part myself. It makes the time pass faster to
+have something to do."
+
+He went to look for fresh meat, and she slipped into her outer garments.
+She found water already hot in a bucket suspended from the cooking rack,
+permitting a simple but refreshing toilet. With Ben's comb she
+straightened out the snarls in her dark tresses, parted them, and
+braided them into two dusky ropes to be worn Indian fashion in front of
+her shoulders. Then she prepared the meal.
+
+It was a problem to tax the ingenuity of any housekeeper,--to prepare an
+appetizing breakfast out of such limited supplies. But in this art,
+particularly, the forest girls are trained. A quantity of rice had been
+left from the stew of the preceding night, and mixing it with flour and
+water and salt, she made a batter. Sooner or later fresh fat could be
+obtained from game to use in frying: to-day she saw no course other than
+to melt a piece of candle. The reverberating roar of the rifle a hundred
+yards down the river bank, however, suggested another alternative.
+
+A moment later Ben appeared--and the breakfast problem was solved. It
+was another of the woods people that his rifle had brought down,--one
+that wore fur rather than feathers and which had just come in from night
+explorations along the river bank. It was a yearling black bear--really
+no larger than a cub--and he had an inch of fat under his furry hide.
+
+The fat he yielded was not greatly different from lard; and the
+pancakes--or fritters, as Ben termed them--were soon frying merrily.
+Served with hot tea they constituted a filling and satisfactory
+breakfast for both travelers.
+
+After breakfast they took to the river, yielding themselves once more to
+the whims of the current. Once more the steep banks whipped past them in
+ever-changing vista; and Ben had to strain at his paddle to guide the
+craft between the perilous crags. The previous day the high waters had
+carried them safely above the boulders of the river bed: to-day some of
+the larger crags all but scraped the bottom of the canoe. It did not
+tend toward peace of mind to know that any instant they might encounter
+a submerged crag that would rip their craft in twain. Ben felt a growing
+eagerness to land.
+
+But within an hour they came out once more upon the open forest. The
+river broadened, sped less swiftly, the bank sloped gradually to the
+distant hills. This was the heart of Back There,--a virgin and primeval
+forest unchanged since the piling-up of the untrodden ranges. The wild
+pace of the craft was checked, and they kept watch for a suitable place
+to land.
+
+There was no need to push on through the seething cataracts that lay
+still farther below. Shortly before the noon hour Ben's quick eye saw a
+break in the heavy brushwood that lined the bank and quickly paddled
+toward it. In a moment it was revealed as the mouth, of a small, clear
+stream, flowing out of a beaver meadow where the grass was rank and
+high. In a moment more he pushed the canoe into the mud of the creek
+bank.
+
+They both got out, rather sober of mien, and she helped him haul the
+canoe out upon the bank. They unloaded it quickly, carrying the supplies
+in easy loads fifty yards up into the edge of the forest, on
+well-drained dry ground.
+
+The entire forest world was hushed and breathless, as if startled by
+this intrusion. Neither of the two travelers felt inclined to speak. And
+the silence was finally broken by the splashing feet of a moose, running
+through a little arm of the marsh that the forest hid from view.
+
+"Is this our permanent camp?" the girl asked at last.
+
+"Surely not," was the reply. "It's too near the river for one
+thing--too easily found. It's too low, too--there'll be mosquitoes in
+plenty in that marsh two months from now. The first thing is--to look
+around and find a better site."
+
+"You want me to come?"
+
+"I'd rather, if you don't mind."
+
+She understood perfectly. He did not intend to give her complete freedom
+until the river fell so low that the rapids farther down would be wholly
+impassable.
+
+"I'll come." Beatrice smiled grimly. "We can have that picnic we
+planned, after all."
+
+They found a moose trail leading into the forest, and leaving the wolf
+on guard over the supplies, they filed swiftly along it in that
+peculiar, shuffling, mile-speeding gait that all foresters learn. At
+once both were aware of a subdued excitement. In the first place, this
+was unknown country and they experienced the incomparable thrill of
+exploration. Besides they were seeking a permanent camp where their
+fortunes would be cast, the drama of their lives be enacted, for weeks
+to come.
+
+Almost at once they began to catch glimpses of wild life,--a squirrel
+romping on a limb; or a long line of grouse, like children in school,
+perched on a fallen log. The trapper had not yet laid his lines in this
+land, and the tracks of the little fur-bearers weaved a marvelous and
+intricate pattern on the moose trail. Once a marten with orange throat
+peered at them from a covert, and once a caribou raced away, too fast
+for a shot.
+
+Mostly the wild things showed little fear or understanding of the two
+humans. The grouse relied on their protective coloration, just as when
+menaced by the beasts of prey. An otter, rarely indeed seen in daylight,
+hovered a moment beside a little stream to consider them; and a coyote,
+greatest of all cowards, lingered in their trail until they were within
+fifty feet of his grey form, then trotted shyly away.
+
+"We won't starve for meat, that's certain," Ben informed her. His voice
+was subdued; he had fallen naturally into the mood of quietness that
+dwells ever in the primeval forest.
+
+Because the trail seemed to be leading them too far from the waterways,
+they took a side trail circling about a wooded hill. Ever Ben studied
+the landmarks, looked carefully down the draws and tried to learn as
+much as possible of the geography of the country; and Beatrice
+understood his purpose with entire clearness. He wished to locate his
+camp so that it would have every natural advantage and insurance against
+surprise attack. He desired that every advantage of warfare be in his
+favor when finally he came to grips with Neilson and his men.
+
+They crossed a low ridge, following down another of the thousand creeks
+that water the northern lands. In a moment it led them to a long, narrow
+lake, blue as a sapphire in its frame of dusky spruce.
+
+For a moment both of them halted on its bank, held by its virgin beauty.
+Lost in the solitudes as it was, perhaps never before gazed upon by the
+eyes of men, still it gave no impression of bleakness and stagnation.
+Rather it was a scene of scintillating life, vivid past all expression.
+Far out of range on the opposite shore a huge bull moose stood like a
+statue in black marble, gazing out over the shimmering expanse. Trout
+leaped, flashing silver, anywhere they might look; and a flock of loon
+shrieked demented cries from its center. The burnished wings of a flock
+of mallard flashed in the air, startled by some creeping hunter.
+
+Slowly, delighted in spite of themselves by the lovely spot, they
+followed along its shore. They climbed the bank; and now Ben began to
+examine his surroundings with great care.
+
+He had suddenly realized that he was in a region wonderfully fitted for
+his permanent camp. The low ridge between the lake and the creek gave a
+clear view of a large part of the surrounding country, affording him
+every chance of seeing his enemies before they saw him. If they came
+along the river--the course they would naturally follow--they would be
+obliged to cross the beaver marsh--a half-mile of open grassland with no
+protecting coverts. Beatrice saw, dismayed, that his gray eyes were
+kindling with unholy fire under his heavy, dark brows.
+
+What if he should see them, deep in the wet grass, filing across the
+open marsh! How many shots would be needed to bring his war to a
+triumphant end? There were no thickets in which they might find shelter:
+hidden himself, they could not return his fire. Before they could break
+and run to cover he could destroy them all!
+
+Should they cross the narrow neck of the marsh, higher up, he would have
+every chance to see them on the lake shore. The site was good from the
+point of health and comfort--high enough to escape the worst of the
+insect pests, close to fresh water, plenty of fuel, and within a few
+hundred yards of a lake that simply swarmed with fish and waterfowl.
+
+Still following a narrow, racing trout stream that flowed into the lake
+they advanced a short distance farther, clear to the base of a rock
+wall. And all at once Beatrice, walking in front, drew up with a gasp.
+
+She stood at the edge of a little glade, perhaps thirty yards across,
+laying at the base of the cliff. The creek flowed through it, the grass
+was green and rich, beloved by the antlered herds that came to graze,
+the tall spruce shaded it on three sides. But it was not these things
+that caught the girl's eye. Just at the edge of a glade a dark hole
+yawned in the face of the cliff.
+
+In an instant more they were beside it, gazing into its depths. It was a
+natural cavern with rock walls and a clean floor of sand--a roomy place,
+and yet a perfect stronghold against either mortal enemies or the powers
+of wind and rain.
+
+"It's home," the man said simply.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+Ben and Beatrice went together back to the canoe, and in two trips they
+carried the supplies to the cave. By instinct a housekeeper, Beatrice
+showed him where to stow the various supplies, what part of the cave was
+to be used for provisions, where their cots would be laid, and where to
+erect the cooking rack. Shadows had fallen over the land before they
+finished the work.
+
+Tired from the hard tramp, yet sustained by a vague excitement neither
+of them could name or trace, they began to prepare for the night. Ben
+cut boughs as before, placing Beatrice's bed within the portals of the
+cave and his own on the grass outside. He cut fuel and made his fire:
+Beatrice prepared the evening meal.
+
+The flesh of the cub-bear they had procured that morning would have to
+serve them to-night; but more delicious meat could be procured
+to-morrow. Ben knew that the white-maned caribou fed in the high park
+lands. Beatrice made biscuits and brewed tea; and they ate the simple
+food in the firelight. Already the darkness was pressing close upon
+them, tremulous, vaguely sinister, inscrutably mysterious.
+
+They had talked gayly at first; but they grew silent as the fire burned
+down to coals. A great preoccupation seemed to hold them both. When one
+spoke the other started, and word did not immediately come in answer.
+Beatrice's despair was not nearly so dominating to-night; and Ben
+harbored a secret excitement that was almost happiness.
+
+Its source and origin Ben could not trace. Perhaps it was just relief
+that the perilous journey was over. The strain of his hours at the
+paddle had been severe; but now they were safe upon the sustaining
+earth. Yet this fact alone could hardly have given him such a sense of
+security,--an inner comfort new to his adventurous life.
+
+The forest was oppressive to-night, tremulous with the passions of the
+Young World; yet he did not respond to it as before. The excitement that
+sparkled in the red wine of his veins was not of the chase and death,
+and he had difficulty in linking it up with the thoughts of his
+forthcoming vengeance. Rather it was a mood that sprang from their
+surroundings here, their shelter at the mouth of the cave. He felt
+deeply at peace.
+
+The fire blazed warmly at the cavern maw; the wolf stood tense and
+still, by means of the secret wireless of the wild fully aware of the
+tragic drama, the curtain of which was the dark just fallen; yet Ben's
+wild, bitter thoughts of the preceding night did not come readily back
+to him. There was a quality here--in the firelight and the haven of the
+cave--that soothed him and comforted him. The powers of the wild were
+helpless against him now. The wind might hurl down the dead trees, but
+the rock of the cavern Wall would stand against them. Even the dreaded
+avalanche could roar and thunder on the steep above in vain.
+
+There was no peril in the hushed, breathless forest for him to-night.
+This was his stronghold, and none could assail it. And it was a
+significant fact that his sense of intimate relationship with the wolf,
+Fenris, Was someway lessened. Fenris was a creature of the open forest,
+sleeping where he chose on the trail; but his master had found a cavern
+home. There was a strange and bridgeless chasm between such breeds as
+roamed abroad and those that slept, night after night, in the shelter of
+the same walls.
+
+He watched the girl's face, ruddy in the firelight, and it was
+increasingly hard to remember that she was of the enemy camp,--the
+daughter of his arch foe. To-night she was just a comrade, a habitat of
+his own cave.
+
+For the first time since he had found Ezram's body--so huddled and
+impotent in the dead leaves--he remembered the solace of tobacco. He
+hunted through his pockets, found his pipe and a single tin of the weed,
+and began to inhale the fragrant, peace-giving smoke. When he raised his
+eyes again he found the girl studying him with intent gaze.
+
+She looked away, embarrassed, and he spoke to put her at ease. "You are
+perfectly comfortable, Beatrice?" he asked gently.
+
+"As good as I could expect--considering everything. I'm awfully relieved
+that we're off the water."
+
+"Of course." He paused, looking away into the tremulous shadows. "Is
+that all? Don't you feel something else, too--a kind of satisfaction?"
+
+The coals threw their lurid glow on her lovely, deeply tanned face.
+"It's for you to feel satisfaction, not me. You couldn't expect me to
+feel very satisfied--taken from my home--as a hostage--in a feud with my
+father. But I think I know what you mean. You mean--the comfort of the
+fire, and a place to stay."
+
+"That's it. Of course."
+
+"I feel it--but every human being does who has a fire when this big,
+northern night comes down and takes charge of things. It's just an
+instinct, I suppose, a comfort and a feeling of safety--and likely only
+the wild beasts are exempt from it." Her voice changed and softened, as
+her girlish fancy reached ever farther. "I suppose the first men that
+you were telling me about on the way out, the hairy men of long ago,
+felt the same way when the cold drove them to their caves for the first
+time. A great comfort in the protecting walls and the fire."
+
+"It's an interesting thought--that perhaps the love of home sprang from
+that hour."
+
+"Quite possibly. Perhaps it came only when they had to fight for their
+homes--against beasts, and such other hairy men as tried to take their
+homes away from them. Perhaps, after all, that's one of the great
+differences between men and beasts. Men have a place to live in and a
+place to fight for--and the fire is the symbol of it all. And the beasts
+run in the forest and make a new lair every day."
+
+Thoughts of the stone age were wholly fitting in this stone-age forest,
+and Ben's fancy caught on fire quickly. "And perhaps, when the hairy men
+came to the caves to live, they forgot their wild passions they knew on
+the open trails--their blood-lust and their wars among themselves--and
+began to be men instead of beasts." Ben's voice had dropped to an even,
+low murmur. "Perhaps they got gentle, and the Brute died in their
+bodies."
+
+"Yes. Perhaps then they began to be tamed."
+
+The silence dropped about them, settling slowly; and all except the
+largest heap of red coals burned down to gray ashes. The darkness
+pressed ever nearer. The girl stretched her slender, brown arms.
+
+"I'm sleepy," she said. "I'm going in."
+
+He got up, with good manners; and he smiled, quietly and gently, into
+her sober, wistful face. "Sleep good," he prayed. "You've got solid
+walls around you to-night--and some one on guard, too. Good night."
+
+A like good wish was on her lips, but she pressed it back. She had
+almost forgotten, for the moment, that this man was her abductor and her
+father's enemy. She ventured into the darkness of the cave.
+
+Scratching a match Ben followed her, so that she could see her way. For
+the instant the fireside was deserted. And then both of them grew
+breathless and alert as the brush cracked and rustled just beyond the
+glowing coals.
+
+Some huge wilderness creature was venturing toward them, at the edge of
+the little glade.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+The match flared out in Ben's fingers, and the only light that was left
+was the pale moonlight, like a cobweb on the floor of the glade, and the
+faint glow from the dying fire. About the glade ranged the tall spruce,
+Watching breathlessly; and for a termless second or two a profound and
+portentous silence descended on the camp. No leaf rustled, not a tree
+limb cracked. The creature that had pushed through the thickets to the
+edge of the glade was evidently standing motionless, deciding on his
+course.
+
+Only the wild things seem to know what complete absence of motion means.
+To stand like a form in rock, not a muscle quivering or a hair stirring,
+is never a feat for ragged, over stretched human nerves; and it requires
+a perfect muscle control that is generally only known to the beasts of
+the forest. Only a few times in a lifetime in human beings are the
+little, outward motions actually suspended; perhaps under the paralysis
+of great terror or, with painstaking effort, before a photographer's
+camera. But with the beasts it is an everyday accomplishment necessary
+to their survival. The fawn that can not stand absolutely motionless,
+his dappled skin blending perfectly with the background of shrubbery
+shot with sunlight, comes to an end quickly in the fangs of some great
+beast of prey. The panther that can not lurk, not a muscle quivering, in
+his ambush beside the deer trail, never knows full feeding. The creature
+on the opposite side of the glade seemed as bereft of motion as the
+spruce trees in the moonlight, or the cliff above the cave.
+
+"What is it?" Beatrice whispered. The man's eyes strained into the
+gloom.
+
+"I don't know. It may be just a moose, or maybe a caribou. But it may
+be--"
+
+He tiptoed to the door of the cave, and his eye fell to the crouching
+form of Fenris. The creature outside was neither moose nor caribou. The
+great wolf of the North does not stand at bay to the antlered people. He
+was poised to spring, his fangs bared and his fierce eyes hot with fire,
+but he was not hunting. Whatever moved in the darkness without, the wolf
+had no desire to go forth and attack. Perhaps he would fight to the
+death to protect the occupants of the cave; but surely an ancient and
+devastating fear had hold of him. Evidently he recognized the intruder
+as an ancestral enemy that held sovereignty over the forest.
+
+At that instant Ben leaped through the cavern maw to reach his gun.
+There was nothing to be gained by waiting further. This was a savage and
+an uninhabited land; and the great beasts of prey that ranged the forest
+had not yet learned the restraint born of the fear of man. And he knew
+one breathless instant of panic when his eye failed to locate the weapon
+in the faint light of the fire.
+
+Holding hard, he tried to remember where he had left it. The form across
+the glade was no longer motionless. Straining, Ben saw the soft roll of
+a great shadow, almost imperceptible in the gloom--advancing slowly
+toward him. Then the faint glow of the fire caught and reflected in the
+creature's eyes.
+
+They suddenly glowed out in the half-darkness, two rather small circles
+of dark red, close together and just alike. This night visitor was not
+moose or caribou, or was it one of the lesser hunters, lynx or
+wolverine, or a panther wandered far from his accustomed haunts. The
+twin circles were too far above the ground. And whatever it was, no
+doubt remained but that the creature was steadily stalking him across
+the soft grass.
+
+At that instant Ben's muscles snapped into action. Only a second
+remained in which to make his defense--the creature had paused, setting
+his muscles for a death-dealing charge. "Go back into the cave--as far
+as you can," he said swiftly to Beatrice. His own eyes, squinted and
+straining for the last iota of vision in that darkened scene, made a
+last, frantic search for his rifle. Suddenly he saw the gleam of its
+barrel as it rested against the wall of the cliff, fifteen feet distant.
+
+At once he knew that his only course was to spring for it in the instant
+that remained, and trust to its mighty shocking power to stop the charge
+that would in a moment ensue. Yet it seemed to tear the life fiber of
+the man to do it. His inmost instincts, urgent and loud in his ear, told
+him to remain on guard, not to leave that cavern maw for an instant but
+to protect with his own body the precious life that it sheltered. His
+mind worked with that incredible speed that is usually manifest in a
+crisis; and he knew that the creature might charge into the cavern
+entrance in the second that he left it. Yet only in the rifle lay the
+least chance or hope for either of them.
+
+"At him, Fenris!" he shouted. The wolf leaped forward like a thrown
+spear,--almost too fast for the eye to follow. He was deathly afraid,
+with full knowledge of the power of the enemy he went to combat, but his
+fears were impotent to restrain him at the first sound of that masterful
+voice. These were the words he had waited for. He could never disobey
+such words as these--from the lips of his god. And Ben's mind had worked
+true; he knew that the wolf could likely hold the creature at bay until
+he could seize his rifle.
+
+In an instant it was in his hands, and he had sprung back to his post in
+front of the cavern maw. And presently he remembered, heartsick, that
+the weapon was not loaded.
+
+For his own safety he had kept it empty on the outward journey, partly
+to prevent accident, partly to be sure that his prisoner could not turn
+it against him. But he had shells in the pocket of his jacket. His hand
+groped, but his reaching fingers found but one shell, dropping it
+swiftly into the gun. And now he knew that no time remained to seek
+another. The beast in the darkness had launched into the charge.
+
+Thereafter there was only a great confusion, event piled upon event with
+incredible rapidity, and a whole lifetime of stress and fear lived in a
+single instant. The creature's first lunge carried him into the brighter
+moonlight; and at once Ben recognized its breed. No woodsman could
+mistake the high, rocking shoulders, the burly form, the wicked ears
+laid back against the flat, massive head, the fangs gleaming white, the
+long, hooked claws slashing through the turf as he ran. It was a
+terrible thing to see and stand against, in the half-darkness. The
+shadows accentuated the towering outline; and forgotten terrors,
+lurking, since the world was young, in the labyrinth of the germ plasm
+wakened and spread like icy streams through the mortal body and seemed
+to threaten to extinguish the warm flame of the very soul.
+
+The grizzly bawled as he came, an explosive, incredible storm of sound.
+Few indeed are the wilderness creatures that can charge in silence:
+muscular exertion can not alone relieve their gathered flood of madness
+and fury. And at once Ben sensed the impulse behind the attack. He and
+the girl had made their home in the grizzly's cave--perhaps the lair
+wherein he had hibernated through the winter and which he still slept in
+from time to time--and he had come to drive them out. Only death could
+pay for such insolence as this,--to make a night's lair in the den of
+his sovereignty, the grizzly.
+
+It is not the accustomed thing for a grizzly to make an unprovoked
+attack. He has done it many times, in the history of the west, but
+usually he is glad enough to turn aside, only launching into his
+terrible death-charge when a mortal wound obliterates his fear of man,
+leaving only his fear of death. But this grizzly, native to these
+uninhabited wilds, had no fear of man to forget. He did not know what
+man was, and he had not learned the death that dwells in the shining
+weapon he carries in his arms. No trappers mushed through his snows of
+spring; no woodsman rode his winding trails. True, from the first
+instant that the human smell had reached him on the wind he had been
+disturbed and discomfited; yet it was not grizzly nature to yield his
+den without a fight. The sight of the wolf--known to him of old--only
+wakened an added rage in his fierce heart.
+
+The wolf met him at his first leap, springing with noble courage at his
+grizzled throat; and the bear paused in his charge to strike him away.
+He lashed out with his great forepaw; and if that blow had gone straight
+home the ribs of the wolf would have been smashed flat on his heart and
+lungs. The tough trunk of a young spruce would have been broken as
+quickly under that terrible, blasting full-stroke of a grizzly. The
+largest grizzly weighs but a thousand pounds, but that weight is simple
+fiber and iron muscle, of a might incredible to any one but the woodsmen
+who know this mountain king in his native haunts. But Fenris whipped
+aside, and the paw missed him.
+
+Immediately the wolf sprang in again, with a courage scarcely compatible
+with lupine characteristics, ready to wage this unequal battle to the
+death. But his brave fight was tragically hopeless. For all that his
+hundred and fifty pounds were, every ounce, lightning muscle and vibrant
+sinew, it was as if a gopher had waged war with a lynx. Yet by the law
+of his wild heart he could not turn and flee. His master--his stalwart
+god whose words thrilled him to the uttermost depths--had given his
+orders, and he must obey them to the end.
+
+The second blow missed him also, but the third caught a small shrub that
+grew twenty feet beyond the dying fire. The shrub snapped off under the
+blow, and its branchy end smote the wolf across the head and neck. As if
+struck by a tornado he was hurled into the air, and curtailed and
+indirect though the blow was, he sprawled down stunned and insensible in
+the grass. The bear paused one instant; then lunged forth again.
+
+But the breath in which the wolf had stayed the charge had given Ben his
+chance. With a swift motion of his arm he had projected the single rifle
+shell into the chamber of the weapon. The stock snapped to his shoulder;
+and his keen, glittering eyes sought the sights.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII
+
+Few wilderness adventures offer a more stern test to human nerves than
+the frightful rush of a maddened grizzly. It typifies all that is primal
+and savage in the wild: the insane rage that can find relief only in the
+cruel rending of flesh; the thundering power that no mere mortal
+strength can withstand. But Ben was a woodsman. He had been tried in the
+fire. He knew that not only his life, but that of the girl in the cavern
+depended upon this one shot; and it was wholly characteristic of Wolf
+Darby that his eye held true and his arm was steady as a vice of iron.
+
+He was aware that he must wait until the bear was almost upon him, in
+order to be sure to send the bullet home to a vital place. This alone
+was a test requiring no small measure of self-control. The instinct was
+to fire at once. In the moonlight it was difficult to see his sights:
+his only chance was to enlarge his target to the last, outer limit of
+safety. He aimed for the great throat, below the slavering jaw.
+
+His finger pressed back steadily against the trigger. The slightest
+flinching, the smallest motion might yet throw off his aim. The rifle
+spoke with a roar.
+
+But this wilderness battle was not yet done. The ball went straight
+home, down through the throat, mushrooming and plowing on into the neck,
+inflicting a wound that was bound to be mortal within a few seconds. The
+bear recoiled; but the mighty engine of its life was not yet destroyed.
+Its incalculable fonts of vitality had not yet run down.
+
+The grizzly bounded forward again. The ball had evidently missed the
+vertebrae and spinal column. His crashing, thunderous roar of pain
+smothered instantly the reechoing report of the rifle and stifled the
+instinctive cry that had come to Ben's lips. He was a forester; and he
+had known of old what havoc a mortally wounded bear can wreak in a few
+seconds of life. In that strange, vivid instant Ben knew that his own
+and the girl's life still hung in the balance, with the beam inclining
+toward death.
+
+The grizzly was in his death-agony, nothing more; yet in that final
+convulsion he could rip into shreds the powerful form that opposed him.
+Ben knew, with a cold, sure knowledge, that if he failed to slay the
+beast, it would naturally crawl into its lair for its last breath. As
+this dreadful thought flashed home he dropped the empty rifle and seized
+the axe that leaned against a log of spruce beside the fire.
+
+There was no time at all to search out another shell and load his rifle.
+If the shock of the heavy bullet had not slackened the bear's pace he
+would not even have had time to seize the axe. Finally, if the bear had
+not been all but dead, in his last, threshing agony, Ben's mortal
+strength could not have sent home one blow. As it was they found
+themselves facing each other over the embers of the fire, well-matched
+contestants whose stake was life and whose penalty was death. The
+grizzly turned his head, caught sight of Ben, identified him as the
+agent of his agony, and lurched forward.
+
+Just in time Ben sprang aside, out of the reach of those terrible
+forearms; and his axe swung mightly in the air. Its blade gleamed and
+descended--a blow that might have easily broken the bear's back if it
+had gone true but which now seemed only to infuriate him the more. The
+bear reared up, reeled, and lashed down; and dying though he was, he
+struck with incredible power. One slashing stroke of that vast forepaw,
+one slow closing of those cruel fangs upon skull or breast, and life
+would have gone out like a light. But Ben leaped aside again, and again
+swung down his axe.
+
+These were but the first blows of a terrific battle that carried like a
+storm through the still reaches of the forest. Far in the distant tree
+aisles the woods people paused in their night's occupation to listen,
+stirred and terrified by the throb and thrill in the air; the grazing
+caribou lifted his growing horns and snorted in terror; the beasts of
+prey paused in the chase, growling uneasily, gazing with fierce,
+luminous eyes in the direction of the battle.
+
+It is beyond the ken of man whether or not, in their wild hearts, these
+forest folk sensed what was taking place,--that their gray monarch, the
+sovereign grizzly, was at the death-fight with some dreadful invader
+from the South. They heard the bear's fierce bawls, unimitatable by any
+other voice as he lashed down blow after blow; and they heard the thud
+and crunch of the axe against his body. Had this monarch of the trails
+found his master at last?
+
+Gazing out through the aperture of the cave Beatrice beheld the whole
+picture: the ring of spruce trees, the glade so strange and ensilvered
+in the moonlight, and these two fighting beasts, magnificent in fury
+over the embers of the dying fire. And Ben's powers increased, rather
+than lessened. Ever he swung his terrible axe with greater power.
+
+He fought like the wolf that was his blood brother,--lunging, striking
+down, recoiling out of harm's way, and springing forward to strike
+again. This man was Wolf Darby, a forester known in many provinces for
+his woods prowess, but even those who had seen his most spectacular
+feats, in past days, had not appreciated the real extent of his powers.
+There was a fury and a might in his blows that was hard to associate
+with the world of human beings,--such ferociousness and wolf-like
+savagery, welling strength and prowess of battle that mostly men have
+forgotten in their centuries of civilization, but which still mark the
+death-fight between beasts.
+
+Ben had always recalled the earlier types of man--his great-thewed
+ancestors, wild hunters in the forests of ancient Germany--but never so
+much as to-night. He was in his natural surroundings--at the mouth of
+his cave in which the Woman watched and exulted in his blows, enclosed
+by the primeval forest and beside the ashes of his fire. There could be
+nothing strange or unreal about this scene to Beatrice. It was more true
+than any soft vista of a far-away city could possibly be. It was life
+itself,--man battling for his home and his woman against the raw forces
+of the wild.
+
+All superficialities and superfluities were gone, and only the basic
+stuff of life remained,--the cave, the fire, the man who fought the
+beast in the light of the ancient moon. At that moment Ben was no more
+of the twentieth century than he was of the first, or of the first more
+than of some dark, unnumbered century of the world's young days. He was
+simply the male of his species, the man-child of all time, forgetting
+for the moment all the little lessons civilization had taught, and
+fighting his fight in the basic way for the basic things.
+
+This was no new war which Ben and the grizzly fought in the pale light
+of the moon. It had begun when the race began, and it would continue,
+in varied fields, until men perished from the earth. Ben fought for
+_life_--not only his own but the girl's--that old, beloved privilege to
+breathe the air and see and know and be. He represented, by a strange
+symbolism, the whole race that has always fought in merciless and
+never-ending battle with the cruel and oppressive powers of nature. In
+the grizzly were typified all those ancient enemies that have always
+opposed, with claw and fang, this stalwart, self-knowing breed that has
+risen among the primates: he symbolized not only the Beast of the
+forest, but the merciless elements, storm and flood and cold and all the
+legions of death. And had they but known their ultimate fate if this
+intruder survived the battle and brought his fellows into this, their
+last stronghold, the watching forest creatures would have prayed to see
+the grizzly strike him to the earth.
+
+Ben knew, too, that he was fighting for his home; and this also lent him
+strength. _Home_! His shelter from the storm and the cold, the thing
+that marked him a man instead of a beast. The grizzly had come to drive
+him forth; and they had met beside the ashes of his fire.
+
+The old exhilaration and rapture of battle flashed through him as he
+swung his axe, sending home blow after blow. Sometimes he cried out,
+involuntarily, in his fury and hatred; and as the bear weakened he waged
+the fight at closer quarters. His muscles made marvelous response,
+flinging him out of danger in the instant of necessity and giving
+terrific power to his blows.
+
+He danced about the shaggy, bleeding form of the bear, swinging his axe,
+howling in his rage, and escaping the smashing blows of the bear with
+miraculous agility,--a weird and savage picture in the moonlight. But
+at last the grizzly lunged too far. Ben sprang aside, just in time, and
+he saw his chance as the great, reeling form sprawled past. He aimed a
+terrific blow just at the base of the skull.
+
+The silence descended quickly thereafter. The blow had gone straight
+home, and the last flicker of waning life fled from the titanic form. He
+went down sprawling; Ben stood waiting to see if another blow was
+needed. Then the axe fell from his hands.
+
+For a moment he stood as if dazed. It was hard to remember all that
+occurred in the countless life times he had lived since the grizzly had
+stolen out of the spruce forest. But soon he remembered Fenris and
+walked unsteadily to his side.
+
+The wolf, however, was already recovering from the blow. He had been
+merely stunned; seemingly no bones were broken. Once more Ben turned to
+the mouth of the cavern.
+
+Sobbing and white as the moonlight itself Beatrice met him in the
+doorway. She too had been uninjured; his arm had saved her from the
+rending fangs. She was closer to him now, filling a bigger part of his
+life. He didn't know just why. He had fought for her; and some way--they
+were more to each other.
+
+And this was his cavern,--his stronghold of rock where he might lay his
+head, his haven and his hearth, and the symbol of his dominance over the
+beasts of the field. He had fought for this, too. And he suddenly knew a
+great and inner peace and a love for the sheltering walls that would
+dwell forever in the warp and woof of his being.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART THREE
+
+THE TAMING
+
+
+
+
+XXIX
+
+Ben rose at daybreak, wonderfully refreshed by the night's sleep, and
+built the fire at the cavern mouth. Beatrice was still asleep, and he
+was careful not to waken her. The days would be long and monotonous for
+her, he knew, and the more time she could spend in sleep the better.
+
+He did, however, steal to the opening of the cavern and peer into her
+face. The soft, morning light fell gently upon it, bringing out its
+springtime freshness and the elusive shades of gold in her hair. She
+looked more a child than a woman, some one to shelter and comfort rather
+than to harry as a foe. "Poor little girl," he murmured under his
+breath. "I'm going to make it as easy for you as I can."
+
+He meant what he said. He could do that much, at least--extend to her
+every courtesy and comfort that was in his power, and place his own
+great strength at her service.
+
+His first work was to remove the skin of last night's invader,--the huge
+grizzly that lay dead just outside the cavern opening. They would have
+use for this warm, furry hide before their adventure was done. It would
+supplement their supply of blankets; and if necessary it could be cut
+and sewed with threads of sinew into clothes. Because the animal had
+but recently emerged from hibernation his fur, except for a few rubbed
+places, was long and rich,--a beautiful, tawny-gray that shimmered like
+cloth-of-gold in the light.
+
+It taxed his strength to the utmost to roll over the huge body and skin
+it. When the heavy skin was removed he laid it out, intending to stretch
+it as soon as he could build a rack. He cut off some of the fat; then
+quartering the huge body, he dragged it away into the thickets.
+
+The hour was already past ten; but Beatrice--worn out by the stress of
+the night before--did not waken until she heard the crack of her pistol.
+She lay a while, resting, watching through the cavern opening Ben's
+efforts to prepare breakfast. A young grouse had fallen before the
+pistol, and her companion was busy preparing it for the skillet.
+
+The girl watched with some pleasure his rather awkward efforts to go
+about his work in silence,--evidently still believing her asleep. She
+laughed secretly at his distress as he tripped clumsily over a piece of
+firewood; then watched him with real interest as he mixed batter for
+griddle cakes and fried the white breast of the grouse in bear fat.
+Filling one of the two tin plates he stole into the cavern.
+
+Falling into his mood the girl pretended to be asleep. She couldn't have
+understood why her pulse quickened as he knelt beside her, looking so
+earnestly and soberly into her face. Then she felt the touch of his
+fingers on her shoulder.
+
+"Wake up, Beatrice," he commanded, with pretended gruffness. "It's after
+ten, and you've got to cook my breakfast."
+
+She stirred, pretending difficulty in opening her eyes.
+
+"Get right up," he commanded again. "D'ye think I'm going to wait all
+morning?"
+
+She opened her eyes to find him regarding her with boyish glee. Then--as
+a surprise--he proffered the filled plate, meanwhile raising his arm in
+feigned fear of a blow.
+
+She laughed; then began upon her breakfast with genuine relish. Then he
+brought her hot water and the meager toilet articles; and left the cave
+to prepare his own breakfast.
+
+"I'm going on a little hunt," he said, when this rite was over. "We
+can't depend on grouse and bear forever. I hate to ask you to go--"
+
+His tone was hopeful; and she could not doubt but that the lonely spirit
+of these solitudes had hold of him. They were two human beings in a vast
+and uninhabited wilderness, and although they were foes, they felt the
+primitive need of each other's companionship. "I don't mind going," she
+told him. "I'd rather, than stay in the cave."
+
+"It's a fine morning. And what's your favorite meat--moose or caribou?"
+
+"Caribou--although I like both."
+
+He might have expected this answer. There are few meats in this
+imperfect earth to compare in flavor with that of the great, woodland
+caribou, monarch of the high park-lands.
+
+"That means we do some climbing, instead of watching in the beaver
+meadows. I'm ready--any time."
+
+They took the game trail up the ridge, venturing at once into the heavy
+spruce; but curiously enough, the mysterious hush, the dusky shadows did
+not appall Beatrice greatly to-day. The miles sped swiftly under her
+feet. Always there were creatures to notice or laugh at,--a squirrel
+performing on a branch, a squawking Canada Jay surprised and utterly
+baffled by their tall forms, a porcupine hunched into a spiny ball and
+pretending a ferociousness that deceived not even such hairbrained folk
+as the chipmunks in the tree roots, or those queens of stupidity, the
+fool hens on the branch. In the way of more serious things sometimes
+they paused to gaze down on some particularly beautiful glen--watered,
+perhaps, by a gleaming stream--or a long, dark valley steeped deeply in
+the ancient mysticism of the trackless wilds.
+
+He helped her over the steeps, waited for her at bad crossings; and
+meanwhile his thoughts found easy expression in words. He had to stop
+and remind himself that she was his foe. Beatrice herself attempted no
+such remembrance; she was simply carrying out her resolve to make the
+best of a deplorable situation.
+
+She could see, however, that he kept close watch of her. He intended to
+give her no opportunity to strike back at him. He carried his rifle
+unloaded, so that if she were able, in an unguarded moment, to wrest it
+from him she could not turn it against him. But there was no joy for her
+in noticing these small precautions. They only reminded her of her
+imprisonment; and she wisely resolved to ignore them.
+
+They climbed to the ridge top, following it on to the plateau where
+patches of snow still gleamed white and the spruce grew in dark clumps,
+leaving open, lovely parks between. Here they encountered their first
+caribou.
+
+This animal, however, was not to their liking in the way of meat for the
+table. A turn in the trail suddenly revealed him at the edge of the
+glade, his white mane gleaming and his graceful form aquiver with that
+unquenchable vitality that seems to be the particular property of
+northern wild animals; but Ben let him go his way. He was an old bull,
+the monarch of his herd; he had ranged and mated and fought his rivals
+for nearly a score of years in the wild heart of Back There,--and his
+flesh would be mostly sinew.
+
+Ten minutes later, however, the girl touched his arm. She pointed to a
+far glade, fully three hundred yards across the canyon. Her quick eyes
+made out a tawny form against the thicket.
+
+It was a young caribou--a yearling buck--and his flesh would be tender
+as a spring fowl.
+
+"It's just what we want, but there's not much chance of getting him at
+that range," he said.
+
+"Try, anyway. You've got a long-range rifle. If you can hold true, he's
+yours."
+
+This was one thing that Ben was skilled at,--holding true. He raised the
+weapon to his shoulder, drawing down finely on that little speck of
+brown across the gulch. Few times in his life had he been more anxious
+to make a successful shot. Yet he would never have admitted the true
+explanation: that he simply desired to make good in the girl's eyes.
+
+He held his breath and pressed the trigger back.
+
+Beatrice could not restrain a low, happy cry of triumph. She had
+forgotten all things, for the moment, but her joy at his success. And
+truly, Ben had made a remarkable shot. Most hunters who boast of
+long-range hits do not step off the distance shot; fifty yards is called
+a hundred, a hundred and fifty yards three hundred; and to kill true at
+this range is not the accustomed thing on the trails of sport. The
+bullet had gone true as a light-shaft, striking the animal through the
+shoulders, and he had never stirred out of his tracks. With that joy of
+conquest known to all owners of rod and gun--related darkly to the
+blood-lust of the beasts--they raced across the gully toward the
+fallen.
+
+Ben quartered the animal, and again he saw fit to save the hide. It is
+the best material of all for the parka, the long, full winter garment of
+the North.
+
+Ben carried the meat in four trips back to the camp. By the time this
+work was done, and one of the quarters was drying over a fire of
+quivering aspen chips, the day was done. Again they saw the twilight
+shadows grow, and the first sable cloak of night was drawn over the
+shoulders of the forest. Beatrice prepared a wonderful roast of caribou
+for their evening meal; and thereafter they sat a short time at the
+mouth of the cavern, looking quietly into the red coals of the dying
+fire. Again Ben knew the beneficence and peace of the sheltering walls
+of home. Again he felt a sweet security,--a taming, gentling influence
+through the innermost fiber of his being.
+
+But Fenris the wolf gazed only into the darkened woods, and the hair
+stood stiff at his shoulders, and his eyes glowed and shone with the
+ancient hunting madness induced by the rising moon.
+
+
+
+
+XXX
+
+June passed away in the wilds of Back There, leaving warmer, longer
+days, a more potent sun, and a greener, fresher loveliness to the land.
+The spring calves no longer tottered on wabbly legs, but could follow
+their swift mothers over the most steep and difficult trails. Fledglings
+learned to fly, the wolf cubs had their first lessons in hunting on the
+ridges. The wild Yuga had fallen to such an extent that navigation--down
+to the Indian villages on the lower waters--was wholly impossible.
+
+The days passed quickly for Ben and Beatrice. They found plenty of work
+and even of play to pass the time. Partly to fill her lonely moments,
+but more because it was an instinct with her, Beatrice took an
+ever-increasing interest in her cave home. She kept it clean and cooked
+the meals, performing her tasks with goodwill, even at times a gaiety
+that was as incomprehensible to herself as to Ben.
+
+Their diet was not so simple now. Of course their flour and sugar and
+rice, and the meat that they took in the chase furnished the body of
+their meals, and without these things they could not live; but Beatrice
+was a woods child, and she knew how to find manna in the wilderness.
+Almost every morning she ventured out into the still, dew-wet forest,
+and nearly always she came in with some dainty for their table. She
+gathered watercress in the still pools and she knew a dozen ways to
+serve it. Sometimes she made a dressing out of animal oil, beaten to a
+cream; and it was better than lettuce salad. Other tender plant tops
+were used as a garnish and as greens, and many and varied were the
+edible roots that supplied their increasing desire for fresh vegetables.
+
+Sometimes she found wocus in the marsh--the plant formerly in such
+demand by the Indians--and by patient experiment she learned how to
+prepare it for the table. Washing the plant carefully she would pound it
+into paste that could be used as the base for a nutty and delicious
+bread. Other roots were baked in ashes or served fried in animal fat,
+and once or twice she found patches of wild strawberries, ripening on
+the slopes.
+
+This was living! They plucked the sweet, juicy berries from the vines;
+they served as dessert and were also used in the fashioning of delicious
+puddings with rice and sugar. Several times she found certain treasures
+laid by for winter use by the squirrels or the digging people--and
+perfectly preserved nuts and acorns, The latter, parched over coals,
+became one of the staples of their diet.
+
+She gathered leaves of the red weed and dried them for tea. She searched
+out the nests of the grouse and robbed them of their eggs; and always
+high celebration in the cave followed such a find as this. Fried eggs,
+boiled eggs, poached eggs tickled their palates for mornings to come.
+And she traced down, one memorable day when their sugar was all but
+gone, a tree that the wild bees had stored with honey.
+
+In the way of meat they had not only caribou, but the tender veal of
+moose and all manner of northern small game. Ben did not, however, spend
+rifle cartridges in reckless shooting. When at last his enemies came
+filing down through the beaver meadow he had no desire to be left with a
+half-empty gun. He had never fired this more powerful weapon since he
+had felled their first caribou. The moose calves and all the small game
+were taken with Beatrice's pistol.
+
+Sometimes he took ptarmigan--those whistling, sprightly grouse of the
+high steeps--and Beatrice served uncounted numbers of them, like the
+famous blackbirds, baked in a pie. Fried ptarmigan was a dish never to
+forget; roast ptarmigan had a distinctive flavor all its own, and the
+memory of ptarmigan fricassee often called Ben home to the cavern an
+hour before the established mealtime. Indeed, they partook of all the
+northern species of that full-bosomed clan, the upland game birds;
+little, brown quail, willow grouse, fool hens, and the incomparable blue
+grouse, half of the breast of which was a meal. It was true that their
+little store of pistol cartridges was all but gone, but worlds of big
+game remained to fall back upon.
+
+Ben never ceased regretting that he had not brought a single fishhook
+and a piece of line. He had long since carried the canoe from the river
+bank and hid it in the tall reeds of the lake shore, not only for
+pleasure's sake, but to preserve it for the autumn floods when they
+might want to float on down to the Indian villages; and surely it would
+have afforded the finest sport in the way of trolling for lake trout.
+But with utter callousness he made his pistol serve as a hook and line.
+Often he would crawl down, cautiously as a stalking wolf, to the edge of
+a trout pool, then fire mercilessly at a great, spotted beauty below.
+The bullet itself did not penetrate the water, but the shock carried
+through and the fish usually turned a white belly to the surface. A fat
+brook or lake trout, dipped in flour and fried to a chestnut brown, was
+a delight that never grew old.
+
+At every fresh find Beatrice would come triumphant into Ben's presence;
+and at such times they scarcely conducted themselves like enemies. An
+unguessed boyishness and charm had come to Ben in these ripe, full
+summer days: the hard lines softened in his face and mostly the hard
+shine left his eyes. Beatrice found herself curiously eager to please
+him, taking the utmost care and pains with every dish she prepared for
+the table; and it was true that he made the most joyful, exultant
+response to her efforts. The searing heat back of his eyes was quite
+gone, now. Even the scarlet fluid of his veins seemed to flow more
+quietly, with less fire, with less madness. A gentling influence had
+come to bear upon him; a great kindness, a new forbearance had
+brightened his outlook toward all the world. A great redemption was even
+now hovering close to him,--some unspeakable and ultimate blessing that
+he could not name.
+
+Their days were not without pleasure. Often they ventured far into the
+heavy forest, and always fresh delight and thrilling adventure awaited
+them. Ever they learned more of the wild things that were their only
+neighbors,--creatures all the way down the scale from the lordly moose,
+proud of his growing antlers and monarch of the marshes, to the small
+pika, squeaking on the slide-rock of the high peaks. They knew and loved
+them all; they found ever-increasing enjoyment in the study of their shy
+ways and furtive occupations; they observed with delight the droll
+awkwardness of the moose calves, the impertinence and saucy speech of
+the jays, the humor of the black bear and the surly arrogance of the
+grizzly. They knew that superlative cunning of his wickedness, the
+wolverine; the stealth of the red fox; the ferociousness of the ermine
+whose brown skin, soon to be white, suggested only something silken and
+soft and tender instead of a fiendish cutthroat, terror of the Little
+People; the skulking cowardice of the coyote; and the incredible
+savagery and agility of the fisher,--that middle-sized hunter that
+catches and kills everything he can master except fish. They climbed
+high hills and descended into still, mysterious valleys; they paddled
+long, dreamy twilight hours on the lake; they traversed marshes where
+the moose wallowed; and they walked through ancient forests where the
+decayed vegetation was a mossy pulp under their feet. Sometimes they
+forgot the poignancy of their strange lives, romping sometimes,
+gossiping like jays in the tree-limbs, and sometimes, forgetting enmity,
+they told each other their secret beliefs and philosophies. They had
+picnics in the woods; and long, comfortable evenings before their
+dancing fire. But there was one enduring joy that always surpassed all
+the rest, a happiness that seemed to have its origin in the silent
+places of their hearts. It was just the return, after a fatiguing day in
+forest and marsh, to the sheltering walls of the cave.
+
+With his axe and hunting knife Ben prepared a complete set of furniture
+for their little abode. His first Work was a surpassing-marvelous
+dining-room suite of a table and two chairs. Then he put up shelves for
+their rapidly dwindling supplies of provisions and cut chunks of spruce
+log, with a bit of bark remaining, for fireside seats. And for more than
+a week, Beatrice was forbidden to enter a certain covert just beyond the
+glade lest she should prematurely discover an even greater wonder that
+Ben, in off hours, was preparing for a surprise.
+
+From time to time she heard him busily at work, the ring of his axe and
+his gay whistling as he whittled bolts of wood; but other than that it
+concerned the grizzly skin she had not the least idea of his task. But
+the work was completed at last, and then came two days of rather
+significant silence,--quite incomprehensible to the girl. She was at a
+loss why Ben did not reveal his treasure.
+
+But one morning she missed the familiar sounds of his fire-building,
+usually his first work on wakening. The very fact of their absence
+startled her wide-awake, while otherwise she would have perhaps slept
+late into the morning. Ben had seemingly vanished into the heavy timber
+across the glade.
+
+Presently she heard him muttering and grunting as he moved some heavy
+object to the door of the cave. Boyishly, he could not wait for the
+usual late hour when she wakened. He made a wholly unnecessary amount of
+noise as he built the fire. Then he thrust his lean head into the cavern
+opening.
+
+"I hope I haven't waked you up?" he said.
+
+The girl smiled secretly. "I wanted to wake up, anyway--to-day."
+
+"I wish you'd get up and come and look at something ugly I've got just
+outside the door."
+
+She hurried into her outer garments, and in a moment appeared. It was
+ugly, certainly, the object that he had fashioned with such tireless
+toil: not fitted at all for a stylish city home; yet the girl, for one
+short instant, stopped breathing. It was a hammock, suspended on a stout
+frame, to take the place of her tree-bough bed on the cave floor. He had
+used the grizzly skin, hanging it with unbreakable sinew, and fashioning
+it in such a manner that folds of the hide could be turned over her on
+cold nights. For a moment she gazed, very earnestly, into the rugged,
+homely, raw-boned face of her companion.
+
+Beatrice was deeply and inexplicably sobered, yet a curious happiness
+took swift possession of her heart. Reading the gratitude in her eyes,
+Ben's lips broke into a radiant smile.
+
+"I guess you've forgotten what day it is," he said.
+
+"Of course. I hardly know the month."
+
+"I've notched each day, you know. And maybe you've forgotten--on the
+ride out from Snowy Gulch--we talked of birthdays. To-day is yours."
+
+She stared at him in genuine astonishment. She had not dreamed that this
+little confidence, given in a careless moment of long weeks before, had
+lingered in the man's memory. She had supposed that the fury and
+savagery of his war with her father and the latter's followers had
+effaced all such things as this.
+
+And it was true that had this birthday come a few weeks before, on the
+river journey and previous to their occupation of the cave, Ben would
+have let it pass unnoticed. The smoldering fire in his brain would have
+seared to ashes any such kindly thought as this. But when the wild
+hunter leaves his leafy lair and goes to dwell, a man rather than a
+beast, in a permanent abode, he has thought for other subjects than his
+tribal wars and the blood-lust of his hates. The hearth, and the care
+and friendship of the girl had tamed Ben to this degree, at least.
+
+But wonders were not done. The look in the girl's eyes suddenly melted,
+as the warm sun melts ice, some of the frozen bitterness of his spirit.
+"It's your birthday--and I hope you have many of 'em," he went on. "No
+more like this--but all of 'em happy,--as you deserve."
+
+He walked toward her, and her eyes could not leave his. He bent soberly,
+and brushed her lips with his own.
+
+There were always worlds to talk about in the warm gleam of their fire.
+When the day's work was done, and the hush of early night gathered the
+land to its arms, they would sit on their fireside seats and settle all
+problems, now and hereafter, to the perfect satisfaction of them both.
+
+From Ben, Beatrice gained a certain strength of outlook as well as depth
+of insight, but she gave him in return more than she received. He felt
+that her influence, in his early years, would have worked wonders for
+him. She straightened out his moral problems for him, taught him lessons
+in simple faith; and her own childish sweetness and absolute purity
+showed his whole world in a new light.
+
+Sometimes they talked of religion and ethics, sometimes of science and
+economics, and particularly they talked of what was nearest to
+them,--the mysteries and works of nature. She had been a close observer
+of the forest. She had received some glimpse of its secret laws that
+were, when all was said and done, the basic laws of life. But for all
+her love of science she was not a mere biologist. She had a full and
+devout faith in Law and Judgment beyond any earthly sphere.
+
+"No one can live in this boundless wilderness and not believe," she told
+him earnestly, her dark eyes brimming with her fervor. "Perhaps I can't
+tell you why--maybe it's just a feeling of need, of insufficiency of
+self. Besides, God is close, like He was to the Israelites when they
+were in the wilderness; but you will remember that He never came close
+again.--This forest is so big and so awful, He knows he must stay close
+to keep you from dying of fear.--God may not be a reality to the people
+of the cities, where they see only buildings and streets, but Ben, He is
+to me. You can't forget Him up here. He stands on every mountain, just
+as the sons of Aaron saw Him."
+
+He found, to his surprise, that she was not ill-read, particularly in
+the old-time classics. But her environment had also influenced her
+choice of reading. She loved the old legends in the minor,--far-off and
+plaintive things that reflected the mood of the dusky forest in which
+she lived.
+
+One night, when the moon was in the sky, he told her of his war record,
+of the shell-shock and the strange, criminal mania that followed it; and
+then of his swift recovery. With an over-powering need of
+self-justification he told her of his further adventures with Ezram, of
+the old man's murder and the theft of the claim. She heard him out,
+listening attentively; but in loyalty to her father she did not let
+herself believe him entirely. The answer she gave him was the same as
+she had always given at his every reference to his side of the case.
+
+"If you were in the right, you'd take me back and let the law take its
+course," she told him. "You'd not be out here laying an ambush for them,
+to kill them when they try to rescue me."
+
+He could never make her understand how, by the intricacies of law, it
+would be a rare chance that he would be able to fasten the crime on the
+murderers: that he had taken the only sure way open to make them pay for
+Ezram's death. He told her of the old man's, final request; how that his
+war with her father and his men was a debt that, by secret, inscrutable
+laws of his being, could never be written off or disavowed. But he could
+never fully find words to uphold his position. The thing went back to
+his instincts, traced at last to the remorseless spirit of the wolf that
+was his heritage.
+
+Yet these hours of talk were immensely good for him. While they never
+met on common grounds, the girl's true outlook and nobility of character
+were ever more manifest to him; and were not without a gentling, healing
+influence upon him. He could not blind himself to them. And sometimes
+when he sat alone by his dying fire, as the dark menaced him, and the
+girl that was his charge slept within the portals of stone, he had the
+unescapable feeling that the very structure of his life was falling and
+shattering down; but even now he could see, an enchanted vista in the
+distance, a mightier, more glorious tower, builded and shaped by this
+woman's hand.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+While Beatrice was at her household tasks--cooking the meals, cleaning
+the cave, washing and repairing their clothes--Ben never forgot his more
+serious work. Certain hours every day he spent in exploration, seeking
+out the passes over the hills, examining every possible means of
+entrance and egress into his valley, getting the lay of the land and
+picking out the points from which he would make his attack. Already he
+knew every winding game trail and every detail of the landscape for five
+miles or more around. His ultimate vengeance seemed just as sure as the
+night following the day.
+
+Ever he listened for the first sound of the pack train in the forest;
+and even in his hours of pleasure his eyes ever roamed over the sweep of
+valley and marsh below. He was prepared for his enemies now. One or
+five, they couldn't escape him. He had provided for every contingency
+and had seemingly perfected his plan to the last detail.
+
+He had not the slightest fear that his eagerness would cost him his aim
+when finally his eye looked along the sights at the forms of his
+enemies, helpless in the marsh. He was wholly cold about the matter now.
+The lust and turmoil in his veins, remembered like a ghastly dream from
+that first night, returned but feebly now, if at all. This change, this
+restraint had been increasingly manifest since his occupation of the
+cave, and it had marked, at the same time, a growing barrier between
+himself and Fenris. But he could not deny but that such a development
+was wholly to have been expected. Fenris was a child of the open forest
+aisles, never of the fireside and the hearth. It was not that the wolf
+had ceased to give him his dint of faithful service, or that he loved
+him any the less. But each of them had other interests,--one his home
+and hearth; the other the ever-haunting, enticing call of the wildwood.
+Lately Fenris had taken to wandering into the forest at night, going and
+coming like a ghost; and once his throat and jowls had been stained with
+dark blood.
+
+"It's getting too tame for you here, old boy, isn't it?" Ben said to him
+one hushed, breathless night. "But wait just a little while more. It
+won't be tame then."
+
+It was true: the hunting party, if they had started at once, must be
+nearing their death valley by now. Except for the absolute worst of
+traveling conditions they would have already come. Ben felt a growing
+impatience: a desire to do his work and get it over. His pulse no longer
+quickened and leaped at the thought of vengeance; and the wolflike
+pleasure in simple killing could no longer be his. It would merely be
+the soldier's work--a dreadful obligation to perform speedily and to
+forget. Even the memory of the huddled form of his savior and friend, so
+silent and impotent in the dead leaves, did not stir him into madness
+now.
+
+Yet he never thought of disavowing his vengeance. It was still the main
+purpose of his life. He had no theme but that: when that work was done
+he could conceive of nothing further of interest on earth, nothing else
+worth living for. Not for an instant had he relented: except for that
+one kiss, on the occasion of her birthday, he had never broken his
+promise in regard to his relations with Beatrice. His first trait was
+steadfastness, a trait that, curiously enough, is inherent in all living
+creatures who are by blood close to the wild wolf, from the German
+police dog to the savage husky of the North. But he was certainly and
+deeply changed in these weeks in the cave. He no longer hated these
+three murderous enemies of his. The power to hate had simply died in his
+body. He regarded their destruction rather as a duty he owed old Ezram,
+an obligation that he would die sooner than forego.
+
+The hushed, dark, primal forest had a different appeal for him now. He
+loved it still, with the reverence and adoration of the forester he was,
+but no longer with that love a servant bears his master. He had
+distinctly escaped from its dominance. The passion and mounting fire
+that it wakened at the fall of darkness could no longer take possession
+of him, as strong drink possesses the brain, bending his will, making of
+him simply a tool and a pawn to gratify its cruel desires and to achieve
+its mysterious ends. He had been, in spirit, a brother of the wolf,
+before: a runner in the packs. Such had been the outgrowth of innate
+traits; part of his strange destiny. Now, after these weeks in the cave,
+he was a man. It was hard for him to explain even to himself. It was as
+if in the escape from his own black passions, he had also escaped the
+curious tyranny of the wild; not further subject to its cruel moods and
+whims, but rather one of a Dominant Breed, a being who could lift his
+head in defiance to the storm, obey his own will, go his own way. This
+was no little change. Perhaps, when all is said and done, it marks the
+difference between man and the lesser mammals, the thing that has
+evolved a certain species of the primates--simply woods creatures that
+trembled at the storm and cowered in the night--into the rulers and
+monarchs of the earth.
+
+Ben had come out from the darkened forest trails where he made his lairs
+and had gone into a cave to live! He had found a permanent abode--a
+lasting, shelter from the cold and the storm. It suggested a curious
+allegory to him. Some time in the long-forgotten past, probably when the
+later glaciers brought their promise of cold, all his race left their
+leafy bowers and found cave homes in the cliffs. Before that time they
+were merely woods children, blind puppets of nature, sleeping where
+exhaustion found them; wandering without aim in the tree aisles; mating
+when they met the female of their species on the trails and venturing on
+again; knowing the ghastly, haunting fear of the night and the blind
+terror of the storm and elements: merely higher beasts in a world of
+beasts. But they came to the caves. They established permanent abodes.
+They began to be men.
+
+All that now stands as civilization, all the conquest of the earth and
+sea and air began from that moment. It was the Great Epoch,--and Ben had
+illustrated it in his own life. The change had been infinitely slow, but
+certain as the movement of the planets in their spheres. Behind the
+sheltering walls they got away from fear,--that cruel bondage in which
+Nature holds all her wild creatures, the burden that makes them her
+slaves. Never to shudder with horror when the darkness fell in silence
+and mystery; never to have the heart freeze with terror when the thunder
+roared in the sky and the wind raged in the trees. The cave dwellers
+began to come into their own. Sheltered behind stone walls they could
+defy the elements that had enslaved them so long. This freedom gained
+they learned to strike the fire; they took one woman to keep the cave,
+instead of mating indiscriminately in the forest, thus marking the
+beginning of family life. Love instead of deathless hatred, gentleness
+rather than cruelty, peace in the place of passion, mercy and tolerance
+and self-control: all these mighty bulwarks of man's dominance grew into
+strength behind the sheltering walls of home.
+
+Thus in these few little weeks Ben Darby--a beast of the forest in his
+unbridled passions--had in some measure imaged the life history of the
+race. He had lived again the momentous regeneration. The protecting
+walls, the hearth, particularly Beatrice's wholesome and healing
+influence, had tamed him. He was still a forester, bred in the
+bone--loving these forest depths with an ardor too deep for words--but
+the mark of the beast was gone from his flesh.
+
+He could still deal justice to Ezram's murderers and thus keep faith
+with his dead partner; but the primal passions could no longer dominate
+him. His pet, however, remained the wolf. The sheltering cavern walls
+were never for him. He loved Ben with an undying devotion, yet a barrier
+was rising between them. They could not go the same paths forever.
+
+Matters reached a crisis between Fenris and himself one still, warm
+night in late July. The two were sitting side by side at the cavern maw,
+watching the slow enchantment of the forest under the spell of the
+rising moon; Beatrice had already gone to her hammock. As the last
+little blaze died in the fire, and it crackled at ever longer intervals,
+Ben suddenly made a moving discovery. The fringe of forest about him,
+usually so dreamlike and still, was simply breathing and throbbing with
+life.
+
+Ben dropped his hand to the wolf's shoulders. "The little folks are
+calling on us to-night," he said quietly.
+
+In all probability he spoke the truth. It was not an uncommon thing for
+the creatures of the wood--usually the lesser people such as rodents and
+the small hunters--to crowd close to the edge of the glade and try to
+puzzle out this ruddy mystery in its center. Unused to men they could
+never understand. Sometimes the lynx halted in his hunt to investigate,
+sometimes an old black bear--kindly, benevolent good-humored old
+bachelor that every naturalist loves--grunted and pondered at the edge
+of shadow, and sometimes even such lordly creatures as moose and caribou
+paused in their night journeys to see what was taking place.
+
+Curiously, the wolf started violently at Ben's touch. The man suddenly
+regarded him with a gaze of deepest interest. The hair was erect on the
+powerful neck, the eyes swam in pale, blue fire, and he was staring away
+into the mysterious shadows.
+
+"What do you see, old-timer?" Ben asked. "I wish I could see too."
+
+He brought his senses to the finest focus, trying hard to understand. He
+was aware only of the strained silence at first. Then here and there,
+about the dimmining circle of firelight, he heard the soft rustle of
+little feet, the subdued crack of a twig or the scratch of a dead leaf.
+The forest smells--of which there is no category in heaven or
+earth--reached him with incredible clarity. These were faint, vaguely
+exciting smells, some of them the exquisite fragrances of summer
+flowers, others beyond his ken. And presently two small, bright circles
+appeared in a distant covert, glowed once, and then went out.
+
+By peering closely, with unwinking eyes, he began to see other
+twin-circles of green and yellow light. Yet they were furtive little
+radiances--vanishing swiftly--and they were nothing of which to be
+afraid.
+
+"They _are_ out to-night," he murmured. "No wonder you're excited,
+Fenris. What is it--some celebration in the forest?"
+
+There was no possible explanation. Foresters know that on certain nights
+the wilderness seems simply to teem with life--scratchings and rustlings
+in every covert--and on other nights it is still and lifeless as a
+desert. The wild folk were abroad to-night and were simply paying
+casual, curious visits to Ben's fire.
+
+Once more Ben glanced at the wolf. The animal no longer crouched. Rather
+he was standing rigid, his head half-turned and lifted, gazing away
+toward a distant ridge behind the lake. A wilderness message had reached
+him, clear as a voice.
+
+But presently Ben understood. Throbbing through the night he heard a
+weird, far-carrying call--a long-drawn note, broken by half-sobs--the
+mysterious, plaintive utterance of the wild itself. Yet it was not an
+inanimate voice. He recognized it at once as the howl of a wolf, one of
+Fenris' wild brethren.
+
+The creature at his feet started as if from a blow. Then he stood
+motionless, listening, and the cry came the second time. He took two
+leaps into the darkness.
+
+Deeply moved, Ben watched him. The wolf halted, then stole back to his
+master's side. He licked the man's hand with his warm tongue, whining
+softly.
+
+"What is it, boy?" Ben asked. "What do you want me to do?"
+
+The wolf whined louder, his eyes luminous with ineffable appeal. Once
+more he leaped into the shadows, pausing as if to see if Ben would
+follow him.
+
+The man shook his head, rather soberly. A curious, excited light was in
+his eyes. "I can't go, old boy," he said. "This is my place--here.
+Fenris, I can't leave the cave."
+
+For a moment they looked eyes into eyes--in the glory of that moon as
+strange a picture as the wood gods ever beheld. Once more the wolf call
+sounded. Fenris whimpered softly.
+
+"Go ahead if you like," Ben told him. "God knows it's your destiny."
+
+The wolf seemed to understand. With a glad bark he sped away and almost
+instantly vanished into the gloom.
+
+But Fenris had not broken all ties with the cave. The chain was too
+strong for that, the hold on his wild heart too firm. If there is one
+trait, far and near in the wilds, that distinguishes the woods children,
+it is their inability to forget. Fenris had joined his fellows, to be
+sure; but he still kept watch over the cave.
+
+The strongest wolf in the little band, the nucleus about which the
+winter pack would form, he largely confined their hunting range to the
+district immediately about the cave. It held him like a chain of iron.
+Although the woods trails beguiled him with every strong appeal, the
+sight of his master was a beloved thing to him still, and scarcely a
+night went by but that he paused to sniff at the cavern maw, seeing that
+all was well. At such times his followers would linger, trembling and
+silent, in the farther shadows. Because they had never known the love of
+man they utterly failed to understand. But in an instant Fenris would
+come back to them, the wild urge in his heart seemingly appeased by the
+mere assurance of Ben's presence and safety.
+
+Ben himself was never aware of these midnight visits. The feet of the
+wolves were like falling feathers on the grass; and if sometimes,
+through the cavern maw, he half-wakened to catch the gleam of their
+wild eyes, he attributed it merely to the presence of skulking coyotes,
+curious concerning the dying coals of the fire.
+
+
+
+
+XXXII
+
+Beatrice had kept only an approximate track of the days; yet she knew
+that an attempt to rescue her must be almost at hand. Even traveling but
+half a dozen miles a day, and counting out a reasonable time for
+exploration and delays, her father's party must be close upon them. And
+the thought of the forthcoming battle between her abductor and her
+rescuers filled every waking moment with dread.
+
+She could not escape the thought of it. It lingered, hovering like a
+shadow, over all her gayest moments; it haunted her more sober hours,
+and it brought evil dreams at night. Her one hope was that her father
+had given her up for lost and had not attempted her rescue.
+
+She realized perfectly the perfection of Ben's plans. She knew that he
+had provided for every contingency; and besides, he had every natural
+advantage in his favor. The end was inevitable: his victory and the
+destruction of his foes. There would be little mercy for these three in
+the hands of this iron man from the eastern provinces. If they were to
+be saved it must be soon, not a week from now, nor when another moon had
+waned. If Ben was to be checkmated there were not many hours to waste.
+
+She had had no opportunity to escape, at first. Ben knew that she could
+not make her way over the hundreds of miles of howling wilderness
+without food supplies, and always the wolf had been on guard. He was
+like a were-wolf, a demon, anticipating her every move, knowing her
+secret thoughts. But the wolf had gone now to join his fellows. She was
+not aware of his almost nightly return. Perhaps the fact of his absence
+gave her an opportunity, her one chance to save her father from Ben's
+ambush.
+
+Conditions for escape were more favorable than at any time since their
+departure from the canoe landing, that late spring day of long ago. The
+wolf was gone; Ben's guard of her was ever more lax. The season was
+verdant: she could supplement what supplies she took from the cave with
+roots and berries, and the warm nights would enable her to carry a
+minimum of blankets. She knew that she could never hope to succeed in
+the venture except by traveling light and fast. On the other hand she
+would need all of Ben's remaining supplies to bring her through: in a
+few more days the stores would be so low that she could not attempt the
+trip. Human beings cannot survive, in the forests of the north, on roots
+and berries alone. Tissue-building flour and sustaining meat are
+necessary to climb the ridges and battle the thicket.
+
+How could she obtain these things? For all his seeming carelessness Ben
+kept a fairly close watch on her actions, and he would discover her
+flight within a few hours. Stronger than she, and knowing every trail
+and pass for miles around he could overtake her with ease. He gave her
+no opportunity to seize his rifle, load it and turn it against him, thus
+making her escape by force.
+
+The fact that she would leave him without food mattered not one way or
+another. He would still have his rifle, and his small stock of rifle
+cartridges would procure sufficient big game to sustain him for weeks
+and months to come. After all, the whole issue depended on the
+rifle,--the symbol of force. It would be his instrument of vengeance
+when his chance came. If she could only take this weapon from him she
+need not fear the coming of her rescuers. In that case Ben would be
+helpless against them.
+
+Unfortunately, the gun rarely left his hands. If indeed she should
+attempt to seize it he would wrest it away from her before she could
+destroy or injure it. But it was a hopeful fact that the rifle was
+useless without its shells!
+
+To procure these, however, presented an unsolvable problem. Any way she
+turned she found a barrier Ben kept them in his shell belt, and he wore
+the belt about his waist, waking or sleeping. Only to procure it, run
+like a deer and hurl it into the rapids of the Yuga,--and her problem
+would be absolutely solved. Ben would be obliged to leave the cave home
+at once and return with her to the Yuga cabins, utilizing the few stores
+they had left for the journey--simply because to stay, unarmed, would
+mean to die of starvation. Indeed the few remaining supplies would not
+more than last them through now, traveling early and late, so if the
+venture were to be attempted at all it must be at once. On the other
+hand his rifle and shells would enable the two of them to remain in the
+cavern indefinitely on a diet of meat alone.
+
+As she worked about the cavern she brooded over the plan; but at first
+she could conceive of no possible way to procure the shells. If the
+chance came, however, she wanted to be ready. She planned all other
+details of the venture; the shortest route to the nearest rapids of the
+river where she might dispose of the deadly cylinders of brass. It
+became necessary, also, to consider the lesser weapon for the plain
+reason that it might defeat her in the moment of her success.
+
+Ben kept the weapon in his cartridge belt, but the extra pistol shells
+were among the supplies. They could easily be procured. It would also be
+necessary to induce him to fire away the few shells that he carried in
+the pistol magazine; but this would likely be easy enough to do. He put
+little reliance on the weapon, trusting rather to his rifle both for the
+impending war and the procurance of big game; and he would not harbor
+the pistol shells as long as he had his rifle.
+
+But the days were passing! Any attempt at deliverance must be made
+before the food stores were further depleted. They could not make the
+march without food. Days and nights overtook her with her triumph as far
+distant as ever. The moment of opportunity she had watched for, in which
+she might seize the cartridge belt and destroy it, had never come to
+pass. The plans she had made while the night lay soft and mysterious in
+the solitudes had all come to nothing. He had never, as she had hoped,
+removed his belt and forgotten to replace it, nor had his slumber ever
+been so deep that she could steal it from him.
+
+His own triumph surely was almost at hand. Surely his pursuers had
+almost overtaken him. The stores had already fallen far below the margin
+of safety for the long journey home. The thought was with her, and she
+was desperate one long, warm afternoon as she searched for roots and
+berries in the forest. Edible plants were ever more hard to find, these
+past days; but what there were she gathered almost automatically,
+herself lost in a deep preoccupation. And all at once her hand reached
+toward a little vine of black berries, each with a green tuft at the
+end, not unlike gooseberries in southern gardens.
+
+As if by instinct, hardly aware of the motion, she withdrew her hand.
+She knew this vine. She was enough of a forester never to mistake it.
+It was the deadly nightshade, and a handful of the berries spelt death.
+She started to look elsewhere.
+
+But presently she paused, arrested by an idea so engrossing and yet so
+terrible that her heart seemed to pause in her breast. Had any rules
+been laid down for her to follow in her war with Ben? Was she to
+consider methods at such a time as this? Was she not a woods girl,--a
+woman, not a child, trained and tutored in the savage code of the wild
+that knows no ethics other than might, whether might of arm or craft, of
+brain or fell singleness of purpose? Should she consider ethics now?
+
+Her father's life was in imminent danger. Another day might find him
+stretched lifeless before her. Ben had not hesitated to use every weapon
+in his power; she should not hesitate now. Ben had made his war; she
+would wage it by his own code.
+
+For a moment she stood almost without outward motion, intrigued by the
+possibilities of this little handful of berries. She shuddered once,
+nervously, but there was no further impulse of remorse. Perhaps she
+trembled slightly; and her eyes were simply depthless shadows under her
+brows.
+
+They were so little, seemingly so inoffensive: these dark berries in the
+shadows of the covert. They were scarcely to be noticed twice. But not
+even the savage grizzly was of such might; storms or seas were not so
+deadly. There they were, inconspicuous among their sister plants,
+waiting for her hand.
+
+It was right that they should be black in color. Their blackness was as
+of a black night without a star shining through,--a black cloud with
+never a rainbow to promise hope. She could not turn her eyes away! How
+black they were among the green leaves--lightless as death itself.
+
+A handful of them meant death: her father had warned her about them long
+ago. But half a handful--perhaps a dozen of the sable berries in the
+palm of her hand--what did _they_ mean? Just a sickness wherein one
+could no longer guard a prisoner. They were a powerful alkaloid, she
+knew; and a dozen of them would likely mean hours and hours of deep,
+dreamless sleep,--a sleep in which one could take no reckoning of hands
+fumbling at a cartridge belt! Half a handful would, in all probability,
+fail to strike the life from such a powerful frame as Ben's, but would
+certainly act upon him like a powerful opiate and leave him helpless in
+her hands.
+
+Eagerly her fingers plucked the black berries.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII
+
+In one of the tin cups Beatrice pressed the juice from the nightshade,
+obtaining perhaps a tablespoonful of black liquor. To this she added
+considerable sugar, barely tasting the mixture on the end of her finger.
+The balance was inclining toward the success of her plan. The sugar
+mostly killed the pungent taste of the berries.
+
+Then she concealed the cup in a cluster of vines, ready for the moment
+of need. Her next act was to procure from among the supplies the little
+cardboard box containing half a dozen or so of her pistol shells. The
+way of safety was to destroy these first. The effect of the poison might
+be of only a few minutes' duration, and every motion might count. Under
+any conditions, they would be out of the way. She was careful, with a
+superlative cunning, to take the box as well as its contents. She
+foresaw that in all likelihood Ben would seek the shells as soon as he
+fired the few that remained in his pistol magazine; and an empty
+container might put him upon his guard. On the other hand, if he could
+not find the box at all, he could easily be led to believe that it had
+been simply misplaced among the other supplies.
+
+She scattered the shells in the heavy brush where not even the bright,
+searching eyes of the Canada jay might ever find them. Then she hastened
+up the ridge to meet Ben on his way to the cave.
+
+She waited a few minutes, then spying his stalwart form at the edge of
+the beaver meadow, she tripped down to meet him. He was not in the least
+suspicious of this little act of friendship. It was quite the customary
+thing, lately, for her thus to watch for his coming; and his brown face
+always lighted with pleasure at the first glimpse of her graceful form
+framed by the spruce. She too had always taken pleasure in these little
+meetings and in the gay talk they had as they sped down toward the
+cavern; but her delight was singularly absent to-day. She tried to
+restrain the wild racing of her heart.
+
+She knew she must act her part. Her plan was to put him off his guard,
+to hide her treachery with pretended friendship. To meet him here--far
+distant from the poison cup hidden in the vines--would give her time to
+master her leaping heart and to strengthen her self-control.
+
+Yet she had hardly expected him to greet her in just this way,--with
+such a light in his eyes and such obvious delight in his smile. He had a
+rather boyish, friendly smile, this foe of hers whom she was about to
+despatch into the very shadow of death. She dispelled quickly a small,
+faltering voice of remorse. This was no time for remorse, for gentleness
+and mercy. She hurried to his side.
+
+"You're flushed from hurrying down that hill," he told her gayly.
+"Beatrice, you're getting prettier every day."
+
+"It's the simple life that's doing it, Ben! No late hours, no
+indigestible food--"
+
+"Speaking of food--I'm famished. I hope you've got something nice for
+lunch--and I know you have."
+
+She _had_ been careful with to-day's lunch; but it had merely been part
+of her plot to put him off his guard. "Caribou tenderloin--almost the
+last of him--wocus bread and strawberries," she assured him. "Does that
+suit your highness?"
+
+He made a great feint of being overwhelmed by the news. "Then let's
+hurry. Take my arm and we'll fly."
+
+She seized the strong forearm, thrilled in spite of herself by the
+muscles of steel she felt through the sleeves. He fell into his fastest
+walking stride,--long steps that sped the yards under them. They emerged
+from the marsh and started to climb the ridge.
+
+At a small hollow beside the creek bed her fingers suddenly tightened on
+his arm. A thrill that was more of wonder than of joy coursed through
+her; and her dark eyes began to glitter with excitement. The wilderness
+was her ally to-day. She suddenly saw her chance--in a manner that could
+not possibly waken his suspicions of her intentions--of disposing of the
+remainder of his pistol cartridges.
+
+On a log thirty feet distant sat an old grouse with half a dozen of her
+brood, all of them perched in a row and relying on their protective
+coloring to save them from sight. They were Franklin's grouse--and they
+had appeared as if in answer to Beatrice's secret wish.
+
+These birds were common enough in their valley, and not a day passed
+without seeing from five to fifty of them, yet the sight went straight
+home to Beatrice's superstitions. "Get them with your pistol," she
+whispered. "I want them all--for a big grouse pie to-night."
+
+"But our pistol shells are getting low," Ben objected. "I've hardly got
+enough shells in the gun to get 'em all--"
+
+"No matter. You have to use them some time. There's a few more in the
+cave, I think. We'll have to rely on big game from now on, anyway. Don't
+miss one."
+
+Ben drew his pistol, then walked up within twenty feet. He drew slowly
+down, knocking the old bird from her perch with a bullet through the
+neck.
+
+"Good work," Beatrice exulted. "Now for the chicks."
+
+Ben took the bird on the extreme right, and again the bullet sped true.
+The remainder of the flock had become uneasy now; and at the next shot
+all except one flew into the branches of the surrounding trees. This
+shot was equally successful, and with the fourth he knocked the
+remaining bird from the log.
+
+Each of the four birds he had downed with a shot either through the head
+or the neck; and such shooting would have been marvelous indeed in the
+eyes of the tenderfoot. But both these two foresters knew that there was
+nothing exceptional about it. Pistol shooting is simply a matter of a
+sure eye and steady nerves, combined with a greater or less period of
+practice. Few were the trappers or woodsmen north of fifty-three that
+could not have done as much.
+
+Ben turned his attention to the fowl on the lower tree limbs, hitting
+once but missing the second time. To correct this unpardonable
+proceeding, he knocked with his seventh a fat cock, his spurs just
+starting, from almost the top of a young spruce.
+
+"Here's one more," Beatrice urged him. "I'll need every one for the
+pie."
+
+But the gun was empty. The firing pin snapped harmlessly against the
+breach. They gathered the grouse and sped on down to the cavern.
+
+Her heart seemingly leaped into her throat at every beat; but with
+steady hands and smiling face she went about the preparation of the
+meal. She fried the venison and baked the wocus bread, and with more
+than usual spirit and gaiety set the dishes at Ben's place at the
+table. "Draw up your chair," she told him. "I'll have the tea in a
+minute."
+
+Ben peered with sudden interest into her face. "What's troubling you,
+Bee?" he asked gently. "You're pale as a ghost."
+
+"I'm not feeling overly well." Her eyes dropped before his gaze. "I'm
+not hungry--at all. But it's nothing to worry about--"
+
+She saw by his eyes that he _was_ worrying; yet it was evident that he
+had not the slightest suspicion of the real cause of the sudden pallor
+in her cheeks. She saw his face cloud and his eyes darken; and again she
+heard that faint, small voice of remorse--whispering deep in her heart's
+heart. He was always so considerate of her, this jailer of hers. His
+concern was always so real and deep. Yet in a moment more the kindly
+sympathy would be gone from his face. He would be lying very still--and
+his face would be even more pale than hers.
+
+Listlessly she walked to the door of the cave, procuring a handful of
+dried red-root leaves that she used for tea. Through the cavern opening
+he saw her drop them into the bucket that served as their teapot.
+
+Then she came back for the oiled, cloth bag that contained the last of
+their sugar. This was always one of her little kindnesses,--to sweeten
+his tea for him before she brought it to him. He began to eat his steak.
+
+In one glance the girl saw that he was wholly unsuspecting. He trusted
+her; in their weeks together he had lost all fear of treachery from her.
+There he was, exulting over the frugal lunch she had prepared, with no
+inkling of the deadly peril that even now was upon him. She wished he
+did not trust her so completely; it would be easier for her if he was
+just a little wary, a little more on guard.
+
+She felt cold all over. She could hardly keep from shivering. But this
+was the moment of trial; the thing would be done in a moment more. She
+mustn't give way yet to the growing weakness in her muscles. She walked
+to the vine where she had left the potion.
+
+How much of it there was--it seemed to have doubled in quantity since
+she had left it. A handful of the black berries meant death--certain as
+the sunrise--but what did half a handful mean? The question came to her
+again. How did she know that half a handful did not mean death too,--not
+just hours of slumber, but relentless and irremediable death! Would that
+be the end of her day's work--to see this tall, friendly warden of hers
+lying dead before her gaze, the laughter gone from his lips and the
+light faded from his eyes? She would be free then to strip the shell
+belt from his waist. He would never waken to prevent her. She could
+escape too--back to her father's home--and leave him in the cave.
+
+All that he had told her concerning his war with her father recurred to
+her in one vivid flash. Could it have been that he had told the
+truth--that her father and his followers had been the attackers in the
+beginning? She had never believed him fully; but could it be that he was
+in the right? His claim had been invaded, he said, and his one friend
+murdered in cold blood. Was this not cause enough, by the code of the
+North, for a war of reprisal?
+
+But even as these thoughts came to her, she had walked boldly to the
+fire and emptied the contents of the cup into the boiling water in the
+teapot. Ben would have only had to look up to see her do it. Yet still
+he did not suspect.
+
+She waited an instant, steadying herself for the ordeal to come. Then
+she took the pot off the fire and poured the hot contents into the cup
+that had just held the potion. She had been careful not to put enough
+water into the pot to weaken the drink. The cup brimmed; but none was
+left. She brought it steaming to Ben's side.
+
+No kindly root tripped her feet as she entered, no merciful unsteadiness
+caused her to drop this cup of death and spill its contents.
+
+"Thanks, Beatrice." Ben looked up, smiling. "I'm a brute to let you fix
+my tea when you are feeling so bad. But I sure am grateful, if that
+helps any--"
+
+His voice sounded far away, like a voice in a nightmare. "It's pretty
+strong, I'm afraid," she told him. "The leaves weren't very good, and I
+boiled them too long. I'm afraid you'll find it bitter."
+
+"I'll drink it, if it's bitter as gall," he assured her, "after your
+kindness to fix it."
+
+His hand reached and seized the handle of the cup. Even now--_now_--he
+was raising it to his lips. In an instant more he would be pouring it
+down his throat, too considerate of her to admit its unwholesome taste,
+drinking it down though it tasted the potion of death that it was! The
+hair seemed to start on her head.
+
+Then she seemed to writhe as in a convulsion. Her voice rose in a
+piercing scream. "Ben--_Ben_--_don't drink it_!" she cried. "God have
+mercy on my soul!"
+
+But with that utterance a strength surpassing that of sinew and muscle
+returned to her. She reached and knocked the cup from his hand; and its
+black contents, like dark blood, stained the sandy floor of the cavern.
+
+Ben's first thought was curiously not of his own narrow escape, but was
+rather in concern for Beatrice. Whether or not he had actually
+swallowed any of the liquor in the cup he did not know; nor did he give
+the matter a thought. He was aware of only the terror-stricken girl
+before him, her face deathly white and her eyes starting and wide. He
+leaped to his feet.
+
+Fearing that she was about to faint he steadied her with his hand. The
+echo of her scream died in the cavern, the cup rolled on the floor and
+came to a standstill against the wall; but still she made no sound, only
+gazing as if entranced. But slowly, as he steadied her, the blessed
+tears stole into her eyes and rolled down her white cheeks; and once
+more breath surged into her lungs.
+
+"Never mind, Beatrice," the man was saying, his deep, rough voice gentle
+as a woman's. "Don't cry--please don't cry--just forget all about it.
+Let's go over to your hammock and rest awhile."
+
+With a strong arm he guided her to her cot, and smiling kindly, pushed
+her down into it. "Just take it easy," he advised. "And forget all about
+it. You'll be all right in a minute."
+
+"But you don't understand--you don't know--what I tried to do--"
+
+"No matter. Tell me after a while, if you want to. Don't tell me at all
+if you'd rather not. I'm going back to my lunch." He laughed, trying to
+bring her to herself. "I wouldn't miss that caribou steak for
+anything--even though I can't have my tea. Just lay down a while, and
+rest."
+
+His rugged face lighted as he smiled, kindly and tolerantly, and then he
+turned to go. But her solemn voice arrested him.
+
+"Wait, Ben. I want you to know--now--so you won't trust me again--or
+give me another chance. The cup--was poisoned."
+
+But the friendly light did not yet wane in his eyes. "I didn't think it
+was anything very good--the way you knocked it out of my hand. We'll
+just pretend it was very bad tea--and let it go at that."
+
+"No. It was nightshade--it might have killed you." She spoke in a flat,
+lifeless voice. "I didn't want it to kill you--I just wanted to give you
+enough to put you to sleep--so I could take your rifle shells and throw
+them away--but I was willing to let you drink it, even if it _did_ kill
+you."
+
+The man looked at her, in infinite compassion, then came and sat beside
+her in the hammock. Rather quietly he took one of her hands and gazed at
+it, without seeing it, a long time. Then he pressed it to his lips.
+
+For a breath he held it close to his cheek, his eyes lightless and far
+away, and she gazed at him in amazement.
+
+"You'd kiss my hand--after what I did--?"
+
+"After what you _didn't_ do," he corrected. "Please, Beatrice--don't
+blame yourself. Some way--I understand things better--than I used to.
+Even if you had killed me--I don't see why it wouldn't have been your
+right. I've held you here by force. Yet you didn't let me drink the
+stuff. You knocked it out of my hand."
+
+And now, for the first time, an inordinate amazement came into his face.
+He looked at her intently, yet with no unfriendliness, no passion.
+Rather it was with overwhelming wonder.
+
+"_You knocked it out of my hands_!" he repeated, more loudly. "Oh,
+Beatrice--it's my turn to beg forgiveness now! When I was at your mercy,
+and the cup at my lips--you spared me. Why did you do it, Beatrice?"
+
+He gazed at her with growing ardor. She shook her head. She simply did
+not know the reason.
+
+"It's not your place to feel penitent," he told her, with infinite
+sincerity. "If you had let me take it, you'd have just served me
+right--you'd have just paid me back in my own coin. It was fair
+enough--to use every advantage you had. Good Lord, have you forgotten
+that I am holding you here by force? But instead--you saved me, when you
+might have killed me--and won the fight. All you've done is to show
+yourself the finer clay--that's what you've done. God knows I suppose
+the woman is always finer clay than the man--yet it comes with a jolt,
+just the same. It's not for you to be down-hearted--Heaven knows the
+strength you've shown is above any I ever had, or ever will have. You've
+shown how to feel mercy--I could never show anything but hate, and
+revenge. You've shown me a bigger and stronger code than mine. And
+there's nothing--nothing I can say."
+
+The tone changed once more to the personal and solicitous. "But it's
+been a big strain on you--I can see that. I believe I'd lie here and
+rest awhile if I were you. I'll eat my dinner--and the fire's about out
+too. That's the girl--Beatrice."
+
+Gently he picked her up, seemingly with no physical effort and laid her
+in her hammock. "Then--you'll forgive me?" she asked brokenly.
+
+"Good Heavens, I wish there was something to forgive--so we'd be a
+little more even. But you've accomplished something, Beatrice--and I
+don't know what it is yet--I only know you've changed me--and softened
+me--as I never dreamed any one in the world could. Now go to sleep."
+
+He turned from her, but the food on the table no longer tempted him. For
+a full hour he stood before the ashes of the fire, deeply and
+inextricably bewildered with himself, with life, and with all these
+thoughts and hopes and regrets that thronged him. He was like ashes now
+himself; the fires of his life seemed burned out. The thought recalled
+him to the need of cutting fuel for the night's fire.
+
+He might be able to quiet the growing turmoil in his brain when the
+still shadows of the spruce closed around him. He seized his axe, then
+peered into the cave. Beatrice, worn out by the stress of the hour
+before and immensely comforted by Ben's words, was already deeply
+asleep. His rifle leaned against the wall of the cavern, and he put it
+in the hollow of his arm. It was not that he feared Beatrice would
+attempt to procure it. The act was mostly habit, combined with the fact
+that their supply of meat was all but exhausted and he did not wish to
+miss any opportunity for big game.
+
+The forest was particularly gloomy to-day. Its shadows lay deep. And
+this was not merely the result of his own darkened outlook: glancing up,
+he saw that clouds were gathering in the sky. They would need fuel in
+plenty to keep the fire bright to-night. Evidently rain was
+impending,--one of those cold, steady downpours that are disliked so
+cordially by the folk of the upper Selkirks.
+
+He went a full two hundred yards before he found a tree to his liking.
+It was a tough spruce of medium height and just at the edge of the
+stream. He laid his rifle down, leaning it against a fallen log; then
+began his work.
+
+It was an awkward place to stand; but he gave no thought to it. His mind
+dwelt steadily on the events in the cavern of the hour before; the
+girl's remorse in the instant that she had him at her mercy and the
+example it set for him. The blade bit into the wood with slow
+encroachments. Perhaps the expenditure of brute energy in swinging the
+axe would relieve his pent-up feelings.
+
+He was not watching his work. His blows struck true from habit. Now the
+tree was half-severed: it was time to cut on the opposite side. Suddenly
+his axe crashed into yielding, rotten wood.
+
+Instantly the powers of the wilderness took their long-awaited toll. Ben
+had been unwary, too absorbed by his swirling thoughts to mark the
+ambush of death that had been prepared for him. Ever to keep watch, ever
+to be on guard: such is the first law of the wild; and Ben had
+disregarded it. Half of the tree had been rotten, changing the direction
+of its fall and crashing it down before its time.
+
+Ben leaped for his life, instinctively aiming for the shelter of the log
+against which he had inclined his rifle; but the blow came too soon. He
+was aware only of the rush of air as he leaped, an instant's hovering at
+the crest of a depthless chasm, then the sense of a mighty, resistless
+blow hurling him into infinity.
+
+Ben's rifle, catching the full might of the blow, was broken like a
+match. Ben himself was crushed to earth as beneath a meteor, the branchy
+trunk shattering down upon his stalwart form like the jaws of a great
+trap. He uttered one short, half-strangled cry.
+
+Then the darkness, shot with varied and multiple lights, dropped over
+him. The noise of the falling tree died away; the forest-dwellers
+returned to their varied activities. The rain clouds deepened and spread
+above his motionless form.
+
+
+
+XXXIV
+
+Beatrice's dreams were troubled after Ben's departure into the forest.
+She tossed and murmured, secretly aware that all was not well with her.
+Yet in the moments that she half-wakened she ascribed the vague warning
+to nervousness only, falling immediately to sleep again. Wakefulness
+came vividly to her only with the beginnings of twilight.
+
+She opened her eyes; the cavern was deep with shadow. She lay resting a
+short time, adjusting her eyes to the soft light. In an instant all the
+dramatic events of the day were recalled to her: the tin cup that had
+held the poison still lay against the wall, and the liquor still stained
+the sandy floor, or was it only a patch of deeper shadow?
+
+She wondered why Ben did not come into the cave. Was he embittered
+against her, after all; had he spoken as he did just from kindness, to
+save her remorse? She listened for the familiar sounds of his fuel
+cutting, or his other work about the camp. Wherever he was, he made no
+sound at all.
+
+She sat up then, staring out through the cavern maw. For an instant she
+experienced a deep sense of bewilderment at the pressing gloom, so
+mysterious and unbroken over the face of the land. But soon she
+understood what was missing. The fire was out.
+
+The fact went home to her with an inexplicable shock. She had become so
+accustomed to seeing the bright, cheerful blaze at the cavern mouth that
+its absence was like a little tragedy in itself. Always it had been the
+last vista of her closing eyes as she dropped off to sleep--the soft,
+warm glow of the coals--and the sight always comforted her. She could
+scarcely remember the morning that it wasn't crackling cheerily when she
+wakened. Ben had always been so considerate of her in this
+regard--removing the chill of the cave with its radiating heat to make
+it comfortable for her to dress. Not even coals were left now--only
+ashes, gray as death.
+
+She got up, then walked to the cavern maw. For a moment she stood
+peering into the gloom, one hand resting against the portals of stone.
+The twilight was already deep. It was the supper hour and past; dark
+night was almost at hand. There could be no further doubt of Ben's
+absence. He was not at the little creek getting water, nor did she hear
+the ring of his axe in the forest. She wondered if he had gone out on
+one of his scouting expeditions and had not yet returned. Of course this
+was the true explanation; she had no real cause to worry.
+
+Likely enough he had little desire to return to the cavern now. She
+could picture him following at his tireless pace one of the winding
+woods trails, lost in contemplation, his vivid eyes clouded with
+thought.
+
+She looked up for the sight of the familiar stars that might guide him
+home. They were all hidden to-night. Not a gleam of light softened the
+stark gloom of the spruce. As she watched the first drops of rain fell
+softly on the grass.
+
+The drops came in ever-increasing frequency, cold as ice on her hand.
+She heard them rustling in the spruce boughs; and far in the forest she
+discerned the first whine of the wakening wind. The sound of the rain
+was no longer soft. It swelled and grew, and all at once the wind caught
+it and swept it into her face. And now the whole forest moaned and
+soughed under the sweep of the wind.
+
+There is no sound quite like the beat of a hard rain on dense forest. It
+has no startling discords, but rather a regular cadence as if the wood
+gods were playing melodies in the minor on giant instruments,--melodies
+remembered from the first, unhappy days of the earth and on instruments
+such as men have never seen. But this was never a melody to fill the
+heart with joy. It touches deep chords of sorrow in the most secret
+realms of the spirit. The rain song grew and fell as the gusts of the
+wind swept it, and the rock walls of the cliff swam in clouds of spray.
+
+The storm could not help but bring Ben to camp, she thought. At least
+she did not fear that he would lose his way: he knew every trail and
+ridge for miles around the cave. Even such pressing, baleful darkness as
+this could not bewilder him. She went back to her cot to wait his
+coming.
+
+The minutes seemed interminable. Time had never moved so slowly before.
+She tried to lie still, to relax; then to direct her thought in other
+channels; but all of these meandering streams flowed back into the main
+current which was Ben. Yet it was folly to worry about him; any moment
+she would hear his step at the edge of the forest. But the night was so
+dark, and the storm so wild. A half-hour dragged its interminable length
+away.
+
+Her uneasiness was swiftly developing into panic. Just to-day she was
+willing to risk his life for her freedom: it was certainly folly now to
+goad herself to despair by dwelling on his mysterious absence. It might
+speed the passing minutes if she got up and found some work to do about
+the cave; but she simply had no heart for it. Once she sat up, only to
+lie down again.
+
+The moments dragged by. Surely he would have had time to reach camp by
+now. The storm neither increased nor decreased; only played its mournful
+melodies in the forest. The song of the rain was despairing,--low
+mournful notes rising to a sharp crescendo as the fiercer gusts swept it
+into the tree tops. The limbs murmured unhappily as they smote together;
+and a tall tree, swaying in the wind, creaked with a maddening
+regularity. She was never so lonely before, so darkly miserable.
+
+"I want him to come," her voice suddenly spoke aloud. It rang strangely
+in the gloomy cave. "I want him to come back to me."
+
+She felt no impulse for the words. They seemed to speak themselves.
+Presently she sat erect, her heart leaping with inexpressible relief, at
+the sound of a heavy tread at the edge of the glade.
+
+The steps came nearer, and then paused. She sprang to her feet and went
+to the mouth of the cave. A silence that lived between the beating rain
+and the complaining wind settled down about her. Her eyes could not
+pierce the darkness.
+
+"Is that you, Ben?" she called.
+
+She strained into the silence for his reply. The cold drops splashed
+into her face.
+
+"Ben?" she called again. "Is that you?"
+
+Then something leaped with an explosive sound, and running feet splashed
+in the wet grass in flight. The little spruce trees at the edge of the
+glade whipped and rustled as a heavy body crashed through. The steps had
+been only those of some forest beast--a caribou, perhaps, or a
+moose--come to mock her despair.
+
+She remembered that Ben had been wishing for just such a visitation
+these past few days; of course in the daylight hours when he could see
+to shoot. Their meat supply was almost gone.
+
+She did not go to her cot again. She stood peering into the gloom. All
+further effort to repel her fears came to nothing. The storm was already
+of two hours' duration, and Ben would have certainly returned to the
+cave unless disaster had befallen him. Was he lost somewhere in the
+intertwining trails, seeking shelter in a heavy thicket until the dawn
+should show him his way? There were so many pitfalls for the
+unsuspecting in these trackless wilds.
+
+Yet she could be of no aid to him. The dark woods stretched
+interminably; she would not even know which way to start. It would just
+mean to be lost herself, should she attempt to seek him. The trails that
+wound through the glades and over the ridges had no end.
+
+"Ben!" she called again. Then with increasing volume. "Ben!"
+
+But no echo returned. The darkness swallowed the sound at once.
+
+The night was chill: she longed for the comfort of the fire. The actual
+labor of building it might take her mind from her fears for a while at
+least; and its warm glow might dispel the growing cold of fear and
+loneliness in her breast. Besides, it might be a beacon light for Ben.
+She turned at once to the pile of kindling Ben had prepared.
+
+But before she could build a really satisfactory fire, one that would
+endure the rain, she must cut fuel from some of the logs Ben had hewn
+down and dragged to the cave. She lighted a short piece of pitchy wood,
+intending to locate the heavy camp axe. Then, putting on her heavy
+coat--the same garment of lustrous fur which Ben had sent her back for
+the day of her abduction--she ventured into the storm.
+
+The rain splashed in vain at her torch. The pitch burned with a fierce
+flame. But her eyes sought in vain for the axe.
+
+This was a strange thing: Ben always left it leaning against one of the
+chunks of spruce. Presently she halted, startled, gazing into the black
+depths of the forest.
+
+Ben had taken it; he had plainly gone forth after fuel. Trees stood all
+about the little glade: he couldn't have gone far. The inference was
+obvious: whatever disaster had befallen him must have occurred within a
+few hundred yards of the cave.
+
+Holding her torch high she went to the edge of the glade and again
+called into the gloom. There was no repression in her voice now. She
+called as loudly as she could. She started to push on into the fringe of
+timber.
+
+But at once she paused, holding hard on her self-control. It was folly
+to make a blind search. To penetrate the dark mystery of the forest with
+only this little light--already flickering out--would probably result in
+becoming lost herself. Such a course would not help Ben's cause.
+Evidently he was lying within a few hundred feet of her,
+unconscious--perhaps dead--or he would have replied to her call.
+
+Dead! The thought sped an icy current throughout the hydraulic system of
+her veins.
+
+She was a mountain girl, and she made no further false motions. She
+turned at once to the cave, and piling up her kindling, built a fire
+just at the mouth of the cave. It was protected here in some degree from
+the rain, and the wind was right to carry the smoke away. This fire
+would serve to keep her direction and lead her back to the cavern.
+
+Once more she ventured into the storm, and gathering all the cut fuel
+she could find, piled it on her fire. The two spruce chunks that Ben had
+cut for their fireside seats were placed as back logs. Then she hunted
+for pine knots taken from the scrub pines that grew in scattering clumps
+among the spruce, and which were laden with pitch.
+
+One of these knots she put in the iron pan they used for frying, then
+lighted it. Then she pushed into the timber.
+
+Holding her light high she began to encircle the glade clear to the
+barrier of the cliffs. To the eyes of the wild creatures this might have
+been a never-to-be-forgotten picture: the slight form of the girl, her
+face blanched and her eyes wide and dark in the flaring light, her
+grotesque torch and its weird shadows, and then rain sweeping down
+between. She reached the cliff, then started back, making a wider
+circle.
+
+Adding fresh fuel to the torch, she peered into every covert and
+examined with minute care any human-shaped shadow in that eerie world of
+shadows; but the long half-circle brought her back to the cliff wall
+without results. She was already wet to the skin, and her pine knots
+were nearly spent. Ever the load of dread was heavier at her heart. In
+the hour or more she had searched--she had no way of estimating
+time--she had already gone farther than Ben usually went for his fuel.
+
+As yet no tears came; only the raindrops lay on her face and curled her
+dark hair in ringlets. But she must not give up yet. It was hard to hold
+her shoulders straight; but she must make the long circle once more.
+
+With courage and strength such as she had not dreamed she possessed,
+she launched forward again. But fatigue was breaking her now. The tree
+roots tripped her faltering feet, the branches clutched at her as she
+passed. It was hard to tell what territory she had searched, or how far
+she had gone. But when she was halfway around, she suddenly halted,
+motionless as an image, at the edge of the stream.
+
+The flickering light revealed a tree, freshly cut, its, naked stump
+gleaming and its tall form lying prone. Yet beneath it the shadows were
+of strange, unearthly shape, and something showed stark white through
+the green foliage. Great branches stretched over it, like bars over a
+prison window.
+
+Just one curious deep sob wracked her whole body. The life-heat, the
+mystery that is being, seemed to steal away from her. Her strength
+wilted; and for an instant she could only stand and gaze with fixed,
+unbelieving eyes. But almost at once the unquenchable fires of her
+spirit blazed up anew. She saw her task, and with a faith and
+steadfastness conformable more to the sun and the earth than to human
+frailty, her muscles made instant and incredible response.
+
+Instantly she was beside the form of her comrade and enemy, struggling
+with the cruel limbs that pinned him to the earth.
+
+
+
+
+XXXV
+
+Beatrice knew one thing and one alone: that she must not give way to the
+devastating terror in her heart. There was mighty work to do, and she
+must keep strong. Her only wish was to kneel beside him, to lift the
+bleeding head into her arms and let the storm and the darkness smother
+her existence; but her stern woods training came to her aid. She began
+the stupendous task of freeing him from the imprisoning tree limbs.
+
+The pine knots flickered feebly; and by their light she looked about for
+Ben's axe. Her eyes rested on the broken gun first: then she saw the
+blade, shining in the rain, protruding from beneath a broken bough. She
+drew it out and swung it down.
+
+Some of the lesser limbs she broke off, with a strength in her hands she
+did not dream she possessed. The larger ones were cut away with blows
+incredibly strong and accurate. How and by what might she did not know,
+but almost at once the man's body was free except for the tree trunk
+that wedged him against a dead log toward which he had leaped for
+shelter.
+
+She seemed powerless to move it. Her shoulders surged against it in
+vain. A desperate frenzy seized her, but she fought it remorselessly
+down. Her self-discipline must not break yet. Seeing that she could not
+move the tree itself, she thrust with all her power against the dead log
+beside which Ben lay. In a moment she had rolled it aside.
+
+Then for the first time she went to her knees beside the prone form.
+Ben was free of the imprisoning limbs, but was his soul already free of
+the stalwart body broken among the broken boughs? She had to know this
+first; further effort was unavailing until she knew this. Her hand stole
+over his face.
+
+She found no reassuring warmth. It was wet with the rain, cold to the
+touch. His hair was wet too, and matted from some dreadful wound in the
+scalp. Very softly she felt along the skull for some dreadful fracture
+that might have caused instant death; but the descending trunk had
+missed his head, at least. Very gently she shook him by the shoulders.
+
+Her stern self-control gave way a little now. The strain had been too
+much for human nerves to bear. She gathered him into her arms, still
+without sobbing, but the hot tears dropped on to his face.
+
+"Speak to me, Ben," she said quietly. The wind caught her words and
+whisked them away; and the rain played its unhappy music in the tree
+foliage; but Ben made no answer. "Speak to me," she repeated, her tone
+lifting. "My man, my baby--tell me you're not dead!"
+
+Dead! Was that it--struck to the earth like the caribou that fell before
+his rifle? And in that weird, dark instant a light far more bright than
+that the flickering pine knots cast so dim and strange over the scene
+beamed forth from the altar flame of her own soul. It was only the light
+of knowledge, not of hope, but it transfigured her none the less.
+
+All at once she knew why she had hurled the poisoned cup from his hand,
+even though her father's life might be the price of her weakness. She
+understood, now, why these long weeks had been a delight rather than a
+torment; why her fears for him had gone so straight to her heart. She
+pressed his battered head tight against her breast.
+
+"My love, my love," she crooned in his ear, pressing her warm cheek
+close to his. "I do love you, I do, I do," she told him confidingly, as
+if this message would call him back to life. Her lips sought his, trying
+to give them warmth, and her voice was low and broken when she spoke
+again. "Can't you hear me, Ben--won't you try to come back to me? If
+you're dead I'll die too--"
+
+But the man did not open his eyes. Would not even this appeal arouse him
+from this deep, strange sleep in which he lay? He had always been so
+watchful of her--since that first day--so zealous for her safety. She
+held him closer, her lips trembling against his.
+
+But she must get herself in hand again! Perhaps life had not yet
+completely flickered out; and she could nurse it back. She dropped her
+ear to his breast, listening.
+
+Yes, she felt the faint stirring of his heart. It was so feeble, the
+throbs were so far apart, yet they meant life,--life that might flush
+his cheeks again, and might yet bring him back to her, into her arms. He
+was breathing, too; breaths so faint that she hardly dared to believe in
+their reality. And presently she realized that his one hope of life lay
+in getting back to the fire.
+
+For long hours he had been lying in the cold rain; a few more minutes
+would likely extinguish the spark of life that remained in his breast.
+Her hand stole over his powerful frame, in an effort to get some idea of
+the nature of his wounds.
+
+One of his arms was broken; its position indicated that. Some of his
+ribs were crushed too--what internal injuries he had that might end him
+before the morning she did not know. But she could not take time to
+build a sledge and cut away the brush. She worked her shoulder under his
+body.
+
+Wrenching with all her fine, young strength she lifted him upon her
+shoulder; then, kneeling in the vines, she struggled for breath. Then
+thrusting with her arm she got on her feet.
+
+His weight was over fifty pounds greater than her own; but her woods
+training, the hard work she had always done, had fitted her for just
+such a test as this. She started with her burden toward the cave.
+
+She had long known how to carry an injured man, suspending him over her
+shoulder, head pointed behind her, her arms clasping his thigh. With her
+free arm she seized the tree branches to sustain her. She had no light
+now; she was guided only by the faint glow of the fire at the cavern
+mouth.
+
+After a hundred feet the load seemed unbearable. Except for the fact
+that she soon got on the well-worn moose trail that followed the creek,
+she could scarcely have progressed a hundred feet farther. As it was,
+she was taxed to the utmost: every ounce of her reserve strength would
+be needed before the end.
+
+At the end of a hundred yards she stopped to rest, leaning against a
+tree and still holding the beloved weight upon her shoulder. If she laid
+it down she knew she could not lift it again. But soon she plunged on,
+down toward the beacon light.
+
+Except for her love for him, and that miraculous strength that love has
+always given to women, she could not have gone on that last, cruel
+hundred yards. But slowly, steadily, the circle of light grew brighter,
+larger, nearer; ever less dense were the thickets of evergreen between.
+Now she was almost to the glade; now she felt the wet grass at her
+ankles. She lunged on and laid her burden on her bed.
+
+Then she relaxed at his feet, breathing in sobbing gasps. Except for the
+crackle of the fire and the beat of the rain, there was no sound in the
+cave but this,--those anguished sobs from her wracked lungs.
+
+But far distant though Ben was and deep as he slept--just outside the
+dark portals of death itself--those sounds went down to him. He heard
+them dimly at first, like a far-distant voice in a dream, but as the
+moments passed he began to recognize their nature and their source. Sobs
+of exhaustion and distress--from the girl that was in his charge. He lay
+a long time, trying to understand.
+
+On her knees beside him Beatrice saw the first flutter of his eyelids.
+In awe, rather than rapture, her arms crept around him, and she kissed
+his rain-wet brow. His eyes opened, looking wonderingly into hers.
+
+She saw the first light of recognition, then a half-smile, gentle as a
+girl's, as he realized his own injuries. Of course Ben Darby would smile
+in such a moment as this; his instincts, true and manly, were always to
+try to cheer her. Presently he spoke in the silence.
+
+"The tree got me, didn't it?" he asked.
+
+"Don't try to talk," she cautioned. "Yes--the tree fell on you. But
+you're not going to die. You're going to live, live--"
+
+He shook his head, the half-smile flickering at his lips. "Let me talk,
+Beatrice," he said, with just a whisper of his old determination. "It's
+important--and I don't think--I have much time."
+
+Her eyes widened in horror. "You don't mean--"
+
+"I'm going back in a minute--I can't hardly keep awake," he said. His
+voice, though feeble, was preternaturally clear. She heard every kind
+accent, every gentle tone even above the crackle of the fire without and
+the beat of the rain. "I think it's the limit," he went on. "I believe
+the tree got me--clear inside--but you must listen to everything I say."
+
+She nodded. In that eerie moment of suspense she knew she must hear what
+he had to tell her.
+
+"Don't wait to see what happens to me," he went on. "I'll either go out
+or I'll live--you really can't help me any. Where's the rifle?"
+
+"The rifle was broken--when the tree fell."
+
+"I knew it would be. I saw it coming." He rested, waiting for further
+breath. "Beatrice--please, please don't stay here, trying to save me."
+
+"Do you think I would go?" she cried.
+
+"You must. The food--is about gone. Just enough to last one person
+through to the Yuga cabins--with berries, roots. Take the pistol.
+There's six shots or so--in the box. Make every one tell. Take the dead
+grouse too. The rifle's broken and we can't get meat. It's
+just--death--if you wait. You can just make it through now."
+
+"And leave you here to die, as long as there's a chance to save you?"
+the girl answered. "You couldn't get up to get water--or build a fire--"
+
+He listened patiently, but shook his head at the end. "No, Bee--please
+don't make me talk any more. It's just death for both of us if you stay.
+The food is gone--the rifle broken. Your father's gang'll be here sooner
+or later--and they'd smash me, anyway. I could hardly fight 'em off with
+those few pistol shells--but by God I'd like to try--"
+
+He struggled for breath, and she thought he had slipped back into
+unconsciousness. But in a moment the faltering current of his speech
+began again.
+
+"Take the pistol--and go," he told her. "You showed me to-day how to
+give up--and I don't want to kill--your father--any more. I renounce it
+all! Ezram--forgive me--old Ez that lay dead in the leaves." He smiled
+at the girl again. "So don't mind leaving me. Life work's all
+spent--given over. Please, Beatrice--you'd just kill yourself without
+aiding me. Wait till the sun comes up--then follow up the river--"
+
+Unconsciousness welled high above him, and the lids dropped over his
+eyes. The gloom still pressed about the cavern, yet a sun no less
+effulgent than that of which he had spoken had risen for Ben. It was his
+moment of renunciation, glorious past any moment of his life. He had
+renounced his last, little fighting chance that the girl might live. And
+Ezram, watching high and afar, and with infinite serenity knowing at
+last the true balance of all things one with another, gave him his full
+forgiveness.
+
+The girl began to strip the wet clothes from his injured body.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVI
+
+The trail was long and steep into Back There for Jeffery Neilson and his
+men. Day after day they traveled with their train of pack horses,
+pushing deeper into the wilds, fording mighty rivers, traversing silent
+and majestic mountain ranges, climbing slopes so steep that the packs
+had to be lightened to half before the gasping animals could reach the
+crest. They could go only at a snail's pace,--even in the best day's
+travel only ten miles, and often a single mile was a hard, exhausting
+day's work.
+
+Of course there was no kind of a trail for them to follow. As far as
+possible they followed the winding pathways of big game--as long as
+these led them in their general direction--but often they were obliged
+to cut their way through the underbrush. Time after time they
+encountered impassable cliffs or rivers from which they were obliged to
+turn back and seek new routes; they found marshes that they could not
+penetrate; ranges they could not climb; wastes of slide rock where they
+could make headway only at a creeping pace and with hourly risk of their
+lives.
+
+They had counted on slow travel, but the weeks grew into the months
+before they even neared the obscure heart of Back There where they
+thought Ben and Beatrice might be hidden. The way was hard as they had
+never dreamed. Every day, it seemed to them, brought its fresh tragedy:
+a long back-trailing to avoid some impassable place, a fatiguing
+digression, perhaps several hours of grinding work with the axe in order
+to cut a trail. Sometimes the harness broke, requiring long stops on
+the trail to repair it, the packs slipped continually from the hard
+going; and they found it increasingly difficult to secure horse feed for
+the animals.
+
+Even Indian ponies cannot keep fat on such grass as grows in the deep
+shade of the spruce. They need the rich growths of the open park lands
+to stiffen them for the grinding toil; and even with good feeding,
+foresters know that pack animals must not be kept on the trail for too
+many days in succession. Jeffery Neilson and his men disregarded both
+these facts, with the result that the animals lost flesh and strength,
+cutting down the speed of their advance. Oaths and shouts were
+unavailing now: only cruel blows could drive them forward at all.
+
+They seemed to sense a great hopelessness in their undertaking. Usually
+well-trained pack horses will follow their leader without question, walk
+almost in his tracks, and the rider in front only has to show the way.
+After the first few days of grinding toil, the morale of the entire
+outfit began to break. The horses broke away into thickets on each side;
+and time after time, one hour upon another, the horsemen had to round
+them up again. When they came to the great rivers--wild tributaries of
+the Yuga--they had to follow up the streams for days in search of a
+place to ford. Then they were obliged to carry the packs across in small
+loads, making trip after trip with the utmost patience and toil. The
+horses, broken in spirit, took the wild waters just as they climbed the
+steep slopes, with little care whether they lived or died.
+
+The days passed, June and July. Ever they moved at a slower pace. One of
+the horses, giving up on a steep pitch and frenzied by Ray's cruel,
+lashing blows, fell off the edge of the trail and shot down like a
+plummet two hundred feet into the canyon below--and thereupon it became
+necessary not only to spend the rest of the day in retrieving and
+repairing the supplies that had fallen with him, but also to heap bigger
+loads on the backs of the remaining horses. And always they were faced
+by the cruel possibility that this whole, mighty labor was in
+vain,--that Ben and Beatrice might have gone to their deaths in the
+rapids, weeks before.
+
+The food stores brought for the journey were rapidly depleted. The
+result was that they had to depend more and more upon a diet of meat.
+Men can hold up fairly well on meat alone, particularly if it has a fair
+amount of fat, but the effort of hunting and drying the flesh into jerky
+served to cut down their speed.
+
+The constant delays, the grinding, blasting toil of the day's march, and
+particularly the ever-recurring crises of ford and steep, made serious
+inroads on the morale of the three men. Just the work of urging on the
+exhausted horses drained their nervous energy in a frightful stream: the
+uncertainty of their quest, the danger, the scarcity of any food but
+meat, and most of all the burning hatred in their hearts for the man who
+had forced the expedition upon them combined to torment them; even now,
+Ben Darby had received no little measure of vengeance.
+
+No experience of their individual lives had ever presented such a daily
+ordeal of physical distress; none had ever been so devastating to hope
+and spirit. There was not one moment of pleasure, one instant of relief
+from the day's beginning to its end. At night they went to sleep on
+hastily made beds, cursing at all things in heaven and earth; they
+blasphemed with growing savagery all that men hold holy and true; and
+degeneracy grew upon them very swiftly. They quarreled over their
+tasks, and they hated each other with a hatred only second to that they
+bore Darby himself. All three had always been reckless, wicked, brutal
+men; but now, particularly in the case of Ray and Chan, the ordeal
+brought out and augmented the latent abnormalities that made them
+criminals in the beginning, developing those odd quirks in human minds
+that make toward perversion and the most fiendish crime.
+
+Jeffery Neilson had almost forgotten the issue of the claim by now. He
+had told the truth, those weary weeks before, when he had wished he had
+never seen it. His only thought was of his daughter, the captive of a
+relentless, merciless man in these far wilds. Never the moon rose or the
+sun declined but that he was sick with haunting fear for her. Had she
+gone down to her death in the rapids? This was Neilson's fondest wish:
+the enfolding oblivion of wild waters would be infinitely better than
+the fate Ben had hinted at in his letter. Yet he dared not turn back.
+She might yet live, held prisoner in some far-off cave.
+
+At first all three agreed on this point: that they must not turn back
+until either Ben was crushed under their heels or they had made sure of
+his death. Ray had not forgotten that Ben alone stood between him and
+the wealth and power he had always craved. He dreamed, at first, that
+the deadly hardships of the journey could be atoned for by years of
+luxury and ease. His mind was also haunted with dark conjectures as to
+the fate of Beatrice, but jealousy, rather than concern for her, was the
+moving impulse.
+
+Neilson knew his young partner now. He saw clearly at last that Ray was
+not and had never been a faithful confederate, but indeed a malicious
+and bitter enemy, only waiting his chance to overthrow his leader. They
+were still partners in their effort to rescue the girl and slay her
+abductor; otherwise they were at swords' points. And there would be
+something more than plain, swift slaying, now. If Neilson could read
+aright, the actual, physical change that had been wrought in Ray's face
+foretold no ordinary end for Ben. His features were curiously drawn; and
+his eyes had a fixed, magnetic, evil light. Occasionally in his darker
+hours Neilson foresaw even more sinister possibilities in this change in
+Ray: the abnormal intensity manifest in every look and word, the weird,
+evil preoccupation that seemed ever upon him. There was not only the
+fate of Ben to consider, but that of Beatrice too, out in these desolate
+forests. But surely Ray's degenerate impulses could be mastered. Neilson
+need not fear this, at least.
+
+Chan Heminway, also, had developed marvelously in the journey. He also
+was more assertive, less the underling he had been. He had developed a
+brutality that, though it contained nothing of the exquisite fineness of
+cruelty of which Ray's diseased thought might conceive, was nevertheless
+the full expression of his depraved nature. He no longer cowered in fear
+of Neilson. Rather he looked to Ray as his leader, took him as his
+example, tried to imitate him, and at last really began to share in his
+mood. In cruelty to the horses he was particularly adept; but he was
+also given to strange, savage bursts of insane fury.
+
+"We must be close on them now," Neilson said one morning when they had
+left the main gorge of the Yuga far behind them. "If they're not dead
+we're bound to find trace of 'em in a few days."
+
+The hope seemed well-founded. It is impossible for even most of the wild
+creatures--furtive as twilight shadows--to journey through wood spaces
+without leaving trace of their goings and comings: much less clumsy
+human beings. Ultimately the searchers would find their tracks in the
+soft earth, the ashes of a camp fire, or a charred cooking rack.
+
+"And when we get 'em, we can wait and live on meat until the river goes
+up in fall--then float on down to the Indian villages in their canoe,"
+Chan answered. "It will carry four of us, all right."
+
+Ray, Chan, Neilson and Neilson's daughter--these made four. What
+remained of Ben when Ray was through could be left, silent upon some
+hushed hillside, to the mercy of the wild creatures and the elements.
+
+Surely they were in the enemy-country now; and now a fresh fear began to
+oppress them. They might expect an attack from their implacable foe at
+any moment. It did not make for ease of mind to know that any brush
+clump might be their enemy's ambush; that any instant a concealed rifle
+might speak death to them in the silence. Ben would have every advantage
+of fortress and ambush. They had not thought greatly of this matter at
+first; but now the fear increased with the passing days. Even Neilson
+was not wholly exempt from it. It seemed a hideous, deadly thing,
+incompatible with life and hope, that they should be plunging deeper,
+farther into helplessness and peril.
+
+If mental distress and physical discomfort can constitute vengeance Ben
+was already avenged. Now that they were in the hill-lands, out from the
+gorge and into a region of yellow beaver meadows lying between gently
+sloping hills, their apprehension turned to veritable terror. A blind
+man could see how small was their fighting chance against a hidden foe
+who had prepared for their coming. The skin twitched and crept when a
+twig cracked about their camp at night, and a cold like death crept
+over the frame when the thickets crashed under a leaping moose.
+
+Ray found himself regretting, for the first time, that murderous crime
+of his of months before. Even riches might not pay for these days of
+dread and nights of terror: the recovery of the girl from Ben's arms
+could not begin to recompense. Indeed, the girl's memory was
+increasingly hard to call up. The mind was kept busy elsewhere.
+
+"We're walking right into a death trap," he told Neilson one morning.
+"If he is here, what chance have we got; he'd have weeks to explore the
+country and lay an ambush for us. Besides, I believe he's dead. I don't
+believe a human being could have got down this far, alive."
+
+Chan too had found himself inclining toward this latter belief; without
+Ray's energy and ambition he had less to keep him fronted to the chase.
+Neilson, however, was not yet ready to turn back. He too feared Ben's
+attack, but already in the twilight of advancing years, he did not
+regard physical danger in the same light as these two younger men.
+Besides, he was made of different stuff. The safety of his daughter was
+the one remaining impulse in his life.
+
+And more and more, in the chill August nights, the talk about the camp
+fire took this trend: the folly of pushing on. It was better to turn
+back and wait his chances to strike again, Ray argued, than to walk
+bald-faced into death. Sometime Ben must return to the claim: a chance
+might come to lay him low. Besides, ever it seemed more probable that
+the river had claimed him.
+
+One rainy, disagreeable morning, as they camped beside the river near
+the mouth of a small creek, affairs reached their crisis. They had
+caught and saddled the horses; Ray was pulling tight the last hitch.
+Chan stood beside him, speaking in an undertone. When he had finished
+Ray cursed explosively in the silence.
+
+Neilson turned. He seemed to sense impending developments. "What now?"
+he asked.
+
+"I'm not going on, that's what it is," Ray replied. "Neilson, it's two
+against one--if you want to go on you can--but Ray and I are going back.
+That devil's dead. Beatrice is, too--sure as hell. If they ain't dead,
+he'll get us. I was a fool ever to start out. And that's final."
+
+"You're going back, eh--scared out!" Neilson commented coldly.
+
+"I'm going back--and don't say too much about being scared out, either."
+
+"And you too, Chan? You're against me, too?"
+
+Chan cursed. "I'd gone a week ago if it'd been me. We knew the way
+home, at least."
+
+The old man looked a long time into the river depths. Only too well he
+realized that their decision was final. But there was no answer, in the
+swirling depths, to the question that wracked his heart: whether or not
+in these spruce-clad hills his daughter still lived. It could only
+murmur and roar, without shaping words that human ears could grasp,
+never relieving the dreadful uncertainty that would be his life's curse
+from henceforth. He sighed, and the lines across his brow were dark and
+deep.
+
+"Then turn the horses around, you cowards," he answered. "I can't go on
+alone."
+
+For once neither Ray nor Chan had outward resentment for the epithet.
+Secretly they realized that old Neilson was to the wall at last, and
+like a grizzly at bay, it was safer not to molest him. Chan went down
+to the edge of the creek to water his saddle horse.
+
+But presently they heard him curse, in inordinate and startled
+amazement, as he gazed at some imprint in the mud of the shore. They saw
+the color sweep from his face. In an instant his two companions were
+beside him.
+
+Clear and unmistakable in the mud they saw the stale imprint of Ben's
+canoe as they had landed, and the tracks of both the man and the girl as
+they had turned into the forest.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVII
+
+The dawn that crept so gray and mysterious over the frosty green of
+spruce brought no hope to Beatrice, sitting beside the unconscious form
+of Ben in the cave fronting the glade. Rather it only brought the tragic
+truth home more clearly. Her love for him had manifested itself too late
+to give happiness to either of them: even now his life seemed to be
+stealing from her, into the valley of the shadow.
+
+She had watched beside him the whole night; and now she beheld a
+sinister change in his condition. He was still unconscious, but he no
+longer drew his breath at long intervals, softly and quietly. He was
+breathing in short, troubled gasps, and an ominous red glow was in his
+cheeks. She touched his brow, only to find it burning with fever.
+
+The fact was not hard to understand. The downpour of cold rain in which
+he had lain, wounded, for so many hours had drawn the life heat out of
+him, and some organic malady had combined with his bodily injuries to
+strike out his life. Her predicament was one of absolute helplessness.
+She was hundreds of miles--weary weeks of march--from medical attention,
+and she could neither leave him nor carry him. The wilderness forces,
+resenting the intrusion into their secret depths, had seemingly taken
+full vengeance at last. They had seemingly closed all gates to life and
+safety. They had set the trap with care; and the cruel jaws had sprung.
+
+She sat dry-eyed, incoherent prayers at her trembling lips. Mostly she
+did not touch the man, only sat at his bedside in the crude chair Ben
+had fashioned for her while the minutes rolled into hours and the hours
+sped the night away,--in tireless vigil, watching with lightless eyes.
+Once she bent and touched her lips to his.
+
+They were not cold now. They were warm with fever. But in the strange
+twilight-world of unconsciousness he could neither know of nor respond
+to her kiss. She patted down his covering and sometimes held his hard
+hands warm between hers, as if she could thus keep death from seizing
+them and leading him away. But her courage did not break again.
+
+The wan light showed her his drawn face; and just for an instant her
+arms pressed about it. "I won't give up, Ben," she promised. "I'll keep
+on fighting--to the last minute. And maybe I can pull you through."
+
+Beatrice meant exactly what she said: to the last minute. That did not
+mean to the gray hour when, by all dictate of common sense, further
+fight is useless. She meant that she would battle tirelessly as long as
+one pale spark glowed in his spirit, as long as his breath could cloud a
+glass. The best thing for her now, however, was rest. She was exhausted
+by the strain of the night; and she must save herself for the crisis
+that was sure to come. Ben was sleeping easily now; the instant when his
+life hung in the balance still impended.
+
+She built up the fire, put on water to heat, covered the man with added
+blankets, then lay down on Ben's cot. Soon she drifted into uneasy
+slumber, waking at intervals to serve her patient.
+
+The hours dragged by, the night sloped down to the forest; and the dawn
+followed the night. Ben's life still flickered, like a flame in the
+wind, in the twilight land between life and death.
+
+Yet little could she do for him these first few days, except, in her
+simple faith, to pray. Never an hour passed but that prayers were at her
+lips, childlike, direct, entreating prayers from her woman's heart. Of
+all her offices these were first: she had no doubt but that they counted
+most. She sat by his bedside, kept him covered with the warmest robes,
+hewed wood for the fire; but as yet he had never fully emerged from his
+unconsciousness. Would he slip away in the night without ever wakening?
+
+But in the morning of the fourth day he opened his eyes vividly,
+muttered, and fell immediately to sleep. He woke again at evening; and
+his moving lips conveyed a message. In response she brought him steaming
+grouse broth, administering it a spoonful at a time until he fell to
+sleep again.
+
+In the days that followed he was conscious to the degree that he could
+drink broth, yet never recognizing Beatrice nor seeming to know where he
+was. His fever still lingered, raging; yet in these days she began to
+notice a slow improvement in his condition. The healing agents of his
+body were hard at work; and doubt was removed that he had received
+mortal internal injuries. She had set his broken arm the best she could,
+holding the bones in place with splints; but in all likelihood it would
+have to be broken and set again when he reached the settlements. She
+began to notice the first cessation of his fever; although weeks of
+sickness yet remained, she believed that the crisis was past. Yet in
+spite of these hopeful signs, she was face to face with the most tragic
+situation of all. Their food was almost gone.
+
+It would be long weeks before Ben could hope for sufficient strength to
+start the journey down to the settlements, even if the way were open. As
+it was their only chance lay in the fall rains that would flood the
+Yuga and enable them to journey down to the native villages in their
+canoe. These rains would not fall till October. For all that she had
+hoarded their supplies to the last morsel, eating barely enough herself
+to sustain life in her body, the dread spectre of starvation waited just
+without the cave. She had realized perfectly that Ben could not hope to
+throw off the malady without nutritious food and she had not stinted
+with him; and now, just when she had begun to hope for his recovery, she
+shook the last precious cup of flour from the sack.
+
+The rice and sugar were gone, long since. The honey she had hoarded to
+give Ben--knowing its warming, nutritive value--not tasting a drop
+herself. Of all their stores only a few pieces of jerked caribou
+remained; she had used the rest to make rich broth for Ben, and there
+was no way under heaven whereby they might procure more.
+
+The rifle was broken. The last of the pistol shots was fired the day she
+had prepared the poisoned cup for Ben.
+
+Yet she still waged the fight, struggling with high courage and tireless
+resolution against the frightful odds that opposed her. Her faith was as
+of that nameless daughter of the Gileadite; and she could not yield. Not
+ambition, not hatred--not even such fire of fury as had been wakened in
+Wolf Darby's heart that first frenzied night on the hillside--could have
+been the impulse for such fortitude and sacrifice as hers. It was not
+one of these base passions--known in the full category to her rescuers
+who were even now bearing down upon her valley--that kept the steel in
+her thews and the steadfastness in her heart. She loved this man; her
+love for him was as wholesome and as steadfast as her own self; and the
+law of that love was to give him all she had.
+
+There were few witnesses to this infinite giving of hers. Ben himself
+still lingered in a strange stupor, remembering nothing, knowing neither
+the girl nor himself. Perhaps the wild things saw her desperate efforts
+to find food in the wilderness,--the long hours of weary searching for a
+handful of berries that gave such little nourishment to his weakened
+body, or for a few acorns stored for winter by bird or rodent. Sometimes
+a great-antlered moose--an easy trophy if the rifle had been
+unbroken--saw her searching for wocus like a lost thing in the tenacious
+mud of the marshes; and almost nightly a silent wolf, pausing in his
+hunting, gazed uneasily through the cavern maw. But mostly her long
+hours of service in the cave, the chill nights that she sat beside Ben's
+cot, the dreary mornings when she cooked her own scanty breakfast and
+took her uneasy rest, the endless labor of fire-mending so that the cave
+could be kept at an even heat went unobserved by mortal eyes. The
+healing forces of his body called for warmth and nourishment; but for
+all the might of her efforts she waged a losing fight.
+
+What little wocus she was able to find she made into bread for Ben; yet
+it was never enough to satisfy his body's craving. The only meat she had
+herself was the vapid flesh that had been previously boiled for Ben's
+broth; and now only a few pieces of the jerked meat remained. She
+herself tried to live on such plants as the wilderness yielded, and she
+soon began to notice the tragic loss of her own strength. Her eyes were
+hollow, preternaturally large; she experienced a strange, floating
+sensation, as if spirit and flesh were disassociated.
+
+Still Ben lingered in his mysterious stupor, unaware of what went on
+about him; but his fever was almost gone by now, and the first
+beginnings of strength returned to his thews. His mind had begun to
+grope vaguely for the key that would open the doors of his memory and
+remind him again of some great, half-forgotten task that still
+confronted him, some duty unperformed. Yet he could not quite seize it.
+The girl who worked about his cot was without his bourne of knowledge;
+her voice reached him as if from an infinite distance, and her words
+penetrated only to the outer edges of his consciousness. It was not
+strictly, however, a return of his amnesia. It was simply an outgrowth
+of delirium caused by his sickness and injuries, to be wholly dispelled
+as soon as he was wholly well.
+
+But now the real hour of crisis was at hand,--not from his illness, but
+from the depletion of their food supplies. Beatrice had spent a hard
+afternoon in the forest in search of roots and berries, and as she crept
+homeward, exhausted and almost empty-handed, the full, tragic truth was
+suddenly laid bare. Her own strength had waned. Without the miracle of a
+fresh food supply she could hardly keep on her feet another day. Plainly
+and simply, the wolf was at the door. His cruel fangs menaced not only
+her, but this stalwart man for whose life she had fought so hard.
+
+The fear of the obliterating darkness known to all the woods people
+pressed close upon her and appalled her. She loved life simply and
+primitively; and it was an unspeakable thing to lose at the end of such
+a battle. Out so far, surrounded by such endless, desolate wastes of
+gloomy forest, the Shadow was cold, inhospitable; and she was afraid to
+face it alone. If Ben would only waken and sustain her drooping spirit
+with his own! She was lonely and afraid, in the shadow of the inert
+spruce, under the gray sky.
+
+She could hardly summon strength for the evening's work of cutting fuel.
+The blade would not drive with its old force into the wood. The blaze
+itself burned dully; and she could not make it leap and crackle with its
+old cheer. And further misfortune was in store for her when she crept
+into the cave to prepare Ben's supper.
+
+A pack rat--one of those detested rodents known so well to all northern
+peoples--had carried off in her absence two of the three remaining
+sticks of jerked caribou. For a moment she gazed in unbelieving and
+speechless horror, then made a frenzied search in the darkened corners
+of the cabin.
+
+This was no little tragedy: the two sticks of condensed and concentrated
+protein might have kept Ben alive for a few days more. It was disaster,
+merciless and sweeping. And the brave heart of the girl seemed to break
+under the blow.
+
+The hot, bitter tears leaped forth; but she suppressed the bitter,
+hopeless sobs that clutched at her throat. She must not let Ben know of
+this catastrophe. Likely in his stupor he would not understand; yet she
+must not take the chance. She must nourish the spark of hope in his
+breast to the last hour. She walked to the mouth of the cave; and Famine
+itself stood close, waiting in the shadows. She gazed out into the
+gathering gloom.
+
+The tears blinded her eyes at first. Slowly the dark profile of the
+spruce against the gray sky penetrated to her consciousness: the somber
+beauty of the wilderness sky line that haunts the woodsman's dreams.
+With it came full realization of the might and the malevolency of these
+shadowed wilds she had battled so long. They had got her down at last;
+they had crushed her and beaten her, and had held up to scorn her
+sacrifice and her mortal strength. She knew the wild wood now: its
+savage power, its remorselessness, and yet, woods girl that she was, she
+could not forget its dark and moving beauty.
+
+The forest was silent to-night. Not a twig cracked or a branch rustled.
+It was hushed, breathless, darkly sinister. All at once her eyes peered
+and strained into the dusk.
+
+Far across the valley, beyond the beaver marsh and on the farther shore
+of the lake she saw a little glimmer of light through the rift in the
+trees. She dared not believe in its reality at first. Perhaps it was a
+trick of her imagination only, a hallucination born of her starvation,
+child of her heartfelt prayer. She looked away, then peered again. But,
+yes--a tiny gleam of yellow light twinkled through the gloom! It was
+real, _it was true_! A gleam of hope in the darkness of despair.
+
+Her rescuers had come. There could be no other explanation. She hastened
+into the cave, drew the blankets higher about Ben's shoulders, then
+crept out into the dusk. Half running, she hastened toward their distant
+camp fire.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVIII
+
+Beatrice's first impulse was to run at a breakneck pace down the ridge
+and about the lake into her father's camp, beseeching instant aid to the
+starving man in the cave. She wished that she had a firearm with which
+to signal to them and bring them at once to the cavern. And it was not
+until she had descended the ridge and stood at the edge of the beaver
+meadow that her delirious joy began to give way to serious, thought.
+
+She was brought to a halt first by the sight of the horses that had
+wandered about the long loop of the lake and were feeding in the rich
+grass of the meadow. The full moon rising in the east had cast a
+nebulous glow over the whole countryside by now; and she could make a
+hasty estimation of their numbers. It was evident at once that her
+father had not made the expedition alone. The large outfit implied a
+party of at least three,--indicating that Ray Brent and Chan Heminway
+had accompanied him.
+
+She had only fear and disdain for these two younger men; but surely they
+would not refuse aid to Ben. Yet perhaps it was best to proceed with
+some caution. These were her lover's enemies; if for no other reason
+than their rage at her own abduction they might be difficult to control.
+Her father, in all probability, would willingly show mercy to the
+helpless man in the cavern--particularly after she told him of Ben's
+consideration and kindness--but she put no faith in Ray and Chan. She
+knew them of old. Besides, she remembered there was a further
+consideration,--that of a gold claim.
+
+Could Ben have told her the truth when he had maintained that they would
+kill him on sight if he did not destroy them first? Was it true that he
+had waged the war in defense of his own rights? Weeks and months had
+passed since she had seen her father's face: perhaps her old control of
+him could no longer be relied upon. If indeed their ownership of a rich
+claim depended upon Ben's death, Ray and Chan could not be trusted at
+all.
+
+She resolved to proceed with the utmost caution. Abruptly she turned out
+of the beaver marsh, where the moonlight might reveal her, and followed
+close to the edge of the timber, a course that could not be visible from
+beyond the lake. She approached the lake at its far neck, then followed
+back along the margin clear to the edge of the woods in which the fire
+was built.
+
+In her years in the woods Beatrice had learned to stalk, and the
+knowledge was of value to her now. With never a misstep she took down a
+little game trail toward the camp fire. She was within fifty yards of it
+now--she could make out three dark figures seated in the circle of
+firelight. Walking softly but upright she pushed within ninety feet of
+the fire.
+
+Then she waited, in doubt as to her course. She was still too far
+distant to hear more than the murmur of their voices. If she could just
+get near enough to catch their words she could probably glean some idea
+of their attitude toward Ben. She pushed on nearer, through the dew-wet
+brush.
+
+Impelled by the excitement under which she advanced, her old agility of
+motion had for the moment returned to her; and she crept softly as a
+fawn between the young trees. One misstep, one rustling branch or
+crackling twig might give her away; but she took each step with
+consummate care, gently thrusting the tree branches from her path.
+
+Once a rodent stirred beneath her feet, and she froze--like a hunting
+wolf--in her tracks. One of the three men looked up, and she saw his
+face plainly through the low spruce boughs. And for a moment she thought
+that this was a stranger. It was with a distinct foreboding of disaster
+that she saw, on second glance, that the man was Ray Brent.
+
+She had never seen such change in human countenance in the space of a
+few months. She did not pause to analyze it. She only knew that his eyes
+were glittering and fixed; and that she herself was deeply,
+unexplainably appalled. The man cursed once, blasphemously, his face
+dusky and evil in the eerie firelight, but immediately turned back to
+his talk. Beatrice crept closer.
+
+Now she was near enough to catch an occasional word, but not discern
+their thoughts. It was evident, however, that their conversation was of
+Ben and herself,--the same topic they had discussed nights without end.
+She caught her own name; once Chan used an obscene epithet as he spoke
+of their enemy.
+
+Her instincts were true and infallible to-night; and she was ever more
+convinced of their deadly intentions toward Ben. It was not wise to
+announce herself yet. Perhaps she would have to rely upon a course other
+than a direct appeal for aid. Now her keen eyes could see the whole
+camp: the three seated figures of the men, their rifles leaning near
+them, their supplies spread out about the fire.
+
+At one side, quite to the edge of the firelight, she saw a kyack--one of
+those square boxes that are hung on a pack saddle--which seemed to be
+heaped with jerked caribou or moose flesh. For the time of a breath she
+could not take her eyes from it. It was food--food in plenty to sustain
+Ben through his illness and the remaining weeks of their exile--and her
+eyes moistened and her hands trembled at the sight. She had been taught
+the meaning of famine, these last, bitter days. In reality she was now
+in the first stage of starvation, experiencing the first, vague
+hallucinations, the sense of incorporeality, the ever-declining
+strength, the constant yearning that is nothing but the vitals'
+submerged demand for food. The contents of the kyack meant _life_ to
+herself and to Ben,--deliverance and safety when all seemed lost.
+
+A daughter of the cities far to the south--even a child of
+poverty--rarely could have understood the unutterable craving that
+overswept her at the sight of this simple food. It was unadorned,
+unaccompanied by the delicacies that most human beings have come to look
+upon as essentials and to expect with every meal: it was only animal
+flesh dried in the smoke and the sun. It not only attracted her
+physically; but in that moment it possessed real objective beauty for
+her; as it would have possessed for the most cultivated esthete that
+might be standing in her place. This girl was down to the most stern
+realities, and life and death hung in the balance.
+
+She went on her hands and knees, creeping nearer. Still she did not make
+the slightest false motion, creeping with an uncanny silence in the
+under shrubbery. And now the words came plain.
+
+"But we must be near," Chan was saying. "They can't be more than a mile
+or so from here. We'll find 'em in the morning--"
+
+"If he doesn't find us first and shoot up our camp," Ray replied. "I
+wish we'd built our fire further into the woods. Here we've looked all
+day without even finding a track except those tracks in the mud."
+
+"They might be beyond the marsh," Neilson suggested.
+
+"But Chan went over that way and didn't find a trace," Ray objected.
+"But just the same--we'll make a real search to-morrow. I believe we'll
+find the devil. And then--we can leave this hellish country and go back
+in peace--if we don't want to wait for the flood."
+
+Beatrice's eyes were on his face, wondering what growth of wickedness,
+what degeneracy had so filled his cruel eyes with light and stamped his
+face with evil. This was the man to whom she must look for mercy. Ben's
+life, if she led the three men to the cave, would be in his hands. She
+sensed from his authoritative tone that her father's control over him
+was largely broken. She hovered, terrified and motionless, in her
+covert.
+
+Ray reached for his rifle, glancing at the sights and drawing the lever
+back far enough to see the brass of its shells. Chan's lean face was
+drawn with a cruel glee.
+
+"You can't keep your hands off that gun, Ray," he said. "You sure are
+gettin' anxious."
+
+"I won't use it on him," Ray replied, slowly and carefully. "It's too
+good for him--except maybe the stock. He didn't lead me clear out here
+just to see him puff out and blow up in a minute with a rifle ball
+through his head. Just the same I want the gun near me, all the time."
+
+The two men looked at him, sardonic-eyed; and both of them seemed to
+understand fully what he meant. They seemed to catch more from the slow
+tones, so full of lust and frenzy that they seemed to drop from his
+lips in an ugly monotone, than they did from the words themselves. They
+took a certain grim amusement in these quirks of abnormal depravity that
+had begun to manifest themselves in Ray. The man's fingers were wide
+spread as he spoke, and his lip twitched twice, sharply, when he had
+finished.
+
+The words came clear and distinct to the listening girl. She tried to
+take them literally--that Ray would not shoot Ben! _"It's too good for
+him--except maybe the stock!"_ Did he mean _that_ too! Was there any
+possible meaning in the world other than that he was planning some
+unearthly, more terrible fate for the man she loved! She would not yet
+yield to the dreadful truth, yet even now terror was clutching at her
+throat, strangling her; and the cold drops were beading her brow. Still
+the dark drama of the fireside continued before her eyes.
+
+Chan suddenly turned to Neilson, evidently imbued with Ray's fervor.
+"What do you think of that, old man?" he asked menacingly. Thus Chan,
+too, had escaped from Neilson's dominance: plainly Ray was his idol now.
+It was also plain that he recognized attributes of mercy and decency in
+his grizzled leader that might interfere with his own and his
+companion's plans. "What's worrying me--whether you're goin' to join in
+on the sport when we catch the weasel!"
+
+Sport! The word was more terrible to Beatrice than the vilest oath he
+had used to emphasize it. She crouched, shivering. Watching intently,
+she saw Ray look up, too, waiting for the reply; and her father, sensing
+his lost dominance, bowed his head.
+
+"You could hardly expect me to let him off easy--seeing what he did to
+my daughter--"
+
+"What he done to your daughter ain't all--I don't care if he treated her
+like a queen of the realm all the time," Ray interrupted harshly. "That
+makes no difference to neither me nor Chan. The main thing is--he
+brought us out here, away from the claim--and gave us months of the
+worst hell I ever hope to spend. I guess you ain't forgotten what Chan
+found out in Snowy Gulch--that the claim's recorded--in old Hiram's
+name. This Darby's got a letter in his pocket from Hiram's brother that
+would stand in any court. We've got to get that first. If Darby was an
+angel I'd mash him under my heel just the same; we've gone too far to
+start crawfishing. Just let me see him tied up in front of me--"
+
+Beatrice did not linger to hear more. She had her answer: only in Ben's
+continued concealment lay the least hope of his salvation. These wolves
+about the fire meant what they said. But already her plans were shaping;
+and now she saw the light.
+
+In the kyack of venison lay her own and her lover's safety: it contained
+enough nutritious food to sustain them until the fall rains could swell
+the Yuga and enable them to escape down to the Indian encampment. Her
+mind was swift and keen as never before: swiftly she perfected the last
+detail of her plan. The canoe, due to Ben's foresight, was securely
+hidden in a maze of tall reeds on the lake shore: they were certain to
+overlook it. The cavern, however, was almost certain to be discovered in
+the next day's search. They must make their escape to-night.
+
+Ben, though terribly weakened, would be able to walk a short distance
+with her help. They could slip into the deepest forest, concealing
+themselves in the coverts until the three men had given up the search
+and gone away. She would take their robes and blankets to keep them
+warm; a camp fire would of course reveal their hiding place. The work
+could easily be accomplished in the midnight shadows: deliverance,
+salvation, life itself depended on the tide of fate in the next few
+hours.
+
+She intended to steal the kyack of dried meat without which Ben and
+herself could not live. She crept back farther into the underbrush; then
+waited, scarcely breathing, while the fire died down. Already the three
+men were preparing to go to their bunks. Chan had already lain down; her
+father was removing his coat and boots. Ray, however, still sat in the
+firelight.
+
+The moments passed. Would he never rise and go? The fire, however, was
+dying: its circle of ruddy light ever drew inward. The kyack was quite
+in the shadow now, yet she dared not attempt its theft until the three
+men were asleep. She waited, thrilling with excitement.
+
+Chan and Neilson were seemingly asleep, and now Ray was knocking the
+ashes from his pipe. He yawned, stretching wide his arms; then, as if
+held by some intriguing thought, sat almost motionless, gazing into the
+graying coals. Presently Beatrice heard him curse, softly, in the
+shadows.
+
+He got up, and removing his outer coat, rolled in his blankets. The
+night hours began their mystic march across the face of the wilderness.
+
+Now was the time to act. As far as she could tell, the three men were
+deeply asleep: at least the likelihood would be as great as at any time
+later in the night. The fire was a heap of gray ashes except for its
+red-hot center: the kyack was in gloom. Very softly she crept through
+the thickets, meanwhile encircling the dying fire, and came up behind
+it.
+
+Now it was almost in reach: now her hands were at its loops. She started
+to lift it in her arms.
+
+But disaster still dogged her trail. Ray Brent had been too wary of
+attack, to-night, to sink easily into deep slumber. He heard the soft
+movement as Beatrice lifted the heavy canvas bag off the ground; and
+with a startled oath sprang to his feet.
+
+He leaped like a panther. "Who's there?" he cried.
+
+Sensing immediate discovery the girl placed all her hope in flight.
+Perhaps yet she could lose her pursuers in the darkness. Still trying to
+hold the kyack of food that meant life to Ben, she turned and darted
+into the shadows.
+
+Like a wolf Ray sped after her. The moonlight showed her fleeing figure
+in the trees, and shouting aloud he sprang through the coverts to
+intercept her flight. The chase was of short duration thereafter.
+Emburdened by the heavy box she could not watch her step; and a
+protruding root caught cruelly at her ankle. She was hurled with
+stunning force to the ground.
+
+Desperate and intent, but in realization of impending triumph, Ray's
+strong arms went about her.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIX
+
+For the second time in his life Ray Brent felt the sting of Beatrice's
+strong hand against his face. In the desperation of fear she had smote
+him with all her force. His arms withdrew quickly from about her; and
+her wide, disdainful eyes beheld a sinister change in his expression.
+The moonlight was in his eyes, silver-white; and they seemed actually to
+redden with fury, and again she saw that queer, ghastly twitching at the
+corner of his lips. The girl's defiance was broken with that one blow.
+She dropped her head, then walked past him into the presence of her
+father.
+
+Neilson and Chan were on their feet now, and they regarded her in the
+utter silence of amazement. Breathing fast, Ray came behind her.
+
+"Build up the fire, Chan," he said in a strange, grim voice. "We want to
+see what we've caught."
+
+Obediently Chan kicked the coals from under the ashes, and began to heap
+on broken pieces of wood. The sticks smoked, then a little tongue of
+yellow flame crept about the fuel. But still the emburdened silence
+continued--the white-faced girl in the ring of silent, watching men.
+
+Slowly the fire's glow crept out to her, revealing--even better than the
+bright moonlight--her wide, frightened eyes and the dark, speculative
+faces of the men. Then Ray spoke sharply in his place.
+
+"Well, why don't you question her?" he demanded of Neilson. "I suppose
+you know what she was doing. She was trying to steal food. It looks to
+me like she's gone over to the opposite camp."
+
+Her father sighed, a peculiar sound that seemed to come from above the
+tree tops, as if fast-flying waterfowl were passing overhead. "Is that
+so, daughter?" he asked simply.
+
+"I was trying to take some of your food--to Ben," Beatrice replied
+softly. "He's in need of it."
+
+"You see, they're on intimate terms," Ray suggested viciously. "Ben was
+in need of food--so she came here to steal it."
+
+But Neilson acted as if he had not heard. "Why didn't you speak to
+us--and tell us you were safe?" he asked. "We've come all the way here
+to find you."
+
+"Perhaps _you_ did. If you had been here alone, I would have told you.
+But Ray and Chan came all the way here to find Ben. I heard what they
+said--back there in the brush. They intend to kill him when they find
+him. I--I didn't want him killed."
+
+Her father stared at her from under his bushy brows. "After carrying you
+from your home--taking you into danger and keeping you a prisoner--you
+still want to protect him?"
+
+The girl nodded. "And I want you to protect him, too," she said.
+"Against these men." Suddenly she moved forward in earnest appeal. "Oh,
+Father--I want you to save him. He's never touched me--he's treated me
+with every respect--done everything he could for me. When he was injured
+he told me to go back--to take what little food there was, and go
+back--"
+
+"I can take it, then, that you're out of food?" Ray asked.
+
+"We're starving--and Ben's sick. Father, I make this one appeal--if your
+love for me isn't all gone, you'll grant it. I love him. You might as
+well know that now, as later. I want you to save the man your daughter
+loves."
+
+Chan cursed in the gloom, his lean face darkened; but Neilson made no
+answer. Ray in his place sharply inhaled; but the sullen glow in his
+eyes snapped into a flame.
+
+If Beatrice had glanced at Ray, she would have ceased her appeal and
+trusted everything to the doubtful mercy of flight,--into the gloom of
+the forest. As it was, she did not fully comprehend the cruel lust, like
+flame, that sped through his veins. She would have hoped for no mercy if
+she could have seen the strange, black surge of wrath in his face.
+
+"He has been kind to me--and he was in the right, not in the wrong. I
+know about the claim-jumping. Father, I want you to stand between him
+and these men--help him--and give him food. I didn't speak to you
+because I was afraid for him--afraid you'd kill him or do some other
+awful thing to him--"
+
+Slowly her father shook his head. "But I can't save him now. He brought
+this on himself."
+
+"Remember, he was in the right," the girl pleaded brokenly. "You
+won't--you couldn't be a partner to murder. That's all it would
+be--murder--brutal, terrible, cold-blooded murder--if you kill him
+without a fight. It couldn't be in defense of me--I tell you he hasn't
+injured me--but was always kind to me. It would be just to take that
+letter away from him--"
+
+"So he has the letter, has he?" Ray interrupted. He smiled grimly, and
+his tone was again flat and strained. "And he's sick--and starving. It
+isn't for your father to say, Beatrice, what's to be done with Ben.
+There's three of us here, and he's just one. Don't go interfering with
+what doesn't concern you, either--about the claim. You take us where he
+is, and we'll decide what to do with him."
+
+Her eyes went to his face; and her lips closed tight. Here was one
+thing, on this mortal earth, that she must not tell. Perhaps, by the
+mercy of heaven, they would not find the cave, hidden as it was at the
+edge of the little glade. The forests were boundless; perhaps they would
+miss the place in their search. She straightened, scarcely perceptibly.
+
+"Yes, tell us where he is," her father urged. "That's the first thing.
+We'll find him, anyway, in the morning."
+
+The girl shook her head. She knew now that even if they promised mercy
+she must not reveal Ben's whereabouts. Their rage and cruelty would not
+be stayed for a spoken promise. The only card she had left, her one
+last, feeble hope of preserving Ben's life, lay in her continued
+silence. Ray's foul-nailed, eager hands could claw her lips apart, but
+he could not make her speak.
+
+"I won't tell you," she answered at last, more clearly than she had
+spoken since her capture. "You said a few minutes ago I had gone
+over--to the opposite camp. I am, from now on. He was in the right, and
+he gave up his fight against you long ago. Now I want to go."
+
+Fearing that Neilson might show mercy, Ray leaped in front of her. "You
+don't go yet awhile," he told her grimly. "I've got a few minutes'
+business with you yet. I tell you that we'll find him, if we have to
+search all year. And he'll have twice the chance of getting out alive if
+you tell us where he is."
+
+She looked into his face, and she knew what that chance was. Her eyelids
+dropped halfway, and she shook her head. "I'd die first," she answered.
+
+"It never occurred to you, did it, that there's ways of _making_ people
+tell things." He suddenly whirled, with drawn lips, to her father.
+"Neilson, is there any reason for showing any further consideration to
+this wench of yours? She's betrayed us--gone over to the opposite
+camp--lived for weeks, willing, with Ben. I for one am never going to
+see her leave this camp till she tells us where he is. I'm tired of
+talking and waiting. I'm going to get that paper away from him, and I'm
+going to smash his heart with my heel. We've almost won out--and I'm
+going to go the rest of the way."
+
+Neilson straightened, his eyes steely and bright under his grizzled
+brows. Only too well he knew that this was the test. Affairs were at
+their crisis at last. But in this final moment his love for his daughter
+swept back to him in all its unmeasured fullness,--and when all was said
+and done it was the first, the mightiest impulse in his life. Ben had
+been kind to her, and she loved him; and all at once he knew that he
+could not yield him or her to the mercy of this black-hearted man before
+him.
+
+He had lived an iniquitous life; he was inured to all except the worst
+forms of wickedness; but for the moment--in love of his daughter--he
+stood redeemed. He was on the right side at last. His hand drew back,
+and his face was like iron.
+
+"Shut that foul mouth!" he cautioned, with a curious, deadly evenness of
+tone. "I haven't surrendered yet to you two wolves. If one of you dares
+to lay a hand on Beatrice, I'll kill him where he stands."
+
+Even as he spoke his thought went to his rifle, leaning against a dead
+log ten feet away. This was the moment of test: the jealousy and rivalry
+and hatred between himself and Ray had reached the crisis. And the
+spirit of murder, terrible past any demon of the Pit, came stalking from
+the savage forest into the ruddy firelight.
+
+Ray leered, his muscles bunching. "And I say to you, you're a dirty
+traitor too," he answered. "She ain't your daughter any more. She's Ben
+Darby's squaw. She's not fit for a white man to touch any more, for all
+her lies. You say one word and you'll get it too."
+
+And at that instant the speeding pace of time seemed to halt, showing
+this accursed scene, so savage and terrible in the eerie light of the
+camp fire, at the edge of the haunted, breathless darkness, in vivid and
+ghastly detail. Neilson leaped forward with all his power; and if his
+blow had gone home, Ray would have been shattered beneath it like a tree
+in the lightning blast. But Ray's arms were incredibly swift, and his
+rifle leaped in his hands.
+
+The barrel gleamed. The roar reechoed in the silence. Neilson's head
+bowed strangely; and for a moment he stood swaying, a ghastly blankness
+on his face; then pitched forward in the dew-wet grass.
+
+Beatrice's last defense had fallen, seriously wounded; and Ray's arm
+seized her as, screaming, she tried to flee.
+
+
+
+
+XL
+
+The shot that wounded Jeffery Neilson carried far through the forest
+aisles, reëchoing against the hills, and arresting, for one breathless
+moment, all the business of the wilderness. The feeding caribou swung
+his horns and tried to catch the scent; the moose, grubbing for water
+roots in the lake bottom, lifted his grotesque head and stood like a
+form in black iron. It came clear as a voice to the cavern where Ben
+lay.
+
+The man started violently in his cot. His entire nervous system seemed
+to react. Then there ensued a curious state in which his physical
+functions seemed to cease,--his heart motionless in his breast, his body
+tensely rigid, his breath held. There was an infinite straining and
+travail in his mind.
+
+The truth was that the sound acted much as a powerful stimulant to his
+retarded nervous forces. It was the one thing his resting nerve-system
+needed; it was as if chemicals were in suspension in a crucible, and at
+a slight jar of the glass they made mysterious union and expelled a
+precipitation. Almost instantly he recognized the sound that had reached
+him, with a clear and unmistakable recognition such as he had not
+experienced since the night of the accident, as the report of a rifle.
+His mind gave a great leap and remembered its familiar world.
+
+A rifle--probably discharged by Beatrice in a hunt after big game. It
+was true that their meat supply was low; he remembered now. Yet it was
+curious that she should be hunting after dark. The gloom was deep at
+the cavern mouth. Besides, he had always kept his rifle from her,
+fearing that she might turn it against him. He looked about him, trying
+to locate the source of the flood of light on the cavern floor. It was
+the moon, and it showed that the girl was gone. He started to sit up.
+
+But his left arm did not react just properly to the command of his
+brain. It impeded him, and its old strength was impaired. For a moment
+more he lay quiet, deep in thought. Of course--he had been injured by
+the falling tree. He remembered clearly, now. And the rifle had been
+broken.
+
+The only possible explanation for the shot was that a rifle had been
+fired by some invader in their valley--in all probability Neilson or one
+of his men. Beatrice's absence would also indicate this fact: perhaps
+she had already joined her father and was on her way back to Snowy Gulch
+with him. In that case, why had he himself been spared?
+
+He looked out of the door of the cavern, trying to get some idea of the
+lateness of the hour. The very quality of the darkness indicated that
+the night was far advanced. Neilson would not be hunting game at this
+hour. Was his own war--planned long ago--even now being waged in ways
+beyond his ken?
+
+His old concern for Beatrice swept through him. With considerable
+difficulty he got to his feet, then holding on to the wail, guided
+himself to the shelf where they ordinarily kept their little store of
+matches. He scratched one of them against the wall.
+
+In the flaring light his eyes made a swift but careful appraisal of his
+surroundings. The girl's cot had not been slept in; and to his great
+amazement he saw that their food supplies were spent. Still holding to
+the wall he walked to the cave mouth.
+
+Instantly his keen eyes saw the far-off gleam of the camp fire on the
+distant margin of the lake. For all that the hour was late, it burned
+high and bright. He watched it, vaguely conscious of the insidious
+advance of a ghastly fear. Beatrice was his ally now--if these weeks had
+sent home one fact to him it was this--and her absence might easily
+indicate that she was helpless in the enemy's hands. The thing suggested
+ugly possibilities. Yet he could not aid her. He could scarcely walk;
+even the knife that he wore at his belt was missing, probably carried by
+Beatrice when she gathered roots in the woods.
+
+But presently all questions as to his course were settled for him. His
+straining ear caught the faintest, almost imperceptible vibration in the
+air--a soundwave so dim and obscure that it seemed impossible that the
+human mind could interpret it--but Ben recognized it in a flash. In some
+great trouble and horror, in the sullen light of that distant camp fire,
+Beatrice had screamed for aid.
+
+Only by the grace of the Red Gods had he heard the sound at all. Except
+for the fact that the half-mile intervening was as still as death, and
+that half the way the sound sped over water, he couldn't have hoped to
+perceive it. If the wind had blown elsewhere than straight toward him
+from the enemy camp, or if his marvelous sense of hearing had been less
+acute, the result would have been the same; and there could have been no
+answer from this dark man at the cave mouth who stood so tense and
+still. Finally, by instinct as much as by conscious intelligence, he
+identified the sound, marked it as a reality rather than a fancy, and
+read the tragic need behind it. Swiftly he started down the glade toward
+her.
+
+Yet in a moment he knew that unless he conserved his strength he could
+not hope to make a fourth of the distance. At the first steps he swayed,
+half staggering. He had paid the price for his weeks of illness and his
+injuries. If he had been in a sick room, under a physician's care, he
+would have believed it impossible to walk unsupported across the room.
+But need is the mother of strength, and this was the test. Besides, he
+had had several days of convalescence that had put back into his sinews
+a measure of his mighty strength. Mostly he progressed by holding on to
+the trees, pulling himself forward step by step.
+
+Likely he would come too late to change the girl's fate. Yet even now he
+knew he must not turn back. If the penalty were death, there must be no
+hesitancy in him; he must not withhold one step.
+
+But it was a losing fight. The hill itself seemed endless; a hundred
+cruel yards of marsh must be traversed before ever he reached the
+nearest point by the lake. The enemy camp from where Beatrice had called
+to him lay on the far side of the lake, a distance of a full mile if he
+followed around the curving shore. And black and bitter self-hatred
+swept like fire through him when he realized that he could not possibly
+keep on his feet for so long a way.
+
+Was this all he had fought for--surging upward through these long, weary
+weeks out of the shadow of death--only to fall dead on the trail in the
+moment of Beatrice's need? Instantly he knew that nothing in his life,
+no other desire or dream, had ever meant as much to him as this: that he
+might reach her side in time. Even his desire for vengeance, in that
+twilight madness, like Roland's, that had shaped his destiny, had been
+wavering and feeble compared to this. And no moment of his existence had
+ever been so dark, so bereft of the last, dim star of hope that lights
+men's way in the deep night of despair.
+
+He gave no thought to the fact of his own helplessness against three
+armed men in case he did succeed in reaching their camp. The point could
+not possibly be considered. The imperious instincts that forced him on
+simply could not take it into reckoning. He knew only he must reach her
+side and put in her service all that he had.
+
+He fell again and again as he tried to make headway in the marsh. But
+always he forced himself up and on. Only too plain he saw that the time
+was even now upon him when he could no longer keep his feet at all. But
+still he plunged on, and with tragically slow encroachments the shore
+line drew up to him.
+
+But he could not go on. The fire itself was hardly a quarter of a mile
+distant, directly across the lake, but to follow the long shore was an
+insuperable mile. Already his leg muscles were failing him, refusing to
+the respond to the impulse of his nerves. Yet it might be that if he
+could make himself heard his enemies would leave the girl for a moment,
+at least--give her an instant's respite--while they came and dispatched
+his own life. Whatever they were doing to her, there in that ring of
+firelight, might be stayed for a moment, at least.
+
+But at that instant he remembered the canoe. He had always kept it
+hidden in a little thicket of tall reeds,--if only the girl had not
+removed it from its place in his weeks of sickness! He plunged down into
+the tall tules. Yes, the boat was still in place.
+
+It took all the strength of his weakened body to push it out from the
+reeds into the water. Then he seized the long pole they had sometimes
+used to propel themselves over the lake. Except for his injured arm,
+the paddle would have been better--he could have made better time and
+escaped the danger of being stranded in deep water--but he doubted that
+he could handle it with his faltering arm. He pushed off, putting most
+of the strain on his uninjured right arm.
+
+The canoe was strongly but lightly made, so that it could be portaged
+with greatest possible ease; and his strokes, though feeble, propelled
+it slowly through the water. The great, white full moon, beloved of long
+ago, looked down from above the tall, dark heads of the spruce and
+changed the little water-body into a miracle of burnished silver. In its
+light Ben's face showed pale, but with a curious, calm strength.
+
+The lake seemed untouched by the faint breath of wind that blew from the
+distant shore. The waters lay quiet, and the trout beneath saw the black
+shadow of the canoe as it passed. A cow moose and her calf sprang up the
+bank with a splash, frightened by the poling figure in the stern. And on
+the far shore, clear where the lake had its outlet in a small river,
+even more keen wilderness eyes might have beheld the black, moving dot
+that was the craft. But the distance was too far and the wind was wrong
+for the keen mind behind the eyes to make any sort of an interpretation.
+
+It might have been that Fenris the wolf, running with a female and two
+younger males that he had mastered that long-ago night on the ridge,
+paused in his hunting to watch and wonder. But his wild brute thoughts
+were not under the bondage of memory to-night; his savage heart was
+thrilled and full; and more than likely he did not even turn his head.
+
+Ray and Chan, standing beside their prisoner in their grisly camp on the
+opposite shore, might have beheld Ben's approach if weightier matters
+had not occupied their minds. They had only to walk to the edge of the
+firelight and stare down through a rift in the trees to see him. But
+they stood with the angry glare revealing a strange and sinister
+intentness in their drawn faces and ominous speculations in their evil
+eyes.
+
+
+
+
+XLI
+
+It was a wilderness moon that rose over the spruce to-night,--white as
+new silver, incredibly large, inscrutably mysterious. The winds had
+whisked away the last pale cloud that might have dimmed its glory, and
+its light poured down with equal bounty on peak and hill, forest and
+yellow marsh. The heavy woods partook most deeply of its enchantment:
+tall, stately trees pale and nebulous as if with silver frost, each
+little stream dancing and shimmering in its light, every glade laid with
+a fairy tapestry, every shadow dreadful and black in contrast. The
+wilderness breathed and shivered as if swept with passion.
+
+The wilderness moon is the moon of desire; and all this great space of
+silence seemed to respond. It seemed to throb, like one living entity,
+as if in longing for something lost long ago--a half-forgotten
+happiness, a glory and a triumph that were gone never to return. No
+creatures that followed the woods trails were dull and flat to-night.
+They were all swept with mystery, knowing vague longings or fierce
+desires. It was the harvest moon; but here it did not light the fields
+so that men might harvest grain. Rather it illumined the hunting trails
+so that the beasts of prey might find relief from the wild lusts and
+seething ferment that was in their veins. But mostly the forest mood was
+disconsolate, rather than savage, to-night. The wild geese on the lake
+called their weird and plaintive cries, their strange complaints that no
+man understands; the loons laughed in insane despair; and the coyotes
+on the ridge wailed out the pain of living and the vague longings of
+their wild hearts.
+
+In the glory of that moon Fenris the wolf knew the same, resistless
+longings that so many times before had turned him from the game trails.
+There was something here that was unutterably dear to him,--something
+that drew him, called him like a voice, and he could not turn aside.
+Because he was a beast, he likely did not know the force that was
+drawing him again along the lake shore. Yet the souls of the lower
+creatures no man knows; and perhaps he had conscious longings,
+profoundly intense, for a moment's touch of a strong hand on his
+shoulder,--one never-to-be-forgotten caress from a certain god that had
+gone to a cave to live. It was true that his wild instincts, ever more
+in dominance these past weeks, would likely halt him at the cavern maw,
+permitting no intimacy other than to ascertain that all was well. They
+were too strong ever to brook man's control again. The moon was a moon
+of desire, but only because it was also the moon of memory,--and perhaps
+memories, stirring and exalting, were sweeping through him. Straight as
+an arrow he turned toward the cave.
+
+His followers--the gaunt female and two younger males, the structure
+about which the winter pack would form--hesitated at first. They had no
+commanding memories of the cavern on the far side of the lake. Yet
+Fenris was their leader; by the deep-lying laws of the pack they must
+follow where he led. They could not decoy him into the trails of game.
+As ever they sped swiftly, silently after him.
+
+In this forest of desires Ben knew but one,--that he might yet be of aid
+to Beatrice. But he knew in his heart that it was a vain hope. He was
+within a hundred yards of Ray's camp now, but the struggle to reach the
+lake and the poling across its waters had brought him seemingly to the
+absolute limit of his strength, clear to the brink of utter exhaustion.
+Never in his life before had he known the full meaning of
+fatigue,--fatigue that was like a paralysis, blunting the mechanism of
+the brain, burning like a slow fire in his muscles, poisoning the vital
+fluids of his nerves. Stroke after stroke, never ceasing!--The flame was
+high, crackling--just before him. Through a rift in the trees he could
+see the outline of two men and the slim form of the girl. Just a few
+yards more.
+
+But of all the desires that the moon invoked in the woods people there
+were none so unredeemed, so wicked and cruel as this that slowly wakened
+in the evil hearts of these two degenerate men, Beatrice's captors. She
+sensed it only vaguely at first. All the disasters that had fallen upon
+her had not taught her to accept such a thing as this: surely this would
+be spared her, at least. There is a kindly blind spot in the brain that
+often will not let the ugly truth go home.
+
+For a strange, still moment Ray's face seemed devoid of all expression.
+It was flat and lifeless as dark clay. Then Beatrice felt the insult of
+his quickening gaze.
+
+"Put a rope around her wrists, Chan," he said. "We don't want to take
+chances on her getting away."
+
+He spoke slowly, rather flatly. There was nothing that her senses could
+seize upon--either in his face or voice to justify the swift,
+strangling, killing horror that came upon her. He stood simply gazing,
+and as she met his gaze her lips parted and drew back in a grimace of
+terror; thus they stood until the blood began to leap fast in Chan's
+veins. She needed no further disillusionment. Chan spoke behind her, a
+startled oath cut off short, and she felt him moving swiftly toward her.
+It was her last instant of respite; and her muscle set and drew for a
+final, desperate attempt at self-defense.
+
+She wore Ben's knife at her belt, and her hand sped toward it. But the
+motion, fast as it was, came too late. Chan saw it; and leaping swiftly,
+his arms went about her and pinned her own arms to her sides.
+
+She tried in vain to fight her way out of his grasp. She writhed,
+screaming; and in the frenzy of her fear she all but succeeded in
+hurling him off. She managed to draw the knife clear of the sheath, yet
+she couldn't raise her arm to strike. Ray was aiding his confederate
+now; and in an instant more she was helpless.
+
+Their drawn faces bent close to hers. She felt their hot hands as they
+drew her wrists in front of her and fastened them with a rope. "Not too
+tight, Chan," Ray advised. "We don't want her to get uncomfortable
+before we're done with her. Don't tie her ankles; she can't run through
+the brush with her arms tied.--Now give her a moment to breathe."
+
+They stood on each side of her, regarding her with secret, growing
+excitement. Already they had descended too far to know pity for this
+girl. The wide-open eyes, so dark with terror and in contrast with the
+stark paleness of her face, the lips that trembled so piteously, the
+slender, girlish figure so helpless to their depraved desires moved them
+not at all.
+
+The scene was one of never-to-be-forgotten vividness. The tenderness and
+mercy, most of all the restraint that has become manifest in men in
+these centuries since they have left their forest lairs to live in
+permanent abodes, had no place here. About them ringed the primeval
+forest, ensilvered by the moon; the fire crackled with a dread ferocity;
+and at the edge of the thickets the motionless form of Jeffery Neilson
+lay with face buried in the soft, summer grass. All was silent and
+motionless, except the fierce crackling of the fire; except a curious,
+intermittent, upward twitching of the corner of Ray's lips.
+
+"So you and Ben are bunkies now, are you?" he asked slowly, without
+emphasis.
+
+But the girl made no reply, only gazing at him with starting eyes.
+
+"A traitor to us, and Ben's squaw!" He turned fiercely to Chan. "I guess
+that gives us right to do what we want to with her. And now she can yell
+if she wants to for her lover to come and save her."
+
+She did not even try to buy their mercy by informing them where they
+might find Ben. Only too well she knew that their dreadful intentions
+could not be turned aside: she would only sacrifice Ben without aiding
+herself. Ray moved toward her, his eyes deeply sunken, the pupils
+abnormally enlarged.
+
+"You haven't lost all your looks," he told her breathlessly. "That mouth
+is still pretty enough to kiss. And I guess you won't slap--this time--"
+
+He drew her toward him, his dark face lowering toward hers. She
+struggled, trying to wrench away from him. Helpless and alone, the
+moment of final horror was at hand. In this last instant her whole being
+leaped again to Ben,--the man whose strength had been her fort
+throughout all their first weeks in the wilds, but whom she had left
+helpless and sick in the distant cavern. Yet even now he would rise and
+come to her if he knew of her peril. Her voice rose shrilly to a scream.
+"Ben--help me!"
+
+And Ray's hands fell from her shoulders as he heard the incredible
+answer from the shore of the lake. The brush rustled and cracked: there
+was a strange sound of a heavy footfall,--slow, unsteady, but
+approaching them as certain as the speeding stars approach their
+mysterious destinations in the far reaches of the sky. Ray
+straightened, staring; Chan stood as if frozen, his hands half-raised,
+his eyes wide open.
+
+"I'm coming, Beatrice," some one said in the coverts. Her cries, uttered
+when her father fell, had not gone unheard. In the last stages of
+exhaustion, deathly pale yet with a face of iron, Ben came reeling
+toward them out of the moonlight.
+
+
+
+
+XLII
+
+Ben walked quietly into the circle of firelight and stood at Beatrice's
+side. But while Ray and Chan gazed at him as if he were a spectre from
+the grave, Beatrice's only impulse was one of immeasurable and
+unspeakable thankfulness. No fate on earth was so dreadful but that it
+would be somewhat alleviated by the fact of his presence: just the sight
+of him, standing beside her, put her in some vague way out of Ray's
+power to harm. Exhausted, reeling, he was still the prop of her life and
+hope.
+
+"Here I am," he said quietly. "The letter's in my pocket. Do what you
+want with me--but let Beatrice go."
+
+His words brought Ray to himself in some degree at least. The ridiculous
+fear of the moment before speedily passed away. Why, the man was
+exhausted--helpless in their hands--and the letter was in his pocket. It
+meant _triumph_--nothing else. All Ray's aims had been attained. With
+Ben's death the claim, a fourth of which had been his motive when he had
+slain Ezram, would pass entirely to him,--except for such share as he
+would have to give Chan. His star of fortune was in the sky. It was his
+moment of glory,--long-awaited but enrapturing him at last.
+
+Neilson lay seriously wounded, perhaps dead by now. Whatever his
+injuries, he would not go back with them to share in the gold of the
+claim. The girl, also, was his prey,--to do with what he liked.
+
+"I see you've come," he answered. "You might as well; we'd have found
+you to-morrow." His voice was no longer flat, but rather exultant,
+boasting. "You thought you could get away--but we've shown you."
+
+Ben nodded. "You are--" he strained for the name he had heard Beatrice
+speak so often--"Ray Brent?" His eyes fell to the form of Neilson,
+wounded beyond the fire. "I see you've been at your old job--killing. It
+was you who killed Ezra Melville."
+
+Ray smiled, ever so faintly: this was what he loved. "You're talking to
+the right man. Anything you'd like to do about it?"
+
+Ben's face hardened. "There is nothing I can do, now. You came too late.
+But I would have had something to do if I had my rifle. I'm glad it was
+you, not Beatrice's father. I ask you this--will you accept my
+proposition. To take Ezram's letter, destroy it and me too--and let the
+girl go in safety?"
+
+Beatrice stretched her bound arms and touched his hairy wrist. "No,
+Ben," she told him quietly. "There's no use of trying to make such a
+bargain as that. Men that murder--and assault women,--won't keep their
+word."
+
+"They were about to attack you, were they?" His voice dropped a tone;
+otherwise it seemed the same.
+
+"Yes--just as you came."
+
+He turned once more to Ray, eyeing him with such a look of contempt and
+scorn that it smarted like a whiplash in spite of the protecting mantel
+of his new-found triumph. "Oh, you depraved dogs!" he told them quietly
+and distinctly. "You yellow, mongrel cowards!"
+
+Ray straightened, stung by the words. "And I'll make you wish you was
+dead before you ever said that," he threatened. "I'll tell you what you
+wanted to know a minute ago--and I tell you no. I won't make any deal
+with you. We'll do what we like to you, and we'll do what we like with
+your dirty squaw, too--the woman you've been living with all these
+months. We've got you where we want you. You're in no fix to make terms.
+Chan--put a rope around his legs and a gag in his rotten mouth!"
+
+They moved toward him simultaneously, and Ben summoned the last jot of
+his almost-spent strength to hurl them off. They did not need deadly
+weapons for this wasted form. Yet for the duration of one second Ben
+fought with an incredible ferocity and valor.
+
+He hurled Chan from his path, and his sound right arm leaped to Ray's
+throat in a death grip. For that one instant his old-time strength
+returned to him,--as to Samson as his arms went about the pillars of the
+temple. They found him no weakling, in that first instant, but a deadly,
+fighting beast, the "Wolf" Darby of the provinces,--his finger nails
+sinking ever deeper into the flesh of Ray's throat, his body braced
+against Chan's attack. And for all that Beatrice's arms were tied, she
+leaped like a she-wolf to her lover's aid.
+
+But such an unequal battle could last only an instant. Ray focused his
+attack upon Ben's injured left arm, Chan struck once at the girl,
+hurling her to the ground with a base blow, then lashed brutal blows
+into Ben's face. The burst of strength ebbed as quickly as it had come:
+his legs wilted under him, and he sank slowly to the ground.
+
+Maddened with battle, for a moment more Chan lashed cowardly blows into
+his face; and he left the brutal labor only to help Ray affix ropes
+about his ankles. Then the two conquerors stood erect, breathing loudly.
+
+Seemingly the utter limit of their brutality was reached,--but for the
+moment only. A strange and foreboding silence fell over the camp: only
+the sound of troubled breathing was heard above the lessening crackle of
+the fire. They did not turn at once again to the work of crushing Ben's
+life out with their fists and boots, nor did they restrain Beatrice as
+she crawled over the blood-stained grass to reach her lover's side.
+
+"Let her go," Ray said to Charley. "She can't help him any."
+
+It was true. They had put up their last defense. The girl crept nearer,
+lying almost prone beside him, and her soft hands stole over his bruised
+flesh. But no tears came now. She was past the kindly mercy of tears.
+She could only gaze at him, and sometimes dry half-sobs clutched at her
+throat. The man half-opened his eyes, smiling.
+
+Life still remained in his rugged body. Even the cruel test of the last
+hour had not taken that from him. The sturdy heart still beat, and the
+breath still whispered through his lips: there was life in plenty to
+afford such sport as Ray and Chan might have for him.
+
+The last, least quality of redemption--such magic and beauty as might
+have been wrought by the firelight dancing over the moonlit glade--was
+quite gone now. The powers of wickedness were in the ascendency, and
+this was only the abode of horror. Yet it was all tragically true, not a
+nightmare from which she would soon waken. This was the remote heart of
+Back There--a primeval land where the demons of lust and death walked
+unrestrained--and the shadow of the moonlit trees fell dark upon her.
+
+The back logs were burning dully now, and the coals were red, and Chan
+and Ray took seats on a huge, dead spruce to talk over their further
+plans. It was all easy enough. They could linger here, living mostly on
+meat, until the rising waters of the Yuga could carry them down to the
+Indian villages. Their methods and procedure in regard to Ben were the
+only remaining questions.
+
+For a few minutes they took little notice of the prone figures at the
+far edge of the fading firelight. In their hands they were as helpless
+as Jeffery Neilson, left already by the receding radiance to the soft
+mercy of the shadows. Attention could be given them soon enough. Their
+own triumph was beginning to give way to deep fatigue.
+
+Ben and Beatrice had talked softly at first, accepting their fate at
+last and trying to forget all things but the fact of each other's
+presence. They had kept the faith to-night, they had both been true; and
+perhaps they had conquered, in some degree, the horror of death. His
+right hand held hers close to his lips, and only she could understand
+the message in its soft pressure, and the gentle, kindly shadows in his
+quiet eyes. But presently her gaze fastened on some object in the grass
+beside him.
+
+He did not understand at first. He knew enough not to attract his
+enemies' attention by trying to turn. The girl relaxed again, but her
+hand throbbed in his, and her eyes shone somberly as if the luster of
+some strange, dark hope.
+
+"What is it?" he asked whispering.
+
+"I see a way out--for us both," she told him. She knew he would not
+misunderstand and dream that she saw an actual avenue to life and
+safety. "Don't give any sign."
+
+"Then hurry," he urged. "They may be back any instant. What is it?"
+
+"A way to cheat 'em--to keep them from torturing you--and to save
+me--from all the things they'll do to me--when you're dead. Oh,
+Ben--you won't fail me--you'll do it for me."
+
+He smiled, gently and strongly. "Do you think I'd fail you now?"
+
+"Then reach your good arm on the other side--soft as you can. There's a
+knife lying there--your own knife--they knocked out of my hand. They'll
+jump at the first gleam. You know what to do--first me, in the
+throat--then yourself."
+
+His face showed no horror at her words. They were down to the most
+terrible realities; and as she had said, this was the way out! The great
+kindness still dwelt in his eyes--and she knew he would do as she asked.
+
+One gleam of steal, one swift touch at the throat--and they would never
+know the unspeakable fate that their depraved captors planned for them.
+_It was no less than victory in the last instant of despair!_ It was
+freedom: although they did not know into what Mystery and what Fear the
+act would dispatch them, it was freedom from Ray and Chan, none the
+less. And Ben welcomed the plan as might a prisoner, waiting in the
+death-cell, welcome a reprieve.
+
+He turned, groping with his hand. There was no use of waiting longer.
+The knife lay just beyond his reach; and softly he moved his body
+through the grass.
+
+But this gate to mercy was closed before they reached it. A sudden
+flaring of the fire revealed them--the gleam of the blade and Ben's
+stretching hand--and Ray left his log in a swift, catlike leap.
+
+If Ben had possessed full use of both hands there still might have been
+time to send home the two crucial blows, or at least to dispatch
+Beatrice out of Ray's power to harm. But his injured arm impeded him,
+and his hand fumbled as he tried to seize the hilt. With a sharp oath
+Ray crushed the blade into the ground with his heel; then kicked
+viciously at the prone body of his enemy.
+
+And at that first base blow his rage and blood-lust that had been
+gathering was swiftly freed. It was all that was needed to set him at
+the work of torture. For an instant he stood almost motionless except
+for the spasmodic twitching--now almost continuous--at his lips and for
+the slow turning of his head as he looked about for a weapon with which
+he could more quickly satiate the murder-madness in his veins. The knife
+appealed to him not at all; but his eye fell on a long, heavy club of
+spruce that had been cut for fuel. He bent and his strong hands seized
+it.
+
+As he swung it high the girl leaped between--with a last, frantic
+effort, wholly instinctive--to shield Ben's body with her own. But it
+was only an instant's reprieve. Chan had followed Ben, and sharing Ray's
+fiendish mood, jerked her aside. Ben raised himself up as far as he
+could at a final impulse to thrust the girl out of harm's way.
+
+Yet it was to be that Ray's murderous blow was never to go home. A
+mighty and terrible ally had come to Ben's aid. He came pouncing from
+the darkness, a gaunt and dreadful avenger whose code of death was as
+remorseless as Ray's own.
+
+It was Fenris the wolf, and he had found his master at last. Missing him
+at the accustomed place in the cave, he had trailed him to the lake
+margin: a smell on the wind had led him the rest of the way. He was not
+one to announce his coming by an audible footfall in the thicket. Like a
+ghost he had glided almost to the edge of the firelight, lingering
+there--with a caution learned in these last wild weeks of running with
+his brethren--until he had made up his brute mind in regard to the
+strangers in the camp. But he had waited only until he saw Ray kick the
+helpless form before him,--that of the god that Fenris, for all the wild
+had claimed him, still worshipped in his inmost heart. With fiendish,
+maniacal fury he had sprung to avenge the blow.
+
+And his three followers, trained by the pack laws to follow where he
+led, and keyed to the highest pitch by their leader's fury, leaped like
+gray demons of the Pit in his wake.
+
+
+
+XLII
+
+As a young tree breaks and goes down in the gale Ray Brent went down
+before the combined attack of the wolves. What desperate struggle he
+made only seemed to increase their fury and shatter him the faster.
+Utterly futile were all his blows: his frantic, piercing screams of fear
+and agony raised to heaven, but were answered with no greater mercy than
+that he would have shown to Ben a moment before.
+
+Seemingly in an instant he was on his back and the ravening pack were
+about him in a ring. In that lurid firelight their fangs gleamed like
+ivory as they flashed, here and there, over his body and throat, and
+their fierce eyes blazed with pale-blue fire,--the mark and sign of the
+blood madness of the beasts of prey.
+
+Seemingly in a single instant the life had been torn from him, leaving
+only a strange, huddled, ghastly thing beside the dying fire. But the
+pack leaped from him at once. Fenris had caught sight of Chan's figure
+as he ran for the nearest tree and seemingly with one leap he was upon
+him. He sprang at him from the side; and his fangs gleamed once.
+
+He had struck true, his fangs went home, and the life went out of Chan
+Heminway in a single, neighing scream. He pitched forward, shuddered
+once in the soft grass, and lay still. The pack surged around his body,
+struck at it once or twice, then stood growling as if waiting for their
+leader's command.
+
+Before ever Ray fell, Ben had taken what measures of self-defense he
+could in case the pack, forgetting its master's master, might turn on
+himself and the girl. He had reached the knife hilt and severed the
+ropes about the girl's wrists. "Stay behind me," he cautioned. "Don't
+move a muscle."
+
+He knew that any attempt to reach and climb a tree would attract the
+attention of the pack and send them ravening about her. Again he knew
+that her life as well as his own depended on his control of the pack
+leader. He saw Chan go down, seemingly in a single instant, and he
+braced himself against attack. "Down, Fenris!" he shouted. "Down--get
+down!"
+
+The great wolf started at the voice, then stood beside the fallen,
+gazing at Ben with fierce, luminous eyes. "Down, down, boy," Ben
+cautioned, in a softer voice. "There, old fellow--down--down."
+
+Then Fenris whined in answer, and Ben knew that he was no longer to be
+feared. The three lesser wolves seemed startled, standing in a nervous
+group, yet growling savagely and eyeing him across the dying fire. For a
+moment Fenris's fury had passed to them, but now that his rage was dead,
+all they had left was an inborn fear of such a breed as this,--these
+tall forms that died so easily in their fangs. Fenris trotted slowly
+toward Ben, but with the true instincts of the wild his followers knew
+that this was no affair of fangs and death. He came in love, in a
+remembered comradeship, just as often he had led them to the mouth of
+the cavern, and they did not understand. They slowly backed away into
+the shadows, fading like ghosts.
+
+Ben's arms, in unspeakable gratitude, went about the shoulders of the
+wolf. Beatrice, sobbing uncontrollably yet swept with that infinite
+thankfulness of the redeemed, crept to his side. Fenris whined and
+shivered in the arms of his god.
+
+Quietude came at last to that camp beside the lake, in the far, hidden
+heart of Back There. Once more the blood moved with sweet, normal
+tranquillity in the veins, the thrill and stir died in the air, and the
+moonlight was beautiful on the spruce.
+
+The wolves had gone. Fenris's three brethren had slipped away, perhaps
+wholly mystified and deeply awed by their madness of a moment before;
+and from the ridge top they had called for their leader to join them. He
+had done his work, he had avenged the base blow that had seemed to
+strike at his own wild heart, he had received the caress he had
+craved,--and there was no law for him to stay. The female called
+enticingly; the wild game was running for his pleasure on the trails.
+
+Ben had watched the struggle in his fierce breast, and Beatrice's eyes
+were soft and wonderfully lustrous in the subdued light as she gave the
+wolf a parting caress. But he could not stay with them. The primal laws
+of his being bade otherwise. His was the way of the open trails, the
+nights of madness and the rapture of hunting--and these were folk of the
+caves! They were not his people, although his love for them burned like
+fire in his heart.
+
+He could not deny the call of his followers on the ridge. It was like a
+chain, drawing him remorselessly to them. Whining, he had sped away into
+the darkness.
+
+The fire had been built up, Beatrice had rallied her spent strength by
+full feeding of the rich, dried meat, and had done what she could for
+Neilson's injury. Ben, exhausted, had lain down in some of the blankets
+of his enemy's outfit. Neilson was not, however, mortally hurt. The
+bullet had coursed through the region of his shoulder, missing his heart
+and lungs, and although he was all but unconscious, they had every
+reason to believe that a few weeks of rest would see him well again.
+
+Beatrice bathed the wound, bandaged it the best she could, then covered
+him up warmly and let him go to sleep. And the time came at last, long
+past the midnight hour, that she crept once more to Ben's side.
+
+There was little indeed for them to say. The stress of the night had
+taken from them almost all desire to talk. But Ben took her hand in his
+feebly, and held it against his lips.
+
+"We're safe now," Beatrice told him, her eye's still bright with tears.
+"We've seen it through, and we're safe."
+
+Ben nodded happily. It was true: there was nothing further for them to
+fear. With the aid of the rifles of the three fallen, they could procure
+meat in plenty for their remaining time at Back There; besides, the
+store of jerked caribou and moose was enough to hold them over. When the
+rains came again, the three of them--Neilson and Ben and Beatrice--could
+glide on down to the Indian encampments in the canoe. Thence they could
+reach the white settlements beyond the mountains.
+
+Her glance into the future went still farther, because she knew certain
+news that as yet Ben had not heard. She had heard from Ray's lips that
+night that Ben's claim had been legally filed; he had only to return and
+take possession. It straightened out the future, promised success in the
+battle of life, gave him an interest to hold him in these northern
+forests. But she would not tell him to-night. It could wait for a more
+quiet hour.
+
+Presently she saw that he was trying to speak to her, whispering; trying
+to draw her ear down to his lips. She smiled, with an infinite
+tenderness. Dimly though he spoke, she heard him every word.
+
+"I love you," he told her simply. He watched her face, as intently as
+the three Wise Men watched the East, for a sign. And he saw it, clear
+and ineffably wonderful, in the stars that came into her eyes.
+
+"I love you," she answered, with equal simplicity. They lay a while in
+silence, blissful in this wonder each had for the other, wholly content
+just that their hands and lips should touch.
+
+The same miracle was upon them both; and the girl's thought, ranging
+far, seized upon a deep and moving discovery. "All this belongs to us,"
+she told him, indicating with one movement of her arm the boundless
+solitudes about them. "This is our own country, isn't it, Ben? We can't
+ever--go away."
+
+It was true: they could never leave the forest for long. They were its
+children, bred in the bone. Their strong thews would waste in a gentler
+land. It was their heritage. They must not go where they could not
+behold the dark line of the forest against the sky.
+
+The fire burned down. The moon wheeled through the sky. The tall spruce
+saw the dawn afar and beckoned.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Sky Line of Spruce, by Edison Marshall
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11402 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11402 ***</div>
+
+<p style="text-align: center;"><img style=
+"width: 400px; height: 605px;" alt="Cover" src=
+"images/ss001.jpg"></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h1>THE SKY LINE<br>
+OF SPRUCE</h1>
+<br>
+<h2>By EDISON MARSHALL</h2>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3>AUTHOR OF</h3>
+<h3>"The Voice of the Pack," "The Strength of the Pines,"<br>
+"The Snowshoe Trail," "Shepherds of the Wild," etc.</h3>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3>1922</h3>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+<br>
+<div class="content"><br>
+<a href="#PART_ONE">PART ONE<br>
+THE WAKENING</a><br>
+<br>
+<a href="#PART_TWO">PART TWO<br>
+THE WOLF-MAN</a><br>
+<br>
+<a href="#PART_THREE">PART THREE<br>
+THE TAMING</a></div>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="PART_ONE"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<h2>PART ONE</h2>
+<h3>THE WAKENING</h3>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="I"></a>
+<h2>I</h2>
+<p>The convict gang had a pleasant place to work to-day. Their road
+building had taken them some miles from the scattered outskirts of
+Walla Walla, among fields green with growing barley. The air was
+fresh and sweet; the Western meadow larks, newly come, seemed in
+imminent danger of splitting their own throats through the
+exuberance of their song. Even the steel rails of the Northern
+Pacific, running parallel to the stretch of new road, gleamed
+pleasantly in the spring sun.</p>
+<p>The convicts themselves were in a genial mood, easily moved to
+wide grins; and with a single exception they looked much like any
+other road gang at work anywhere in the land. An expert might have
+recognized purely criminal types among them: to a layman they
+suggested merely the lower grades of unskilled labor. Some of the
+faces were distinctly brutal; there was the sullen visage of a
+powerful negro who, with different environment, might have been a
+Congo prince; but the face of "Plug" Spanos, a notorious gunman who
+was by far the worst character in the gang, might have been that of
+an artless plow-boy in a distant land under a warm sun. There
+remained, however, the "exception." Curiously enough, whenever the
+warden's thought dwelt upon the inmates of his prison, classifying
+them into various groups, there was always one wind-tanned, vivid
+face, one brawny, towering form that seemed to demand individual
+consideration. The man who was listed on the records as Ben Kinney
+was distinctly an individual. He some way failed to classify among
+the groups of his fellows. Because he had been sent out to-day with
+the road gang the two armed guards had an interesting subject of
+conversation.</p>
+<p>In the first place he habitually did two men's work. He did not
+do it with any idea of trying to ingratiate himself with his
+keepers: no inmate of the institution at Walla Walla made any such
+mistake as that. He did it purely because he could not tone down
+his mighty strength and energy to stay even with his fellows.
+To-day Sprigley, the guard in first command of the gang, had placed
+him opposite Judy, the burly negro, but the latter was being driven
+straight toward absolute exhaustion. Yet Kinney at least knew how
+to subdue and direct the pouring fountain of his vitality and
+energy, for the robust blows of his pick fell with the regularity
+of a tireless machine. It was as if a wild stallion, off the
+plains, had been trained to draw the plow. His great muscles moved
+with marvelous precision; but for all the monotony and rhythm of
+his motions he conveyed no image of stolidity and dullness.</p>
+<p>He was a great, dark man, his skin darkly brown from exposure;
+his straight hair showed almost coal black in spite of the fact
+that it had but recently been clipped close; his eyebrows were
+similarly black; and black hairs spread down his hands almost to
+the finger nails and cropped up from his chest at his open throat.
+It was a mighty, deep, full chest, the chest of a runner and a
+fighter, sustained by a strong, flat abdomen and by powerful,
+sturdy legs. Yet physical might and development were not all of Ben
+Kinney. The image conveyed was never one of sheer brutality. For
+all their black hair, the large, brawny hands were well-shaped and
+sensitive; he had a healthy, good-humored mouth that could
+evidently, on occasion, be the seat of a most pleasant, boyish
+smile. He had a straight, good nose, rather high cheek bones, and a
+broad, brown forehead, straight rather than sloping swiftly like
+that of the negro opposite. But none of his features, nor yet his
+brawny form, caught and held the attention as did his vivid,
+dark-gray eyes. They were deeply dark, even against his deeply
+tanned face, yet now and then one caught distinct surface lights,
+denoting the presence of unmeasured animal spirits, and perhaps,
+too, the surprising health and vitality of the engine of his life.
+They were keen eyes, alert, fiery with a zealot's fire: evidently
+the eyes of a steadfast, headstrong, purposeful man. Some
+complexity of lines about them, hard to trace, indicated a
+recklessness, too; a willingness to risk all that he had for his
+convictions.</p>
+<p>"That's the queerest case we ever had here at Walla Walla,"
+Sprigley told his fellow guard, as they watched the man's pick
+swing in the air. "Sometimes I wonder whether he ought to be here
+or not. Look at that face&mdash;he hasn't any more of a criminal
+face than I have."</p>
+<p>The other guard, Howard, scanned his companion's face with mock
+care. "That ain't sayin' so much for him," he observed. But at once
+he began to evince real interest. "I maintain you can't tell
+anything from their faces," he answered seriously. "There's nothin'
+in it. The man's a crook, isn't he? Wasn't he caught
+red-handed?"</p>
+<p>"Let me tell you about it. I was interested in the case and
+found out all I could concerning it. He apparently showed up in
+Seattle some time during the summer of 1919, a crook of the crooks,
+as you say. No one knows where he came from&mdash;and that's queer
+in itself. You know very well that his face and form are going to
+be remembered and noticed, yet he wasn't in any rogue's gallery, in
+any city. Desperate crook though he was, no one had ever heard of
+him before he showed up in Seattle.</p>
+<p>"The crooks down there called him 'Wild' Kinney, and were pretty
+well scared of him. Swanson, one of the lieutenants of the Seattle
+force, whom I know well as I know you, told me that he was a power,
+sort of a king in the underworld from the very first, largely
+because he was afraid of nothing, absolutely desperate, and willing
+to take any chance. He wasn't a hop-head, yet they all looked at
+him as sort of queer; though ready to follow him to the last ditch,
+yet some way they thought him off his head. And Swanson believes
+that his career of crime started <i>after</i> he reached Seattle,
+not before&mdash;that he hadn't grown up to crime like most of the
+men in his gang. He didn't know anything about the
+'profession'&mdash;as far as skill went he was a rank amateur, but
+he made it up with daring and cunning. Once or twice he got in a
+fight down there, and they all agree he fought like a mad man, the
+most terrible fighter in the whole district, and it took about a
+half dozen to stop him."</p>
+<p>"You don't have to tell me that. Anybody who can swing a pick
+like that&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Now let me tell you how they happened to catch him. Maybe you
+heard&mdash;he and Dago Frank were in the act of breaking into the
+Western-Danish Bank. Part of this I'm giving you now came straight
+from Frank himself. He says that they were in the alley, in the act
+of jimmying a window, and all at once Kinney straightened up as if
+something had hit him and let the jimmy fall with a thump to the
+pavement. Frank said he thought that the man had 'gone off his
+nut,' but it's my private opinion that he had been somewhat
+deranged all the time he was in Seattle, and he just came to, more
+or less, that minute. The man hardly seemed to know what he was
+doing. 'Have you lost your guts, Kinney?' Frank asked him; and
+Kinney stood there, staring like he didn't know he was being spoken
+to. He put his hands to his head, then, like a man with a headache.
+And the next instant a cop came running from the mouth of the
+alley.</p>
+<p>"Kinney was heeled, but he didn't even pull his gun. He still
+stood with his hands to his head. All his pards in the underworld
+always said he'd die before he'd give up, but he let the cop take
+him like he was a baby. Frank got away, but they got him, you
+remember, three weeks later. After some kind of a trial Kinney was
+sent down here."</p>
+<p>Sprigley paused and shifted his gun from his right to his left
+shoulder. "You'll say that's all common enough," he went on. "Now
+let me tell you another queer thing. You know, the chief has
+started a system here to keep track of all the prisoners, with the
+idea of making them good citizens when they get out. He has them
+all fill out a card. Well, when this man Kinney turned in his card,
+he had written 'Ben' on it, but the rest was absolutely blank.</p>
+<p>"Mr. Mitchell thought at first that the man couldn't write. It
+turned out, though, that he can write&mdash;an intelligent hand,
+and spell good too. Then Mitchell decided he was just sulking. But
+his second guess was no better than his first. I haven't got
+Mitchell persuaded yet, and maybe never will have him persuaded,
+but I'm confident I know the answer. The reason he didn't fill out
+that card was because he couldn't remember.</p>
+<p>"He couldn't remember where or when he was born, or who were his
+folks, or where he had come from, or how he had spent his life. He
+knew that 'Ben,' his first name, sounded right to him, but 'Kinney'
+didn't&mdash;the reason likely being that Kinney was an alias
+adopted during his life as a criminal. I suppose you've noticed
+that queer, bewildered look he has when any one calls him Kinney.
+What his real name is he doesn't know. He can't even remember that.
+And the explanation is&mdash;complete loss of memory.</p>
+<p>"You mark my words, Howard&mdash;that man hasn't been a criminal
+always. Something got wrong with his head, and he turned
+crook&mdash;you might say that the criminal side that all of us has
+simply took possession of him. That night in the alley he came to
+himself&mdash;only his mind was left a blank not only in regard to
+his life as a criminal, but all that had gone before."</p>
+<p>"Then why don't you do something about it&mdash;besides talk?
+Mitchell says you're gettin' so you talk of nothin' else."</p>
+<p>"It's not for me to do anything about it. The man was a
+criminal. The State can't go any further than that. I suppose if
+every man was set free who wasn't, in the last analysis,
+responsible for his crimes, we wouldn't have anybody left in the
+penitentiary. He's in for five years&mdash;considering what he'll
+pick up here, it might as well be for life. Amnesia&mdash;that's
+what the doctors call it&mdash;amnesia following some sort of a
+mental trouble. In the end you'll see that I'm right."</p>
+<p>Sprigley was right. To Ben Kinney life was like a single pale
+light in a long, dark street. Complete loss of memory prevented him
+from looking backward. Complete loss of hope kept him from looking
+ahead.</p>
+<p>It had been this way for months now&mdash;ever since the night
+the policeman had found him, the "jimmy" dropped from his hands, in
+the alley. Heaven knows what he had done, what madness had been
+upon him, before that time. But as Sprigley had said, that night
+had marked a change. It was true that so far as facts went he was
+no better off: when he had come to himself he had found his mind a
+blank regarding not only his career of crime, but all the years
+that had gone before. Even his own name eluded him. That of Kinney
+had an alien sound in his ears.</p>
+<p>The past had simply ceased to exist for him; and because it is
+some way the key to the future, the latter seemed likewise
+blank,&mdash;a toneless gray that did not in the least waken his
+interest. Indeed the only light that flung into the unfathomable
+darkness of his forgetfulness was that which played in his dreams
+at night. Sometimes these were inordinately vivid, quite in
+contrast to the routine of prison life.</p>
+<p>He felt if he could only recall these dreams clearly they would
+interpret for him the mystery of his own life. He wakened, again
+and again, with the consciousness of having dreamed the most
+stirring, amazing dreams, but what they were he couldn't tell. He
+could only remember fragments, such as a picture of rushing waters
+recurring again and again&mdash;and sometimes an amazing horizon, a
+dark line curiously notched against a pale green background.</p>
+<p>They were not all bad dreams: in reality many of them stirred
+him and moved him happily, and he would waken to find the mighty
+tides of his blood surging fiercely through the avenues of veins.
+Evidently they recalled some happiness that was forgotten. And
+there was one phase, at least, of this work in the road gangs that
+brought him moving, intense delight. It was merely the sight of the
+bird life, abounding in the fields and meadows about the towns.</p>
+<p>There had been quite a northern migration lately, these late
+spring days. The lesser songsters were already mating and nesting,
+and he found secret pleasure in their cheery calls and bustling
+activity. But they didn't begin to move him as did the waterfowl,
+passing in long V-shaped flocks. That strange, wild wanderer's
+greeting that the gray geese called down to their lesser brethren
+in the meadows had a really extraordinary effect upon him. It
+always caught him up and held him, stirring some deep, strange part
+of him that he hardly knew existed. Sometimes the weird, wailing
+sound brought him quite to the edge of a profound discovery, but
+always the flocks sped on and out of hearing before he could quite
+grasp it. When the moon looked down, through the barred window of
+his cell, he sometimes felt the same way. A great, white mysterious
+moon that he had known long ago. It was queer that there should be
+a relationship between the gray geese and the cold, white satellite
+that rode in the sky. Ben Kinney never tried to puzzle out what it
+was; but he always knew it with a knowledge not to be denied.</p>
+<p>The last of the waterfowl had passed by now, but the northern
+migration was not yet done. The sun still moved north; warm,
+north-blowing winds blew the last of the lowering, wintry clouds
+back to the Arctic Seas whence they had come. And because the road
+work the convicts were doing brought them, this afternoon, in sight
+of the railroad right-of-way, Ben now and then caught sight of
+other wayfarers moving slowly, but no less steadily, toward the
+north. The open road beckoned northward, these full, balmy,
+late-April days, and various tattered men, mostly vagabonds and
+tramps, passed the gang from time to time on this same, northern
+quest.</p>
+<p>Ben thought about them as birds of passage, and the thought
+amused him. And at the sight of a small, stooped figure advancing
+toward him up the railroad right-of-way he paused, leaning on his
+pick.</p>
+<p>Because Ben had paused, for the first time in an hour, his two
+guards looked up to see what had attracted his attention. They saw
+what seemed to them a white-haired old wanderer of sixty years or
+more; but at first they were wholly at a loss to explain Ben's
+fascinated look of growing interest.</p>
+<p>It was true that the old man scarcely represented the usual
+worthless, criminal type that took to vagabondage. As he paused to
+scrutinize the convict gang neither insolence nor fear, one of
+which was certainly to be expected, became manifest in his face.
+They had anticipated certain words in greeting, a certain look out
+of bleary, shifty eyes, but neither materialized. True, the old man
+was following the cinder trail northward, but plainly he did not
+belong to the brotherhood of tramps. They saw that he was
+white-haired and withered, but upright; and that undying youth
+dwelt in his twinkling blue eyes and the complexity of little,
+good-natured lines about his mouth. Poverty, age, the hardships of
+the cinder trail had not conquered him in the least. He was small
+physically, but his skinny arms and legs looked as if they were
+made of high-tension wire. His face was shrewd, but also kindly,
+and the gray stubble on his cheeks and chin did not in the least
+hide a smile that was surprisingly boyish and winning. And when he
+spoke his cracked good-natured voice was perfectly in character,
+evidently that of a man possessing full self-respect and
+confidence, yet brimming over with easy kindliness and humor.</p>
+<p>Both guards would have felt instantly, instinctively friendly
+toward him if they had been free to feel at all. Instead they were
+held and amazed by the apparent fact that at the first scrutiny of
+the man's outline, his carriage and his droll, wrinkled face, the
+prisoner Kinney was moved and stirred as if confronted by the risen
+dead.</p>
+<p>The old man himself halted, returning Kinney's stare. The moment
+had, still half concealed, an unmistakable quality of drama. In the
+contagion of suppressed excitement, the other prisoners paused,
+their tools held stiffly in their hands. Kinney's mind seemed to be
+reaching, groping for some astonishing truth that eluded him.</p>
+<p>The old man ran, in great strides, toward him. "My God, aren't
+you Ben Darby?" he demanded.</p>
+<p>The convict answered him as from a great distance, his voice
+cool and calm with an infinite certainty. "Of course," he said. "Of
+course I'm Darby."</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="II"></a>
+<h2>II</h2>
+<p>For the moment that chance meeting thrilled all the spectators
+with the sense of monumental drama. The convicts stared; Howard,
+the second guard, forgot his vigilance and stared with open mouth.
+He started absurdly, rather guiltily, when the old man whirled
+toward him.</p>
+<p>"What are you doing with Ben Darby in a convict gang?" the old
+wanderer demanded.</p>
+<p>"What am I doin'?" Howard's astonishment gave way to righteous
+indignation. "I'm guardin' convicts, that's what I'm a-doin'." He
+composed himself then and shifted his gun from his left to his
+right shoulder. "He's here in this gang because he's a convict. Ask
+my friend, here, if you want to know the details. And who might you
+be?"</p>
+<p>There was no immediate answer to that question. The old man had
+turned his eyes again to the tall, trembling figure of Ben, trying
+to find further proof of his identity. To Ezra Melville there could
+no longer be any shadow of doubt as to the truth: even that he had
+found the young man working in a gang of convicts could not impugn
+the fact that the dark-gray vivid eyes, set in the vivid face under
+dark, beetling brows, were unquestionably those of the boy he had
+seen grow to manhood's years, Ben Darby.</p>
+<p>It was true that he had changed. His face was more deeply lined,
+his eyes more bright and nervous; there was a long, dark scar just
+under the short hair at his temple that Melville had never seen
+before. And the finality of despair seemed to settle over the droll
+features as he walked nearer and took Darby's hand.</p>
+<p>"Ben, Ben!" he said, evidently struggling with deep emotion.
+"What are you doing here?"</p>
+<p>The younger man gave him his hand, but continued to stare at him
+in growing bewilderment. "Five years&mdash;for burglary," he
+answered simply. "Guilty, too&mdash;I don't know anything more. And
+I can't remember&mdash;who you are."</p>
+<p>"You don't know me?" Some of Ben's own bewilderment seemed to
+pass to him. "You know Ezra Melville&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Sprigley, whose beliefs in regard to Ben had been strengthened
+by the little episode, stepped quickly to Melville's side. "He's
+suffering loss of memory," he explained swiftly. "At least, he's
+either lost his memory or he's doing a powerful lot of faking. This
+is the first time he ever recalled his own name."</p>
+<p>"I'm not faking," Ben told them quietly. "I honestly don't
+remember you&mdash;I feel that I ought to, but I don't. I honestly
+didn't remember my name was Darby until a minute ago&mdash;then
+just as soon as you spoke it, I knew the truth. Nothing can
+surprise me, any more. I suppose you're kin of mine&mdash;?"</p>
+<p>Melville gazed at him in incredulous astonishment, then turned
+to Sprigley. "May I talk to you about this case?" he asked quietly.
+"If not to you, who can I talk to? There are a few points that
+might help to clear up&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Ordering his men to their work, Melville and Sprigley stood
+apart, and for nearly an hour engaged in the most earnest
+conversation. The afternoon was shadow-flaked and paling when they
+had finished, and before Sprigley led his men back within the gray
+walls he had arranged for Melville to come to the prison after the
+dinner hour and confer with Mitchell, the warden.</p>
+<p>Many and important were the developments arising from this
+latter conference. One of the least of them was that Melville's
+northward journey was postponed for some days, and that within a
+week this same white-haired, lean old man, dressed in the garb of
+the cinder trail, was pleading his case to no less a personage than
+the governor of the State of Washington in whom authority for
+dealing with Ben's case was absolutely vested. It came about, from
+the same cause, that a noted alienist, Forest, of Seattle, visited
+Ben Darby in his cell; and finally that the prisoner himself, under
+the strict guard of Sprigley, was taken to the capital at
+Olympia.</p>
+<p>The brief inquisition that followed, changing the entire current
+of Ben Darby's life, occurred in the private office of McNamara,
+the Governor. McNamara himself stood up to greet them when they
+entered, the guard and the convict. Ezra Melville and Forest, the
+alienist from Seattle, were already in session. The latter
+conducted the examination.</p>
+<p>He tried his subject first on some of the most simple tests for
+sanity. It became evident at once, however, that except for his
+amnesia Ben's mind was perfectly sound: he passed all general
+intelligence tests with a high score, he conversed easily, he
+talked frankly of his symptoms. He had perfect understanding of the
+general sweep of events in the past twenty years: his amnesia
+seemed confined to his own activities and the activities of those
+intimately connected with him. Where he had been, what he had done,
+all the events of his life up to the night of his arrest remained,
+for all his effort to remember them, absolutely in darkness.</p>
+<p>"You don't remember this man?" Forest asked him quietly,
+indicating Ezra Melville.</p>
+<p>Again Ben's eyes studied the droll, gray face. "With the vaguest
+kind of memory. I know I've seen him before&mdash;often. I can't
+tell anything else."</p>
+<p>"He's a good friend of your family. He knew your folks. I should
+say he was a <i>very</i> good friend, to take the trouble and time
+he has, in your behalf."</p>
+<p>Ben nodded. He did not have to be told that fact. The
+explanation, however, was beyond him.</p>
+<p>Forest leaned forward. "You remember the Saskatchewan
+River?"</p>
+<p>Ben straightened, but the dim images in his mind were not clear
+enough for him to answer in the affirmative. "I'm afraid not."</p>
+<p>Melville leaned forward in his chair. "Ask him if he remembers
+winning the canoe race at Lodge Pole&mdash;or the time he shot the
+Athabaska Rapids."</p>
+<p>Ben turned brightly to him, but slowly shook his head. "I can't
+remember ever hearing of them before."</p>
+<p>"I think you would, in time," Forest remarked. "They must have
+been interesting experiences. Now what do these mean to
+you?&mdash;Thunder Lake&mdash;Abner Darby&mdash;Edith
+Darby&mdash;MacLean's College----"</p>
+<p>Ben relaxed, focusing his attention on the names. For the
+instant the scene about him, the anxious, interested faces, faded
+from his consciousness. Thunder Lake! Somewhere, some time, Thunder
+Lake had had the most intimate associations with his life. The name
+stirred him and moved him; dim voices whispered in his ears about
+it, but he couldn't quite catch what they said. He groped and
+reached in vain.</p>
+<p>There was no doubt but that an under-consciousness had full
+knowledge of the name and all that it meant. But it simply could
+not reach that knowledge up into his conscious mind.</p>
+<p>Abner Darby! It was curious what a flood of tenderness swept
+through him as, whispering, he repeated the name. Some one old and
+white-haired had been named Abner Darby: some one whom he had once
+worshipped with the fervor of boyhood, but who had leaned on his
+own, strong shoulders in latter years. Since his own name was
+Darby, Abner Darby was, in all probability, his father; but his
+reasoning intelligence, rather than his memory, told him so.</p>
+<p>The name of Edith Darby conjured up in his mind a childhood
+playmate,&mdash;a girl with towzled yellow curls and chubby,
+confiding little hands.... But these dim memory-pictures went no
+further: there were no later visions of Edith as a young woman,
+blossoming with virgin beauty. They stopped short, and he had a
+deep, compelling sense of grief. The child, unquestionably a
+sister, had likely died in early years. The third name of the
+three, MacLean's College, called up no memories whatever.</p>
+<p>"I can hardly say that I remember much about them," he responded
+at last. "I think they'll come plainer, though, the more I think
+about them. I just get the barest, vague ideas."</p>
+<p>"They'll strengthen in time, I'm sure," Forest told him. "Put
+them out of your mind, for now. Let it be blank." The alienist
+again leaned toward him, his eyes searching. There ensued an
+instant's pause, possessing a certain quality of suspense. Then
+Forest spoke quickly, sharply. "<i>Wolf</i> Darby!"</p>
+<p>In response a curious tremor passed over Ben's frame, giving in
+some degree the effect of a violent start. "<i>Wolf</i> Darby," he
+repeated hesitantly. "Why do you call me that?"</p>
+<p>"The very fact that you know the name refers to you, not some
+one else, shows that that blunted memory of yours has begun to
+function in some degree. Now think. What do you know about 'Wolf'
+Darby?"</p>
+<p>Ben tried in vain to find an answer. A whole world of meaning
+lingered just beyond the reach of his groping mind; but always it
+eluded him. It was true, however, that the name gave him a certain
+sense of pleasure and pride, as if it had been used in compliment
+to some of his own traits. Far away and long ago, men had called
+<i>him</i> "Wolf" Darby: he felt that perhaps the name had carried
+far, through many sparsely settled districts. But what had been the
+occasion for it he did not know.</p>
+<p>He described these dim memory pictures; and Forest's air of
+satisfaction seemed to imply that his own theories in regard to
+Ben's case were receiving justification. He appeared quite a little
+flushed, deeply intent, when he turned to the next feature of the
+examination. He suddenly spoke quietly to old Ezra Melville; and
+the latter put a small, cardboard box into his hands.</p>
+<p>"I want you to see what I have here," Forest told Ben. "They
+were your own possessions once&mdash;you sent them yourself to
+Abner Darby, your late father&mdash;and I want you to see if you
+remember them."</p>
+<p>Ben's eyes fastened on the box; and the others saw a queer
+drawing of the lines of his face, a curious tightening and clasping
+of his fingers. There was little doubt but that his
+subconsciousness had full cognizance of the contents of that box.
+He was trembling slightly, too&mdash;in excitement and
+expectation&mdash;and Ezra Melville, suddenly standing erect, was
+trembling too. The moment was charged with the uttermost
+suspense.</p>
+<p>Evidently this was the climax in the examination. Even McNamara,
+the Governor, was breathless with interest in his chair; Forest had
+the rapt look of a scientist in some engrossing experiment. He
+opened the box, taking therefrom a roll of white cotton. This he
+slowly unrolled, revealing two small, ribboned ornaments of gold or
+bronze.</p>
+<p>Ben's starting eyes fastened on them. No doubt he recognized
+them. A look of veritable anguish swept his brown face, and all at
+once small drops of moisture appeared on his brow and through the
+short hairs at his temples. The dark scar at his temple was
+suddenly brightly red from the pounding blood beneath.</p>
+<p>"The Victoria Cross, of course," he said slowly, brokenly. "I
+won it, didn't I&mdash;the day&mdash;that day at Ypres&mdash;the
+day my men were trapped&mdash;"</p>
+<p>His words faltered then. The wheels of <i>his</i> memory,
+starting into motion, were stilled once more. Again the great
+darkness dropped over him; there were only the medals left in their
+roll of cotton, and the broken fragments of a story&mdash;of some
+wild, stirring event of the war just gone&mdash;remaining in his
+mind. Yet to Forest the experiment was an unqualified success.</p>
+<p>"There's no doubt of it!" he exclaimed. He turned to McNamara,
+the Governor. "His brain is just as sound as yours or mine. With
+the right environment, the right treatment, he'd be on the straight
+road to recovery. In a general way of speaking he has recovered
+now, largely, from the purely temporary trouble that he had
+before."</p>
+<p>McNamara focused an intent gaze first on Ben, then on the
+alienist. "It is, then&mdash;as you guessed."</p>
+<p>"Absolutely. The night of his arrest marked the end of his
+trouble; you might say that his brain simply snapped back into
+health and began to function normally again, after a period of
+temporary mania from shell-shock. It is true that his memory was
+left blank, but there doesn't seem to be any organic reason for it
+to be blank&mdash;other than lack of incentive to remember. Catch
+me up, if you don't follow me. In other words, he has been slowly
+convalescing since that night: under the proper stimuli I have no
+doubt that everything would come back to him."</p>
+<p>"And our friend here&mdash;Melville&mdash;offers to supply those
+stimuli."</p>
+<p>"Exactly. And it's up to you to say whether he gets a
+chance."</p>
+<p>Thoughtfully the executive drummed his desk with his pencil.
+Presently a smile, markedly boyish and pleasant, broke over his
+face. More than once, in the line of duty imposed by his high
+office, he had been obliged to make decisions contrary to every
+dictate of mercy. He was all the more pleased at this opportunity
+to do, with a clear conscience, the thing that his kindness
+prompted. He turned slowly in his chair.</p>
+<p>"Darby, I suppose you followed what the doctor said?" he asked
+easily.</p>
+<p>"Fairly well, I think."</p>
+<p>"I'll review it, if I may. It seems, Ben, that you have been the
+victim of a strange set of unfortunate circumstances. Due to the
+efforts of an old family friend&mdash;a most devoted and earnest
+friend if I may say so&mdash;we've looked up your record, and now
+we know more about you than you know about yourself. You served in
+France with Canadian troops and there, you will be proud to know,
+you won among other honors the highest honor that the Government of
+England can award a hero. There you were shell-shocked, in the last
+months of the war.</p>
+<p>"You did not return to your home. Shell-shock, Forest tells me,
+is a curious thing, resulting in many forms of mania. Yours led you
+into crime. For some months you lived as a desperate criminal in
+Seattle. You came to yourself in the act of breaking into a bank,
+only to find that your memory of not only your days of crime but
+all that had gone before was left a blank. That night, as you know,
+marked your arrest.</p>
+<p>"Forest has just explained that you are organically
+sound&mdash;that the recovery of your memory is just a matter of
+time and the proper stimuli. Now, Ben, it isn't the purpose of this
+State to punish men when they are not responsible for their deeds.
+Melville tells me that your record, in your own home, was the best;
+your war record alone, I believe, would entitle you to the limit of
+mercy from the State. I don't see how we can hold you responsible
+for deeds done while you were mentally disabled from
+shell-shock.</p>
+<p>"All you need for complete recovery, to call everything back in
+your mind, is the proper stimuli. At least that is the opinion of
+Doctor Forest. What those proper stimuli are of course no one knows
+for sure&mdash;but Doctor Forest has a theory; and I think he will
+tell you that he will share the credit for it with the same man who
+has been your friend all the way through. They think they know what
+is best for you. The final decision has been put up to me as to
+whether or not they shall be permitted to give it a trial.</p>
+<p>"This good friend of yours has offered to try to put it through.
+He has a plan outlined that he'll tell you of later, that will not
+only be the best possible influence toward recalling your memory,
+but will also give you a clean, new start in life. A chance for
+every success.</p>
+<p>"So you needn't return to Walla Walla, Darby. I'm going to
+parole you&mdash;under the charge of your benefactor. Melville,
+from now on it's up to you."</p>
+<p>The little, withered gray man looked very solemn as he rose. The
+others were stricken instantly solemn too, surprised that the droll
+smile they were so used to seeing had died on the homely, kindly
+face. Even his twinkling eyes were sobered too.</p>
+<p>Vaguely amused, yet without scorn, McNamara and Forest got up to
+shake his hand. "I'll look after him," Melville assured them.
+"Never fear for that."</p>
+<p>Slight as he was, wasted by the years, his was a figure of
+unmistakable dignity as he thanked them, gravely and earnestly, for
+their kindness in Ben's behalf. Soon after he and his young charge
+went out together.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="III"></a>
+<h2>III</h2>
+<p>There was a great house-cleaning in the dome of the heavens one
+memorable night that flashed like a jewel from the murky desolation
+of a rainy spring. The little winds came in troops, some from the
+sea, some with loads of balsam from the great forests of the
+Olympic Peninsula, and some, quite tired out, from the stretching
+sage plains to the east, and they swept the sky of clouds as a
+housekeeper sweeps the ceiling of cobwebs. Not a wisp, not one
+trailing streamer remained.</p>
+<p>The Seattle citizenry, for the first time in some weeks,
+recalled the existence of the stars. These emerged in legions and
+armies, all the way from the finest diamond dust to great, white
+spheres that seemed near enough to reach up and touch. Little
+forgotten stars that had hidden away since Heaven knows when in the
+deepest recesses of the skies came out to join in the celebration.
+Aged men, half blind, beheld so many that they thought their sight
+was returning to them, and youths saw whole constellations that
+they had never beheld before. They continued their high revels
+until a magnificent moon rose in the east, too big and too bright
+to compete with.</p>
+<p>It was not just a crescent moon, about to fade away, or even a
+rain moon&mdash;one of those standing straight up in the sky so
+that water can run out as out of a dipper. It was almost at its
+full, large and nearly round, and it made the whole city, which is
+rather like other cities in the daylight, seem a place of
+enchantment. It was so bright that the electric signs along Second
+Avenue were not even counter-attractions.</p>
+<p>No living creature who saw it remained wholly unmoved by it.
+Wary young men, crafty and slick as foxes, found themselves
+proposing to their sweethearts before they could catch themselves;
+and maidens who had looked forward to some years yet of independent
+gaiety found themselves accepting. Old tom-cats went wooing; old
+spinsters got out old letters; old husbands thought to return and
+kiss their wives before venturing down to old, moth-eaten clubs.
+Old dogs, too well-bred to howl, were lost and absent-minded with
+dreams that were older than all the rest of these things put
+together.</p>
+<p>But to no one in the city was the influence of the moon more
+potent than to Ben Darby, once known as "Wolf" Darby through
+certain far-spreading districts, and now newly come from the State
+capital, walking Seattle's streets with his ward and benefactor,
+Ezra Melville. No matter how faltering was his memory in other
+regards, the moon, at least, was an old acquaintance. He had known
+it in the nights when its light had probed into his barred cell;
+but his intimate acquaintance with it had begun long, long before
+that. Not even the names that the alienist, Forest, had
+spoken&mdash;the names of places and people close to his own
+heart&mdash;stirred his memory like the sight of the mysterious
+sphere rolling through the empty places of the sky. It recalled,
+clearer than any other one thing, the time and place of his early
+years.</p>
+<p>He could not put into words just how it affected him. From first
+to last, even through his days of crime, it had been the one thing
+constant&mdash;the unchanging symbol&mdash;that in any manner
+connected his present with his shadowed past. It had served to
+recall in him, more than any other one thing, the fact that there
+was a past to look for&mdash;the assurance that somewhere, far
+away, he had been something more than a reckless criminal in city
+slums. The love he had for it was an old love, proving to him
+conclusively that his past life had been intimately associated,
+some way, with moonlight falling in open places. Yet the mood that
+was wakened in him went even farther. It was as if the sight of the
+argent satellite stirred and moved deep-buried instincts innate in
+him, in no way connected with any experience of his immediate life.
+Rather it was as if his love for it were a racial love, reaching
+back beyond his own life: something inborn in him. It was as if he
+were recalling it, not alone from his own past, but from a racial
+existence a thousand-thousand years before his own birth. His
+memory was strangely stifled, but, oh, he remembered the moon!
+Forest had spoken of stimuli! The mere sight of the blue-white
+beams was the best possible stimulus to call him to himself.</p>
+<p>Ezra Melville and he walked under it, talking little at first,
+and mostly the old, blue twinkling eyes watched his face. Seemingly
+with no other purpose than to escape the bright glare of the street
+lights they walked northward along the docks, below Queen Anne
+Hill, passed old Rope Walk, through the suburb of Ballard, finally
+emerging on the Great Northern Railroad tracks heading toward
+Vancouver and the Canadian border. For all that Ben's long legs had
+set a fast pace Melville kept cheerfully beside him throughout the
+long walk, seemingly without trace of fatigue.</p>
+<p>They paused at last at a crossing, and Ben faced the open
+fields. Evidently, before crime had claimed him, he had been deeply
+sensitive to nature's beauty. Ezra saw him straighten, his dark,
+vivid face rise; his quiet talk died on his lips. Evidently the
+peaceful scene before him went home to him very straight. He was
+very near thralldom from some quality of beauty that dwelt here,
+some strange, deep appeal that the moonlit realm made to his
+heart.</p>
+<p>For the moment Ben had forgotten the old, tried companion at his
+side. Vague memories stirred him, trying to convey him an urgent
+message. He could all but hear: the sight of the meadows,
+ensilvered under the moon, were making many things plain to him
+which before were shadowed and vague. The steel rails gleamed like
+platinum, the tree tops seemed to have white, molten metal poured
+on them. It was hard to take his eyes off those moonlit trees. They
+got to him, deep inside; thrilling to him, stirring. Perhaps in his
+Lost Land the moon shone on the trees this same way.</p>
+<p>There were no prison walls around him to-night. The high
+buildings behind him, pressing one upon another, had gone to
+sustain the feeling of imprisonment, but it had quite left him now.
+There were no cold, watchful lights,&mdash;only the moon and the
+stars and an occasional mellow gleam from the window of a home.
+There was scarcely any sound at all; not even a stir&mdash;as of
+prisoners tossing and uneasy in their cells. His whole body felt
+rested.</p>
+<p>The air was marvelously sweet. Clover was likely in blossom in
+nearby fields. He breathed deep, an unknown delight stealing over
+him. He stole on farther, into the mystery of the
+night&mdash;ravished, tingling and almost breathless from an inner
+and inexplicable excitement. Melville walked quietly beside
+him.</p>
+<p>Forest had given over the case: it was Melville's time for
+experiments to-night. All the way out he had watched his patient,
+sounding him, studying his reactions and all that he had beheld had
+gone to strengthen his own convictions. And now, after this moment
+in the meadows, the old man was ready to go on with his plan.</p>
+<p>"Let's set down here," he invited casually. Ben started,
+emerging from his revery. The old man's cheery smile had returned,
+in its full charm, to his droll face. "You'll want to know what
+it's all about&mdash;and what I have in mind. And I sure think
+you've done mighty well to hold onto your patience this long."</p>
+<p>He sat himself on the rail, and Ben quietly took a seat beside
+him. "There are plenty of things I'd like to know," he
+admitted.</p>
+<p>"And plenty of things I ain't goin' to tell you,
+neither&mdash;for the reason that Forest advised against it," Ezra
+went on. "I don't understand it&mdash;but he says you've got a lot
+better chance to get your memory workin' clear again if things are
+recalled to you by the aid of 'stimuli' instead of having any one
+tell you. I've agreed to supply the 'stimuli.'</p>
+<p>"I don't see any harm in tellin' you that the guesses you've
+already made are right. Your name is Ben Darby&mdash;and you used
+to be known as 'Wolf' Darby&mdash;for reasons that sooner or later
+you may know. Abner Darby was your father. Edith Darby was your
+sister that ain't no more. You went awhile to MacLean's College, in
+Ontario.</p>
+<p>"Now, Ben, I'm going to put a proposition up to you. I'm hoping
+you'll see fit to accept it. And I might as well say right here,
+that while it's the best plan possible to bring you back your
+memory, and that while it offers just the kind of 'stimuli' you're
+supposed to need, neither 'stimuli' nor stimulus or stimulum has
+got very much to do with it. I argued that point mighty strong
+because I knew it would appeal to Forest, and through him, to the
+governor. I don't see it makes a whale of a lot of difference
+whether you get your memory back or not.</p>
+<p>"Maybe you don't foller me. But you know and I know you're all
+right now, remembering clear enough everything that happened since
+you was arrested, and I don't see what difference it makes whether
+or not you remember who your great-aunt was, and the scrapes you
+got in as a kid. You can talk and walk and figger, get by in any
+comp'ny, and you suit me for a buddy just as you are. However,
+Forest seemed to think it was mighty important&mdash;and it may
+be.</p>
+<p>"The reason I'm goin' to take you where I'm goin' to take you is
+for your own good. I'm sort of responsible for you, bein' your
+folks are dead. I know you from head to heel, and I think I know
+what's good for you, what you can do and what you can't do and
+where you succeed and where you fail. And I'll say right here you
+wasn't born to be no gangman in a big city like Seattle. You'll
+find that isn't your line at all."</p>
+<p>"I'm willing to take your word for that, Mr. Melville," Ben
+interposed quietly.</p>
+<p>"And I might say, now a good time as any, to let up on the
+'<i>Mister</i>.' My name is Ezra Melville, and I've been known as
+'Ezram' as long as I can remember, to my friends. The Darbys in
+particular called me that, and you're a Darby.</p>
+<p>"I'll say in the beginning I can't do for you all I'd like to
+do, simply because I haven't the means. The first time you saw me I
+was walkin' ties, and you'll see me walkin' some more of 'em before
+you're done. I know you ain't got any money, and due to the poker
+habit I ain't got much either&mdash;in spite of the fact I've done
+two men's work for something over forty years. On this expedition
+to come we'll have to go on the cheaps. No Pullmans, no
+hotels&mdash;sleeping out the hay when we're caught out at night.
+Maybe ridin' the blinds, whenever we can. I'm awful sorry, but it
+jest can't be helped. But I will say&mdash;when it comes to work I
+can do my full share, without kickin'."</p>
+<p>Ben stared in amazement. It was almost as if the old man were
+pleading a case, rather than giving glorious alms to one to whom
+hope had seemed dead. Ben tried to cut in, to ask questions, but
+the old man's words swept his own away.</p>
+<p>"To begin at the beginning, I've got a brother&mdash;leastwise I
+had him a few weeks ago&mdash;Hiram Melville by name," Ezram went
+on. "You'd remember him well enough. He was a prospector up to a
+place called Snowy Gulch&mdash;a town way up in the Caribou
+Mountains, in Canada. Some weeks ago, herdin' cattle in Eastern
+Oregon, I got a letter from him, and started north, runnin' into
+you on the way up. The letter's right here."</p>
+<p>He drew a white envelope from his coat pocket, opening it
+slowly. "This is a real proposition, son," he went on in a sobered
+voice. "I'm mighty glad that I've got something, at least worth
+lookin' into, to let you in on. I only wish it was more."</p>
+<p>"Why should you want to let me in on anything?" Ben asked
+clearly.</p>
+<p>The direct question received only a stare of blank amazement
+from Ezram. "Why should I&mdash;" he repeated, seemingly surprised
+out of his life by the question. "Shucks, and quit interruptin' me.
+But I'll say right here I've got my own ideas, if you must know.
+Didn't I hear that while you was rampin' around the underworld, you
+showed yourself a mighty good fighter? Well, there's likely to be
+some fightin' where we're goin', and I want some one to do it
+besides myself. If there ain't fightin', at least they'll be
+worklots of work. Maybe I'm gettin' a little too old to do much of
+it. I want a buddy&mdash;some one who will go halfway with me."</p>
+<p>"Therefore I suppose you go to the 'pen' to find one," Ben
+commented, wholly unconvinced.</p>
+<p>"I'm going to make this proposition good," Ezram went on as if
+he had not heard, "probably a fourth&mdash;maybe even a
+third&mdash;to you. And I ain't such a fool as I look, neither. I
+know the chances of comin' out right on it are twice as good if
+somebody young and strong, and who can fight, is in on it with me.
+Listen to this."</p>
+<p>Opening the letter, he read laboriously:</p>
+<div class="ltr">
+<p>Snowy Gulch, B.C.</p>
+<p>DEAR BROTHER EZRA:&mdash;</p>
+<p>I rite this with what I think is my dying hand. It's my will
+too. I'm at the hotel at Snowy Gulch&mdash;and not much more time.
+You know I've been hunting a claim. Well, I found it&mdash;rich a
+pocket as any body want, worth a quarter million any how and in a
+district where the Snowy Gulch folks believe there ain't a grain of
+gold.</p>
+<p>It's yours. Come up and get it quick before some thieves up hear
+jump it. Lookout for Jeffery Neilson and his gang they seen some of
+my dust. I'm too sick to go to recorder in Bradleyburg and record
+claim. Get copy of this letter to carry, put this in some safe
+place. The only condition is you take good care of Fenris, the pet
+I raised from a pup. You'll find him and my gun at Steve
+Morris's.</p>
+<p>I felt myself going and just did get hear. You get supplies
+horses at Snowy Gulch go up Poor Man Creek through Spruce Pass over
+to Yuga River. Go down Yuga River past first rapids along still
+place to first creek you'll know it cause there's an old cabin just
+below and my canoe landing. Half mile up, in creek bed, is the
+pocket and new cabin. And don't tell no one in Snowy Gulch who you
+are and where you going. Go quick brother Ez and put up a stone for
+me at Snowy Gulch.</p>
+<p>Your brother</p>
+<p>HIRAM MELVILLE.</p>
+</div>
+<br>
+<p>There was a long pause after Ezram's voice had died away. Ben's
+eyes glowed in the moonlight.</p>
+<p>"And you haven't heard&mdash;whether your brother is still
+alive?"</p>
+<p>"I got a wire the hotel man sent me. It reached me weeks before
+the letter came, and I guess he must have died soon after he wrote
+it. I suppose you see what he means when he says to carry a copy of
+this letter, instead of the original."</p>
+<p>"Of course&mdash;because it constitutes his will, your legal
+claim. Just the fact that you are his brother would be claim
+enough, I should think, but since the claim isn't recorded, this
+simplifies matters for you. You'd better make a copy of it and you
+can leave it in some safe place. And of course this claim is what
+you offered to let me in on."</p>
+<p>"That's it. Not much, but all what I got. What I want to know
+is&mdash;if it's a go."</p>
+<p>"Wait just a minute. You've asked me to go in with you on a
+scheme that looks like a clear quarter of a million, even though I
+can't give anything except my time and my work. You found me in a
+penitentiary, busted and all in&mdash;a thief and a gangster.
+Before we go any further, tell me what service I've done you, what
+obligation you're under to me, that gives me a right to accept so
+much from you?"</p>
+<p>It might have been in the moonlight that Ezram's eyes glittered
+perceptibly. "You're in my charge," he grinned. "I guess you ain't
+got any say comin'."</p>
+<p>"Wait&mdash;wait." Ben sprang to his feet, and caught by his
+earnestness, Ezram got up too. "I sure&mdash;I sure appreciate the
+trust you put in me," Ben went on slowly. "For my own part I'd give
+everything I've got and all I'd hope to ever get to go with you.
+It's a chance such as I never dared believe would come to me
+again&mdash;a chance for big success&mdash;a chance to go away and
+get a new start in a country where I feel, instinctively, that I'd
+make good. But that's only the beginning of it."</p>
+<p>The dark vivid eyes seemed to glow in the soft light. "Forgive
+me if I talk frank; and if it sounds silly I can't help it," Ben
+continued. "You've never been in prison&mdash;with a five-year
+sentence hanging over you&mdash;and nobody giving a damn. For some
+reason I can't guess you've already done more for me than I can
+ever hope to repay. You got me out of prison, you wakened hope and
+self-respect in me when I thought they were dead, and you've proved
+a friend when I'd given up any thought of ever knowing human
+friendship again. I was down and out, Ezram. Anything you want me
+to do I'll do to the last ditch. You know I can fight&mdash;you
+know how a man can fight if it's his last chance. I've got some
+bonus money coming to me from the Canadian Government&mdash;and
+I'll put that in too, because we'll be needing horses and supplies
+and things that cost money. But I can't take all that from a
+stranger. You must know how it is. A man can't, while he's young
+and strong, accept charity&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Good Lord, it ain't charity!" the old man shouted, drowning him
+out. "I'm gettin' as much pleasure out of it as you." His voice
+sank again; and there was no line of mirth in his face.</p>
+<p>"It was long ago, in Montreal," Ezram went on, after a pause. "I
+knew your mother, as a girl. She married a better man, but I told
+her that every wish of hers was law to me. You're her son."</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="IV"></a>
+<h2>IV</h2>
+<br>
+<p>Night is always a time of mystery in Snowy Gulch&mdash;that
+little cluster of frame shacks lost and far in the northern reaches
+of the Caribou Range. Shadows lie deep, pale lights spring up here
+and there in windows, with gaping, cavernous darkness between; a
+wet mist is clammy on the face. At such times one forgets that here
+is a town, an enduring outpost of civilization, and can remember
+only the forests that stretch so heavy and dark on every side.
+Indeed the town seems simply swallowed up in these forests,
+immersed in their silence, overspread by their gloom, and the red
+gods themselves walk like sentries in the main street.</p>
+<p>The breath that is so fragrant and strange between the fronting
+rows of shacks is simply that of the forest: inept the woodsman who
+would not recognize it at once. The silence is a forest silence,
+and if the air is tense and electric, it is because certain
+wilderness forces that no white man can name but which surely dwell
+in the darker thickets have risen and are in possession.</p>
+<p>It is not a time when human beings are at their best and
+strongest. There is an instinctive, haunting feeling which, though
+not fear, wakens a feeling of inadequacy and meekness. Only a
+few&mdash;those who have given their love and their lives to the
+wild places&mdash;have any idea of sympathetic understanding with
+it. Among these was Beatrice Neilson, and she herself did not fully
+understand the dreams and longings that swept her ever at the fall
+of the mysterious wilderness night.</p>
+<p>The forest had never grown old to her. Its mystery was undying.
+Born in its shadow, her love had gone out to it in her earliest
+years, and it held her just as fast to-day. All her
+dreams&mdash;the natural longings of an imaginative girl born to
+live in an uninhabited portion of the earth&mdash;were inextricably
+bound up in it; whatever plans she had for the future always
+included it. Not that she was blind to its more terrible qualities:
+its might and its utter remorselessness that all foresters, sooner
+or later, come to recognize. Her thews were strong, and she loved
+it all the more for the tests that it put to its children.</p>
+<p>She was a daughter of the forests, and its mark was on her.
+To-night the same moon that, a thousand miles to the south, was
+lighting the way for Ben and Ezram on their northern journey, shone
+on her as she hastened down the long, shadowed street toward her
+father's shack, revealing her forest parentage for all to see. The
+quality could be discerned in her very carriage&mdash;swift and
+graceful and silent&mdash;vaguely suggesting that of the wild
+creatures themselves. But there was no coarseness or ruggedness
+about her face and form such as superficial observation might have
+expected. Physically she was like a deer, strong, straight-limbed,
+graceful, slender rather than buxom, dainty of hands and feet. A
+perfect constitution and healthful surroundings had done all this.
+And good fairies had worked further magic: as she passed beneath
+the light at the door of the rude hotel there was revealed an
+unquestioned and rather startling facial beauty.</p>
+<p>It seemed hardly fitting in this stern, rough land&mdash;the
+soft contour and delicacy of the girl's features. It had come
+straight from her mother, a woman who, in gold-rush days, had been
+the acknowledged beauty of the province. Nor was it merely the
+attractive, animal beauty that is so often seen in healthy, rural
+girls. Rather its loveliness was of a mysterious, haunting kind
+that one associates with old legends and far distant lands.</p>
+<p>Perhaps its particular appeal lay in her eyes. They seemed to be
+quite marvelously deep and clear, so darkly gray that they looked
+black in certain lights, and they were so shadowed and pensive that
+sometimes they gave the image of actual sadness. For all the
+isolation of her home she was no stranger to romance; but the
+romance that was to be seen, like a gentleness, in her face was
+that of the great, shadowed forest in which she dwelt.</p>
+<p>Pensive, wistful, enthralled in a dreamy sadness,&mdash;what
+could be nearer the tone and pitch of the northern forest itself?
+There might have been also depths of latent passion such as is
+known to all who live the full, strong life of the woods. The lines
+were soft about her lips and eyes, indicating a marked sweetness
+and tenderness of nature; but these traits did not in the least
+deny her parentage. No one but the woodsman knows how gentle, how
+hospitably tender, the forest may be at times.</p>
+<p>She had fine, dark straight brows that served to darken her
+eyes, dark brown hair waving enough to soften every line of her
+face, a girlish throat and a red mouth surprisingly tender and
+childish. As might have been expected her garb was neither rich nor
+smart, but it was pretty and well made and evidently fitted for her
+life: a loose "middy," blue skirt, woolen stockings and rather
+solid little boots.</p>
+<p>As she passed the door of the hotel one of the younger men who
+had been lounging about the stove strode out and accosted her. She
+half-turned, recognized his face in the lamplight, and frankly
+recoiled.</p>
+<p>She had been lost in dreams before, vaguely pensive, for
+Beatrice had been watching the darkness overspread and encompass
+the dark fringe of the spruce forest that enclosed the town. Now,
+because she recognized the man and knew his type&mdash;born of the
+wild places even as herself, but a bastard breed&mdash;the tender,
+wistful half-smile sped from her childish mouth and her eyes grew
+alert and widened as if with actual fear. She halted, evidently in
+doubt as to her course.</p>
+<p>"Going home?" the man asked. "I'm going up to see your pop, and
+I'll see you there, if you don't mind."</p>
+<p>Ray Brent's voice had an undeniable ring of power. It was deeply
+bass, evidently the voice of a passionate, reckless, brutal man.
+The covetous caress of his thick hand upon her arm indicated that
+he was wholly sure of himself in regard to her.</p>
+<p>She stared with growing apprehension into his even-featured, not
+unhandsome face. Evidently she found it hard to meet his
+eyes,&mdash;eyes wholly lacking in humor and kindliness, but
+unquestionably vivid and compelling under his heavy, dark brows.
+"I'm going home," she told him at last. "I guess, if you're going
+up to see Pop, you can walk along too."</p>
+<p>The man fell in beside her, his powerful frame overshadowing
+hers. It was plain at once that the manner of her consent did not
+in the least disturb him. "You're just letting me because I'm going
+up there anyway, eh?" he asked. "I'll walk along further than that
+with you before I'm done."</p>
+<p>The girl paused, as if in appeal. "Ray, we've thrashed that out
+long ago," she responded. "I wish you wouldn't keep talking about
+it. If you want to walk with me&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"All right, but you'll be changing your mind one of these days."
+Ray's voice rang in the silence, indicating utter indifference to
+the fact that many of the loungers on the street were listening to
+the little scene. "I've never seen anything I wanted yet that I
+didn't get&mdash;and I want you. Why don't you believe what your
+pop says about me? He thinks Ray Brent is the goods."</p>
+<p>"I'm not going to talk about it any more. I've already given you
+my answer&mdash;twenty times."</p>
+<p>The man talked on, but the girl walked with lifted chin,
+apparently not hearing. They followed the board sidewalk into the
+shadows, finally turning in at a ramshackle, three-room house that
+was perched on the hillside almost at the end of the street at the
+outer limits of the village.</p>
+<p>The girl turned to go in, but the man held fast to her arm.
+"Wait just a minute, Bee," he urged. "I've got one thing more to
+say to you."</p>
+<p>The girl looked into his face, now faintly illumined by the full
+moon that was rising, incredibly large and white, above the dark
+line of the spruce tops. For all the regularity of his rather
+handsome features, his was never an attractive face to her, even in
+first, susceptible girlhood; and in the moonlight it suddenly
+filled her with dread. Ray Brent was a dangerous type: imperious
+willed, slave to his most degenerate instincts, reckless, as free
+from moral restraint as the most savage creatures that roamed his
+native wilds. Now his facial lines appeared noticeably deep, dark
+like scars, and curious little flakes of iniquitous fire danced in
+his sunken eyes.</p>
+<p>"Just one minute, Bee," he went on, wholly rapt in his own,
+devouring desires. The dark passions of the man, always just under
+the skin, seemed to be getting out of bounds. "When I want
+something, I don't know how to quit till I get it. It's part of my
+nature. Your pop knows that&mdash;and that's why he's made me his
+pardner in a big deal."</p>
+<p>"If my father wants men like you&mdash;for his pardners, I can't
+speak for his judgment."</p>
+<p>"Wait just a minute. He's told me&mdash;and I know he's told you
+too&mdash;that I'd suit him all right for a son-in-law. He and I
+agree on that. And this country ain't like the places you read
+about in your story books&mdash;it's a man's country. Oh, I know
+you well enough. It's time you got down to brass tacks. If you're
+going to be a northern woman, you've got to be content with the
+kind of men that grow up here. Up here, the best man wins, the
+hardest, strongest man. That's why I'm going to win you."</p>
+<p>Because he was secretly attacking her dreams, the dearest part
+of her being, she felt the first surge of rising anger.</p>
+<p>"You're not the best man here," she told him, straightening. "If
+you were, I'd move out. You may be the strongest in your body, and
+certainly the hardest, going further to get your own way&mdash;but
+a real man would break you in two in a minute. Some one more than a
+brute to beat horses to death and jump claims. I'm going in now.
+Please take away your hand."</p>
+<p>"One thing more. This is the North. We do things in a man's way
+up here&mdash;not a story-book way. The strong man gets what he
+wants&mdash;and I want you. And I'll get you, too&mdash;just like I
+get this kiss."</p>
+<p>He suddenly snatched her toward him. A powerful man; she was
+wholly helpless in his grasp. His arms went about her and he
+pressed his lips to hers&mdash;three times. Then he released her,
+his eyes glowing like red coals.</p>
+<p>But she was a northern girl, trained to self-defense. As he
+freed her, her strong, slender arm swung out and up&mdash;with
+really startling force. Her half-closed hand struck with a sharp,
+drawing motion across his lips, a blow that extinguished his
+laughter as the wind extinguishes a match-blaze.</p>
+<p>"You little&mdash;devil!"</p>
+<p>The tempest of the forest was upon her, and her eyes blazed as
+she hastened around the house.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="V"></a>
+<h2>V</h2>
+<p>Jeffery Neilson and Chan Heminway were already in session when
+Ray Brent, his face flushed and his eyes still angry and red,
+joined them. Neilson was a tall, gaunt man, well past
+fifty&mdash;from his manner evidently the leader of the three. He
+had heavy, grizzled brows and rather quiet eyes, a man of deep
+passions and great resolve. Yet his lean face had nothing of the
+wickedness of Brent's. There had evidently been some gentling,
+redeeming influence in his life, and although it was not in the
+ascendancy, it had softened his smile and the hard lines about his
+lips. Notorious as he was through the northern provinces he was
+infinitely to be preferred to Chan Heminway, who sat at his left
+who, a weaker man than either Ray or Neilson, was simply a tool in
+the latter's hand,&mdash;a smashing sledge or a cruel blade as his
+master wished. He was vicious without strength, brutal without
+self-control. Locks of his blond hair, unkempt, dropped over his
+low forehead into his eyes.</p>
+<p>"Where's Beatrice?" Neilson asked at once. "I thought I heard
+her voice."</p>
+<p>Ray searched for a reply, and in the silence all three heard the
+girl's tread as she went around the house. "She's going in the back
+door. Likely she didn't want to disturb us."</p>
+<p>Ray looked up to find Neilson's eyes firmly fixed upon his face.
+Try hard as he might he couldn't restrain a surge of color in his
+cheeks. "Yes, and what's the rest of it?" Neilson asked.</p>
+<p>"Nothing&mdash;I know of."</p>
+<p>"You've got some white marks on your cheeks&mdash;where it ain't
+red. The kid can slap, can't she&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Ray flushed deeper, but the lines of Neilson's face began to
+deepen and draw. Then his voice broke in a great, hearty chuckle.
+He had evidently tried to restrain it&mdash;but it got away from
+him at last. No man could look at him, his twinkling eyes and his
+joyous face, and doubt but that this soft-eyed, strong-handed
+daughter of his was the joy and pride of his life. He had heard the
+ringing slap through the ramshackle walls of the house, and for all
+that he favored Ray as his daughter's suitor, the independence and
+spirit behind the action had delighted him to the core.</p>
+<p>But Ray's sense of humor did not run along these lines. The
+first danger signal of rising anger leaped like a little, hot spark
+into his eyes. Many times before Ray had been obliged to curb his
+wrath against Neilson: to-night he found it more difficult than
+ever. The time would come, he felt, when he would no longer be
+obliged to submit to Neilson's dictation. Sometime the situation
+would be reversed; he would be leader instead of underling, taking
+the lion's share of the profit of their enterprises instead of the
+left-overs, and when that time came he would not be obliged to
+endure Neilson's jests in silence. Neilson himself, as he eyed the
+stiffening figure, had no realization of Ray's true attitude toward
+him. He thought him a willing helper, a loyal partner, and he would
+not have sat with such content in his chair if he could have beheld
+the smoldering fires of jealousy and ambition in the other's
+breasts The time would come when Ray would assert himself, he
+thought&mdash;when Beatrice was safe in his hands.</p>
+<p>"It may seem like a joke to you, but it doesn't to me," he
+answered shortly. Nor was he able to keep his anger entirely from
+his voice. "Everything that girl does you think is perfect. Instead
+of encouraging her in her meanness you ought to help me out." His
+tones harshened, and he lost the fine edge of his self-control.
+"I've stood enough nonsense from that little&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Seemingly, Neilson made no perceptible movement in his chair.
+What change there was showed merely in the lines of his face, and
+particularly in the light that dwelt in the gray, straightforward
+eyes. "Don't finish it," he ordered simply.</p>
+<p>For an instant eyes met eyes in bitter hatred&mdash;and Chan
+Heminway began to wonder just where he would seek cover in case
+matters got to a shooting stage. But Ray's gaze broke before that
+of his leader. "I'm not going to say anything I shouldn't," he
+protested sullenly. "But this doesn't look like you're helping out
+my case any. You told me you'd do everything you could for me. You
+even went so far as to say you'd take matters in your own
+hands&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"And I will, in reason. I'm keeping away the rest of the boys so
+you can have a chance. But if you think I'm going to tie her up to
+anybody against her will, you're barking up the wrong tree. She's
+my daughter, and her happiness happens to be my first object." Then
+his voice changed, good-humored again. "But cool down,
+boy&mdash;wait till you hear everything I've got to tell you, and
+you'll feel better. Of course, you know what it's about&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I suppose&mdash;Hiram Melville's claim."</p>
+<p>"That's it. Of course we don't know that he had a
+claim&mdash;but he had a pocket full of the most beautiful nuggets
+you ever want to see. No one knows that fact but me&mdash;I saw 'em
+by accident&mdash;and I got 'em now. You know he's always had an
+idea that the Yuga country was worth prospecting, but we always
+laughed at him. Of course it is a pocket country; but it's my
+opinion he found a pocket that would make many a placer look sick,
+before he died."</p>
+<p>"But he might have got the nuggets somewheres else&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Hold your horses. Where would he get 'em? There's something
+else suspicious too. He wrote a letter, the day before he died, and
+addressed it to Ezra Melville, somewhere in Oregon. He must just
+about got it by now&mdash;maybe a few days ago. He had the clerk
+mail it for him, and got him to witness it, saying it was his
+will&mdash;and what did that old hound have to will except a mine?
+Next day he wrote another letter somewhere too&mdash;but I didn't
+find out who it was to. If I'd had any gumption I'd got ahold of
+'em both. The point is&mdash;I'm convinced it's worth a trip, at
+least."</p>
+<p>"I should say it was worth a trip," Ray agreed. "And a fast one,
+too. There might be some competition&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"There won't be a rush, if that's what you mean. Everybody knows
+it's a pocket country, and the men in this town wouldn't any more
+get excited about the Yuga River&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"True enough&mdash;but that Ezra Melville will be showin' up one
+of these days. We want to be settin' pretty when he comes."</p>
+<p>"You've got the idea. It ought to be the easiest job we ever
+did. It's my idea he had his claim all laid out, monuments up and
+everything, and was on his way down to Bradleyburg to record it
+when he died. He just went out before he could make the rest of the
+trip. All we'll have to do is go up there, locate in his cabin, and
+sit tight."</p>
+<p>"Wait just a second." Ray was lost in thought. "There's an old
+cabin up that way somewhere&mdash;along that still place&mdash;on
+the river. It was a trapping cabin belonging to old Bill
+Foulks."</p>
+<p>"That's true enough&mdash;but it likely ain't near his mine.
+Boys, it's a clean, open-and-shut job&mdash;with absolutely nothing
+to interfere. If his brother does come up, he'll find us in
+possession&mdash;and nothing to do but go back. So to-morrow we'll
+load up and pack horses and light out."</p>
+<p>"Up Poor Man creek, through Spruce Pass&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Sure. Then over to the Yuga. Old Hiram was hunting down some
+kind of a scent in the vicinity of that old cabin you speak of,
+last heard of him. And I wouldn't be surprised, on second thought,
+if it wasn't his base of operations."</p>
+<p>"All easy enough," Ray agreed. He paused, and a queer,
+speculative look came into his wild-beast's eyes. "But what I don't
+see&mdash;how you can figure all this is going to help me out with
+Beatrice."</p>
+<p>Jeffery Neilson turned in his chair. "You can't, eh? You need
+spectacles. Just think a minute&mdash;say you had fifty or sixty
+thousand all your own&mdash;to spend on a wife and buy her clothes
+and automobiles. Don't you think that would make you more
+attractive to the feminine eye?"</p>
+<p>At first Ray made no apparent answer. He merely sat staring
+ahead. But plainly the words had wakened riot in his imagination.
+Such a sum meant <i>wealth</i>, the power his ambitious nature had
+always craved, idleness and the gratification of all his lusts. He
+was no stranger to greed, this degenerate son of the North. "It'd
+help some," he admitted in a low voice. "But what makes you think
+it would be worth that much?"</p>
+<p>"Because old Hiram talked a little, half-delirious, before he
+died. 'A quarter of a million,' he kept saying. 'Right there in
+sight&mdash;a quarter of a million.' If he really found that much
+stowed away in the rocks, that's fifty or sixty apiece for you and
+Chan."</p>
+<p>Ray's mind worked swiftly. Sixty thousand apiece&mdash;and that
+left one hundred and thirty thousand for their leader's portion.
+The old rage and jealousy that had preyed upon his mind so long
+swept over him, more compelling than ever. "Go on," he urged.
+"What's the rest of it?"</p>
+<p>"The second thing is&mdash;we'll need some one to cook, and look
+after us, when we get up there. Who should it be but Beatrice? She
+wouldn't want to stay here; you know how she loves the woods. And
+if you know anything about girls, you know that nothing counts like
+having 'em alone. There wouldn't be any of the other boys up there
+to trouble you. You'd have a clear field."</p>
+<p>Ray's dark eyes shone. "It'd help some," he admitted. "That
+means&mdash;hunt up an extra horse for her to-morrow."</p>
+<p>"No. I don't intend she should come up now. Not till we're
+settled."</p>
+<p>"Why not?"</p>
+<p>"Think a minute, and you'll see why not. You know how she
+regards this business of jumping claims. She's dead against it if
+any one could be&mdash;bless her heart!"</p>
+<p>"Don't go getting sentimental, Neilson."</p>
+<p>"And don't let that mouth of yours get you into trouble,
+either." Once more their eyes locked: once more Ray looked away. "I
+hope she'll always stay that way, too. As I say, she's dead against
+it, and she's been a little suspicious ever since that Jenkins
+deal. Besides, it wouldn't be any pleasure for her until we find a
+claim and get settled. When she comes up we'll be established in a
+couple of cabins&mdash;one for her and me and one for you
+two&mdash;and she won't know but that we made the original
+find."</p>
+<p>"How will she know just where to find us?"</p>
+<p>"We're bound to be somewhere near that old cabin on the Yuga.
+We'll set a date for her to come, and I can meet her there."</p>
+<p>It was, Ray was forced to admit, a highly commendable scheme. He
+sat back, contemplating all its phases. "It's slick enough," he
+agreed. "It ought to do the trick."</p>
+<p>But if he had known the girl's thoughts, as she sat alone in the
+back part of the house, he wouldn't have felt so confident. She was
+watching the moon over the spruce forest, and she was thinking,
+with repugnance in her heart, of the indignity to which she had
+been subjected at her father's door. Yet the kisses Ray had forced
+on her were no worse than his blasphemy of her dreams. The spirit
+of romance was abroad to-night&mdash;in the enchantment of the
+moon&mdash;and she was wistful and imaginative as never before.
+This was just the normal expression of her starved
+girlhood&mdash;the same childlike wistfulness with which a
+Cinderella might long for her prince&mdash;just as natural and as
+wholesome and as much a part of youth as laughter and
+happiness.</p>
+<p>"I won't believe him, I won't believe him," she told herself.
+Her thought turned to other channels, and her heart spoke its wish.
+"Wherever he is&mdash;sometime he'll come to me."</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="VI"></a>
+<h2>VI</h2>
+<p>At a little town at the end of steel Ben and Ezram ended the
+first lap of their journey. They had had good traveling these past
+days. Steadily they had gone north, through the tilled lands of
+Northern Washington, through the fertile valleys of lower British
+Columbia, traversing great mountain ranges and penetrating gloomy
+forests, and now had come to the bank of a north-flowing
+river,&mdash;a veritable flood and one of the monarch rivers of the
+North. Every hour their companionship had been more close and their
+hopes higher. Every waking moment Ben had been swept with
+thankfulness for the chance that had come to him.</p>
+<p>They had worked for their meals and passage&mdash;hard, manual
+toil&mdash;but it had seemed only play to them both. Sometimes they
+mended fence, sometimes helped at farm labor, and one gala morning,
+with entire good will and cheer, they beat into cleanliness every
+carpet in a widow's cottage. And the sign of the outcast was fading
+from Ben's flesh.</p>
+<p>The change was marked in his face. His eye seemed more clear and
+steadfast, his lips more firm, the lines of his face were not so
+hard and deep. His fellows of the underworld would have scarcely
+known him now,&mdash;his lips and chin darkening with beard and
+this new air of self-respect upon him. Perhaps they had forgotten
+him, but it was no less than he had done to them. The prison walls
+seemed already as if they hadn't been true. He loved every minute
+of the journey, freshness instead of filth, freedom instead of
+confinement, fragrant fields and blossoming flowers. Ever the stars
+and the moon, remembered of old, yielded him a peace and happiness
+beyond his power to tell. And his gratitude to Ezram grew
+apace.</p>
+<p>Besides self-confidence and the constant, slow unraveling of his
+memory problems, each day yielded rich gifts: no less than added
+trust in each other. Always they found each other steadfast,
+utterly to be relied upon. Ezram never regretted for a moment his
+offer to Ben. The young man had seemingly developed under his eye
+and was a real aid to him in all the problems of the journey.</p>
+<p>As the days passed, the whole tone and key of the land had
+seemed to change. They were full in the mountains now, snow
+gleaming on the heights, forests blue-black on the slopes; and
+Ben's response was a growing excitement that at first he could not
+analyze. The air was sweeter, more bracing, and sometimes he
+discerned a fleeting, delicate odor that drew him up short in his
+talk and held him entranced. There was a sparkle and stir in the
+air, unknown in the cities he had left; and to breathe it deeply
+thrilled him with an unexplainable happiness.</p>
+<p>Some way it was all familiar, all dear to him as if it had once
+been close to his life. The sparkle in the air was not new, only
+recalled: long and long ago he had wakened to find just such a
+delicate fragrance in his nostrils. But the key hadn't come to him
+yet. His memory pictures were ever stronger of outline, clearer in
+his mind's eye, yet they were still too dim for him to interpret
+them. In these days Ezram watched him closely, with a curious,
+intense interest.</p>
+<p>It was no longer pleasant to sleep out in the hay. For the sake
+of warmth alone they were obliged to hire their night's lodging at
+cheap hotels. Spring was full in the land they had left: it was
+just beginning here. The mountains, visible from the village of
+Saltsville where they left the railroad, were still swept with
+snow.</p>
+<p>Ben felt that he would have liked to take a day off at this
+point and venture with his companion into the high, wooded hills
+that fronted the town, but he agreed with Ezram that they could not
+spare the time. They swiftly made preparations for their journey
+down-river. A canoe was bought for a reasonable sum&mdash;they were
+told they had a good chance of selling it again when they left the
+river near Snowy Gulch&mdash;and at the general store they bought
+an axe, rudimentary fishing tackle, tobacco, blankets, and all
+manner of simpler provisions, such as flour, rice, bacon, coffee,
+canned milk, and sugar. And for a ridiculously small sum which he
+mysteriously produced from the pocket of his faded jeans Ezram
+bought a second-hand rifle&mdash;an ancient gun of large caliber
+but of enduring quality&mdash;and a box of shells to match.</p>
+<p>"Old Hiram left me a gun, but we'll each need one," Ezram
+explained. "And they tell me there's a chance to pick up game, like
+as not, goin' down the river."</p>
+<p>They would have need of good canoe-craft before the journey's
+end, the villagers told them. Ezram had not boasted of any such
+ability, and at first Ben regarded the plan with considerable
+misgivings. And it was with the most profound amazement that, when
+they pushed off, he saw Ezram deliberately seat himself in the bow,
+leaving the more important place to his young companion.</p>
+<p>"Good heavens, I'll capsize you in a minute," Ben said. "How do
+you dare risk it----"</p>
+<p>"Push off and stop botherin' me," Ezram answered. "There's a
+paddle&mdash;go ahead and shoot 'er."</p>
+<p>The waters caught the canoe, speeding it downstream; and in
+apprehension of immediate disaster Ben seized the paddle. Swiftly
+he thrust it into the streaming water at his side.</p>
+<p>He was not further aware of Ezram's searching gaze. He did not
+know of the old man's delight at the entire incident&mdash;first
+the anxious, hurried stroke of the paddle, then the movement of
+Ben's long fingers as he caught a new hold, finally the white flame
+of exultation that came into his face. For himself, Ben instantly
+knew that this was his own sphere. He suddenly found himself an
+absolute master of his craft: at the touch of the paddle
+controlling it as a master mechanic controls a delicate
+machine.</p>
+<p>The white waters were no more to be feared. He found that he
+knew, as if by instinct, every trick of the riverman's
+trade,&mdash;the slow stroke, the fast stroke, the best stroke for
+a long day's sail, the little half-turn in his hands that put the
+blade on edge in the water and gave him the finest control. It was
+all so familiar, so unspeakably dear to him. Clear, bright memories
+hovered close to him, almost within his grasp.</p>
+<p>"Do you remember when you shot the Athabaska Rapids?" Ezram had
+asked. It was all clear enough. In that life that was forgotten he
+had evidently lived much in a canoe, knowing every detail of river
+life. Perhaps he had been a master canoeist; at least he felt a
+strange, surging sense of self-confidence and power. He understood,
+now, why the image of rushing waters had come so often into his
+dreams. Dim pictures of river scenes&mdash;cataracts white with
+foam, rapids with thunderous voices, perilous eddies, and then,
+just beyond, glassy waters where the shadow of the canoe was
+unbroken in the blue depths&mdash;streamed through his mind, but
+they were not yet bright enough for him to seize and hold.</p>
+<p>He enjoyed the first few hours of paddling, but in the long,
+warm afternoon came indolence, and they were both willing to glide
+with the current and watch the ever-changing vista of the shore.
+For the first time since they had come into the real North, Ben
+found opportunity to observe and study the country.</p>
+<p>Already they were out of sight of the last vestige of a
+habitation; and the evergreen forests pushed down to the water's
+edge. From the middle of the stream the woods appeared only as a
+dark wall, but this was immeasurably fascinating to Ben. It
+suggested mystery, adventure; yet its deeper appeal, the thing that
+stirred him and thrilled him to the quick, he could neither
+understand nor analyze.</p>
+<p>Sometimes a little clump of trees stood apart, and from their
+shape he identified them as the incomparable spruce, perhaps the
+most distinguished and beautiful of all the evergreens. He marked
+their great height, their slender forms, their dark foliage that
+ever seemed to be silvered with frost; and they seemed to him to
+answer, to the fullest extent, some vague expectation of which he
+had scarcely been aware.</p>
+<p>The wild life of the river filled him with speechless delight.
+Sometimes he saw the waters break and gleam at the leap of a mighty
+salmon&mdash;the king fish of the North on his spring rush to the
+headwaters where he would spawn and die&mdash;and often the canoe
+sent flocks of waterfowl into flight. Ben dimly felt that on the
+tree-clad shores larger, more glorious living creatures were
+standing, hiding, watching the canoe glide past. The thought
+thrilled him.</p>
+<p>Late afternoon, and they worked closer to the shore. They were
+watching for a place to land. But because the shadows of twilight
+were already falling, the forest itself was hardly more vivid to
+their eyes. Once it seemed to Ben that he saw the underbrush move
+and waver at the water's edge, and his heart leaped; but whatever
+stirred kept itself concealed. And now, in the gray of twilight,
+Ezram saw the place to land.</p>
+<p>It was a small lagoon into which a creek emptied, and beyond was
+an open meadow, found so often and so unexpectedly in the North
+woods. Swiftly Ben turned the canoe into shore.</p>
+<p>Ezram climbed out and made fast, and so busy was he with his
+work that he did not glance at Ben, otherwise he might have beheld
+a phenomenon that would have been of keen interest to the alienist,
+Forest. His young charge had suddenly grown quite pale. Ben himself
+was neither aware of this nor of the fact that his heart was
+hammering wildly in his breast and his blood racing, like wild
+rivers, through his veins: he was only thrilled and held by a sense
+of vast, impending developments. Every nerve tingled and thrilled,
+and why he did not know.</p>
+<p>Ezram began to unload; but now, his blue eyes shining, he began
+a covert watch of his young companion. He saw the man from prison
+suddenly catch his breath in inexpressible awe and his eye kindle
+with a light of unknown source. A great question was shaping itself
+in Ben's mind, but as yet he could not find the answer.</p>
+<p>All at once Ben knew this place. Here was nothing strange or
+new: it was all as he had known it would be in his inmost heart.
+All of it spoke to him with familiar voice, seemingly to welcome
+him as a son is welcomed after long absence. There was nothing here
+that had not been known and beloved of old. Vivid memories, bright
+as lightning, swept through him.</p>
+<p>He had always known this wholesome, sweet breath that swept into
+his face. It was merely that of the outdoors, the open places that
+were his own haunts. It was wholly fitting and true that the
+silence should lie over the dark spruce that ringed about him, a
+silence that, in its infinite harmony with some queer mood of
+silence in his own heart, was more moving than any voice. All was
+as he had secretly known: the hushed tree aisles, the gray
+radiance&mdash;soft as a hand upon the brow&mdash;of the afterglow;
+the all-pervading health and peace of the wilderness. Except for an
+old and trusted companion, he was alone with it all, and that too
+was as it should be. Just he and the forest, his companion and the
+gliding river.</p>
+<p>He didn't try to understand, at first, the joy and the wonder
+that thrilled him, nor could he speak aloud the thoughts that came
+to him. Ravished and mystified, he walked softly to the dark, still
+edge of the forest, penetrated it a distance, then sat down to
+wait.</p>
+<p>For the first time in years, it seemed to him, he was at peace.
+A strange sense of self-realization&mdash;lost to him in his years
+of exile&mdash;climbed like fire through him; and with it the
+return of a lost virility, a supreme vigor tingling each little
+nerve; a sense of strength and power that was almost blinding.</p>
+<p>He sat still. He saw the twilight descending, ever heavier, over
+the forest. The sharp edges of the individual trees faded and
+blended, the trunks blurred. He turned one fleeting glance of
+infinite, inexpressible gratitude toward Ezram&mdash;the man who
+had brought him here and who now was busily engaged in unpacking
+the canoe and making camp&mdash;then looked back to his forests.
+The wind brought the wood smells,&mdash;spruce and moldering earth
+and a thousand more no man could name. The great, watchful,
+brooding spirit of the forest went in to him.</p>
+<p>All at once his heart seemed to pause in his breast. He was
+listening,&mdash;for what he did not know. His eyes strained into
+the shadows. Brush wavered, a twig cracked with a miniature
+explosion. And then two figures emerged into the beaver meadow
+opposite him.</p>
+<p>They were only creatures of the wild, an old cow moose, black
+and ungainly, and her long-legged, awkward calf. Yet they supplied
+the detail that was missing. They were the one thing needed to
+complete the picture&mdash;the crowning touch that revealed this
+land as it was&mdash;the virgin wilderness where the creatures of
+the wild still held full sway.</p>
+<p>But it did more. All at once a great clarity seemed to take
+possession of his mind. Here, in these dark forests, were the
+<i>stimuli</i> of which Forest, the alienist, had spoken; and his
+brain seemed to leap, as in one impulse, to the truth. Suddenly he
+knew the answer to all the questions and problems that had troubled
+him so long.</p>
+<p>Many times, in the past years, he had seen logs jammed in the
+water, a veritable labyrinth that defied dissolution. Suddenly, as
+if by magic, the key log would be ejected, and the whole jam would
+break, shatter down in one stupendous crash, settle and dissolve,
+leaving at last only drift logs floating quietly in the river. Thus
+it was with the confusion in his brain. All at once it seemed to
+dissolve, the tangled skeins straightened out, the association
+areas of his mind stirred full into life once more. As he sat
+there, pale as the twilight sky, the mists of amnesia lifted from
+him. He was cured as if by the touch of a holy man.</p>
+<p>No wonder these forests depths were familiar. His boyhood and
+early manhood, clear until the vortex of war had engulfed him, had
+been spent amid just such surroundings, in just such silences, on
+the banks of just such wilderness rivers. The same sky line of
+dark, heaven-reaching spruce had fronted him of old. He sprang up,
+his eyes blazing. "I remember everything," an inaudible voice spoke
+within him. Then he whispered, fervently, to his familiar wilds.
+"And I have come home."</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="VII"></a>
+<h2>VII</h2>
+<br>
+<p>Everything was as it should be, as he and Ezram made the camp.
+He himself cut the boughs for their beds, laid them with his
+remembered skill, spread the blankets, and kept the fire blazing
+while Ezram cooked; afterwards he knew the indescribable peace of a
+pipe smoke beside the glowing coals. He saw the moon come up at
+last, translating the spruce forest into a fairy land.</p>
+<p>Of course he had remembered the moon. How many times had he
+watched for its argent gleam on the sky line, the vivid, detailed
+silhouette of the spruce against it; and then its slow-spreading
+glory through the still, dark forests! The spires of the trees grew
+ensilvered, as always; immense nebulous patches lay between the
+trunks, shadows stole mysteriously, phantoms met, lingered, and
+vanished.</p>
+<p>This was his own North! The stir and vigor in the very air told
+him that. This was the land he had dreamed of, under the moon; the
+primeval forests that had tried him, tested him, staked their cruel
+might against him, but yet had blessed him with their infinite
+beneficence and hospitality. It was ever somber, yet its dusky
+beauty stirred him more than any richness he had seen in bright
+cities. He knew its every mood: ecstasy in spring; gentleness in
+summer; brooding melancholy in the gray days of fall; remorseless,
+savage, but unspeakably beautiful in the winter. He felt his old
+pity for the spring flowers, blossoming so hopefully in this gentle
+season. How soon they would be covered with many feet of snow!</p>
+<p>"It's all come clear again," he told Ezram. And the two men
+talked over, quietly and happily, old days at Thunder Lake. He
+remembered now that Ezram had always been the most intimate friend
+of his own family: a spry old godfather to himself and young
+sister, a boon companion to his once successful rival, Ben's
+father. Ben did not wonder, now, at his own perplexity when Forest
+had spoken of "Wolf" Darby. That was his own name known throughout
+hundreds of square miles of forest and in dozens of little river
+hamlets in an Eastern province. Partly the name was in token of his
+skill as a woodsman and frontiersman, partly in recognition of
+certain traits that his fellow woodsmen had seen and wondered at in
+him. It was not an empty nickname, in his case. It was simply that
+the name suited him.</p>
+<p>"The boys had reason a-plenty for callin' you that," Ezram told
+him. "Up here, as you know, men don't get no complimentary epithets
+unless they deserve 'em. Some men, Ben, are like weasels. You've
+seen 'em. You've seen human rats, too. As if the souls they carried
+around with 'em was the souls of rats. Of course you remember
+'Grizzly' Silverdale? Did you ever see any one who in disposition
+and looks and walk and everything reminded you so much of a grizzly
+bear? I've known men like sheep, and men with the faithful souls of
+dogs. You remember when you got in the big fight in the Le Perray
+bar?"</p>
+<p>"I don't think I'll ever forget it again."</p>
+<p>"That's the night the name came on you, to stay. You remember
+how you'd drive into one of them, leap away, then tear into
+another. Like a wolf for all the world! You was always hard to get
+into a fight, but you know as well as I do, and I ain't salvin' you
+when I say it, that you're the most terrible, ferocious fighter,
+forgettin' everything but blood, that ever paddled a canoe on the
+Athabaska. Some men, Ben, seem to have the spirit of the wolf right
+under their skins, a sort of a wild instinct that might have come
+straight down from the stone age, for all I know. You happen to be
+one of 'em, the worst I ever saw. Maybe you don't remember, but you
+took your bull moose before you was thirteen years old."</p>
+<p>Ben sat dreaming. The Athabaska Rapids was not an empty name to
+him now. He remembered the day he had won the canoe race at Lodge
+Pole. Other exploits occurred to him,&mdash;of brutal, savage
+brawls in river taverns, of adventures on the trail, of struggling
+with wild rivers when his canoe capsized, of running the great logs
+down through white waters. It was his world, these far-stretching
+wildernesses. And he blessed, with all the fervency of his heart,
+the man who had brought him home.</p>
+<p>He went to his bed, but sleep did not at once come to him. He
+lay with hushed breathing, listening to the little, secret noises,
+known so well, of the wilderness night. He heard the wild creatures
+start forth on their midnight journeys. Once a lynx mewed at the
+edge of the forest; and he laughed aloud when some large
+creature&mdash;probably a moose&mdash;grunted and splashed water in
+the near-by beaver meadow.</p>
+<p>Thus ended the first of a brilliant succession of joyous days,
+descending the stream in the daylight hours and camping on the bank
+at night. Every day they plunged deeper into the heart of the
+wilderness, and every hour Ben felt more at home.</p>
+<p>It was only play for him,&mdash;to meet and shoot successfully
+the rapids of the river. In the long stillnesses he paddled hour
+upon hour, not only to make time but to find an outlet for his
+surging energy. His old-time woodsman's pleasures were recalled
+again: shooting waterfowl for their mess in the still dawns, racing
+the swimming moose when they ran on him in the water. One day, fish
+hungry, he rigged up the elementary fishing tackle that they had
+brought from Saltsville and tried for a salmon.</p>
+<p>To a long, tough rod cut on the river bank he attached thirty
+feet of cheap, white cord, and to the cord he fastened a bright
+spoon hook&mdash;the spinner that salmon fishers know. He had no
+leader, no reel, no delicately balanced salmon rod&mdash;and Ezram
+was full of scorn for the whole proceeding. And it was certainly
+true that, by all the rules of angling, Ben had no chance whatever
+to get a bite.</p>
+<p>The cord was visible in the clear water, and the spoon itself
+was scarcely more than twenty feet from the rear of the boat. But
+this northern stream was not at all like the famous salmon rivers
+known to sportsmen. In years to come, when the lines of
+communication are better and tourist hotels are established on its
+banks, the river may then begin to conform to the qualifications of
+a conventional fishing stream, and then Ben's crude tackle will be
+unavailing. But at present the salmon were not so particular. As
+fishermen came but rarely, the fish were in countless numbers; and
+in such a galaxy there were bound to be few misguided fish that did
+not know a sportsman's tackle from a dub's.</p>
+<p>The joy of angling, once known, dwells in the body until death,
+and Ben was a born fisherman. The old delight that can never die
+crept back to him the instant he felt the clumsy rod in his hands
+and the faint throb of the line through the delicate mechanism of
+his nerves. And apparently for no other reason than that the river
+hordes wished to welcome him home, almost at once a gigantic bull
+salmon took his spoon.</p>
+<p>Ezram's first knowledge of it was a wild yell that almost
+startled him over the side&mdash;the same violent outcry that old
+anglers still can not restrain when the fish takes hold, even after
+a lifetime of angling. When he recovered himself he looked to see
+Ben kneeling frantically in the stern, hanging for dear life to his
+rod and seemingly in grave danger of being pulled overboard.</p>
+<p>No man who has felt that first, overpowering jolt of a striking
+salmon can question the rapture of that first moment. The jolt
+carried through all the intricacies of the nerves, jarred the soul
+within the man, and seemingly registered in the germ plasm itself
+an impression that could be recalled, in dreams, ten generations
+hence. Fortunately the pole withstood that first, frantic rush, and
+then things began to happen in earnest.</p>
+<p>The great trout seemed to dance on the surface of the water. He
+tugged, he swam in frantic circles, he flopped and darted and
+sulked and rushed and leaped. If he hadn't been securely hooked,
+and if it had not been for a skill earned in a hundred such
+battles, Ben would not have held him a moment.</p>
+<p>But the time came at last, after a sublime half-hour, when his
+steam began to die. His rushes were less powerful, and often he
+hung like a dead weight on the line. Slowly Ben worked him in, not
+daring to believe that he was conquering, willing to sell his soul
+for the privilege of seeing the great fish safe in the boat. His
+eyes protruded, perspiration gleamed on his brow, he talked
+foolishly and incessantly to Ezram, the fish, the river-gods, and
+himself. Ezram, something of an old Isaac Walton himself, managed
+the canoe with unusual dexterity and chuckled in the contagion of
+Ben's delight. And lo&mdash;in a moment more the thing was
+done.</p>
+<p>"You'd think you never had a rod in your hand before," Ezram
+commented in mock disgust. "Such hollerin' and whoopin' I never
+heard."</p>
+<p>Ben grinned widely. "That's fishing&mdash;the sport that keeps a
+man an amateur all his days&mdash;with an amateur's delight." His
+vivid smile quivered at his lips and was still. "That's why I love
+the North; it can never, never grow old. You're just as excited at
+the close as at the beginning. Ezram, old man, it's life!"</p>
+<p>Ezram nodded. Perhaps, in the moment's fire, Ben had touched at
+the truth. Perhaps <i>life</i>, in its fullest sense, is something
+more than being born, breathing air, consuming food, and moving the
+lips in speech. <i>Life</i> is a thing that wilderness creatures
+know, realized only when the blood, leaping red, sweeps away
+lifeless and palsied tissue and builds a more sentient structure in
+its place; invoked by such forces as adventure and danger and
+battle and triumph. For the past half-hour Ben had lived in the
+fullest sense, and Ezram was a little touched by the look of
+unspeakable gratitude with which his young companion regarded
+him.</p>
+<p>But the journey ended at last. They saw the white peak they had
+been told to watch for, and soon after they came to a green bank
+from which the forest had been cut away. Softly, rather
+regretfully, they pushed up and made landing on the banks of a
+small stream, tributary to the great river, that marked the end of
+the water route.</p>
+<p>This stream, Ezram knew, was Poor Man's Creek, the stream of
+which his brother had written and which they must ascend to reach
+Spruce Pass. Only five miles distant, in a quartering direction
+from the river, was Snowy Gulch, the village where they were to
+secure supplies and, from Steve Morris, the late Hiram's gun and
+his pet, Fenris.</p>
+<p>For a time, at least, they had left the utter solitudes of the
+wild. Men had cut away the forest and had built a crude wagon road
+to Snowy Gulch. And before they were fully unpacked they made out
+the figure of a middle-aged frontiersman, his back loaded,
+advancing up the road toward them.</p>
+<p>Both men knew something of the ways of the frontier and turned
+in greeting. "Howdy," Ezram began pleasantly.</p>
+<p>"Howdy," the stranger replied. "How was goin'?"</p>
+<p>"Oh, good enough."</p>
+<p>"Come all the way from Saltsville?"</p>
+<p>"Yes. Goin' to Snowy Gulch."</p>
+<p>"It's only five miles, up this road," the stranger ventured.
+"I'm goin' up Saltsville way myself, but I won't have no river to
+tow me. I've got to do my own paddlin'. Thank the lord I'm only
+goin' a small part of the way."</p>
+<p>"You ain't goin' to swim, are you? Where's your boat."</p>
+<p>"My pard's got an old craft, and he and I are goin' to pack it
+out next trip." The stranger paused, blinking his eyes. "Say,
+partners&mdash;you don't want to sell your boat, do you?"</p>
+<p>Ben started to speak, but the doubtful look on Ezram's face
+checked him. "Oh, I don't know," the old man replied, in the
+discouraging tones of a born tradesman. In reality the old
+Shylock's heart was leaping gayly in his breast. This was almost
+too good to be true: a purchaser for the boat in the first hour.
+"Yet we might," he went on. "We was countin' on goin' back in it
+soon."</p>
+<p>"I'd just as leave buy it, if you want to sell it. In this
+jerked-off town there ain't a fit canoe to be had. Our boat is the
+worst tub you ever seen. How much you want for it?"</p>
+<p>Ezram stated his figure, and Ben was prone to believe that he
+had adopted a highwayman for a buddy. The amount named was nearly
+twice that which they had paid. And to his vast amazement the
+stranger accepted the offer in his next breath.</p>
+<p>"It's worth something to bring it up here, you dub," Ezram
+informed his young partner, when the latter accused him of
+profiteering.</p>
+<p>After the sale was made Ezram and the stranger soon got on the
+intimate terms that almost invariably follow a mutually
+satisfactory business deal, and in the talk that ensued the old man
+learned a fact of the most vital importance to their venture. And
+it came like a bolt from the blue.</p>
+<p>"So you don't know any folks in Snowy Gulch, then?" the stranger
+had asked politely. "But you'll get acquainted soon
+enough&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I've got a letter to a feller named Morris," Ezram replied.
+"And I've heard of one or two more men too&mdash;Jeffery Neilson
+was one of 'em&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"You'll find Morris in town all right," the stranger ventured to
+assure him. "He lives right next to Neilson's.
+And&mdash;say&mdash;what do you know about this man Neilson?"</p>
+<p>"Oh, nothin' at all. Why?"</p>
+<p>"If you fellows is prospectin', Jeffery Neilson is a first-class
+man to stay away from&mdash;and his understrapers, too&mdash;Ray
+Brent and Chan Heminway. But they're out of town right now. They
+skinned out all in a bunch a few weeks ago&mdash;and I can't tell
+you what kind of a scent they got."</p>
+<p>Ezram felt cold to the marrow of his bones. He glanced covertly
+at Ben; fortunately his partner was busy among the supplies and was
+not listening to this conversation. Yet likely enough it was a
+false alarm! Doubtless the ugly possibility that occurred to him
+had no justification whatever in fact. Nevertheless, he couldn't
+restrain the question that was at his lips.</p>
+<p>"You don't know where they went, do you?" he asked.</p>
+<p>"Not exactly. They took up this creek here a ways, through
+Spruce Pass, and over to Yuga River&mdash;the country that kind of
+a crazy old chap named Hiram Melville, who died here a few weeks
+ago, has always prospected."</p>
+<p>The stranger marvelled that his old listener should have
+suddenly gone quite pale.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="VIII"></a>
+<h2>VIII</h2>
+<p>Ezram had only a moment's further conversation with his new
+friend. He put two or three questions&mdash;in a rather curious,
+hushed voice&mdash;and got his answer. Yes, it was true that the
+shortest way to go to the Yuga River was to follow up the creek by
+which he was now standing. It was only out of the way to go into
+Snowy Gulch: they would have to come back to this very point. And
+yes, a pedestrian, carrying a light pack, could make much better
+time than a horseman with pack animals. The horses could go no
+faster than a walk, and the time required to sling packs and care
+for the animals cut down the day's march by half.</p>
+<p>These things learned, Ezram strolled over to his young partner.
+And at that moment he revealed the possession of a talent that
+neither he nor any of his friends had ever suspected. The stage had
+lost an artist of no mean ability when Ezra Melville had taken to
+the cattle business. Outwardly, to the last, little lines about his
+lips and eyes, he was his genial, optimistic, droll old self. His
+eye twinkled, his face beamed in the gray stubble, his voice was
+rollicking with the fun of life the same as ever. And like
+Pagliacci in his masque there was not the slightest exterior sign
+of the fear and despair that chilled his heart.</p>
+<p>"What have you and your poor victim been talking about, all this
+time?" Ben asked.</p>
+<p>"Oh, just a gab-fest&mdash;a tat-i-tat as you'd call it. But you
+know, Ben, I've got a idea all a-sudden." Ben straightened, lighted
+his pipe, and prepared to listen.</p>
+<p>"This old boy tells me that we'd save just twelve miles by
+striking off front here, instead of goin' into town. Snowy Gulch is
+six miles, and we have to come back to this very place. What's the
+use of goin' into town at all?"</p>
+<p>"Good heavens, Ez? Have you forgotten we've got to get supplies?
+And your brother's gun&mdash;and his dog?"</p>
+<p>"How do you know he's got a dog?"</p>
+<p>"He said a pup, didn't he? But it may be an elephant for all I
+know. Of course, we've got to go on in."</p>
+<p>"Yes, I know&mdash;one of us has. But, Ben, it seems to me that
+one of us ought to strike off now and figure out the way and sort
+of get located. One of us could take a little food and a couple of
+blankets and make it through in less than a day. Half a day,
+almost. Then we could have the cabin all ready, and everything laid
+out for to begin work. He could blaze any dim spots in the trail
+and save time for the other feller, comin' with the horses."</p>
+<p>"Oh, it would be all right," Ben began rather doubtfully. "I
+don't see that much is to be gained by it. But I'll strike off on
+foot, if you want me to."</p>
+<p>Ezram's mind was flashing with thoughts like lightning, and his
+answer was ready. "Ben, if you don't mind, I'll do that," he said.
+"I can get along without gazin' at the sky-scrapers of Snowy Gulch,
+and to tell the truth, that twelve miles of extra walkin' don't
+appeal to me one bit. I'd as soon have you tend to all the things
+in town."</p>
+<p>"But you'd get a ride, if you waited&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I hate a horse, anyway&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"You've surely changed a lot since the war."</p>
+<p>"I was thrown off not long ago&mdash;and have been leery of the
+dum things ever since. I'd walk, sooner than ride, even if I did
+have a horse. So you roll me that big Hudson Bay blanket and give
+me a couple of day's rations. I'll make a pack for my back that I
+can't feel. Then you strike off into town."</p>
+<p>Without especial enthusiasm Ben agreed. Ezram gave a great sigh
+of satisfaction. He had put through the deal: Ben's secret thought
+was that Ezram's curiosity&mdash;always a pronounced trait with the
+old&mdash;had mastered him, and he could not wait longer to explore
+the mine. Not one glimpse of the truth as to Ezram's real reason
+for desiring to push on alone as much as occurred to him.</p>
+<p>Ezram was wholly deliberate. He knew what waited him on arrival
+at his brother's claim. Jeffery Neilson and his gang had assembled
+there, had already jumped the claim just as his brother had warned
+him that they would do; and coolly and quietly he had resolved to
+face them alone. They were desperate men, not likely to be driven
+from the gold by threats or persuasion only. But there was no law
+in his life, no precept in his code, whereby he could subject his
+young partner to the risk.</p>
+<p>It was true that the desire to arrive on the scene at the
+earliest possible moment had been a factor in his decision. One of
+them could hurry on, unimpeded by the pack animals, and the other
+must linger to secure their supplies; and there could really be no
+question, in Ezram's mind, which should go and which should stay.
+He had known perfectly that if Ben had realized the true need for
+haste, he would never have submitted so tamely to Ezram's will. The
+old man knew Wolf Darby. The strong dark eyes in the lean,
+raw-boned face reassured him as to this knowledge. Ben would go
+too, if he knew the truth. Likely he would insist on going
+alone.</p>
+<p>Ezram had decided the whole thing in a flash, realizing that a
+lone pedestrian would be practically as effective in dealing with
+the usurpers as two horsemen, impeded by the pack animals. If they
+didn't shoot to kill at first sight of him Ezram would have time in
+plenty to seek refuge in the forest and do a sharpshooter's
+business that would fill his old heart with joy. And there really
+wasn't any question as to which of the two should go. Their
+partnership was of long duration; their comradeship was deep; Ben
+was young, and Ezram himself was old!</p>
+<p>Ezram made his decision entirely casually, and he would have
+been surprised out of his wits if any one had expressed wonder of
+it. He knew no self-pity or sentimentality, only the knowledge that
+he did not desire that his young buddy should be shot full of holes
+in the first moment of play. The only fear that had visited him was
+that Ben might catch on and not let him go. And now he could
+scarcely restrain his triumphant chuckles in Ben's hearing.</p>
+<p>He made his pack&mdash;a few simple provisions wrapped in his
+blanket&mdash;and a knife and camp axe swung on his belt. He took
+his trusted pipe&mdash;because he knew well that he could never
+acquit himself creditably in a fight without a few lungfuls of
+tobacco smoke first&mdash;and he also took his rifle. "You'll be
+gettin' my brother's gun when you get to Snowy Gulch," he
+explained, "and I may see game on the way out. And you keep this
+copy of the letter." He handed Ben the copy he had made of Hiram's
+will. "I'm the worst hand for losin' things you ever seen."</p>
+<p>"You're sure you've got the directions straight?"</p>
+<p>"Sure.&mdash;And I guess that's all."</p>
+<p>They said their simple good-bys, shaking hands over a pile of
+stores. "I've only got one decent place to keep things safe," Ezra
+confided, "and that ain't so all-fired decent, either. When I get
+any papers that are extra precious, I always stick 'em down the leg
+of these high old boots, between the sock and the leather. But it's
+too much work to take the boot off now, so you keep the
+letter."</p>
+<p>"I suppose you've got a million-dollar bank note hidden down
+there now," Ben remarked.</p>
+<p>"No, not a cent. Just the same, if ever I get shuffled off all
+of a sudden&mdash;rollin' down one of these mountains, say&mdash;I
+want you to look there mighty careful. There may be a document or
+two of importance&mdash;letter to my old home, and all that."</p>
+<p>"I won't forget," Ben promised.</p>
+<p>"See that you don't." They shook hands again, lightly and
+happily. "So good-by, son, and&mdash;'<i>take keer of
+yerself</i>!'"</p>
+<p>The old man turned away, and soon his withered figure vanished
+into the thickets farther up the river. He was following a fairly
+well-worn moose trail, and he went swiftly. Soon he was out of
+hearing of the sound of the great river.</p>
+<p>Then the little woods people&mdash;marten and ermine and rodent
+and such other small forest creatures that&mdash;who can
+say?&mdash;might watch with exceeding interest the travelers on the
+trails, could have thought that old Ezram was already fatigued. He
+sat down beside a tree and drew a soiled sheet of paper from his
+pocket. Searching further he found then the stub of a pencil. Then
+he wrote.</p>
+<p>Having written he unlaced his boot on the right foot, folded the
+paper, and thrust it into the bootleg. Then, relacing the shoe, he
+arose and journeyed blithely on.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="IX"></a>
+<h2>IX</h2>
+<p>On arriving in Snowy Gulch, Ben's first efforts were to inquire
+in regard to horses. Both pack and saddle animals, he learned, were
+to be hired of Sandy McClurg, the owner of the general store and
+leading citizen of the village; and at once he made his way to
+confer with him.</p>
+<p>"Most of my mustangs are rented out," the merchant informed him
+when they met in the rear of the general store, "but if you can get
+along with three, I guess I can fix you up. You can pack two of
+'em, and ride the third."</p>
+<p>"Good enough," Ben agreed. "And after I once get in, I'd like to
+turn back two of them, and maybe all three&mdash;to save the hire
+and the bother of taking care of them. I suppose, after the fashion
+of cayuses, they'll leg it right home."</p>
+<p>"Just a little faster than a dog. Horses don't much care to grub
+their food out of them spruce forests. They're good plugs, so of
+course I don't want to rent 'em to any one who'll abuse 'em, or
+take 'em on too hard trips. Where are you heading, if the
+question's fair?"</p>
+<p>"Through Spruce Pass and down into the Yuga River."</p>
+<p>"Prospecting, eh? There's been quite a movement down that way
+lately, considering it never was anything but a pocket country. By
+starting early you can make it through in a day. And you said your
+name was&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Darby. Ben Darby."</p>
+<p>The merchant opened his eyes. "Not the Ben Darby that took all
+the prizes at the meet at Lodge Pole&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Ben's rugged face lit with the brilliancy of his smile. "The
+same Darby," he admitted.</p>
+<p>"Well, well! I hope you'll excuse them remarks about abusing the
+horses. If I had known who you was, 'Wolf' Darby, I'd have known
+you knew how to take care of cayuses. Take 'em for as long as you
+want, or where you want. And when did you say you was going?"</p>
+<p>"First thing to-morrow."</p>
+<p>"Well, you're pretty likely to have companionship on the road,
+too. There is another party that is going up that way either
+to-morrow or the day after. Pretty lucky for you."</p>
+<p>"I'm glad of it, if he isn't a tenderfoot. That must be a pretty
+thickly settled region&mdash;where I'm heading."</p>
+<p>"On the contrary, there's only three human beings in the whole
+district&mdash;and there's a thousand of square miles back of it
+without even one. These three are some men that went up that way
+prospecting some time ago, and this other party will make four." He
+paused, smiling. "Yes, I think you will enjoy this trip to-morrow,
+after you see who it is. I'd enjoy it, and I'm thirty years older
+than you are."</p>
+<p>Ben's thought was elsewhere, and he only half heard. "All
+right&mdash;I'll be here before dawn to-morrow and get the horses.
+And now will you tell me&mdash;where Steve Morris lives? I've got
+some business with him."</p>
+<p>"Right up the street&mdash;clear to the end of the row."
+McClurg's humor had quite engulfed him by now, and he chuckled
+again. "And if I was you, I'd stop in the door just this
+side&mdash;and get acquainted with your fellow traveler."</p>
+<p>"What's his name?" Ben asked.</p>
+<p>"The party is named Neilson."</p>
+<p>Unfortunately the name had no mental associations for Ben. It
+wakened no interest or stirred no memories. He had read the letter
+the copy of which he carried but once, and evidently the name of
+the man Ezram had been warned against had made no lasting
+impression on Ben's mind.</p>
+<p>"All right. Maybe I'll look him up."</p>
+<p>Ben turned, then made his way up the long, straggly row of
+unpainted shacks that marked the village street. A few moments
+later he was standing in the Morris home, facing the one friend
+that Hiram Melville had possessed on earth.</p>
+<p>Ben stated his case simply. He was the partner of Hiram's
+brother, he said, and he had been designated to take care of Fenris
+and such other belongings as Hiram had left. Morris studied his
+face with the quiet, far-seeing eyes of a woodsman.</p>
+<p>"You've got means of identification?" he asked.</p>
+<p>Ben realized with something of a shock that he had none at all.
+The letter he carried was merely a copy without Hiram's signature;
+besides, he had no desire to reveal its contents. For an instant he
+was considerably embarrassed. But Morris smiled quietly.</p>
+<p>"I guess I won't ask you for any," he said. "Hiram didn't leave
+anything, far as I know, except his old gun and his pet. Lord
+knows, I'd let anybody take that pet of his that's fool enough to
+say he's got any claim to him, and you can be sure I ain't going to
+dispute his claim."</p>
+<p>"Fenris, then, is,&mdash;something of a problem?"</p>
+<p>"The worst I ever had. His old gun is a good enough weapon, but
+I'm willing to trust you with it to get rid of Fenris. If you don't
+turn out to be the right man, I'll dig up for the gun&mdash;and
+feel lucky at that. I won't be able to furnish another Fenris,
+though, and I guess nobody'll be sorry. And if I was you&mdash;I'd
+take him out in a nice quiet place and shoot him."</p>
+<p>He turned, with the intention of securing the gun from an inner
+room. He did not even reach the door. It was as if both of them
+were struck motionless, frozen in odd, fixed attitudes, by a shrill
+scream for help that penetrated like a bullet the thin walls of the
+house.</p>
+<p>Instinctively both of them recognized it, unmistakably, as the
+piercing cry of a woman in great distress and terror. It rose
+surprisingly high, hovered a ghastly instant, and then was almost
+drowned out and obliterated by another sound, such a sound as left
+Ben only wondering and appalled.</p>
+<p>The sound was in the range between a growl and a bay, instantly
+identifying itself as the utterance of an animal, rather than a
+human being. And it was savage and ferocious simply beyond power of
+words to tell. Ben's first thought was of some enormous, vicious
+dog, and yet his wood's sense told him that the utterance was not
+that of a dog. Rather it contained that incredible fierceness and
+savagery that marks the killing cries of the creatures of the
+wild.</p>
+<p>He heard it even as he leaped through the door in answer to the
+scream for aid. His muscles gathered with that mysterious power
+that had always sustained him in his moments of crisis. He took the
+steps in one leap, Morris immediately behind him.</p>
+<p>"Fenris is loose," he heard the man say. "He'll kill some
+one----!"</p>
+<p>Ben could still hear the savage cries of the animal, seemingly
+from just behind the adjoining house. A girl's terrified voice
+still called for help. And deeply appalled by the sounds, Ben
+wished that the rifle, such a weapon as had been his trust since
+early boyhood, was ready and loaded in his hands.</p>
+<p>He raced about the house; and at once the scene, in every vivid
+detail, was revealed to him. Pressed back against the wall of a
+little woodshed that stood behind her house a girl stood at
+bay,&mdash;a dark-eyed girl whose beautiful face was drawn and
+stark-white with horror. She was screaming for aid, her fascinated
+gaze held by a gray-black, houndlike creature that crouched,
+snarling, twenty yards distant.</p>
+<p>Evidently the creature was stealing toward her in stealthy
+advance more like a stalking cat than a frenzied hound. Nor was
+this creature a hound, in spite of the similarity of outline. Such
+fearful, lurid surface-lights as all of them saw in its fierce eyes
+are not characteristic of the soft, brown orbs of the dog, ancient
+friend to man, but are ever the mark of the wild beast of the
+forest. The fangs were bared, gleaming in foam, the hair stood
+erect on the powerful shoulders; and instantly Ben recognized its
+breed. It was a magnificent specimen of that huge, gaunt runner of
+the forests, the Northern wolf. Evidently from the black shades of
+his fur he was partly of the Siberian breed of wolves that
+beforetime have migrated down on the North American side of Bering
+Sea.</p>
+<p>A chain was attached to the animal's collar, and this in turn to
+a stake that had been freshly pulled from the ground. This beast
+was Fenris,&mdash;the woods creature that old Hiram Melville had
+raised from cubdom.</p>
+<p>There could be no doubt as to the reality of the girl's peril.
+The animal was insane with the hunting madness, and he was plainly
+stalking her, just as his fierce mother might have stalked a fawn,
+across the young grass. Already he was almost near enough to leap,
+and the girl's young, strong body could be no defense against the
+hundred and fifty pounds of wire sinew and lightning muscle that
+constituted the wolf. The bared fangs need flash but once for such
+game as this. And yet, after the first, startled glance, Ben Darby
+felt himself complete master of the situation.</p>
+<p>No man could tell him why. No fact of his life would have been
+harder to explain, no impulse in all his days had had a more
+inscrutable origin. The realization seemed to spring from some
+cool, sequestered knowledge hidden deep in his spirit. He knew, in
+one breathless instant, that he was the master&mdash;and that the
+girl was safe.</p>
+<p>He seemed to know, again, that he had found his ordained sphere.
+He knew this breed,&mdash;this savage, blood-mad, fierce-eyed
+creature that turned, snarling, at his approach. He had something
+in common with the breed, knowing their blood-lusts and their
+mighty moods; and dim, dreamlike memory reminded him that he had
+mastered them in a long war that went down to the roots of time.
+Fenris was only a fellow wilderness creature, a pack brother of the
+dark forests, and he had no further cause for fear.</p>
+<p>"Fenris!" he ordered sharply. "Come here!" His voice was
+commanding and clear above the animal's snarls.</p>
+<p>There followed a curious, long instant of utter silence and
+infinite suspense. The girl's scream died on her lips: the wolf
+stood tense, wholly motionless. Morris, who had drawn his knife and
+had prepared to leap with magnificent daring upon the wolf, turned
+with widening eyes, instinctively aware of impending miracle. Ben's
+eyes met those of the wolf, commanding and unafraid.</p>
+<p>"Down, Fenris," Ben said again. "Down!"</p>
+<p>Then slowly, steadily, Ben moved toward him. Watching
+unbelieving, Morris saw the fierce eyes begin to lose their fire.
+The stiff hair on the shoulders fell into place, tense muscle
+relaxed. He saw in wonder that the animal was trembling all
+over.</p>
+<p>Ben stood beside him now, his hand reaching. "Down, down," he
+cautioned quietly. Suddenly the wolf crouched, cowering, at his
+feet.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="X"></a>
+<h2>X</h2>
+<p>Ben straightened to find himself under a wondering scrutiny by
+both Morris and the girl. "Good Lord, Darby!" the former exclaimed.
+"How did you do it&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Now that the suspense was over, Ben himself stood smiling, quite
+at ease. "Can't say just how. I just felt that I could&mdash;I've
+always been able to handle animals. He's tame, anyway."</p>
+<p>"Tame, is he? You ought to have had to care for him the last few
+weeks, and you'd think tame. Not once have I dared go in reach of
+his rope. And there he is, crouched at your feet! I was always
+dreading he'd get away&mdash;" Morris paused, evidently remembering
+the girl. "Beatrice, are you hurt?"</p>
+<p>The girl moved toward them. "No. He didn't touch me. But you
+came just in time&mdash;" The girl's voice wavered; and Ben stepped
+to her side. "I'm all right now&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"But you'd better sit down," Ben advised quietly. "It was enough
+to scare any one to death&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Any one&mdash;but you&mdash;" the girl replied, her voice still
+unsteady. But she paused when she saw the warm color spread over
+Ben's rugged, brown face. And his embarrassment was real. Naturally
+shy and unassuming, such effusive praise as this always disturbed
+him&mdash;just as it would have embarrassed any really masculine
+man alive. Women, more extravagant in speech and loving flattery
+with a higher ardor, would have found it hard to believe how really
+distressed he was; but Morris, an outdoor man to the core,
+understood completely. Besides, Ben knew that the praise was not
+deserved. Excessive bravery had played no part in the scene of a
+moment before. He had been brave just as far as Morris was brave,
+leaping freely in response to a call for help: the same degree of
+bravery that can be counted on in most men, over the face of the
+earth. Bravery does not lie alone in facing danger: there must also
+be the consciousness of danger, the conquest of fear. In this case
+Ben had felt no fear. He knew with a sure, true knowledge that he
+was master of the wolf. He knew the wolf's response to his words
+before ever he spoke. And now all the words in the language could
+not convey to these others whence that knowledge had come.</p>
+<p>He vaguely realized that this had always been some way part of
+his destiny,&mdash;the imposition of his will over the beasts of
+the forest. He had never tried to puzzle out why, knowing that such
+trial would be unavailing. He had instinctively understood such
+creatures as these. To-day he felt that he knew the wild, fierce
+heart beating in the lean breast as a man might know his brother's
+heart. The bond between them was hidden from his sight, something
+back of him, beyond him, enfolded within a secret self that was
+mysterious as a dream, and it reached into the countless years; yet
+it was real, an ancient relationship that was no less intimate
+because it could not be named. In turn, the wolf had seemed to know
+that this tall form was a born habitant of the forests, even as
+himself, one that would kill him as unmercifully as he himself
+would kill a fall, and whose dark eyes, swept with fire, and whose
+cool, strong words must never be disobeyed.</p>
+<p>"You never seen this wolf before?" Morris asked him, calling him
+from his revery.</p>
+<p>"Never."</p>
+<p>"Then you must be old Hiram's brother himself, to control him
+like you did. Lord, look at him. Crouching at your feet."</p>
+<p>Suddenly Ben reached and took the wolf's head between his hands.
+Slowly he lifted the savage face till their eyes met. The wolf
+growled, then, whimpering, tried to avert its gaze. Then a rough
+tongue lapped at the man's hand.</p>
+<p>"There's nothing to be afraid of, now," he told the girl.</p>
+<p>"He's right, Beatrice," Morris agreed. "He's tamed him. Even I
+can see that much. And I never saw anything like it, since the day
+I was born."</p>
+<p>It was true: as far as Ben was concerned, the terrible
+Fenris&mdash;named by a Swedish trapper, acquaintance of Hiram
+Melville's, for the dreadful wolf of Scandinavian legend&mdash;was
+tamed. He had found a new master; Ben had won a servant and friend
+whose loyalty would never waver as long as blood flowed in his
+veins and breath surged in his lungs. "Lay still, now, Fenris," he
+ordered. "Don't get up till I tell you."</p>
+<p>It seems to be true that as a rule the lower animals catch the
+meaning of but few words; usually the tone of the voice and the
+gesture that accompanies it interpret a spoken order in a dog's
+brain. On this occasion, it was as if Fenris had read his master's
+thought. He lay supine, his eyes intent on Ben's rugged face.</p>
+<p>And now, for the first time, Ben found himself regarding
+Beatrice. He could scarcely take his eyes from her face. He knew
+perfectly that he was staring rudely, but he was without the power
+to turn his eyes. Her dark eyes fell under his gaze.</p>
+<p>The truth was that Ben's life had been singularly untouched by
+the influence of women. Mostly his life had been spent in the
+unpeopled forest, away from women of all kinds; and such creatures
+as had admired him in Seattle's underworld had never got close to
+him. He had had many dreams; but some way it had never been
+credible to him that he should ever know womanhood as a source of
+comradeship and happiness. Love and marriage had always seemed
+infinitely apart from his wild, adventurous life.</p>
+<p>In his days in prison he had given up all dream of this
+happiness; but now he could begin to dream again. Everything was
+changed now that he had come home. The girl's regard for him was
+friendly, even somewhat admiring, and the speculations of ripening
+womanhood were in her eyes. He returned her gaze with frankest
+interest and admiration. His senses had been made sharp in his
+wilderness life; and his respect for her grew apace. She was not
+only innocent and girlish; she had those traits, innate, that a
+strong man loves in women: such worth and depth of character as he
+wishes bequeathed to his children.</p>
+<p>Ben drew a long breath. It was good to be home. He had not only
+found his forests, just as he had left them, but now again he was
+among the forest people. This girl was of his own breed, not a
+stranger; her standards were his; she was a woods girl no less than
+he was a woodsman. It is good to be among one's own people, those
+who can follow through and understand. She too knew the urge of
+unbridled vitality and spirit, common to all the woods children;
+and life's vivid meaning was her inheritance, no less than his. Her
+arms and lips were warm from fast-flowing blood, her nerves were
+vibrant and singing like his own. A virgin still, her eyes were
+tender with the warmheartedness that is such a dominant trait of
+frontier peoples; but what fire, what passion might burn in them
+to-morrow! They were dark, lovely eyes, rather somber now in their
+earnestness, seeming shadowed by the dark shadows of the spruce
+themselves.</p>
+<p>No human face had ever given him such an image of beauty as that
+of this dark-eyed forest child before him. Yet she was not piquant,
+demure, like the girls he had met in France; not stylish and
+sophisticated like those of the great cities he had visited since
+his return. Her garb became her: simple, not holding the eye in
+itself but calling attention to the brunette beauty of her throat
+and face, the warm redness of her childish mouth, and the brown,
+warm color of her arms. She had dark, waving hair, lovely to touch,
+wistful red lips. Because he was the woodsman, now and always, he
+marked with pleasure that there was no indication of ill-health or
+physical weakness about her. Her body was lithe and strong, with
+the grace of the wild creatures.</p>
+<p>It would be good to know her, and walk beside her in the tree
+aisles. All manner of delectable possibilities occurred to him. But
+all at once he checked his dreams with an iron will.</p>
+<p>There must be no thought of women in his life&mdash;for now. He
+still had his way to make. A few hours more would find him plunging
+deeper into the forest, perhaps never to see her again. He felt an
+all-pervading sense of regret.</p>
+<p>"There's nothing I can say&mdash;to thank you," the girl was
+murmuring. "I never saw anything like it; it was just as if the
+wolf understood every word you said."</p>
+<p>"Old Hiram had him pretty well trained, I suspect." The man's
+eyes fell to the shaggy form at his feet. "I'm glad I happened
+along Miss&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Miss Neilson," the girl prompted him. "Beatrice Neilson. I live
+here."</p>
+<p>Neilson! His mind seemed to leap and catch at the name. Just
+that day he had heard it from the lips of the merchant. And this
+was the house next door where dwelt his fellow traveler for the
+morrow.</p>
+<p>"Then it's your father&mdash;or brother&mdash;who's going to the
+Yuga&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"No," the girl answered doubtfully. "My father is already there.
+I'm here alone&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Then the gray eyes lighted and a smile broke about Ben's lips.
+Few times in his life had he smiled in quite this vivid way.</p>
+<p>"Then it's you," he exulted, "who is going to be my fellow
+traveler to-morrow!"</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XI"></a>
+<h2>XI</h2>
+<p>Ben found, rather as he had expected, that the girl was not at
+all embarrassed by the knowledge that they were to have a lonely
+all-day ride together. She looked at the matter from a perfectly
+natural and wholesome point of view, and she could see nothing in
+it amiss or improper. The girls of the frontier rarely feel the
+need of chaperones. Their womanhood comes early, and the open
+places and the fresh-life-giving air they breathe give them a
+healthy confidence in their ability to take care of themselves.
+Beatrice had a pistol, and she could shoot it like a man. She loved
+the solitude of the forest, but she also knew it was good to hear
+the sound of a human voice when journeying the lonely trails.</p>
+<p>The frontier had also taught her to judge men. Here foregathered
+many types, strong-thewed frontiersmen whose reverence for women
+surpassed, perhaps, that of any other class of men on earth, as
+well as the most villainous renegades, brutish offspring of the
+wilds, but she knew them apart. She realized from the first that
+this tall woodsman would have only kindness and respect for her;
+and that he was to be trusted even in those lonely forest depths
+beyond Spruce Pass.</p>
+<p>Ben knew the wild beasts of the field better than he knew women,
+so her actual reception of the plan was lost to him. He felt that
+she was not displeased: in reality the delight and anticipation she
+felt were beyond any power of hers to tell. She had been
+tremendously thrilled and impressed by his dominance over the wolf.
+She liked his bright, steady, friendly eyes; because she was a
+woods girl her heart leaped at the sight of his upright, powerful
+body; but most of all she felt that he was very near indeed to an
+ideal come true, a man of terrific strength and prowess yet not
+without those traits that women love best in men,&mdash;courage and
+character and gentleness.</p>
+<p>"I'm surely glad I'm going to have a companion," he told her. "I
+won't miss Ez&mdash;"</p>
+<p>But just then remembrance came to him, cutting the word off
+short. The letter he carried in his pocket contained certain advice
+in regard to silence, and perhaps now was a good time to follow it.
+There was no need to tell the people of Snowy Gulch about Ezram and
+the claim. He remembered that he had been warned of the danger of
+claim jumpers.</p>
+<p>For an instant his mind seemed to hover at the edge of a more
+elusive memory; but he could not quite seize upon it. He only knew
+that it concerned the matter in hand, and that it left him vaguely
+troubled.</p>
+<p>"You were saying," the girl prompted him.</p>
+<p>"Nothing very important&mdash;except how glad I am you are going
+my way. The woods are certainly lonesome by yourself. I suppose
+you'll be willing to make an early start."</p>
+<p>"The earlier the better. I've got a long way to go."</p>
+<p>They made their plans, and soon they parted to complete
+preparations for the journey. The girl went into her house: Ben
+took the rifle, and followed by the wolf, struck down the main
+street of the village.</p>
+<p>It can be said for Ben that he aroused no little conjecture and
+interest in the minds of the townspeople, striding through the
+street with the savage woods creature following abjectly at his
+heels. Evidently Ben's conquest was complete: the animal obeyed his
+every command as quickly as an intelligent dog. It was noticeable,
+however, that even the hardiest citizens kept an apprehensive eye
+on the wolf during the course of any conversation with Ben.</p>
+<p>He bought supplies&mdash;flour and salt and a few other
+essentials&mdash;simple tools and utensils such as are carried by
+prospectors, blankets, shells for his rifle, and a few, simple,
+hard-wearing clothes. He went to bed dead tired, his funds
+materially reduced. But before dawn he was up, wholly refreshed;
+and after a hasty breakfast went to pack his horses for the
+trip.</p>
+<p>Beatrice came stealing out of the shadows, more than ever
+suggestive of some timid creature of the forest, and the three of
+them saddled and packed the animals. As daylight broke they started
+out, down the shadowed street of the little town.</p>
+<p>"The last we'll see of civilization for a long, long time," the
+girl reminded him.</p>
+<p>The man thrilled deeply. "And I'm glad of it," he answered.
+"Nothing ahead but the long trail!"</p>
+<p>It was a long trail, that which they followed along Poor Man's
+creek in the morning hours. The girl led, by right of having some
+previous acquaintance with the trail. The three pack horses walked
+in file between, heads low, tails whisking; and Ben, with Fenris at
+his horse's hoofs, brought up the rear. Almost at once the spruce
+forest dropped over them, the silence and the gloom that Ben had
+known of old.</p>
+<p>This was not like gliding in a boat down-river. The narrow,
+winding trail offered a chance for the most intimate study of the
+wilderness. From the river the woodsfolk were but an occasional
+glimpse, the stir of a thicket on the bank: here they were living,
+breathing realities,&mdash;vivid pictures perfectly framed by the
+frosty green of the spruce.</p>
+<p>From the first mile these two riders were the best of
+companions. They talked gaily, their voices carrying to each other
+with entire ease through the still glades. He found her spirited,
+warm-hearted, responding with an eager gladness to every fresh
+manifestation of the wild; and in spite of his gay laughter she
+read something of the dark moodiness and intensity that were his
+dominant traits. But he was kind, too. His attitude toward the
+Little People met with on the trail&mdash;the little, scurrying
+folk&mdash;was particularly appealing: like that of a strong man
+toward children. She saw that he was sympathetic, instinctively
+chivalrous; and she got past his barrier of reserve as few living
+beings had ever done before.</p>
+<p>She saw at once that he was an expert horseman. Riding a
+half-broken mustang over the winding, brush-grown moose trails of
+the North is not like cantering a thoroughbred along a park avenue,
+and a certain amount of difficulty is the rule rather than the
+exception; but he controlled his animal as no man of her
+acquaintance had ever done. He rode a bay mare that was not, by a
+long way, the most reliable piece of horseflesh McClurg owned, yet
+she gave him the best she had in her, scrambling with a burst of
+energy on the pitches, leaping the logs, battling the mires, and
+obeying his every wish. The joy of the Northern trails depends
+largely upon the service rendered by the horse between one's knees,
+and Ben knew it to the full.</p>
+<p>Before the first two hours were past Beatrice found herself
+thrilling with admiration at Ben's woodcraft. Not only by
+experience but by instinct and character he was wholly fitted for
+life in the waste places. Just as some artists are born with the
+soul of music, he had come to the earth with the Red Gods at his
+beck and call; the spirit of the wild things seemed to move in his
+being. She didn't wholly understand. She only knew that this man,
+newly come from "The States," riding so straight and talking so
+gaily behind her, had qualities native to the forest that were
+lacking not only in her, but in such men as her father and Ray
+Brent. Seemingly he had inherited straight from the youngest days
+of the earth those traits by which aboriginal man conquered the
+wild.</p>
+<p>The first real manifestation of this truth occurred soon after
+they reached the bank of Poor Man's creek. All at once he had
+shouted at her and told her to stop her horse. She drew up and
+turned in her saddle, questioning.</p>
+<p>"There's something stirring in the thicket beside you. Don't you
+hear him?"</p>
+<p>Beatrice had sharp ears, but she strained in vain for the sound
+that, forty feet farther distant, Ben heard easily. She shook her
+head, firmly believing his imagination had led him astray. But an
+instant later a coyote&mdash;one of those gray skulkers whose
+waging cries at twilight every woodfarer knows&mdash;sprang out of
+his covert and darted away.</p>
+<p>Beatrice was amazed. The significance of the incident went
+further than the fact of mere good hearing. The coyote, except when
+he chooses to wail out his wrongs at the fall of night, is one of
+the forest shadows for silence&mdash;yet Ben had heard him. It
+meant nothing less than that strange quickening of the senses found
+in but few&mdash;master woodsmen&mdash;that is the especial trait
+and property of the beasts themselves.</p>
+<p>Now that they climbed toward Spruce Pass their talk died away,
+and more and more they yielded themselves to the hushed mood of the
+forest. Their trail was no longer clearly pronounced. It was a
+wilderness thoroughfare in the true sense,&mdash;a winding path
+made by the feet of the great moose journeying from valley to
+valley.</p>
+<p>Wild life became ever more manifest. They saw the grouse,
+Franklin's fowl so well beloved by tenderfeet because of their
+propensity to sit still under fire and give an unsteady marksman a
+second shot. Fool hens, the woodsman called them, and the motley
+and mark of their weak mentality were a red badge near the eye. The
+fat birds perched on the tree limbs over the trail, relying on
+their mottled plumage, blending perfectly with the dull grays and
+browns of the foliage, to keep them out of sight. But such wiles
+did not deceive Ben. And once, in provision for their noon lunch, a
+fat cock tumbled through the branches at Beatrice's pistol
+shot.</p>
+<p>The pine squirrels seemed to be having some sort of a
+competitive field meet, and the tricks they did in the trees above
+the trail filled the two riders with delight. They sped up and down
+the trunks; they sprang from limb to limb; they flicked their tails
+and turned their heads around backward and stood on their haunches,
+all the time chattering in the greatest excitement. Once a
+porcupine&mdash;stupid, inoffensive old Urson who carries his fort
+around on his back&mdash;rattled his quills in a near-by thicket;
+and once they caught a glimpse of a mule deer on the hillside. This
+was rather too cold and hard a country, however, to be beloved by
+deer. Mostly they dwelt farther upriver.</p>
+<p>All manner of wild creatures, great and small, had left signs on
+the trails. There were tracks of otter and mink, those two river
+hunters whose skins, on ladies' shoulders, are better known than
+the animals themselves. They might be only patches of fur in
+cities, but they were living, breathing personages here.
+Particularly they were personages to the trout. Ben knew perfectly
+how the silver fish had learned to dart with such rapidity in the
+water. They learned it keeping out of the way of the otter and the
+mink.</p>
+<p>They saw the tracks of marten&mdash;the mink that has gone into
+the tree tops to live; the doglike imprints of a coyote at which
+Fenris whimpered and scratched in excitement (doubtless wishing to
+run him down and bite him, as is the usual reception to the
+detested coyote by the more important woods creatures) and once the
+fresh mud showed that an old grizzly&mdash;the forest monarch, the
+ancient, savage despot of the woods of which all foresters, near
+and far, speak with deep respect&mdash;had passed that way but a
+few minutes before. Foresters both, the two riders had every reason
+to believe that the old gray tyrant was lurking somewhere in the
+thickets beside the trail, half in anger, half in curiosity
+watching them ride past. And of course the tracks of moose, and of
+their fellows of mighty antlers, the caribou, were in
+profusion.</p>
+<p>To all these things Beatrice responded with the joy of a true
+nature lover. Her heart thrilled and her eyes were bright; and
+every new track was a fresh surprise and delight. But Ben was
+affected more deeply still. The response he made had its origin and
+font in deeply hidden centers of his spirit; mysterious realms that
+no introspection could reveal or words lay bare.</p>
+<p>He knew nothing of Beatrice's sense of constant surprise. In his
+own heart he had known that all these woodspeople would be waiting
+for him&mdash;just as they were&mdash;and he would have known far
+greater amazement to have found some of them gone. And instead of
+sprightly delight he knew only an all-pervading sense of comfort,
+as a man feels upon returning to his home country, among the people
+whom he knows and understands.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XII"></a>
+<h2>XII</h2>
+<p>At the very headquarters of Poor Man's Creek, where the stream
+had dwindled to a silver thread between mossy banks, Beatrice and
+Ben made their noon camp. They were full in the heart of the wild,
+by now, and had mounted to those high levels and park lands beloved
+by the caribou. They built a small fire beside the stream and drew
+water from the deep, clear pools that lay between cascade and
+cascade.</p>
+<p>Ben Darby slowly became aware that this was one of the happiest
+hours of his life. He watched, with absorbed delight, the deft,
+sure motions of the girl as she fried the grouse and sliced bread,
+while Ben himself tended to the coffee. Already the two were on the
+friendliest terms, and since they were to be somewhere in the same
+region, the future offered the most pleasing vistas to both of
+them. When the horses were rested and Ben's pipe was out, they
+ventured on. Following a caribou trail, they ascended a majestic
+range of mountains&mdash;a trail too steep to ride and which the
+pack horses accomplished only with great difficulty&mdash;emerging
+onto a high plateau of open parks and small clumps of the darkest
+spruce. It was, of course, the most scenic part of the journey; and
+the inclination to talk died speedily from the lips.</p>
+<p>They rode in silence, watching. Both of them were sure that
+words, no matter how beautiful and eloquent, could be only a
+sacrilege. The very tone of the high ranges is that of silence vast
+and eternal beyond scope of thought, and the only sounds that can
+fittingly shatter that mighty breathlessness are the great,
+calamitous phenomena of nature,&mdash;the thunder crashing in the
+sky and the avalanche on the slope. The forests they had just left
+were deeply silent, but the far hush had been alleviated by the
+soft noises of wild creatures stirring about their occupations;
+perhaps also by the feeling that the thickets were full of sound
+pitched just too high or just too low for human ears to hear; but
+even this relief was absent here. The high peaks stretched before
+them, one after another, until they faded into the
+horizon,&mdash;majestic, aloof, utterly and grandly silent.</p>
+<p>The snow still lay deep over the plateau, packed to the
+consistency of ice, and the marmots had not yet emerged to welcome
+the spring with their shrill, joyous whistling. From their high
+place they could see the hills spread out below them,&mdash;fold
+after fold as of a great cloak, deeply green, seemingly infinite in
+expanse, broken only by the blue glint of the Agnes lakes, like two
+great twin sapphires hidden in the forest. But they couldn't make
+out a single roof top of Snowy Gulch. The forest had already
+claimed it utterly.</p>
+<p>This was the caribou range; wherever they looked they saw the
+tracks of the noble animals in the snow. Later they caught a
+glimpse of the creatures themselves, a small herd of perhaps half a
+dozen swinging along the snow in their indescribable pacing gait.
+They were in fitting surroundings, their color inexpressibly vivid
+against the snow, and Ben's heart warmed and thumped in his breast
+at the sight.</p>
+<p>But the trail descended at last into the great valley of the
+Yuga. Mile after mile, it seemed to them, they went down, leaving
+the snow, leaving the open glades, into the dark, still glens of
+spruce. At last they paused on the river bank.</p>
+<p>Ben was somewhat amazed at the size of the stream when it
+emerged below the rapids. It was, at its present high stage, fully
+one hundred and fifty yards across, such a stream as would bear the
+traffic of commerce in any inhabited region. They turned down the
+moose trail that followed its bank.</p>
+<p>But it was not to be that this journey should hold only delight
+for Ben. A half-mile down the river he suddenly made a most
+momentous and disturbing discovery.</p>
+<p>He had stopped his horse to reread the copy of Hiram Melville's
+letter, intending to verify his course. In the shadow of the tall,
+dark spruce&mdash;darkening ever as the light grew less&mdash;his
+eye sped swiftly over it. His gaze came to rest upon a familiar
+name.</p>
+<p>"Look out for Jeff Neilson and his gang," the letter read. "They
+seen some of my dust."</p>
+<p>Neilson&mdash;no wonder Ben had been perplexed when Beatrice had
+first spoken her name. No wonder it had sounded familiar. And the
+hot beads moistened his brow when he conceived of all the dreadful
+possibilities of that coincidence of names.</p>
+<p>Yet because he was a woodsman of nature and instinct, blood and
+birth, he retained the most rigid self-control. He made no
+perceptible start. At first he did not glance at Beatrice. Slowly
+he folded the letter and put it back into his pocket.</p>
+<p>"I'm going all right," he announced. He urged his horse forward.
+His perfect self-discipline had included his voice: it was deep,
+but wholly casual and unshaken. "And how about you, Miss
+Neilson?"</p>
+<p>He pronounced her name distinctly, giving her every chance to
+correct him in case he had misunderstood her. But there was no hope
+here. "I'm going all right, I know."</p>
+<p>"It seems to me we must be heading into about the same country,"
+Ben went on. "You see, Miss Neilson, I'm going to make my first
+permanent camp somewhere along this still stretch; I've had inside
+dope that there's big gold possibilities around here."</p>
+<p>"It has never been a gold country except for pockets, some of
+them remarkably rich," she told him doubtfully, evidently trying
+not to discourage him. "But my father has come to the conclusion
+that it's really worth prospecting. He's in this same country
+now."</p>
+<p>"I suppose I'll meet him&mdash;I'll likely meet him to-night
+when I take you to the cabin on the river. You said his name
+was&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Jeffery Neilson."</p>
+<p>For all that he was prepared for it, the name was a straight-out
+body blow to Ben. He had still dared to hope that this girl was of
+no blood kin of the claim-jumper, Jeffery Neilson. The truth was
+now only too plain. By the girl's own word he was operating in
+Hiram Melville's district and unquestionably had already jumped the
+claim. His daughter was joining him now, probably to keep house for
+him; and for all that Ben knew, already possessing guilty knowledge
+of her father's crime.</p>
+<p>It was hard to hold the head erect, after that. Already he had
+builded much on his friendship with this girl, only to find that
+she was allied with the enemy camp. He saw in a flash how unlikely
+it would be that Ezram and himself could drive the usurpers out:
+the claim-jumper is a difficult problem, even when the original
+discoverer is living and in possession, much more so when he is
+silent in his grave.</p>
+<p>Ben had known the breed since boyhood, and he hated them as he
+hated coyotes and pack-rats. They lacked the manhood to brave the
+unknown in pursuit of the golden fleece; they waited until after
+years of grinding labor the strike was made and then pounced down
+upon the claim like vultures on the dead. Ben was glad he had not
+obeyed his impulse to tell the girl of his true reason for coming
+to the Yuga. He knew now, with many foes against him, he could best
+operate in the dark.</p>
+<p>His thought flashed to Ezram. The recovery of the mine had been
+the old man's fondest dream, the last hope of his declining years,
+and this setback would go hard with him. The blow was ever so much
+more cruel on Ezram's account than his own. Ben could picture his
+downcast face, trying yet to smile; his sobered eyes that he would
+try to keep bright. But there would be certain planning, when they
+met again over their camp fire. And there were three of them allied
+now. Fenris the wolf had come into his service.</p>
+<p>He glanced back at the gray-black creature that followed at the
+heels of his horse; and now, at twilight's graying, he saw that a
+significant and startling change had come over him. He no longer
+trotted easily behind them. He came stalking, almost as if in the
+hunt, his ears pointing, his neck hairs bristling, and there were
+the beginnings of curious, lurid lightnings in his eyes. There
+could be but one answer. He had been swept away in the current of
+madness that sweeps the forest at the fall of darkness: the age-old
+intoxication of the wilderness night. The hunting hours were at
+hand. The creatures of claw and fang were coming into their own.
+Fenris was shivering all over with those dark wood's passions that
+not even the wisest naturalist can fully understand.</p>
+<p>The air was tingling and electric, just as Ben recalled it a
+thousand nights. Everywhere the hunters were leaving their lairs
+and starting forth; grasses moved and brush-clumps rustled; blood
+was hot and savage eyes were shot with fire. The mink, with
+unspeakable savagery, took the trail of a snow-shoe rabbit beside
+the river-bed; a lynx with pale, green, luminous eyes began his
+stalk of a tree squirrel, and various of Fenris' fellows&mdash;pack
+brothers except for his own relations with men&mdash;sang a song
+that was old when the mountains were new as they raced, black in
+silhouette against the paling sky, along a snowy ridge.</p>
+<p>Ben felt a quickening of his own senses, not knowing why.
+<i>His</i> blood, too, spurted inordinately fast through his veins,
+and his flesh seemed to creep and tingle. There could be no surer
+proof of his legitimacy as a son of the wilderness. The passions
+that maddened the first men, near to the beasts they hunted in
+their ancient forests, returned in all their fullness. The dusk
+deepened. The trail dimmed so that the eye had to strain to follow
+it.</p>
+<p>Complex and weird were the passions invoked to-night, but not
+even to the gray wolf that is, beyond all other creatures, the
+embodiment of the wilderness spirit, did there come such a madness,
+such a dark and terrible lust, as that which cursed a certain
+wayfarer beyond the next bend in the river. This was not one of the
+forest people, neither the lynx, nor the hunting otter, nor even
+the venerable grizzly with whom no one contests the trail. It was a
+human being,&mdash;a man of youthful body and strong, deeply lined,
+yet savage face.</p>
+<p>A close observer would have noticed the faintest tremor and
+shiver throughout his body. His eyes were very bright, vivid even
+in the dying day. He was deeply lost in his own mood, seemingly
+oblivious to the whole world about him. He carried a rifle in his
+hands.</p>
+<p>He was on his way to report to his chief; and just what would be
+forthcoming he did not know. But if too much objection were raised
+and affairs got to a crucial stage, he had nothing to fear. He had
+learned a certain lesson&mdash;an avenue to triumph. It was strange
+that he had never hit upon it before.</p>
+<p>His blood was scalding hot, and he was swept by exultation. Not
+for an instant had he hesitated, nor Would he ever hesitate again.
+There was no one in the North of greater might than he! No one
+could bend his will from now on. He had found the road to
+triumph.</p>
+<p>Ray Brent had discovered a new power within himself. Perhaps
+even his chief, Jeffery Neilson, must yield before his new-found
+strength.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XIII"></a>
+<h2>XIII</h2>
+<p>As twilight darkened to the full gloom of the forest night, Ben
+and Beatrice rode to a lonely cabin on the Yuga River,&mdash;one
+that had been built by Hiram Melville years past and was just at
+the mouth of the little creek on which, less than a half-mile
+distant, he had his claim. They had seen a lighted window from
+afar, marking the end of Beatrice's hard day's ride.</p>
+<p>"Of course you won't try to go on to-night?" she asked Ben.
+"You'll stay at the cabin?"</p>
+<p>"There likely won't be room for three," he answered. "But it's a
+clear night. I can make a fire and sleep out."</p>
+<p>It was true. The stars were emerging, faint points of light
+through the darkening canopy of the sky; and to the East a silver
+glint on the horizon forecast the rising moon.</p>
+<p>They halted at last; and Beatrice saw her father's form, framed
+in the doorway. She hastened into his arms: waiting in the darkness
+Ben could not help but hear his welcome. Many things were doubtful;
+but there could be no doubt of the love that Neilson bore his
+daughter. The amused, half-teasing words with which he received her
+did not in the least disguise it. "The joy and the light of his
+life," Ben commented to himself. The gray old claim-jumper had this
+to redeem him, at least.</p>
+<p>"But why so many horses, Beatrice?" he asked. "You&mdash;brought
+some one with you?"</p>
+<p>Ben was not so far distant that he failed to discern the instant
+change in Neilson's tone. It had a strained, almost an apprehensive
+quality such as few men had ever heard in his voice before. Plainly
+all visitors in this end of the mountains were regarded with
+suspicion.</p>
+<p>"He's a prospector&mdash;Mr. Darby," the girl replied. "Come
+here, Ben&mdash;and be introduced." She turned toward her new-found
+friend; and the latter walked near, into the light that streamed
+over him from the doorway. "This is my father, Mr. Darby&mdash;Mr.
+Neilson. Some one told him this was a good gold country."</p>
+<p>Ben had already decided upon his course of action and had his
+answer ready. He knew perfectly that it would only put Neilson on
+his guard if he stated his true position; and besides, he wanted
+word of Ezram. "I may have a wrong steer, Mr. Neilson," he said,
+"but a man I met down on the river-trail, out of Snowy Gulch,
+advised me to come here. He said that he had some sort of a claim
+up here that his brother left him, and though it was a pocket
+country, he thought there'd soon be a great rush up this way."</p>
+<p>"I hardly know who it could have been that you met," Neilson
+began doubtfully. "He didn't tell you his name&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Melville. I believe that was it. And if you'll tell me how to
+find him, I'll try to go on to-night. I brought him some of his
+belongings from Snowy Gulch&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Melville, eh? I guess I know who you mean now. But no&mdash;I
+don't know of any claim unless it's over east, beyond here. Maybe
+further down the river."</p>
+<p>Ben made no reply at once; but his mind sped like lightning. Of
+course Neilson was lying about the claim: he knew perfectly that at
+that moment he was occupying one of Hiram Melville's cabins. He was
+a first-class actor, too&mdash;his voice indicating scarcely no
+acquaintance with or interest in the name.</p>
+<p>"He hasn't come up this way?" Ben asked casually.</p>
+<p>"He hasn't come through here that I know of. Of course I'm
+working at my claim&mdash;with my partners&mdash;and he might have
+gone through without our seeing him. It seems rather unlikely."</p>
+<p>Ben was really puzzled now. If Ezram had already made his
+presence known and was camping somewhere in the hills about, there
+was no reason immediately evident why Neilson should deny his
+presence. Ben found himself wondering whether by any chance Ezram
+had been delayed along the trail, perhaps had even lost his way,
+and had not yet put in an appearance.</p>
+<p>"He told me, in the few minutes that I talked to him, that his
+cabin was somewhere close to this one&mdash;I thought he said up
+this creek."</p>
+<p>"There is a cabin up the creek a way," Neilson admitted, "but it
+isn't the one he meant. It's on my claim, and my two partners are
+living in it. But when he said near to this one, he might have
+meant ten miles. That's the way we Northern men speak of
+distance."</p>
+<p>There was nothing more to say, nothing to do at present. He said
+his farewells to the girl, refused an invitation to pass the night
+in the cabin, and made his way to the green bank of the stream.
+Four hundred yards from the cabin, and perhaps a like number from
+the cabin of Ray and Charley&mdash;obscured from both by the
+thickets&mdash;he pitched his camp.</p>
+<p>In the cabin he had left Jeffery Neilson catechized his
+daughter, trying to learn all he could concerning Ben. It was true
+that he carried the dead Hiram's rifle, and that the latter's pet
+wolf followed at his heels, but it was wholly probable that the old
+man, Hiram's brother, with whom he had conversed at the river, had
+designated him to get them. He had been courteous and respectful
+throughout the journey to the Yuga, Beatrice said, and he had also
+saved her from possible death in the fangs of the wolf the evening
+previous. Neilson decided that he would take no steps at present
+but merely wait and watch developments.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Ben had made his fire and unpacked his horses. He
+confined his riding horse with a picket rope; the others he turned
+loose. Then he cooked a simple meal for himself and the gaunt
+servant at his heels.</p>
+<p>When the night had come down in full, and as he sat about the
+glowing coals of his supper fire, he had time to devote serious
+thought to the fate of Ezram. It occurred to him that perhaps the
+old man had discovered, at a distance, the presence of the
+claim-jumpers; and was merely waiting in the thickets for a chance
+to take action. If such were the case, sooner or later they could
+join their fortunes again. It was also easy to imagine that Ezram
+had lost his way on the journey out.</p>
+<p>He stood at the edge of the firelight, gazing out into the
+darkened forest. The wolf crouched beside him: alert, watching his
+face for any command. It was wholly plain that the gaunt woods
+creature had accepted him at once as his master; and that the bond
+between them, because of some secret similarity of spirit, was
+already far closer than between most masters and their pets.</p>
+<p>Ben sensed another side of the forest to-night because of his
+inborn love of the waste places not often seen. The thickets were
+menacing, sinister to-night. The spruce crept up to the skyline
+with darkness and mystery: he realized the eternal malevolence that
+haunts their silent fastnesses. They would have tricks in plenty to
+play on such as would lose their way on their dusky trails! Oh,
+they would have no mercy or remorse for any one who was lost,
+<i>out there</i>, to-night! Ben felt a heavy burden of dread!</p>
+<p>Even now, old Ezram might be wandering, vainly, through the
+gloomy, whispering woods, ever penetrating farther into their
+merciless solitudes. And no homes smoked in the clearings, no camps
+glowed in the immensity of the dark&mdash;out there. This was just
+the beginning of the forest; clear into the shadow of the Arctic
+Circle, where the woodlands gave way to the Weary wastes of
+barrens, there was no break, no tilled fields or fisher's villages,
+only an occasional Indian encampment which not even a wolf, running
+through the night, might find. His supply of food would quickly be
+exhausted, fatigue would break his valiant spirit. Ben planned an
+extensive search for his tracks as soon as the morning light
+permitted him to see.</p>
+<p>He missed the old man's comradeship with a deep and fervid
+longing. They had come to count on each other, these past weeks. It
+wasn't alone infinite gratitude that he felt for him now. The thing
+went too deep to tell. Yet there was no use seeking for him
+to-night.</p>
+<p>He turned to the wolf and dropped his hand upon the animal's
+shoulder. Fenris started, then quivered in ecstasy. "I wish I had
+your nose, to-night, old boy," Ben told him. "I'd find that old
+buddy of mine. I wish I had your eyes to see in the dark, and your
+legs to run. Fenris, do you know where he is?"</p>
+<p>The wolf turned his wild eyes toward his master's face, as if he
+were trying to understand.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XIV"></a>
+<h2>XIV</h2>
+<p>Impelled by an urge within himself Ben suddenly knelt beside his
+lupine friend. He could not understand the flood of emotion, the
+vague sense of impending and dramatic events that stirred him to
+the quick. He only knew, with a knowledge akin to inspiration, that
+in Fenris lay the answer to his problem.</p>
+<p>The moment was misted over with a quality of unreality. In the
+east rose the moon, shining incredibly on the tree tops, showering
+down through the little rifts in the withholding branches,
+enchanting the place as by the weaving of a dream. The moon madness
+caught up Ben like a flame, enthralling him as never before. He
+knew that white sphere of old. And all at once he realized that
+here, at his knees, was one who knew it too,&mdash;with a knowledge
+as ancient and as infinite as his own. Not for nothing had the wolf
+breed lived their lives beneath it through the long roll of the
+ages. Its rising and its setting had regulated the hunting hours of
+the pack time without end; its beams had lighted the game trails
+where the gray band had bayed after the deer; its light had beheld,
+since the world was young, the rapturous mating of the old pack
+leader and his female. Fenris too knew the moon-madness; but unlike
+Ben he had a means of expression of the wonder and mystery and
+vague longing that thrilled his wild heart. No man who has heard
+the pack song to the moon could doubt this fact. It is a long,
+melancholy wail, poignant with the pain of living, but it tells
+what man can not.</p>
+<p>Ben knew, now, why he was a forester, a woodsman famed even
+among woodsmen. Most of his fellows had been tamed by civilization;
+they had lived beneath roofs instead of the canopy of heaven, and
+they had almost forgotten about the moon. Ben, on the other hand,
+was a recurrence of an earlier type, inheriting little from his
+immediate ancestors but reverting back a thousand centuries to the
+Cave and the Squatting Place. His nature was that of prehistoric
+man rather than that of the son of civilization; and in this lay
+the explanation for all that had set him apart from the great run
+of men and had made him the master woodsman that he was. And
+because his spirit was of the wildwood, because he also knew the
+magic of the moon, he was able to make this wildwood thing at his
+feet understand and obey his will.</p>
+<p>The world of to-day seemed to fade out for him and left only the
+wolf, its fierce eyes on his own. Time swung back, and this might
+have been a scene of forgotten ages,&mdash;the wolf, the human
+hunter, the smoldering camp fire, the dark, jagged line of spruce
+against the sky. It was thus at the edge of the ice. Wolf and
+man&mdash;both children of the wild&mdash;had understood each other
+then; and they could understand each other now.</p>
+<p>"Fenris, old boy," the man whispered. "Can you find him for me,
+Fenris? He's out there somewhere&mdash;" the man motioned toward
+the dark&mdash;"and I want him. Can you take me to him?"</p>
+<p>The wolf trembled all over, struggling to get his meaning. This
+was no creature of subordinate intelligence: the great wolf of the
+North. He had, besides the cunning of the wild hunters, the
+intelligence that is the trait of the whole canine breed. Nor did
+he depend on his sense of hearing alone. He watched his master's
+face, and more than that, he was tuned and keyed to those
+mysterious vibrations that carry a message from brain to brain no
+less clearly and swift than words themselves,&mdash;the secret
+wireless of the wild.</p>
+<p>"He's my buddy, old boy, and I want you to find him for me," Ben
+went on, more patiently. He searched his pockets, drawing out at
+last the copy of the letter Ezram had given him that morning, and,
+because the old man had carried it for many days, it could still
+convey a message to the keen nose of the wolf. He put it to the
+animal's nostrils, then pointed away into the darkness.</p>
+<p>Fenris followed the motion with his eyes; and presently his long
+body stiffened. Ben watched him, fascinated. Then the wolf sniffed
+at the paper again and trotted away into the night.</p>
+<p>In one leap Ben was on his feet, following him. The wolf turned
+once, saw that his master was at his heels, and sped on. They
+turned up a slight draw, toward the hillside.</p>
+<p>It became clear at once that Fenris was depending upon his
+marvelous sense of smell. His nose would lower to the ground, and
+sometimes he tacked back and forth, uncertainly. At such times Ben
+watched him with bated breath. But always he caught the scent
+again.</p>
+<p>Once more he paused, sniffing eagerly; then turned, whining.
+Just as clearly as if they had possessed a mutual language Ben
+understood: the animal had caught the clear scent at last. The wolf
+loped off, and his fierce bay rang through the hushed forest.</p>
+<p>It was a long-drawn, triumphant note; and the wild creatures
+paused in their mysterious, hushed occupations to listen. It was
+also significant that it made certain deadly inroads in the spirit
+of Ray Brent, sitting in his distant cabin. He marked the direction
+of the sound, and he cursed, half in awe, under his breath. He had
+always hated the gray rangers. They were the uncanny demons of the
+forest.</p>
+<p>Ben followed the running wolf as fast as he could; and in his
+eagerness he had no opportunity for conjecture as to what he would
+find at the end of the pursuit. Yet he did not believe for an
+instant this was a false trail. The wolf's deep, full-ringing bays
+were ever more urgent and excited, filling the forest with their
+uproar. But quite suddenly the silence closed down again, seemingly
+more deep and mysterious than ever.</p>
+<p>Ben's first sensation was one of icy terror that crept to the
+very marrow of his bones. He knew instantly that there was a
+meaning of dreadful portent in the abrupt cessation of the cries.
+He halted an instant, listening, but at first could hear no more
+than the throb of his heart in his breast and the whisper of his
+own troubled breathing. But presently, at a distance of one hundred
+yards, he distinguished the soft whining of the wolf.</p>
+<p>Fenris was no longer running! He had halted at the edge of a
+distant thicket. The cold sweat sprang out on Ben's forehead, and
+he broke into a headlong run.</p>
+<p>There was no later remembrance of traversing that last hundred
+yards. The hillside seemed to whip under his feet. He paused at
+last, just at the dark margin of an impenetrable thicket. The wolf
+whined disconsolately just beyond the range of his vision.</p>
+<p>"Ezram!" he called, a curious throbbing quality in his voice.
+"Are you there, Ez? It's me&mdash;Ben."</p>
+<p>But the thickets neither rustled nor spoke. The cracked old
+voice he had learned to love did not speak in relief, in that
+moment of unutterable suspense. Indeed, the silence seemed to
+deepen about him. The spruce trees were hushed and impassive as
+ever; the moon shone and the wind breathed softly in his face.
+Fenris came whimpering toward him.</p>
+<p>Together, the man and the wolf, they crept on into the thicket.
+They halted at last before a curious shadow in the silvered covert.
+Ben knew at once he had found his ancient comrade.</p>
+<p>He and Ezram had had their last laugh together. He lay very
+still, the moonlight ensilvering his droll, kindly
+face,&mdash;sleeping so deeply that no human voice could ever waken
+him. An ugly rifle wound yawned darkly at his temple.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XV"></a>
+<h2>XV</h2>
+<p>The first effect of a great shock is usually a semi-paralysis of
+the entire mental mechanism and is, as a rule, beneficent. The
+brain seems to be enclosed in a great preoccupation, like a wall,
+and the messages of pain and horror brought by the nerves batter
+against it in vain. The senses are dulled, the perceptions blunted,
+and full realization does not come.</p>
+<p>For a long time, in which time itself stood still, Ben sat
+beside the dead body of his old counselor and friend as a child
+might sit among flowers. He half leaned forward, his arms limp, his
+hands resting in his lap, a deep wonder and bewilderment in his
+eyes. Dully he watched the moon lifting in the sky and felt the
+caress of the wind against his face, glancing only from time to
+time at the huddled body before him. The wolf whined softly, and
+sometimes Ben reached his hand to caress the furry shoulder.</p>
+<p>But slowly his wandering faculties returned to him. He began to
+understand. Ezram was dead&mdash;that was it&mdash;gone from his
+life as smoke goes in the air. Never to hear him again, or see him,
+or make plans with him, or have high adventures beside him along
+the lonely trails. Fenris had found him in the darkness: here he
+lay&mdash;the old family friend, the man who had saved him,
+redeemed him and given him his chance, his old "buddy" who had
+brought him home. The thing was not credible at first: that here,
+dead as a stone, lay the shell of that life that had been his own
+salvation. He studied intently the gray face, missed its habitual
+smile and for really the first time his gaze rested upon the
+yawning wound in the temple.</p>
+<p>He gazed at it in speechless, growing horror, and something like
+an incredible cold descended upon him. The entire hydraulic system
+of his blood seemed to be freezing. His hands were cold, his vitals
+icy and lifeless. There was, however, the beginning of heat
+somewhere back of his eyes. He could feel it but dimly, but it was
+increasing, slowly, like a smoldering coal that eats its way into
+wood and soon will burst into a flame. Slowly he began to grow
+rigid, his muscles flexing. His face underwent a tangible change.
+The lines deepened, the lips set in a hard line, the eyes were like
+those of a reptile,&mdash;cold, passionless, unutterably terrible.
+His face was pale like the paleness of death, but it appeared more
+like hard, white metal than flesh. His mind began to work clear
+again; he began to understand.</p>
+<p>Ezram had been shot, murdered by the men who had jumped his
+claim. Beatrice's father, who had talked to him, had probably
+committed the crime: if not he, one of his understrappers at his
+order. He found himself recalling what Jeffery Neilson had said.
+Oh, the man had been sharp! Believing that in the depth of the
+forest the body would never be discovered, he had tried to send Ben
+farther into the interior in search of him.</p>
+<p>He arose, wholly self-mastered, and with hard, strong hands made
+a detailed examination of Ezram's wound. He had evidently been shot
+by a rifle of large caliber, probably at close range. Ezram's own
+gun lay at his feet, loaded but not cocked.</p>
+<p>"They shot you down in cold blood, old boy, didn't they?" he
+found himself asking. "You didn't have a chance!"</p>
+<p>But the gray lips were setting with death, and could not answer.
+Ben had forgotten for the instant; he must keep better hold of
+himself. The time was not ripe to turn himself loose. But he did
+wish for one more word with Ezram, just a few little minutes of
+planning. They could doubtless work out something good together.
+They could decide what to do.</p>
+<p>From this point his mind naturally fell to Ezram's parting
+advice to him. "I've only got one decent place to keep things safe,
+and that ain't so all-fired decent," the old man had told him. "I
+always put 'em down my bootleg, between the sock and the leather.
+If I ever get shuffled off, all of a sudden, I want you to look
+there careful."</p>
+<p>Still with the same deathly pallor he crept over the dead leaves
+to Ezram's feet. His hands were perfectly steady as he unlooped the
+laces, one after another, and quietly pulled off the right boot. In
+the boot leg, just as Ezram had promised, Ben found a scrap of
+white paper.</p>
+<p>He spread it on his knee, and unfolded it with care. The
+moonlight was not sufficiently vivid, however, for him to read the
+penciled scrawl. He felt in his pocket for a match.</p>
+<p>Because his mind was operating clear and sure, his thoughts
+flashed at once to his enemies in their cabins along the creek. He
+did not want them to know he had found the body. His first instinct
+was to work in the dark, to achieve his ends by stealth and
+cunning! It was strange what capacity for cunning had come upon
+him. Oh, he would be crafty&mdash;sharp&mdash;sure in every
+motion.</p>
+<p>It was unlikely, however, that the faint glare of a match could
+carry so far. To make sure he walked behind the covert, then turned
+his back to the canyon through which the creek flowed. The match
+cracked, inordinately loud in the silence, and his eyes followed
+the script. Ezram had been faithful to the last:</p>
+<div class="ltr">
+<p>To WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:</p>
+<p>In case of my death I leave all I die possessed of including my
+brother Hiram's claim near Yuga River to my pard and buddy, Ben
+Darby.</p>
+<p>(Signed) EZRA MELVILLE.</p>
+</div>
+<p>The document was as formal as Ezram could make it, with a
+carefully drawn seal, and for all its quaint wording, it was a will
+to stand in any court. But Ezram had not been able to hold his
+dignity for long. He had added a postscript:</p>
+<div class="ltr">
+<p>Son, old Hiram made a will, and I guess I can make one too. I
+just found out about them devils that jumped our claim. I left you
+back there at the river because I didn't want you taking any dam
+fool risks till I found out how things lay.</p>
+<p>I just got one thing to ask. If them devils get me&mdash;get
+them. My life ain't worth much but I want you to make them pay for
+the little it is worth. Never stop till you've done it.</p>
+</div>
+<p>Ben lighted match after match until he had absorbed every word.
+Then he folded the paper and placed it in his pocket; but the
+action did not in the least take his eyes from the words. He could
+still see them, written in fire. They were branded on his
+spirit.</p>
+<p>He stood wholly motionless for a space of almost a minute, as if
+listening. The heat back of his eyes was more intense now. The red
+coals were about to burst into flame. All the blood of his huge
+body seemed to be collecting there, searing his brain.</p>
+<p>The moon was no longer white in the sky. It had turned a fiery
+red. The stars were red too,&mdash;all of them more red than the
+Star of War. "I want you to make them pay," a voice said clearly in
+his ears. "Never stop till you've done it."</p>
+<p>And now Ben was no longer pale. His face was no longer hard and
+set. Rather it was dark&mdash;dark as dark earth. His eyes glowed
+like coals beneath his black brows. He was not standing still and
+lifeless now. He was shivering all over with the blackest hate, the
+most deadly fury.</p>
+<p>"Make them pay," he said aloud again, "and never stop till
+you've done it."</p>
+<p>A sudden snarl from the lips of the wolf drew his eyes downward.
+Heaven help him; for the moment he had forgotten Fenris! But he
+must not forget him again. They had work to do, the two of
+them.</p>
+<p>Fenris was no longer whining disconsolately. His master's fury
+had passed to him, and Ben looked and saw before him not the docile
+pet, but the savage beast of the wild. The hair was erect on his
+shoulders, his lips were drawn, too; he was crouched as if for
+battle. The eyes, sunken in their sockets, were red and terrible to
+see. Yet he was still Ben's servant. That quality could never pass
+from him. The eyes of two met,&mdash;the wolf and the man.</p>
+<p>At that instant the little tongue of flame that had been
+mounting in Ben's brain burst into a dreadful conflagration. It was
+the explosion at last, no less terrible because of its
+silence&mdash;because the sound of the least, little wind was still
+discernible in the distant thickets. He dropped to his knees before
+the wolf, seizing its head in a terrific grasp. He half jerked it
+off its feet, till he held it so that its eyes burned straight into
+his.</p>
+<p>"Fenris, Fenris!" he breathed. "We've got to make them pay. And
+we must not stop till we're done."</p>
+<p>It was more than a command. It had the quality of a vow. And
+now, as they knelt, eyes looking into eyes, it was like a pagan
+rite in the ancient world.</p>
+<p>Their separate identities were no longer greatly pronounced.
+They were not man and beast, they were simply the wolves of the
+forest. The old qualities most often associated with
+manhood&mdash;gentleness, forbearance, mercy&mdash;seemed to pass
+away from Ben as a light passes into darkness. Only the Wolf was
+left, the dominant Beast&mdash;that darker, hidden side of himself
+from which no man can wholly escape and which civilization has only
+smothered, as fresh fuel smothers a flame. Not for nothing had his
+fellows known him as "Wolf" Darby; and now the name was true.</p>
+<p>The Beast that dwells under every man's skin, in a greater or
+less degree, was in the full ascendancy at last. The unnamable
+ferocity that marks the death-leap of the wild hunters was in his
+face. In his eyes was cunning,&mdash;such craft as marks the pack
+in its hunting. All over him was written that unearthly rage that
+is alone the property and trait of the woods creatures: the fury
+with which a she-wolf fights for her cubs or a rattlesnake avenges
+the death of its mate. Mercy, remorse, compassion there was
+none.</p>
+<p>And the demon gods of the wilderness rejoiced. For uncounted
+thousands of years the tide of battle had flowed against them; and
+it was long and long since they had won such a victory as this.
+Mostly their men children had forsaken their leafy bowers to live
+in houses. They tilled the ground rather than hunt in the forest.
+The cattle that had once run wild in the marshes now fed dully in
+enclosed pastures; the horses&mdash;that mighty breed that once
+mated and fought and died in freedom on the high lands&mdash;pulled
+lowly burdens in the cultivated fields. Even some of the canine
+people too&mdash;first cousins to the wolves themselves&mdash;had
+sold themselves into slavery for a gnawed bone and a chimney
+corner. But to-night the wild had claimed its own again.</p>
+<p>Here was one, at least, who had come back into his own. The
+forest seemed to whisper and thrill with rapture.</p>
+<a name="PART_TWO"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<h2>PART TWO</h2>
+<h3>THE WOLF-MAN</h3>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XVI"></a>
+<h2>XVI</h2>
+<p>As a wolf might plan a hunt in the forest, Ben planned his war
+against Neilson and his subordinates. He knew perfectly that he
+must not attempt open warfare. The way of the wolf is the way of
+cunning and stealth: the stalk through the thicket and the
+ferocious attack upon the unsuspecting; and such example must guide
+Ben in his operations. He could not be too careful, too
+furtive.</p>
+<p>His foes were three against one, and they were on their own
+ground. They knew the trails and the lay of the country; and as
+always, in the science of warfare, this was an advantage hardly to
+be overcome. Ben knew that his only hope lay in the finest
+strategy. First he must make a surprise attack, and second, he must
+utilize all natural advantages.</p>
+<p>He was well aware that he could lie in ambush, close to the
+mine, and probably send one man to a speedy death with a rifle
+bullet. But he did not have one enemy; he had three. The survivors
+of the first shot would immediately seek shelter&mdash;probably
+returning shot for shot&mdash;and that would insert an element of
+uncertainty into the venture. At the distance he would be obliged
+to shoot, he would possibly only succeed in wounding one of his
+enemies, and he might miss him altogether. Such a plan as this was
+wholly too uncertain for adoption.</p>
+<p>There must be no sporting chances in his strategy. The way of
+the wolf is to cover every opening, to prepare for every
+contingency that his brute mind can foresee. He would give and
+receive no quarter, and the ancient fairness and honor must be
+likewise forgotten. He must take no risk with his own life until
+the last of the three was down. What happened thereafter did not
+greatly concern him. The world could shatter to atoms after that
+for all he would care. He was a son of forest solitude; and he had
+but one dream left in life.</p>
+<p>It was not his aim to give his foes the least chance to fight
+back, the slightest hope of battle. He would use any advantage,
+descend to any wile. This was not to be a sportsmen's war, but a
+grim battle to the death, inexorable and merciless.</p>
+<p>These things were all fully known to him before ever he left the
+hillside, and like a man asleep, walked down to his camp. The fire
+had burned down to coals&mdash;sullen and angry&mdash;but he heaped
+on fuel, and they broke into a blaze. Then, Fenris at his side, he
+squatted on the ground beside the dancing flame.</p>
+<p>He watched it, fascinated; mostly silent but sometimes muttering
+and whispering half-enunciated words. His red eyes and the black
+hair, matted about his lips and shadowing the backs of his hands,
+gave him a wild, fierce look; and it was as if the primal
+blood-lust and hatred that seared him had literally swept him back
+into the forgotten centuries,&mdash;the first, savage human hunter
+at the edge of the retreating glaciers. The scene had not changed:
+dark spruce and the red glow of fire; and there was atavism in his
+very posture. The first men had squatted beside their camp fires
+this same way, their wolfine pets beside them, as they made their
+battle plans.</p>
+<p>The eager flames held Ben's fascinated gaze as a crystal ball
+might hold the eyes of a seer. They seemed to have a message for
+him if he could just grasp it, a course whereby he might achieve
+success. Oh, they could be cruel, relentless&mdash;mercilessly
+eating their way into sensitive flesh. They were no respecters of
+persons, these creeping, leaping tongues. Nor must <i>he</i> have
+any scruples or qualms as to how he gained his ends. He too must be
+merciless, and if necessary, strike down the innocent in order to
+reach the guilty.</p>
+<p>As he watched certain knowledge reached him of life and death.
+The conclusion slowly came to him that just blind killing was not
+enough. For all he knew death might bring instant
+forgetfulness&mdash;and thus not constitute in itself a
+satisfactory measure of vengeance. The <i>fear</i> of death was a
+reality and a torment: for all he knew, the thing itself might be a
+change for the better. It might be that, suddenly hurled out of
+this world of three dimensions, his enemies would have no knowledge
+nor carry no memories of the hand that struck them down. There
+could be no satisfaction in this. To murder from ambush might be a
+measure of expedience, but never one of self-gratification. When
+Ben struck he wanted them to know who was their enemy, and for what
+crime they were laid low.</p>
+<p>The best way of all, of course, was to strike indirectly at
+them, perhaps through some one they loved. Soon, perhaps, he would
+see the way.</p>
+<p>He went to his blankets, but sleep did not come to him. The wolf
+stood on guard. Beatrice Neilson had fallen into happy dreams long
+since, but there was further wakefulness in Hiram Melville's newer
+cabin, farther up-creek. Ray Brent and Chan Heminway still sat over
+their cups, the fiery liquid running riot in their veins, but
+slumber did not come easily to-night. And when Beatrice was asleep,
+Neilson stole down the moonlit moose trail and joined his men.</p>
+<p>"I've brought news," he began, when the door had closed out the
+stars and the breath of the night. Chan, his small eyes glazed from
+strong drink, staggered to his feet to offer his chair to his
+chief. Brent, however, was in no mood for servility to-night. He
+had done man's work in the early evening; and his triumph and his
+new-found sense of power had not yet died in his body. Perhaps he
+had learned the way to all success. There was a curious sullen
+defiance in the blearing gaze over his glass.</p>
+<p>"What's your news?" Ray's voice harshened, possessing a certain
+quality of grim levity. "I guess old Hiram's brother hasn't come to
+life again, has he?"</p>
+<p>It was a significant thing that both Chan and Neilson looked
+oppressed and uneasy at the words. Like all men of low moral status
+they were secretly superstitious, and these boasting words crept
+unpleasantly under their skins. It is never a good thing to taunt
+the dead! Ray had spoken sheerly to frighten and shock them, thus
+revealing his own fearlessness and strength; yet his voice rang
+louder than he had meant. He had no desire for it to carry into the
+silver mystery of the night.</p>
+<p>"The less you say about Hiram's brother the better," Neilson
+answered sternly. "We've thrashed it out once to-night." He
+straightened as he read the insolence, the gathering
+insubordination in the other's contemptuous glance; and his voice
+lacked its old ring of power when he spoke again. "Jumpin' claims
+is one thing and murder is another."</p>
+<p>Ray, spurred on by the false strength of wickedness, drunk with
+his new sense of power, was already feeling the first surge of
+deadly anger in his veins. "I suppose if you had been doin' it,
+you'd let that old whelp take back this claim, worth a quarter
+million if it's worth a cent. Not if I know it. It was the only
+way&mdash;and the safe way too."</p>
+<p>"Safe! What if by a thousandth chance some one would blunder on
+to that body you left in the brush? What if some sergeant of
+mounted police would say to his man, 'Go get Ray Brent!' Where
+would you be then? You've always been a murderer at heart,
+Brent&mdash;but some time you'll slip up&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Only a fool slips up. Don't think I didn't figure on
+everything. As you say, there's not one chance in a thousand any
+one will ever find him. If they do, there wouldn't be any kind of a
+case. Likely the old man hasn't got a friend or relation on earth.
+I've searched his pockets&mdash;there's nothing to tell who he is.
+We'll have our claim recorded soon, and it would be easy to make
+him out the claim-jumper rather than us&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Wait just a minute before you say he ain't got any friends, or
+at least acquaintances. That's what I came to see you about
+to-night." Neilson paused, for the sake of suspense. "Beatrice came
+up to-night, as agreed, and she had a prospector with her&mdash;and
+he knew old Hiram's brother."</p>
+<p>A short, tense silence followed his words, and Ray stared into
+his cup. It might be that just for an instant the reckless light
+went out of his eyes and left them startled and glazing. Then he
+got to his feet. "Then God Almighty!" he cried. "What you waiting
+for? Why don't you croak him off before this night's over?"</p>
+<p>"Wait, you fool, till you've heard everything," Neilson replied.
+"There's no hurry about killing. As I told you, the less work of
+that kind we do, the more chance we've got of dying in our beds. It
+may be reasonable for one prospector to disappear, but some one's
+going to be suspicious if two of 'em do. I think I've already
+handled the matter."</p>
+<p>"I'd handle it, and quick too," Ray protested.</p>
+<p>"You'd handle yourself up a gallows, too. He doesn't seem to be
+a close friend of this old man; he just seems to have met up with
+him at the river, and the old man steered him up here. He asked me
+where the old man's claim was, and said he wanted to go over and
+see him. He was taking Hiram's wolf and his gun up to him. I told
+him I hadn't heard of the claim, that it must be farther inside,
+and I think I put it over. He ain't got the least suspicion. What
+he'll do is hang around here a while, I suppose,
+prospecting&mdash;and likely enough soon forget all about the old
+devil. I just came down here to tell you he was here and to watch
+your step."</p>
+<p>"Then the first thing up," Chan Heminway suggested, "is to bury
+the stiff."</p>
+<p>"Spoke up like a fool!" Ray answered. "Not till this man is dead
+or out of the country. It's well hidden, and don't go prowling
+anywheres near it. If he's the least bit suspicious, or even if
+he's on the lookout for gold, he'd likely enough follow you. But
+there's one thing we can do&mdash;and that quick."</p>
+<p>"And what's that?"</p>
+<p>"Start Chan off to-morrow to the office in Bradleyburg and
+record this claim in our names. We've waited too long already."</p>
+<p>"Ray, you're talking like a man now," Neilson agreed. "You and I
+stay here and work away, innocent as can be, on the claim. Chan,
+put that bottle away and get to bed. Take the trail down first
+thing to-morrow. Then we can laugh at all the prospectors that want
+to come."</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XVII"></a>
+<h2>XVII</h2>
+<p>Soon after the break of dawn Ben put his pick and shovel on his
+shoulder, and leisurely walked up the creek past Ray's cabin. Since
+Chan Heminway had already departed down the long trail to
+Bradleyburg&mdash;a town situated nearly forty miles from Snowy
+Gulch&mdash;Ray alone saw him pass; and he eyed him with some
+apprehension. Daylight had brought a more vivid consciousness of
+his last night's crime; and a little of his bravado had departed
+from him. He moved closer to his rifle.</p>
+<p>Yet in a moment his suspicions were allayed. Ben was evidently a
+prospector, just as he claimed to be, and was venturing forth to
+get his first "lay of the land." The latter continued up the draw,
+crossed a ridge, halted now and then in the manner of the wild
+creatures to see if he were being followed, and finally by a
+roundabout route returned to the lifeless form of his only friend.
+The wolf still trotted in silence behind him.</p>
+<p>The vivid morning light only revealed the crime in more dreadful
+detail. The withered form lay huddled in the stained leaves; and
+Ben stood a long time beside it, in deep and wondering silence,
+even now scarcely able to believe the truth. How strange it was
+that this old comrade could not waken and go on with him again! But
+in a moment he remembered his work.</p>
+<p>Slowly, laboriously, with little outward sign of the emotion
+that rent his heart, he dug a shallow grave He knew perfectly that
+this was a serious risk to his cause. Should the murderer return
+for any purpose, to his dead, the grave would of course show that
+the body had been discovered and would put him on his guard against
+Ben. Nevertheless, the latter could not leave these early remains
+to the doubtful mercy of the wilderness: the agents of air and sun,
+and the wild beasts.</p>
+<p>He threw the last clod and stood looking down at the upturned
+earth. "Sleep good, old Ez," he murmured in simple mass for the
+dead. "I'll do what you said."</p>
+<p>Then, at the head of the grave, he thrust the barrel of Ezram's
+rifle into the ground, a monument grim as his own thoughts. The
+last rite was completed; he was free to work now. From now on he
+could devote every thought to the work in hand,&mdash;the payment
+of his debts.</p>
+<p>By the same roundabout route he circled back to his camp, cooked
+his meager lunch, and in the afternoon ventured forth again. But he
+was prospecting in earnest this time, though the prospects that he
+sought were those of victory to his cause, rather than of gold. He
+was seeking simply a good, general idea of the nature and geography
+of the country so that he might know better how to plan his
+attack.</p>
+<p>His excursion took him at last to the wooded bank of the river.
+He stood a long time, quite motionless, listening to the water
+voices that only the wise can understand. This was really a noble
+stream. It flowed with such grandeur in its silence and solitude;
+old and gray and austere, it was a mighty expression of wilderness
+power,&mdash;resistless, immortal, eternally secretive. The waters
+flowed darkly, icy cold from the melting snow; but like a sleeping
+giant they would be quick to seize upon and destroy such as would
+try to brave their currents, likely never to yield them up again.
+Flowing forever through the uninhabited forest no man would ever
+know the fate of those the river claimed.</p>
+<p>He was above the camp when he descended to its banks, but he
+worked his way down through the thickets toward Jeffery Neilson's
+cabin. The river flowed quietly here, a long, still stretch that
+afforded safe boating. Yet the smooth waters did not in the least
+alleviate Ben's haunting sense of their sinister power and peril.
+The old gray she-wolf is not to be trusted in her peaceful moments.
+His keen ears could distinctly hear the roar and rumble of wild
+waters, just below.</p>
+<p>The river was of great depth as well as breadth,&mdash;one of
+the king rivers of the land. Ben found himself staring into its
+depths with a quickening pulse. He had a momentary impression that
+this great stream was his ally, a mighty agent that he could bend
+to his will.</p>
+<p>He approached the long, sloping bank on which stood Neilson's
+cabin; and he suddenly drew up short at the sight of a light,
+staunch canoe on the open water. It was a curious fact that he
+noticed the craft itself before ever he glanced at its occupant. A
+thrill of excitement passed over him. He realized that this boat
+simplified to some degree his own problem, in that it afforded him
+means of traversing this great water-body, certainly to be a factor
+in the forthcoming conflict. The boat had evidently been the
+property of Hiram Melville.</p>
+<p>Then he noticed, with a strange, inexplicable leap of his heart,
+that its lone occupant was Beatrice Neilson. His eye kindled at the
+recognition, and the beginnings of a smile flashed to his lips. But
+at once remembrance came to him, crushing his joy as the heel
+crushes a tender flower. The girl was of the enemy camp, the
+daughter of the leader of the triumvirate of murderers. While she
+herself could have had no part in the crime, perhaps she already
+had guilty knowledge of it, and at least she was of her father's
+hated blood.</p>
+<p>He had builded much on his friendship with this girl; but he
+felt it withering, turning black&mdash;like buds under
+frost&mdash;in his cold breast. There could be no friendly words,
+except in guile; no easy comradeship between them now. They were on
+opposite sides, hated foes to the last. Perhaps she would be one of
+the innocents that must suffer with the guilty; but he felt no
+remorse. Not even this lovely, tender wood child must stand in his
+way.</p>
+<p>Nevertheless, he must not put her on guard. He must simulate
+friendship. He lifted his hat in answer to her gay signal.</p>
+<p>She wore a white middy blouse, and her brown, bare forearms
+flashed pleasantly in the spring sun. Her brown hair was
+disarranged by the wind that found a passway down the river, and
+her eyes shone with the sheer, unadorned love of living. Evidently
+she had just enjoyed a brisk paddle through the still stretches of
+the river. With sure, steady strokes she pushed the craft close to
+the little, board landing where Ben stood. She reached up to him,
+and in an instant was laughing&mdash;at nothing in particular but
+the fun of life&mdash;at his side.</p>
+<p>The man glanced once at Fenris, spoke in command, then turned to
+the girl. "All rested from the ride, I see," he began easily.</p>
+<p>Her instincts keyed to the highest pitch, for an instant she
+thought she discerned an unfamiliar tone, hard and hateful, in his
+voice. But his eyes and his lips were smiling; and evidently she
+was mistaken. "I never get tired," she responded. She glanced at
+the tools in his arms. "I suppose you've found a dozen rich lodes
+already this morning."</p>
+<p>"Only one." He smiled, significantly, into her eyes. Because she
+was a forest girl, unused to flattery, the warm color grew in her
+brown cheeks. "And how was paddling? The water looks still enough
+from here."</p>
+<p>"It's not as still as it looks, but it is easy going for a
+half-mile each way. If you aren't an expert boatman,
+however&mdash;I hardly think&mdash;I'd try it."</p>
+<p>"Why not? I'm fair enough with a canoe, of course&mdash;but it
+looks safe as a lake."</p>
+<p>"But it isn't." She paused. "Listen with those keen ears of
+yours, Mr. Darby. Don't you hear anything?"</p>
+<p>Ben did not need particularly keen ears to hear: the far-off
+sound of surging waters reached him with entire clearness. He
+nodded.</p>
+<p>"That's the reason," the girl went on. "If something should
+happen&mdash;and you'd get carried around the bend&mdash;a little
+farther than you meant to go&mdash;you'd understand. And we
+wouldn't see any more of Mr. Darby around these parts."</p>
+<p>Her dark eyes, brimming with light and laughter, were on his
+face, but she failed to see him slowly stiffen to hide the sudden,
+wild leaping of his heart. Could it be that he saw the far-off
+vision of his triumph?</p>
+<p>His eyes glowed, and he fought off with difficulty a great
+preoccupation that seemed to be settling over him.</p>
+<p>"Tell me about it," he said at last, casually. "I was thinking
+of making a boat and going down on a prospecting trip."</p>
+<p>"I'll tell you about it, and then I think you'll change your
+mind. The first cataract is the one just above where we first saw
+the river&mdash;coming in; then there's this mile of quiet water.
+From that point on the Yuga flows into a gorge&mdash;or rather one
+gorge after another; and sometime they'll likely be almost as
+famous as some of the great gorges of your country. The walls are
+just about straight up on each side, and of course are absolutely
+impassable. I don't know how many miles the first gorge
+is&mdash;but for nearly two hundred miles the river is considered
+impassable for boats. Two hundred and fifty miles or so below there
+is an Indian village&mdash;but they never try to go down the river
+from here. A few white men, however, have tried to go down with
+canoe-loads of fur."</p>
+<p>"And all drowned?" Ben asked.</p>
+<p>"All except one party. Once two men went down when the river was
+high&mdash;just as it is now. They were good canoeists, and they
+made it through. No one ever expected they would come out
+again."</p>
+<p>"And after you've once got into the rapids, there's no getting
+out&mdash;or landing?"</p>
+<p>"Of course not. I suppose there are places where you might get
+on the bank, but the gorge above is impassable."</p>
+<p>"You couldn't follow the river down&mdash;with horses?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, in time. Of course it would be slow going, as there are no
+trails, the brush is heavy, and the country is absolutely
+unexplored. You see it has never been considered a gold
+country&mdash;and of course the Indians won't go except where they
+can go in canoes. Some of the hills must be impassable, too. I've
+heard my father speak about it&mdash;how that if any
+criminal&mdash;or any one like that&mdash;could take down this
+river in a canoe in high water&mdash;and get through into that
+great, virgin, trackless country a hundred miles below, it would be
+almost impossible to get him out. Unless the officers could chase
+him down the same way he went&mdash;by canoe&mdash;it would take
+literally weeks and months for them to get in, and by that time he
+could be hidden and located and his tracks covered up."</p>
+<p>"And with good ambushes, able to hold off and kill a dozen of
+them, eh?" Ben's hands shook, and he locked them behind him. "They
+call that country&mdash;what?"</p>
+<p>"'Back There.' That's all I've ever heard it called&mdash;'Back
+There.'"</p>
+<p>"It's as good a name as any. Of course, the reason they were
+able to make it through in high water was due to the fact that most
+of the rocks and ledges were submerged, and they could slide right
+over them."</p>
+<p>"Of course. Many of our rivers are safer in high water. But you
+seriously don't intend to take such a trip&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He looked up to find her eyes wide and full upon his. Yet her
+concern for him touched him not at all. She was his enemy: that
+fact could never be forgotten or forgiven.</p>
+<p>"I want to hear about it, anyway. I heard in town the river is
+higher than it's been for years&mdash;due to the
+Chinook&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"It <i>is</i> higher than I've ever seen it. But it's reached
+its peak and has started to fall, and it won't come up again, at
+least, till fall. When the Yuga rises it comes up in a flood, and
+it falls the same way. It's gone down quite a little since this
+morning; by the day after to-morrow no one could hope to get
+through Devil's Gate&mdash;the first cataract in the gorge."</p>
+<p>"Not even with a canoe? Of course a raft would be broken to
+pieces."</p>
+<p>"Not a canoe, either, in two or three days, if the river falls
+like it usually does. But tell me&mdash;you aren't
+serious&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I suppose not. But it gets my imagination&mdash;just the same.
+I suppose a man would average better than twenty miles an hour down
+through that gorge, and would come out at <i>Back There</i>."</p>
+<p>Their talk moved easily to other subjects; yet it seemed to Ben
+that some secondary consciousness held up his end of the
+conversation. His own deeper self was lost in curious and dark
+conjectures. Her description of the river lingered in his thoughts,
+and he seemed to be groping for a great inspiration that was
+hovering just beyond his reach&mdash;as plants grope for light in
+far-off leafy jungles. He felt that it would come to him in a
+moment: he would know the dark relation that these facts about the
+river bore to his war with Neilson. It was as if an inner mind,
+much more subtle and discerning than his normal consciousness, had
+seen great possibilities in them, but as yet had not divulged their
+significance.</p>
+<p>"I must be going now," the girl was saying. "Father pretty near
+goes crazy when I stay away too long. You can't imagine how he
+loves me and worries about me&mdash;and how fearful he is of
+me&mdash;"</p>
+<p>His mind seemed to leap and gather her words. It was true: she
+was the joy and the pride and the hope of the old man's life. All
+his work, his dreams were for her. And now he remembered a fact
+that she had told him on the outward journey: that Ray Brent, the
+stronger of Neilson's two subordinates, loved her too.</p>
+<p>"To strike at them indirectly&mdash;through some one they
+love&mdash;" such had been his greatest wish. To put them at a
+disadvantage and overcome his own&mdash;to lead them into his own
+ambushes. And was it for the Wolf to care what guiltless creatures
+fell before his fangs in the gaining of his dreadful ends? Was the
+gratification of his hate to be turned aside through pity for an
+innocent girl? Mercy and remorse were two things that he had put
+from him. It was the way of the Wolf to pay no attention to
+methods, only to achieve his own fierce desires. He stood lost in
+dark and savage reverie.</p>
+<p>"Good-by," the girl was saying. "I'll see you soon&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He turned toward her, a smile at his lips. His voice held steady
+when he spoke.</p>
+<p>"It'll have to be soon, if at all," he replied. "I've got to
+really get to work in a few days. How about a little picnic
+to-morrow&mdash;a grouse hunt, say&mdash;on the other side of the
+river? It's going to be a beautiful day&mdash;"</p>
+<p>The girl's eyes shone, and the color rose again in her tanned
+cheeks. "I'd think that would be very nice," she told him.</p>
+<p>"Then I'll meet you here&mdash;at eight."</p>
+<br>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XVIII"></a>
+<h2>XVIII</h2>
+<p>Alone by the fire Ben had opportunity to balance one thing with
+another and think out the full consequences of his plan. As far as
+he could discern, it stood every test. It meant not only direct and
+indirect vengeance upon Neilson and his followers; but it would
+also, past all doubt, deliver them into his hands. That much was
+sure. When finally they came to grips&mdash;if indeed they did not
+go down to a terrible death before ever that time came&mdash;he
+would be prepared for them, with every advantage of ground and
+fortress, able to combat them one by one and shatter them from
+ambush. Best of all, they would know at whose hands, and for what
+crime, they received their retribution.</p>
+<p>One by one he checked the chances against him. First of all, he
+had to face the great chance of failure and the consequent loss of
+his own life. But there was even recompense in this. He would not
+die unavenged. The blow that he would thereby deal to his enemies
+would be terrible beyond any reckoning, but he would have no
+regrets.</p>
+<p>There were two outstanding points in his favor, one of them
+being that the river was rapidly falling. By the time a canoe could
+be built the river would be wholly unnavigable. There were no
+canoes procurable in Snowy Gulch, if indeed a lightning trip could
+be made there and back to secure one, before the river fell. The
+conversation with the frontiersman at the river bank brought out
+this fact. Lastly, a raft could not live a moment in the
+rapids.</p>
+<p>Very methodically he began to make his preparations. He untied
+his horse, leaving it free to descend to Snowy Gulch. Then he
+packed a few of his most essential supplies, his gun and shells,
+such necessary camp equipment as robes, matches, soap and towels,
+cooking and table ware, an axe and similar necessaries. In the way
+of food he laid out flour, rice, salt, and sugar, plus a few pounds
+of tea&mdash;nothing else. The entire outfit weighed less than two
+hundred pounds, easily carried in three loads upon the back.</p>
+<p>In the still hour of midnight, when the forest world was swept
+in mystery, he carried the equipment down to the canoe that
+Beatrice had left the evening before. He loaded the craft with the
+greatest care, balancing it now and then with his hands at the
+sides, and covering up the food supplies with robes and blankets.
+Then he drew from his pocket a sheet of paper&mdash;evidently a
+paper sack that had once held provisions, cut open and
+spread&mdash;and wrote carefully, a long time, with a pencil.</p>
+<p>He had no envelope to enclose it, no wax to seal it. He did,
+however, carry a stub of a candle&mdash;a requisite to most
+northern men who are obliged to build supper fires in wet forest.
+Folding his letter carefully, he sealed it with tallow. Then
+wrapping one of his blankets about him, he prepared to wait for the
+dawn. Fenris growled and murmured in his sleep.</p>
+<p>Ben himself had not slept the night before; and moved and
+stirred by his plan of the morrow, slumber did not come easily to
+him now. He too murmured in his sleep and had weird, tragic dreams
+between sleep and wakefulness. But the shadows paled at last. A
+ribbon of light spread along the eastern horizon; the more familiar
+landmarks emerged&mdash;ghosts at first, then in vivid outline, the
+wooded sky line strengthened; the nebulous magic of the moon died
+in the forest. Birds wakened and sang; the hunting creatures crept
+to their lairs; sleeping flowers opened. Morning broke on a clear,
+warm day.</p>
+<p>Ben devoured a heavy breakfast&mdash;all that he could force
+himself to swallow&mdash;then prepared to wait for Beatrice. He
+knew perfectly that explanations would be difficult if Neilson or
+one of his followers found him with the loaded boat. It was not
+likely, however, that any of his enemies&mdash;except, of course,
+Beatrice herself&mdash;would venture down that way.</p>
+<p>Just before eight he saw her come,&mdash;first the glint of her
+white blouse in the green of the forest, and then the flash of her
+brown arms. Her voice rang clear and sweet through the hushed
+depths as she called a greeting. A moment later she was beside
+him.</p>
+<p>"Go back and get your heavy coat," he commanded. "I've already
+been out on the water, and it'll freeze you stiff."</p>
+<p>He was not overly pleased with himself for speaking thus. He had
+resolved to put mercy from him; and he was taking a serious risk to
+his own cause by the delay of sending her back for her warmer
+garments. She smiled into his eyes, but she came of a breed of
+women that had learned obedience to men, and she immediately
+turned. But Ben had builded better than he thought. His eyes were
+no longer on her radiant face. They had dropped to the pistol, in
+its holster, that she carried in her hands, preparatory to
+strapping it about her waist. It was disconcerting that he had
+forgotten about her pistol. It was one of those insignificant
+trifles that before now have disrupted the mightiest plans of
+nations and of men. His mind sped like lightning, and he thanked
+his stars that he had seen it in time. This pistol and a small
+package, the contents of which he did not know, were the only
+equipment she had.</p>
+<p>"It's going to be a bright day," the girl said hesitatingly. "I
+don't think I'll need the fur coat&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Get it, anyway," Ben advised. "The wind's keen on the river.
+Leave your pistol and your package here&mdash;and go up and back at
+top speed. I'll be arranging the canoe&mdash;"</p>
+<p>She laid down the things, and in a moment the thickets had
+hidden her. Swiftly Ben reached for the gun, and for a few speeding
+seconds his fingers worked at its mechanism. He was busy about the
+canoe when the girl returned.</p>
+<p>Evidently Beatrice was in wonderful spirits. The air itself was
+sparkling, the sun&mdash;beloved with an ardor too deep for words
+by all northern peoples&mdash;was warm and genial in the sky; the
+spruce forest was lush with dew, fragrant with hidden blossoms. It
+was a Spring Day&mdash;nothing less. Both of them knew perfectly
+that miracle was abroad in the forest,&mdash;flowers opening, buds
+breaking into blossoms, little grass blades stealing, shy as
+fairies, up through the dead leaves; birds fluttering and gossiping
+and carrying all manner of building materials for their nests.</p>
+<p>Spring is not just a time of year to the forest folk, and
+particularly to those creatures whose homes are the far spruce
+forests of the North. It is a magic and a mystery, a recreation and
+a renewed lease on life itself. It is hope come again, the joy of
+living undreamed of except by such highly strung, nerve-tingling,
+wild-blooded creatures as these; and in some measure at least it is
+the escape from Fear. For there is no other name than Fear for the
+great, white, merciless winter that had just departed.</p>
+<p>High and low, every woods creature knows this dread, this
+age-old apprehension of the deepening snow. Perhaps it had its
+birth in eons past, when the great glaciers brought their curse of
+gold into the temperate regions, locking land and sea under tons of
+ice. Never the frost comes, and the snow deepens on the land, and
+the rivers and lakes are struck silent as if by a cruel magician's
+magic, but that this old fear returns, creeping like poison into
+the nerves, bowing down the heart and chilling the warm wheel of
+the blood. For the rodents and the digging people&mdash;even for
+the mighty grizzly himself&mdash;the season means nothing but the
+cold and the darkness of their underground lairs. For those that
+try to brave the winter, the portion is famine and cold; the vast,
+far-spreading silence broken only by the sobbing song of the wolf
+pack, starving and afraid on the distant ridges. Man is the
+conqueror, the Mighty One who can strike the fire, but yet he too
+knows the creepy, haunting dread and deep-lying fear of the
+northern winter. But that dread season was gone now, yielding for a
+few happy months to a gay invader from the South; and the whole
+forest world rejoiced.</p>
+<p>Both Beatrice and Ben could sense the new wakening and revival
+in the still depths about them. The forest was hushed, tremulous,
+yet vibrant and ecstatic with renewed life. The old grizzly bear
+had left his winter lair; and good feeding was putting the fat
+again on his bones; the old cow moose had stolen away into the
+farther marshes for some mystery and miracle of her own. Everywhere
+young calves of caribou were breathing the air for the first time,
+trying to stand on wobbly legs and pushing with greedy noses into
+overflowing udders. The rich new grass yielded milk in plenty for
+all these wilderness nurslings. Even the she-wolf forgot her wicked
+savagery to nurse and fondle her whelps in the lair; even the
+she-lynx, hunting with renewed fervor through the branches, knew of
+a marvelous secret in a hollow log that she would be torn to scraps
+of fur rather than reveal.</p>
+<p>The she-ermine, her white hair falling out, was brooding a
+litter of cutthroats and murderers in a nest of grass and twigs,
+and each one of them was a source of pride and joy to her mother
+heart. Even the wolverine had some wicked-eyed little cubs that, to
+her, were precious beyond rubies; but which would ultimately
+receive all the oaths in the language for stealing bait on the trap
+lines out from the settlements.</p>
+<p>Beatrice, a woods creature herself, knew the stir and thrill of
+spring; but there were also more personal, more deeply hidden
+reasons why she was happy to-day. She was certainly a very
+girlish-girl in most ways, with even more than the usual allowance
+of romance and sentiment, and the idea of an all-day picnic with
+this stalwart forester went straight home to her imagination. She
+had been tremendously impressed with him from the first, and the
+day's ride out from Snowy Gulch had brought him very close to her
+indeed. And what might not the day bring forth! What mystery and
+wonder might come to pass!</p>
+<p>Her dark eyes were lustrous, and the haunting sadness they often
+held was quite gone. Her face was faintly flushed, her red lips
+wistful, every motion eager and happy as a child's. But Ben looked
+at her unmoved.</p>
+<p>Coldly his eye leaped over her supple, slender form. He saw with
+relief that she was stoutly clad in middy and skirt of wool, wool
+stockings, and solid little boots. The heavy coat she had brought
+was not particularly noteworthy in these woods, but it would have
+drawn instant admiration from knowing people of a great city. It
+was not cut with particular style, neither was it beautifully
+lined, but the fabric itself was plucked otter,&mdash;the dark,
+well-wearing fur of many lights and of matchless luster and
+beauty.</p>
+<p>"For goodness sake, Mr. Darby," the girl cried. "What have you
+got in this boat? Surely that isn't just the lunch&mdash;" She
+pointed to the pile of supplies, covered by the blankets, in the
+center of the craft.</p>
+<p>"It looks like we had enough to stay a month, doesn't it?" he
+laughed. "There's blankets there, of course&mdash;for table cloths
+and to make us comfortable&mdash;and the lunch, and a pillow or
+two&mdash;and some little surprises. The rest is just some stores
+that I'm going to take this opportunity to put across the
+river&mdash;to my next camp. Now, Miss Neilson&mdash;if you'll take
+the seat in the bow. Fenris is going to ride in the
+middle&mdash;"</p>
+<p>The girl's eyes fell with some apprehension on the shaggy wolf.
+"I haven't established very friendly relations with
+Fenris&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I'd leave him at home, but he won't stand for it. Besides I'd
+like to teach him how to retrieve grouse. Lie down, old boy." Ben
+motioned, and Fenris sprawled at his feet. "Now come here and pet
+him, Miss Neilson. His fur, at this season, is
+wonderful&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Reluctant to show her fear before Ben, the girl drew near. The
+wolf shivered as the soft hand touched his side and moved slowly to
+his fierce head; but he gave no further sign of enmity.</p>
+<p>"He understands," Ben explained. "He realizes that I've accepted
+you, and you're all right. Until he's given orders otherwise, he'll
+treat you with the greatest respect."</p>
+<p>She was deeply and sincerely pleased. It did not occur to her,
+in the least, little degree, that occasion could possibly arise
+whereby contradictory orders would be given. Ben started to help
+her into the boat.</p>
+<p>"You've not forgotten anything?" he asked casually.</p>
+<p>"Nothing I can think of."</p>
+<p>"Got plenty of extra shells?"</p>
+<p>"Part of a box. It's a small caliber automatic, you see, and a
+box holds fifty."</p>
+<p>"It is, eh?" Ben's tone indicated deep interest. "May I see 'em
+a minute? I think I had a gun like it once. Not the gun&mdash;just
+the box of shells."</p>
+<p>She had strapped the weapon around her waist, by now, so she
+didn't attempt to put it in his hands. From her pocket she procured
+a small box of shells, and these she passed to him. He examined
+them with a great show of interest, balancing their weight in the
+palm of his hand; then he carelessly threw the box down among the
+duffle in front of the stern seat. Presently he started to push
+off.</p>
+<p>"You're not taking the other paddle?" the girl asked
+curiously.</p>
+<p>"No. I don't believe in letting young ladies work when I take
+'em on an outing. You are just to sit in the bow and enjoy
+yourself. Fenris, sit still and don't rock the boat!"</p>
+<p>Just one moment more he hesitated. From his pocket he drew a
+piece of paper, carefully folded and sealed with tallow. This he
+inserted into a little crack in the blade of the second
+paddle&mdash;the one that was to be left at the landing.</p>
+<p>"Just a little note for your father," he explained, "to tell him
+where we are, in case he worries about you."</p>
+<p>"That's very considerate of you," the girl answered in a
+thoughtful voice.</p>
+<p>She wondered at the curious glowings, lurid as red coals, that
+came and went in his eyes.</p>
+<br>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XIX"></a>
+<h2>XIX</h2>
+<p>After the manner of backwoods fathers Jeffery Neilson had
+offered no objections to his daughter's all-day excursion with Ben.
+The ways of the frontier are informal; and besides, he had every
+confidence in her ability to take care of herself. The only
+unfortunate phase of the affair concerned Ray. The latter would
+look with no favor upon the venture; and in all probability a
+disagreeable half-hour would ensue with him if he found it out.</p>
+<p>The control of Ray Brent had been an increasingly difficult
+problem. Always sullen and envious, once or twice he had not been
+far from open rebellion. There is a certain dread malady that comes
+to men at the sight of naked gold, and Ray's degenerate type was
+particularly subject to it. Every day the mine had shown itself
+increasingly rich, and Ray's ambition had given way to greed, and
+his greed to avarice of the most dangerous sort. For instance, he
+had a disquieting way of gathering the nuggets into his hands,
+fondling them with an unholy love. Neilson realized perfectly, now,
+that the younger man would not be content with a fourth share or
+less; and on the other hand he resolutely refused to yield any of
+his own, larger share. Sometime the issue would bring them to
+grips. Ray's dreadful crime of a few days past had given him an
+added insolence and self-assurance that complicated the problem
+still further. The leopard that has once tasted human flesh is not
+to be trusted again. Finally, there remained this matter of
+Beatrice.</p>
+<p>Neilson's love for his daughter forbade that he should force her
+to receive unwelcome attentions. Ray, on the other hand, had always
+insisted that his chief allow him a clear field. He would be
+infuriated when he heard of the trip she was taking with Ben
+to-day. Neilson straightened, resolving to meet the issue with
+old-time firmness.</p>
+<p>When he heard his daughter's voice on the canoe landing, one
+hundred yards below, he was inordinately startled. She had not told
+him that their picnic would take them on to the water. The reason
+had been, of course, that Beatrice knew her father's distrust of
+the treacherous stream and either feared his refusal to her plan or
+wished to save him worry. Even now they were starting. He could
+hear the first stroke of the paddle through the hushed woods.</p>
+<p>He turned toward the door, instinctively alarmed; then
+hesitated. After all, he could not tell her to come back. Beatrice
+would be mortified; and besides, there was nothing definite to
+fear. The river was almost as still as a lake for a long stretch
+immediately in front of the landing; even a poor canoeist could
+cross with ease. It was true that rapids, mile after mile of them
+past counting, lay just below, but surely the canoeists would stay
+at a safe distance above them. And if by any chance this young
+prospector had no skill with a canoe, Beatrice herself was an
+expert.</p>
+<p>Yet what, in reality, did he know of Ben Darby? He had liked the
+man's face: whence he came and what was his real business on the
+Yuga he had not the least idea. All at once a baffling apprehension
+crept like a chill through his frame.</p>
+<p>He could not laugh it away. It laid hold of him, refusing to be
+dispelled. It was as if an inner voice was warning him, telling him
+to rush down to the river bank and check that canoe ride at all
+costs. It occurred to him, for the moment, that this might be
+premonition of a disastrous accident, yet vaguely he sensed a plot,
+an obscure design that filled him with ghastly terror. Once more
+the man started for the door.</p>
+<p>Unaware of his ground, he did not hurry at first. He hardly knew
+what to say, by what excuse he could call Beatrice back to the
+landing. His heart was racing incomprehensibly in his breast, and
+all at once he started to run.</p>
+<p>At the first step he fell sprawling, and stark panic was upon
+him when he got to his feet again. And when he reached the landing
+the canoe was already near the opposite shore, heading swiftly
+downstream.</p>
+<p>He saw in one glance that the craft was rather heavily laden,
+Fenris atop the pile of duffle, and that Ben was paddling with a
+remarkably fast, easy stroke. "Come back, Beatrice," he shouted.
+"You've forgotten something."</p>
+<p>The girl turned, waving, but Ben's voice drowned out hers.
+"We'll see you later," he called in a gay voice. "We can't come
+back now."</p>
+<p>"Come back!" Neilson called again. "I order you&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He stared intently, hoping that the man would turn. Already they
+were practically out of hearing; and not even Beatrice was dipping
+her paddle in obedience to his command. Looking more closely, he
+saw that the man only was paddling.</p>
+<p>Then his eye fell to the landing on which he stood,
+instinctively trying to locate the second paddle. It lay at his
+feet. A foolhardy thing to do, he thought, a broken paddle, out
+there above the rapids, would mean death and no other thing.
+Helpless in the current, the canoe could not be guided through
+those fearful gates of peril below. If by a thousandth chance it
+escaped the rocks, it would be carried for unnumbered miles into a
+land unknown, a territory that could be entered only by the
+greatest difficulty&mdash;packing day after day over range and
+through thicket with a great train of pack horses&mdash;and from
+which the egress, except by the same perilous water route, would be
+almost impossible. But the thought passed as he discerned the white
+paper that had been fastened in the paddle blade.</p>
+<p>He bent for it with eager hand. He knew instinctively that it
+contained an all-important and sinister message for him. His eyes
+leaped over the bold writing on the exterior.</p>
+<p>"To Ezra Melville's murderers," Ben had written. And with that
+reading Jeffery Neilson knew a terror beyond any experienced in the
+darkest nightmare of his iniquitous life.</p>
+<p>It did not occur to him to bring the note, unopened, to Ray
+Brent. As yet he did not fully understand; yet he knew that the
+issue was one of seconds. <i>Seconds</i> must decide everything;
+his whole world hung in the balance. His hand ripped apart the
+sealed fold, and he held the sheet before his eyes.</p>
+<p>Possessing only an elementary education Jeffery Neilson was not,
+ordinarily, a fast reader. Usually he sounded out his words only
+with the greatest difficulty. But to-day, one glance at the page
+conveyed to him the truth: from half a dozen words he got a general
+idea of the letter's full, dread meaning. Ben had written:</p>
+<div class="ltr">
+<p>TO NEILSON AND HIS GANG:&mdash;</p>
+<p>When you get this, Beatrice will be on her way to Back
+There&mdash;either there or on her way to hell.</p>
+<p>Ezra Melville was my pard. A letter leaving his claim to me is
+in my pocket, and I alone know where Hiram's will is, leaving it to
+Ezram. Your title will never stand as long as those papers aren't
+destroyed. If you don't care enough about saving your daughter from
+me, at least you'll want those letters. Come and get them. I'll be
+waiting for you.</p>
+<p>BEN DARBY.</p>
+</div>
+<p>As the truth flashed home, Neilson's first thought was of his
+rifle. He was a wilderness man, trained to put his trust in the
+weapon of steel; and if it were only in his hands, there might yet
+be time to prevent the abduction. One well-aimed bullet over the
+water, shooting with all his old-time skill, might yet hurl the
+avenger to his death in the moment of his triumph. Just one keen,
+long gaze over the sights,&mdash;heaven or earth could not yield
+him a vision half so glorious as this! For all his terror he knew
+that he could shoot as he had never shot before, true as a
+light-ray. His remorseless eyes for once could see clear and sure.
+One shot&mdash;and then Beatrice could seize the paddle and save
+herself. And he cursed himself, more bitterly than he had ever
+cursed an enemy, when his empty hands showed him that he had left
+his rifle in his cabin.</p>
+<p>His pistol, however, was at his belt, and his hand reached for
+it. But the range was already too far for any hope of accurate
+pistol fire. His hard eyes gazed along the short, black barrel. His
+steady finger pressed back against the trigger.</p>
+<p>The first shot fell far short. The pistol was of large caliber
+but small velocity; and a hundred yards was its absolute limit of
+point-blank range. He lifted the gun higher and shot again. Again
+he shot low. But the third bullet fell just a few feet on the near
+side of the canoe.</p>
+<p>He had the range now, and he shot again. It was like a dream,
+outside his consciousness, that Beatrice was screaming with fear
+and amazement. She was already too far to give or receive a
+message: all hope lay in the pistol alone. The fifth shot splashed
+water beyond the craft.</p>
+<p>Once more he fired, but the boat was farther distant now, and
+the bullet went wild. The pistol was empty. Like a moose leaping
+through a marsh he turned back to his cabin for his rifle.</p>
+<p>But already he knew that he was lost. Before ever he could climb
+up the hundred yards to the cabin, and back again, the craft would
+be around the bend in the river. Heavy brush would hide it from
+then on. He hastened frantically up the narrow, winding trail.</p>
+<br>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XX"></a>
+<h2>XX</h2>
+<p>Ben was fully aware, as he pushed the canoe from landing, that
+the success of his scheme was not yet guaranteed. Long ago, in the
+hard school of the woods, he had found out life; and one of the
+things he had learned was that nothing on earth is infallible and
+no man's plans are sure. There are always coincidents of which the
+scheming brain has not conceived: the sudden interjection of
+unexpected circumstances. The unforeseen appearance of Beatrice's
+father on the landing had been a case in point.</p>
+<p>Most of all he had been afraid that Beatrice herself would leap
+from the canoe and attempt to swim to safety. He had learned in his
+past conversations with her that she had at least an elementary
+knowledge of swimming. Had she not confessed at the same time fear
+of the water, his plan could have never been adopted. The northern
+girls have few opportunities to obtain real proficiency in
+swimming. Their rivers are icy cold, their villages do not afford
+heated natatoriums. Yet he realized that he must quiet her
+suspicions as long as possible.</p>
+<p>"I've got the landing picked out," he told her as they started
+off. "I've been all over the river this morning. It is quite a way
+down&mdash;around the bend&mdash;but it's perfectly safe. So don't
+be afraid."</p>
+<p>"I'm not afraid&mdash;with you. And how fast you paddle!"</p>
+<p>It was true: in all her days by rivers she had never seen such
+perfect control of a canoe. He paddled as if without effort, but
+the streaming shore line showed that the boat moved at an
+astonishing rate. He was a master canoeist, and whatever fears she
+might have had vanished at once.</p>
+<p>She talked gayly to him, scarcely aware that they were heading
+across and down the stream.</p>
+<p>When her father had appeared on the bank, calling, she had not
+been in the least alarmed. Ben's gay shouts kept her from
+understanding exactly what he was saying. And when the old man had
+drawn his pistol and fired, and the bullet had splashed in the
+water some twenty yards toward shore, her mind had refused to
+accept the evidence of her senses.</p>
+<p>The second shot followed the first, and the third the second,
+resulting in, for her part, only the impotence of bewilderment. Her
+first thought was that her father's fierce temper, long known to
+her, had engulfed him in murderous rage. Trusting Ben wholly, the
+real truth did not occur to her.</p>
+<p>She screamed shrilly at the fourth shot; and Ben looked up to
+find her pale as the foam from his flashing paddle. "Turn around
+and go back," she cried to Ben. "He'll kill you if you don't! Oh,
+please&mdash;turn around&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"And get in range of him so he <i>can</i> kill me?" Ben replied
+savagely. "Can't you see he's shooting at me?"</p>
+<p>"Then throw up your hands&mdash;it's all some dreadful mistake.
+Can't you hear me&mdash;turn and go back."</p>
+<p>The fifth and sixth shots were fired by now; and Neilson had
+gone to his cabin for his rifle. Ben smiled grimly into her white
+face.</p>
+<p>"We'd better keep on going to our landing place," he advised.
+"There's no place to land above it&mdash;I went all over the shore
+this morning. That will give him time to cool down. I only want to
+get around this curve before he comes with his rifle."</p>
+<p>She stared at him aghast, too confused and terrified to make
+rational answer. He was pale, too; but she had a swift feeling that
+the cold, rugged face was in some way exultant, too. The first
+chill of fear of him brushed her like a cold wind.</p>
+<p>But they were around the bend by now, and Ben's breath caught as
+if in a triumphant gasp. Already all opportunity for the girl to
+swim to shore was irremediably past. While he could still control
+the canoe with comparative ease, the river was a swift-moving sheet
+of water that would carry any one but the strongest swimmer
+remorselessly into the rapids below. Ben smiled, like a man who has
+come into a great happiness, and rested on his paddle.</p>
+<p>"Push into shore," the girl urged. "The home shore&mdash;if you
+can. Then I'll go and find him and try to quiet him. He'll kill you
+if you don't."</p>
+<p>A short pause followed the girl's words. The man smiled coldly
+into her eyes.</p>
+<p>"He'll kill me, will he?" he repeated.</p>
+<p>The response to the simple question was simply unmitigated
+terror, swift and deadly, surging through the girl's frame. It
+caught and twisted her throat muscles like a cruel hand; and her
+childish eyes widened and darkened under his contemptuous gaze.</p>
+<p>"What do you mean?" she asked breathlessly. "What&mdash;are you
+going to do?"</p>
+<p>"He won't kill me," Ben went on. "I may kill him&mdash;and I
+will if I can&mdash;but he won't kill me. See&mdash;we're going
+faster all the time."</p>
+<p>It was true. Strokes of the paddle were no longer necessary to
+propel the craft at the breakneck pace. It sped like an
+arrow&mdash;straight toward the perilous cataracts below.</p>
+<p>The girl watched him with transcending horror, and slowly the
+truth went home. The supplies in the boat, her father's desperate
+attempt to rescue her, even at the risk of her own life and the
+cost of Ben's, this white, exultant face before her, more terrible
+than that of the wolf between, the cold reptile eyes so full of
+some unhallowed emotion,&mdash;at last she saw their meaning and
+relation. Was it <i>death</i>&mdash;was <i>that</i> what this mad
+man in the stern had for her? She remembered what she had told him
+the day before, her description of the cataracts that lay below.
+She struggled to shake off the trance that her terror had cast
+about her.</p>
+<p>"Turn into the shore," she told him, half-whispering. There was
+no pleading in her tone: the hard eyes before her told her only too
+plainly how futile her pleas would be. "You still have time to
+steer into shore. I'll jump overboard if you don't."</p>
+<p>He shook his head. "Don't jump overboard, Beatrice," he
+answered, some of the harshness gone from his tones. "It isn't my
+purpose to kill you&mdash;and to jump over into this stream only
+means to die&mdash;'for any one except the most powerful swimmer.
+You'd be carried down in an instant."</p>
+<p>The girl knew he spoke the truth. Only death dwelt in those cold
+and rushing waters. "What do you mean to do?" she asked.</p>
+<p>Her tone was more quiet now, and he waited an instant before he
+answered. The canoe glided faster&mdash;ever faster down the
+stream. Somewhat afraid, but still trusting in the imperial mind of
+his master, the wolf raised his head to watch the racing shore
+line.</p>
+<p>"It's just a little debt I owe your father&mdash;and his gang,"
+Ben explained. "I'll tell you some time, in the days to come. It
+was a debt of blood&mdash;"</p>
+<p>The girl's dark eyes charged with red fire. "And you, a coward,
+take your payment on a woman. Turn the canoe into the bank."</p>
+<p>"The payment won't be taken from you," he explained soberly.
+"You'll be safe enough&mdash;even the fate that Neilson fears for
+you won't happen. I hate him too much to take <i>that</i> payment
+from you. I'd die before I'd touch the flesh of his flesh to mine!
+Do you understand that?"</p>
+<p>His fury had blazed up, for the instant, and she saw the deadly
+zeal of a fanatic in his gray eyes. A hatred beyond all naming, a
+bitterness and a rage such as she had never dreamed could blast a
+human heart was written in his brown, rugged face. Her woman's
+intuition gave her added vision, and she glimpsed something of the
+fire that smoldered and seared behind his eyes. They were of one
+blood, this man in the stern and the wolf on the duffle.</p>
+<p>"Then why&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"You're safe with me&mdash;the daughter of Jeff Neilson can't
+ever be anything but safe with me&mdash;as far as the thing you
+fear is concerned. Don't be afraid for that. I'm simply paying an
+honest debt, and you're the unfortunate agent. Don't you know the
+things he's fearing now are more torment to him than anything I
+could do to his flesh? If we should be killed in these rapids that
+are coming, it will be fair enough too; he'll know what it is to
+lose the dearest thing on earth he has. For you and me it will only
+be a minute that won't greatly matter. For him it will be
+weeks&mdash;months! But that's only a part of it. I hope to bring
+you through. The main thing is&mdash;that sooner or later they'll
+come for you&mdash;into a country where I'll have every advantage.
+Where there won't be any escape or chance for them. Where I can
+watch the trails, and shatter them&mdash;every one&mdash;as slow or
+as fast as I like. Where they'll have to hunt for me, week on week
+and month on month, their fears eating into them. That's my game,
+Beatrice. There will be discomfort for you&mdash;and some
+danger&mdash;but I'll make it as light as I can. And in another
+moment&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"You've still got time to turn back," the girl answered him,
+seemingly without feeling. "Glide into shore, and we'll try to
+catch an overhanging limb. It's my last warning."</p>
+<p>It was true that a few seconds remained in which they might,
+with heroic effort, save themselves. But these were passing:
+already they could see the gleaming whitecaps of the cataract
+below.</p>
+<p>The roar of the wild waters was in their ears. Ahead they could
+see great rocks, emerging like fangs above the water, sharp-edged
+and wet with spray. The boat was shuddering; the water seemed to
+covet them, and a great force, like the hand of a river god,
+reached at them from beneath as if to crush them in a merciless
+grasp. A hundred yards farther the smooth, swift water fell into a
+seething, roaring cataract&mdash;such a manifestation of the mighty
+powers of nature as checks the breath and awes the heart&mdash;a
+death stream in which seemingly the canoe would be shattered to
+pieces in an instant.</p>
+<p>Ben shook his head. The girl's white hand flashed to her side,
+then rose sure and steady, holding her pistol. "Turn quick, or I'll
+fire," she said.</p>
+<p>He felt that, if such action were in her power, she told the
+truth. No mercy dwelt in her clear gaze. His eye fell to the box of
+cartridges, now fallen safely among the duffle. Presently he smiled
+into her eyes.</p>
+<p>"Your gun is empty, Beatrice," he told her quietly. He heard her
+sob, and he smiled a little, reassuringly. "Never mind&mdash;and
+pray for a good voyage," he advised. "We're going through."</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXI"></a>
+<h2>XXI</h2>
+<p>The craft and its occupants were out of sight by the time
+Jeffery Neilson reached the river bank with his rifle. The flush
+had swept from his bronze skin, leaving it a ghastly yellow, and
+for once in his life no oaths came to his lips. He could only
+mutter, strangely, from a convulsed throat.</p>
+<p>Like an insane man he hastened down the river bank, fighting his
+way through the brush. The thickets were dense, ordinarily
+impenetrable to any mortal strength except to that mighty,
+incalculable power of the moose and grizzly; yet they could not
+restrain him now. The tough clothes he wore were nearly torn from
+his body; his face and hands were scratched as if by the claws of a
+lynx; but he did not pause till he reached the bank of the gray
+river.</p>
+<p>Only one more glimpse of the canoe was vouchsafed him, and that
+glimpse came too late. He saw the light barge just as it hovered at
+the crest of the rapids. Even if he could have shot straight at so
+great a range and had killed the man in the stern, no miracle could
+have saved his daughter. She would have been instantly swept to her
+death against the crags.</p>
+<p>Some measure of self-control returned to him then, and he made
+his way fast as he could toward the claim. Sensing the older man's
+distress, Ray straightened from his work at the sight of him.</p>
+<p>The face before him was drawn and white; but there was no time
+for questions. Hard hands seized his arm.</p>
+<p>"Ray, do you know of a canoe anywhere&mdash;up or down this
+river?"</p>
+<p>"There's one at the landing. None other I know of."</p>
+<p>"Think, man! You don't know where we can get one?"</p>
+<p>"No. Old Hiram's canoe was the only one. What's the matter?"</p>
+<p>"Do you think there's one chance in a million of getting down
+through those rapids on a raft?"</p>
+<p>Ray's eyes opened wide. "A raft!" he echoed. "Man, are you
+crazy? Even at this high water a canoe wouldn't have a chance in
+ten of making it. The river's falling every hour&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I know it. Do you suppose there's a canoe in town?"</p>
+<p>"No! Of course there isn't&mdash;one that you could even dream
+about shooting those rapids in. Besides, by the time we got there
+and packed it up&mdash;it would take two days to pack it the best
+we could do&mdash;the river would be too far down to tackle the
+trip at all. And it won't come up again till fall&mdash;you know
+that. Tell me what's the matter. Has Beatrice&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Beatrice has gone down, that's all."</p>
+<p>"Then she's dead&mdash;no hope of anything else. Only an expert
+could hope to take her through, and there's nothing to live on Back
+There. What's the use of trying to follow&mdash;?"</p>
+<p>Neilson straightened, his eyes searching Ray's. "She's got food,
+I suppose. And she's got an expert paddler to take her there."</p>
+<p>Ray's face seemed to darken before his eyes. His hands half
+closed, shook in his face, then caught at Neilson's shoulders. "You
+don't mean&mdash;she's run away?"</p>
+<p>"Don't be a fool. Not run away&mdash;abducted. The prospector I
+told you about&mdash;Darby&mdash;was the old man's partner. He's
+paying us back. Heaven only knows what the girl's fate will
+be&mdash;I don't dare to think of it. Ray, I wish to God I had died
+before I ever saw this day!"</p>
+<p>Ray stared blankly. "Then he found out&mdash;about the murder?"
+he gasped.</p>
+<p>"Yes. Here's his letter. Take time&mdash;and read it. There's no
+use to try to act before we think&mdash;how to act. If I could only
+see a way&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Ray read the letter carefully, crumpling it at last in savage
+wrath. "It's your fault!" he cried. "Why didn't you save her for me
+as I've always asked you to do; why did you let her go out with him
+at all? I'll bet she wanted to go&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I'd rather she had, instead of being taken by force!" The older
+man&mdash;aged incredibly in a few little minutes&mdash;slowly
+straightened. "But don't storm at me, Ray!" he warned, carefully
+and quietly. "I've stood a lot from you, but to-day I'd kill you
+for one word!"</p>
+<p>They faced each other in black disdain, but Ray knew he spoke
+the truth. There was no toying with this man's wrath to-day.</p>
+<p>"And if you'd let me croak this devil like I wanted to, it
+wouldn't have happened either. But there's no use crying about
+either one. The girl's a goner, sure; she's deep in the rapids by
+now."</p>
+<p>"Yes, and it's part of this man's hellish plan to take her clear
+through to Back There. You see, he dares us to come for
+her&mdash;and he'll be waiting and ready for us, mark my words. My
+God, she's probably dead&mdash;smashed to
+pieces&mdash;already!"</p>
+<p>"He says he's got the old man's letter, leaving the claim to
+him. That messes up things even worse."</p>
+<p>"I wish I'd never heard of the claim. There's only one thing to
+do, and that's to rush into Snowy Gulch and get a big
+outfit&mdash;all the horses and supplies we can find&mdash;and go
+after her by land."</p>
+<p>"Yes, and walk right into his trap. Think again, Neilson. It
+would take weeks and months to get in that way. Besides, what would
+happen to the claim while we're gone?"</p>
+<p>"You needn't fear for the claim! Of course, I'd expect you to
+think of that first&mdash;you who loved Beatrice so dearly!"
+Neilson's face was white with disdain. "It'll be recorded in our
+names, by then&mdash;likely Chan is already in
+Bradleyburg&mdash;and Darby himself is the only man on earth we
+have to fear." He paused, putting his faith in desperate craft. "If
+you want to cinch the claim, the first thing to do is go and stamp
+the life out of Darby; otherwise he'll turn up and make us trouble,
+just as he says."</p>
+<p>"He can't do much if the claim's recorded in our names!"</p>
+<p>"He can make us plenty of trouble. If you want the girl,
+Ray&mdash;don't lose a minute. Put your things together as fast as
+you can. We'll try to get some men in Snowy Gulch to come with
+us&mdash;to join in the hunt&mdash;and we'll hire every pack horse
+in the country. Get busy, and get busy quick."</p>
+<p>Reluctant to leave his gold, yet seeing the truth in Neilson's
+words, Ray hastened to his cabin to get such few supplies as would
+be needed for the day's march into Snowy Gulch. In less than five
+minutes they were on their way&mdash;tramping in file down the
+narrow moose trail.</p>
+<p>They crossed the divide, thus reaching the headwaters of Poor
+Man's Creek; then took the trail down toward the settlements. But
+the two claim-jumpers had not yet learned all the day's ill news.
+Half-way to the mouth of the stream they met Chan Heminway on his
+way back to the claim.</p>
+<p>At the first sight of him, riding in the rear of a long train of
+laden pack horses, they could hardly believe their eyes. It was not
+to be credited that he had made the trip to Bradleyburg and back in
+the few days he had been absent. Only an aeroplane could have made
+so fast a trip. Could it be that in spite of his definite orders he
+was returning with the duty of recording the claim still
+unperformed? To Neilson, however, the sight of the long pack train
+brought some measure of satisfaction. Here were horses laden with
+the summer supplies that Chan had been told to procure, and they
+could be utilized in the pursuit of Beatrice. Two days at least
+could be saved.</p>
+<p>"What in the devil you coming back for?" Ray shouted, when
+Chan's identity became certain.</p>
+<p>Chan rode nearer as if he had not heard. He checked his horse
+deliberately, undoubtedly inwardly excited by the news he had to
+tell and perhaps somewhat triumphant because he was its bearer.
+"I'm coming back because there ain't no use in staying at Snowy
+Gulch any longer," he answered at last. "I've got the supplies, and
+I'm packin' up to the claim, just as I was told."</p>
+<p>"But why didn't you go to Bradleyburg and record the claim?" Ray
+stormed. "Don't you know until that's done we're likely to be
+chased off any minute?"</p>
+<p>Chan looked into his partner's angry eyes, and his own lips drew
+in a scowl. "Because there wasn't any use in goin' to
+Bradleyburg."</p>
+<p>Ray was stricken with terror, and his words faltered. "You mean
+you could tend to it in Snowy Gulch&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I don't mean nothing of the kind. Shut up a minute, and I'll
+tell you about it. A few days ago Steve Morris got a letter
+addressed to old Hiram Melville&mdash;in care of Steve. He opened
+it and read it, and I heard about it soon as I got into town. There
+ain't no use of our trying to record that claim."</p>
+<p>"For God's sake, why?"</p>
+<p>"Because it's already recorded, that's why. We all felt so sure,
+and we wasn't sure at all. Before old Hiram died he wrote a
+letter&mdash;one of them two letters you heard about,
+Neilson&mdash;and which you wished you'd got hold of. Who that
+letter was to was an official in Bradleyburg&mdash;an old friend of
+Hiram's&mdash;and in it was a description of the claim. This letter
+Morris got was a notice that his claim was all properly filed in
+his&mdash;Hiram's&mdash;name. Whatever formalities was necessary
+was cut out because the old man had been too sick to make the
+trip&mdash;the recorder got special permission from Victoria. To be
+plain, I didn't file the claim because it's already filed, and I
+didn't want to show myself up as a claim-jumper quite as bad as
+that."</p>
+<p>"It's all over town&mdash;about the claim?"</p>
+<p>"Sure, but there won't be a rush. There's quite a movement over
+Bradleyburg way for one thing; for another, this is a pocket
+country, once and for always."</p>
+<p>For some seconds thereafter his partners could make no
+intelligent response. This bitter blow had been anticipated by
+neither. But Ray was a strong man, and his self-control quickly
+returned to him.</p>
+<p>"You see what that means, don't you?" he asked Neilson.</p>
+<p>"It means we've lost!"</p>
+<p>The eyes before him narrowed and gleamed. "So that's what it
+means to you! Well, I don't look at it just that way. It means to
+me that we've got to take these supplies and these pack horses and
+start out and find Ben Darby&mdash;and never stop hunting till
+we've found him."</p>
+<p>"Of course we've got to rescue Beatrice&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Rescuing Beatrice isn't all of it now, by a long shot. For the
+Lord's sake, Neilson&mdash;use your head a minute. Didn't old Hiram
+leave a will, giving this claim to his brother Ezra? If the claim
+wasn't recorded that will wouldn't mean much&mdash;but it is. And
+hasn't this Ben got a letter from Ezra leaving the claim to him?
+Now do you want to know who owns that claim? Ben Darby owns it, and
+as long as he can kick, that quarter of a million in gold can never
+be ours."</p>
+<p>"You mean we've got to find him&mdash;and destroy that
+letter&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"We've got to; that's all. He wrote us he had it, just to taunt
+us, and we've got to burn that up whether we find the girl or not.
+But that ain't all we've got to destroy&mdash;that piece of paper.
+You see that, don't you?"</p>
+<p>Neilson breathed heavily. "It's all plain enough."</p>
+<p>"I want it to be plain, so next time I want to let daylight
+through a man you won't stand in the way. It ain't just enough to
+burn up that letter. We've got to get the man who owns it, too. If
+we don't he'd still have a good enough case against us&mdash;with a
+good lawyer. Likely enough lots of people knew of their
+partnership, maybe have seen the letter&mdash;and they'd all be
+good witnesses in a suit. Our reputation ain't so good, after that
+Jenkins deal, that we'd shine very bright in a suit. Even if he
+couldn't prove his own claim, he could lug out the will old Hiram
+left&mdash;he alone knows where it's hid&mdash;and then his next
+nearest relatives would come in and get the claim. On the other
+hand, if we smash him, the thing will all quiet down; there'll be
+no claimants to work the mine; and after a few months we can step
+in and put up our own notices. But we've got to do that
+first&mdash;smash him wide-open as soon as we can catch up with
+him. He'll be way out in Back There, and no man would ever know
+what became of him, and there'd be nobody left to oppose us any
+more. But we can't be safe any other way."</p>
+<p>Neilson nodded slowly. His subordinate had put the matter
+clearly; and there was truth in his words. In Ben's murder alone
+lay their safety.</p>
+<p>He had always been adverse to bloodshed; but further reluctance
+meant ruin. Ben was one whom he could strike down without mercy or
+regret. And the blow would not be for expediency alone. There would
+be a personal debt to pay after the long months of searching. He
+could not forget that Beatrice was helpless in his hands.</p>
+<p>"The thing to do is to turn back with Chan, at once," he
+said.</p>
+<p>"Of course," Ray agreed. "That plan of yours to get help in
+chasing 'em down don't go any more. We don't want any spectators
+for what's ahead of us. Here's grub and horses a-plenty, and we
+needn't lose any time."</p>
+<p>So they turned back toward the Yuga, on their quest of hate.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXII"></a>
+<h2>XXII</h2>
+<p>Beatrice Neilson was a mountain girl, with the strong thews of
+Jael, yet she hid her face as the canoe shot into the crest of the
+rapids. It seemed incredible to her that the light craft should
+buffet that wild cataract and yet live. She was young and she loved
+life; and death seemed very near.</p>
+<div class="figure" style="width: 450px;"><img src=
+"images/ss002.jpg" height="586" width="400" alt=
+"He was leaning forward, aware of nothing in the world but the forthcoming crisis.">
+</div>
+<br>
+<p>The scene that her eyes beheld in that last little instant in
+which the boat seemed to hang, shuddering, at the crest of the
+descent was branded indelibly on her memory. She saw Ben's face,
+set like iron, the muscles bunching beneath his flannel sleeves as
+he set his paddle. He was leaning forward, aware of nothing in the
+world but the forthcoming crisis. And in that swift flash of vision
+she saw not only the steel determination and the brutal savagery of
+the avenger. A little glimpse of the truth went home to her, and
+she beheld something of the misdirected idealism of the man, the
+intensity and steadfastness that were the dominant traits of his
+nature. She could not doubt his belief in the reality of his cause.
+Whether fancied or real the injury, deep wells of emotion in his
+heart had broken their seals and flowed forth.</p>
+<p>The wolf crouched on the heap of supplies, fearful to the depths
+of his wild heart of this mighty stream, yet still putting his
+faith in his master in the stern. Beatrice saw his wild, frightened
+eyes as he gazed down into the frightful whirlpools. The banks
+seemed to whip past.</p>
+<p>Then the rushing waters caught the craft and seemed to fling it
+into the air. There was the swift sense of lightning and incredible
+movement, of such incalculable speed as that with which a meteor
+blazes through the sky, and then a mighty surging, struggle; an
+interminable instant of ineffable and stupendous conflict. The bow
+dipped, split the foam; then the raging waters seized the craft
+again, and with one great impulse hurled it through the clouds of
+spray, down between the narrow portals of rocks.</p>
+<p>Beatrice came to herself with the realization that she had
+uttered a shrill cry. Part of the impulse behind it was simply
+terror; but it was also the expression of an intensity of sensation
+never before experienced. She could have understood, now, the lure
+of the rapids to experienced canoeists. She forced herself to look
+into the wild cataract.</p>
+<p>The boat sped at an unbelievable pace. Ben held his paddle like
+iron, yet with a touch as delicate as that of a great musician upon
+piano keys, and he steered his craft to the last inch. His face was
+still like metal, but the eyes, steely, vivid, and magnetic, had a
+look of triumph. The first of the great tests had been passed.</p>
+<p>Sudden confidence in Ben's ability to guide her through to
+safety began to warm the girl's frozen heart. There were no places
+more dangerous than that just past; and he had handled his craft
+like a master. He was a voyageur: as long as his iron control was
+sustained, as long as his nerve was strong and his eye true she had
+every chance of coming out alive. But they had irremediably cast
+their fortunes upon the river, now. They could not turn back. She
+was in his whole charge, an agent of vengeance against her own
+father and his confederates.</p>
+<p>Hot, blinding tears suddenly filled her eyes. Her frantic fear
+of the river had held them back for a time; but they flowed freely
+enough now the first crisis was past. In utter misery and despair
+her head bowed in her hands; and her brown hair, disheveled,
+dropped down.</p>
+<p>Ben gazed at her with a curious mingling of emotions. It had not
+been part of his plan to bring sorrow to this girl. After all, she
+was not in the least responsible for her father's crimes. He had
+sworn to have no regrets, no matter what innocent flesh was
+despoiled in order that he might strike the guilty; yet the sight
+of that bowed, lovely head went home to him very deeply indeed. She
+was the instrument of his vengeance, necessary to his cause, but
+there was nothing to be gained by afflicting her needlessly. At
+least, he could give her his pity. It would not weaken him, dampen
+his fiery resolution, to give her that.</p>
+<p>As he guided his craft he felt growing compassion for her; yet
+it was a personal pity only and brought no regrets that he had
+acted as he did.</p>
+<p>"I wish you wouldn't cry," he said, rather quietly.</p>
+<p>Amazed beyond expression at the words, Beatrice looked up. For
+the instant her woe was forgotten in the astounding fact that she
+had won compassion from this cast-iron man in the stern.</p>
+<p>"I'll try not to," she told him, her dark eyes ineffably
+beautiful with their luster of tears. "I don't see why I should
+try&mdash;why I should try to do anything you ask me to&mdash;but
+yet I will&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Further words came to him, and he could not restrain them.
+"You're sort of&mdash;the goat, Beatrice," he told her soberly. "It
+was said, long ago, that the sins of the father must be visited
+upon the children; and maybe that's the way it is with you. I can't
+help but feel sorry&mdash;that you had to undergo this&mdash;so
+that I could reach your father and his men. If you had seen old
+Ezram lying there&mdash;the life gone from, his kind, gray old
+face&mdash;the man who brought me home and gave me my one
+chance&mdash;maybe you'd understand."</p>
+<p>They were speechless a long time, Beatrice watching the swift
+leap of the shore line, Ben guiding, with steady hand, the canoe.
+Neither of them could guess at what speed they traveled this first
+wild half-hour; but he knew that the long miles&mdash;so
+heart-breaking with their ridges and brush thickets to men and
+horses&mdash;were whipping past them each in a few, little breaths.
+Ever they plunged deeper into the secret, hushed heart of the
+wild&mdash;a land unknown to the tread of white men, a region so
+still and changeless that it seemed excluded from the reign and law
+of, time. The spruce grew here, straight and dark and tall, a
+stalwart army whose measureless march no human eyes beheld. Already
+they had come farther than a pack train could travel, through the
+same region, in weary days.</p>
+<p>Already they were at the border of Back There. They had cut the
+last ties with the world of men. There were no trails here, leading
+slowly but immutably to the busy centers of civilization; not a
+blaze on a tree for the eyes of a woodsman riding on some forest
+venture, not the ashes of a dead camp fire or a charred cooking
+rack, where an Indian had broiled his caribou flesh. Except by the
+slow process of exploration with pack horses, traveling a few miles
+each day, fording unknown rivers and encircling impassable ranges,
+or by waiting patiently until the fall rains swelled the river,
+they might never leave this land they had so boldly entered. They
+could not go out the way they had come&mdash;over those seething
+waters&mdash;and the river, falling swiftly, would soon be too low
+to permit them to push down to its lower waters where they might
+find Indian encampments.</p>
+<p>Nothing was left but the wilderness, ancient and unchanged. The
+spruce forest had a depth and a darkness that even Ben had never
+seen; the wild creatures that they sometimes glimpsed on the bank
+stared at them wholly without knowledge as to what they were, and
+likely amazed at the strength whereby they had braved this seething
+torrent that swept through their sylvan home. Here was a land where
+the grizzly had not yet learned of a might greater than his, where
+he had not yet surrendered his sovereignty to man. Here the
+moose&mdash;mightiest of the antlered herd&mdash;reached full
+maturity and old age without ever mistaking the call of a
+birch-bark horn for that of his rutting cow. Young bulls with only
+a fifty-inch spread of horns and ten points on each did not lead
+the herds, as in the more accessible provinces of the North. All
+things were in their proper balance, since the forest had gone
+unchanged for time immemorial; and as the head-hunters had not yet
+come the bull moose did not rank as a full-grown warrior until he
+wore thirty points and had five feet of spread, and he wasn't a
+patriarch until he could no longer walk free between two tree
+trunks seventy inches apart. Certain of the lesser forest people
+were not in unwonted numbers because that fierce little hunter, the
+marten, had been exterminated by trappers; the otter, yet to know
+the feel of cold iron, fished to his heart's content in rivers
+where an artificial fly had never fallen and the trout swarmed in
+uncounted numbers in the pools.</p>
+<p>Darting down the rapids Ben felt the beginnings of an exquisite
+exhilaration. Part of it arose from the very thrill and excitement
+of their headlong pace; but partly it had a deeper, more portentous
+origin. Here was his own country&mdash;this Back There. While all
+the spruce forest in which he had lived had been his natural range
+and district&mdash;his own kind of land with which he felt close
+and intimate relations&mdash;this was even more his home than his
+own birthplace. By light of a secret quality, hard to recognize, he
+was of it, and it was of him. He felt the joy of one who sees the
+gleam of his own hearth through a distant window.</p>
+<p>He <i>knew</i> this land; it was as if he had simply been away,
+through the centuries, and had come home. The shadows and the
+stillness had the exact depth and tone that was true and right; the
+forest fragance was undefiled; the dark sky line was like something
+he had dreamed come true. He felt a strange and growing excitement,
+as if magnificent adventure were opening out before him. His gaze
+fell, with a queer sense of understanding, to Fenris.</p>
+<p>The wolf had recovered from his fear of the river, by now, and
+he was crouched, alert and still, in his place. His gaze was fast
+upon the shore line; and the green and yellow fires that mark the
+beast were ablaze again in his eyes. Fenris too made instinctive
+response to those breathless forests; and Ben knew that the bond
+between them was never so close as now.</p>
+<p>Fenris also knew that here was his own realm, the land in which
+the great Fear had not yet laid its curse. The forest still
+thronged with game, the wood trails would be his own. Here was the
+motherland, not only to him but to his master, too. They were its
+fierce children: one by breed, the other because he answered, to
+the full, the call of the wild from which no man is wholly
+immune.</p>
+<p>Ben could have understood the wolf's growing exultation. The war
+he was about to wage with Neilson. would be on his own ground, in a
+land that enhanced and developed his innate, natural powers, and
+where he had every advantage. The wolf does not run into the heart
+of busy cities in pursuit of his prey. He tries to decoy it into
+his own fastnesses.</p>
+<p>A sudden movement on the part of Beatrice, in the bow of the
+canoe, caught his eye. She had leaned forward and was reaching
+among the supplies. His mind at once leaped to the box of shells
+for her pistol that he had thrown among the duffle, but evidently
+this was not the object of her search. She lifted into her hands a
+paper parcel, the same she had brought from her cabin early that
+morning.</p>
+<p>He tried to analyze the curious mingling of emotions in her
+face. It was neither white with disdain nor dark with wrath; and
+the tears were gone from her eyes. Rather her expression was
+speculative, pensive. Presently her eyes met his.</p>
+<p>His heart leaped; why he did not know. "What is, it?" he
+asked.</p>
+<p>"Ben&mdash;I called you that yesterday and there's no use going
+back to last names now&mdash;I've made an important decision."</p>
+<p>"I hope it's a happy one," he ventured.</p>
+<p>"It's as happy as it can be, under the circumstances. Ben, I
+came of a line of frontiersmen&mdash;the forest people&mdash;and if
+the woods teach one thing it is to make the best of any bad
+situation."</p>
+<p>Ben nodded. For all his long training he had not entirely
+mastered this lesson himself, but he knew she spoke true.</p>
+<p>"We've found out how hard Fate can hit&mdash;if I can make it
+plain," she went on. "We've found out there are certain
+powers&mdash;or devils&mdash;or something else, and what I don't
+know&mdash;that are always lying in wait for people, ready to
+strike them down. Maybe you would call it Destiny. But the Destiny
+city men know isn't the Destiny we know out here&mdash;I don't have
+to tell you that. We see Nature just as she is, without any gay
+clothes, and we know the cruelty behind her smile, and the evil
+plans behind her gentle words."</p>
+<p>The man was amazed. Evidently the stress and excitement of the
+morning had brought out the fanciful and poetic side of the girl's
+nature.</p>
+<p>"We don't look for good luck," she told him. "We don't expect to
+live forever. We know what death is, and that it is sure to come,
+and that misfortune comes always&mdash;in the snow and the cold and
+the falling tree&mdash;and when we have good luck we're
+glad&mdash;we don't take it for granted. Living up here, where life
+is real, we've learned that we have to make the best of things in
+order to be happy at all."</p>
+<p>"And you mean&mdash;you're going to try to make the best of
+<i>this</i>?" His voice throbbed ever so slightly, because he could
+not hold it even.</p>
+<p>"There's nothing else I can do," she replied. "You've taken me
+here and as yet I don't see how I can get away. This doesn't mean
+I've gone over to your side."</p>
+<p>He nodded. He understood <i>that</i> very well.</p>
+<p>"I'm just admitting that at present I'm in your
+hands&mdash;helpless&mdash;and many long weeks in before us," she
+went on. "I'm on my father's side, last and always, and I'll strike
+back at you if the chance comes. Expect no mercy from me, in case I
+ever see my way to strike."</p>
+<p>The man's eyes suddenly gleamed. "Don't you know&mdash;that
+you'd have a better chance of fighting me&mdash;if you didn't put
+me on guard?"</p>
+<p>"I don't think so. I don't believe you'd be fooled that easy.
+Besides&mdash;I can't pretend to be a friend&mdash;when I'm really
+an enemy."</p>
+<p>For one significant instant the man looked down. This was what
+he had done&mdash;pretended friendship when he was a foe. But his
+was a high cause!</p>
+<p>"I'm warning you that I'm against you to the last&mdash;and will
+beat you if I see my way," the girl went on. "But at the same time
+I'm going to make the best of a bad situation, and try to get all
+the comfort I can. I'm in your hands at present, and we're foes,
+but just the same we can talk, and try to make each other
+comfortable so that we can be comfortable ourselves, and try not to
+be any more miserable than we can help. I'm not going to cry any
+more."</p>
+<p>As she talked she was slowly unwrapping the little parcel she
+had brought. Presently she held it out to him.</p>
+<p>It was just a box of homemade candy&mdash;fudge made with sugar
+and canned milk&mdash;that she had brought for their day's picnic.
+But it was a peace offering not to be despised. A heavy load lifted
+from Ben's heart.</p>
+<p>He waited his chance, guiding the boat with care, and then
+reached a brown hand. He crushed a piece of the soft, delicious
+confection between his lips. "Thanks, Beatrice," he said. "I'll
+remember all you've told me."</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXIII"></a>
+<h2>XXIII</h2>
+<p>It is a peculiar fact that no one is more deeply moved by the
+great works and phenomena of nature than those who live among them.
+It is the visitor from distant cities, or the callow youth with
+tawdry clothes and tawdry thoughts who disturbs the great silences
+and austerity of majestic scenes with half-felt effusive words or
+cheap impertinences. Oddly enough, the awe that the wilderness
+dweller knows at the sight of some great, mysterious canyon or
+towering peak seems to increase, rather than decrease, with
+familiarity. His native scenes never grow old to him. Their beauty
+and majesty is eternal.</p>
+<p>Perhaps the reason lies in the fact that the native woodsman
+knows nature as she really is: living ever close to her he knows
+her power over his life. Perhaps there is a religious side to the
+matter, too. In the solitudes the religious instincts receive an
+impulse that is impossible to those who know only the works of man.
+The religion that this gives is true and deep, and the eye
+instinctively lifts in reverence to the manifestations of divine
+might.</p>
+<p>When the swirling waters carried the canoe down into the gorge
+of the Yuga both Ben and Beatrice were instinctively awed and
+stilled. Ever the walls of the gorge grew more steep, until the
+sunlight was cut off and they rode as if in twilight. The stone of
+the precipices presented a marvellous array of color; and the
+spruce, almost black in the subdued light, stood in startling
+contrast. Ben saw at once that even were they able to land they
+could not&mdash;until they had emerged from the gorge&mdash;climb
+to the highlands. A mountain goat, most hardy of all mountaineers,
+could scarcely scale the abrupt wall.</p>
+<p>During this time of half-light they saw none of the larger
+forest creatures that at first had gazed at them with such wonder
+from the banks. The reason was simply that they could not descend
+and ascend the steep walls.</p>
+<p>Mostly Ben had time only for an occasional glimpse at the
+colossus above him. His work was to guide the craft between the
+perilous boulders. Occasionally the river slackened its wild pace,
+and at such times he stretched his arms and rested his straining
+eyes.</p>
+<p>Both had largely forgotten the danger of the ride. Because she
+was trying bravely to make the best of a tragic situation Beatrice
+had resolved to keep danger from her thoughts. Ben had known from
+the first that danger was an inevitable element in his venture, and
+he accepted it just as he had considered it,&mdash;with entire
+coldness. Yet both of them knew, in their secret thoughts, that the
+balance of life and death was so fine that the least minor incident
+might cast them into darkness. It would not have to be a great
+disaster, a wide departure from the commonplace. They were
+traveling at a terrific rate of speed, and a sharp rock too close
+to the surface would rip the bottom from their craft. Any instant
+might bring the shock and shudder of the end.</p>
+<p>There would scarcely be time to be afraid. Both would be hurled
+into the stream; and the wild waters, pounding against the rocks,
+would close the matter swiftly. It awed them and humbled them to
+realize with what dispatch and ease this wilderness power could
+snuff out their mortal lives. There would be no chance to fight
+back, no element of uncertainty in the outcome. Here was a destiny
+against which the strength of man was as thistledown in the wind!
+The thought was good spiritual medicine for Ben, just as it would
+have been for most other men, and his egoism died a swift and
+natural death.</p>
+<p>One crash, one shock, and then the darkness and silence of the
+end! The river would rage on, unsatiated by their few pounds of
+flesh, storming by in noble fury; but no man would know whither
+they had gone and how they had died. The walls of the gorge would
+not tremble one whit, or notice; and the spruce against the sky
+would not bow their heads to show that they had seen.</p>
+<p>But the canyon broke at last, and the craft emerged into the
+sunlight. It was good to see the easy slope of the hills again, the
+spruce forests, and the forms of the wild creatures on the river
+bank, startled by their passing. Noon came and passed, and for
+lunch they ate the last of the fudge. And now a significant change
+was manifest in both of them.</p>
+<p>Psychologists are ever astounded at the ability of mortals, men
+and animals, to become adjusted to any set of circumstances. The
+wax of habit sets almost in a day. The truth was, that in a certain
+measure with very definite and restricted limits, both Ben and
+Beatrice were becoming adjusted even to this amazing situation in
+which they found themselves. This did not mean that Beatrice was in
+the least degree reconciled to it. She had simply accepted it with
+the intention of making the best of it. She had been abducted by an
+enemy of her father and was being carried down an unknown and
+dangerous river; but the element of surprise, the life of which is
+never but a moment, was already passing away. Sometimes she caught
+herself with a distinct start, remembering everything with a rage
+and a bitter load on her heart; but the mood would pass
+quickly.</p>
+<p>It is impossible, through any ordinary change of fortune, for a
+normal person to lose his sense of self-identity. As long as that
+remains exterior conditions can make no vital change, or make him
+feel greatly different than he felt before. The change from a
+peasant to a millionaire brings only a moment's surprise, and then
+readjustment. Beatrice was still herself; the man in the stern
+remained Ben Darby and no one else. Very naturally she began to
+talk to him, and he to answer her.</p>
+<p>The fact that they were bitter foes, one the victim of the
+other, did not decree they could not have friendly conversation,
+isolated as they were. From time to time Ben pointed out objects of
+interest on the shore; and she found herself remarking, in a casual
+voice, about them. And before the afternoon he had made her laugh,
+in spite of herself,&mdash;a gay sound in which fear and distress
+had little echo.</p>
+<p>"We're bound to see a great deal of each other in the next few
+weeks," he had said; and this fact could not be denied. The sooner
+both became adjusted to it the better. Actual fear of him she had
+none; she remembered only too well the steel in his eyes and the
+white flame on his cheeks as he had assured her of her safety.</p>
+<p>In mid-afternoon Ben began to think of making his night's camp.
+From time to time the bank became an upright precipice where not
+even a tree could find foothold; and it had occurred to him, with
+sudden vividness, that he did not wish the darkness to overtake him
+in such a place. The river rocks would make short work of him, in
+that case. It was better to pick out a camp site in plenty of time
+lest they could not find one at the day's end.</p>
+<p>In one of the more quiet stretches of water he saw the
+place&mdash;a small cove and a green, tree-clad bank, with the
+gorge rising behind. Handling his canoe with greatest care he
+slanted toward it. A moment later he had caught the brush at the
+water's edge, stepped off into shallow water, and was drawing the
+canoe up onto the bank.</p>
+<p>"We're through for the day," he said happily, as he helped
+Beatrice out of the boat. "I'll confess I'm ready to rest."</p>
+<p>Beatrice made no answer because her eyes were busy. Coolly and
+quietly she took stock of the situation, trying to get an idea of
+the geographical features of the camp site. She saw in a glance,
+however, that there was no path to freedom up the gorge behind her.
+The rocks were precipitate: besides, she remembered that over a
+hundred miles of impassable wilderness lay between her and her
+father's cabin. Without food and supplies she could not hope to
+make the journey.</p>
+<p>The racing river, however, wakened a curious, inviting train of
+thought. The torrent continued largely unabated for at least one
+hundred miles more, she knew, and the hours that it would be
+passable in a canoe were numbered. The river had fallen steadily
+all day; driftwood was left on the shore; rocks dried swiftly in
+the sun, cropping out like fangs above the foam of the stream. Was
+there still time to drift on down the Yuga a hundred or more miles
+to the distant Indian encampment? She shut the thought from her
+mind, at present, and turned her attention to the work of making
+camp.</p>
+<p>With entire good humor she began to gather such pieces of dead
+wood as she could find for their fire.</p>
+<p>"Your prisoner might as well make herself useful," she said.</p>
+<p>Ben's face lighted as she had not seen it since their outward
+journey from Snowy Gulch. "Thank God you're taking it that way,
+Beatrice," he told her fervently. "It was a proposition I couldn't
+help&mdash;"</p>
+<p>But the girl's eyes flashed, and her lips set in a hard line.
+"I'm doing it to make my own time go faster," she told him softly,
+rather slowly. "I want you to remember that."</p>
+<p>But instantly both forgot their words to listen to a familiar
+clucking sound from a near-by shrub. Peering closely they made out
+the plump, genial form of Franklin's grouse,&mdash;a bird known far
+and wide in the north for her ample breast and her tender
+flesh.</p>
+<p>"Good Lord, there's supper!" Ben whispered. "Beatrice, get your
+pistol&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Her eyes smiled as she looked him in the face. "You
+remember&mdash;my pistol isn't loaded!"</p>
+<p>"Excuse me. I forgot. Give it to me."</p>
+<p>She handed him the little gun, and he slipped in the shells he
+had taken from it. Then&mdash;for the simple and sensible reason
+that he didn't want to take any chance on the loss of their
+dinner&mdash;he stole within twenty feet of the bird. Very
+carefully he drew down on the plump neck.</p>
+<p>"Dinner all safe," he remarked rather gayly, as the grouse came
+tumbling through the branches.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXIV"></a>
+<h2>XXIV</h2>
+<p>Quietly Beatrice retrieved the bird and began to remove its
+feathers. Ben built the fire, chopped sturdily at a half-grown
+spruce until it shattered to the earth, and then chopped it into
+lengths for fuel. When the fire was blazing bright, he cut away the
+green branches and laid them, stems overlapping, into a fragrant
+bed.</p>
+<p>"Here's where you sleep to-night, Beatrice," he informed
+her.</p>
+<p>She stopped in her work long enough to try the springy boughs
+with her arms; then she gave him an answering smile. Even a
+tenderfoot can make some sort of a comfortable pallet out of
+evergreen boughs&mdash;ends overlapping and plumes bent&mdash;but a
+master woodsman can fashion a veritable cradle, soft as silk with
+never a hard limb to irritate the flesh, and yielding as a hair
+mattress. Such softness, with the fragrance of the balsam like a
+sleeping potion, can not help but bring sweet dreams.</p>
+<p>Ben had been wholly deliberate in the care with which he had
+built the pallet. He had simply come to the conclusion that she was
+paying a high price for her father's sins; and from now on he
+intended to make all things as easy as he could for her. Moreover,
+she had been a sportswoman of the rarest breed and merited every
+kindness he could do for her.</p>
+<p>He was not half so careful with his own bed, built sixty feet on
+the opposite side of the fire. He threw it together rather hastily.
+And when he walked back to the fire he found an amazing change.</p>
+<p>Already Beatrice had established sovereignty over the little
+patch of ground they had chosen for the camp,&mdash;and the
+wilderness had drawn back. This spot was no longer mere part of the
+far-spreading, trackless wilds. It had been set off and marked so
+that the wilderness creatures could no longer mistake it for part
+of their domain. Over the fire she had erected a cooking rack; and
+water was already boiling in a small bucket suspended from it. In
+another container a fragrant mixture was in the process of cooking.
+She had spread one of the blankets on the grass for a
+tablecloth.</p>
+<p>As twilight lowered they sat down to their simple
+meal,&mdash;tea, sweetened with sugar, and vegetables and meat
+happily mingled in a stew. It was true that the vegetable end was
+held up by white grains of rice alone, but the meat was the white,
+tender flesh of grouse, permeating the entire dish with its
+tempting flavor. As a whole, the stew was greatly satisfying to the
+inner man.</p>
+<p>"I wish I'd brought more tea," Ben complained, as he sipped that
+most delightful of all drinks, the black tea beloved of the
+northern men.</p>
+<p>"You a woodsman, and don't know how to remedy that!" the girl
+responded. "I know of a native substitute that's almost as good as
+the real article."</p>
+<p>About the embers of the fire they sat and watched the tremulous
+wings of night close round them. The copse grew breathless. The
+distant trees blended into shadow, the nearer trunks dimmed and
+finally faded; the large, white northern stars emerged in infinite
+troops and companies, peering down through the rifts in the trees.
+Here about their fire they had established the domain of man. For a
+few short hours they had routed the forces of the wilderness; but
+the foe pressed close upon them. Just at the fluctuating ring of
+firelight he waited, clothed in darkness and mystery,&mdash;the
+infinite, brooding spirit of the ancient forest.</p>
+<p>They had never known such silence, broken only by the prolonged
+chord of the river, as descended upon them now. It was new and
+strange to the conscious life of Ben, himself, the veritable
+offspring of the woods; although infinitely old and familiar to a
+still, watching, secret self within him. It was as if he had
+searched forever for this place and had just found it, and it
+answered, to the full, a queer mood of silence in his own heart.
+The wind had died down now. The last wail of a
+coyote&mdash;disconsolate on a far-away ridge&mdash;had trembled
+away into nothingness; the voices of the Little People who had
+chirped and rustled in the tree aisles during the daylight hours
+were stilled with a breathless, dramatic stillness. Such sound as
+remained over the interminable breadth of that dark forest was only
+the faint stirrings and rustlings of the beasts of prey going to
+their hunting; and this was only a moving tone in the great chord
+of silence.</p>
+<p>To Ben the falling night brought a return of his most terrible
+moods. Beatrice sensed them in his pale, set face and his cold,
+wolfish eyes. The wolf sat beside him, swept by his master's mood,
+gazing with deadly speculations into the darkness. Beatrice saw
+them as one breed to-night. The wild had wholly claimed this
+repatriated son. The paw of the Beast was heavy upon him; the
+softening influences of civilization seemed wholly dispelled. There
+was little here to remind her that this was the twentieth century.
+The primitive that lies just under the skin in all men was in the
+ascendancy; and there was little indeed to distinguish him from the
+hunter of long ago, a grizzled savage at the edge of the ice who
+chased the mammoth and wild pony, knowing no home but the forest
+and no gentleness unknown to the wolf that ran at his heels.... The
+tenderness and sympathy he had had for her earlier that day seemed
+quite gone now. She searched for it in vain in the dark and savage
+lines of his pale face.</p>
+<p>Because it has always been that the happiness of women must
+depend upon the mood of men, her own spirits fell. The despair that
+descended upon her brought also resentment and rage; and soon she
+slipped away quietly to her bed. She drew the blankets over her
+face; but no tears wet her cheeks to-night. She was dry-eyed,
+thoughtful&mdash;full of vague plans.</p>
+<p>She lay awake a long time, until at last a little, faint ray of
+hope beamed bright and clear. More than a hundred miles farther
+down the Yuga, past the mouth of Grizzly River, not far from the
+great, north-flowing stream of which the Yuga was a tributary, lay
+an Indian village&mdash;and if only she could reach it she might
+enlist the aid of the natives and make a safe return, by a long,
+roundabout route, to her father's arms. The plan meant deliverance
+from Ben and the defeat of all his schemes of
+vengeance,&mdash;perhaps the salvation of her father and his
+subordinates.</p>
+<p>She realized perfectly the reality of her father's danger. She
+had read the iron resolve in Ben's face. She knew that if she
+failed to make an immediate escape from him, all his dreadful plans
+were likely to succeed: his enemies would follow him into the
+unexplored mazes of Back There to effect her rescue and fall
+helpless in his trap. What quality of mercy he would extend to them
+then she could readily guess.</p>
+<p>Just to get down to the Indian village: this was her whole
+problem. But it was Ben's plan to land and enter the interior
+somewhere in the vast wilderness between, from which escape could
+not be made until the flood waters of fall. The way would remain
+open but a few hours more, due to the simple fact that the waters
+were steadily falling and the river-bottom crags, forming
+impassable barriers at some points, would be exposed. <i>If she
+made her escape at all it must be soon.</i></p>
+<p>Yet she could not attempt it at night. She could not see to
+guide the canoe while the darkness lay over the river. Just one
+further chance remained&mdash;to depart in the first gray of
+dawn.</p>
+<p>She fell into troubled sleep, but true to her resolution,
+wakened when the first ribbon of light stretched along the eastern
+horizon. She sat up, laying the blankets back with infinite care.
+This was her chance: Ben still lay asleep.</p>
+<p>Just to steal down to the water's edge, push off the canoe, and
+trust her life to the doubtful mercy of the river. The morning soon
+would break; if she could avoid the first few crags, she had every
+chance to guide her craft through to deliverance and safety. By no
+conceivable chance could Ben follow her. He would be left in the
+shadow of the gorge, a prisoner without hope or prayer of
+deliverance. There was no crossing the cliffs that lifted so stern
+and gray just behind. Before he could build any kind of a craft
+with axe and fire, the waters would fall to a death level, beyond
+any hope of carrying him to safety. The tables would be turned; he
+would be left as helpless to follow her as Neilson had been to
+follow him.</p>
+<p>The plan meant deliverance for her; but surely it meant
+<i>death</i> to him. Starvation would drive him to the river and
+destruction, before men could ever come the long way to rescue him.
+But this was not her concern. She was a forest girl and he her
+enemy: he must pay the price for his own deeds.</p>
+<p>She got to her feet, stalking with absolute silence. She must
+not waken him now. Softly she pressed her unshod foot into the
+grass. He stirred in his sleep; and she paused, scarcely
+breathing.</p>
+<p>She looked toward him. Dimly she could see his face, tranquil in
+sleep and gray in the soft light; and an instantaneous surge of
+remorse sped through her. There was a sweetness, a hint of kindly
+boyishness in his face now, so changed since she had left him
+beside the glowing coals. Yet he was her deadly enemy; and she must
+not let her woman's heart cost her her victory in its moment of
+fulfillment. She crept on down to the water.</p>
+<p>She could discern the black shadow of the canoe. One swift surge
+of her shoulders, one leap, the splash of the stern in the water
+and the swift stroke of the paddle, and she would be safe. She
+stepped nearer.</p>
+<p>But at that instant a subdued note of warning froze her in her
+tracks. It was only a small sound, hushed and hardly sharp enough
+to arouse Ben from his sleep; but it was deadly, savage,
+unutterably sinister. She had forgotten that Ben did not wage war
+alone. For the moment she had given no thought to his terrible
+ally,&mdash;a pack brother faithful to the death.</p>
+<p>A great, gaunt form raised up from the pile of duffle in the
+canoe; and his fangs showed ivory white in the wan light. It was
+Fenris, and he guarded the canoe. He crouched, ready to spring if
+she drew near.</p>
+<p>The girl sobbed once, then stole back to her blankets.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXV"></a>
+<h2>XXV</h2>
+<p>Ben wakened refreshed, at peace with the world as far as he
+could ever be until his ends were attained; and immediately built a
+roaring fire. Beatrice still slept, exhausted from the stress and
+suspense of her attempt to escape. When the leaping flames had
+dispelled the frost from the grass about the fire Ben stepped to
+her side and touched her shoulder.</p>
+<p>"It's time to get up and go on," he said. "We have only a few
+hours more of travel."</p>
+<p>It was true. The river had fallen appreciably during the night.
+Not many hours remained in which to make their permanent landing.
+Although the river was somewhat less violent from this point on,
+the lower water line would make traveling practically as perilous
+as on the preceding day.</p>
+<p>The girl opened her eyes. "I'd rather hoped&mdash;I had dreamed
+it all," she told him miserably.</p>
+<p>The words touched him. He looked into her face, moved by the
+girlishness and appeal about the red, wistful mouth and the dark,
+brimming eyes. "It's pretty tough, but I'm afraid it's true," he
+said, more kindly than he had spoken since they had left the
+landing. "Do you want me to cook breakfast and bring it to you
+here?"</p>
+<p>"No, I want to do that part myself. It makes the time pass
+faster to have something to do."</p>
+<p>He went to look for fresh meat, and she slipped into her outer
+garments. She found water already hot in a bucket suspended from
+the cooking rack, permitting a simple but refreshing toilet. With
+Ben's comb she straightened out the snarls in her dark tresses,
+parted them, and braided them into two dusky ropes to be worn
+Indian fashion in front of her shoulders. Then she prepared the
+meal.</p>
+<p>It was a problem to tax the ingenuity of any
+housekeeper,&mdash;to prepare an appetizing breakfast out of such
+limited supplies. But in this art, particularly, the forest girls
+are trained. A quantity of rice had been left from the stew of the
+preceding night, and mixing it with flour and water and salt, she
+made a batter. Sooner or later fresh fat could be obtained from
+game to use in frying: to-day she saw no course other than to melt
+a piece of candle. The reverberating roar of the rifle a hundred
+yards down the river bank, however, suggested another
+alternative.</p>
+<p>A moment later Ben appeared&mdash;and the breakfast problem was
+solved. It was another of the woods people that his rifle had
+brought down,&mdash;one that wore fur rather than feathers and
+which had just come in from night explorations along the river
+bank. It was a yearling black bear&mdash;really no larger than a
+cub&mdash;and he had an inch of fat under his furry hide.</p>
+<p>The fat he yielded was not greatly different from lard; and the
+pancakes&mdash;or fritters, as Ben termed them&mdash;were soon
+frying merrily. Served with hot tea they constituted a filling and
+satisfactory breakfast for both travelers.</p>
+<p>After breakfast they took to the river, yielding themselves once
+more to the whims of the current. Once more the steep banks whipped
+past them in ever-changing vista; and Ben had to strain at his
+paddle to guide the craft between the perilous crags. The previous
+day the high waters had carried them safely above the boulders of
+the river bed: to-day some of the larger crags all but scraped the
+bottom of the canoe. It did not tend toward peace of mind to know
+that any instant they might encounter a submerged crag that would
+rip their craft in twain. Ben felt a growing eagerness to land.</p>
+<p>But within an hour they came out once more upon the open forest.
+The river broadened, sped less swiftly, the bank sloped gradually
+to the distant hills. This was the heart of Back There,&mdash;a
+virgin and primeval forest unchanged since the piling-up of the
+untrodden ranges. The wild pace of the craft was checked, and they
+kept watch for a suitable place to land.</p>
+<p>There was no need to push on through the seething cataracts that
+lay still farther below. Shortly before the noon hour Ben's quick
+eye saw a break in the heavy brushwood that lined the bank and
+quickly paddled toward it. In a moment it was revealed as the
+mouth, of a small, clear stream, flowing out of a beaver meadow
+where the grass was rank and high. In a moment more he pushed the
+canoe into the mud of the creek bank.</p>
+<p>They both got out, rather sober of mien, and she helped him haul
+the canoe out upon the bank. They unloaded it quickly, carrying the
+supplies in easy loads fifty yards up into the edge of the forest,
+on well-drained dry ground.</p>
+<p>The entire forest world was hushed and breathless, as if
+startled by this intrusion. Neither of the two travelers felt
+inclined to speak. And the silence was finally broken by the
+splashing feet of a moose, running through a little arm of the
+marsh that the forest hid from view.</p>
+<p>"Is this our permanent camp?" the girl asked at last.</p>
+<p>"Surely not," was the reply. "It's too near the river for one
+thing&mdash;too easily found. It's too low, too&mdash;there'll be
+mosquitoes in plenty in that marsh two months from now. The first
+thing is&mdash;to look around and find a better site."</p>
+<p>"You want me to come?"</p>
+<p>"I'd rather, if you don't mind."</p>
+<p>She understood perfectly. He did not intend to give her complete
+freedom until the river fell so low that the rapids farther down
+would be wholly impassable.</p>
+<p>"I'll come." Beatrice smiled grimly. "We can have that picnic we
+planned, after all."</p>
+<p>They found a moose trail leading into the forest, and leaving
+the wolf on guard over the supplies, they filed swiftly along it in
+that peculiar, shuffling, mile-speeding gait that all foresters
+learn. At once both were aware of a subdued excitement. In the
+first place, this was unknown country and they experienced the
+incomparable thrill of exploration. Besides they were seeking a
+permanent camp where their fortunes would be cast, the drama of
+their lives be enacted, for weeks to come.</p>
+<p>Almost at once they began to catch glimpses of wild
+life,&mdash;a squirrel romping on a limb; or a long line of grouse,
+like children in school, perched on a fallen log. The trapper had
+not yet laid his lines in this land, and the tracks of the little
+fur-bearers weaved a marvelous and intricate pattern on the moose
+trail. Once a marten with orange throat peered at them from a
+covert, and once a caribou raced away, too fast for a shot.</p>
+<p>Mostly the wild things showed little fear or understanding of
+the two humans. The grouse relied on their protective coloration,
+just as when menaced by the beasts of prey. An otter, rarely indeed
+seen in daylight, hovered a moment beside a little stream to
+consider them; and a coyote, greatest of all cowards, lingered in
+their trail until they were within fifty feet of his grey form,
+then trotted shyly away.</p>
+<p>"We won't starve for meat, that's certain," Ben informed her.
+His voice was subdued; he had fallen naturally into the mood of
+quietness that dwells ever in the primeval forest.</p>
+<p>Because the trail seemed to be leading them too far from the
+waterways, they took a side trail circling about a wooded hill.
+Ever Ben studied the landmarks, looked carefully down the draws and
+tried to learn as much as possible of the geography of the country;
+and Beatrice understood his purpose with entire clearness. He
+wished to locate his camp so that it would have every natural
+advantage and insurance against surprise attack. He desired that
+every advantage of warfare be in his favor when finally he came to
+grips with Neilson and his men.</p>
+<p>They crossed a low ridge, following down another of the thousand
+creeks that water the northern lands. In a moment it led them to a
+long, narrow lake, blue as a sapphire in its frame of dusky
+spruce.</p>
+<p>For a moment both of them halted on its bank, held by its virgin
+beauty. Lost in the solitudes as it was, perhaps never before gazed
+upon by the eyes of men, still it gave no impression of bleakness
+and stagnation. Rather it was a scene of scintillating life, vivid
+past all expression. Far out of range on the opposite shore a huge
+bull moose stood like a statue in black marble, gazing out over the
+shimmering expanse. Trout leaped, flashing silver, anywhere they
+might look; and a flock of loon shrieked demented cries from its
+center. The burnished wings of a flock of mallard flashed in the
+air, startled by some creeping hunter.</p>
+<p>Slowly, delighted in spite of themselves by the lovely spot,
+they followed along its shore. They climbed the bank; and now Ben
+began to examine his surroundings with great care.</p>
+<p>He had suddenly realized that he was in a region wonderfully
+fitted for his permanent camp. The low ridge between the lake and
+the creek gave a clear view of a large part of the surrounding
+country, affording him every chance of seeing his enemies before
+they saw him. If they came along the river&mdash;the course they
+would naturally follow&mdash;they would be obliged to cross the
+beaver marsh&mdash;a half-mile of open grassland with no protecting
+coverts. Beatrice saw, dismayed, that his gray eyes were kindling
+with unholy fire under his heavy, dark brows.</p>
+<p>What if he should see them, deep in the wet grass, filing across
+the open marsh! How many shots would be needed to bring his war to
+a triumphant end? There were no thickets in which they might find
+shelter: hidden himself, they could not return his fire. Before
+they could break and run to cover he could destroy them all!</p>
+<p>Should they cross the narrow neck of the marsh, higher up, he
+would have every chance to see them on the lake shore. The site was
+good from the point of health and comfort&mdash;high enough to
+escape the worst of the insect pests, close to fresh water, plenty
+of fuel, and within a few hundred yards of a lake that simply
+swarmed with fish and waterfowl.</p>
+<p>Still following a narrow, racing trout stream that flowed into
+the lake they advanced a short distance farther, clear to the base
+of a rock wall. And all at once Beatrice, walking in front, drew up
+with a gasp.</p>
+<p>She stood at the edge of a little glade, perhaps thirty yards
+across, laying at the base of the cliff. The creek flowed through
+it, the grass was green and rich, beloved by the antlered herds
+that came to graze, the tall spruce shaded it on three sides. But
+it was not these things that caught the girl's eye. Just at the
+edge of a glade a dark hole yawned in the face of the cliff.</p>
+<p>In an instant more they were beside it, gazing into its depths.
+It was a natural cavern with rock walls and a clean floor of
+sand&mdash;a roomy place, and yet a perfect stronghold against
+either mortal enemies or the powers of wind and rain.</p>
+<p>"It's home," the man said simply.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXVI"></a>
+<h2>XXVI</h2>
+<p>Ben and Beatrice went together back to the canoe, and in two
+trips they carried the supplies to the cave. By instinct a
+housekeeper, Beatrice showed him where to stow the various
+supplies, what part of the cave was to be used for provisions,
+where their cots would be laid, and where to erect the cooking
+rack. Shadows had fallen over the land before they finished the
+work.</p>
+<p>Tired from the hard tramp, yet sustained by a vague excitement
+neither of them could name or trace, they began to prepare for the
+night. Ben cut boughs as before, placing Beatrice's bed within the
+portals of the cave and his own on the grass outside. He cut fuel
+and made his fire: Beatrice prepared the evening meal.</p>
+<p>The flesh of the cub-bear they had procured that morning would
+have to serve them to-night; but more delicious meat could be
+procured to-morrow. Ben knew that the white-maned caribou fed in
+the high park lands. Beatrice made biscuits and brewed tea; and
+they ate the simple food in the firelight. Already the darkness was
+pressing close upon them, tremulous, vaguely sinister, inscrutably
+mysterious.</p>
+<p>They had talked gayly at first; but they grew silent as the fire
+burned down to coals. A great preoccupation seemed to hold them
+both. When one spoke the other started, and word did not
+immediately come in answer. Beatrice's despair was not nearly so
+dominating to-night; and Ben harbored a secret excitement that was
+almost happiness.</p>
+<p>Its source and origin Ben could not trace. Perhaps it was just
+relief that the perilous journey was over. The strain of his hours
+at the paddle had been severe; but now they were safe upon the
+sustaining earth. Yet this fact alone could hardly have given him
+such a sense of security,&mdash;an inner comfort new to his
+adventurous life.</p>
+<p>The forest was oppressive to-night, tremulous with the passions
+of the Young World; yet he did not respond to it as before. The
+excitement that sparkled in the red wine of his veins was not of
+the chase and death, and he had difficulty in linking it up with
+the thoughts of his forthcoming vengeance. Rather it was a mood
+that sprang from their surroundings here, their shelter at the
+mouth of the cave. He felt deeply at peace.</p>
+<p>The fire blazed warmly at the cavern maw; the wolf stood tense
+and still, by means of the secret wireless of the wild fully aware
+of the tragic drama, the curtain of which was the dark just fallen;
+yet Ben's wild, bitter thoughts of the preceding night did not come
+readily back to him. There was a quality here&mdash;in the
+firelight and the haven of the cave&mdash;that soothed him and
+comforted him. The powers of the wild were helpless against him
+now. The wind might hurl down the dead trees, but the rock of the
+cavern Wall would stand against them. Even the dreaded avalanche
+could roar and thunder on the steep above in vain.</p>
+<p>There was no peril in the hushed, breathless forest for him
+to-night. This was his stronghold, and none could assail it. And it
+was a significant fact that his sense of intimate relationship with
+the wolf, Fenris, Was someway lessened. Fenris was a creature of
+the open forest, sleeping where he chose on the trail; but his
+master had found a cavern home. There was a strange and bridgeless
+chasm between such breeds as roamed abroad and those that slept,
+night after night, in the shelter of the same walls.</p>
+<p>He watched the girl's face, ruddy in the firelight, and it was
+increasingly hard to remember that she was of the enemy
+camp,&mdash;the daughter of his arch foe. To-night she was just a
+comrade, a habitat of his own cave.</p>
+<p>For the first time since he had found Ezram's body&mdash;so
+huddled and impotent in the dead leaves&mdash;he remembered the
+solace of tobacco. He hunted through his pockets, found his pipe
+and a single tin of the weed, and began to inhale the fragrant,
+peace-giving smoke. When he raised his eyes again he found the girl
+studying him with intent gaze.</p>
+<p>She looked away, embarrassed, and he spoke to put her at ease.
+"You are perfectly comfortable, Beatrice?" he asked gently.</p>
+<p>"As good as I could expect&mdash;considering everything. I'm
+awfully relieved that we're off the water."</p>
+<p>"Of course." He paused, looking away into the tremulous shadows.
+"Is that all? Don't you feel something else, too&mdash;a kind of
+satisfaction?"</p>
+<p>The coals threw their lurid glow on her lovely, deeply tanned
+face. "It's for you to feel satisfaction, not me. You couldn't
+expect me to feel very satisfied&mdash;taken from my home&mdash;as
+a hostage&mdash;in a feud with my father. But I think I know what
+you mean. You mean&mdash;the comfort of the fire, and a place to
+stay."</p>
+<p>"That's it. Of course."</p>
+<p>"I feel it&mdash;but every human being does who has a fire when
+this big, northern night comes down and takes charge of things.
+It's just an instinct, I suppose, a comfort and a feeling of
+safety&mdash;and likely only the wild beasts are exempt from it."
+Her voice changed and softened, as her girlish fancy reached ever
+farther. "I suppose the first men that you were telling me about on
+the way out, the hairy men of long ago, felt the same way when the
+cold drove them to their caves for the first time. A great comfort
+in the protecting walls and the fire."</p>
+<p>"It's an interesting thought&mdash;that perhaps the love of home
+sprang from that hour."</p>
+<p>"Quite possibly. Perhaps it came only when they had to fight for
+their homes&mdash;against beasts, and such other hairy men as tried
+to take their homes away from them. Perhaps, after all, that's one
+of the great differences between men and beasts. Men have a place
+to live in and a place to fight for&mdash;and the fire is the
+symbol of it all. And the beasts run in the forest and make a new
+lair every day."</p>
+<p>Thoughts of the stone age were wholly fitting in this stone-age
+forest, and Ben's fancy caught on fire quickly. "And perhaps, when
+the hairy men came to the caves to live, they forgot their wild
+passions they knew on the open trails&mdash;their blood-lust and
+their wars among themselves&mdash;and began to be men instead of
+beasts." Ben's voice had dropped to an even, low murmur. "Perhaps
+they got gentle, and the Brute died in their bodies."</p>
+<p>"Yes. Perhaps then they began to be tamed."</p>
+<p>The silence dropped about them, settling slowly; and all except
+the largest heap of red coals burned down to gray ashes. The
+darkness pressed ever nearer. The girl stretched her slender, brown
+arms.</p>
+<p>"I'm sleepy," she said. "I'm going in."</p>
+<p>He got up, with good manners; and he smiled, quietly and gently,
+into her sober, wistful face. "Sleep good," he prayed. "You've got
+solid walls around you to-night&mdash;and some one on guard, too.
+Good night."</p>
+<p>A like good wish was on her lips, but she pressed it back. She
+had almost forgotten, for the moment, that this man was her
+abductor and her father's enemy. She ventured into the darkness of
+the cave.</p>
+<p>Scratching a match Ben followed her, so that she could see her
+way. For the instant the fireside was deserted. And then both of
+them grew breathless and alert as the brush cracked and rustled
+just beyond the glowing coals.</p>
+<p>Some huge wilderness creature was venturing toward them, at the
+edge of the little glade.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXVII"></a>
+<h2>XXVII</h2>
+<p>The match flared out in Ben's fingers, and the only light that
+was left was the pale moonlight, like a cobweb on the floor of the
+glade, and the faint glow from the dying fire. About the glade
+ranged the tall spruce, Watching breathlessly; and for a termless
+second or two a profound and portentous silence descended on the
+camp. No leaf rustled, not a tree limb cracked. The creature that
+had pushed through the thickets to the edge of the glade was
+evidently standing motionless, deciding on his course.</p>
+<p>Only the wild things seem to know what complete absence of
+motion means. To stand like a form in rock, not a muscle quivering
+or a hair stirring, is never a feat for ragged, over stretched
+human nerves; and it requires a perfect muscle control that is
+generally only known to the beasts of the forest. Only a few times
+in a lifetime in human beings are the little, outward motions
+actually suspended; perhaps under the paralysis of great terror or,
+with painstaking effort, before a photographer's camera. But with
+the beasts it is an everyday accomplishment necessary to their
+survival. The fawn that can not stand absolutely motionless, his
+dappled skin blending perfectly with the background of shrubbery
+shot with sunlight, comes to an end quickly in the fangs of some
+great beast of prey. The panther that can not lurk, not a muscle
+quivering, in his ambush beside the deer trail, never knows full
+feeding. The creature on the opposite side of the glade seemed as
+bereft of motion as the spruce trees in the moonlight, or the cliff
+above the cave.</p>
+<p>"What is it?" Beatrice whispered. The man's eyes strained into
+the gloom.</p>
+<p>"I don't know. It may be just a moose, or maybe a caribou. But
+it may be&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He tiptoed to the door of the cave, and his eye fell to the
+crouching form of Fenris. The creature outside was neither moose
+nor caribou. The great wolf of the North does not stand at bay to
+the antlered people. He was poised to spring, his fangs bared and
+his fierce eyes hot with fire, but he was not hunting. Whatever
+moved in the darkness without, the wolf had no desire to go forth
+and attack. Perhaps he would fight to the death to protect the
+occupants of the cave; but surely an ancient and devastating fear
+had hold of him. Evidently he recognized the intruder as an
+ancestral enemy that held sovereignty over the forest.</p>
+<p>At that instant Ben leaped through the cavern maw to reach his
+gun. There was nothing to be gained by waiting further. This was a
+savage and an uninhabited land; and the great beasts of prey that
+ranged the forest had not yet learned the restraint born of the
+fear of man. And he knew one breathless instant of panic when his
+eye failed to locate the weapon in the faint light of the fire.</p>
+<p>Holding hard, he tried to remember where he had left it. The
+form across the glade was no longer motionless. Straining, Ben saw
+the soft roll of a great shadow, almost imperceptible in the
+gloom&mdash;advancing slowly toward him. Then the faint glow of the
+fire caught and reflected in the creature's eyes.</p>
+<p>They suddenly glowed out in the half-darkness, two rather small
+circles of dark red, close together and just alike. This night
+visitor was not moose or caribou, or was it one of the lesser
+hunters, lynx or wolverine, or a panther wandered far from his
+accustomed haunts. The twin circles were too far above the ground.
+And whatever it was, no doubt remained but that the creature was
+steadily stalking him across the soft grass.</p>
+<p>At that instant Ben's muscles snapped into action. Only a second
+remained in which to make his defense&mdash;the creature had
+paused, setting his muscles for a death-dealing charge. "Go back
+into the cave&mdash;as far as you can," he said swiftly to
+Beatrice. His own eyes, squinted and straining for the last iota of
+vision in that darkened scene, made a last, frantic search for his
+rifle. Suddenly he saw the gleam of its barrel as it rested against
+the wall of the cliff, fifteen feet distant.</p>
+<p>At once he knew that his only course was to spring for it in the
+instant that remained, and trust to its mighty shocking power to
+stop the charge that would in a moment ensue. Yet it seemed to tear
+the life fiber of the man to do it. His inmost instincts, urgent
+and loud in his ear, told him to remain on guard, not to leave that
+cavern maw for an instant but to protect with his own body the
+precious life that it sheltered. His mind worked with that
+incredible speed that is usually manifest in a crisis; and he knew
+that the creature might charge into the cavern entrance in the
+second that he left it. Yet only in the rifle lay the least chance
+or hope for either of them.</p>
+<p>"At him, Fenris!" he shouted. The wolf leaped forward like a
+thrown spear,&mdash;almost too fast for the eye to follow. He was
+deathly afraid, with full knowledge of the power of the enemy he
+went to combat, but his fears were impotent to restrain him at the
+first sound of that masterful voice. These were the words he had
+waited for. He could never disobey such words as these&mdash;from
+the lips of his god. And Ben's mind had worked true; he knew that
+the wolf could likely hold the creature at bay until he could seize
+his rifle.</p>
+<p>In an instant it was in his hands, and he had sprung back to his
+post in front of the cavern maw. And presently he remembered,
+heartsick, that the weapon was not loaded.</p>
+<p>For his own safety he had kept it empty on the outward journey,
+partly to prevent accident, partly to be sure that his prisoner
+could not turn it against him. But he had shells in the pocket of
+his jacket. His hand groped, but his reaching fingers found but one
+shell, dropping it swiftly into the gun. And now he knew that no
+time remained to seek another. The beast in the darkness had
+launched into the charge.</p>
+<p>Thereafter there was only a great confusion, event piled upon
+event with incredible rapidity, and a whole lifetime of stress and
+fear lived in a single instant. The creature's first lunge carried
+him into the brighter moonlight; and at once Ben recognized its
+breed. No woodsman could mistake the high, rocking shoulders, the
+burly form, the wicked ears laid back against the flat, massive
+head, the fangs gleaming white, the long, hooked claws slashing
+through the turf as he ran. It was a terrible thing to see and
+stand against, in the half-darkness. The shadows accentuated the
+towering outline; and forgotten terrors, lurking, since the world
+was young, in the labyrinth of the germ plasm wakened and spread
+like icy streams through the mortal body and seemed to threaten to
+extinguish the warm flame of the very soul.</p>
+<p>The grizzly bawled as he came, an explosive, incredible storm of
+sound. Few indeed are the wilderness creatures that can charge in
+silence: muscular exertion can not alone relieve their gathered
+flood of madness and fury. And at once Ben sensed the impulse
+behind the attack. He and the girl had made their home in the
+grizzly's cave&mdash;perhaps the lair wherein he had hibernated
+through the winter and which he still slept in from time to
+time&mdash;and he had come to drive them out. Only death could pay
+for such insolence as this,&mdash;to make a night's lair in the den
+of his sovereignty, the grizzly.</p>
+<p>It is not the accustomed thing for a grizzly to make an
+unprovoked attack. He has done it many times, in the history of the
+west, but usually he is glad enough to turn aside, only launching
+into his terrible death-charge when a mortal wound obliterates his
+fear of man, leaving only his fear of death. But this grizzly,
+native to these uninhabited wilds, had no fear of man to forget. He
+did not know what man was, and he had not learned the death that
+dwells in the shining weapon he carries in his arms. No trappers
+mushed through his snows of spring; no woodsman rode his winding
+trails. True, from the first instant that the human smell had
+reached him on the wind he had been disturbed and discomfited; yet
+it was not grizzly nature to yield his den without a fight. The
+sight of the wolf&mdash;known to him of old&mdash;only wakened an
+added rage in his fierce heart.</p>
+<p>The wolf met him at his first leap, springing with noble courage
+at his grizzled throat; and the bear paused in his charge to strike
+him away. He lashed out with his great forepaw; and if that blow
+had gone straight home the ribs of the wolf would have been smashed
+flat on his heart and lungs. The tough trunk of a young spruce
+would have been broken as quickly under that terrible, blasting
+full-stroke of a grizzly. The largest grizzly weighs but a thousand
+pounds, but that weight is simple fiber and iron muscle, of a might
+incredible to any one but the woodsmen who know this mountain king
+in his native haunts. But Fenris whipped aside, and the paw missed
+him.</p>
+<p>Immediately the wolf sprang in again, with a courage scarcely
+compatible with lupine characteristics, ready to wage this unequal
+battle to the death. But his brave fight was tragically hopeless.
+For all that his hundred and fifty pounds were, every ounce,
+lightning muscle and vibrant sinew, it was as if a gopher had waged
+war with a lynx. Yet by the law of his wild heart he could not turn
+and flee. His master&mdash;his stalwart god whose words thrilled
+him to the uttermost depths&mdash;had given his orders, and he must
+obey them to the end.</p>
+<p>The second blow missed him also, but the third caught a small
+shrub that grew twenty feet beyond the dying fire. The shrub
+snapped off under the blow, and its branchy end smote the wolf
+across the head and neck. As if struck by a tornado he was hurled
+into the air, and curtailed and indirect though the blow was, he
+sprawled down stunned and insensible in the grass. The bear paused
+one instant; then lunged forth again.</p>
+<p>But the breath in which the wolf had stayed the charge had given
+Ben his chance. With a swift motion of his arm he had projected the
+single rifle shell into the chamber of the weapon. The stock
+snapped to his shoulder; and his keen, glittering eyes sought the
+sights.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXVIII"></a>
+<h2>XXVIII</h2>
+<p>Few wilderness adventures offer a more stern test to human
+nerves than the frightful rush of a maddened grizzly. It typifies
+all that is primal and savage in the wild: the insane rage that can
+find relief only in the cruel rending of flesh; the thundering
+power that no mere mortal strength can withstand. But Ben was a
+woodsman. He had been tried in the fire. He knew that not only his
+life, but that of the girl in the cavern depended upon this one
+shot; and it was wholly characteristic of Wolf Darby that his eye
+held true and his arm was steady as a vice of iron.</p>
+<p>He was aware that he must wait until the bear was almost upon
+him, in order to be sure to send the bullet home to a vital place.
+This alone was a test requiring no small measure of self-control.
+The instinct was to fire at once. In the moonlight it was difficult
+to see his sights: his only chance was to enlarge his target to the
+last, outer limit of safety. He aimed for the great throat, below
+the slavering jaw.</p>
+<p>His finger pressed back steadily against the trigger. The
+slightest flinching, the smallest motion might yet throw off his
+aim. The rifle spoke with a roar.</p>
+<p>But this wilderness battle was not yet done. The ball went
+straight home, down through the throat, mushrooming and plowing on
+into the neck, inflicting a wound that was bound to be mortal
+within a few seconds. The bear recoiled; but the mighty engine of
+its life was not yet destroyed. Its incalculable fonts of vitality
+had not yet run down.</p>
+<p>The grizzly bounded forward again. The ball had evidently missed
+the vertebrae and spinal column. His crashing, thunderous roar of
+pain smothered instantly the reechoing report of the rifle and
+stifled the instinctive cry that had come to Ben's lips. He was a
+forester; and he had known of old what havoc a mortally wounded
+bear can wreak in a few seconds of life. In that strange, vivid
+instant Ben knew that his own and the girl's life still hung in the
+balance, with the beam inclining toward death.</p>
+<p>The grizzly was in his death-agony, nothing more; yet in that
+final convulsion he could rip into shreds the powerful form that
+opposed him. Ben knew, with a cold, sure knowledge, that if he
+failed to slay the beast, it would naturally crawl into its lair
+for its last breath. As this dreadful thought flashed home he
+dropped the empty rifle and seized the axe that leaned against a
+log of spruce beside the fire.</p>
+<p>There was no time at all to search out another shell and load
+his rifle. If the shock of the heavy bullet had not slackened the
+bear's pace he would not even have had time to seize the axe.
+Finally, if the bear had not been all but dead, in his last,
+threshing agony, Ben's mortal strength could not have sent home one
+blow. As it was they found themselves facing each other over the
+embers of the fire, well-matched contestants whose stake was life
+and whose penalty was death. The grizzly turned his head, caught
+sight of Ben, identified him as the agent of his agony, and lurched
+forward.</p>
+<p>Just in time Ben sprang aside, out of the reach of those
+terrible forearms; and his axe swung mightly in the air. Its blade
+gleamed and descended&mdash;a blow that might have easily broken
+the bear's back if it had gone true but which now seemed only to
+infuriate him the more. The bear reared up, reeled, and lashed
+down; and dying though he was, he struck with incredible power. One
+slashing stroke of that vast forepaw, one slow closing of those
+cruel fangs upon skull or breast, and life would have gone out like
+a light. But Ben leaped aside again, and again swung down his
+axe.</p>
+<p>These were but the first blows of a terrific battle that carried
+like a storm through the still reaches of the forest. Far in the
+distant tree aisles the woods people paused in their night's
+occupation to listen, stirred and terrified by the throb and thrill
+in the air; the grazing caribou lifted his growing horns and
+snorted in terror; the beasts of prey paused in the chase, growling
+uneasily, gazing with fierce, luminous eyes in the direction of the
+battle.</p>
+<p>It is beyond the ken of man whether or not, in their wild
+hearts, these forest folk sensed what was taking place,&mdash;that
+their gray monarch, the sovereign grizzly, was at the death-fight
+with some dreadful invader from the South. They heard the bear's
+fierce bawls, unimitatable by any other voice as he lashed down
+blow after blow; and they heard the thud and crunch of the axe
+against his body. Had this monarch of the trails found his master
+at last?</p>
+<p>Gazing out through the aperture of the cave Beatrice beheld the
+whole picture: the ring of spruce trees, the glade so strange and
+ensilvered in the moonlight, and these two fighting beasts,
+magnificent in fury over the embers of the dying fire. And Ben's
+powers increased, rather than lessened. Ever he swung his terrible
+axe with greater power.</p>
+<p>He fought like the wolf that was his blood
+brother,&mdash;lunging, striking down, recoiling out of harm's way,
+and springing forward to strike again. This man was Wolf Darby, a
+forester known in many provinces for his woods prowess, but even
+those who had seen his most spectacular feats, in past days, had
+not appreciated the real extent of his powers. There was a fury and
+a might in his blows that was hard to associate with the world of
+human beings,&mdash;such ferociousness and wolf-like savagery,
+welling strength and prowess of battle that mostly men have
+forgotten in their centuries of civilization, but which still mark
+the death-fight between beasts.</p>
+<p>Ben had always recalled the earlier types of man&mdash;his
+great-thewed ancestors, wild hunters in the forests of ancient
+Germany&mdash;but never so much as to-night. He was in his natural
+surroundings&mdash;at the mouth of his cave in which the Woman
+watched and exulted in his blows, enclosed by the primeval forest
+and beside the ashes of his fire. There could be nothing strange or
+unreal about this scene to Beatrice. It was more true than any soft
+vista of a far-away city could possibly be. It was life
+itself,&mdash;man battling for his home and his woman against the
+raw forces of the wild.</p>
+<p>All superficialities and superfluities were gone, and only the
+basic stuff of life remained,&mdash;the cave, the fire, the man who
+fought the beast in the light of the ancient moon. At that moment
+Ben was no more of the twentieth century than he was of the first,
+or of the first more than of some dark, unnumbered century of the
+world's young days. He was simply the male of his species, the
+man-child of all time, forgetting for the moment all the little
+lessons civilization had taught, and fighting his fight in the
+basic way for the basic things.</p>
+<p>This was no new war which Ben and the grizzly fought in the pale
+light of the moon. It had begun when the race began, and it would
+continue, in varied fields, until men perished from the earth. Ben
+fought for <i>life</i>&mdash;not only his own but the
+girl's&mdash;that old, beloved privilege to breathe the air and see
+and know and be. He represented, by a strange symbolism, the whole
+race that has always fought in merciless and never-ending battle
+with the cruel and oppressive powers of nature. In the grizzly were
+typified all those ancient enemies that have always opposed, with
+claw and fang, this stalwart, self-knowing breed that has risen
+among the primates: he symbolized not only the Beast of the forest,
+but the merciless elements, storm and flood and cold and all the
+legions of death. And had they but known their ultimate fate if
+this intruder survived the battle and brought his fellows into
+this, their last stronghold, the watching forest creatures would
+have prayed to see the grizzly strike him to the earth.</p>
+<p>Ben knew, too, that he was fighting for his home; and this also
+lent him strength. <i>Home</i>! His shelter from the storm and the
+cold, the thing that marked him a man instead of a beast. The
+grizzly had come to drive him forth; and they had met beside the
+ashes of his fire.</p>
+<p>The old exhilaration and rapture of battle flashed through him
+as he swung his axe, sending home blow after blow. Sometimes he
+cried out, involuntarily, in his fury and hatred; and as the bear
+weakened he waged the fight at closer quarters. His muscles made
+marvelous response, flinging him out of danger in the instant of
+necessity and giving terrific power to his blows.</p>
+<p>He danced about the shaggy, bleeding form of the bear, swinging
+his axe, howling in his rage, and escaping the smashing blows of
+the bear with miraculous agility,&mdash;a weird and savage picture
+in the moonlight. But at last the grizzly lunged too far. Ben
+sprang aside, just in time, and he saw his chance as the great,
+reeling form sprawled past. He aimed a terrific blow just at the
+base of the skull.</p>
+<p>The silence descended quickly thereafter. The blow had gone
+straight home, and the last flicker of waning life fled from the
+titanic form. He went down sprawling; Ben stood waiting to see if
+another blow was needed. Then the axe fell from his hands.</p>
+<p>For a moment he stood as if dazed. It was hard to remember all
+that occurred in the countless life times he had lived since the
+grizzly had stolen out of the spruce forest. But soon he remembered
+Fenris and walked unsteadily to his side.</p>
+<p>The wolf, however, was already recovering from the blow. He had
+been merely stunned; seemingly no bones were broken. Once more Ben
+turned to the mouth of the cavern.</p>
+<p>Sobbing and white as the moonlight itself Beatrice met him in
+the doorway. She too had been uninjured; his arm had saved her from
+the rending fangs. She was closer to him now, filling a bigger part
+of his life. He didn't know just why. He had fought for her; and
+some way&mdash;they were more to each other.</p>
+<p>And this was his cavern,&mdash;his stronghold of rock where he
+might lay his head, his haven and his hearth, and the symbol of his
+dominance over the beasts of the field. He had fought for this,
+too. And he suddenly knew a great and inner peace and a love for
+the sheltering walls that would dwell forever in the warp and woof
+of his being.</p>
+<a name="PART_THREE"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<h2>PART THREE</h2>
+<h3>THE TAMING</h3>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXIX"></a>
+<h2>XXIX</h2>
+<p>Ben rose at daybreak, wonderfully refreshed by the night's
+sleep, and built the fire at the cavern mouth. Beatrice was still
+asleep, and he was careful not to waken her. The days would be long
+and monotonous for her, he knew, and the more time she could spend
+in sleep the better.</p>
+<p>He did, however, steal to the opening of the cavern and peer
+into her face. The soft, morning light fell gently upon it,
+bringing out its springtime freshness and the elusive shades of
+gold in her hair. She looked more a child than a woman, some one to
+shelter and comfort rather than to harry as a foe. "Poor little
+girl," he murmured under his breath. "I'm going to make it as easy
+for you as I can."</p>
+<p>He meant what he said. He could do that much, at
+least&mdash;extend to her every courtesy and comfort that was in
+his power, and place his own great strength at her service.</p>
+<p>His first work was to remove the skin of last night's
+invader,&mdash;the huge grizzly that lay dead just outside the
+cavern opening. They would have use for this warm, furry hide
+before their adventure was done. It would supplement their supply
+of blankets; and if necessary it could be cut and sewed with
+threads of sinew into clothes. Because the animal had but recently
+emerged from hibernation his fur, except for a few rubbed places,
+was long and rich,&mdash;a beautiful, tawny-gray that shimmered
+like cloth-of-gold in the light.</p>
+<p>It taxed his strength to the utmost to roll over the huge body
+and skin it. When the heavy skin was removed he laid it out,
+intending to stretch it as soon as he could build a rack. He cut
+off some of the fat; then quartering the huge body, he dragged it
+away into the thickets.</p>
+<p>The hour was already past ten; but Beatrice&mdash;worn out by
+the stress of the night before&mdash;did not waken until she heard
+the crack of her pistol. She lay a while, resting, watching through
+the cavern opening Ben's efforts to prepare breakfast. A young
+grouse had fallen before the pistol, and her companion was busy
+preparing it for the skillet.</p>
+<p>The girl watched with some pleasure his rather awkward efforts
+to go about his work in silence,&mdash;evidently still believing
+her asleep. She laughed secretly at his distress as he tripped
+clumsily over a piece of firewood; then watched him with real
+interest as he mixed batter for griddle cakes and fried the white
+breast of the grouse in bear fat. Filling one of the two tin plates
+he stole into the cavern.</p>
+<p>Falling into his mood the girl pretended to be asleep. She
+couldn't have understood why her pulse quickened as he knelt beside
+her, looking so earnestly and soberly into her face. Then she felt
+the touch of his fingers on her shoulder.</p>
+<p>"Wake up, Beatrice," he commanded, with pretended gruffness.
+"It's after ten, and you've got to cook my breakfast."</p>
+<p>She stirred, pretending difficulty in opening her eyes.</p>
+<p>"Get right up," he commanded again. "D'ye think I'm going to
+wait all morning?"</p>
+<p>She opened her eyes to find him regarding her with boyish glee.
+Then&mdash;as a surprise&mdash;he proffered the filled plate,
+meanwhile raising his arm in feigned fear of a blow.</p>
+<p>She laughed; then began upon her breakfast with genuine relish.
+Then he brought her hot water and the meager toilet articles; and
+left the cave to prepare his own breakfast.</p>
+<p>"I'm going on a little hunt," he said, when this rite was over.
+"We can't depend on grouse and bear forever. I hate to ask you to
+go&mdash;"</p>
+<p>His tone was hopeful; and she could not doubt but that the
+lonely spirit of these solitudes had hold of him. They were two
+human beings in a vast and uninhabited wilderness, and although
+they were foes, they felt the primitive need of each other's
+companionship. "I don't mind going," she told him. "I'd rather,
+than stay in the cave."</p>
+<p>"It's a fine morning. And what's your favorite meat&mdash;moose
+or caribou?"</p>
+<p>"Caribou&mdash;although I like both."</p>
+<p>He might have expected this answer. There are few meats in this
+imperfect earth to compare in flavor with that of the great,
+woodland caribou, monarch of the high park-lands.</p>
+<p>"That means we do some climbing, instead of watching in the
+beaver meadows. I'm ready&mdash;any time."</p>
+<p>They took the game trail up the ridge, venturing at once into
+the heavy spruce; but curiously enough, the mysterious hush, the
+dusky shadows did not appall Beatrice greatly to-day. The miles
+sped swiftly under her feet. Always there were creatures to notice
+or laugh at,&mdash;a squirrel performing on a branch, a squawking
+Canada Jay surprised and utterly baffled by their tall forms, a
+porcupine hunched into a spiny ball and pretending a ferociousness
+that deceived not even such hairbrained folk as the chipmunks in
+the tree roots, or those queens of stupidity, the fool hens on the
+branch. In the way of more serious things sometimes they paused to
+gaze down on some particularly beautiful glen&mdash;watered,
+perhaps, by a gleaming stream&mdash;or a long, dark valley steeped
+deeply in the ancient mysticism of the trackless wilds.</p>
+<p>He helped her over the steeps, waited for her at bad crossings;
+and meanwhile his thoughts found easy expression in words. He had
+to stop and remind himself that she was his foe. Beatrice herself
+attempted no such remembrance; she was simply carrying out her
+resolve to make the best of a deplorable situation.</p>
+<p>She could see, however, that he kept close watch of her. He
+intended to give her no opportunity to strike back at him. He
+carried his rifle unloaded, so that if she were able, in an
+unguarded moment, to wrest it from him she could not turn it
+against him. But there was no joy for her in noticing these small
+precautions. They only reminded her of her imprisonment; and she
+wisely resolved to ignore them.</p>
+<p>They climbed to the ridge top, following it on to the plateau
+where patches of snow still gleamed white and the spruce grew in
+dark clumps, leaving open, lovely parks between. Here they
+encountered their first caribou.</p>
+<p>This animal, however, was not to their liking in the way of meat
+for the table. A turn in the trail suddenly revealed him at the
+edge of the glade, his white mane gleaming and his graceful form
+aquiver with that unquenchable vitality that seems to be the
+particular property of northern wild animals; but Ben let him go
+his way. He was an old bull, the monarch of his herd; he had ranged
+and mated and fought his rivals for nearly a score of years in the
+wild heart of Back There,&mdash;and his flesh would be mostly
+sinew.</p>
+<p>Ten minutes later, however, the girl touched his arm. She
+pointed to a far glade, fully three hundred yards across the
+canyon. Her quick eyes made out a tawny form against the
+thicket.</p>
+<p>It was a young caribou&mdash;a yearling buck&mdash;and his flesh
+would be tender as a spring fowl.</p>
+<p>"It's just what we want, but there's not much chance of getting
+him at that range," he said.</p>
+<p>"Try, anyway. You've got a long-range rifle. If you can hold
+true, he's yours."</p>
+<p>This was one thing that Ben was skilled at,&mdash;holding true.
+He raised the weapon to his shoulder, drawing down finely on that
+little speck of brown across the gulch. Few times in his life had
+he been more anxious to make a successful shot. Yet he would never
+have admitted the true explanation: that he simply desired to make
+good in the girl's eyes.</p>
+<p>He held his breath and pressed the trigger back.</p>
+<p>Beatrice could not restrain a low, happy cry of triumph. She had
+forgotten all things, for the moment, but her joy at his success.
+And truly, Ben had made a remarkable shot. Most hunters who boast
+of long-range hits do not step off the distance shot; fifty yards
+is called a hundred, a hundred and fifty yards three hundred; and
+to kill true at this range is not the accustomed thing on the
+trails of sport. The bullet had gone true as a light-shaft,
+striking the animal through the shoulders, and he had never stirred
+out of his tracks. With that joy of conquest known to all owners of
+rod and gun&mdash;related darkly to the blood-lust of the
+beasts&mdash;they raced across the gully toward the fallen.</p>
+<p>Ben quartered the animal, and again he saw fit to save the hide.
+It is the best material of all for the parka, the long, full winter
+garment of the North.</p>
+<p>Ben carried the meat in four trips back to the camp. By the time
+this work was done, and one of the quarters was drying over a fire
+of quivering aspen chips, the day was done. Again they saw the
+twilight shadows grow, and the first sable cloak of night was drawn
+over the shoulders of the forest. Beatrice prepared a wonderful
+roast of caribou for their evening meal; and thereafter they sat a
+short time at the mouth of the cavern, looking quietly into the red
+coals of the dying fire. Again Ben knew the beneficence and peace
+of the sheltering walls of home. Again he felt a sweet
+security,&mdash;a taming, gentling influence through the innermost
+fiber of his being.</p>
+<p>But Fenris the wolf gazed only into the darkened woods, and the
+hair stood stiff at his shoulders, and his eyes glowed and shone
+with the ancient hunting madness induced by the rising moon.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXX"></a>
+<h2>XXX</h2>
+<p>June passed away in the wilds of Back There, leaving warmer,
+longer days, a more potent sun, and a greener, fresher loveliness
+to the land. The spring calves no longer tottered on wabbly legs,
+but could follow their swift mothers over the most steep and
+difficult trails. Fledglings learned to fly, the wolf cubs had
+their first lessons in hunting on the ridges. The wild Yuga had
+fallen to such an extent that navigation&mdash;down to the Indian
+villages on the lower waters&mdash;was wholly impossible.</p>
+<p>The days passed quickly for Ben and Beatrice. They found plenty
+of work and even of play to pass the time. Partly to fill her
+lonely moments, but more because it was an instinct with her,
+Beatrice took an ever-increasing interest in her cave home. She
+kept it clean and cooked the meals, performing her tasks with
+goodwill, even at times a gaiety that was as incomprehensible to
+herself as to Ben.</p>
+<p>Their diet was not so simple now. Of course their flour and
+sugar and rice, and the meat that they took in the chase furnished
+the body of their meals, and without these things they could not
+live; but Beatrice was a woods child, and she knew how to find
+manna in the wilderness. Almost every morning she ventured out into
+the still, dew-wet forest, and nearly always she came in with some
+dainty for their table. She gathered watercress in the still pools
+and she knew a dozen ways to serve it. Sometimes she made a
+dressing out of animal oil, beaten to a cream; and it was better
+than lettuce salad. Other tender plant tops were used as a garnish
+and as greens, and many and varied were the edible roots that
+supplied their increasing desire for fresh vegetables.</p>
+<p>Sometimes she found wocus in the marsh&mdash;the plant formerly
+in such demand by the Indians&mdash;and by patient experiment she
+learned how to prepare it for the table. Washing the plant
+carefully she would pound it into paste that could be used as the
+base for a nutty and delicious bread. Other roots were baked in
+ashes or served fried in animal fat, and once or twice she found
+patches of wild strawberries, ripening on the slopes.</p>
+<p>This was living! They plucked the sweet, juicy berries from the
+vines; they served as dessert and were also used in the fashioning
+of delicious puddings with rice and sugar. Several times she found
+certain treasures laid by for winter use by the squirrels or the
+digging people&mdash;and perfectly preserved nuts and acorns, The
+latter, parched over coals, became one of the staples of their
+diet.</p>
+<p>She gathered leaves of the red weed and dried them for tea. She
+searched out the nests of the grouse and robbed them of their eggs;
+and always high celebration in the cave followed such a find as
+this. Fried eggs, boiled eggs, poached eggs tickled their palates
+for mornings to come. And she traced down, one memorable day when
+their sugar was all but gone, a tree that the wild bees had stored
+with honey.</p>
+<p>In the way of meat they had not only caribou, but the tender
+veal of moose and all manner of northern small game. Ben did not,
+however, spend rifle cartridges in reckless shooting. When at last
+his enemies came filing down through the beaver meadow he had no
+desire to be left with a half-empty gun. He had never fired this
+more powerful weapon since he had felled their first caribou. The
+moose calves and all the small game were taken with Beatrice's
+pistol.</p>
+<p>Sometimes he took ptarmigan&mdash;those whistling, sprightly
+grouse of the high steeps&mdash;and Beatrice served uncounted
+numbers of them, like the famous blackbirds, baked in a pie. Fried
+ptarmigan was a dish never to forget; roast ptarmigan had a
+distinctive flavor all its own, and the memory of ptarmigan
+fricassee often called Ben home to the cavern an hour before the
+established mealtime. Indeed, they partook of all the northern
+species of that full-bosomed clan, the upland game birds; little,
+brown quail, willow grouse, fool hens, and the incomparable blue
+grouse, half of the breast of which was a meal. It was true that
+their little store of pistol cartridges was all but gone, but
+worlds of big game remained to fall back upon.</p>
+<p>Ben never ceased regretting that he had not brought a single
+fishhook and a piece of line. He had long since carried the canoe
+from the river bank and hid it in the tall reeds of the lake shore,
+not only for pleasure's sake, but to preserve it for the autumn
+floods when they might want to float on down to the Indian
+villages; and surely it would have afforded the finest sport in the
+way of trolling for lake trout. But with utter callousness he made
+his pistol serve as a hook and line. Often he would crawl down,
+cautiously as a stalking wolf, to the edge of a trout pool, then
+fire mercilessly at a great, spotted beauty below. The bullet
+itself did not penetrate the water, but the shock carried through
+and the fish usually turned a white belly to the surface. A fat
+brook or lake trout, dipped in flour and fried to a chestnut brown,
+was a delight that never grew old.</p>
+<p>At every fresh find Beatrice would come triumphant into Ben's
+presence; and at such times they scarcely conducted themselves like
+enemies. An unguessed boyishness and charm had come to Ben in these
+ripe, full summer days: the hard lines softened in his face and
+mostly the hard shine left his eyes. Beatrice found herself
+curiously eager to please him, taking the utmost care and pains
+with every dish she prepared for the table; and it was true that he
+made the most joyful, exultant response to her efforts. The searing
+heat back of his eyes was quite gone, now. Even the scarlet fluid
+of his veins seemed to flow more quietly, with less fire, with less
+madness. A gentling influence had come to bear upon him; a great
+kindness, a new forbearance had brightened his outlook toward all
+the world. A great redemption was even now hovering close to
+him,&mdash;some unspeakable and ultimate blessing that he could not
+name.</p>
+<p>Their days were not without pleasure. Often they ventured far
+into the heavy forest, and always fresh delight and thrilling
+adventure awaited them. Ever they learned more of the wild things
+that were their only neighbors,&mdash;creatures all the way down
+the scale from the lordly moose, proud of his growing antlers and
+monarch of the marshes, to the small pika, squeaking on the
+slide-rock of the high peaks. They knew and loved them all; they
+found ever-increasing enjoyment in the study of their shy ways and
+furtive occupations; they observed with delight the droll
+awkwardness of the moose calves, the impertinence and saucy speech
+of the jays, the humor of the black bear and the surly arrogance of
+the grizzly. They knew that superlative cunning of his wickedness,
+the wolverine; the stealth of the red fox; the ferociousness of the
+ermine whose brown skin, soon to be white, suggested only something
+silken and soft and tender instead of a fiendish cutthroat, terror
+of the Little People; the skulking cowardice of the coyote; and the
+incredible savagery and agility of the fisher,&mdash;that
+middle-sized hunter that catches and kills everything he can master
+except fish. They climbed high hills and descended into still,
+mysterious valleys; they paddled long, dreamy twilight hours on the
+lake; they traversed marshes where the moose wallowed; and they
+walked through ancient forests where the decayed vegetation was a
+mossy pulp under their feet. Sometimes they forgot the poignancy of
+their strange lives, romping sometimes, gossiping like jays in the
+tree-limbs, and sometimes, forgetting enmity, they told each other
+their secret beliefs and philosophies. They had picnics in the
+woods; and long, comfortable evenings before their dancing fire.
+But there was one enduring joy that always surpassed all the rest,
+a happiness that seemed to have its origin in the silent places of
+their hearts. It was just the return, after a fatiguing day in
+forest and marsh, to the sheltering walls of the cave.</p>
+<p>With his axe and hunting knife Ben prepared a complete set of
+furniture for their little abode. His first Work was a
+surpassing-marvelous dining-room suite of a table and two chairs.
+Then he put up shelves for their rapidly dwindling supplies of
+provisions and cut chunks of spruce log, with a bit of bark
+remaining, for fireside seats. And for more than a week, Beatrice
+was forbidden to enter a certain covert just beyond the glade lest
+she should prematurely discover an even greater wonder that Ben, in
+off hours, was preparing for a surprise.</p>
+<p>From time to time she heard him busily at work, the ring of his
+axe and his gay whistling as he whittled bolts of wood; but other
+than that it concerned the grizzly skin she had not the least idea
+of his task. But the work was completed at last, and then came two
+days of rather significant silence,&mdash;quite incomprehensible to
+the girl. She was at a loss why Ben did not reveal his
+treasure.</p>
+<p>But one morning she missed the familiar sounds of his
+fire-building, usually his first work on wakening. The very fact of
+their absence startled her wide-awake, while otherwise she would
+have perhaps slept late into the morning. Ben had seemingly
+vanished into the heavy timber across the glade.</p>
+<p>Presently she heard him muttering and grunting as he moved some
+heavy object to the door of the cave. Boyishly, he could not wait
+for the usual late hour when she wakened. He made a wholly
+unnecessary amount of noise as he built the fire. Then he thrust
+his lean head into the cavern opening.</p>
+<p>"I hope I haven't waked you up?" he said.</p>
+<p>The girl smiled secretly. "I wanted to wake up,
+anyway&mdash;to-day."</p>
+<p>"I wish you'd get up and come and look at something ugly I've
+got just outside the door."</p>
+<p>She hurried into her outer garments, and in a moment appeared.
+It was ugly, certainly, the object that he had fashioned with such
+tireless toil: not fitted at all for a stylish city home; yet the
+girl, for one short instant, stopped breathing. It was a hammock,
+suspended on a stout frame, to take the place of her tree-bough bed
+on the cave floor. He had used the grizzly skin, hanging it with
+unbreakable sinew, and fashioning it in such a manner that folds of
+the hide could be turned over her on cold nights. For a moment she
+gazed, very earnestly, into the rugged, homely, raw-boned face of
+her companion.</p>
+<p>Beatrice was deeply and inexplicably sobered, yet a curious
+happiness took swift possession of her heart. Reading the gratitude
+in her eyes, Ben's lips broke into a radiant smile.</p>
+<p>"I guess you've forgotten what day it is," he said.</p>
+<p>"Of course. I hardly know the month."</p>
+<p>"I've notched each day, you know. And maybe you've
+forgotten&mdash;on the ride out from Snowy Gulch&mdash;we talked of
+birthdays. To-day is yours."</p>
+<p>She stared at him in genuine astonishment. She had not dreamed
+that this little confidence, given in a careless moment of long
+weeks before, had lingered in the man's memory. She had supposed
+that the fury and savagery of his war with her father and the
+latter's followers had effaced all such things as this.</p>
+<p>And it was true that had this birthday come a few weeks before,
+on the river journey and previous to their occupation of the cave,
+Ben would have let it pass unnoticed. The smoldering fire in his
+brain would have seared to ashes any such kindly thought as this.
+But when the wild hunter leaves his leafy lair and goes to dwell, a
+man rather than a beast, in a permanent abode, he has thought for
+other subjects than his tribal wars and the blood-lust of his
+hates. The hearth, and the care and friendship of the girl had
+tamed Ben to this degree, at least.</p>
+<p>But wonders were not done. The look in the girl's eyes suddenly
+melted, as the warm sun melts ice, some of the frozen bitterness of
+his spirit. "It's your birthday&mdash;and I hope you have many of
+'em," he went on. "No more like this&mdash;but all of 'em
+happy,&mdash;as you deserve."</p>
+<p>He walked toward her, and her eyes could not leave his. He bent
+soberly, and brushed her lips with his own.</p>
+<p>There were always worlds to talk about in the warm gleam of
+their fire. When the day's work was done, and the hush of early
+night gathered the land to its arms, they would sit on their
+fireside seats and settle all problems, now and hereafter, to the
+perfect satisfaction of them both.</p>
+<p>From Ben, Beatrice gained a certain strength of outlook as well
+as depth of insight, but she gave him in return more than she
+received. He felt that her influence, in his early years, would
+have worked wonders for him. She straightened out his moral
+problems for him, taught him lessons in simple faith; and her own
+childish sweetness and absolute purity showed his whole world in a
+new light.</p>
+<p>Sometimes they talked of religion and ethics, sometimes of
+science and economics, and particularly they talked of what was
+nearest to them,&mdash;the mysteries and works of nature. She had
+been a close observer of the forest. She had received some glimpse
+of its secret laws that were, when all was said and done, the basic
+laws of life. But for all her love of science she was not a mere
+biologist. She had a full and devout faith in Law and Judgment
+beyond any earthly sphere.</p>
+<p>"No one can live in this boundless wilderness and not believe,"
+she told him earnestly, her dark eyes brimming with her fervor.
+"Perhaps I can't tell you why&mdash;maybe it's just a feeling of
+need, of insufficiency of self. Besides, God is close, like He was
+to the Israelites when they were in the wilderness; but you will
+remember that He never came close again.&mdash;This forest is so
+big and so awful, He knows he must stay close to keep you from
+dying of fear.&mdash;God may not be a reality to the people of the
+cities, where they see only buildings and streets, but Ben, He is
+to me. You can't forget Him up here. He stands on every mountain,
+just as the sons of Aaron saw Him."</p>
+<p>He found, to his surprise, that she was not ill-read,
+particularly in the old-time classics. But her environment had also
+influenced her choice of reading. She loved the old legends in the
+minor,&mdash;far-off and plaintive things that reflected the mood
+of the dusky forest in which she lived.</p>
+<p>One night, when the moon was in the sky, he told her of his war
+record, of the shell-shock and the strange, criminal mania that
+followed it; and then of his swift recovery. With an over-powering
+need of self-justification he told her of his further adventures
+with Ezram, of the old man's murder and the theft of the claim. She
+heard him out, listening attentively; but in loyalty to her father
+she did not let herself believe him entirely. The answer she gave
+him was the same as she had always given at his every reference to
+his side of the case.</p>
+<p>"If you were in the right, you'd take me back and let the law
+take its course," she told him. "You'd not be out here laying an
+ambush for them, to kill them when they try to rescue me."</p>
+<p>He could never make her understand how, by the intricacies of
+law, it would be a rare chance that he would be able to fasten the
+crime on the murderers: that he had taken the only sure way open to
+make them pay for Ezram's death. He told her of the old man's,
+final request; how that his war with her father and his men was a
+debt that, by secret, inscrutable laws of his being, could never be
+written off or disavowed. But he could never fully find words to
+uphold his position. The thing went back to his instincts, traced
+at last to the remorseless spirit of the wolf that was his
+heritage.</p>
+<p>Yet these hours of talk were immensely good for him. While they
+never met on common grounds, the girl's true outlook and nobility
+of character were ever more manifest to him; and were not without a
+gentling, healing influence upon him. He could not blind himself to
+them. And sometimes when he sat alone by his dying fire, as the
+dark menaced him, and the girl that was his charge slept within the
+portals of stone, he had the unescapable feeling that the very
+structure of his life was falling and shattering down; but even now
+he could see, an enchanted vista in the distance, a mightier, more
+glorious tower, builded and shaped by this woman's hand.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXI"></a>
+<h2>XXXI</h2>
+<p>While Beatrice was at her household tasks&mdash;cooking the
+meals, cleaning the cave, washing and repairing their
+clothes&mdash;Ben never forgot his more serious work. Certain hours
+every day he spent in exploration, seeking out the passes over the
+hills, examining every possible means of entrance and egress into
+his valley, getting the lay of the land and picking out the points
+from which he would make his attack. Already he knew every winding
+game trail and every detail of the landscape for five miles or more
+around. His ultimate vengeance seemed just as sure as the night
+following the day.</p>
+<p>Ever he listened for the first sound of the pack train in the
+forest; and even in his hours of pleasure his eyes ever roamed over
+the sweep of valley and marsh below. He was prepared for his
+enemies now. One or five, they couldn't escape him. He had provided
+for every contingency and had seemingly perfected his plan to the
+last detail.</p>
+<p>He had not the slightest fear that his eagerness would cost him
+his aim when finally his eye looked along the sights at the forms
+of his enemies, helpless in the marsh. He was wholly cold about the
+matter now. The lust and turmoil in his veins, remembered like a
+ghastly dream from that first night, returned but feebly now, if at
+all. This change, this restraint had been increasingly manifest
+since his occupation of the cave, and it had marked, at the same
+time, a growing barrier between himself and Fenris. But he could
+not deny but that such a development was wholly to have been
+expected. Fenris was a child of the open forest aisles, never of
+the fireside and the hearth. It was not that the wolf had ceased to
+give him his dint of faithful service, or that he loved him any the
+less. But each of them had other interests,&mdash;one his home and
+hearth; the other the ever-haunting, enticing call of the wildwood.
+Lately Fenris had taken to wandering into the forest at night,
+going and coming like a ghost; and once his throat and jowls had
+been stained with dark blood.</p>
+<p>"It's getting too tame for you here, old boy, isn't it?" Ben
+said to him one hushed, breathless night. "But wait just a little
+while more. It won't be tame then."</p>
+<p>It was true: the hunting party, if they had started at once,
+must be nearing their death valley by now. Except for the absolute
+worst of traveling conditions they would have already come. Ben
+felt a growing impatience: a desire to do his work and get it over.
+His pulse no longer quickened and leaped at the thought of
+vengeance; and the wolflike pleasure in simple killing could no
+longer be his. It would merely be the soldier's work&mdash;a
+dreadful obligation to perform speedily and to forget. Even the
+memory of the huddled form of his savior and friend, so silent and
+impotent in the dead leaves, did not stir him into madness now.</p>
+<p>Yet he never thought of disavowing his vengeance. It was still
+the main purpose of his life. He had no theme but that: when that
+work was done he could conceive of nothing further of interest on
+earth, nothing else worth living for. Not for an instant had he
+relented: except for that one kiss, on the occasion of her
+birthday, he had never broken his promise in regard to his
+relations with Beatrice. His first trait was steadfastness, a trait
+that, curiously enough, is inherent in all living creatures who are
+by blood close to the wild wolf, from the German police dog to the
+savage husky of the North. But he was certainly and deeply changed
+in these weeks in the cave. He no longer hated these three
+murderous enemies of his. The power to hate had simply died in his
+body. He regarded their destruction rather as a duty he owed old
+Ezram, an obligation that he would die sooner than forego.</p>
+<p>The hushed, dark, primal forest had a different appeal for him
+now. He loved it still, with the reverence and adoration of the
+forester he was, but no longer with that love a servant bears his
+master. He had distinctly escaped from its dominance. The passion
+and mounting fire that it wakened at the fall of darkness could no
+longer take possession of him, as strong drink possesses the brain,
+bending his will, making of him simply a tool and a pawn to gratify
+its cruel desires and to achieve its mysterious ends. He had been,
+in spirit, a brother of the wolf, before: a runner in the packs.
+Such had been the outgrowth of innate traits; part of his strange
+destiny. Now, after these weeks in the cave, he was a man. It was
+hard for him to explain even to himself. It was as if in the escape
+from his own black passions, he had also escaped the curious
+tyranny of the wild; not further subject to its cruel moods and
+whims, but rather one of a Dominant Breed, a being who could lift
+his head in defiance to the storm, obey his own will, go his own
+way. This was no little change. Perhaps, when all is said and done,
+it marks the difference between man and the lesser mammals, the
+thing that has evolved a certain species of the
+primates&mdash;simply woods creatures that trembled at the storm
+and cowered in the night&mdash;into the rulers and monarchs of the
+earth.</p>
+<p>Ben had come out from the darkened forest trails where he made
+his lairs and had gone into a cave to live! He had found a
+permanent abode&mdash;a lasting, shelter from the cold and the
+storm. It suggested a curious allegory to him. Some time in the
+long-forgotten past, probably when the later glaciers brought their
+promise of cold, all his race left their leafy bowers and found
+cave homes in the cliffs. Before that time they were merely woods
+children, blind puppets of nature, sleeping where exhaustion found
+them; wandering without aim in the tree aisles; mating when they
+met the female of their species on the trails and venturing on
+again; knowing the ghastly, haunting fear of the night and the
+blind terror of the storm and elements: merely higher beasts in a
+world of beasts. But they came to the caves. They established
+permanent abodes. They began to be men.</p>
+<p>All that now stands as civilization, all the conquest of the
+earth and sea and air began from that moment. It was the Great
+Epoch,&mdash;and Ben had illustrated it in his own life. The change
+had been infinitely slow, but certain as the movement of the
+planets in their spheres. Behind the sheltering walls they got away
+from fear,&mdash;that cruel bondage in which Nature holds all her
+wild creatures, the burden that makes them her slaves. Never to
+shudder with horror when the darkness fell in silence and mystery;
+never to have the heart freeze with terror when the thunder roared
+in the sky and the wind raged in the trees. The cave dwellers began
+to come into their own. Sheltered behind stone walls they could
+defy the elements that had enslaved them so long. This freedom
+gained they learned to strike the fire; they took one woman to keep
+the cave, instead of mating indiscriminately in the forest, thus
+marking the beginning of family life. Love instead of deathless
+hatred, gentleness rather than cruelty, peace in the place of
+passion, mercy and tolerance and self-control: all these mighty
+bulwarks of man's dominance grew into strength behind the
+sheltering walls of home.</p>
+<p>Thus in these few little weeks Ben Darby&mdash;a beast of the
+forest in his unbridled passions&mdash;had in some measure imaged
+the life history of the race. He had lived again the momentous
+regeneration. The protecting walls, the hearth, particularly
+Beatrice's wholesome and healing influence, had tamed him. He was
+still a forester, bred in the bone&mdash;loving these forest depths
+with an ardor too deep for words&mdash;but the mark of the beast
+was gone from his flesh.</p>
+<p>He could still deal justice to Ezram's murderers and thus keep
+faith with his dead partner; but the primal passions could no
+longer dominate him. His pet, however, remained the wolf. The
+sheltering cavern walls were never for him. He loved Ben with an
+undying devotion, yet a barrier was rising between them. They could
+not go the same paths forever.</p>
+<p>Matters reached a crisis between Fenris and himself one still,
+warm night in late July. The two were sitting side by side at the
+cavern maw, watching the slow enchantment of the forest under the
+spell of the rising moon; Beatrice had already gone to her hammock.
+As the last little blaze died in the fire, and it crackled at ever
+longer intervals, Ben suddenly made a moving discovery. The fringe
+of forest about him, usually so dreamlike and still, was simply
+breathing and throbbing with life.</p>
+<p>Ben dropped his hand to the wolf's shoulders. "The little folks
+are calling on us to-night," he said quietly.</p>
+<p>In all probability he spoke the truth. It was not an uncommon
+thing for the creatures of the wood&mdash;usually the lesser people
+such as rodents and the small hunters&mdash;to crowd close to the
+edge of the glade and try to puzzle out this ruddy mystery in its
+center. Unused to men they could never understand. Sometimes the
+lynx halted in his hunt to investigate, sometimes an old black
+bear&mdash;kindly, benevolent good-humored old bachelor that every
+naturalist loves&mdash;grunted and pondered at the edge of shadow,
+and sometimes even such lordly creatures as moose and caribou
+paused in their night journeys to see what was taking place.</p>
+<p>Curiously, the wolf started violently at Ben's touch. The man
+suddenly regarded him with a gaze of deepest interest. The hair was
+erect on the powerful neck, the eyes swam in pale, blue fire, and
+he was staring away into the mysterious shadows.</p>
+<p>"What do you see, old-timer?" Ben asked. "I wish I could see
+too."</p>
+<p>He brought his senses to the finest focus, trying hard to
+understand. He was aware only of the strained silence at first.
+Then here and there, about the dimmining circle of firelight, he
+heard the soft rustle of little feet, the subdued crack of a twig
+or the scratch of a dead leaf. The forest smells&mdash;of which
+there is no category in heaven or earth&mdash;reached him with
+incredible clarity. These were faint, vaguely exciting smells, some
+of them the exquisite fragrances of summer flowers, others beyond
+his ken. And presently two small, bright circles appeared in a
+distant covert, glowed once, and then went out.</p>
+<p>By peering closely, with unwinking eyes, he began to see other
+twin-circles of green and yellow light. Yet they were furtive
+little radiances&mdash;vanishing swiftly&mdash;and they were
+nothing of which to be afraid.</p>
+<p>"They <i>are</i> out to-night," he murmured. "No wonder you're
+excited, Fenris. What is it&mdash;some celebration in the
+forest?"</p>
+<p>There was no possible explanation. Foresters know that on
+certain nights the wilderness seems simply to teem with
+life&mdash;scratchings and rustlings in every covert&mdash;and on
+other nights it is still and lifeless as a desert. The wild folk
+were abroad to-night and were simply paying casual, curious visits
+to Ben's fire.</p>
+<p>Once more Ben glanced at the wolf. The animal no longer
+crouched. Rather he was standing rigid, his head half-turned and
+lifted, gazing away toward a distant ridge behind the lake. A
+wilderness message had reached him, clear as a voice.</p>
+<p>But presently Ben understood. Throbbing through the night he
+heard a weird, far-carrying call&mdash;a long-drawn note, broken by
+half-sobs&mdash;the mysterious, plaintive utterance of the wild
+itself. Yet it was not an inanimate voice. He recognized it at once
+as the howl of a wolf, one of Fenris' wild brethren.</p>
+<p>The creature at his feet started as if from a blow. Then he
+stood motionless, listening, and the cry came the second time. He
+took two leaps into the darkness.</p>
+<p>Deeply moved, Ben watched him. The wolf halted, then stole back
+to his master's side. He licked the man's hand with his warm
+tongue, whining softly.</p>
+<p>"What is it, boy?" Ben asked. "What do you want me to do?"</p>
+<p>The wolf whined louder, his eyes luminous with ineffable appeal.
+Once more he leaped into the shadows, pausing as if to see if Ben
+would follow him.</p>
+<p>The man shook his head, rather soberly. A curious, excited light
+was in his eyes. "I can't go, old boy," he said. "This is my
+place&mdash;here. Fenris, I can't leave the cave."</p>
+<p>For a moment they looked eyes into eyes&mdash;in the glory of
+that moon as strange a picture as the wood gods ever beheld. Once
+more the wolf call sounded. Fenris whimpered softly.</p>
+<p>"Go ahead if you like," Ben told him. "God knows it's your
+destiny."</p>
+<p>The wolf seemed to understand. With a glad bark he sped away and
+almost instantly vanished into the gloom.</p>
+<p>But Fenris had not broken all ties with the cave. The chain was
+too strong for that, the hold on his wild heart too firm. If there
+is one trait, far and near in the wilds, that distinguishes the
+woods children, it is their inability to forget. Fenris had joined
+his fellows, to be sure; but he still kept watch over the cave.</p>
+<p>The strongest wolf in the little band, the nucleus about which
+the winter pack would form, he largely confined their hunting range
+to the district immediately about the cave. It held him like a
+chain of iron. Although the woods trails beguiled him with every
+strong appeal, the sight of his master was a beloved thing to him
+still, and scarcely a night went by but that he paused to sniff at
+the cavern maw, seeing that all was well. At such times his
+followers would linger, trembling and silent, in the farther
+shadows. Because they had never known the love of man they utterly
+failed to understand. But in an instant Fenris would come back to
+them, the wild urge in his heart seemingly appeased by the mere
+assurance of Ben's presence and safety.</p>
+<p>Ben himself was never aware of these midnight visits. The feet
+of the wolves were like falling feathers on the grass; and if
+sometimes, through the cavern maw, he half-wakened to catch the
+gleam of their wild eyes, he attributed it merely to the presence
+of skulking coyotes, curious concerning the dying coals of the
+fire.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXII"></a>
+<h2>XXXII</h2>
+<p>Beatrice had kept only an approximate track of the days; yet she
+knew that an attempt to rescue her must be almost at hand. Even
+traveling but half a dozen miles a day, and counting out a
+reasonable time for exploration and delays, her father's party must
+be close upon them. And the thought of the forthcoming battle
+between her abductor and her rescuers filled every waking moment
+with dread.</p>
+<p>She could not escape the thought of it. It lingered, hovering
+like a shadow, over all her gayest moments; it haunted her more
+sober hours, and it brought evil dreams at night. Her one hope was
+that her father had given her up for lost and had not attempted her
+rescue.</p>
+<p>She realized perfectly the perfection of Ben's plans. She knew
+that he had provided for every contingency; and besides, he had
+every natural advantage in his favor. The end was inevitable: his
+victory and the destruction of his foes. There would be little
+mercy for these three in the hands of this iron man from the
+eastern provinces. If they were to be saved it must be soon, not a
+week from now, nor when another moon had waned. If Ben was to be
+checkmated there were not many hours to waste.</p>
+<p>She had had no opportunity to escape, at first. Ben knew that
+she could not make her way over the hundreds of miles of howling
+wilderness without food supplies, and always the wolf had been on
+guard. He was like a were-wolf, a demon, anticipating her every
+move, knowing her secret thoughts. But the wolf had gone now to
+join his fellows. She was not aware of his almost nightly return.
+Perhaps the fact of his absence gave her an opportunity, her one
+chance to save her father from Ben's ambush.</p>
+<p>Conditions for escape were more favorable than at any time since
+their departure from the canoe landing, that late spring day of
+long ago. The wolf was gone; Ben's guard of her was ever more lax.
+The season was verdant: she could supplement what supplies she took
+from the cave with roots and berries, and the warm nights would
+enable her to carry a minimum of blankets. She knew that she could
+never hope to succeed in the venture except by traveling light and
+fast. On the other hand she would need all of Ben's remaining
+supplies to bring her through: in a few more days the stores would
+be so low that she could not attempt the trip. Human beings cannot
+survive, in the forests of the north, on roots and berries alone.
+Tissue-building flour and sustaining meat are necessary to climb
+the ridges and battle the thicket.</p>
+<p>How could she obtain these things? For all his seeming
+carelessness Ben kept a fairly close watch on her actions, and he
+would discover her flight within a few hours. Stronger than she,
+and knowing every trail and pass for miles around he could overtake
+her with ease. He gave her no opportunity to seize his rifle, load
+it and turn it against him, thus making her escape by force.</p>
+<p>The fact that she would leave him without food mattered not one
+way or another. He would still have his rifle, and his small stock
+of rifle cartridges would procure sufficient big game to sustain
+him for weeks and months to come. After all, the whole issue
+depended on the rifle,&mdash;the symbol of force. It would be his
+instrument of vengeance when his chance came. If she could only
+take this weapon from him she need not fear the coming of her
+rescuers. In that case Ben would be helpless against them.</p>
+<p>Unfortunately, the gun rarely left his hands. If indeed she
+should attempt to seize it he would wrest it away from her before
+she could destroy or injure it. But it was a hopeful fact that the
+rifle was useless without its shells!</p>
+<p>To procure these, however, presented an unsolvable problem. Any
+way she turned she found a barrier Ben kept them in his shell belt,
+and he wore the belt about his waist, waking or sleeping. Only to
+procure it, run like a deer and hurl it into the rapids of the
+Yuga,&mdash;and her problem would be absolutely solved. Ben would
+be obliged to leave the cave home at once and return with her to
+the Yuga cabins, utilizing the few stores they had left for the
+journey&mdash;simply because to stay, unarmed, would mean to die of
+starvation. Indeed the few remaining supplies would not more than
+last them through now, traveling early and late, so if the venture
+were to be attempted at all it must be at once. On the other hand
+his rifle and shells would enable the two of them to remain in the
+cavern indefinitely on a diet of meat alone.</p>
+<p>As she worked about the cavern she brooded over the plan; but at
+first she could conceive of no possible way to procure the shells.
+If the chance came, however, she wanted to be ready. She planned
+all other details of the venture; the shortest route to the nearest
+rapids of the river where she might dispose of the deadly cylinders
+of brass. It became necessary, also, to consider the lesser weapon
+for the plain reason that it might defeat her in the moment of her
+success.</p>
+<p>Ben kept the weapon in his cartridge belt, but the extra pistol
+shells were among the supplies. They could easily be procured. It
+would also be necessary to induce him to fire away the few shells
+that he carried in the pistol magazine; but this would likely be
+easy enough to do. He put little reliance on the weapon, trusting
+rather to his rifle both for the impending war and the procurance
+of big game; and he would not harbor the pistol shells as long as
+he had his rifle.</p>
+<p>But the days were passing! Any attempt at deliverance must be
+made before the food stores were further depleted. They could not
+make the march without food. Days and nights overtook her with her
+triumph as far distant as ever. The moment of opportunity she had
+watched for, in which she might seize the cartridge belt and
+destroy it, had never come to pass. The plans she had made while
+the night lay soft and mysterious in the solitudes had all come to
+nothing. He had never, as she had hoped, removed his belt and
+forgotten to replace it, nor had his slumber ever been so deep that
+she could steal it from him.</p>
+<p>His own triumph surely was almost at hand. Surely his pursuers
+had almost overtaken him. The stores had already fallen far below
+the margin of safety for the long journey home. The thought was
+with her, and she was desperate one long, warm afternoon as she
+searched for roots and berries in the forest. Edible plants were
+ever more hard to find, these past days; but what there were she
+gathered almost automatically, herself lost in a deep
+preoccupation. And all at once her hand reached toward a little
+vine of black berries, each with a green tuft at the end, not
+unlike gooseberries in southern gardens.</p>
+<p>As if by instinct, hardly aware of the motion, she withdrew her
+hand. She knew this vine. She was enough of a forester never to
+mistake it. It was the deadly nightshade, and a handful of the
+berries spelt death. She started to look elsewhere.</p>
+<p>But presently she paused, arrested by an idea so engrossing and
+yet so terrible that her heart seemed to pause in her breast. Had
+any rules been laid down for her to follow in her war with Ben? Was
+she to consider methods at such a time as this? Was she not a woods
+girl,&mdash;a woman, not a child, trained and tutored in the savage
+code of the wild that knows no ethics other than might, whether
+might of arm or craft, of brain or fell singleness of purpose?
+Should she consider ethics now?</p>
+<p>Her father's life was in imminent danger. Another day might find
+him stretched lifeless before her. Ben had not hesitated to use
+every weapon in his power; she should not hesitate now. Ben had
+made his war; she would wage it by his own code.</p>
+<p>For a moment she stood almost without outward motion, intrigued
+by the possibilities of this little handful of berries. She
+shuddered once, nervously, but there was no further impulse of
+remorse. Perhaps she trembled slightly; and her eyes were simply
+depthless shadows under her brows.</p>
+<p>They were so little, seemingly so inoffensive: these dark
+berries in the shadows of the covert. They were scarcely to be
+noticed twice. But not even the savage grizzly was of such might;
+storms or seas were not so deadly. There they were, inconspicuous
+among their sister plants, waiting for her hand.</p>
+<p>It was right that they should be black in color. Their blackness
+was as of a black night without a star shining through,&mdash;a
+black cloud with never a rainbow to promise hope. She could not
+turn her eyes away! How black they were among the green
+leaves&mdash;lightless as death itself.</p>
+<p>A handful of them meant death: her father had warned her about
+them long ago. But half a handful&mdash;perhaps a dozen of the
+sable berries in the palm of her hand&mdash;what did <i>they</i>
+mean? Just a sickness wherein one could no longer guard a prisoner.
+They were a powerful alkaloid, she knew; and a dozen of them would
+likely mean hours and hours of deep, dreamless sleep,&mdash;a sleep
+in which one could take no reckoning of hands fumbling at a
+cartridge belt! Half a handful would, in all probability, fail to
+strike the life from such a powerful frame as Ben's, but would
+certainly act upon him like a powerful opiate and leave him
+helpless in her hands.</p>
+<p>Eagerly her fingers plucked the black berries.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXIII"></a>
+<h2>XXXIII</h2>
+<p>In one of the tin cups Beatrice pressed the juice from the
+nightshade, obtaining perhaps a tablespoonful of black liquor. To
+this she added considerable sugar, barely tasting the mixture on
+the end of her finger. The balance was inclining toward the success
+of her plan. The sugar mostly killed the pungent taste of the
+berries.</p>
+<p>Then she concealed the cup in a cluster of vines, ready for the
+moment of need. Her next act was to procure from among the supplies
+the little cardboard box containing half a dozen or so of her
+pistol shells. The way of safety was to destroy these first. The
+effect of the poison might be of only a few minutes' duration, and
+every motion might count. Under any conditions, they would be out
+of the way. She was careful, with a superlative cunning, to take
+the box as well as its contents. She foresaw that in all likelihood
+Ben would seek the shells as soon as he fired the few that remained
+in his pistol magazine; and an empty container might put him upon
+his guard. On the other hand, if he could not find the box at all,
+he could easily be led to believe that it had been simply misplaced
+among the other supplies.</p>
+<p>She scattered the shells in the heavy brush where not even the
+bright, searching eyes of the Canada jay might ever find them. Then
+she hastened up the ridge to meet Ben on his way to the cave.</p>
+<p>She waited a few minutes, then spying his stalwart form at the
+edge of the beaver meadow, she tripped down to meet him. He was not
+in the least suspicious of this little act of friendship. It was
+quite the customary thing, lately, for her thus to watch for his
+coming; and his brown face always lighted with pleasure at the
+first glimpse of her graceful form framed by the spruce. She too
+had always taken pleasure in these little meetings and in the gay
+talk they had as they sped down toward the cavern; but her delight
+was singularly absent to-day. She tried to restrain the wild racing
+of her heart.</p>
+<p>She knew she must act her part. Her plan was to put him off his
+guard, to hide her treachery with pretended friendship. To meet him
+here&mdash;far distant from the poison cup hidden in the
+vines&mdash;would give her time to master her leaping heart and to
+strengthen her self-control.</p>
+<p>Yet she had hardly expected him to greet her in just this
+way,&mdash;with such a light in his eyes and such obvious delight
+in his smile. He had a rather boyish, friendly smile, this foe of
+hers whom she was about to despatch into the very shadow of death.
+She dispelled quickly a small, faltering voice of remorse. This was
+no time for remorse, for gentleness and mercy. She hurried to his
+side.</p>
+<p>"You're flushed from hurrying down that hill," he told her
+gayly. "Beatrice, you're getting prettier every day."</p>
+<p>"It's the simple life that's doing it, Ben! No late hours, no
+indigestible food&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Speaking of food&mdash;I'm famished. I hope you've got
+something nice for lunch&mdash;and I know you have."</p>
+<p>She <i>had</i> been careful with to-day's lunch; but it had
+merely been part of her plot to put him off his guard. "Caribou
+tenderloin&mdash;almost the last of him&mdash;wocus bread and
+strawberries," she assured him. "Does that suit your highness?"</p>
+<p>He made a great feint of being overwhelmed by the news. "Then
+let's hurry. Take my arm and we'll fly."</p>
+<p>She seized the strong forearm, thrilled in spite of herself by
+the muscles of steel she felt through the sleeves. He fell into his
+fastest walking stride,&mdash;long steps that sped the yards under
+them. They emerged from the marsh and started to climb the
+ridge.</p>
+<p>At a small hollow beside the creek bed her fingers suddenly
+tightened on his arm. A thrill that was more of wonder than of joy
+coursed through her; and her dark eyes began to glitter with
+excitement. The wilderness was her ally to-day. She suddenly saw
+her chance&mdash;in a manner that could not possibly waken his
+suspicions of her intentions&mdash;of disposing of the remainder of
+his pistol cartridges.</p>
+<p>On a log thirty feet distant sat an old grouse with half a dozen
+of her brood, all of them perched in a row and relying on their
+protective coloring to save them from sight. They were Franklin's
+grouse&mdash;and they had appeared as if in answer to Beatrice's
+secret wish.</p>
+<p>These birds were common enough in their valley, and not a day
+passed without seeing from five to fifty of them, yet the sight
+went straight home to Beatrice's superstitions. "Get them with your
+pistol," she whispered. "I want them all&mdash;for a big grouse pie
+to-night."</p>
+<p>"But our pistol shells are getting low," Ben objected. "I've
+hardly got enough shells in the gun to get 'em all&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"No matter. You have to use them some time. There's a few more
+in the cave, I think. We'll have to rely on big game from now on,
+anyway. Don't miss one."</p>
+<p>Ben drew his pistol, then walked up within twenty feet. He drew
+slowly down, knocking the old bird from her perch with a bullet
+through the neck.</p>
+<p>"Good work," Beatrice exulted. "Now for the chicks."</p>
+<p>Ben took the bird on the extreme right, and again the bullet
+sped true. The remainder of the flock had become uneasy now; and at
+the next shot all except one flew into the branches of the
+surrounding trees. This shot was equally successful, and with the
+fourth he knocked the remaining bird from the log.</p>
+<p>Each of the four birds he had downed with a shot either through
+the head or the neck; and such shooting would have been marvelous
+indeed in the eyes of the tenderfoot. But both these two foresters
+knew that there was nothing exceptional about it. Pistol shooting
+is simply a matter of a sure eye and steady nerves, combined with a
+greater or less period of practice. Few were the trappers or
+woodsmen north of fifty-three that could not have done as much.</p>
+<p>Ben turned his attention to the fowl on the lower tree limbs,
+hitting once but missing the second time. To correct this
+unpardonable proceeding, he knocked with his seventh a fat cock,
+his spurs just starting, from almost the top of a young spruce.</p>
+<p>"Here's one more," Beatrice urged him. "I'll need every one for
+the pie."</p>
+<p>But the gun was empty. The firing pin snapped harmlessly against
+the breach. They gathered the grouse and sped on down to the
+cavern.</p>
+<p>Her heart seemingly leaped into her throat at every beat; but
+with steady hands and smiling face she went about the preparation
+of the meal. She fried the venison and baked the wocus bread, and
+with more than usual spirit and gaiety set the dishes at Ben's
+place at the table. "Draw up your chair," she told him. "I'll have
+the tea in a minute."</p>
+<p>Ben peered with sudden interest into her face. "What's troubling
+you, Bee?" he asked gently. "You're pale as a ghost."</p>
+<p>"I'm not feeling overly well." Her eyes dropped before his gaze.
+"I'm not hungry&mdash;at all. But it's nothing to worry
+about&mdash;"</p>
+<p>She saw by his eyes that he <i>was</i> worrying; yet it was
+evident that he had not the slightest suspicion of the real cause
+of the sudden pallor in her cheeks. She saw his face cloud and his
+eyes darken; and again she heard that faint, small voice of
+remorse&mdash;whispering deep in her heart's heart. He was always
+so considerate of her, this jailer of hers. His concern was always
+so real and deep. Yet in a moment more the kindly sympathy would be
+gone from his face. He would be lying very still&mdash;and his face
+would be even more pale than hers.</p>
+<p>Listlessly she walked to the door of the cave, procuring a
+handful of dried red-root leaves that she used for tea. Through the
+cavern opening he saw her drop them into the bucket that served as
+their teapot.</p>
+<p>Then she came back for the oiled, cloth bag that contained the
+last of their sugar. This was always one of her little
+kindnesses,&mdash;to sweeten his tea for him before she brought it
+to him. He began to eat his steak.</p>
+<p>In one glance the girl saw that he was wholly unsuspecting. He
+trusted her; in their weeks together he had lost all fear of
+treachery from her. There he was, exulting over the frugal lunch
+she had prepared, with no inkling of the deadly peril that even now
+was upon him. She wished he did not trust her so completely; it
+would be easier for her if he was just a little wary, a little more
+on guard.</p>
+<p>She felt cold all over. She could hardly keep from shivering.
+But this was the moment of trial; the thing would be done in a
+moment more. She mustn't give way yet to the growing weakness in
+her muscles. She walked to the vine where she had left the
+potion.</p>
+<p>How much of it there was&mdash;it seemed to have doubled in
+quantity since she had left it. A handful of the black berries
+meant death&mdash;certain as the sunrise&mdash;but what did half a
+handful mean? The question came to her again. How did she know that
+half a handful did not mean death too,&mdash;not just hours of
+slumber, but relentless and irremediable death! Would that be the
+end of her day's work&mdash;to see this tall, friendly warden of
+hers lying dead before her gaze, the laughter gone from his lips
+and the light faded from his eyes? She would be free then to strip
+the shell belt from his waist. He would never waken to prevent her.
+She could escape too&mdash;back to her father's home&mdash;and
+leave him in the cave.</p>
+<p>All that he had told her concerning his war with her father
+recurred to her in one vivid flash. Could it have been that he had
+told the truth&mdash;that her father and his followers had been the
+attackers in the beginning? She had never believed him fully; but
+could it be that he was in the right? His claim had been invaded,
+he said, and his one friend murdered in cold blood. Was this not
+cause enough, by the code of the North, for a war of reprisal?</p>
+<p>But even as these thoughts came to her, she had walked boldly to
+the fire and emptied the contents of the cup into the boiling water
+in the teapot. Ben would have only had to look up to see her do it.
+Yet still he did not suspect.</p>
+<p>She waited an instant, steadying herself for the ordeal to come.
+Then she took the pot off the fire and poured the hot contents into
+the cup that had just held the potion. She had been careful not to
+put enough water into the pot to weaken the drink. The cup brimmed;
+but none was left. She brought it steaming to Ben's side.</p>
+<p>No kindly root tripped her feet as she entered, no merciful
+unsteadiness caused her to drop this cup of death and spill its
+contents.</p>
+<p>"Thanks, Beatrice." Ben looked up, smiling. "I'm a brute to let
+you fix my tea when you are feeling so bad. But I sure am grateful,
+if that helps any&mdash;"</p>
+<p>His voice sounded far away, like a voice in a nightmare. "It's
+pretty strong, I'm afraid," she told him. "The leaves weren't very
+good, and I boiled them too long. I'm afraid you'll find it
+bitter."</p>
+<p>"I'll drink it, if it's bitter as gall," he assured her, "after
+your kindness to fix it."</p>
+<p>His hand reached and seized the handle of the cup. Even
+now&mdash;<i>now</i>&mdash;he was raising it to his lips. In an
+instant more he would be pouring it down his throat, too
+considerate of her to admit its unwholesome taste, drinking it down
+though it tasted the potion of death that it was! The hair seemed
+to start on her head.</p>
+<p>Then she seemed to writhe as in a convulsion. Her voice rose in
+a piercing scream. "Ben&mdash;<i>Ben</i>&mdash;<i>don't drink
+it</i>!" she cried. "God have mercy on my soul!"</p>
+<p>But with that utterance a strength surpassing that of sinew and
+muscle returned to her. She reached and knocked the cup from his
+hand; and its black contents, like dark blood, stained the sandy
+floor of the cavern.</p>
+<p>Ben's first thought was curiously not of his own narrow escape,
+but was rather in concern for Beatrice. Whether or not he had
+actually swallowed any of the liquor in the cup he did not know;
+nor did he give the matter a thought. He was aware of only the
+terror-stricken girl before him, her face deathly white and her
+eyes starting and wide. He leaped to his feet.</p>
+<p>Fearing that she was about to faint he steadied her with his
+hand. The echo of her scream died in the cavern, the cup rolled on
+the floor and came to a standstill against the wall; but still she
+made no sound, only gazing as if entranced. But slowly, as he
+steadied her, the blessed tears stole into her eyes and rolled down
+her white cheeks; and once more breath surged into her lungs.</p>
+<p>"Never mind, Beatrice," the man was saying, his deep, rough
+voice gentle as a woman's. "Don't cry&mdash;please don't
+cry&mdash;just forget all about it. Let's go over to your hammock
+and rest awhile."</p>
+<p>With a strong arm he guided her to her cot, and smiling kindly,
+pushed her down into it. "Just take it easy," he advised. "And
+forget all about it. You'll be all right in a minute."</p>
+<p>"But you don't understand&mdash;you don't know&mdash;what I
+tried to do&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"No matter. Tell me after a while, if you want to. Don't tell me
+at all if you'd rather not. I'm going back to my lunch." He
+laughed, trying to bring her to herself. "I wouldn't miss that
+caribou steak for anything&mdash;even though I can't have my tea.
+Just lay down a while, and rest."</p>
+<p>His rugged face lighted as he smiled, kindly and tolerantly, and
+then he turned to go. But her solemn voice arrested him.</p>
+<p>"Wait, Ben. I want you to know&mdash;now&mdash;so you won't
+trust me again&mdash;or give me another chance. The cup&mdash;was
+poisoned."</p>
+<p>But the friendly light did not yet wane in his eyes. "I didn't
+think it was anything very good&mdash;the way you knocked it out of
+my hand. We'll just pretend it was very bad tea&mdash;and let it go
+at that."</p>
+<p>"No. It was nightshade&mdash;it might have killed you." She
+spoke in a flat, lifeless voice. "I didn't want it to kill
+you&mdash;I just wanted to give you enough to put you to
+sleep&mdash;so I could take your rifle shells and throw them
+away&mdash;but I was willing to let you drink it, even if it
+<i>did</i> kill you."</p>
+<p>The man looked at her, in infinite compassion, then came and sat
+beside her in the hammock. Rather quietly he took one of her hands
+and gazed at it, without seeing it, a long time. Then he pressed it
+to his lips.</p>
+<p>For a breath he held it close to his cheek, his eyes lightless
+and far away, and she gazed at him in amazement.</p>
+<p>"You'd kiss my hand&mdash;after what I did&mdash;?"</p>
+<p>"After what you <i>didn't</i> do," he corrected. "Please,
+Beatrice&mdash;don't blame yourself. Some way&mdash;I understand
+things better&mdash;than I used to. Even if you had killed
+me&mdash;I don't see why it wouldn't have been your right. I've
+held you here by force. Yet you didn't let me drink the stuff. You
+knocked it out of my hand."</p>
+<p>And now, for the first time, an inordinate amazement came into
+his face. He looked at her intently, yet with no unfriendliness, no
+passion. Rather it was with overwhelming wonder.</p>
+<p>"<i>You knocked it out of my hands</i>!" he repeated, more
+loudly. "Oh, Beatrice&mdash;it's my turn to beg forgiveness now!
+When I was at your mercy, and the cup at my lips&mdash;you spared
+me. Why did you do it, Beatrice?"</p>
+<p>He gazed at her with growing ardor. She shook her head. She
+simply did not know the reason.</p>
+<p>"It's not your place to feel penitent," he told her, with
+infinite sincerity. "If you had let me take it, you'd have just
+served me right&mdash;you'd have just paid me back in my own coin.
+It was fair enough&mdash;to use every advantage you had. Good Lord,
+have you forgotten that I am holding you here by force? But
+instead&mdash;you saved me, when you might have killed me&mdash;and
+won the fight. All you've done is to show yourself the finer
+clay&mdash;that's what you've done. God knows I suppose the woman
+is always finer clay than the man&mdash;yet it comes with a jolt,
+just the same. It's not for you to be down-hearted&mdash;Heaven
+knows the strength you've shown is above any I ever had, or ever
+will have. You've shown how to feel mercy&mdash;I could never show
+anything but hate, and revenge. You've shown me a bigger and
+stronger code than mine. And there's nothing&mdash;nothing I can
+say."</p>
+<p>The tone changed once more to the personal and solicitous. "But
+it's been a big strain on you&mdash;I can see that. I believe I'd
+lie here and rest awhile if I were you. I'll eat my
+dinner&mdash;and the fire's about out too. That's the
+girl&mdash;Beatrice."</p>
+<p>Gently he picked her up, seemingly with no physical effort and
+laid her in her hammock. "Then&mdash;you'll forgive me?" she asked
+brokenly.</p>
+<p>"Good Heavens, I wish there was something to forgive&mdash;so
+we'd be a little more even. But you've accomplished something,
+Beatrice&mdash;and I don't know what it is yet&mdash;I only know
+you've changed me&mdash;and softened me&mdash;as I never dreamed
+any one in the world could. Now go to sleep."</p>
+<p>He turned from her, but the food on the table no longer tempted
+him. For a full hour he stood before the ashes of the fire, deeply
+and inextricably bewildered with himself, with life, and with all
+these thoughts and hopes and regrets that thronged him. He was like
+ashes now himself; the fires of his life seemed burned out. The
+thought recalled him to the need of cutting fuel for the night's
+fire.</p>
+<p>He might be able to quiet the growing turmoil in his brain when
+the still shadows of the spruce closed around him. He seized his
+axe, then peered into the cave. Beatrice, worn out by the stress of
+the hour before and immensely comforted by Ben's words, was already
+deeply asleep. His rifle leaned against the wall of the cavern, and
+he put it in the hollow of his arm. It was not that he feared
+Beatrice would attempt to procure it. The act was mostly habit,
+combined with the fact that their supply of meat was all but
+exhausted and he did not wish to miss any opportunity for big
+game.</p>
+<p>The forest was particularly gloomy to-day. Its shadows lay deep.
+And this was not merely the result of his own darkened outlook:
+glancing up, he saw that clouds were gathering in the sky. They
+would need fuel in plenty to keep the fire bright to-night.
+Evidently rain was impending,&mdash;one of those cold, steady
+downpours that are disliked so cordially by the folk of the upper
+Selkirks.</p>
+<p>He went a full two hundred yards before he found a tree to his
+liking. It was a tough spruce of medium height and just at the edge
+of the stream. He laid his rifle down, leaning it against a fallen
+log; then began his work.</p>
+<p>It was an awkward place to stand; but he gave no thought to it.
+His mind dwelt steadily on the events in the cavern of the hour
+before; the girl's remorse in the instant that she had him at her
+mercy and the example it set for him. The blade bit into the wood
+with slow encroachments. Perhaps the expenditure of brute energy in
+swinging the axe would relieve his pent-up feelings.</p>
+<p>He was not watching his work. His blows struck true from habit.
+Now the tree was half-severed: it was time to cut on the opposite
+side. Suddenly his axe crashed into yielding, rotten wood.</p>
+<p>Instantly the powers of the wilderness took their long-awaited
+toll. Ben had been unwary, too absorbed by his swirling thoughts to
+mark the ambush of death that had been prepared for him. Ever to
+keep watch, ever to be on guard: such is the first law of the wild;
+and Ben had disregarded it. Half of the tree had been rotten,
+changing the direction of its fall and crashing it down before its
+time.</p>
+<p>Ben leaped for his life, instinctively aiming for the shelter of
+the log against which he had inclined his rifle; but the blow came
+too soon. He was aware only of the rush of air as he leaped, an
+instant's hovering at the crest of a depthless chasm, then the
+sense of a mighty, resistless blow hurling him into infinity.</p>
+<p>Ben's rifle, catching the full might of the blow, was broken
+like a match. Ben himself was crushed to earth as beneath a meteor,
+the branchy trunk shattering down upon his stalwart form like the
+jaws of a great trap. He uttered one short, half-strangled cry.</p>
+<p>Then the darkness, shot with varied and multiple lights, dropped
+over him. The noise of the falling tree died away; the
+forest-dwellers returned to their varied activities. The rain
+clouds deepened and spread above his motionless form.</p>
+<br>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXIV"></a>
+<h2>XXXIV</h2>
+<p>Beatrice's dreams were troubled after Ben's departure into the
+forest. She tossed and murmured, secretly aware that all was not
+well with her. Yet in the moments that she half-wakened she
+ascribed the vague warning to nervousness only, falling immediately
+to sleep again. Wakefulness came vividly to her only with the
+beginnings of twilight.</p>
+<p>She opened her eyes; the cavern was deep with shadow. She lay
+resting a short time, adjusting her eyes to the soft light. In an
+instant all the dramatic events of the day were recalled to her:
+the tin cup that had held the poison still lay against the wall,
+and the liquor still stained the sandy floor, or was it only a
+patch of deeper shadow?</p>
+<p>She wondered why Ben did not come into the cave. Was he
+embittered against her, after all; had he spoken as he did just
+from kindness, to save her remorse? She listened for the familiar
+sounds of his fuel cutting, or his other work about the camp.
+Wherever he was, he made no sound at all.</p>
+<p>She sat up then, staring out through the cavern maw. For an
+instant she experienced a deep sense of bewilderment at the
+pressing gloom, so mysterious and unbroken over the face of the
+land. But soon she understood what was missing. The fire was
+out.</p>
+<p>The fact went home to her with an inexplicable shock. She had
+become so accustomed to seeing the bright, cheerful blaze at the
+cavern mouth that its absence was like a little tragedy in itself.
+Always it had been the last vista of her closing eyes as she
+dropped off to sleep&mdash;the soft, warm glow of the
+coals&mdash;and the sight always comforted her. She could scarcely
+remember the morning that it wasn't crackling cheerily when she
+wakened. Ben had always been so considerate of her in this
+regard&mdash;removing the chill of the cave with its radiating heat
+to make it comfortable for her to dress. Not even coals were left
+now&mdash;only ashes, gray as death.</p>
+<p>She got up, then walked to the cavern maw. For a moment she
+stood peering into the gloom, one hand resting against the portals
+of stone. The twilight was already deep. It was the supper hour and
+past; dark night was almost at hand. There could be no further
+doubt of Ben's absence. He was not at the little creek getting
+water, nor did she hear the ring of his axe in the forest. She
+wondered if he had gone out on one of his scouting expeditions and
+had not yet returned. Of course this was the true explanation; she
+had no real cause to worry.</p>
+<p>Likely enough he had little desire to return to the cavern now.
+She could picture him following at his tireless pace one of the
+winding woods trails, lost in contemplation, his vivid eyes clouded
+with thought.</p>
+<p>She looked up for the sight of the familiar stars that might
+guide him home. They were all hidden to-night. Not a gleam of light
+softened the stark gloom of the spruce. As she watched the first
+drops of rain fell softly on the grass.</p>
+<p>The drops came in ever-increasing frequency, cold as ice on her
+hand. She heard them rustling in the spruce boughs; and far in the
+forest she discerned the first whine of the wakening wind. The
+sound of the rain was no longer soft. It swelled and grew, and all
+at once the wind caught it and swept it into her face. And now the
+whole forest moaned and soughed under the sweep of the wind.</p>
+<p>There is no sound quite like the beat of a hard rain on dense
+forest. It has no startling discords, but rather a regular cadence
+as if the wood gods were playing melodies in the minor on giant
+instruments,&mdash;melodies remembered from the first, unhappy days
+of the earth and on instruments such as men have never seen. But
+this was never a melody to fill the heart with joy. It touches deep
+chords of sorrow in the most secret realms of the spirit. The rain
+song grew and fell as the gusts of the wind swept it, and the rock
+walls of the cliff swam in clouds of spray.</p>
+<p>The storm could not help but bring Ben to camp, she thought. At
+least she did not fear that he would lose his way: he knew every
+trail and ridge for miles around the cave. Even such pressing,
+baleful darkness as this could not bewilder him. She went back to
+her cot to wait his coming.</p>
+<p>The minutes seemed interminable. Time had never moved so slowly
+before. She tried to lie still, to relax; then to direct her
+thought in other channels; but all of these meandering streams
+flowed back into the main current which was Ben. Yet it was folly
+to worry about him; any moment she would hear his step at the edge
+of the forest. But the night was so dark, and the storm so wild. A
+half-hour dragged its interminable length away.</p>
+<p>Her uneasiness was swiftly developing into panic. Just to-day
+she was willing to risk his life for her freedom: it was certainly
+folly now to goad herself to despair by dwelling on his mysterious
+absence. It might speed the passing minutes if she got up and found
+some work to do about the cave; but she simply had no heart for it.
+Once she sat up, only to lie down again.</p>
+<p>The moments dragged by. Surely he would have had time to reach
+camp by now. The storm neither increased nor decreased; only played
+its mournful melodies in the forest. The song of the rain was
+despairing,&mdash;low mournful notes rising to a sharp crescendo as
+the fiercer gusts swept it into the tree tops. The limbs murmured
+unhappily as they smote together; and a tall tree, swaying in the
+wind, creaked with a maddening regularity. She was never so lonely
+before, so darkly miserable.</p>
+<p>"I want him to come," her voice suddenly spoke aloud. It rang
+strangely in the gloomy cave. "I want him to come back to me."</p>
+<p>She felt no impulse for the words. They seemed to speak
+themselves. Presently she sat erect, her heart leaping with
+inexpressible relief, at the sound of a heavy tread at the edge of
+the glade.</p>
+<p>The steps came nearer, and then paused. She sprang to her feet
+and went to the mouth of the cave. A silence that lived between the
+beating rain and the complaining wind settled down about her. Her
+eyes could not pierce the darkness.</p>
+<p>"Is that you, Ben?" she called.</p>
+<p>She strained into the silence for his reply. The cold drops
+splashed into her face.</p>
+<p>"Ben?" she called again. "Is that you?"</p>
+<p>Then something leaped with an explosive sound, and running feet
+splashed in the wet grass in flight. The little spruce trees at the
+edge of the glade whipped and rustled as a heavy body crashed
+through. The steps had been only those of some forest beast&mdash;a
+caribou, perhaps, or a moose&mdash;come to mock her despair.</p>
+<p>She remembered that Ben had been wishing for just such a
+visitation these past few days; of course in the daylight hours
+when he could see to shoot. Their meat supply was almost gone.</p>
+<p>She did not go to her cot again. She stood peering into the
+gloom. All further effort to repel her fears came to nothing. The
+storm was already of two hours' duration, and Ben would have
+certainly returned to the cave unless disaster had befallen him.
+Was he lost somewhere in the intertwining trails, seeking shelter
+in a heavy thicket until the dawn should show him his way? There
+were so many pitfalls for the unsuspecting in these trackless
+wilds.</p>
+<p>Yet she could be of no aid to him. The dark woods stretched
+interminably; she would not even know which way to start. It would
+just mean to be lost herself, should she attempt to seek him. The
+trails that wound through the glades and over the ridges had no
+end.</p>
+<p>"Ben!" she called again. Then with increasing volume. "Ben!"</p>
+<p>But no echo returned. The darkness swallowed the sound at
+once.</p>
+<p>The night was chill: she longed for the comfort of the fire. The
+actual labor of building it might take her mind from her fears for
+a while at least; and its warm glow might dispel the growing cold
+of fear and loneliness in her breast. Besides, it might be a beacon
+light for Ben. She turned at once to the pile of kindling Ben had
+prepared.</p>
+<p>But before she could build a really satisfactory fire, one that
+would endure the rain, she must cut fuel from some of the logs Ben
+had hewn down and dragged to the cave. She lighted a short piece of
+pitchy wood, intending to locate the heavy camp axe. Then, putting
+on her heavy coat&mdash;the same garment of lustrous fur which Ben
+had sent her back for the day of her abduction&mdash;she ventured
+into the storm.</p>
+<p>The rain splashed in vain at her torch. The pitch burned with a
+fierce flame. But her eyes sought in vain for the axe.</p>
+<p>This was a strange thing: Ben always left it leaning against one
+of the chunks of spruce. Presently she halted, startled, gazing
+into the black depths of the forest.</p>
+<p>Ben had taken it; he had plainly gone forth after fuel. Trees
+stood all about the little glade: he couldn't have gone far. The
+inference was obvious: whatever disaster had befallen him must have
+occurred within a few hundred yards of the cave.</p>
+<p>Holding her torch high she went to the edge of the glade and
+again called into the gloom. There was no repression in her voice
+now. She called as loudly as she could. She started to push on into
+the fringe of timber.</p>
+<p>But at once she paused, holding hard on her self-control. It was
+folly to make a blind search. To penetrate the dark mystery of the
+forest with only this little light&mdash;already flickering
+out&mdash;would probably result in becoming lost herself. Such a
+course would not help Ben's cause. Evidently he was lying within a
+few hundred feet of her, unconscious&mdash;perhaps dead&mdash;or he
+would have replied to her call.</p>
+<p>Dead! The thought sped an icy current throughout the hydraulic
+system of her veins.</p>
+<p>She was a mountain girl, and she made no further false motions.
+She turned at once to the cave, and piling up her kindling, built a
+fire just at the mouth of the cave. It was protected here in some
+degree from the rain, and the wind was right to carry the smoke
+away. This fire would serve to keep her direction and lead her back
+to the cavern.</p>
+<p>Once more she ventured into the storm, and gathering all the cut
+fuel she could find, piled it on her fire. The two spruce chunks
+that Ben had cut for their fireside seats were placed as back logs.
+Then she hunted for pine knots taken from the scrub pines that grew
+in scattering clumps among the spruce, and which were laden with
+pitch.</p>
+<p>One of these knots she put in the iron pan they used for frying,
+then lighted it. Then she pushed into the timber.</p>
+<p>Holding her light high she began to encircle the glade clear to
+the barrier of the cliffs. To the eyes of the wild creatures this
+might have been a never-to-be-forgotten picture: the slight form of
+the girl, her face blanched and her eyes wide and dark in the
+flaring light, her grotesque torch and its weird shadows, and then
+rain sweeping down between. She reached the cliff, then started
+back, making a wider circle.</p>
+<p>Adding fresh fuel to the torch, she peered into every covert and
+examined with minute care any human-shaped shadow in that eerie
+world of shadows; but the long half-circle brought her back to the
+cliff wall without results. She was already wet to the skin, and
+her pine knots were nearly spent. Ever the load of dread was
+heavier at her heart. In the hour or more she had
+searched&mdash;she had no way of estimating time&mdash;she had
+already gone farther than Ben usually went for his fuel.</p>
+<p>As yet no tears came; only the raindrops lay on her face and
+curled her dark hair in ringlets. But she must not give up yet. It
+was hard to hold her shoulders straight; but she must make the long
+circle once more.</p>
+<p>With courage and strength such as she had not dreamed she
+possessed, she launched forward again. But fatigue was breaking her
+now. The tree roots tripped her faltering feet, the branches
+clutched at her as she passed. It was hard to tell what territory
+she had searched, or how far she had gone. But when she was halfway
+around, she suddenly halted, motionless as an image, at the edge of
+the stream.</p>
+<p>The flickering light revealed a tree, freshly cut, its, naked
+stump gleaming and its tall form lying prone. Yet beneath it the
+shadows were of strange, unearthly shape, and something showed
+stark white through the green foliage. Great branches stretched
+over it, like bars over a prison window.</p>
+<p>Just one curious deep sob wracked her whole body. The life-heat,
+the mystery that is being, seemed to steal away from her. Her
+strength wilted; and for an instant she could only stand and gaze
+with fixed, unbelieving eyes. But almost at once the unquenchable
+fires of her spirit blazed up anew. She saw her task, and with a
+faith and steadfastness conformable more to the sun and the earth
+than to human frailty, her muscles made instant and incredible
+response.</p>
+<p>Instantly she was beside the form of her comrade and enemy,
+struggling with the cruel limbs that pinned him to the earth.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXV"></a>
+<h2>XXXV</h2>
+<p>Beatrice knew one thing and one alone: that she must not give
+way to the devastating terror in her heart. There was mighty work
+to do, and she must keep strong. Her only wish was to kneel beside
+him, to lift the bleeding head into her arms and let the storm and
+the darkness smother her existence; but her stern woods training
+came to her aid. She began the stupendous task of freeing him from
+the imprisoning tree limbs.</p>
+<p>The pine knots flickered feebly; and by their light she looked
+about for Ben's axe. Her eyes rested on the broken gun first: then
+she saw the blade, shining in the rain, protruding from beneath a
+broken bough. She drew it out and swung it down.</p>
+<p>Some of the lesser limbs she broke off, with a strength in her
+hands she did not dream she possessed. The larger ones were cut
+away with blows incredibly strong and accurate. How and by what
+might she did not know, but almost at once the man's body was free
+except for the tree trunk that wedged him against a dead log toward
+which he had leaped for shelter.</p>
+<p>She seemed powerless to move it. Her shoulders surged against it
+in vain. A desperate frenzy seized her, but she fought it
+remorselessly down. Her self-discipline must not break yet. Seeing
+that she could not move the tree itself, she thrust with all her
+power against the dead log beside which Ben lay. In a moment she
+had rolled it aside.</p>
+<p>Then for the first time she went to her knees beside the prone
+form. Ben was free of the imprisoning limbs, but was his soul
+already free of the stalwart body broken among the broken boughs?
+She had to know this first; further effort was unavailing until she
+knew this. Her hand stole over his face.</p>
+<p>She found no reassuring warmth. It was wet with the rain, cold
+to the touch. His hair was wet too, and matted from some dreadful
+wound in the scalp. Very softly she felt along the skull for some
+dreadful fracture that might have caused instant death; but the
+descending trunk had missed his head, at least. Very gently she
+shook him by the shoulders.</p>
+<p>Her stern self-control gave way a little now. The strain had
+been too much for human nerves to bear. She gathered him into her
+arms, still without sobbing, but the hot tears dropped on to his
+face.</p>
+<p>"Speak to me, Ben," she said quietly. The wind caught her words
+and whisked them away; and the rain played its unhappy music in the
+tree foliage; but Ben made no answer. "Speak to me," she repeated,
+her tone lifting. "My man, my baby&mdash;tell me you're not
+dead!"</p>
+<p>Dead! Was that it&mdash;struck to the earth like the caribou
+that fell before his rifle? And in that weird, dark instant a light
+far more bright than that the flickering pine knots cast so dim and
+strange over the scene beamed forth from the altar flame of her own
+soul. It was only the light of knowledge, not of hope, but it
+transfigured her none the less.</p>
+<p>All at once she knew why she had hurled the poisoned cup from
+his hand, even though her father's life might be the price of her
+weakness. She understood, now, why these long weeks had been a
+delight rather than a torment; why her fears for him had gone so
+straight to her heart. She pressed his battered head tight against
+her breast.</p>
+<p>"My love, my love," she crooned in his ear, pressing her warm
+cheek close to his. "I do love you, I do, I do," she told him
+confidingly, as if this message would call him back to life. Her
+lips sought his, trying to give them warmth, and her voice was low
+and broken when she spoke again. "Can't you hear me,
+Ben&mdash;won't you try to come back to me? If you're dead I'll die
+too&mdash;"</p>
+<p>But the man did not open his eyes. Would not even this appeal
+arouse him from this deep, strange sleep in which he lay? He had
+always been so watchful of her&mdash;since that first day&mdash;so
+zealous for her safety. She held him closer, her lips trembling
+against his.</p>
+<p>But she must get herself in hand again! Perhaps life had not yet
+completely flickered out; and she could nurse it back. She dropped
+her ear to his breast, listening.</p>
+<p>Yes, she felt the faint stirring of his heart. It was so feeble,
+the throbs were so far apart, yet they meant life,&mdash;life that
+might flush his cheeks again, and might yet bring him back to her,
+into her arms. He was breathing, too; breaths so faint that she
+hardly dared to believe in their reality. And presently she
+realized that his one hope of life lay in getting back to the
+fire.</p>
+<p>For long hours he had been lying in the cold rain; a few more
+minutes would likely extinguish the spark of life that remained in
+his breast. Her hand stole over his powerful frame, in an effort to
+get some idea of the nature of his wounds.</p>
+<p>One of his arms was broken; its position indicated that. Some of
+his ribs were crushed too&mdash;what internal injuries he had that
+might end him before the morning she did not know. But she could
+not take time to build a sledge and cut away the brush. She worked
+her shoulder under his body.</p>
+<p>Wrenching with all her fine, young strength she lifted him upon
+her shoulder; then, kneeling in the vines, she struggled for
+breath. Then thrusting with her arm she got on her feet.</p>
+<p>His weight was over fifty pounds greater than her own; but her
+woods training, the hard work she had always done, had fitted her
+for just such a test as this. She started with her burden toward
+the cave.</p>
+<p>She had long known how to carry an injured man, suspending him
+over her shoulder, head pointed behind her, her arms clasping his
+thigh. With her free arm she seized the tree branches to sustain
+her. She had no light now; she was guided only by the faint glow of
+the fire at the cavern mouth.</p>
+<p>After a hundred feet the load seemed unbearable. Except for the
+fact that she soon got on the well-worn moose trail that followed
+the creek, she could scarcely have progressed a hundred feet
+farther. As it was, she was taxed to the utmost: every ounce of her
+reserve strength would be needed before the end.</p>
+<p>At the end of a hundred yards she stopped to rest, leaning
+against a tree and still holding the beloved weight upon her
+shoulder. If she laid it down she knew she could not lift it again.
+But soon she plunged on, down toward the beacon light.</p>
+<p>Except for her love for him, and that miraculous strength that
+love has always given to women, she could not have gone on that
+last, cruel hundred yards. But slowly, steadily, the circle of
+light grew brighter, larger, nearer; ever less dense were the
+thickets of evergreen between. Now she was almost to the glade; now
+she felt the wet grass at her ankles. She lunged on and laid her
+burden on her bed.</p>
+<p>Then she relaxed at his feet, breathing in sobbing gasps. Except
+for the crackle of the fire and the beat of the rain, there was no
+sound in the cave but this,&mdash;those anguished sobs from her
+wracked lungs.</p>
+<p>But far distant though Ben was and deep as he slept&mdash;just
+outside the dark portals of death itself&mdash;those sounds went
+down to him. He heard them dimly at first, like a far-distant voice
+in a dream, but as the moments passed he began to recognize their
+nature and their source. Sobs of exhaustion and distress&mdash;from
+the girl that was in his charge. He lay a long time, trying to
+understand.</p>
+<p>On her knees beside him Beatrice saw the first flutter of his
+eyelids. In awe, rather than rapture, her arms crept around him,
+and she kissed his rain-wet brow. His eyes opened, looking
+wonderingly into hers.</p>
+<p>She saw the first light of recognition, then a half-smile,
+gentle as a girl's, as he realized his own injuries. Of course Ben
+Darby would smile in such a moment as this; his instincts, true and
+manly, were always to try to cheer her. Presently he spoke in the
+silence.</p>
+<p>"The tree got me, didn't it?" he asked.</p>
+<p>"Don't try to talk," she cautioned. "Yes&mdash;the tree fell on
+you. But you're not going to die. You're going to live,
+live&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He shook his head, the half-smile flickering at his lips. "Let
+me talk, Beatrice," he said, with just a whisper of his old
+determination. "It's important&mdash;and I don't think&mdash;I have
+much time."</p>
+<p>Her eyes widened in horror. "You don't mean&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I'm going back in a minute&mdash;I can't hardly keep awake," he
+said. His voice, though feeble, was preternaturally clear. She
+heard every kind accent, every gentle tone even above the crackle
+of the fire without and the beat of the rain. "I think it's the
+limit," he went on. "I believe the tree got me&mdash;clear
+inside&mdash;but you must listen to everything I say."</p>
+<p>She nodded. In that eerie moment of suspense she knew she must
+hear what he had to tell her.</p>
+<p>"Don't wait to see what happens to me," he went on. "I'll either
+go out or I'll live&mdash;you really can't help me any. Where's the
+rifle?"</p>
+<p>"The rifle was broken&mdash;when the tree fell."</p>
+<p>"I knew it would be. I saw it coming." He rested, waiting for
+further breath. "Beatrice&mdash;please, please don't stay here,
+trying to save me."</p>
+<p>"Do you think I would go?" she cried.</p>
+<p>"You must. The food&mdash;is about gone. Just enough to last one
+person through to the Yuga cabins&mdash;with berries, roots. Take
+the pistol. There's six shots or so&mdash;in the box. Make every
+one tell. Take the dead grouse too. The rifle's broken and we can't
+get meat. It's just&mdash;death&mdash;if you wait. You can just
+make it through now."</p>
+<p>"And leave you here to die, as long as there's a chance to save
+you?" the girl answered. "You couldn't get up to get water&mdash;or
+build a fire&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He listened patiently, but shook his head at the end. "No,
+Bee&mdash;please don't make me talk any more. It's just death for
+both of us if you stay. The food is gone&mdash;the rifle broken.
+Your father's gang'll be here sooner or later&mdash;and they'd
+smash me, anyway. I could hardly fight 'em off with those few
+pistol shells&mdash;but by God I'd like to try&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He struggled for breath, and she thought he had slipped back
+into unconsciousness. But in a moment the faltering current of his
+speech began again.</p>
+<p>"Take the pistol&mdash;and go," he told her. "You showed me
+to-day how to give up&mdash;and I don't want to kill&mdash;your
+father&mdash;any more. I renounce it all! Ezram&mdash;forgive
+me&mdash;old Ez that lay dead in the leaves." He smiled at the girl
+again. "So don't mind leaving me. Life work's all spent&mdash;given
+over. Please, Beatrice&mdash;you'd just kill yourself without
+aiding me. Wait till the sun comes up&mdash;then follow up the
+river&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Unconsciousness welled high above him, and the lids dropped over
+his eyes. The gloom still pressed about the cavern, yet a sun no
+less effulgent than that of which he had spoken had risen for Ben.
+It was his moment of renunciation, glorious past any moment of his
+life. He had renounced his last, little fighting chance that the
+girl might live. And Ezram, watching high and afar, and with
+infinite serenity knowing at last the true balance of all things
+one with another, gave him his full forgiveness.</p>
+<p>The girl began to strip the wet clothes from his injured
+body.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXVI"></a>
+<h2>XXXVI</h2>
+<p>The trail was long and steep into Back There for Jeffery Neilson
+and his men. Day after day they traveled with their train of pack
+horses, pushing deeper into the wilds, fording mighty rivers,
+traversing silent and majestic mountain ranges, climbing slopes so
+steep that the packs had to be lightened to half before the gasping
+animals could reach the crest. They could go only at a snail's
+pace,&mdash;even in the best day's travel only ten miles, and often
+a single mile was a hard, exhausting day's work.</p>
+<p>Of course there was no kind of a trail for them to follow. As
+far as possible they followed the winding pathways of big
+game&mdash;as long as these led them in their general
+direction&mdash;but often they were obliged to cut their way
+through the underbrush. Time after time they encountered impassable
+cliffs or rivers from which they were obliged to turn back and seek
+new routes; they found marshes that they could not penetrate;
+ranges they could not climb; wastes of slide rock where they could
+make headway only at a creeping pace and with hourly risk of their
+lives.</p>
+<p>They had counted on slow travel, but the weeks grew into the
+months before they even neared the obscure heart of Back There
+where they thought Ben and Beatrice might be hidden. The way was
+hard as they had never dreamed. Every day, it seemed to them,
+brought its fresh tragedy: a long back-trailing to avoid some
+impassable place, a fatiguing digression, perhaps several hours of
+grinding work with the axe in order to cut a trail. Sometimes the
+harness broke, requiring long stops on the trail to repair it, the
+packs slipped continually from the hard going; and they found it
+increasingly difficult to secure horse feed for the animals.</p>
+<p>Even Indian ponies cannot keep fat on such grass as grows in the
+deep shade of the spruce. They need the rich growths of the open
+park lands to stiffen them for the grinding toil; and even with
+good feeding, foresters know that pack animals must not be kept on
+the trail for too many days in succession. Jeffery Neilson and his
+men disregarded both these facts, with the result that the animals
+lost flesh and strength, cutting down the speed of their advance.
+Oaths and shouts were unavailing now: only cruel blows could drive
+them forward at all.</p>
+<p>They seemed to sense a great hopelessness in their undertaking.
+Usually well-trained pack horses will follow their leader without
+question, walk almost in his tracks, and the rider in front only
+has to show the way. After the first few days of grinding toil, the
+morale of the entire outfit began to break. The horses broke away
+into thickets on each side; and time after time, one hour upon
+another, the horsemen had to round them up again. When they came to
+the great rivers&mdash;wild tributaries of the Yuga&mdash;they had
+to follow up the streams for days in search of a place to ford.
+Then they were obliged to carry the packs across in small loads,
+making trip after trip with the utmost patience and toil. The
+horses, broken in spirit, took the wild waters just as they climbed
+the steep slopes, with little care whether they lived or died.</p>
+<p>The days passed, June and July. Ever they moved at a slower
+pace. One of the horses, giving up on a steep pitch and frenzied by
+Ray's cruel, lashing blows, fell off the edge of the trail and shot
+down like a plummet two hundred feet into the canyon
+below&mdash;and thereupon it became necessary not only to spend the
+rest of the day in retrieving and repairing the supplies that had
+fallen with him, but also to heap bigger loads on the backs of the
+remaining horses. And always they were faced by the cruel
+possibility that this whole, mighty labor was in vain,&mdash;that
+Ben and Beatrice might have gone to their deaths in the rapids,
+weeks before.</p>
+<p>The food stores brought for the journey were rapidly depleted.
+The result was that they had to depend more and more upon a diet of
+meat. Men can hold up fairly well on meat alone, particularly if it
+has a fair amount of fat, but the effort of hunting and drying the
+flesh into jerky served to cut down their speed.</p>
+<p>The constant delays, the grinding, blasting toil of the day's
+march, and particularly the ever-recurring crises of ford and
+steep, made serious inroads on the morale of the three men. Just
+the work of urging on the exhausted horses drained their nervous
+energy in a frightful stream: the uncertainty of their quest, the
+danger, the scarcity of any food but meat, and most of all the
+burning hatred in their hearts for the man who had forced the
+expedition upon them combined to torment them; even now, Ben Darby
+had received no little measure of vengeance.</p>
+<p>No experience of their individual lives had ever presented such
+a daily ordeal of physical distress; none had ever been so
+devastating to hope and spirit. There was not one moment of
+pleasure, one instant of relief from the day's beginning to its
+end. At night they went to sleep on hastily made beds, cursing at
+all things in heaven and earth; they blasphemed with growing
+savagery all that men hold holy and true; and degeneracy grew upon
+them very swiftly. They quarreled over their tasks, and they hated
+each other with a hatred only second to that they bore Darby
+himself. All three had always been reckless, wicked, brutal men;
+but now, particularly in the case of Ray and Chan, the ordeal
+brought out and augmented the latent abnormalities that made them
+criminals in the beginning, developing those odd quirks in human
+minds that make toward perversion and the most fiendish crime.</p>
+<p>Jeffery Neilson had almost forgotten the issue of the claim by
+now. He had told the truth, those weary weeks before, when he had
+wished he had never seen it. His only thought was of his daughter,
+the captive of a relentless, merciless man in these far wilds.
+Never the moon rose or the sun declined but that he was sick with
+haunting fear for her. Had she gone down to her death in the
+rapids? This was Neilson's fondest wish: the enfolding oblivion of
+wild waters would be infinitely better than the fate Ben had hinted
+at in his letter. Yet he dared not turn back. She might yet live,
+held prisoner in some far-off cave.</p>
+<p>At first all three agreed on this point: that they must not turn
+back until either Ben was crushed under their heels or they had
+made sure of his death. Ray had not forgotten that Ben alone stood
+between him and the wealth and power he had always craved. He
+dreamed, at first, that the deadly hardships of the journey could
+be atoned for by years of luxury and ease. His mind was also
+haunted with dark conjectures as to the fate of Beatrice, but
+jealousy, rather than concern for her, was the moving impulse.</p>
+<p>Neilson knew his young partner now. He saw clearly at last that
+Ray was not and had never been a faithful confederate, but indeed a
+malicious and bitter enemy, only waiting his chance to overthrow
+his leader. They were still partners in their effort to rescue the
+girl and slay her abductor; otherwise they were at swords' points.
+And there would be something more than plain, swift slaying, now.
+If Neilson could read aright, the actual, physical change that had
+been wrought in Ray's face foretold no ordinary end for Ben. His
+features were curiously drawn; and his eyes had a fixed, magnetic,
+evil light. Occasionally in his darker hours Neilson foresaw even
+more sinister possibilities in this change in Ray: the abnormal
+intensity manifest in every look and word, the weird, evil
+preoccupation that seemed ever upon him. There was not only the
+fate of Ben to consider, but that of Beatrice too, out in these
+desolate forests. But surely Ray's degenerate impulses could be
+mastered. Neilson need not fear this, at least.</p>
+<p>Chan Heminway, also, had developed marvelously in the journey.
+He also was more assertive, less the underling he had been. He had
+developed a brutality that, though it contained nothing of the
+exquisite fineness of cruelty of which Ray's diseased thought might
+conceive, was nevertheless the full expression of his depraved
+nature. He no longer cowered in fear of Neilson. Rather he looked
+to Ray as his leader, took him as his example, tried to imitate
+him, and at last really began to share in his mood. In cruelty to
+the horses he was particularly adept; but he was also given to
+strange, savage bursts of insane fury.</p>
+<p>"We must be close on them now," Neilson said one morning when
+they had left the main gorge of the Yuga far behind them. "If
+they're not dead we're bound to find trace of 'em in a few
+days."</p>
+<p>The hope seemed well-founded. It is impossible for even most of
+the wild creatures&mdash;furtive as twilight shadows&mdash;to
+journey through wood spaces without leaving trace of their goings
+and comings: much less clumsy human beings. Ultimately the
+searchers would find their tracks in the soft earth, the ashes of a
+camp fire, or a charred cooking rack.</p>
+<p>"And when we get 'em, we can wait and live on meat until the
+river goes up in fall&mdash;then float on down to the Indian
+villages in their canoe," Chan answered. "It will carry four of us,
+all right."</p>
+<p>Ray, Chan, Neilson and Neilson's daughter&mdash;these made four.
+What remained of Ben when Ray was through could be left, silent
+upon some hushed hillside, to the mercy of the wild creatures and
+the elements.</p>
+<p>Surely they were in the enemy-country now; and now a fresh fear
+began to oppress them. They might expect an attack from their
+implacable foe at any moment. It did not make for ease of mind to
+know that any brush clump might be their enemy's ambush; that any
+instant a concealed rifle might speak death to them in the silence.
+Ben would have every advantage of fortress and ambush. They had not
+thought greatly of this matter at first; but now the fear increased
+with the passing days. Even Neilson was not wholly exempt from it.
+It seemed a hideous, deadly thing, incompatible with life and hope,
+that they should be plunging deeper, farther into helplessness and
+peril.</p>
+<p>If mental distress and physical discomfort can constitute
+vengeance Ben was already avenged. Now that they were in the
+hill-lands, out from the gorge and into a region of yellow beaver
+meadows lying between gently sloping hills, their apprehension
+turned to veritable terror. A blind man could see how small was
+their fighting chance against a hidden foe who had prepared for
+their coming. The skin twitched and crept when a twig cracked about
+their camp at night, and a cold like death crept over the frame
+when the thickets crashed under a leaping moose.</p>
+<p>Ray found himself regretting, for the first time, that murderous
+crime of his of months before. Even riches might not pay for these
+days of dread and nights of terror: the recovery of the girl from
+Ben's arms could not begin to recompense. Indeed, the girl's memory
+was increasingly hard to call up. The mind was kept busy
+elsewhere.</p>
+<p>"We're walking right into a death trap," he told Neilson one
+morning. "If he is here, what chance have we got; he'd have weeks
+to explore the country and lay an ambush for us. Besides, I believe
+he's dead. I don't believe a human being could have got down this
+far, alive."</p>
+<p>Chan too had found himself inclining toward this latter belief;
+without Ray's energy and ambition he had less to keep him fronted
+to the chase. Neilson, however, was not yet ready to turn back. He
+too feared Ben's attack, but already in the twilight of advancing
+years, he did not regard physical danger in the same light as these
+two younger men. Besides, he was made of different stuff. The
+safety of his daughter was the one remaining impulse in his
+life.</p>
+<p>And more and more, in the chill August nights, the talk about
+the camp fire took this trend: the folly of pushing on. It was
+better to turn back and wait his chances to strike again, Ray
+argued, than to walk bald-faced into death. Sometime Ben must
+return to the claim: a chance might come to lay him low. Besides,
+ever it seemed more probable that the river had claimed him.</p>
+<p>One rainy, disagreeable morning, as they camped beside the river
+near the mouth of a small creek, affairs reached their crisis. They
+had caught and saddled the horses; Ray was pulling tight the last
+hitch. Chan stood beside him, speaking in an undertone. When he had
+finished Ray cursed explosively in the silence.</p>
+<p>Neilson turned. He seemed to sense impending developments. "What
+now?" he asked.</p>
+<p>"I'm not going on, that's what it is," Ray replied. "Neilson,
+it's two against one&mdash;if you want to go on you can&mdash;but
+Ray and I are going back. That devil's dead. Beatrice is,
+too&mdash;sure as hell. If they ain't dead, he'll get us. I was a
+fool ever to start out. And that's final."</p>
+<p>"You're going back, eh&mdash;scared out!" Neilson commented
+coldly.</p>
+<p>"I'm going back&mdash;and don't say too much about being scared
+out, either."</p>
+<p>"And you too, Chan? You're against me, too?"</p>
+<p>Chan cursed. "I'd gone a week ago if it'd been me. "We knew the
+way home, at least."</p>
+<p>The old man looked a long time into the river depths. Only too
+well he realized that their decision was final. But there was no
+answer, in the swirling depths, to the question that wracked his
+heart: whether or not in these spruce-clad hills his daughter still
+lived. It could only murmur and roar, without shaping words that
+human ears could grasp, never relieving the dreadful uncertainty
+that would be his life's curse from henceforth. He sighed, and the
+lines across his brow were dark and deep.</p>
+<p>"Then turn the horses around, you cowards," he answered. "I
+can't go on alone."</p>
+<p>For once neither Ray nor Chan had outward resentment for the
+epithet. Secretly they realized that old Neilson was to the wall at
+last, and like a grizzly at bay, it was safer not to molest him.
+Chan went down to the edge of the creek to water his saddle
+horse.</p>
+<p>But presently they heard him curse, in inordinate and startled
+amazement, as he gazed at some imprint in the mud of the shore.
+They saw the color sweep from his face. In an instant his two
+companions were beside him.</p>
+<p>Clear and unmistakable in the mud they saw the stale imprint of
+Ben's canoe as they had landed, and the tracks of both the man and
+the girl as they had turned into the forest.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXVII"></a>
+<h2>XXXVII</h2>
+<p>The dawn that crept so gray and mysterious over the frosty green
+of spruce brought no hope to Beatrice, sitting beside the
+unconscious form of Ben in the cave fronting the glade. Rather it
+only brought the tragic truth home more clearly. Her love for him
+had manifested itself too late to give happiness to either of them:
+even now his life seemed to be stealing from her, into the valley
+of the shadow.</p>
+<p>She had watched beside him the whole night; and now she beheld a
+sinister change in his condition. He was still unconscious, but he
+no longer drew his breath at long intervals, softly and quietly. He
+was breathing in short, troubled gasps, and an ominous red glow was
+in his cheeks. She touched his brow, only to find it burning with
+fever.</p>
+<p>The fact was not hard to understand. The downpour of cold rain
+in which he had lain, wounded, for so many hours had drawn the life
+heat out of him, and some organic malady had combined with his
+bodily injuries to strike out his life. Her predicament was one of
+absolute helplessness. She was hundreds of miles&mdash;weary weeks
+of march&mdash;from medical attention, and she could neither leave
+him nor carry him. The wilderness forces, resenting the intrusion
+into their secret depths, had seemingly taken full vengeance at
+last. They had seemingly closed all gates to life and safety. They
+had set the trap with care; and the cruel jaws had sprung.</p>
+<p>She sat dry-eyed, incoherent prayers at her trembling lips.
+Mostly she did not touch the man, only sat at his bedside in the
+crude chair Ben had fashioned for her while the minutes rolled into
+hours and the hours sped the night away,&mdash;in tireless vigil,
+watching with lightless eyes. Once she bent and touched her lips to
+his.</p>
+<p>They were not cold now. They were warm with fever. But in the
+strange twilight-world of unconsciousness he could neither know of
+nor respond to her kiss. She patted down his covering and sometimes
+held his hard hands warm between hers, as if she could thus keep
+death from seizing them and leading him away. But her courage did
+not break again.</p>
+<p>The wan light showed her his drawn face; and just for an instant
+her arms pressed about it. "I won't give up, Ben," she promised.
+"I'll keep on fighting&mdash;to the last minute. And maybe I can
+pull you through."</p>
+<p>Beatrice meant exactly what she said: to the last minute. That
+did not mean to the gray hour when, by all dictate of common sense,
+further fight is useless. She meant that she would battle
+tirelessly as long as one pale spark glowed in his spirit, as long
+as his breath could cloud a glass. The best thing for her now,
+however, was rest. She was exhausted by the strain of the night;
+and she must save herself for the crisis that was sure to come. Ben
+was sleeping easily now; the instant when his life hung in the
+balance still impended.</p>
+<p>She built up the fire, put on water to heat, covered the man
+with added blankets, then lay down on Ben's cot. Soon she drifted
+into uneasy slumber, waking at intervals to serve her patient.</p>
+<p>The hours dragged by, the night sloped down to the forest; and
+the dawn followed the night. Ben's life still flickered, like a
+flame in the wind, in the twilight land between life and death.</p>
+<p>Yet little could she do for him these first few days, except, in
+her simple faith, to pray. Never an hour passed but that prayers
+were at her lips, childlike, direct, entreating prayers from her
+woman's heart. Of all her offices these were first: she had no
+doubt but that they counted most. She sat by his bedside, kept him
+covered with the warmest robes, hewed wood for the fire; but as yet
+he had never fully emerged from his unconsciousness. Would he slip
+away in the night without ever wakening?</p>
+<p>But in the morning of the fourth day he opened his eyes vividly,
+muttered, and fell immediately to sleep. He woke again at evening;
+and his moving lips conveyed a message. In response she brought him
+steaming grouse broth, administering it a spoonful at a time until
+he fell to sleep again.</p>
+<p>In the days that followed he was conscious to the degree that he
+could drink broth, yet never recognizing Beatrice nor seeming to
+know where he was. His fever still lingered, raging; yet in these
+days she began to notice a slow improvement in his condition. The
+healing agents of his body were hard at work; and doubt was removed
+that he had received mortal internal injuries. She had set his
+broken arm the best she could, holding the bones in place with
+splints; but in all likelihood it would have to be broken and set
+again when he reached the settlements. She began to notice the
+first cessation of his fever; although weeks of sickness yet
+remained, she believed that the crisis was past. Yet in spite of
+these hopeful signs, she was face to face with the most tragic
+situation of all. Their food was almost gone.</p>
+<p>It would be long weeks before Ben could hope for sufficient
+strength to start the journey down to the settlements, even if the
+way were open. As it was their only chance lay in the fall rains
+that would flood the Yuga and enable them to journey down to the
+native villages in their canoe. These rains would not fall till
+October. For all that she had hoarded their supplies to the last
+morsel, eating barely enough herself to sustain life in her body,
+the dread spectre of starvation waited just without the cave. She
+had realized perfectly that Ben could not hope to throw off the
+malady without nutritious food and she had not stinted with him;
+and now, just when she had begun to hope for his recovery, she
+shook the last precious cup of flour from the sack.</p>
+<p>The rice and sugar were gone, long since. The honey she had
+hoarded to give Ben&mdash;knowing its warming, nutritive
+value&mdash;not tasting a drop herself. Of all their stores only a
+few pieces of jerked caribou remained; she had used the rest to
+make rich broth for Ben, and there was no way under heaven whereby
+they might procure more.</p>
+<p>The rifle was broken. The last of the pistol shots was fired the
+day she had prepared the poisoned cup for Ben.</p>
+<p>Yet she still waged the fight, struggling with high courage and
+tireless resolution against the frightful odds that opposed her.
+Her faith was as of that nameless daughter of the Gileadite; and
+she could not yield. Not ambition, not hatred&mdash;not even such
+fire of fury as had been wakened in Wolf Darby's heart that first
+frenzied night on the hillside&mdash;could have been the impulse
+for such fortitude and sacrifice as hers. It was not one of these
+base passions&mdash;known in the full category to her rescuers who
+were even now bearing down upon her valley&mdash;that kept the
+steel in her thews and the steadfastness in her heart. She loved
+this man; her love for him was as wholesome and as steadfast as her
+own self; and the law of that love was to give him all she had.</p>
+<p>There were few witnesses to this infinite giving of hers. Ben
+himself still lingered in a strange stupor, remembering nothing,
+knowing neither the girl nor himself. Perhaps the wild things saw
+her desperate efforts to find food in the wilderness,&mdash;the
+long hours of weary searching for a handful of berries that gave
+such little nourishment to his weakened body, or for a few acorns
+stored for winter by bird or rodent. Sometimes a great-antlered
+moose&mdash;an easy trophy if the rifle had been unbroken&mdash;saw
+her searching for wocus like a lost thing in the tenacious mud of
+the marshes; and almost nightly a silent wolf, pausing in his
+hunting, gazed uneasily through the cavern maw. But mostly her long
+hours of service in the cave, the chill nights that she sat beside
+Ben's cot, the dreary mornings when she cooked her own scanty
+breakfast and took her uneasy rest, the endless labor of
+fire-mending so that the cave could be kept at an even heat went
+unobserved by mortal eyes. The healing forces of his body called
+for warmth and nourishment; but for all the might of her efforts
+she waged a losing fight.</p>
+<p>What little wocus she was able to find she made into bread for
+Ben; yet it was never enough to satisfy his body's craving. The
+only meat she had herself was the vapid flesh that had been
+previously boiled for Ben's broth; and now only a few pieces of the
+jerked meat remained. She herself tried to live on such plants as
+the wilderness yielded, and she soon began to notice the tragic
+loss of her own strength. Her eyes were hollow, preternaturally
+large; she experienced a strange, floating sensation, as if spirit
+and flesh were disassociated.</p>
+<p>Still Ben lingered in his mysterious stupor, unaware of what
+went on about him; but his fever was almost gone by now, and the
+first beginnings of strength returned to his thews. His mind had
+begun to grope vaguely for the key that would open the doors of his
+memory and remind him again of some great, half-forgotten task that
+still confronted him, some duty unperformed. Yet he could not quite
+seize it. The girl who worked about his cot was without his bourne
+of knowledge; her voice reached him as if from an infinite
+distance, and her words penetrated only to the outer edges of his
+consciousness. It was not strictly, however, a return of his
+amnesia. It was simply an outgrowth of delirium caused by his
+sickness and injuries, to be wholly dispelled as soon as he was
+wholly well.</p>
+<p>But now the real hour of crisis was at hand,&mdash;not from his
+illness, but from the depletion of their food supplies. Beatrice
+had spent a hard afternoon in the forest in search of roots and
+berries, and as she crept homeward, exhausted and almost
+empty-handed, the full, tragic truth was suddenly laid bare. Her
+own strength had waned. Without the miracle of a fresh food supply
+she could hardly keep on her feet another day. Plainly and simply,
+the wolf was at the door. His cruel fangs menaced not only her, but
+this stalwart man for whose life she had fought so hard.</p>
+<p>The fear of the obliterating darkness known to all the woods
+people pressed close upon her and appalled her. She loved life
+simply and primitively; and it was an unspeakable thing to lose at
+the end of such a battle. Out so far, surrounded by such endless,
+desolate wastes of gloomy forest, the Shadow was cold,
+inhospitable; and she was afraid to face it alone. If Ben would
+only waken and sustain her drooping spirit with his own! She was
+lonely and afraid, in the shadow of the inert spruce, under the
+gray sky.</p>
+<p>She could hardly summon strength for the evening's work of
+cutting fuel. The blade would not drive with its old force into the
+wood. The blaze itself burned dully; and she could not make it leap
+and crackle with its old cheer. And further misfortune was in store
+for her when she crept into the cave to prepare Ben's supper.</p>
+<p>A pack rat&mdash;one of those detested rodents known so well to
+all northern peoples&mdash;had carried off in her absence two of
+the three remaining sticks of jerked caribou. For a moment she
+gazed in unbelieving and speechless horror, then made a frenzied
+search in the darkened corners of the cabin.</p>
+<p>This was no little tragedy: the two sticks of condensed and
+concentrated protein might have kept Ben alive for a few days more.
+It was disaster, merciless and sweeping. And the brave heart of the
+girl seemed to break under the blow.</p>
+<p>The hot, bitter tears leaped forth; but she suppressed the
+bitter, hopeless sobs that clutched at her throat. She must not let
+Ben know of this catastrophe. Likely in his stupor he would not
+understand; yet she must not take the chance. She must nourish the
+spark of hope in his breast to the last hour. She walked to the
+mouth of the cave; and Famine itself stood close, waiting in the
+shadows. She gazed out into the gathering gloom.</p>
+<p>The tears blinded her eyes at first. Slowly the dark profile of
+the spruce against the gray sky penetrated to her consciousness:
+the somber beauty of the wilderness sky line that haunts the
+woodsman's dreams. With it came full realization of the might and
+the malevolency of these shadowed wilds she had battled so long.
+They had got her down at last; they had crushed her and beaten her,
+and had held up to scorn her sacrifice and her mortal strength. She
+knew the wild wood now: its savage power, its remorselessness, and
+yet, woods girl that she was, she could not forget its dark and
+moving beauty.</p>
+<p>The forest was silent to-night. Not a twig cracked or a branch
+rustled. It was hushed, breathless, darkly sinister. All at once
+her eyes peered and strained into the dusk.</p>
+<p>Far across the valley, beyond the beaver marsh and on the
+farther shore of the lake she saw a little glimmer of light through
+the rift in the trees. She dared not believe in its reality at
+first. Perhaps it was a trick of her imagination only, a
+hallucination born of her starvation, child of her heartfelt
+prayer. She looked away, then peered again. But, yes&mdash;a tiny
+gleam of yellow light twinkled through the gloom! It was real,
+<i>it was true</i>! A gleam of hope in the darkness of despair.</p>
+<p>Her rescuers had come. There could be no other explanation. She
+hastened into the cave, drew the blankets higher about Ben's
+shoulders, then crept out into the dusk. Half running, she hastened
+toward their distant camp fire.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXVIII"></a>
+<h2>XXXVIII</h2>
+<p>Beatrice's first impulse was to run at a breakneck pace down the
+ridge and about the lake into her father's camp, beseeching instant
+aid to the starving man in the cave. She wished that she had a
+firearm with which to signal to them and bring them at once to the
+cavern. And it was not until she had descended the ridge and stood
+at the edge of the beaver meadow that her delirious joy began to
+give way to serious, thought.</p>
+<p>She was brought to a halt first by the sight of the horses that
+had wandered about the long loop of the lake and were feeding in
+the rich grass of the meadow. The full moon rising in the east had
+cast a nebulous glow over the whole countryside by now; and she
+could make a hasty estimation of their numbers. It was evident at
+once that her father had not made the expedition alone. The large
+outfit implied a party of at least three,&mdash;indicating that Ray
+Brent and Chan Heminway had accompanied him.</p>
+<p>She had only fear and disdain for these two younger men; but
+surely they would not refuse aid to Ben. Yet perhaps it was best to
+proceed with some caution. These were her lover's enemies; if for
+no other reason than their rage at her own abduction they might be
+difficult to control. Her father, in all probability, would
+willingly show mercy to the helpless man in the
+cavern&mdash;particularly after she told him of Ben's consideration
+and kindness&mdash;but she put no faith in Ray and Chan. She knew
+them of old. Besides, she remembered there was a further
+consideration,&mdash;that of a gold claim.</p>
+<p>Could Ben have told her the truth when he had maintained that
+they would kill him on sight if he did not destroy them first? Was
+it true that he had waged the war in defense of his own rights?
+Weeks and months had passed since she had seen her father's face:
+perhaps her old control of him could no longer be relied upon. If
+indeed their ownership of a rich claim depended upon Ben's death,
+Ray and Chan could not be trusted at all.</p>
+<p>She resolved to proceed with the utmost caution. Abruptly she
+turned out of the beaver marsh, where the moonlight might reveal
+her, and followed close to the edge of the timber, a course that
+could not be visible from beyond the lake. She approached the lake
+at its far neck, then followed back along the margin clear to the
+edge of the woods in which the fire was built.</p>
+<p>In her years in the woods Beatrice had learned to stalk, and the
+knowledge was of value to her now. With never a misstep she took
+down a little game trail toward the camp fire. She was within fifty
+yards of it now&mdash;she could make out three dark figures seated
+in the circle of firelight. Walking softly but upright she pushed
+within ninety feet of the fire.</p>
+<p>Then she waited, in doubt as to her course. She was still too
+far distant to hear more than the murmur of their voices. If she
+could just get near enough to catch their words she could probably
+glean some idea of their attitude toward Ben. She pushed on nearer,
+through the dew-wet brush.</p>
+<p>Impelled by the excitement under which she advanced, her old
+agility of motion had for the moment returned to her; and she crept
+softly as a fawn between the young trees. One misstep, one rustling
+branch or crackling twig might give her away; but she took each
+step with consummate care, gently thrusting the tree branches from
+her path.</p>
+<p>Once a rodent stirred beneath her feet, and she froze&mdash;like
+a hunting wolf&mdash;in her tracks. One of the three men looked up,
+and she saw his face plainly through the low spruce boughs. And for
+a moment she thought that this was a stranger. It was with a
+distinct foreboding of disaster that she saw, on second glance,
+that the man was Ray Brent.</p>
+<p>She had never seen such change in human countenance in the space
+of a few months. She did not pause to analyze it. She only knew
+that his eyes were glittering and fixed; and that she herself was
+deeply, unexplainably appalled. The man cursed once, blasphemously,
+his face dusky and evil in the eerie firelight, but immediately
+turned back to his talk. Beatrice crept closer.</p>
+<p>Now she was near enough to catch an occasional word, but not
+discern their thoughts. It was evident, however, that their
+conversation was of Ben and herself,&mdash;the same topic they had
+discussed nights without end. She caught her own name; once Chan
+used an obscene epithet as he spoke of their enemy.</p>
+<p>Her instincts were true and infallible to-night; and she was
+ever more convinced of their deadly intentions toward Ben. It was
+not wise to announce herself yet. Perhaps she would have to rely
+upon a course other than a direct appeal for aid. Now her keen eyes
+could see the whole camp: the three seated figures of the men,
+their rifles leaning near them, their supplies spread out about the
+fire.</p>
+<p>At one side, quite to the edge of the firelight, she saw a
+kyack&mdash;one of those square boxes that are hung on a pack
+saddle&mdash;which seemed to be heaped with jerked caribou or moose
+flesh. For the time of a breath she could not take her eyes from
+it. It was food&mdash;food in plenty to sustain Ben through his
+illness and the remaining weeks of their exile&mdash;and her eyes
+moistened and her hands trembled at the sight. She had been taught
+the meaning of famine, these last, bitter days. In reality she was
+now in the first stage of starvation, experiencing the first, vague
+hallucinations, the sense of incorporeality, the ever-declining
+strength, the constant yearning that is nothing but the vitals'
+submerged demand for food. The contents of the kyack meant
+<i>life</i> to herself and to Ben,&mdash;deliverance and safety
+when all seemed lost.</p>
+<p>A daughter of the cities far to the south&mdash;even a child of
+poverty&mdash;rarely could have understood the unutterable craving
+that overswept her at the sight of this simple food. It was
+unadorned, unaccompanied by the delicacies that most human beings
+have come to look upon as essentials and to expect with every meal:
+it was only animal flesh dried in the smoke and the sun. It not
+only attracted her physically; but in that moment it possessed real
+objective beauty for her; as it would have possessed for the most
+cultivated esthete that might be standing in her place. This girl
+was down to the most stern realities, and life and death hung in
+the balance.</p>
+<p>She went on her hands and knees, creeping nearer. Still she did
+not make the slightest false motion, creeping with an uncanny
+silence in the under shrubbery. And now the words came plain.</p>
+<p>"But we must be near," Chan was saying. "They can't be more than
+a mile or so from here. We'll find 'em in the morning&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"If he doesn't find us first and shoot up our camp," Ray
+replied. "I wish we'd built our fire further into the woods. Here
+we've looked all day without even finding a track except those
+tracks in the mud."</p>
+<p>"They might be beyond the marsh," Neilson suggested.</p>
+<p>"But Chan went over that way and didn't find a trace," Ray
+objected. "But just the same&mdash;we'll make a real search
+to-morrow. I believe we'll find the devil. And then&mdash;we can
+leave this hellish country and go back in peace&mdash;if we don't
+want to wait for the flood."</p>
+<p>Beatrice's eyes were on his face, wondering what growth of
+wickedness, what degeneracy had so filled his cruel eyes with light
+and stamped his face with evil. This was the man to whom she must
+look for mercy. Ben's life, if she led the three men to the cave,
+would be in his hands. She sensed from his authoritative tone that
+her father's control over him was largely broken. She hovered,
+terrified and motionless, in her covert.</p>
+<p>Ray reached for his rifle, glancing at the sights and drawing
+the lever back far enough to see the brass of its shells. Chan's
+lean face was drawn with a cruel glee.</p>
+<p>"You can't keep your hands off that gun, Ray," he said. "You
+sure are gettin' anxious."</p>
+<p>"I won't use it on him," Ray replied, slowly and carefully.
+"It's too good for him&mdash;except maybe the stock. He didn't lead
+me clear out here just to see him puff out and blow up in a minute
+with a rifle ball through his head. Just the same I want the gun
+near me, all the time."</p>
+<p>The two men looked at him, sardonic-eyed; and both of them
+seemed to understand fully what he meant. They seemed to catch more
+from the slow tones, so full of lust and frenzy that they seemed to
+drop from his lips in an ugly monotone, than they did from the
+words themselves. They took a certain grim amusement in these
+quirks of abnormal depravity that had begun to manifest themselves
+in Ray. The man's fingers were wide spread as he spoke, and his lip
+twitched twice, sharply, when he had finished.</p>
+<p>The words came clear and distinct to the listening girl. She
+tried to take them literally&mdash;that Ray would not shoot Ben!
+<i>"It's too good for him&mdash;except maybe the stock!"</i> Did he
+mean <i>that</i> too! Was there any possible meaning in the world
+other than that he was planning some unearthly, more terrible fate
+for the man she loved! She would not yet yield to the dreadful
+truth, yet even now terror was clutching at her throat, strangling
+her; and the cold drops were beading her brow. Still the dark drama
+of the fireside continued before her eyes.</p>
+<p>Chan suddenly turned to Neilson, evidently imbued with Ray's
+fervor. "What do you think of that, old man?" he asked menacingly.
+Thus Chan, too, had escaped from Neilson's dominance: plainly Ray
+was his idol now. It was also plain that he recognized attributes
+of mercy and decency in his grizzled leader that might interfere
+with his own and his companion's plans. "What's worrying
+me&mdash;whether you're goin' to join in on the sport when we catch
+the weasel!"</p>
+<p>Sport! The word was more terrible to Beatrice than the vilest
+oath he had used to emphasize it. She crouched, shivering. Watching
+intently, she saw Ray look up, too, waiting for the reply; and her
+father, sensing his lost dominance, bowed his head.</p>
+<p>"You could hardly expect me to let him off easy&mdash;seeing
+what he did to my daughter&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"What he done to your daughter ain't all&mdash;I don't care if
+he treated her like a queen of the realm all the time," Ray
+interrupted harshly. "That makes no difference to neither me nor
+Chan. The main thing is&mdash;he brought us out here, away from the
+claim&mdash;and gave us months of the worst hell I ever hope to
+spend. I guess you ain't forgotten what Chan found out in Snowy
+Gulch&mdash;that the claim's recorded&mdash;in old Hiram's name.
+This Darby's got a letter in his pocket from Hiram's brother that
+would stand in any court. We've got to get that first. If Darby was
+an angel I'd mash him under my heel just the same; we've gone too
+far to start crawfishing. Just let me see him tied up in front of
+me&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Beatrice did not linger to hear more. She had her answer: only
+in Ben's continued concealment lay the least hope of his salvation.
+These wolves about the fire meant what they said. But already her
+plans were shaping; and now she saw the light.</p>
+<p>In the kyack of venison lay her own and her lover's safety: it
+contained enough nutritious food to sustain them until the fall
+rains could swell the Yuga and enable them to escape down to the
+Indian encampment. Her mind was swift and keen as never before:
+swiftly she perfected the last detail of her plan. The canoe, due
+to Ben's foresight, was securely hidden in a maze of tall reeds on
+the lake shore: they were certain to overlook it. The cavern,
+however, was almost certain to be discovered in the next day's
+search. They must make their escape to-night.</p>
+<p>Ben, though terribly weakened, would be able to walk a short
+distance with her help. They could slip into the deepest forest,
+concealing themselves in the coverts until the three men had given
+up the search and gone away. She would take their robes and
+blankets to keep them warm; a camp fire would of course reveal
+their hiding place. The work could easily be accomplished in the
+midnight shadows: deliverance, salvation, life itself depended on
+the tide of fate in the next few hours.</p>
+<p>She intended to steal the kyack of dried meat without which Ben
+and herself could not live. She crept back farther into the
+underbrush; then waited, scarcely breathing, while the fire died
+down. Already the three men were preparing to go to their bunks.
+Chan had already lain down; her father was removing his coat and
+boots. Ray, however, still sat in the firelight.</p>
+<p>The moments passed. Would he never rise and go? The fire,
+however, was dying: its circle of ruddy light ever drew inward. The
+kyack was quite in the shadow now, yet she dared not attempt its
+theft until the three men were asleep. She waited, thrilling with
+excitement.</p>
+<p>Chan and Neilson were seemingly asleep, and now Ray was knocking
+the ashes from his pipe. He yawned, stretching wide his arms; then,
+as if held by some intriguing thought, sat almost motionless,
+gazing into the graying coals. Presently Beatrice heard him curse,
+softly, in the shadows.</p>
+<p>He got up, and removing his outer coat, rolled in his blankets.
+The night hours began their mystic march across the face of the
+wilderness.</p>
+<p>Now was the time to act. As far as she could tell, the three men
+were deeply asleep: at least the likelihood would be as great as at
+any time later in the night. The fire was a heap of gray ashes
+except for its red-hot center: the kyack was in gloom. Very softly
+she crept through the thickets, meanwhile encircling the dying
+fire, and came up behind it.</p>
+<p>Now it was almost in reach: now her hands were at its loops. She
+started to lift it in her arms.</p>
+<p>But disaster still dogged her trail. Ray Brent had been too wary
+of attack, to-night, to sink easily into deep slumber. He heard the
+soft movement as Beatrice lifted the heavy canvas bag off the
+ground; and with a startled oath sprang to his feet.</p>
+<p>He leaped like a panther. "Who's there?" he cried.</p>
+<p>Sensing immediate discovery the girl placed all her hope in
+flight. Perhaps yet she could lose her pursuers in the darkness.
+Still trying to hold the kyack of food that meant life to Ben, she
+turned and darted into the shadows.</p>
+<p>Like a wolf Ray sped after her. The moonlight showed her fleeing
+figure in the trees, and shouting aloud he sprang through the
+coverts to intercept her flight. The chase was of short duration
+thereafter. Emburdened by the heavy box she could not watch her
+step; and a protruding root caught cruelly at her ankle. She was
+hurled with stunning force to the ground.</p>
+<p>Desperate and intent, but in realization of impending triumph,
+Ray's strong arms went about her.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXIX"></a>
+<h2>XXXIX</h2>
+<p>For the second time in his life Ray Brent felt the sting of
+Beatrice's strong hand against his face. In the desperation of fear
+she had smote him with all her force. His arms withdrew quickly
+from about her; and her wide, disdainful eyes beheld a sinister
+change in his expression. The moonlight was in his eyes,
+silver-white; and they seemed actually to redden with fury, and
+again she saw that queer, ghastly twitching at the corner of his
+lips. The girl's defiance was broken with that one blow. She
+dropped her head, then walked past him into the presence of her
+father.</p>
+<p>Neilson and Chan were on their feet now, and they regarded her
+in the utter silence of amazement. Breathing fast, Ray came behind
+her.</p>
+<p>"Build up the fire, Chan," he said in a strange, grim voice. "We
+want to see what we've caught."</p>
+<p>Obediently Chan kicked the coals from under the ashes, and began
+to heap on broken pieces of wood. The sticks smoked, then a little
+tongue of yellow flame crept about the fuel. But still the
+emburdened silence continued&mdash;the white-faced girl in the ring
+of silent, watching men.</p>
+<p>Slowly the fire's glow crept out to her, revealing&mdash;even
+better than the bright moonlight&mdash;her wide, frightened eyes
+and the dark, speculative faces of the men. Then Ray spoke sharply
+in his place.</p>
+<p>"Well, why don't you question her?" he demanded of Neilson. "I
+suppose you know what she was doing. She was trying to steal food.
+It looks to me like she's gone over to the opposite camp."</p>
+<p>Her father sighed, a peculiar sound that seemed to come from
+above the tree tops, as if fast-flying waterfowl were passing
+overhead. "Is that so, daughter?" he asked simply.</p>
+<p>"I was trying to take some of your food&mdash;to Ben," Beatrice
+replied softly. "He's in need of it."</p>
+<p>"You see, they're on intimate terms," Ray suggested viciously.
+"Ben was in need of food&mdash;so she came here to steal it."</p>
+<p>But Neilson acted as if he had not heard. "Why didn't you speak
+to us&mdash;and tell us you were safe?" he asked. "We've come all
+the way here to find you."</p>
+<p>"Perhaps <i>you</i> did. If you had been here alone, I would
+have told you. But Ray and Chan came all the way here to find Ben.
+I heard what they said&mdash;back there in the brush. They intend
+to kill him when they find him. I&mdash;I didn't want him
+killed."</p>
+<p>Her father stared at her from under his bushy brows. "After
+carrying you from your home&mdash;taking you into danger and
+keeping you a prisoner&mdash;you still want to protect him?"</p>
+<p>The girl nodded. "And I want you to protect him, too," she said.
+"Against these men." Suddenly she moved forward in earnest appeal.
+"Oh, Father&mdash;I want you to save him. He's never touched
+me&mdash;he's treated me with every respect&mdash;done everything
+he could for me. When he was injured he told me to go back&mdash;to
+take what little food there was, and go back&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I can take it, then, that you're out of food?" Ray asked.</p>
+<p>"We're starving&mdash;and Ben's sick. Father, I make this one
+appeal&mdash;if your love for me isn't all gone, you'll grant it. I
+love him. You might as well know that now, as later. I want you to
+save the man your daughter loves."</p>
+<p>Chan cursed in the gloom, his lean face darkened; but Neilson
+made no answer. Ray in his place sharply inhaled; but the sullen
+glow in his eyes snapped into a flame.</p>
+<p>If Beatrice had glanced at Ray, she would have ceased her appeal
+and trusted everything to the doubtful mercy of flight,&mdash;into
+the gloom of the forest. As it was, she did not fully comprehend
+the cruel lust, like flame, that sped through his veins. She would
+have hoped for no mercy if she could have seen the strange, black
+surge of wrath in his face.</p>
+<p>"He has been kind to me&mdash;and he was in the right, not in
+the wrong. I know about the claim-jumping. Father, I want you to
+stand between him and these men&mdash;help him&mdash;and give him
+food. I didn't speak to you because I was afraid for
+him&mdash;afraid you'd kill him or do some other awful thing to
+him&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Slowly her father shook his head. "But I can't save him now. He
+brought this on himself."</p>
+<p>"Remember, he was in the right," the girl pleaded brokenly. "You
+won't&mdash;you couldn't be a partner to murder. That's all it
+would be&mdash;murder&mdash;brutal, terrible, cold-blooded
+murder&mdash;if you kill him without a fight. It couldn't be in
+defense of me&mdash;I tell you he hasn't injured me&mdash;but was
+always kind to me. It would be just to take that letter away from
+him&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"So he has the letter, has he?" Ray interrupted. He smiled
+grimly, and his tone was again flat and strained. "And he's
+sick&mdash;and starving. It isn't for your father to say, Beatrice,
+what's to be done with Ben. There's three of us here, and he's just
+one. Don't go interfering with what doesn't concern you,
+either&mdash;about the claim. You take us where he is, and we'll
+decide what to do with him."</p>
+<p>Her eyes went to his face; and her lips closed tight. Here was
+one thing, on this mortal earth, that she must not tell. Perhaps,
+by the mercy of heaven, they would not find the cave, hidden as it
+was at the edge of the little glade. The forests were boundless;
+perhaps they would miss the place in their search. She
+straightened, scarcely perceptibly.</p>
+<p>"Yes, tell us where he is," her father urged. "That's the first
+thing. We'll find him, anyway, in the morning."</p>
+<p>The girl shook her head. She knew now that even if they promised
+mercy she must not reveal Ben's whereabouts. Their rage and cruelty
+would not be stayed for a spoken promise. The only card she had
+left, her one last, feeble hope of preserving Ben's life, lay in
+her continued silence. Ray's foul-nailed, eager hands could claw
+her lips apart, but he could not make her speak.</p>
+<p>"I won't tell you," she answered at last, more clearly than she
+had spoken since her capture. "You said a few minutes ago I had
+gone over&mdash;to the opposite camp. I am, from now on. He was in
+the right, and he gave up his fight against you long ago. Now I
+want to go."</p>
+<p>Fearing that Neilson might show mercy, Ray leaped in front of
+her. "You don't go yet awhile," he told her grimly. "I've got a few
+minutes' business with you yet. I tell you that we'll find him, if
+we have to search all year. And he'll have twice the chance of
+getting out alive if you tell us where he is."</p>
+<p>She looked into his face, and she knew what that chance was. Her
+eyelids dropped halfway, and she shook her head. "I'd die first,"
+she answered.</p>
+<p>"It never occurred to you, did it, that there's ways of
+<i>making</i> people tell things." He suddenly whirled, with drawn
+lips, to her father. "Neilson, is there any reason for showing any
+further consideration to this wench of yours? She's betrayed
+us&mdash;gone over to the opposite camp&mdash;lived for weeks,
+willing, with Ben. I for one am never going to see her leave this
+camp till she tells us where he is. I'm tired of talking and
+waiting. I'm going to get that paper away from him, and I'm going
+to smash his heart with my heel. We've almost won out&mdash;and I'm
+going to go the rest of the way."</p>
+<p>Neilson straightened, his eyes steely and bright under his
+grizzled brows. Only too well he knew that this was the test.
+Affairs were at their crisis at last. But in this final moment his
+love for his daughter swept back to him in all its unmeasured
+fullness,&mdash;and when all was said and done it was the first,
+the mightiest impulse in his life. Ben had been kind to her, and
+she loved him; and all at once he knew that he could not yield him
+or her to the mercy of this black-hearted man before him.</p>
+<p>He had lived an iniquitous life; he was inured to all except the
+worst forms of wickedness; but for the moment&mdash;in love of his
+daughter&mdash;he stood redeemed. He was on the right side at last.
+His hand drew back, and his face was like iron.</p>
+<p>"Shut that foul mouth!" he cautioned, with a curious, deadly
+evenness of tone. "I haven't surrendered yet to you two wolves. If
+one of you dares to lay a hand on Beatrice, I'll kill him where he
+stands."</p>
+<p>Even as he spoke his thought went to his rifle, leaning against
+a dead log ten feet away. This was the moment of test: the jealousy
+and rivalry and hatred between himself and Ray had reached the
+crisis. And the spirit of murder, terrible past any demon of the
+Pit, came stalking from the savage forest into the ruddy
+firelight.</p>
+<p>Ray leered, his muscles bunching. "And I say to you, you're a
+dirty traitor too," he answered. "She ain't your daughter any more.
+She's Ben Darby's squaw. She's not fit for a white man to touch any
+more, for all her lies. You say one word and you'll get it
+too."</p>
+<p>And at that instant the speeding pace of time seemed to halt,
+showing this accursed scene, so savage and terrible in the eerie
+light of the camp fire, at the edge of the haunted, breathless
+darkness, in vivid and ghastly detail. Neilson leaped forward with
+all his power; and if his blow had gone home, Ray would have been
+shattered beneath it like a tree in the lightning blast. But Ray's
+arms were incredibly swift, and his rifle leaped in his hands.</p>
+<p>The barrel gleamed. The roar reechoed in the silence. Neilson's
+head bowed strangely; and for a moment he stood swaying, a ghastly
+blankness on his face; then pitched forward in the dew-wet
+grass.</p>
+<p>Beatrice's last defense had fallen, seriously wounded; and Ray's
+arm seized her as, screaming, she tried to flee.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XL"></a>
+<h2>XL</h2>
+<p>The shot that wounded Jeffery Neilson carried far through the
+forest aisles, re&euml;choing against the hills, and arresting, for
+one breathless moment, all the business of the wilderness. The
+feeding caribou swung his horns and tried to catch the scent; the
+moose, grubbing for water roots in the lake bottom, lifted his
+grotesque head and stood like a form in black iron. It came clear
+as a voice to the cavern where Ben lay.</p>
+<p>The man started violently in his cot. His entire nervous system
+seemed to react. Then there ensued a curious state in which his
+physical functions seemed to cease,&mdash;his heart motionless in
+his breast, his body tensely rigid, his breath held. There was an
+infinite straining and travail in his mind.</p>
+<p>The truth was that the sound acted much as a powerful stimulant
+to his retarded nervous forces. It was the one thing his resting
+nerve-system needed; it was as if chemicals were in suspension in a
+crucible, and at a slight jar of the glass they made mysterious
+union and expelled a precipitation. Almost instantly he recognized
+the sound that had reached him, with a clear and unmistakable
+recognition such as he had not experienced since the night of the
+accident, as the report of a rifle. His mind gave a great leap and
+remembered its familiar world.</p>
+<p>A rifle&mdash;probably discharged by Beatrice in a hunt after
+big game. It was true that their meat supply was low; he remembered
+now. Yet it was curious that she should be hunting after dark. The
+gloom was deep at the cavern mouth. Besides, he had always kept his
+rifle from her, fearing that she might turn it against him. He
+looked about him, trying to locate the source of the flood of light
+on the cavern floor. It was the moon, and it showed that the girl
+was gone. He started to sit up.</p>
+<p>But his left arm did not react just properly to the command of
+his brain. It impeded him, and its old strength was impaired. For a
+moment more he lay quiet, deep in thought. Of course&mdash;he had
+been injured by the falling tree. He remembered clearly, now. And
+the rifle had been broken.</p>
+<p>The only possible explanation for the shot was that a rifle had
+been fired by some invader in their valley&mdash;in all probability
+Neilson or one of his men. Beatrice's absence would also indicate
+this fact: perhaps she had already joined her father and was on her
+way back to Snowy Gulch with him. In that case, why had he himself
+been spared?</p>
+<p>He looked out of the door of the cavern, trying to get some idea
+of the lateness of the hour. The very quality of the darkness
+indicated that the night was far advanced. Neilson would not be
+hunting game at this hour. Was his own war&mdash;planned long
+ago&mdash;even now being waged in ways beyond his ken?</p>
+<p>His old concern for Beatrice swept through him. With
+considerable difficulty he got to his feet, then holding on to the
+wail, guided himself to the shelf where they ordinarily kept their
+little store of matches. He scratched one of them against the
+wall.</p>
+<p>In the flaring light his eyes made a swift but careful appraisal
+of his surroundings. The girl's cot had not been slept in; and to
+his great amazement he saw that their food supplies were spent.
+Still holding to the wall he walked to the cave mouth.</p>
+<p>Instantly his keen eyes saw the far-off gleam of the camp fire
+on the distant margin of the lake. For all that the hour was late,
+it burned high and bright. He watched it, vaguely conscious of the
+insidious advance of a ghastly fear. Beatrice was his ally
+now&mdash;if these weeks had sent home one fact to him it was
+this&mdash;and her absence might easily indicate that she was
+helpless in the enemy's hands. The thing suggested ugly
+possibilities. Yet he could not aid her. He could scarcely walk;
+even the knife that he wore at his belt was missing, probably
+carried by Beatrice when she gathered roots in the woods.</p>
+<p>But presently all questions as to his course were settled for
+him. His straining ear caught the faintest, almost imperceptible
+vibration in the air&mdash;a soundwave so dim and obscure that it
+seemed impossible that the human mind could interpret it&mdash;but
+Ben recognized it in a flash. In some great trouble and horror, in
+the sullen light of that distant camp fire, Beatrice had screamed
+for aid.</p>
+<p>Only by the grace of the Red Gods had he heard the sound at all.
+Except for the fact that the half-mile intervening was as still as
+death, and that half the way the sound sped over water, he couldn't
+have hoped to perceive it. If the wind had blown elsewhere than
+straight toward him from the enemy camp, or if his marvelous sense
+of hearing had been less acute, the result would have been the
+same; and there could have been no answer from this dark man at the
+cave mouth who stood so tense and still. Finally, by instinct as
+much as by conscious intelligence, he identified the sound, marked
+it as a reality rather than a fancy, and read the tragic need
+behind it. Swiftly he started down the glade toward her.</p>
+<p>Yet in a moment he knew that unless he conserved his strength he
+could not hope to make a fourth of the distance. At the first steps
+he swayed, half staggering. He had paid the price for his weeks of
+illness and his injuries. If he had been in a sick room, under a
+physician's care, he would have believed it impossible to walk
+unsupported across the room. But need is the mother of strength,
+and this was the test. Besides, he had had several days of
+convalescence that had put back into his sinews a measure of his
+mighty strength. Mostly he progressed by holding on to the trees,
+pulling himself forward step by step.</p>
+<p>Likely he would come too late to change the girl's fate. Yet
+even now he knew he must not turn back. If the penalty were death,
+there must be no hesitancy in him; he must not withhold one
+step.</p>
+<p>But it was a losing fight. The hill itself seemed endless; a
+hundred cruel yards of marsh must be traversed before ever he
+reached the nearest point by the lake. The enemy camp from where
+Beatrice had called to him lay on the far side of the lake, a
+distance of a full mile if he followed around the curving shore.
+And black and bitter self-hatred swept like fire through him when
+he realized that he could not possibly keep on his feet for so long
+a way.</p>
+<p>Was this all he had fought for&mdash;surging upward through
+these long, weary weeks out of the shadow of death&mdash;only to
+fall dead on the trail in the moment of Beatrice's need? Instantly
+he knew that nothing in his life, no other desire or dream, had
+ever meant as much to him as this: that he might reach her side in
+time. Even his desire for vengeance, in that twilight madness, like
+Roland's, that had shaped his destiny, had been wavering and feeble
+compared to this. And no moment of his existence had ever been so
+dark, so bereft of the last, dim star of hope that lights men's way
+in the deep night of despair.</p>
+<p>He gave no thought to the fact of his own helplessness against
+three armed men in case he did succeed in reaching their camp. The
+point could not possibly be considered. The imperious instincts
+that forced him on simply could not take it into reckoning. He knew
+only he must reach her side and put in her service all that he
+had.</p>
+<p>He fell again and again as he tried to make headway in the
+marsh. But always he forced himself up and on. Only too plain he
+saw that the time was even now upon him when he could no longer
+keep his feet at all. But still he plunged on, and with tragically
+slow encroachments the shore line drew up to him.</p>
+<p>But he could not go on. The fire itself was hardly a quarter of
+a mile distant, directly across the lake, but to follow the long
+shore was an insuperable mile. Already his leg muscles were failing
+him, refusing to the respond to the impulse of his nerves. Yet it
+might be that if he could make himself heard his enemies would
+leave the girl for a moment, at least&mdash;give her an instant's
+respite&mdash;while they came and dispatched his own life. Whatever
+they were doing to her, there in that ring of firelight, might be
+stayed for a moment, at least.</p>
+<p>But at that instant he remembered the canoe. He had always kept
+it hidden in a little thicket of tall reeds,&mdash;if only the girl
+had not removed it from its place in his weeks of sickness! He
+plunged down into the tall tules. Yes, the boat was still in
+place.</p>
+<p>It took all the strength of his weakened body to push it out
+from the reeds into the water. Then he seized the long pole they
+had sometimes used to propel themselves over the lake. Except for
+his injured arm, the paddle would have been better&mdash;he could
+have made better time and escaped the danger of being stranded in
+deep water&mdash;but he doubted that he could handle it with his
+faltering arm. He pushed off, putting most of the strain on his
+uninjured right arm.</p>
+<p>The canoe was strongly but lightly made, so that it could be
+portaged with greatest possible ease; and his strokes, though
+feeble, propelled it slowly through the water. The great, white
+full moon, beloved of long ago, looked down from above the tall,
+dark heads of the spruce and changed the little water-body into a
+miracle of burnished silver. In its light Ben's face showed pale,
+but with a curious, calm strength.</p>
+<p>The lake seemed untouched by the faint breath of wind that blew
+from the distant shore. The waters lay quiet, and the trout beneath
+saw the black shadow of the canoe as it passed. A cow moose and her
+calf sprang up the bank with a splash, frightened by the poling
+figure in the stern. And on the far shore, clear where the lake had
+its outlet in a small river, even more keen wilderness eyes might
+have beheld the black, moving dot that was the craft. But the
+distance was too far and the wind was wrong for the keen mind
+behind the eyes to make any sort of an interpretation.</p>
+<p>It might have been that Fenris the wolf, running with a female
+and two younger males that he had mastered that long-ago night on
+the ridge, paused in his hunting to watch and wonder. But his wild
+brute thoughts were not under the bondage of memory to-night; his
+savage heart was thrilled and full; and more than likely he did not
+even turn his head.</p>
+<p>Ray and Chan, standing beside their prisoner in their grisly
+camp on the opposite shore, might have beheld Ben's approach if
+weightier matters had not occupied their minds. They had only to
+walk to the edge of the firelight and stare down through a rift in
+the trees to see him. But they stood with the angry glare revealing
+a strange and sinister intentness in their drawn faces and ominous
+speculations in their evil eyes.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XLI"></a>
+<h2>XLI</h2>
+<p>It was a wilderness moon that rose over the spruce
+to-night,&mdash;white as new silver, incredibly large, inscrutably
+mysterious. The winds had whisked away the last pale cloud that
+might have dimmed its glory, and its light poured down with equal
+bounty on peak and hill, forest and yellow marsh. The heavy woods
+partook most deeply of its enchantment: tall, stately trees pale
+and nebulous as if with silver frost, each little stream dancing
+and shimmering in its light, every glade laid with a fairy
+tapestry, every shadow dreadful and black in contrast. The
+wilderness breathed and shivered as if swept with passion.</p>
+<p>The wilderness moon is the moon of desire; and all this great
+space of silence seemed to respond. It seemed to throb, like one
+living entity, as if in longing for something lost long ago&mdash;a
+half-forgotten happiness, a glory and a triumph that were gone
+never to return. No creatures that followed the woods trails were
+dull and flat to-night. They were all swept with mystery, knowing
+vague longings or fierce desires. It was the harvest moon; but here
+it did not light the fields so that men might harvest grain. Rather
+it illumined the hunting trails so that the beasts of prey might
+find relief from the wild lusts and seething ferment that was in
+their veins. But mostly the forest mood was disconsolate, rather
+than savage, to-night. The wild geese on the lake called their
+weird and plaintive cries, their strange complaints that no man
+understands; the loons laughed in insane despair; and the coyotes
+on the ridge wailed out the pain of living and the vague longings
+of their wild hearts.</p>
+<p>In the glory of that moon Fenris the wolf knew the same,
+resistless longings that so many times before had turned him from
+the game trails. There was something here that was unutterably dear
+to him,&mdash;something that drew him, called him like a voice, and
+he could not turn aside. Because he was a beast, he likely did not
+know the force that was drawing him again along the lake shore. Yet
+the souls of the lower creatures no man knows; and perhaps he had
+conscious longings, profoundly intense, for a moment's touch of a
+strong hand on his shoulder,&mdash;one never-to-be-forgotten caress
+from a certain god that had gone to a cave to live. It was true
+that his wild instincts, ever more in dominance these past weeks,
+would likely halt him at the cavern maw, permitting no intimacy
+other than to ascertain that all was well. They were too strong
+ever to brook man's control again. The moon was a moon of desire,
+but only because it was also the moon of memory,&mdash;and perhaps
+memories, stirring and exalting, were sweeping through him.
+Straight as an arrow he turned toward the cave.</p>
+<p>His followers&mdash;the gaunt female and two younger males, the
+structure about which the winter pack would form&mdash;hesitated at
+first. They had no commanding memories of the cavern on the far
+side of the lake. Yet Fenris was their leader; by the deep-lying
+laws of the pack they must follow where he led. They could not
+decoy him into the trails of game. As ever they sped swiftly,
+silently after him.</p>
+<p>In this forest of desires Ben knew but one,&mdash;that he might
+yet be of aid to Beatrice. But he knew in his heart that it was a
+vain hope. He was within a hundred yards of Ray's camp now, but the
+struggle to reach the lake and the poling across its waters had
+brought him seemingly to the absolute limit of his strength, clear
+to the brink of utter exhaustion. Never in his life before had he
+known the full meaning of fatigue,&mdash;fatigue that was like a
+paralysis, blunting the mechanism of the brain, burning like a slow
+fire in his muscles, poisoning the vital fluids of his nerves.
+Stroke after stroke, never ceasing!--The flame was high,
+crackling&mdash;just before him. Through a rift in the trees he
+could see the outline of two men and the slim form of the girl.
+Just a few yards more.</p>
+<p>But of all the desires that the moon invoked in the woods people
+there were none so unredeemed, so wicked and cruel as this that
+slowly wakened in the evil hearts of these two degenerate men,
+Beatrice's captors. She sensed it only vaguely at first. All the
+disasters that had fallen upon her had not taught her to accept
+such a thing as this: surely this would be spared her, at least.
+There is a kindly blind spot in the brain that often will not let
+the ugly truth go home.</p>
+<p>For a strange, still moment Ray's face seemed devoid of all
+expression. It was flat and lifeless as dark clay. Then Beatrice
+felt the insult of his quickening gaze.</p>
+<p>"Put a rope around her wrists, Chan," he said. "We don't want to
+take chances on her getting away."</p>
+<p>He spoke slowly, rather flatly. There was nothing that her
+senses could seize upon&mdash;either in his face or voice to
+justify the swift, strangling, killing horror that came upon her.
+He stood simply gazing, and as she met his gaze her lips parted and
+drew back in a grimace of terror; thus they stood until the blood
+began to leap fast in Chan's veins. She needed no further
+disillusionment. Chan spoke behind her, a startled oath cut off
+short, and she felt him moving swiftly toward her. It was her last
+instant of respite; and her muscle set and drew for a final,
+desperate attempt at self-defense.</p>
+<p>She wore Ben's knife at her belt, and her hand sped toward it.
+But the motion, fast as it was, came too late. Chan saw it; and
+leaping swiftly, his arms went about her and pinned her own arms to
+her sides.</p>
+<p>She tried in vain to fight her way out of his grasp. She
+writhed, screaming; and in the frenzy of her fear she all but
+succeeded in hurling him off. She managed to draw the knife clear
+of the sheath, yet she couldn't raise her arm to strike. Ray was
+aiding his confederate now; and in an instant more she was
+helpless.</p>
+<p>Their drawn faces bent close to hers. She felt their hot hands
+as they drew her wrists in front of her and fastened them with a
+rope. "Not too tight, Chan," Ray advised. "We don't want her to get
+uncomfortable before we're done with her. Don't tie her ankles; she
+can't run through the brush with her arms tied.&mdash;Now give her
+a moment to breathe."</p>
+<p>They stood on each side of her, regarding her with secret,
+growing excitement. Already they had descended too far to know pity
+for this girl. The wide-open eyes, so dark with terror and in
+contrast with the stark paleness of her face, the lips that
+trembled so piteously, the slender, girlish figure so helpless to
+their depraved desires moved them not at all.</p>
+<p>The scene was one of never-to-be-forgotten vividness. The
+tenderness and mercy, most of all the restraint that has become
+manifest in men in these centuries since they have left their
+forest lairs to live in permanent abodes, had no place here. About
+them ringed the primeval forest, ensilvered by the moon; the fire
+crackled with a dread ferocity; and at the edge of the thickets the
+motionless form of Jeffery Neilson lay with face buried in the
+soft, summer grass. All was silent and motionless, except the
+fierce crackling of the fire; except a curious, intermittent,
+upward twitching of the corner of Ray's lips.</p>
+<p>"So you and Ben are bunkies now, are you?" he asked slowly,
+without emphasis.</p>
+<p>But the girl made no reply, only gazing at him with starting
+eyes.</p>
+<p>"A traitor to us, and Ben's squaw!" He turned fiercely to Chan.
+"I guess that gives us right to do what we want to with her. And
+now she can yell if she wants to for her lover to come and save
+her."</p>
+<p>She did not even try to buy their mercy by informing them where
+they might find Ben. Only too well she knew that their dreadful
+intentions could not be turned aside: she would only sacrifice Ben
+without aiding herself. Ray moved toward her, his eyes deeply
+sunken, the pupils abnormally enlarged.</p>
+<p>"You haven't lost all your looks," he told her breathlessly.
+"That mouth is still pretty enough to kiss. And I guess you won't
+slap&mdash;this time&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He drew her toward him, his dark face lowering toward hers. She
+struggled, trying to wrench away from him. Helpless and alone, the
+moment of final horror was at hand. In this last instant her whole
+being leaped again to Ben,&mdash;the man whose strength had been
+her fort throughout all their first weeks in the wilds, but whom
+she had left helpless and sick in the distant cavern. Yet even now
+he would rise and come to her if he knew of her peril. Her voice
+rose shrilly to a scream. "Ben&mdash;help me!"</p>
+<p>And Ray's hands fell from her shoulders as he heard the
+incredible answer from the shore of the lake. The brush rustled and
+cracked: there was a strange sound of a heavy footfall,&mdash;slow,
+unsteady, but approaching them as certain as the speeding stars
+approach their mysterious destinations in the far reaches of the
+sky. Ray straightened, staring; Chan stood as if frozen, his hands
+half-raised, his eyes wide open.</p>
+<p>"I'm coming, Beatrice," some one said in the coverts. Her cries,
+uttered when her father fell, had not gone unheard. In the last
+stages of exhaustion, deathly pale yet with a face of iron, Ben
+came reeling toward them out of the moonlight.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XLII"></a>
+<h2>XLII</h2>
+<p>Ben walked quietly into the circle of firelight and stood at
+Beatrice's side. But while Ray and Chan gazed at him as if he were
+a spectre from the grave, Beatrice's only impulse was one of
+immeasurable and unspeakable thankfulness. No fate on earth was so
+dreadful but that it would be somewhat alleviated by the fact of
+his presence: just the sight of him, standing beside her, put her
+in some vague way out of Ray's power to harm. Exhausted, reeling,
+he was still the prop of her life and hope.</p>
+<p>"Here I am," he said quietly. "The letter's in my pocket. Do
+what you want with me&mdash;but let Beatrice go."</p>
+<p>His words brought Ray to himself in some degree at least. The
+ridiculous fear of the moment before speedily passed away. Why, the
+man was exhausted&mdash;helpless in their hands&mdash;and the
+letter was in his pocket. It meant <i>triumph</i>&mdash;nothing
+else. All Ray's aims had been attained. With Ben's death the claim,
+a fourth of which had been his motive when he had slain Ezram,
+would pass entirely to him,&mdash;except for such share as he would
+have to give Chan. His star of fortune was in the sky. It was his
+moment of glory,&mdash;long-awaited but enrapturing him at
+last.</p>
+<p>Neilson lay seriously wounded, perhaps dead by now. Whatever his
+injuries, he would not go back with them to share in the gold of
+the claim. The girl, also, was his prey,&mdash;to do with what he
+liked.</p>
+<p>"I see you've come," he answered. "You might as well; we'd have
+found you to-morrow." His voice was no longer flat, but rather
+exultant, boasting. "You thought you could get away&mdash;but we've
+shown you."</p>
+<p>Ben nodded. "You are&mdash;" he strained for the name he had
+heard Beatrice speak so often&mdash;"Ray Brent?" His eyes fell to
+the form of Neilson, wounded beyond the fire. "I see you've been at
+your old job&mdash;killing. It was you who killed Ezra
+Melville."</p>
+<p>Ray smiled, ever so faintly: this was what he loved. "You're
+talking to the right man. Anything you'd like to do about it?"</p>
+<p>Ben's face hardened. "There is nothing I can do, now. You came
+too late. But I would have had something to do if I had my rifle.
+I'm glad it was you, not Beatrice's father. I ask you
+this&mdash;will you accept my proposition. To take Ezram's letter,
+destroy it and me too&mdash;and let the girl go in safety?"</p>
+<p>Beatrice stretched her bound arms and touched his hairy wrist.
+"No, Ben," she told him quietly. "There's no use of trying to make
+such a bargain as that. Men that murder&mdash;and assault
+women,&mdash;won't keep their word."</p>
+<p>"They were about to attack you, were they?" His voice dropped a
+tone; otherwise it seemed the same.</p>
+<p>"Yes&mdash;just as you came."</p>
+<p>He turned once more to Ray, eyeing him with such a look of
+contempt and scorn that it smarted like a whiplash in spite of the
+protecting mantel of his new-found triumph. "Oh, you depraved
+dogs!" he told them quietly and distinctly. "You yellow, mongrel
+cowards!"</p>
+<p>Ray straightened, stung by the words. "And I'll make you wish
+you was dead before you ever said that," he threatened. "I'll tell
+you what you wanted to know a minute ago&mdash;and I tell you no. I
+won't make any deal with you. We'll do what we like to you, and
+we'll do what we like with your dirty squaw, too&mdash;the woman
+you've been living with all these months. We've got you where we
+want you. You're in no fix to make terms. Chan&mdash;put a rope
+around his legs and a gag in his rotten mouth!"</p>
+<p>They moved toward him simultaneously, and Ben summoned the last
+jot of his almost-spent strength to hurl them off. They did not
+need deadly weapons for this wasted form. Yet for the duration of
+one second Ben fought with an incredible ferocity and valor.</p>
+<p>He hurled Chan from his path, and his sound right arm leaped to
+Ray's throat in a death grip. For that one instant his old-time
+strength returned to him,&mdash;as to Samson as his arms went about
+the pillars of the temple. They found him no weakling, in that
+first instant, but a deadly, fighting beast, the "Wolf" Darby of
+the provinces,&mdash;his finger nails sinking ever deeper into the
+flesh of Ray's throat, his body braced against Chan's attack. And
+for all that Beatrice's arms were tied, she leaped like a she-wolf
+to her lover's aid.</p>
+<p>But such an unequal battle could last only an instant. Ray
+focused his attack upon Ben's injured left arm, Chan struck once at
+the girl, hurling her to the ground with a base blow, then lashed
+brutal blows into Ben's face. The burst of strength ebbed as
+quickly as it had come: his legs wilted under him, and he sank
+slowly to the ground.</p>
+<p>Maddened with battle, for a moment more Chan lashed cowardly
+blows into his face; and he left the brutal labor only to help Ray
+affix ropes about his ankles. Then the two conquerors stood erect,
+breathing loudly.</p>
+<p>Seemingly the utter limit of their brutality was
+reached,&mdash;but for the moment only. A strange and foreboding
+silence fell over the camp: only the sound of troubled breathing
+was heard above the lessening crackle of the fire. They did not
+turn at once again to the work of crushing Ben's life out with
+their fists and boots, nor did they restrain Beatrice as she
+crawled over the blood-stained grass to reach her lover's side.</p>
+<p>"Let her go," Ray said to Charley. "She can't help him any."</p>
+<p>It was true. They had put up their last defense. The girl crept
+nearer, lying almost prone beside him, and her soft hands stole
+over his bruised flesh. But no tears came now. She was past the
+kindly mercy of tears. She could only gaze at him, and sometimes
+dry half-sobs clutched at her throat. The man half-opened his eyes,
+smiling.</p>
+<p>Life still remained in his rugged body. Even the cruel test of
+the last hour had not taken that from him. The sturdy heart still
+beat, and the breath still whispered through his lips: there was
+life in plenty to afford such sport as Ray and Chan might have for
+him.</p>
+<p>The last, least quality of redemption&mdash;such magic and
+beauty as might have been wrought by the firelight dancing over the
+moonlit glade&mdash;was quite gone now. The powers of wickedness
+were in the ascendency, and this was only the abode of horror. Yet
+it was all tragically true, not a nightmare from which she would
+soon waken. This was the remote heart of Back There&mdash;a
+primeval land where the demons of lust and death walked
+unrestrained&mdash;and the shadow of the moonlit trees fell dark
+upon her.</p>
+<p>The back logs were burning dully now, and the coals were red,
+and Chan and Ray took seats on a huge, dead spruce to talk over
+their further plans. It was all easy enough. They could linger
+here, living mostly on meat, until the rising waters of the Yuga
+could carry them down to the Indian villages. Their methods and
+procedure in regard to Ben were the only remaining questions.</p>
+<p>For a few minutes they took little notice of the prone figures
+at the far edge of the fading firelight. In their hands they were
+as helpless as Jeffery Neilson, left already by the receding
+radiance to the soft mercy of the shadows. Attention could be given
+them soon enough. Their own triumph was beginning to give way to
+deep fatigue.</p>
+<p>Ben and Beatrice had talked softly at first, accepting their
+fate at last and trying to forget all things but the fact of each
+other's presence. They had kept the faith to-night, they had both
+been true; and perhaps they had conquered, in some degree, the
+horror of death. His right hand held hers close to his lips, and
+only she could understand the message in its soft pressure, and the
+gentle, kindly shadows in his quiet eyes. But presently her gaze
+fastened on some object in the grass beside him.</p>
+<p>He did not understand at first. He knew enough not to attract
+his enemies' attention by trying to turn. The girl relaxed again,
+but her hand throbbed in his, and her eyes shone somberly as if the
+luster of some strange, dark hope.</p>
+<p>"What is it?" he asked whispering.</p>
+<p>"I see a way out&mdash;for us both," she told him. She knew he
+would not misunderstand and dream that she saw an actual avenue to
+life and safety. "Don't give any sign."</p>
+<p>"Then hurry," he urged. "They may be back any instant. What is
+it?"</p>
+<p>"A way to cheat 'em&mdash;to keep them from torturing
+you&mdash;and to save me&mdash;from all the things they'll do to
+me&mdash;when you're dead. Oh, Ben&mdash;you won't fail
+me&mdash;you'll do it for me."</p>
+<p>He smiled, gently and strongly. "Do you think I'd fail you
+now?"</p>
+<p>"Then reach your good arm on the other side&mdash;soft as you
+can. There's a knife lying there&mdash;your own knife&mdash;they
+knocked out of my hand. They'll jump at the first gleam. You know
+what to do&mdash;first me, in the throat&mdash;then yourself."</p>
+<p>His face showed no horror at her words. They were down to the
+most terrible realities; and as she had said, this was the way out!
+The great kindness still dwelt in his eyes&mdash;and she knew he
+would do as she asked.</p>
+<p>One gleam of steal, one swift touch at the throat&mdash;and they
+would never know the unspeakable fate that their depraved captors
+planned for them. <i>It was no less than victory in the last
+instant of despair!</i> It was freedom: although they did not know
+into what Mystery and what Fear the act would dispatch them, it was
+freedom from Ray and Chan, none the less. And Ben welcomed the plan
+as might a prisoner, waiting in the death-cell, welcome a
+reprieve.</p>
+<p>He turned, groping with his hand. There was no use of waiting
+longer. The knife lay just beyond his reach; and softly he moved
+his body through the grass.</p>
+<p>But this gate to mercy was closed before they reached it. A
+sudden flaring of the fire revealed them&mdash;the gleam of the
+blade and Ben's stretching hand&mdash;and Ray left his log in a
+swift, catlike leap.</p>
+<p>If Ben had possessed full use of both hands there still might
+have been time to send home the two crucial blows, or at least to
+dispatch Beatrice out of Ray's power to harm. But his injured arm
+impeded him, and his hand fumbled as he tried to seize the hilt.
+With a sharp oath Ray crushed the blade into the ground with his
+heel; then kicked viciously at the prone body of his enemy.</p>
+<p>And at that first base blow his rage and blood-lust that had
+been gathering was swiftly freed. It was all that was needed to set
+him at the work of torture. For an instant he stood almost
+motionless except for the spasmodic twitching&mdash;now almost
+continuous&mdash;at his lips and for the slow turning of his head
+as he looked about for a weapon with which he could more quickly
+satiate the murder-madness in his veins. The knife appealed to him
+not at all; but his eye fell on a long, heavy club of spruce that
+had been cut for fuel. He bent and his strong hands seized it.</p>
+<p>As he swung it high the girl leaped between&mdash;with a last,
+frantic effort, wholly instinctive&mdash;to shield Ben's body with
+her own. But it was only an instant's reprieve. Chan had followed
+Ben, and sharing Ray's fiendish mood, jerked her aside. Ben raised
+himself up as far as he could at a final impulse to thrust the girl
+out of harm's way.</p>
+<p>Yet it was to be that Ray's murderous blow was never to go home.
+A mighty and terrible ally had come to Ben's aid. He came pouncing
+from the darkness, a gaunt and dreadful avenger whose code of death
+was as remorseless as Ray's own.</p>
+<p>It was Fenris the wolf, and he had found his master at last.
+Missing him at the accustomed place in the cave, he had trailed him
+to the lake margin: a smell on the wind had led him the rest of the
+way. He was not one to announce his coming by an audible footfall
+in the thicket. Like a ghost he had glided almost to the edge of
+the firelight, lingering there&mdash;with a caution learned in
+these last wild weeks of running with his brethren&mdash;until he
+had made up his brute mind in regard to the strangers in the camp.
+But he had waited only until he saw Ray kick the helpless form
+before him,&mdash;that of the god that Fenris, for all the wild had
+claimed him, still worshipped in his inmost heart. With fiendish,
+maniacal fury he had sprung to avenge the blow.</p>
+<p>And his three followers, trained by the pack laws to follow
+where he led, and keyed to the highest pitch by their leader's
+fury, leaped like gray demons of the Pit in his wake.</p>
+<br>
+<p>XLII</p>
+<p>As a young tree breaks and goes down in the gale Ray Brent went
+down before the combined attack of the wolves. What desperate
+struggle he made only seemed to increase their fury and shatter him
+the faster. Utterly futile were all his blows: his frantic,
+piercing screams of fear and agony raised to heaven, but were
+answered with no greater mercy than that he would have shown to Ben
+a moment before.</p>
+<p>Seemingly in an instant he was on his back and the ravening pack
+were about him in a ring. In that lurid firelight their fangs
+gleamed like ivory as they flashed, here and there, over his body
+and throat, and their fierce eyes blazed with pale-blue
+fire,&mdash;the mark and sign of the blood madness of the beasts of
+prey.</p>
+<p>Seemingly in a single instant the life had been torn from him,
+leaving only a strange, huddled, ghastly thing beside the dying
+fire. But the pack leaped from him at once. Fenris had caught sight
+of Chan's figure as he ran for the nearest tree and seemingly with
+one leap he was upon him. He sprang at him from the side; and his
+fangs gleamed once.</p>
+<p>He had struck true, his fangs went home, and the life went out
+of Chan Heminway in a single, neighing scream. He pitched forward,
+shuddered once in the soft grass, and lay still. The pack surged
+around his body, struck at it once or twice, then stood growling as
+if waiting for their leader's command.</p>
+<p>Before ever Ray fell, Ben had taken what measures of
+self-defense he could in case the pack, forgetting its master's
+master, might turn on himself and the girl. He had reached the
+knife hilt and severed the ropes about the girl's wrists. "Stay
+behind me," he cautioned. "Don't move a muscle."</p>
+<p>He knew that any attempt to reach and climb a tree would attract
+the attention of the pack and send them ravening about her. Again
+he knew that her life as well as his own depended on his control of
+the pack leader. He saw Chan go down, seemingly in a single
+instant, and he braced himself against attack. "Down, Fenris!" he
+shouted. "Down&mdash;get down!"</p>
+<p>The great wolf started at the voice, then stood beside the
+fallen, gazing at Ben with fierce, luminous eyes. "Down, down,
+boy," Ben cautioned, in a softer voice. "There, old
+fellow&mdash;down&mdash;down."</p>
+<p>Then Fenris whined in answer, and Ben knew that he was no longer
+to be feared. The three lesser wolves seemed startled, standing in
+a nervous group, yet growling savagely and eyeing him across the
+dying fire. For a moment Fenris's fury had passed to them, but now
+that his rage was dead, all they had left was an inborn fear of
+such a breed as this,&mdash;these tall forms that died so easily in
+their fangs. Fenris trotted slowly toward Ben, but with the true
+instincts of the wild his followers knew that this was no affair of
+fangs and death. He came in love, in a remembered comradeship, just
+as often he had led them to the mouth of the cavern, and they did
+not understand. They slowly backed away into the shadows, fading
+like ghosts.</p>
+<p>Ben's arms, in unspeakable gratitude, went about the shoulders
+of the wolf. Beatrice, sobbing uncontrollably yet swept with that
+infinite thankfulness of the redeemed, crept to his side. Fenris
+whined and shivered in the arms of his god.</p>
+<p>Quietude came at last to that camp beside the lake, in the far,
+hidden heart of Back There. Once more the blood moved with sweet,
+normal tranquillity in the veins, the thrill and stir died in the
+air, and the moonlight was beautiful on the spruce.</p>
+<p>The wolves had gone. Fenris's three brethren had slipped away,
+perhaps wholly mystified and deeply awed by their madness of a
+moment before; and from the ridge top they had called for their
+leader to join them. He had done his work, he had avenged the base
+blow that had seemed to strike at his own wild heart, he had
+received the caress he had craved,&mdash;and there was no law for
+him to stay. The female called enticingly; the wild game was
+running for his pleasure on the trails.</p>
+<p>Ben had watched the struggle in his fierce breast, and
+Beatrice's eyes were soft and wonderfully lustrous in the subdued
+light as she gave the wolf a parting caress. But he could not stay
+with them. The primal laws of his being bade otherwise. His was the
+way of the open trails, the nights of madness and the rapture of
+hunting&mdash;and these were folk of the caves! They were not his
+people, although his love for them burned like fire in his
+heart.</p>
+<p>He could not deny the call of his followers on the ridge. It was
+like a chain, drawing him remorselessly to them. Whining, he had
+sped away into the darkness.</p>
+<p>The fire had been built up, Beatrice had rallied her spent
+strength by full feeding of the rich, dried meat, and had done what
+she could for Neilson's injury. Ben, exhausted, had lain down in
+some of the blankets of his enemy's outfit. Neilson was not,
+however, mortally hurt. The bullet had coursed through the region
+of his shoulder, missing his heart and lungs, and although he was
+all but unconscious, they had every reason to believe that a few
+weeks of rest would see him well again.</p>
+<p>Beatrice bathed the wound, bandaged it the best she could, then
+covered him up warmly and let him go to sleep. And the time came at
+last, long past the midnight hour, that she crept once more to
+Ben's side.</p>
+<p>There was little indeed for them to say. The stress of the night
+had taken from them almost all desire to talk. But Ben took her
+hand in his feebly, and held it against his lips.</p>
+<p>"We're safe now," Beatrice told him, her eye's still bright with
+tears. "We've seen it through, and we're safe."</p>
+<p>Ben nodded happily. It was true: there was nothing further for
+them to fear. With the aid of the rifles of the three fallen, they
+could procure meat in plenty for their remaining time at Back
+There; besides, the store of jerked caribou and moose was enough to
+hold them over. When the rains came again, the three of
+them&mdash;Neilson and Ben and Beatrice&mdash;could glide on down
+to the Indian encampments in the canoe. Thence they could reach the
+white settlements beyond the mountains.</p>
+<p>Her glance into the future went still farther, because she knew
+certain news that as yet Ben had not heard. She had heard from
+Ray's lips that night that Ben's claim had been legally filed; he
+had only to return and take possession. It straightened out the
+future, promised success in the battle of life, gave him an
+interest to hold him in these northern forests. But she would not
+tell him to-night. It could wait for a more quiet hour.</p>
+<p>Presently she saw that he was trying to speak to her,
+whispering; trying to draw her ear down to his lips. She smiled,
+with an infinite tenderness. Dimly though he spoke, she heard him
+every word.</p>
+<p>"I love you," he told her simply. He watched her face, as
+intently as the three Wise Men watched the East, for a sign. And he
+saw it, clear and ineffably wonderful, in the stars that came into
+her eyes.</p>
+<p>"I love you," she answered, with equal simplicity. They lay a
+while in silence, blissful in this wonder each had for the other,
+wholly content just that their hands and lips should touch.</p>
+<p>The same miracle was upon them both; and the girl's thought,
+ranging far, seized upon a deep and moving discovery. "All this
+belongs to us," she told him, indicating with one movement of her
+arm the boundless solitudes about them. "This is our own country,
+isn't it, Ben? We can't ever&mdash;go away."</p>
+<p>It was true: they could never leave the forest for long. They
+were its children, bred in the bone. Their strong thews would waste
+in a gentler land. It was their heritage. They must not go where
+they could not behold the dark line of the forest against the
+sky.</p>
+<p>The fire burned down. The moon wheeled through the sky. The tall
+spruce saw the dawn afar and beckoned.</p>
+<p>THE END.</p>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11402 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #11402 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/11402)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Sky Line of Spruce, by Edison Marshall
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Sky Line of Spruce
+
+Author: Edison Marshall
+
+Release Date: March 2, 2004 [EBook #11402]
+Last updated: March 20, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SKY LINE OF SPRUCE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Audrey Longhurst and the Online Distributed Proofreading
+Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: He was leaning forward, aware of nothing in the
+world but the forthcoming crisis.
+FRONTISPIECE.]
+
+
+
+
+ THE SKY LINE
+ OF SPRUCE
+
+ By EDISON MARSHALL
+
+
+
+ AUTHOR OF
+
+"The Voice of the Pack," "The Strength of the Pines,"
+"The Snowshoe Trail," "Shepherds of the Wild," etc.
+
+
+
+ 1922
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+PART ONE
+THE WAKENING
+
+PART TWO
+THE WOLF-MAN
+
+PART THREE
+THE TAMING
+
+
+
+
+
+PART ONE
+
+THE WAKENING
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+The convict gang had a pleasant place to work to-day. Their road
+building had taken them some miles from the scattered outskirts of Walla
+Walla, among fields green with growing barley. The air was fresh and
+sweet; the Western meadow larks, newly come, seemed in imminent danger
+of splitting their own throats through the exuberance of their song.
+Even the steel rails of the Northern Pacific, running parallel to the
+stretch of new road, gleamed pleasantly in the spring sun.
+
+The convicts themselves were in a genial mood, easily moved to wide
+grins; and with a single exception they looked much like any other road
+gang at work anywhere in the land. An expert might have recognized
+purely criminal types among them: to a layman they suggested merely the
+lower grades of unskilled labor. Some of the faces were distinctly
+brutal; there was the sullen visage of a powerful negro who, with
+different environment, might have been a Congo prince; but the face of
+"Plug" Spanos, a notorious gunman who was by far the worst character in
+the gang, might have been that of an artless plow-boy in a distant land
+under a warm sun. There remained, however, the "exception." Curiously
+enough, whenever the warden's thought dwelt upon the inmates of his
+prison, classifying them into various groups, there was always one
+wind-tanned, vivid face, one brawny, towering form that seemed to demand
+individual consideration. The man who was listed on the records as Ben
+Kinney was distinctly an individual. He some way failed to classify
+among the groups of his fellows. Because he had been sent out to-day
+with the road gang the two armed guards had an interesting subject of
+conversation.
+
+In the first place he habitually did two men's work. He did not do it
+with any idea of trying to ingratiate himself with his keepers: no
+inmate of the institution at Walla Walla made any such mistake as that.
+He did it purely because he could not tone down his mighty strength and
+energy to stay even with his fellows. To-day Sprigley, the guard in
+first command of the gang, had placed him opposite Judy, the burly
+negro, but the latter was being driven straight toward absolute
+exhaustion. Yet Kinney at least knew how to subdue and direct the
+pouring fountain of his vitality and energy, for the robust blows of his
+pick fell with the regularity of a tireless machine. It was as if a wild
+stallion, off the plains, had been trained to draw the plow. His great
+muscles moved with marvelous precision; but for all the monotony and
+rhythm of his motions he conveyed no image of stolidity and dullness.
+
+He was a great, dark man, his skin darkly brown from exposure; his
+straight hair showed almost coal black in spite of the fact that it had
+but recently been clipped close; his eyebrows were similarly black; and
+black hairs spread down his hands almost to the finger nails and
+cropped up from his chest at his open throat. It was a mighty, deep,
+full chest, the chest of a runner and a fighter, sustained by a strong,
+flat abdomen and by powerful, sturdy legs. Yet physical might and
+development were not all of Ben Kinney. The image conveyed was never one
+of sheer brutality. For all their black hair, the large, brawny hands
+were well-shaped and sensitive; he had a healthy, good-humored mouth
+that could evidently, on occasion, be the seat of a most pleasant,
+boyish smile. He had a straight, good nose, rather high cheek bones, and
+a broad, brown forehead, straight rather than sloping swiftly like that
+of the negro opposite. But none of his features, nor yet his brawny
+form, caught and held the attention as did his vivid, dark-gray eyes.
+They were deeply dark, even against his deeply tanned face, yet now and
+then one caught distinct surface lights, denoting the presence of
+unmeasured animal spirits, and perhaps, too, the surprising health and
+vitality of the engine of his life. They were keen eyes, alert, fiery
+with a zealot's fire: evidently the eyes of a steadfast, headstrong,
+purposeful man. Some complexity of lines about them, hard to trace,
+indicated a recklessness, too; a willingness to risk all that he had for
+his convictions.
+
+"That's the queerest case we ever had here at Walla Walla," Sprigley
+told his fellow guard, as they watched the man's pick swing in the air.
+"Sometimes I wonder whether he ought to be here or not. Look at that
+face--he hasn't any more of a criminal face than I have."
+
+The other guard, Howard, scanned his companion's face with mock care.
+"That ain't sayin' so much for him," he observed. But at once he began
+to evince real interest. "I maintain you can't tell anything from their
+faces," he answered seriously. "There's nothin' in it. The man's a
+crook, isn't he? Wasn't he caught red-handed?"
+
+"Let me tell you about it. I was interested in the case and found out
+all I could concerning it. He apparently showed up in Seattle some time
+during the summer of 1919, a crook of the crooks, as you say. No one
+knows where he came from--and that's queer in itself. You know very well
+that his face and form are going to be remembered and noticed, yet he
+wasn't in any rogue's gallery, in any city. Desperate crook though he
+was, no one had ever heard of him before he showed up in Seattle.
+
+"The crooks down there called him 'Wild' Kinney, and were pretty well
+scared of him. Swanson, one of the lieutenants of the Seattle force,
+whom I know well as I know you, told me that he was a power, sort of a
+king in the underworld from the very first, largely because he was
+afraid of nothing, absolutely desperate, and willing to take any chance.
+He wasn't a hop-head, yet they all looked at him as sort of queer;
+though ready to follow him to the last ditch, yet some way they thought
+him off his head. And Swanson believes that his career of crime started
+_after_ he reached Seattle, not before--that he hadn't grown up to crime
+like most of the men in his gang. He didn't know anything about the
+'profession'--as far as skill went he was a rank amateur, but he made it
+up with daring and cunning. Once or twice he got in a fight down there,
+and they all agree he fought like a mad man, the most terrible fighter
+in the whole district, and it took about a half dozen to stop him."
+
+"You don't have to tell me that. Anybody who can swing a pick like
+that--"
+
+"Now let me tell you how they happened to catch him. Maybe you heard--he
+and Dago Frank were in the act of breaking into the Western-Danish
+Bank. Part of this I'm giving you now came straight from Frank himself.
+He says that they were in the alley, in the act of jimmying a window,
+and all at once Kinney straightened up as if something had hit him and
+let the jimmy fall with a thump to the pavement. Frank said he thought
+that the man had 'gone off his nut,' but it's my private opinion that he
+had been somewhat deranged all the time he was in Seattle, and he just
+came to, more or less, that minute. The man hardly seemed to know what
+he was doing. 'Have you lost your guts, Kinney?' Frank asked him; and
+Kinney stood there, staring like he didn't know he was being spoken to.
+He put his hands to his head, then, like a man with a headache. And the
+next instant a cop came running from the mouth of the alley.
+
+"Kinney was heeled, but he didn't even pull his gun. He still stood with
+his hands to his head. All his pards in the underworld always said he'd
+die before he'd give up, but he let the cop take him like he was a baby.
+Frank got away, but they got him, you remember, three weeks later. After
+some kind of a trial Kinney was sent down here."
+
+Sprigley paused and shifted his gun from his right to his left shoulder.
+"You'll say that's all common enough," he went on. "Now let me tell you
+another queer thing. You know, the chief has started a system here to
+keep track of all the prisoners, with the idea of making them good
+citizens when they get out. He has them all fill out a card. Well, when
+this man Kinney turned in his card, he had written 'Ben' on it, but the
+rest was absolutely blank.
+
+"Mr. Mitchell thought at first that the man couldn't write. It turned
+out, though, that he can write--an intelligent hand, and spell good too.
+Then Mitchell decided he was just sulking. But his second guess was no
+better than his first. I haven't got Mitchell persuaded yet, and maybe
+never will have him persuaded, but I'm confident I know the answer. The
+reason he didn't fill out that card was because he couldn't remember.
+
+"He couldn't remember where or when he was born, or who were his folks,
+or where he had come from, or how he had spent his life. He knew that
+'Ben,' his first name, sounded right to him, but 'Kinney' didn't--the
+reason likely being that Kinney was an alias adopted during his life as
+a criminal. I suppose you've noticed that queer, bewildered look he has
+when any one calls him Kinney. What his real name is he doesn't know. He
+can't even remember that. And the explanation is--complete loss of
+memory.
+
+"You mark my words, Howard--that man hasn't been a criminal always.
+Something got wrong with his head, and he turned crook--you might say
+that the criminal side that all of us has simply took possession of him.
+That night in the alley he came to himself--only his mind was left a
+blank not only in regard to his life as a criminal, but all that had
+gone before."
+
+"Then why don't you do something about it--besides talk? Mitchell says
+you're gettin' so you talk of nothin' else."
+
+"It's not for me to do anything about it. The man was a criminal. The
+State can't go any further than that. I suppose if every man was set
+free who wasn't, in the last analysis, responsible for his crimes, we
+wouldn't have anybody left in the penitentiary. He's in for five
+years--considering what he'll pick up here, it might as well be for
+life. Amnesia--that's what the doctors call it--amnesia following some
+sort of a mental trouble. In the end you'll see that I'm right."
+
+Sprigley was right. To Ben Kinney life was like a single pale light in
+a long, dark street. Complete loss of memory prevented him from looking
+backward. Complete loss of hope kept him from looking ahead.
+
+It had been this way for months now--ever since the night the policeman
+had found him, the "jimmy" dropped from his hands, in the alley. Heaven
+knows what he had done, what madness had been upon him, before that
+time. But as Sprigley had said, that night had marked a change. It was
+true that so far as facts went he was no better off: when he had come to
+himself he had found his mind a blank regarding not only his career of
+crime, but all the years that had gone before. Even his own name eluded
+him. That of Kinney had an alien sound in his ears.
+
+The past had simply ceased to exist for him; and because it is some way
+the key to the future, the latter seemed likewise blank,--a toneless
+gray that did not in the least waken his interest. Indeed the only light
+that flung into the unfathomable darkness of his forgetfulness was that
+which played in his dreams at night. Sometimes these were inordinately
+vivid, quite in contrast to the routine of prison life.
+
+He felt if he could only recall these dreams clearly they would
+interpret for him the mystery of his own life. He wakened, again and
+again, with the consciousness of having dreamed the most stirring,
+amazing dreams, but what they were he couldn't tell. He could only
+remember fragments, such as a picture of rushing waters recurring again
+and again--and sometimes an amazing horizon, a dark line curiously
+notched against a pale green background.
+
+They were not all bad dreams: in reality many of them stirred him and
+moved him happily, and he would waken to find the mighty tides of his
+blood surging fiercely through the avenues of veins. Evidently they
+recalled some happiness that was forgotten. And there was one phase, at
+least, of this work in the road gangs that brought him moving, intense
+delight. It was merely the sight of the bird life, abounding in the
+fields and meadows about the towns.
+
+There had been quite a northern migration lately, these late spring
+days. The lesser songsters were already mating and nesting, and he found
+secret pleasure in their cheery calls and bustling activity. But they
+didn't begin to move him as did the waterfowl, passing in long V-shaped
+flocks. That strange, wild wanderer's greeting that the gray geese
+called down to their lesser brethren in the meadows had a really
+extraordinary effect upon him. It always caught him up and held him,
+stirring some deep, strange part of him that he hardly knew existed.
+Sometimes the weird, wailing sound brought him quite to the edge of a
+profound discovery, but always the flocks sped on and out of hearing
+before he could quite grasp it. When the moon looked down, through the
+barred window of his cell, he sometimes felt the same way. A great,
+white mysterious moon that he had known long ago. It was queer that
+there should be a relationship between the gray geese and the cold,
+white satellite that rode in the sky. Ben Kinney never tried to puzzle
+out what it was; but he always knew it with a knowledge not to be
+denied.
+
+The last of the waterfowl had passed by now, but the northern migration
+was not yet done. The sun still moved north; warm, north-blowing winds
+blew the last of the lowering, wintry clouds back to the Arctic Seas
+whence they had come. And because the road work the convicts were doing
+brought them, this afternoon, in sight of the railroad right-of-way, Ben
+now and then caught sight of other wayfarers moving slowly, but no less
+steadily, toward the north. The open road beckoned northward, these
+full, balmy, late-April days, and various tattered men, mostly vagabonds
+and tramps, passed the gang from time to time on this same, northern
+quest.
+
+Ben thought about them as birds of passage, and the thought amused him.
+And at the sight of a small, stooped figure advancing toward him up the
+railroad right-of-way he paused, leaning on his pick.
+
+Because Ben had paused, for the first time in an hour, his two guards
+looked up to see what had attracted his attention. They saw what seemed
+to them a white-haired old wanderer of sixty years or more; but at first
+they were wholly at a loss to explain Ben's fascinated look of growing
+interest.
+
+It was true that the old man scarcely represented the usual worthless,
+criminal type that took to vagabondage. As he paused to scrutinize the
+convict gang neither insolence nor fear, one of which was certainly to
+be expected, became manifest in his face. They had anticipated certain
+words in greeting, a certain look out of bleary, shifty eyes, but
+neither materialized. True, the old man was following the cinder trail
+northward, but plainly he did not belong to the brotherhood of tramps.
+They saw that he was white-haired and withered, but upright; and that
+undying youth dwelt in his twinkling blue eyes and the complexity of
+little, good-natured lines about his mouth. Poverty, age, the hardships
+of the cinder trail had not conquered him in the least. He was small
+physically, but his skinny arms and legs looked as if they were made of
+high-tension wire. His face was shrewd, but also kindly, and the gray
+stubble on his cheeks and chin did not in the least hide a smile that
+was surprisingly boyish and winning. And when he spoke his cracked
+good-natured voice was perfectly in character, evidently that of a man
+possessing full self-respect and confidence, yet brimming over with easy
+kindliness and humor.
+
+Both guards would have felt instantly, instinctively friendly toward him
+if they had been free to feel at all. Instead they were held and amazed
+by the apparent fact that at the first scrutiny of the man's outline,
+his carriage and his droll, wrinkled face, the prisoner Kinney was moved
+and stirred as if confronted by the risen dead.
+
+The old man himself halted, returning Kinney's stare. The moment had,
+still half concealed, an unmistakable quality of drama. In the contagion
+of suppressed excitement, the other prisoners paused, their tools held
+stiffly in their hands. Kinney's mind seemed to be reaching, groping for
+some astonishing truth that eluded him.
+
+The old man ran, in great strides, toward him. "My God, aren't you Ben
+Darby?" he demanded.
+
+The convict answered him as from a great distance, his voice cool and
+calm with an infinite certainty. "Of course," he said. "Of course I'm
+Darby."
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+For the moment that chance meeting thrilled all the spectators with the
+sense of monumental drama. The convicts stared; Howard, the second
+guard, forgot his vigilance and stared with open mouth. He started
+absurdly, rather guiltily, when the old man whirled toward him.
+
+"What are you doing with Ben Darby in a convict gang?" the old wanderer
+demanded.
+
+"What am I doin'?" Howard's astonishment gave way to righteous
+indignation. "I'm guardin' convicts, that's what I'm a-doin'." He
+composed himself then and shifted his gun from his left to his right
+shoulder. "He's here in this gang because he's a convict. Ask my friend,
+here, if you want to know the details. And who might you be?"
+
+There was no immediate answer to that question. The old man had turned
+his eyes again to the tall, trembling figure of Ben, trying to find
+further proof of his identity. To Ezra Melville there could no longer be
+any shadow of doubt as to the truth: even that he had found the young
+man working in a gang of convicts could not impugn the fact that the
+dark-gray vivid eyes, set in the vivid face under dark, beetling brows,
+were unquestionably those of the boy he had seen grow to manhood's
+years, Ben Darby.
+
+It was true that he had changed. His face was more deeply lined, his
+eyes more bright and nervous; there was a long, dark scar just under the
+short hair at his temple that Melville had never seen before. And the
+finality of despair seemed to settle over the droll features as he
+walked nearer and took Darby's hand.
+
+"Ben, Ben!" he said, evidently struggling with deep emotion. "What are
+you doing here?"
+
+The younger man gave him his hand, but continued to stare at him in
+growing bewilderment. "Five years--for burglary," he answered simply.
+"Guilty, too--I don't know anything more. And I can't remember--who you
+are."
+
+"You don't know me?" Some of Ben's own bewilderment seemed to pass to
+him. "You know Ezra Melville--"
+
+Sprigley, whose beliefs in regard to Ben had been strengthened by the
+little episode, stepped quickly to Melville's side. "He's suffering loss
+of memory," he explained swiftly. "At least, he's either lost his memory
+or he's doing a powerful lot of faking. This is the first time he ever
+recalled his own name."
+
+"I'm not faking," Ben told them quietly. "I honestly don't remember
+you--I feel that I ought to, but I don't. I honestly didn't remember my
+name was Darby until a minute ago--then just as soon as you spoke it, I
+knew the truth. Nothing can surprise me, any more. I suppose you're kin
+of mine--?"
+
+Melville gazed at him in incredulous astonishment, then turned to
+Sprigley. "May I talk to you about this case?" he asked quietly. "If not
+to you, who can I talk to? There are a few points that might help to
+clear up--"
+
+Ordering his men to their work, Melville and Sprigley stood apart, and
+for nearly an hour engaged in the most earnest conversation. The
+afternoon was shadow-flaked and paling when they had finished, and
+before Sprigley led his men back within the gray walls he had arranged
+for Melville to come to the prison after the dinner hour and confer with
+Mitchell, the warden.
+
+Many and important were the developments arising from this latter
+conference. One of the least of them was that Melville's northward
+journey was postponed for some days, and that within a week this same
+white-haired, lean old man, dressed in the garb of the cinder trail, was
+pleading his case to no less a personage than the governor of the State
+of Washington in whom authority for dealing with Ben's case was
+absolutely vested. It came about, from the same cause, that a noted
+alienist, Forest, of Seattle, visited Ben Darby in his cell; and finally
+that the prisoner himself, under the strict guard of Sprigley, was taken
+to the capital at Olympia.
+
+The brief inquisition that followed, changing the entire current of Ben
+Darby's life, occurred in the private office of McNamara, the Governor.
+McNamara himself stood up to greet them when they entered, the guard and
+the convict. Ezra Melville and Forest, the alienist from Seattle, were
+already in session. The latter conducted the examination.
+
+He tried his subject first on some of the most simple tests for sanity.
+It became evident at once, however, that except for his amnesia Ben's
+mind was perfectly sound: he passed all general intelligence tests with
+a high score, he conversed easily, he talked frankly of his symptoms. He
+had perfect understanding of the general sweep of events in the past
+twenty years: his amnesia seemed confined to his own activities and the
+activities of those intimately connected with him. Where he had been,
+what he had done, all the events of his life up to the night of his
+arrest remained, for all his effort to remember them, absolutely in
+darkness.
+
+"You don't remember this man?" Forest asked him quietly, indicating
+Ezra Melville.
+
+Again Ben's eyes studied the droll, gray face. "With the vaguest kind of
+memory. I know I've seen him before--often. I can't tell anything else."
+
+"He's a good friend of your family. He knew your folks. I should say he
+was a _very_ good friend, to take the trouble and time he has, in your
+behalf."
+
+Ben nodded. He did not have to be told that fact. The explanation,
+however, was beyond him.
+
+Forest leaned forward. "You remember the Saskatchewan River?"
+
+Ben straightened, but the dim images in his mind were not clear enough
+for him to answer in the affirmative. "I'm afraid not."
+
+Melville leaned forward in his chair. "Ask him if he remembers winning
+the canoe race at Lodge Pole--or the time he shot the Athabaska Rapids."
+
+Ben turned brightly to him, but slowly shook his head. "I can't remember
+ever hearing of them before."
+
+"I think you would, in time," Forest remarked. "They must have been
+interesting experiences. Now what do these mean to you?--Thunder
+Lake--Abner Darby--Edith Darby--MacLean's College----"
+
+Ben relaxed, focusing his attention on the names. For the instant the
+scene about him, the anxious, interested faces, faded from his
+consciousness. Thunder Lake! Somewhere, some time, Thunder Lake had had
+the most intimate associations with his life. The name stirred him and
+moved him; dim voices whispered in his ears about it, but he couldn't
+quite catch what they said. He groped and reached in vain.
+
+There was no doubt but that an under-consciousness had full knowledge
+of the name and all that it meant. But it simply could not reach that
+knowledge up into his conscious mind.
+
+Abner Darby! It was curious what a flood of tenderness swept through him
+as, whispering, he repeated the name. Some one old and white-haired had
+been named Abner Darby: some one whom he had once worshipped with the
+fervor of boyhood, but who had leaned on his own, strong shoulders in
+latter years. Since his own name was Darby, Abner Darby was, in all
+probability, his father; but his reasoning intelligence, rather than his
+memory, told him so.
+
+The name of Edith Darby conjured up in his mind a childhood playmate,--a
+girl with towzled yellow curls and chubby, confiding little hands....
+But these dim memory-pictures went no further: there were no later
+visions of Edith as a young woman, blossoming with virgin beauty. They
+stopped short, and he had a deep, compelling sense of grief. The child,
+unquestionably a sister, had likely died in early years. The third name
+of the three, MacLean's College, called up no memories whatever.
+
+"I can hardly say that I remember much about them," he responded at
+last. "I think they'll come plainer, though, the more I think about
+them. I just get the barest, vague ideas."
+
+"They'll strengthen in time, I'm sure," Forest told him. "Put them out
+of your mind, for now. Let it be blank." The alienist again leaned
+toward him, his eyes searching. There ensued an instant's pause,
+possessing a certain quality of suspense. Then Forest spoke quickly,
+sharply. "_Wolf_ Darby!"
+
+In response a curious tremor passed over Ben's frame, giving in some
+degree the effect of a violent start. "_Wolf_ Darby," he repeated
+hesitantly. "Why do you call me that?"
+
+"The very fact that you know the name refers to you, not some one else,
+shows that that blunted memory of yours has begun to function in some
+degree. Now think. What do you know about 'Wolf' Darby?"
+
+Ben tried in vain to find an answer. A whole world of meaning lingered
+just beyond the reach of his groping mind; but always it eluded him. It
+was true, however, that the name gave him a certain sense of pleasure
+and pride, as if it had been used in compliment to some of his own
+traits. Far away and long ago, men had called _him_ "Wolf" Darby: he
+felt that perhaps the name had carried far, through many sparsely
+settled districts. But what had been the occasion for it he did not
+know.
+
+He described these dim memory pictures; and Forest's air of satisfaction
+seemed to imply that his own theories in regard to Ben's case were
+receiving justification. He appeared quite a little flushed, deeply
+intent, when he turned to the next feature of the examination. He
+suddenly spoke quietly to old Ezra Melville; and the latter put a small,
+cardboard box into his hands.
+
+"I want you to see what I have here," Forest told Ben. "They were your
+own possessions once--you sent them yourself to Abner Darby, your late
+father--and I want you to see if you remember them."
+
+Ben's eyes fastened on the box; and the others saw a queer drawing of
+the lines of his face, a curious tightening and clasping of his fingers.
+There was little doubt but that his subconsciousness had full cognizance
+of the contents of that box. He was trembling slightly, too--in
+excitement and expectation--and Ezra Melville, suddenly standing erect,
+was trembling too. The moment was charged with the uttermost suspense.
+
+Evidently this was the climax in the examination. Even McNamara, the
+Governor, was breathless with interest in his chair; Forest had the rapt
+look of a scientist in some engrossing experiment. He opened the box,
+taking therefrom a roll of white cotton. This he slowly unrolled,
+revealing two small, ribboned ornaments of gold or bronze.
+
+Ben's starting eyes fastened on them. No doubt he recognized them. A
+look of veritable anguish swept his brown face, and all at once small
+drops of moisture appeared on his brow and through the short hairs at
+his temples. The dark scar at his temple was suddenly brightly red from
+the pounding blood beneath.
+
+"The Victoria Cross, of course," he said slowly, brokenly. "I won it,
+didn't I--the day--that day at Ypres--the day my men were trapped--"
+
+His words faltered then. The wheels of _his_ memory, starting into
+motion, were stilled once more. Again the great darkness dropped over
+him; there were only the medals left in their roll of cotton, and the
+broken fragments of a story--of some wild, stirring event of the war
+just gone--remaining in his mind. Yet to Forest the experiment was an
+unqualified success.
+
+"There's no doubt of it!" he exclaimed. He turned to McNamara, the
+Governor. "His brain is just as sound as yours or mine. With the right
+environment, the right treatment, he'd be on the straight road to
+recovery. In a general way of speaking he has recovered now, largely,
+from the purely temporary trouble that he had before."
+
+McNamara focused an intent gaze first on Ben, then on the alienist. "It
+is, then--as you guessed."
+
+"Absolutely. The night of his arrest marked the end of his trouble; you
+might say that his brain simply snapped back into health and began to
+function normally again, after a period of temporary mania from
+shell-shock. It is true that his memory was left blank, but there
+doesn't seem to be any organic reason for it to be blank--other than
+lack of incentive to remember. Catch me up, if you don't follow me. In
+other words, he has been slowly convalescing since that night: under the
+proper stimuli I have no doubt that everything would come back to him."
+
+"And our friend here--Melville--offers to supply those stimuli."
+
+"Exactly. And it's up to you to say whether he gets a chance."
+
+Thoughtfully the executive drummed his desk with his pencil. Presently a
+smile, markedly boyish and pleasant, broke over his face. More than
+once, in the line of duty imposed by his high office, he had been
+obliged to make decisions contrary to every dictate of mercy. He was all
+the more pleased at this opportunity to do, with a clear conscience, the
+thing that his kindness prompted. He turned slowly in his chair.
+
+"Darby, I suppose you followed what the doctor said?" he asked easily.
+
+"Fairly well, I think."
+
+"I'll review it, if I may. It seems, Ben, that you have been the victim
+of a strange set of unfortunate circumstances. Due to the efforts of an
+old family friend--a most devoted and earnest friend if I may say
+so--we've looked up your record, and now we know more about you than you
+know about yourself. You served in France with Canadian troops and
+there, you will be proud to know, you won among other honors the highest
+honor that the Government of England can award a hero. There you were
+shell-shocked, in the last months of the war.
+
+"You did not return to your home. Shell-shock, Forest tells me, is a
+curious thing, resulting in many forms of mania. Yours led you into
+crime. For some months you lived as a desperate criminal in Seattle. You
+came to yourself in the act of breaking into a bank, only to find that
+your memory of not only your days of crime but all that had gone before
+was left a blank. That night, as you know, marked your arrest.
+
+"Forest has just explained that you are organically sound--that the
+recovery of your memory is just a matter of time and the proper stimuli.
+Now, Ben, it isn't the purpose of this State to punish men when they are
+not responsible for their deeds. Melville tells me that your record, in
+your own home, was the best; your war record alone, I believe, would
+entitle you to the limit of mercy from the State. I don't see how we can
+hold you responsible for deeds done while you were mentally disabled
+from shell-shock.
+
+"All you need for complete recovery, to call everything back in your
+mind, is the proper stimuli. At least that is the opinion of Doctor
+Forest. What those proper stimuli are of course no one knows for
+sure--but Doctor Forest has a theory; and I think he will tell you that
+he will share the credit for it with the same man who has been your
+friend all the way through. They think they know what is best for you.
+The final decision has been put up to me as to whether or not they shall
+be permitted to give it a trial.
+
+"This good friend of yours has offered to try to put it through. He has
+a plan outlined that he'll tell you of later, that will not only be the
+best possible influence toward recalling your memory, but will also give
+you a clean, new start in life. A chance for every success.
+
+"So you needn't return to Walla Walla, Darby. I'm going to parole
+you--under the charge of your benefactor. Melville, from now on it's up
+to you."
+
+The little, withered gray man looked very solemn as he rose. The others
+were stricken instantly solemn too, surprised that the droll smile they
+were so used to seeing had died on the homely, kindly face. Even his
+twinkling eyes were sobered too.
+
+Vaguely amused, yet without scorn, McNamara and Forest got up to shake
+his hand. "I'll look after him," Melville assured them. "Never fear for
+that."
+
+Slight as he was, wasted by the years, his was a figure of unmistakable
+dignity as he thanked them, gravely and earnestly, for their kindness in
+Ben's behalf. Soon after he and his young charge went out together.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+There was a great house-cleaning in the dome of the heavens one
+memorable night that flashed like a jewel from the murky desolation of a
+rainy spring. The little winds came in troops, some from the sea, some
+with loads of balsam from the great forests of the Olympic Peninsula,
+and some, quite tired out, from the stretching sage plains to the east,
+and they swept the sky of clouds as a housekeeper sweeps the ceiling of
+cobwebs. Not a wisp, not one trailing streamer remained.
+
+The Seattle citizenry, for the first time in some weeks, recalled the
+existence of the stars. These emerged in legions and armies, all the way
+from the finest diamond dust to great, white spheres that seemed near
+enough to reach up and touch. Little forgotten stars that had hidden
+away since Heaven knows when in the deepest recesses of the skies came
+out to join in the celebration. Aged men, half blind, beheld so many
+that they thought their sight was returning to them, and youths saw
+whole constellations that they had never beheld before. They continued
+their high revels until a magnificent moon rose in the east, too big and
+too bright to compete with.
+
+It was not just a crescent moon, about to fade away, or even a rain
+moon--one of those standing straight up in the sky so that water can run
+out as out of a dipper. It was almost at its full, large and nearly
+round, and it made the whole city, which is rather like other cities in
+the daylight, seem a place of enchantment. It was so bright that the
+electric signs along Second Avenue were not even counter-attractions.
+
+No living creature who saw it remained wholly unmoved by it. Wary young
+men, crafty and slick as foxes, found themselves proposing to their
+sweethearts before they could catch themselves; and maidens who had
+looked forward to some years yet of independent gaiety found themselves
+accepting. Old tom-cats went wooing; old spinsters got out old letters;
+old husbands thought to return and kiss their wives before venturing
+down to old, moth-eaten clubs. Old dogs, too well-bred to howl, were
+lost and absent-minded with dreams that were older than all the rest of
+these things put together.
+
+But to no one in the city was the influence of the moon more potent than
+to Ben Darby, once known as "Wolf" Darby through certain far-spreading
+districts, and now newly come from the State capital, walking Seattle's
+streets with his ward and benefactor, Ezra Melville. No matter how
+faltering was his memory in other regards, the moon, at least, was an
+old acquaintance. He had known it in the nights when its light had
+probed into his barred cell; but his intimate acquaintance with it had
+begun long, long before that. Not even the names that the alienist,
+Forest, had spoken--the names of places and people close to his own
+heart--stirred his memory like the sight of the mysterious sphere
+rolling through the empty places of the sky. It recalled, clearer than
+any other one thing, the time and place of his early years.
+
+He could not put into words just how it affected him. From first to
+last, even through his days of crime, it had been the one thing
+constant--the unchanging symbol--that in any manner connected his
+present with his shadowed past. It had served to recall in him, more
+than any other one thing, the fact that there was a past to look
+for--the assurance that somewhere, far away, he had been something more
+than a reckless criminal in city slums. The love he had for it was an
+old love, proving to him conclusively that his past life had been
+intimately associated, some way, with moonlight falling in open places.
+Yet the mood that was wakened in him went even farther. It was as if the
+sight of the argent satellite stirred and moved deep-buried instincts
+innate in him, in no way connected with any experience of his immediate
+life. Rather it was as if his love for it were a racial love, reaching
+back beyond his own life: something inborn in him. It was as if he were
+recalling it, not alone from his own past, but from a racial existence a
+thousand-thousand years before his own birth. His memory was strangely
+stifled, but, oh, he remembered the moon! Forest had spoken of stimuli!
+The mere sight of the blue-white beams was the best possible stimulus to
+call him to himself.
+
+Ezra Melville and he walked under it, talking little at first, and
+mostly the old, blue twinkling eyes watched his face. Seemingly with no
+other purpose than to escape the bright glare of the street lights they
+walked northward along the docks, below Queen Anne Hill, passed old Rope
+Walk, through the suburb of Ballard, finally emerging on the Great
+Northern Railroad tracks heading toward Vancouver and the Canadian
+border. For all that Ben's long legs had set a fast pace Melville kept
+cheerfully beside him throughout the long walk, seemingly without trace
+of fatigue.
+
+They paused at last at a crossing, and Ben faced the open fields.
+Evidently, before crime had claimed him, he had been deeply sensitive to
+nature's beauty. Ezra saw him straighten, his dark, vivid face rise; his
+quiet talk died on his lips. Evidently the peaceful scene before him
+went home to him very straight. He was very near thralldom from some
+quality of beauty that dwelt here, some strange, deep appeal that the
+moonlit realm made to his heart.
+
+For the moment Ben had forgotten the old, tried companion at his side.
+Vague memories stirred him, trying to convey him an urgent message. He
+could all but hear: the sight of the meadows, ensilvered under the moon,
+were making many things plain to him which before were shadowed and
+vague. The steel rails gleamed like platinum, the tree tops seemed to
+have white, molten metal poured on them. It was hard to take his eyes
+off those moonlit trees. They got to him, deep inside; thrilling to him,
+stirring. Perhaps in his Lost Land the moon shone on the trees this same
+way.
+
+There were no prison walls around him to-night. The high buildings
+behind him, pressing one upon another, had gone to sustain the feeling
+of imprisonment, but it had quite left him now. There were no cold,
+watchful lights,--only the moon and the stars and an occasional mellow
+gleam from the window of a home. There was scarcely any sound at all;
+not even a stir--as of prisoners tossing and uneasy in their cells. His
+whole body felt rested.
+
+The air was marvelously sweet. Clover was likely in blossom in nearby
+fields. He breathed deep, an unknown delight stealing over him. He stole
+on farther, into the mystery of the night--ravished, tingling and almost
+breathless from an inner and inexplicable excitement. Melville walked
+quietly beside him.
+
+Forest had given over the case: it was Melville's time for experiments
+to-night. All the way out he had watched his patient, sounding him,
+studying his reactions and all that he had beheld had gone to strengthen
+his own convictions. And now, after this moment in the meadows, the old
+man was ready to go on with his plan.
+
+"Let's set down here," he invited casually. Ben started, emerging from
+his revery. The old man's cheery smile had returned, in its full charm,
+to his droll face. "You'll want to know what it's all about--and what I
+have in mind. And I sure think you've done mighty well to hold onto your
+patience this long."
+
+He sat himself on the rail, and Ben quietly took a seat beside him.
+"There are plenty of things I'd like to know," he admitted.
+
+"And plenty of things I ain't goin' to tell you, neither--for the reason
+that Forest advised against it," Ezra went on. "I don't understand
+it--but he says you've got a lot better chance to get your memory
+workin' clear again if things are recalled to you by the aid of
+'stimuli' instead of having any one tell you. I've agreed to supply the
+'stimuli.'
+
+"I don't see any harm in tellin' you that the guesses you've already
+made are right. Your name is Ben Darby--and you used to be known as
+'Wolf' Darby--for reasons that sooner or later you may know. Abner Darby
+was your father. Edith Darby was your sister that ain't no more. You
+went awhile to MacLean's College, in Ontario.
+
+"Now, Ben, I'm going to put a proposition up to you. I'm hoping you'll
+see fit to accept it. And I might as well say right here, that while
+it's the best plan possible to bring you back your memory, and that
+while it offers just the kind of 'stimuli' you're supposed to need,
+neither 'stimuli' nor stimulus or stimulum has got very much to do with
+it. I argued that point mighty strong because I knew it would appeal to
+Forest, and through him, to the governor. I don't see it makes a whale
+of a lot of difference whether you get your memory back or not.
+
+"Maybe you don't foller me. But you know and I know you're all right
+now, remembering clear enough everything that happened since you was
+arrested, and I don't see what difference it makes whether or not you
+remember who your great-aunt was, and the scrapes you got in as a kid.
+You can talk and walk and figger, get by in any comp'ny, and you suit me
+for a buddy just as you are. However, Forest seemed to think it was
+mighty important--and it may be.
+
+"The reason I'm goin' to take you where I'm goin' to take you is for
+your own good. I'm sort of responsible for you, bein' your folks are
+dead. I know you from head to heel, and I think I know what's good for
+you, what you can do and what you can't do and where you succeed and
+where you fail. And I'll say right here you wasn't born to be no gangman
+in a big city like Seattle. You'll find that isn't your line at all."
+
+"I'm willing to take your word for that, Mr. Melville," Ben interposed
+quietly.
+
+"And I might say, now a good time as any, to let up on the '_Mister_.'
+My name is Ezra Melville, and I've been known as 'Ezram' as long as I
+can remember, to my friends. The Darbys in particular called me that,
+and you're a Darby.
+
+"I'll say in the beginning I can't do for you all I'd like to do, simply
+because I haven't the means. The first time you saw me I was walkin'
+ties, and you'll see me walkin' some more of 'em before you're done. I
+know you ain't got any money, and due to the poker habit I ain't got
+much either--in spite of the fact I've done two men's work for something
+over forty years. On this expedition to come we'll have to go on the
+cheaps. No Pullmans, no hotels--sleeping out the hay when we're caught
+out at night. Maybe ridin' the blinds, whenever we can. I'm awful sorry,
+but it jest can't be helped. But I will say--when it comes to work I can
+do my full share, without kickin'."
+
+Ben stared in amazement. It was almost as if the old man were pleading a
+case, rather than giving glorious alms to one to whom hope had seemed
+dead. Ben tried to cut in, to ask questions, but the old man's words
+swept his own away.
+
+"To begin at the beginning, I've got a brother--leastwise I had him a
+few weeks ago--Hiram Melville by name," Ezram went on. "You'd remember
+him well enough. He was a prospector up to a place called Snowy Gulch--a
+town way up in the Caribou Mountains, in Canada. Some weeks ago, herdin'
+cattle in Eastern Oregon, I got a letter from him, and started north,
+runnin' into you on the way up. The letter's right here."
+
+He drew a white envelope from his coat pocket, opening it slowly. "This
+is a real proposition, son," he went on in a sobered voice. "I'm mighty
+glad that I've got something, at least worth lookin' into, to let you in
+on. I only wish it was more."
+
+"Why should you want to let me in on anything?" Ben asked clearly.
+
+The direct question received only a stare of blank amazement from Ezram.
+"Why should I--" he repeated, seemingly surprised out of his life by the
+question. "Shucks, and quit interruptin' me. But I'll say right here
+I've got my own ideas, if you must know. Didn't I hear that while you
+was rampin' around the underworld, you showed yourself a mighty good
+fighter? Well, there's likely to be some fightin' where we're goin', and
+I want some one to do it besides myself. If there ain't fightin', at
+least they'll be worklots of work. Maybe I'm gettin' a little too old
+to do much of it. I want a buddy--some one who will go halfway with me."
+
+"Therefore I suppose you go to the 'pen' to find one," Ben commented,
+wholly unconvinced.
+
+"I'm going to make this proposition good," Ezram went on as if he had
+not heard, "probably a fourth--maybe even a third--to you. And I ain't
+such a fool as I look, neither. I know the chances of comin' out right
+on it are twice as good if somebody young and strong, and who can fight,
+is in on it with me. Listen to this."
+
+Opening the letter, he read laboriously:
+
+ Snowy Gulch, B.C.
+
+ DEAR BROTHER EZRA:--
+
+ I rite this with what I think is my dying hand. It's my will too.
+ I'm at the hotel at Snowy Gulch--and not much more time. You know
+ I've been hunting a claim. Well, I found it--rich a pocket as any
+ body want, worth a quarter million any how and in a district where
+ the Snowy Gulch folks believe there ain't a grain of gold.
+
+ It's yours. Come up and get it quick before some thieves up hear
+ jump it. Lookout for Jeffery Neilson and his gang they seen some of
+ my dust. I'm too sick to go to recorder in Bradleyburg and record
+ claim. Get copy of this letter to carry, put this in some safe
+ place. The only condition is you take good care of Fenris, the pet I
+ raised from a pup. You'll find him and my gun at Steve Morris's.
+
+ I felt myself going and just did get hear. You get supplies horses
+ at Snowy Gulch go up Poor Man Creek through Spruce Pass over to Yuga
+ River. Go down Yuga River past first rapids along still place to
+ first creek you'll know it cause there's an old cabin just below and
+ my canoe landing. Half mile up, in creek bed, is the pocket and new
+ cabin. And don't tell no one in Snowy Gulch who you are and where
+ you going. Go quick brother Ez and put up a stone for me at Snowy
+ Gulch.
+
+ Your brother
+
+ HIRAM MELVILLE.
+
+There was a long pause after Ezram's voice had died away. Ben's eyes
+glowed in the moonlight.
+
+"And you haven't heard--whether your brother is still alive?"
+
+"I got a wire the hotel man sent me. It reached me weeks before the
+letter came, and I guess he must have died soon after he wrote it. I
+suppose you see what he means when he says to carry a copy of this
+letter, instead of the original."
+
+"Of course--because it constitutes his will, your legal claim. Just the
+fact that you are his brother would be claim enough, I should think, but
+since the claim isn't recorded, this simplifies matters for you. You'd
+better make a copy of it and you can leave it in some safe place. And of
+course this claim is what you offered to let me in on."
+
+"That's it. Not much, but all what I got. What I want to know is--if
+it's a go."
+
+"Wait just a minute. You've asked me to go in with you on a scheme that
+looks like a clear quarter of a million, even though I can't give
+anything except my time and my work. You found me in a penitentiary,
+busted and all in--a thief and a gangster. Before we go any further,
+tell me what service I've done you, what obligation you're under to me,
+that gives me a right to accept so much from you?"
+
+It might have been in the moonlight that Ezram's eyes glittered
+perceptibly. "You're in my charge," he grinned. "I guess you ain't got
+any say comin'."
+
+"Wait--wait." Ben sprang to his feet, and caught by his earnestness,
+Ezram got up too. "I sure--I sure appreciate the trust you put in me,"
+Ben went on slowly. "For my own part I'd give everything I've got and
+all I'd hope to ever get to go with you. It's a chance such as I never
+dared believe would come to me again--a chance for big success--a chance
+to go away and get a new start in a country where I feel, instinctively,
+that I'd make good. But that's only the beginning of it."
+
+The dark vivid eyes seemed to glow in the soft light. "Forgive me if I
+talk frank; and if it sounds silly I can't help it," Ben continued.
+"You've never been in prison--with a five-year sentence hanging over
+you--and nobody giving a damn. For some reason I can't guess you've
+already done more for me than I can ever hope to repay. You got me out
+of prison, you wakened hope and self-respect in me when I thought they
+were dead, and you've proved a friend when I'd given up any thought of
+ever knowing human friendship again. I was down and out, Ezram. Anything
+you want me to do I'll do to the last ditch. You know I can fight--you
+know how a man can fight if it's his last chance. I've got some bonus
+money coming to me from the Canadian Government--and I'll put that in
+too, because we'll be needing horses and supplies and things that cost
+money. But I can't take all that from a stranger. You must know how it
+is. A man can't, while he's young and strong, accept charity--"
+
+"Good Lord, it ain't charity!" the old man shouted, drowning him out.
+"I'm gettin' as much pleasure out of it as you." His voice sank again;
+and there was no line of mirth in his face.
+
+"It was long ago, in Montreal," Ezram went on, after a pause. "I knew
+your mother, as a girl. She married a better man, but I told her that
+every wish of hers was law to me. You're her son."
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+Night is always a time of mystery in Snowy Gulch--that little cluster of
+frame shacks lost and far in the northern reaches of the Caribou Range.
+Shadows lie deep, pale lights spring up here and there in windows, with
+gaping, cavernous darkness between; a wet mist is clammy on the face. At
+such times one forgets that here is a town, an enduring outpost of
+civilization, and can remember only the forests that stretch so heavy
+and dark on every side. Indeed the town seems simply swallowed up in
+these forests, immersed in their silence, overspread by their gloom, and
+the red gods themselves walk like sentries in the main street.
+
+The breath that is so fragrant and strange between the fronting rows of
+shacks is simply that of the forest: inept the woodsman who would not
+recognize it at once. The silence is a forest silence, and if the air is
+tense and electric, it is because certain wilderness forces that no
+white man can name but which surely dwell in the darker thickets have
+risen and are in possession.
+
+It is not a time when human beings are at their best and strongest.
+There is an instinctive, haunting feeling which, though not fear, wakens
+a feeling of inadequacy and meekness. Only a few--those who have given
+their love and their lives to the wild places--have any idea of
+sympathetic understanding with it. Among these was Beatrice Neilson, and
+she herself did not fully understand the dreams and longings that swept
+her ever at the fall of the mysterious wilderness night.
+
+The forest had never grown old to her. Its mystery was undying. Born in
+its shadow, her love had gone out to it in her earliest years, and it
+held her just as fast to-day. All her dreams--the natural longings of an
+imaginative girl born to live in an uninhabited portion of the
+earth--were inextricably bound up in it; whatever plans she had for the
+future always included it. Not that she was blind to its more terrible
+qualities: its might and its utter remorselessness that all foresters,
+sooner or later, come to recognize. Her thews were strong, and she loved
+it all the more for the tests that it put to its children.
+
+She was a daughter of the forests, and its mark was on her. To-night the
+same moon that, a thousand miles to the south, was lighting the way for
+Ben and Ezram on their northern journey, shone on her as she hastened
+down the long, shadowed street toward her father's shack, revealing her
+forest parentage for all to see. The quality could be discerned in her
+very carriage--swift and graceful and silent--vaguely suggesting that of
+the wild creatures themselves. But there was no coarseness or ruggedness
+about her face and form such as superficial observation might have
+expected. Physically she was like a deer, strong, straight-limbed,
+graceful, slender rather than buxom, dainty of hands and feet. A perfect
+constitution and healthful surroundings had done all this. And good
+fairies had worked further magic: as she passed beneath the light at the
+door of the rude hotel there was revealed an unquestioned and rather
+startling facial beauty.
+
+It seemed hardly fitting in this stern, rough land--the soft contour and
+delicacy of the girl's features. It had come straight from her mother, a
+woman who, in gold-rush days, had been the acknowledged beauty of the
+province. Nor was it merely the attractive, animal beauty that is so
+often seen in healthy, rural girls. Rather its loveliness was of a
+mysterious, haunting kind that one associates with old legends and far
+distant lands.
+
+Perhaps its particular appeal lay in her eyes. They seemed to be quite
+marvelously deep and clear, so darkly gray that they looked black in
+certain lights, and they were so shadowed and pensive that sometimes
+they gave the image of actual sadness. For all the isolation of her home
+she was no stranger to romance; but the romance that was to be seen,
+like a gentleness, in her face was that of the great, shadowed forest in
+which she dwelt.
+
+Pensive, wistful, enthralled in a dreamy sadness,--what could be nearer
+the tone and pitch of the northern forest itself? There might have been
+also depths of latent passion such as is known to all who live the full,
+strong life of the woods. The lines were soft about her lips and eyes,
+indicating a marked sweetness and tenderness of nature; but these traits
+did not in the least deny her parentage. No one but the woodsman knows
+how gentle, how hospitably tender, the forest may be at times.
+
+She had fine, dark straight brows that served to darken her eyes, dark
+brown hair waving enough to soften every line of her face, a girlish
+throat and a red mouth surprisingly tender and childish. As might have
+been expected her garb was neither rich nor smart, but it was pretty and
+well made and evidently fitted for her life: a loose "middy," blue
+skirt, woolen stockings and rather solid little boots.
+
+As she passed the door of the hotel one of the younger men who had been
+lounging about the stove strode out and accosted her. She half-turned,
+recognized his face in the lamplight, and frankly recoiled.
+
+She had been lost in dreams before, vaguely pensive, for Beatrice had
+been watching the darkness overspread and encompass the dark fringe of
+the spruce forest that enclosed the town. Now, because she recognized
+the man and knew his type--born of the wild places even as herself, but
+a bastard breed--the tender, wistful half-smile sped from her childish
+mouth and her eyes grew alert and widened as if with actual fear. She
+halted, evidently in doubt as to her course.
+
+"Going home?" the man asked. "I'm going up to see your pop, and I'll see
+you there, if you don't mind."
+
+Ray Brent's voice had an undeniable ring of power. It was deeply bass,
+evidently the voice of a passionate, reckless, brutal man. The covetous
+caress of his thick hand upon her arm indicated that he was wholly sure
+of himself in regard to her.
+
+She stared with growing apprehension into his even-featured, not
+unhandsome face. Evidently she found it hard to meet his eyes,--eyes
+wholly lacking in humor and kindliness, but unquestionably vivid and
+compelling under his heavy, dark brows. "I'm going home," she told him
+at last. "I guess, if you're going up to see Pop, you can walk along
+too."
+
+The man fell in beside her, his powerful frame overshadowing hers. It
+was plain at once that the manner of her consent did not in the least
+disturb him. "You're just letting me because I'm going up there anyway,
+eh?" he asked. "I'll walk along further than that with you before I'm
+done."
+
+The girl paused, as if in appeal. "Ray, we've thrashed that out long
+ago," she responded. "I wish you wouldn't keep talking about it. If you
+want to walk with me--"
+
+"All right, but you'll be changing your mind one of these days." Ray's
+voice rang in the silence, indicating utter indifference to the fact
+that many of the loungers on the street were listening to the little
+scene. "I've never seen anything I wanted yet that I didn't get--and I
+want you. Why don't you believe what your pop says about me? He thinks
+Ray Brent is the goods."
+
+"I'm not going to talk about it any more. I've already given you my
+answer--twenty times."
+
+The man talked on, but the girl walked with lifted chin, apparently not
+hearing. They followed the board sidewalk into the shadows, finally
+turning in at a ramshackle, three-room house that was perched on the
+hillside almost at the end of the street at the outer limits of the
+village.
+
+The girl turned to go in, but the man held fast to her arm. "Wait just a
+minute, Bee," he urged. "I've got one thing more to say to you."
+
+The girl looked into his face, now faintly illumined by the full moon
+that was rising, incredibly large and white, above the dark line of the
+spruce tops. For all the regularity of his rather handsome features, his
+was never an attractive face to her, even in first, susceptible
+girlhood; and in the moonlight it suddenly filled her with dread. Ray
+Brent was a dangerous type: imperious willed, slave to his most
+degenerate instincts, reckless, as free from moral restraint as the most
+savage creatures that roamed his native wilds. Now his facial lines
+appeared noticeably deep, dark like scars, and curious little flakes of
+iniquitous fire danced in his sunken eyes.
+
+"Just one minute, Bee," he went on, wholly rapt in his own, devouring
+desires. The dark passions of the man, always just under the skin,
+seemed to be getting out of bounds. "When I want something, I don't know
+how to quit till I get it. It's part of my nature. Your pop knows
+that--and that's why he's made me his pardner in a big deal."
+
+"If my father wants men like you--for his pardners, I can't speak for
+his judgment."
+
+"Wait just a minute. He's told me--and I know he's told you too--that
+I'd suit him all right for a son-in-law. He and I agree on that. And
+this country ain't like the places you read about in your story
+books--it's a man's country. Oh, I know you well enough. It's time you
+got down to brass tacks. If you're going to be a northern woman, you've
+got to be content with the kind of men that grow up here. Up here, the
+best man wins, the hardest, strongest man. That's why I'm going to win
+you."
+
+Because he was secretly attacking her dreams, the dearest part of her
+being, she felt the first surge of rising anger.
+
+"You're not the best man here," she told him, straightening. "If you
+were, I'd move out. You may be the strongest in your body, and certainly
+the hardest, going further to get your own way--but a real man would
+break you in two in a minute. Some one more than a brute to beat horses
+to death and jump claims. I'm going in now. Please take away your hand."
+
+"One thing more. This is the North. We do things in a man's way up
+here--not a story-book way. The strong man gets what he wants--and I
+want you. And I'll get you, too--just like I get this kiss."
+
+He suddenly snatched her toward him. A powerful man; she was wholly
+helpless in his grasp. His arms went about her and he pressed his lips
+to hers--three times. Then he released her, his eyes glowing like red
+coals.
+
+But she was a northern girl, trained to self-defense. As he freed her,
+her strong, slender arm swung out and up--with really startling force.
+Her half-closed hand struck with a sharp, drawing motion across his
+lips, a blow that extinguished his laughter as the wind extinguishes a
+match-blaze.
+
+"You little--devil!"
+
+The tempest of the forest was upon her, and her eyes blazed as she
+hastened around the house.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+Jeffery Neilson and Chan Heminway were already in session when Ray
+Brent, his face flushed and his eyes still angry and red, joined them.
+Neilson was a tall, gaunt man, well past fifty--from his manner
+evidently the leader of the three. He had heavy, grizzled brows and
+rather quiet eyes, a man of deep passions and great resolve. Yet his
+lean face had nothing of the wickedness of Brent's. There had evidently
+been some gentling, redeeming influence in his life, and although it was
+not in the ascendancy, it had softened his smile and the hard lines
+about his lips. Notorious as he was through the northern provinces he
+was infinitely to be preferred to Chan Heminway, who sat at his left
+who, a weaker man than either Ray or Neilson, was simply a tool in the
+latter's hand,--a smashing sledge or a cruel blade as his master wished.
+He was vicious without strength, brutal without self-control. Locks of
+his blond hair, unkempt, dropped over his low forehead into his eyes.
+
+"Where's Beatrice?" Neilson asked at once. "I thought I heard her
+voice."
+
+Ray searched for a reply, and in the silence all three heard the girl's
+tread as she went around the house. "She's going in the back door.
+Likely she didn't want to disturb us."
+
+Ray looked up to find Neilson's eyes firmly fixed upon his face. Try
+hard as he might he couldn't restrain a surge of color in his cheeks.
+"Yes, and what's the rest of it?" Neilson asked.
+
+"Nothing--I know of."
+
+"You've got some white marks on your cheeks--where it ain't red. The kid
+can slap, can't she--"
+
+Ray flushed deeper, but the lines of Neilson's face began to deepen and
+draw. Then his voice broke in a great, hearty chuckle. He had evidently
+tried to restrain it--but it got away from him at last. No man could
+look at him, his twinkling eyes and his joyous face, and doubt but that
+this soft-eyed, strong-handed daughter of his was the joy and pride of
+his life. He had heard the ringing slap through the ramshackle walls of
+the house, and for all that he favored Ray as his daughter's suitor, the
+independence and spirit behind the action had delighted him to the core.
+
+But Ray's sense of humor did not run along these lines. The first danger
+signal of rising anger leaped like a little, hot spark into his eyes.
+Many times before Ray had been obliged to curb his wrath against
+Neilson: to-night he found it more difficult than ever. The time would
+come, he felt, when he would no longer be obliged to submit to Neilson's
+dictation. Sometime the situation would be reversed; he would be leader
+instead of underling, taking the lion's share of the profit of their
+enterprises instead of the left-overs, and when that time came he would
+not be obliged to endure Neilson's jests in silence. Neilson himself, as
+he eyed the stiffening figure, had no realization of Ray's true attitude
+toward him. He thought him a willing helper, a loyal partner, and he
+would not have sat with such content in his chair if he could have
+beheld the smoldering fires of jealousy and ambition in the other's
+breasts The time would come when Ray would assert himself, he
+thought--when Beatrice was safe in his hands.
+
+"It may seem like a joke to you, but it doesn't to me," he answered
+shortly. Nor was he able to keep his anger entirely from his voice.
+"Everything that girl does you think is perfect. Instead of encouraging
+her in her meanness you ought to help me out." His tones harshened, and
+he lost the fine edge of his self-control. "I've stood enough nonsense
+from that little--"
+
+Seemingly, Neilson made no perceptible movement in his chair. What
+change there was showed merely in the lines of his face, and
+particularly in the light that dwelt in the gray, straightforward eyes.
+"Don't finish it," he ordered simply.
+
+For an instant eyes met eyes in bitter hatred--and Chan Heminway began
+to wonder just where he would seek cover in case matters got to a
+shooting stage. But Ray's gaze broke before that of his leader. "I'm not
+going to say anything I shouldn't," he protested sullenly. "But this
+doesn't look like you're helping out my case any. You told me you'd do
+everything you could for me. You even went so far as to say you'd take
+matters in your own hands--"
+
+"And I will, in reason. I'm keeping away the rest of the boys so you can
+have a chance. But if you think I'm going to tie her up to anybody
+against her will, you're barking up the wrong tree. She's my daughter,
+and her happiness happens to be my first object." Then his voice
+changed, good-humored again. "But cool down, boy--wait till you hear
+everything I've got to tell you, and you'll feel better. Of course, you
+know what it's about--"
+
+"I suppose--Hiram Melville's claim."
+
+"That's it. Of course we don't know that he had a claim--but he had a
+pocket full of the most beautiful nuggets you ever want to see. No one
+knows that fact but me--I saw 'em by accident--and I got 'em now. You
+know he's always had an idea that the Yuga country was worth
+prospecting, but we always laughed at him. Of course it is a pocket
+country; but it's my opinion he found a pocket that would make many a
+placer look sick, before he died."
+
+"But he might have got the nuggets somewheres else--"
+
+"Hold your horses. Where would he get 'em? There's something else
+suspicious too. He wrote a letter, the day before he died, and addressed
+it to Ezra Melville, somewhere in Oregon. He must just about got it by
+now--maybe a few days ago. He had the clerk mail it for him, and got him
+to witness it, saying it was his will--and what did that old hound have
+to will except a mine? Next day he wrote another letter somewhere
+too--but I didn't find out who it was to. If I'd had any gumption I'd
+got ahold of 'em both. The point is--I'm convinced it's worth a trip, at
+least."
+
+"I should say it was worth a trip," Ray agreed. "And a fast one, too.
+There might be some competition--"
+
+"There won't be a rush, if that's what you mean. Everybody knows it's a
+pocket country, and the men in this town wouldn't any more get excited
+about the Yuga River--"
+
+"True enough--but that Ezra Melville will be showin' up one of these
+days. We want to be settin' pretty when he comes."
+
+"You've got the idea. It ought to be the easiest job we ever did. It's
+my idea he had his claim all laid out, monuments up and everything, and
+was on his way down to Bradleyburg to record it when he died. He just
+went out before he could make the rest of the trip. All we'll have to do
+is go up there, locate in his cabin, and sit tight."
+
+"Wait just a second." Ray was lost in thought. "There's an old cabin up
+that way somewhere--along that still place--on the river. It was a
+trapping cabin belonging to old Bill Foulks."
+
+"That's true enough--but it likely ain't near his mine. Boys, it's a
+clean, open-and-shut job--with absolutely nothing to interfere. If his
+brother does come up, he'll find us in possession--and nothing to do but
+go back. So to-morrow we'll load up and pack horses and light out."
+
+"Up Poor Man creek, through Spruce Pass--"
+
+"Sure. Then over to the Yuga. Old Hiram was hunting down some kind of a
+scent in the vicinity of that old cabin you speak of, last heard of him.
+And I wouldn't be surprised, on second thought, if it wasn't his base of
+operations."
+
+"All easy enough," Ray agreed. He paused, and a queer, speculative look
+came into his wild-beast's eyes. "But what I don't see--how you can
+figure all this is going to help me out with Beatrice."
+
+Jeffery Neilson turned in his chair. "You can't, eh? You need
+spectacles. Just think a minute--say you had fifty or sixty thousand all
+your own--to spend on a wife and buy her clothes and automobiles. Don't
+you think that would make you more attractive to the feminine eye?"
+
+At first Ray made no apparent answer. He merely sat staring ahead. But
+plainly the words had wakened riot in his imagination. Such a sum meant
+_wealth_, the power his ambitious nature had always craved, idleness and
+the gratification of all his lusts. He was no stranger to greed, this
+degenerate son of the North. "It'd help some," he admitted in a low
+voice. "But what makes you think it would be worth that much?"
+
+"Because old Hiram talked a little, half-delirious, before he died. 'A
+quarter of a million,' he kept saying. 'Right there in sight--a quarter
+of a million.' If he really found that much stowed away in the rocks,
+that's fifty or sixty apiece for you and Chan."
+
+Ray's mind worked swiftly. Sixty thousand apiece--and that left one
+hundred and thirty thousand for their leader's portion. The old rage and
+jealousy that had preyed upon his mind so long swept over him, more
+compelling than ever. "Go on," he urged. "What's the rest of it?"
+
+"The second thing is--we'll need some one to cook, and look after us,
+when we get up there. Who should it be but Beatrice? She wouldn't want
+to stay here; you know how she loves the woods. And if you know anything
+about girls, you know that nothing counts like having 'em alone. There
+wouldn't be any of the other boys up there to trouble you. You'd have a
+clear field."
+
+Ray's dark eyes shone. "It'd help some," he admitted. "That means--hunt
+up an extra horse for her to-morrow."
+
+"No. I don't intend she should come up now. Not till we're settled."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Think a minute, and you'll see why not. You know how she regards this
+business of jumping claims. She's dead against it if any one could
+be--bless her heart!"
+
+"Don't go getting sentimental, Neilson."
+
+"And don't let that mouth of yours get you into trouble, either." Once
+more their eyes locked: once more Ray looked away. "I hope she'll always
+stay that way, too. As I say, she's dead against it, and she's been a
+little suspicious ever since that Jenkins deal. Besides, it wouldn't be
+any pleasure for her until we find a claim and get settled. When she
+comes up we'll be established in a couple of cabins--one for her and me
+and one for you two--and she won't know but that we made the original
+find."
+
+"How will she know just where to find us?"
+
+"We're bound to be somewhere near that old cabin on the Yuga. We'll set
+a date for her to come, and I can meet her there."
+
+It was, Ray was forced to admit, a highly commendable scheme. He sat
+back, contemplating all its phases. "It's slick enough," he agreed. "It
+ought to do the trick."
+
+But if he had known the girl's thoughts, as she sat alone in the back
+part of the house, he wouldn't have felt so confident. She was watching
+the moon over the spruce forest, and she was thinking, with repugnance
+in her heart, of the indignity to which she had been subjected at her
+father's door. Yet the kisses Ray had forced on her were no worse than
+his blasphemy of her dreams. The spirit of romance was abroad
+to-night--in the enchantment of the moon--and she was wistful and
+imaginative as never before. This was just the normal expression of her
+starved girlhood--the same childlike wistfulness with which a Cinderella
+might long for her prince--just as natural and as wholesome and as much
+a part of youth as laughter and happiness.
+
+"I won't believe him, I won't believe him," she told herself. Her
+thought turned to other channels, and her heart spoke its wish.
+"Wherever he is--sometime he'll come to me."
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+At a little town at the end of steel Ben and Ezram ended the first lap
+of their journey. They had had good traveling these past days. Steadily
+they had gone north, through the tilled lands of Northern Washington,
+through the fertile valleys of lower British Columbia, traversing great
+mountain ranges and penetrating gloomy forests, and now had come to the
+bank of a north-flowing river,--a veritable flood and one of the monarch
+rivers of the North. Every hour their companionship had been more close
+and their hopes higher. Every waking moment Ben had been swept with
+thankfulness for the chance that had come to him.
+
+They had worked for their meals and passage--hard, manual toil--but it
+had seemed only play to them both. Sometimes they mended fence,
+sometimes helped at farm labor, and one gala morning, with entire good
+will and cheer, they beat into cleanliness every carpet in a widow's
+cottage. And the sign of the outcast was fading from Ben's flesh.
+
+The change was marked in his face. His eye seemed more clear and
+steadfast, his lips more firm, the lines of his face were not so hard
+and deep. His fellows of the underworld would have scarcely known him
+now,--his lips and chin darkening with beard and this new air of
+self-respect upon him. Perhaps they had forgotten him, but it was no
+less than he had done to them. The prison walls seemed already as if
+they hadn't been true. He loved every minute of the journey, freshness
+instead of filth, freedom instead of confinement, fragrant fields and
+blossoming flowers. Ever the stars and the moon, remembered of old,
+yielded him a peace and happiness beyond his power to tell. And his
+gratitude to Ezram grew apace.
+
+Besides self-confidence and the constant, slow unraveling of his memory
+problems, each day yielded rich gifts: no less than added trust in each
+other. Always they found each other steadfast, utterly to be relied
+upon. Ezram never regretted for a moment his offer to Ben. The young man
+had seemingly developed under his eye and was a real aid to him in all
+the problems of the journey.
+
+As the days passed, the whole tone and key of the land had seemed to
+change. They were full in the mountains now, snow gleaming on the
+heights, forests blue-black on the slopes; and Ben's response was a
+growing excitement that at first he could not analyze. The air was
+sweeter, more bracing, and sometimes he discerned a fleeting, delicate
+odor that drew him up short in his talk and held him entranced. There
+was a sparkle and stir in the air, unknown in the cities he had left;
+and to breathe it deeply thrilled him with an unexplainable happiness.
+
+Some way it was all familiar, all dear to him as if it had once been
+close to his life. The sparkle in the air was not new, only recalled:
+long and long ago he had wakened to find just such a delicate fragrance
+in his nostrils. But the key hadn't come to him yet. His memory pictures
+were ever stronger of outline, clearer in his mind's eye, yet they were
+still too dim for him to interpret them. In these days Ezram watched him
+closely, with a curious, intense interest.
+
+It was no longer pleasant to sleep out in the hay. For the sake of
+warmth alone they were obliged to hire their night's lodging at cheap
+hotels. Spring was full in the land they had left: it was just
+beginning here. The mountains, visible from the village of Saltsville
+where they left the railroad, were still swept with snow.
+
+Ben felt that he would have liked to take a day off at this point and
+venture with his companion into the high, wooded hills that fronted the
+town, but he agreed with Ezram that they could not spare the time. They
+swiftly made preparations for their journey down-river. A canoe was
+bought for a reasonable sum--they were told they had a good chance of
+selling it again when they left the river near Snowy Gulch--and at the
+general store they bought an axe, rudimentary fishing tackle, tobacco,
+blankets, and all manner of simpler provisions, such as flour, rice,
+bacon, coffee, canned milk, and sugar. And for a ridiculously small sum
+which he mysteriously produced from the pocket of his faded jeans Ezram
+bought a second-hand rifle--an ancient gun of large caliber but of
+enduring quality--and a box of shells to match.
+
+"Old Hiram left me a gun, but we'll each need one," Ezram explained.
+"And they tell me there's a chance to pick up game, like as not, goin'
+down the river."
+
+They would have need of good canoe-craft before the journey's end, the
+villagers told them. Ezram had not boasted of any such ability, and at
+first Ben regarded the plan with considerable misgivings. And it was
+with the most profound amazement that, when they pushed off, he saw
+Ezram deliberately seat himself in the bow, leaving the more important
+place to his young companion.
+
+"Good heavens, I'll capsize you in a minute," Ben said. "How do you dare
+risk it----"
+
+"Push off and stop botherin' me," Ezram answered. "There's a paddle--go
+ahead and shoot 'er."
+
+The waters caught the canoe, speeding it downstream; and in
+apprehension of immediate disaster Ben seized the paddle. Swiftly he
+thrust it into the streaming water at his side.
+
+He was not further aware of Ezram's searching gaze. He did not know of
+the old man's delight at the entire incident--first the anxious, hurried
+stroke of the paddle, then the movement of Ben's long fingers as he
+caught a new hold, finally the white flame of exultation that came into
+his face. For himself, Ben instantly knew that this was his own sphere.
+He suddenly found himself an absolute master of his craft: at the touch
+of the paddle controlling it as a master mechanic controls a delicate
+machine.
+
+The white waters were no more to be feared. He found that he knew, as if
+by instinct, every trick of the riverman's trade,--the slow stroke, the
+fast stroke, the best stroke for a long day's sail, the little half-turn
+in his hands that put the blade on edge in the water and gave him the
+finest control. It was all so familiar, so unspeakably dear to him.
+Clear, bright memories hovered close to him, almost within his grasp.
+
+"Do you remember when you shot the Athabaska Rapids?" Ezram had asked.
+It was all clear enough. In that life that was forgotten he had
+evidently lived much in a canoe, knowing every detail of river life.
+Perhaps he had been a master canoeist; at least he felt a strange,
+surging sense of self-confidence and power. He understood, now, why the
+image of rushing waters had come so often into his dreams. Dim pictures
+of river scenes--cataracts white with foam, rapids with thunderous
+voices, perilous eddies, and then, just beyond, glassy waters where the
+shadow of the canoe was unbroken in the blue depths--streamed through
+his mind, but they were not yet bright enough for him to seize and hold.
+
+He enjoyed the first few hours of paddling, but in the long, warm
+afternoon came indolence, and they were both willing to glide with the
+current and watch the ever-changing vista of the shore. For the first
+time since they had come into the real North, Ben found opportunity to
+observe and study the country.
+
+Already they were out of sight of the last vestige of a habitation; and
+the evergreen forests pushed down to the water's edge. From the middle
+of the stream the woods appeared only as a dark wall, but this was
+immeasurably fascinating to Ben. It suggested mystery, adventure; yet
+its deeper appeal, the thing that stirred him and thrilled him to the
+quick, he could neither understand nor analyze.
+
+Sometimes a little clump of trees stood apart, and from their shape he
+identified them as the incomparable spruce, perhaps the most
+distinguished and beautiful of all the evergreens. He marked their great
+height, their slender forms, their dark foliage that ever seemed to be
+silvered with frost; and they seemed to him to answer, to the fullest
+extent, some vague expectation of which he had scarcely been aware.
+
+The wild life of the river filled him with speechless delight. Sometimes
+he saw the waters break and gleam at the leap of a mighty salmon--the
+king fish of the North on his spring rush to the headwaters where he
+would spawn and die--and often the canoe sent flocks of waterfowl into
+flight. Ben dimly felt that on the tree-clad shores larger, more
+glorious living creatures were standing, hiding, watching the canoe
+glide past. The thought thrilled him.
+
+Late afternoon, and they worked closer to the shore. They were watching
+for a place to land. But because the shadows of twilight were already
+falling, the forest itself was hardly more vivid to their eyes. Once it
+seemed to Ben that he saw the underbrush move and waver at the water's
+edge, and his heart leaped; but whatever stirred kept itself concealed.
+And now, in the gray of twilight, Ezram saw the place to land.
+
+It was a small lagoon into which a creek emptied, and beyond was an open
+meadow, found so often and so unexpectedly in the North woods. Swiftly
+Ben turned the canoe into shore.
+
+Ezram climbed out and made fast, and so busy was he with his work that
+he did not glance at Ben, otherwise he might have beheld a phenomenon
+that would have been of keen interest to the alienist, Forest. His young
+charge had suddenly grown quite pale. Ben himself was neither aware of
+this nor of the fact that his heart was hammering wildly in his breast
+and his blood racing, like wild rivers, through his veins: he was only
+thrilled and held by a sense of vast, impending developments. Every
+nerve tingled and thrilled, and why he did not know.
+
+Ezram began to unload; but now, his blue eyes shining, he began a covert
+watch of his young companion. He saw the man from prison suddenly catch
+his breath in inexpressible awe and his eye kindle with a light of
+unknown source. A great question was shaping itself in Ben's mind, but
+as yet he could not find the answer.
+
+All at once Ben knew this place. Here was nothing strange or new: it was
+all as he had known it would be in his inmost heart. All of it spoke to
+him with familiar voice, seemingly to welcome him as a son is welcomed
+after long absence. There was nothing here that had not been known and
+beloved of old. Vivid memories, bright as lightning, swept through him.
+
+He had always known this wholesome, sweet breath that swept into his
+face. It was merely that of the outdoors, the open places that were his
+own haunts. It was wholly fitting and true that the silence should lie
+over the dark spruce that ringed about him, a silence that, in its
+infinite harmony with some queer mood of silence in his own heart, was
+more moving than any voice. All was as he had secretly known: the hushed
+tree aisles, the gray radiance--soft as a hand upon the brow--of the
+afterglow; the all-pervading health and peace of the wilderness. Except
+for an old and trusted companion, he was alone with it all, and that too
+was as it should be. Just he and the forest, his companion and the
+gliding river.
+
+He didn't try to understand, at first, the joy and the wonder that
+thrilled him, nor could he speak aloud the thoughts that came to him.
+Ravished and mystified, he walked softly to the dark, still edge of the
+forest, penetrated it a distance, then sat down to wait.
+
+For the first time in years, it seemed to him, he was at peace. A
+strange sense of self-realization--lost to him in his years of
+exile--climbed like fire through him; and with it the return of a lost
+virility, a supreme vigor tingling each little nerve; a sense of
+strength and power that was almost blinding.
+
+He sat still. He saw the twilight descending, ever heavier, over the
+forest. The sharp edges of the individual trees faded and blended, the
+trunks blurred. He turned one fleeting glance of infinite, inexpressible
+gratitude toward Ezram--the man who had brought him here and who now was
+busily engaged in unpacking the canoe and making camp--then looked back
+to his forests. The wind brought the wood smells,--spruce and moldering
+earth and a thousand more no man could name. The great, watchful,
+brooding spirit of the forest went in to him.
+
+All at once his heart seemed to pause in his breast. He was
+listening,--for what he did not know. His eyes strained into the
+shadows. Brush wavered, a twig cracked with a miniature explosion. And
+then two figures emerged into the beaver meadow opposite him.
+
+They were only creatures of the wild, an old cow moose, black and
+ungainly, and her long-legged, awkward calf. Yet they supplied the
+detail that was missing. They were the one thing needed to complete the
+picture--the crowning touch that revealed this land as it was--the
+virgin wilderness where the creatures of the wild still held full sway.
+
+But it did more. All at once a great clarity seemed to take possession
+of his mind. Here, in these dark forests, were the _stimuli_ of which
+Forest, the alienist, had spoken; and his brain seemed to leap, as in
+one impulse, to the truth. Suddenly he knew the answer to all the
+questions and problems that had troubled him so long.
+
+Many times, in the past years, he had seen logs jammed in the water, a
+veritable labyrinth that defied dissolution. Suddenly, as if by magic,
+the key log would be ejected, and the whole jam would break, shatter
+down in one stupendous crash, settle and dissolve, leaving at last only
+drift logs floating quietly in the river. Thus it was with the confusion
+in his brain. All at once it seemed to dissolve, the tangled skeins
+straightened out, the association areas of his mind stirred full into
+life once more. As he sat there, pale as the twilight sky, the mists of
+amnesia lifted from him. He was cured as if by the touch of a holy man.
+
+No wonder these forests depths were familiar. His boyhood and early
+manhood, clear until the vortex of war had engulfed him, had been spent
+amid just such surroundings, in just such silences, on the banks of
+just such wilderness rivers. The same sky line of dark, heaven-reaching
+spruce had fronted him of old. He sprang up, his eyes blazing. "I
+remember everything," an inaudible voice spoke within him. Then he
+whispered, fervently, to his familiar wilds. "And I have come home."
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+Everything was as it should be, as he and Ezram made the camp. He
+himself cut the boughs for their beds, laid them with his remembered
+skill, spread the blankets, and kept the fire blazing while Ezram
+cooked; afterwards he knew the indescribable peace of a pipe smoke
+beside the glowing coals. He saw the moon come up at last, translating
+the spruce forest into a fairy land.
+
+Of course he had remembered the moon. How many times had he watched for
+its argent gleam on the sky line, the vivid, detailed silhouette of the
+spruce against it; and then its slow-spreading glory through the still,
+dark forests! The spires of the trees grew ensilvered, as always;
+immense nebulous patches lay between the trunks, shadows stole
+mysteriously, phantoms met, lingered, and vanished.
+
+This was his own North! The stir and vigor in the very air told him
+that. This was the land he had dreamed of, under the moon; the primeval
+forests that had tried him, tested him, staked their cruel might against
+him, but yet had blessed him with their infinite beneficence and
+hospitality. It was ever somber, yet its dusky beauty stirred him more
+than any richness he had seen in bright cities. He knew its every mood:
+ecstasy in spring; gentleness in summer; brooding melancholy in the gray
+days of fall; remorseless, savage, but unspeakably beautiful in the
+winter. He felt his old pity for the spring flowers, blossoming so
+hopefully in this gentle season. How soon they would be covered with
+many feet of snow!
+
+"It's all come clear again," he told Ezram. And the two men talked over,
+quietly and happily, old days at Thunder Lake. He remembered now that
+Ezram had always been the most intimate friend of his own family: a spry
+old godfather to himself and young sister, a boon companion to his once
+successful rival, Ben's father. Ben did not wonder, now, at his own
+perplexity when Forest had spoken of "Wolf" Darby. That was his own name
+known throughout hundreds of square miles of forest and in dozens of
+little river hamlets in an Eastern province. Partly the name was in
+token of his skill as a woodsman and frontiersman, partly in recognition
+of certain traits that his fellow woodsmen had seen and wondered at in
+him. It was not an empty nickname, in his case. It was simply that the
+name suited him.
+
+"The boys had reason a-plenty for callin' you that," Ezram told him. "Up
+here, as you know, men don't get no complimentary epithets unless they
+deserve 'em. Some men, Ben, are like weasels. You've seen 'em. You've
+seen human rats, too. As if the souls they carried around with 'em was
+the souls of rats. Of course you remember 'Grizzly' Silverdale? Did you
+ever see any one who in disposition and looks and walk and everything
+reminded you so much of a grizzly bear? I've known men like sheep, and
+men with the faithful souls of dogs. You remember when you got in the
+big fight in the Le Perray bar?"
+
+"I don't think I'll ever forget it again."
+
+"That's the night the name came on you, to stay. You remember how you'd
+drive into one of them, leap away, then tear into another. Like a wolf
+for all the world! You was always hard to get into a fight, but you
+know as well as I do, and I ain't salvin' you when I say it, that you're
+the most terrible, ferocious fighter, forgettin' everything but blood,
+that ever paddled a canoe on the Athabaska. Some men, Ben, seem to have
+the spirit of the wolf right under their skins, a sort of a wild
+instinct that might have come straight down from the stone age, for all
+I know. You happen to be one of 'em, the worst I ever saw. Maybe you
+don't remember, but you took your bull moose before you was thirteen
+years old."
+
+Ben sat dreaming. The Athabaska Rapids was not an empty name to him now.
+He remembered the day he had won the canoe race at Lodge Pole. Other
+exploits occurred to him,--of brutal, savage brawls in river taverns, of
+adventures on the trail, of struggling with wild rivers when his canoe
+capsized, of running the great logs down through white waters. It was
+his world, these far-stretching wildernesses. And he blessed, with all
+the fervency of his heart, the man who had brought him home.
+
+He went to his bed, but sleep did not at once come to him. He lay with
+hushed breathing, listening to the little, secret noises, known so well,
+of the wilderness night. He heard the wild creatures start forth on
+their midnight journeys. Once a lynx mewed at the edge of the forest;
+and he laughed aloud when some large creature--probably a moose--grunted
+and splashed water in the near-by beaver meadow.
+
+Thus ended the first of a brilliant succession of joyous days,
+descending the stream in the daylight hours and camping on the bank at
+night. Every day they plunged deeper into the heart of the wilderness,
+and every hour Ben felt more at home.
+
+It was only play for him,--to meet and shoot successfully the rapids of
+the river. In the long stillnesses he paddled hour upon hour, not only
+to make time but to find an outlet for his surging energy. His old-time
+woodsman's pleasures were recalled again: shooting waterfowl for their
+mess in the still dawns, racing the swimming moose when they ran on him
+in the water. One day, fish hungry, he rigged up the elementary fishing
+tackle that they had brought from Saltsville and tried for a salmon.
+
+To a long, tough rod cut on the river bank he attached thirty feet of
+cheap, white cord, and to the cord he fastened a bright spoon hook--the
+spinner that salmon fishers know. He had no leader, no reel, no
+delicately balanced salmon rod--and Ezram was full of scorn for the
+whole proceeding. And it was certainly true that, by all the rules of
+angling, Ben had no chance whatever to get a bite.
+
+The cord was visible in the clear water, and the spoon itself was
+scarcely more than twenty feet from the rear of the boat. But this
+northern stream was not at all like the famous salmon rivers known to
+sportsmen. In years to come, when the lines of communication are better
+and tourist hotels are established on its banks, the river may then
+begin to conform to the qualifications of a conventional fishing stream,
+and then Ben's crude tackle will be unavailing. But at present the
+salmon were not so particular. As fishermen came but rarely, the fish
+were in countless numbers; and in such a galaxy there were bound to be
+few misguided fish that did not know a sportsman's tackle from a dub's.
+
+The joy of angling, once known, dwells in the body until death, and Ben
+was a born fisherman. The old delight that can never die crept back to
+him the instant he felt the clumsy rod in his hands and the faint throb
+of the line through the delicate mechanism of his nerves. And
+apparently for no other reason than that the river hordes wished to
+welcome him home, almost at once a gigantic bull salmon took his spoon.
+
+Ezram's first knowledge of it was a wild yell that almost startled him
+over the side--the same violent outcry that old anglers still can not
+restrain when the fish takes hold, even after a lifetime of angling.
+When he recovered himself he looked to see Ben kneeling frantically in
+the stern, hanging for dear life to his rod and seemingly in grave
+danger of being pulled overboard.
+
+No man who has felt that first, overpowering jolt of a striking salmon
+can question the rapture of that first moment. The jolt carried through
+all the intricacies of the nerves, jarred the soul within the man, and
+seemingly registered in the germ plasm itself an impression that could
+be recalled, in dreams, ten generations hence. Fortunately the pole
+withstood that first, frantic rush, and then things began to happen in
+earnest.
+
+The great trout seemed to dance on the surface of the water. He tugged,
+he swam in frantic circles, he flopped and darted and sulked and rushed
+and leaped. If he hadn't been securely hooked, and if it had not been
+for a skill earned in a hundred such battles, Ben would not have held
+him a moment.
+
+But the time came at last, after a sublime half-hour, when his steam
+began to die. His rushes were less powerful, and often he hung like a
+dead weight on the line. Slowly Ben worked him in, not daring to believe
+that he was conquering, willing to sell his soul for the privilege of
+seeing the great fish safe in the boat. His eyes protruded, perspiration
+gleamed on his brow, he talked foolishly and incessantly to Ezram, the
+fish, the river-gods, and himself. Ezram, something of an old Isaac
+Walton himself, managed the canoe with unusual dexterity and chuckled in
+the contagion of Ben's delight. And lo--in a moment more the thing was
+done.
+
+"You'd think you never had a rod in your hand before," Ezram commented
+in mock disgust. "Such hollerin' and whoopin' I never heard."
+
+Ben grinned widely. "That's fishing--the sport that keeps a man an
+amateur all his days--with an amateur's delight." His vivid smile
+quivered at his lips and was still. "That's why I love the North; it can
+never, never grow old. You're just as excited at the close as at the
+beginning. Ezram, old man, it's life!"
+
+Ezram nodded. Perhaps, in the moment's fire, Ben had touched at the
+truth. Perhaps _life_, in its fullest sense, is something more than
+being born, breathing air, consuming food, and moving the lips in
+speech. _Life_ is a thing that wilderness creatures know, realized only
+when the blood, leaping red, sweeps away lifeless and palsied tissue and
+builds a more sentient structure in its place; invoked by such forces as
+adventure and danger and battle and triumph. For the past half-hour Ben
+had lived in the fullest sense, and Ezram was a little touched by the
+look of unspeakable gratitude with which his young companion regarded
+him.
+
+But the journey ended at last. They saw the white peak they had been
+told to watch for, and soon after they came to a green bank from which
+the forest had been cut away. Softly, rather regretfully, they pushed up
+and made landing on the banks of a small stream, tributary to the great
+river, that marked the end of the water route.
+
+This stream, Ezram knew, was Poor Man's Creek, the stream of which his
+brother had written and which they must ascend to reach Spruce Pass.
+Only five miles distant, in a quartering direction from the river, was
+Snowy Gulch, the village where they were to secure supplies and, from
+Steve Morris, the late Hiram's gun and his pet, Fenris.
+
+For a time, at least, they had left the utter solitudes of the wild. Men
+had cut away the forest and had built a crude wagon road to Snowy Gulch.
+And before they were fully unpacked they made out the figure of a
+middle-aged frontiersman, his back loaded, advancing up the road toward
+them.
+
+Both men knew something of the ways of the frontier and turned in
+greeting. "Howdy," Ezram began pleasantly.
+
+"Howdy," the stranger replied. "How was goin'?"
+
+"Oh, good enough."
+
+"Come all the way from Saltsville?"
+
+"Yes. Goin' to Snowy Gulch."
+
+"It's only five miles, up this road," the stranger ventured. "I'm goin'
+up Saltsville way myself, but I won't have no river to tow me. I've got
+to do my own paddlin'. Thank the lord I'm only goin' a small part of the
+way."
+
+"You ain't goin' to swim, are you? Where's your boat."
+
+"My pard's got an old craft, and he and I are goin' to pack it out next
+trip." The stranger paused, blinking his eyes. "Say, partners--you don't
+want to sell your boat, do you?"
+
+Ben started to speak, but the doubtful look on Ezram's face checked him.
+"Oh, I don't know," the old man replied, in the discouraging tones of a
+born tradesman. In reality the old Shylock's heart was leaping gayly in
+his breast. This was almost too good to be true: a purchaser for the
+boat in the first hour. "Yet we might," he went on. "We was countin' on
+goin' back in it soon."
+
+"I'd just as leave buy it, if you want to sell it. In this jerked-off
+town there ain't a fit canoe to be had. Our boat is the worst tub you
+ever seen. How much you want for it?"
+
+Ezram stated his figure, and Ben was prone to believe that he had
+adopted a highwayman for a buddy. The amount named was nearly twice that
+which they had paid. And to his vast amazement the stranger accepted the
+offer in his next breath.
+
+"It's worth something to bring it up here, you dub," Ezram informed his
+young partner, when the latter accused him of profiteering.
+
+After the sale was made Ezram and the stranger soon got on the intimate
+terms that almost invariably follow a mutually satisfactory business
+deal, and in the talk that ensued the old man learned a fact of the most
+vital importance to their venture. And it came like a bolt from the
+blue.
+
+"So you don't know any folks in Snowy Gulch, then?" the stranger had
+asked politely. "But you'll get acquainted soon enough--"
+
+"I've got a letter to a feller named Morris," Ezram replied. "And I've
+heard of one or two more men too--Jeffery Neilson was one of 'em--"
+
+"You'll find Morris in town all right," the stranger ventured to assure
+him. "He lives right next to Neilson's. And--say--what do you know about
+this man Neilson?"
+
+"Oh, nothin' at all. Why?"
+
+"If you fellows is prospectin', Jeffery Neilson is a first-class man to
+stay away from--and his understrapers, too--Ray Brent and Chan Heminway.
+But they're out of town right now. They skinned out all in a bunch a
+few weeks ago--and I can't tell you what kind of a scent they got."
+
+Ezram felt cold to the marrow of his bones. He glanced covertly at Ben;
+fortunately his partner was busy among the supplies and was not
+listening to this conversation. Yet likely enough it was a false alarm!
+Doubtless the ugly possibility that occurred to him had no justification
+whatever in fact. Nevertheless, he couldn't restrain the question that
+was at his lips.
+
+"You don't know where they went, do you?" he asked.
+
+"Not exactly. They took up this creek here a ways, through Spruce Pass,
+and over to Yuga River--the country that kind of a crazy old chap named
+Hiram Melville, who died here a few weeks ago, has always prospected."
+
+The stranger marvelled that his old listener should have suddenly gone
+quite pale.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+Ezram had only a moment's further conversation with his new friend. He
+put two or three questions--in a rather curious, hushed voice--and got
+his answer. Yes, it was true that the shortest way to go to the Yuga
+River was to follow up the creek by which he was now standing. It was
+only out of the way to go into Snowy Gulch: they would have to come back
+to this very point. And yes, a pedestrian, carrying a light pack, could
+make much better time than a horseman with pack animals. The horses
+could go no faster than a walk, and the time required to sling packs and
+care for the animals cut down the day's march by half.
+
+These things learned, Ezram strolled over to his young partner. And at
+that moment he revealed the possession of a talent that neither he nor
+any of his friends had ever suspected. The stage had lost an artist of
+no mean ability when Ezra Melville had taken to the cattle business.
+Outwardly, to the last, little lines about his lips and eyes, he was his
+genial, optimistic, droll old self. His eye twinkled, his face beamed in
+the gray stubble, his voice was rollicking with the fun of life the same
+as ever. And like Pagliacci in his masque there was not the slightest
+exterior sign of the fear and despair that chilled his heart.
+
+"What have you and your poor victim been talking about, all this time?"
+Ben asked.
+
+"Oh, just a gab-fest--a tat-i-tat as you'd call it. But you know, Ben,
+I've got a idea all a-sudden." Ben straightened, lighted his pipe, and
+prepared to listen.
+
+"This old boy tells me that we'd save just twelve miles by striking off
+front here, instead of goin' into town. Snowy Gulch is six miles, and we
+have to come back to this very place. What's the use of goin' into town
+at all?"
+
+"Good heavens, Ez? Have you forgotten we've got to get supplies? And
+your brother's gun--and his dog?"
+
+"How do you know he's got a dog?"
+
+"He said a pup, didn't he? But it may be an elephant for all I know. Of
+course, we've got to go on in."
+
+"Yes, I know--one of us has. But, Ben, it seems to me that one of us
+ought to strike off now and figure out the way and sort of get located.
+One of us could take a little food and a couple of blankets and make it
+through in less than a day. Half a day, almost. Then we could have the
+cabin all ready, and everything laid out for to begin work. He could
+blaze any dim spots in the trail and save time for the other feller,
+comin' with the horses."
+
+"Oh, it would be all right," Ben began rather doubtfully. "I don't see
+that much is to be gained by it. But I'll strike off on foot, if you
+want me to."
+
+Ezram's mind was flashing with thoughts like lightning, and his answer
+was ready. "Ben, if you don't mind, I'll do that," he said. "I can get
+along without gazin' at the sky-scrapers of Snowy Gulch, and to tell the
+truth, that twelve miles of extra walkin' don't appeal to me one bit.
+I'd as soon have you tend to all the things in town."
+
+"But you'd get a ride, if you waited--"
+
+"I hate a horse, anyway--"
+
+"You've surely changed a lot since the war."
+
+"I was thrown off not long ago--and have been leery of the dum things
+ever since. I'd walk, sooner than ride, even if I did have a horse. So
+you roll me that big Hudson Bay blanket and give me a couple of day's
+rations. I'll make a pack for my back that I can't feel. Then you strike
+off into town."
+
+Without especial enthusiasm Ben agreed. Ezram gave a great sigh of
+satisfaction. He had put through the deal: Ben's secret thought was that
+Ezram's curiosity--always a pronounced trait with the old--had mastered
+him, and he could not wait longer to explore the mine. Not one glimpse
+of the truth as to Ezram's real reason for desiring to push on alone as
+much as occurred to him.
+
+Ezram was wholly deliberate. He knew what waited him on arrival at his
+brother's claim. Jeffery Neilson and his gang had assembled there, had
+already jumped the claim just as his brother had warned him that they
+would do; and coolly and quietly he had resolved to face them alone.
+They were desperate men, not likely to be driven from the gold by
+threats or persuasion only. But there was no law in his life, no precept
+in his code, whereby he could subject his young partner to the risk.
+
+It was true that the desire to arrive on the scene at the earliest
+possible moment had been a factor in his decision. One of them could
+hurry on, unimpeded by the pack animals, and the other must linger to
+secure their supplies; and there could really be no question, in Ezram's
+mind, which should go and which should stay. He had known perfectly that
+if Ben had realized the true need for haste, he would never have
+submitted so tamely to Ezram's will. The old man knew Wolf Darby. The
+strong dark eyes in the lean, raw-boned face reassured him as to this
+knowledge. Ben would go too, if he knew the truth. Likely he would
+insist on going alone.
+
+Ezram had decided the whole thing in a flash, realizing that a lone
+pedestrian would be practically as effective in dealing with the
+usurpers as two horsemen, impeded by the pack animals. If they didn't
+shoot to kill at first sight of him Ezram would have time in plenty to
+seek refuge in the forest and do a sharpshooter's business that would
+fill his old heart with joy. And there really wasn't any question as to
+which of the two should go. Their partnership was of long duration;
+their comradeship was deep; Ben was young, and Ezram himself was old!
+
+Ezram made his decision entirely casually, and he would have been
+surprised out of his wits if any one had expressed wonder of it. He knew
+no self-pity or sentimentality, only the knowledge that he did not
+desire that his young buddy should be shot full of holes in the first
+moment of play. The only fear that had visited him was that Ben might
+catch on and not let him go. And now he could scarcely restrain his
+triumphant chuckles in Ben's hearing.
+
+He made his pack--a few simple provisions wrapped in his blanket--and a
+knife and camp axe swung on his belt. He took his trusted pipe--because
+he knew well that he could never acquit himself creditably in a fight
+without a few lungfuls of tobacco smoke first--and he also took his
+rifle. "You'll be gettin' my brother's gun when you get to Snowy Gulch,"
+he explained, "and I may see game on the way out. And you keep this copy
+of the letter." He handed Ben the copy he had made of Hiram's will. "I'm
+the worst hand for losin' things you ever seen."
+
+"You're sure you've got the directions straight?"
+
+"Sure.--And I guess that's all."
+
+They said their simple good-bys, shaking hands over a pile of stores.
+"I've only got one decent place to keep things safe," Ezra confided,
+"and that ain't so all-fired decent, either. When I get any papers that
+are extra precious, I always stick 'em down the leg of these high old
+boots, between the sock and the leather. But it's too much work to take
+the boot off now, so you keep the letter."
+
+"I suppose you've got a million-dollar bank note hidden down there now,"
+Ben remarked.
+
+"No, not a cent. Just the same, if ever I get shuffled off all of a
+sudden--rollin' down one of these mountains, say--I want you to look
+there mighty careful. There may be a document or two of
+importance--letter to my old home, and all that."
+
+"I won't forget," Ben promised.
+
+"See that you don't." They shook hands again, lightly and happily. "So
+good-by, son, and--'_take keer of yerself_!'"
+
+The old man turned away, and soon his withered figure vanished into the
+thickets farther up the river. He was following a fairly well-worn moose
+trail, and he went swiftly. Soon he was out of hearing of the sound of
+the great river.
+
+Then the little woods people--marten and ermine and rodent and such
+other small forest creatures that--who can say?--might watch with
+exceeding interest the travelers on the trails, could have thought that
+old Ezram was already fatigued. He sat down beside a tree and drew a
+soiled sheet of paper from his pocket. Searching further he found then
+the stub of a pencil. Then he wrote.
+
+Having written he unlaced his boot on the right foot, folded the paper,
+and thrust it into the bootleg. Then, relacing the shoe, he arose and
+journeyed blithely on.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+On arriving in Snowy Gulch, Ben's first efforts were to inquire in
+regard to horses. Both pack and saddle animals, he learned, were to be
+hired of Sandy McClurg, the owner of the general store and leading
+citizen of the village; and at once he made his way to confer with him.
+
+"Most of my mustangs are rented out," the merchant informed him when
+they met in the rear of the general store, "but if you can get along
+with three, I guess I can fix you up. You can pack two of 'em, and ride
+the third."
+
+"Good enough," Ben agreed. "And after I once get in, I'd like to turn
+back two of them, and maybe all three--to save the hire and the bother
+of taking care of them. I suppose, after the fashion of cayuses, they'll
+leg it right home."
+
+"Just a little faster than a dog. Horses don't much care to grub their
+food out of them spruce forests. They're good plugs, so of course I
+don't want to rent 'em to any one who'll abuse 'em, or take 'em on too
+hard trips. Where are you heading, if the question's fair?"
+
+"Through Spruce Pass and down into the Yuga River."
+
+"Prospecting, eh? There's been quite a movement down that way lately,
+considering it never was anything but a pocket country. By starting
+early you can make it through in a day. And you said your name was--"
+
+"Darby. Ben Darby."
+
+The merchant opened his eyes. "Not the Ben Darby that took all the
+prizes at the meet at Lodge Pole--"
+
+Ben's rugged face lit with the brilliancy of his smile. "The same
+Darby," he admitted.
+
+"Well, well! I hope you'll excuse them remarks about abusing the horses.
+If I had known who you was, 'Wolf' Darby, I'd have known you knew how to
+take care of cayuses. Take 'em for as long as you want, or where you
+want. And when did you say you was going?"
+
+"First thing to-morrow."
+
+"Well, you're pretty likely to have companionship on the road, too.
+There is another party that is going up that way either to-morrow or the
+day after. Pretty lucky for you."
+
+"I'm glad of it, if he isn't a tenderfoot. That must be a pretty thickly
+settled region--where I'm heading."
+
+"On the contrary, there's only three human beings in the whole
+district--and there's a thousand of square miles back of it without even
+one. These three are some men that went up that way prospecting some
+time ago, and this other party will make four." He paused, smiling.
+"Yes, I think you will enjoy this trip to-morrow, after you see who it
+is. I'd enjoy it, and I'm thirty years older than you are."
+
+Ben's thought was elsewhere, and he only half heard. "All right--I'll be
+here before dawn to-morrow and get the horses. And now will you tell
+me--where Steve Morris lives? I've got some business with him."
+
+"Right up the street--clear to the end of the row." McClurg's humor had
+quite engulfed him by now, and he chuckled again. "And if I was you,
+I'd stop in the door just this side--and get acquainted with your fellow
+traveler."
+
+"What's his name?" Ben asked.
+
+"The party is named Neilson."
+
+Unfortunately the name had no mental associations for Ben. It wakened no
+interest or stirred no memories. He had read the letter the copy of
+which he carried but once, and evidently the name of the man Ezram had
+been warned against had made no lasting impression on Ben's mind.
+
+"All right. Maybe I'll look him up."
+
+Ben turned, then made his way up the long, straggly row of unpainted
+shacks that marked the village street. A few moments later he was
+standing in the Morris home, facing the one friend that Hiram Melville
+had possessed on earth.
+
+Ben stated his case simply. He was the partner of Hiram's brother, he
+said, and he had been designated to take care of Fenris and such other
+belongings as Hiram had left. Morris studied his face with the quiet,
+far-seeing eyes of a woodsman.
+
+"You've got means of identification?" he asked.
+
+Ben realized with something of a shock that he had none at all. The
+letter he carried was merely a copy without Hiram's signature; besides,
+he had no desire to reveal its contents. For an instant he was
+considerably embarrassed. But Morris smiled quietly.
+
+"I guess I won't ask you for any," he said. "Hiram didn't leave
+anything, far as I know, except his old gun and his pet. Lord knows, I'd
+let anybody take that pet of his that's fool enough to say he's got any
+claim to him, and you can be sure I ain't going to dispute his claim."
+
+"Fenris, then, is,--something of a problem?"
+
+"The worst I ever had. His old gun is a good enough weapon, but I'm
+willing to trust you with it to get rid of Fenris. If you don't turn out
+to be the right man, I'll dig up for the gun--and feel lucky at that. I
+won't be able to furnish another Fenris, though, and I guess nobody'll
+be sorry. And if I was you--I'd take him out in a nice quiet place and
+shoot him."
+
+He turned, with the intention of securing the gun from an inner room. He
+did not even reach the door. It was as if both of them were struck
+motionless, frozen in odd, fixed attitudes, by a shrill scream for help
+that penetrated like a bullet the thin walls of the house.
+
+Instinctively both of them recognized it, unmistakably, as the piercing
+cry of a woman in great distress and terror. It rose surprisingly high,
+hovered a ghastly instant, and then was almost drowned out and
+obliterated by another sound, such a sound as left Ben only wondering
+and appalled.
+
+The sound was in the range between a growl and a bay, instantly
+identifying itself as the utterance of an animal, rather than a human
+being. And it was savage and ferocious simply beyond power of words to
+tell. Ben's first thought was of some enormous, vicious dog, and yet his
+wood's sense told him that the utterance was not that of a dog. Rather
+it contained that incredible fierceness and savagery that marks the
+killing cries of the creatures of the wild.
+
+He heard it even as he leaped through the door in answer to the scream
+for aid. His muscles gathered with that mysterious power that had always
+sustained him in his moments of crisis. He took the steps in one leap,
+Morris immediately behind him.
+
+"Fenris is loose," he heard the man say. "He'll kill some one----!"
+
+Ben could still hear the savage cries of the animal, seemingly from
+just behind the adjoining house. A girl's terrified voice still called
+for help. And deeply appalled by the sounds, Ben wished that the rifle,
+such a weapon as had been his trust since early boyhood, was ready and
+loaded in his hands.
+
+He raced about the house; and at once the scene, in every vivid detail,
+was revealed to him. Pressed back against the wall of a little woodshed
+that stood behind her house a girl stood at bay,--a dark-eyed girl whose
+beautiful face was drawn and stark-white with horror. She was screaming
+for aid, her fascinated gaze held by a gray-black, houndlike creature
+that crouched, snarling, twenty yards distant.
+
+Evidently the creature was stealing toward her in stealthy advance more
+like a stalking cat than a frenzied hound. Nor was this creature a
+hound, in spite of the similarity of outline. Such fearful, lurid
+surface-lights as all of them saw in its fierce eyes are not
+characteristic of the soft, brown orbs of the dog, ancient friend to
+man, but are ever the mark of the wild beast of the forest. The fangs
+were bared, gleaming in foam, the hair stood erect on the powerful
+shoulders; and instantly Ben recognized its breed. It was a magnificent
+specimen of that huge, gaunt runner of the forests, the Northern wolf.
+Evidently from the black shades of his fur he was partly of the Siberian
+breed of wolves that beforetime have migrated down on the North American
+side of Bering Sea.
+
+A chain was attached to the animal's collar, and this in turn to a stake
+that had been freshly pulled from the ground. This beast was
+Fenris,--the woods creature that old Hiram Melville had raised from
+cubdom.
+
+There could be no doubt as to the reality of the girl's peril. The
+animal was insane with the hunting madness, and he was plainly stalking
+her, just as his fierce mother might have stalked a fawn, across the
+young grass. Already he was almost near enough to leap, and the girl's
+young, strong body could be no defense against the hundred and fifty
+pounds of wire sinew and lightning muscle that constituted the wolf. The
+bared fangs need flash but once for such game as this. And yet, after
+the first, startled glance, Ben Darby felt himself complete master of
+the situation.
+
+No man could tell him why. No fact of his life would have been harder to
+explain, no impulse in all his days had had a more inscrutable origin.
+The realization seemed to spring from some cool, sequestered knowledge
+hidden deep in his spirit. He knew, in one breathless instant, that he
+was the master--and that the girl was safe.
+
+He seemed to know, again, that he had found his ordained sphere. He knew
+this breed,--this savage, blood-mad, fierce-eyed creature that turned,
+snarling, at his approach. He had something in common with the breed,
+knowing their blood-lusts and their mighty moods; and dim, dreamlike
+memory reminded him that he had mastered them in a long war that went
+down to the roots of time. Fenris was only a fellow wilderness creature,
+a pack brother of the dark forests, and he had no further cause for
+fear.
+
+"Fenris!" he ordered sharply. "Come here!" His voice was commanding and
+clear above the animal's snarls.
+
+There followed a curious, long instant of utter silence and infinite
+suspense. The girl's scream died on her lips: the wolf stood tense,
+wholly motionless. Morris, who had drawn his knife and had prepared to
+leap with magnificent daring upon the wolf, turned with widening eyes,
+instinctively aware of impending miracle. Ben's eyes met those of the
+wolf, commanding and unafraid.
+
+"Down, Fenris," Ben said again. "Down!"
+
+Then slowly, steadily, Ben moved toward him. Watching unbelieving,
+Morris saw the fierce eyes begin to lose their fire. The stiff hair on
+the shoulders fell into place, tense muscle relaxed. He saw in wonder
+that the animal was trembling all over.
+
+Ben stood beside him now, his hand reaching. "Down, down," he cautioned
+quietly. Suddenly the wolf crouched, cowering, at his feet.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+Ben straightened to find himself under a wondering scrutiny by both
+Morris and the girl. "Good Lord, Darby!" the former exclaimed. "How did
+you do it--"
+
+Now that the suspense was over, Ben himself stood smiling, quite at
+ease. "Can't say just how. I just felt that I could--I've always been
+able to handle animals. He's tame, anyway."
+
+"Tame, is he? You ought to have had to care for him the last few weeks,
+and you'd think tame. Not once have I dared go in reach of his rope. And
+there he is, crouched at your feet! I was always dreading he'd get
+away--" Morris paused, evidently remembering the girl. "Beatrice, are
+you hurt?"
+
+The girl moved toward them. "No. He didn't touch me. But you came just
+in time--" The girl's voice wavered; and Ben stepped to her side. "I'm
+all right now--"
+
+"But you'd better sit down," Ben advised quietly. "It was enough to
+scare any one to death--"
+
+"Any one--but you--" the girl replied, her voice still unsteady. But she
+paused when she saw the warm color spread over Ben's rugged, brown face.
+And his embarrassment was real. Naturally shy and unassuming, such
+effusive praise as this always disturbed him--just as it would have
+embarrassed any really masculine man alive. Women, more extravagant in
+speech and loving flattery with a higher ardor, would have found it hard
+to believe how really distressed he was; but Morris, an outdoor man to
+the core, understood completely. Besides, Ben knew that the praise was
+not deserved. Excessive bravery had played no part in the scene of a
+moment before. He had been brave just as far as Morris was brave,
+leaping freely in response to a call for help: the same degree of
+bravery that can be counted on in most men, over the face of the earth.
+Bravery does not lie alone in facing danger: there must also be the
+consciousness of danger, the conquest of fear. In this case Ben had felt
+no fear. He knew with a sure, true knowledge that he was master of the
+wolf. He knew the wolf's response to his words before ever he spoke. And
+now all the words in the language could not convey to these others
+whence that knowledge had come.
+
+He vaguely realized that this had always been some way part of his
+destiny,--the imposition of his will over the beasts of the forest. He
+had never tried to puzzle out why, knowing that such trial would be
+unavailing. He had instinctively understood such creatures as these.
+To-day he felt that he knew the wild, fierce heart beating in the lean
+breast as a man might know his brother's heart. The bond between them
+was hidden from his sight, something back of him, beyond him, enfolded
+within a secret self that was mysterious as a dream, and it reached into
+the countless years; yet it was real, an ancient relationship that was
+no less intimate because it could not be named. In turn, the wolf had
+seemed to know that this tall form was a born habitant of the forests,
+even as himself, one that would kill him as unmercifully as he himself
+would kill a fall, and whose dark eyes, swept with fire, and whose cool,
+strong words must never be disobeyed.
+
+"You never seen this wolf before?" Morris asked him, calling him from
+his revery.
+
+"Never."
+
+"Then you must be old Hiram's brother himself, to control him like you
+did. Lord, look at him. Crouching at your feet."
+
+Suddenly Ben reached and took the wolf's head between his hands. Slowly
+he lifted the savage face till their eyes met. The wolf growled, then,
+whimpering, tried to avert its gaze. Then a rough tongue lapped at the
+man's hand.
+
+"There's nothing to be afraid of, now," he told the girl.
+
+"He's right, Beatrice," Morris agreed. "He's tamed him. Even I can see
+that much. And I never saw anything like it, since the day I was born."
+
+It was true: as far as Ben was concerned, the terrible Fenris--named by
+a Swedish trapper, acquaintance of Hiram Melville's, for the dreadful
+wolf of Scandinavian legend--was tamed. He had found a new master; Ben
+had won a servant and friend whose loyalty would never waver as long as
+blood flowed in his veins and breath surged in his lungs. "Lay still,
+now, Fenris," he ordered. "Don't get up till I tell you."
+
+It seems to be true that as a rule the lower animals catch the meaning
+of but few words; usually the tone of the voice and the gesture that
+accompanies it interpret a spoken order in a dog's brain. On this
+occasion, it was as if Fenris had read his master's thought. He lay
+supine, his eyes intent on Ben's rugged face.
+
+And now, for the first time, Ben found himself regarding Beatrice. He
+could scarcely take his eyes from her face. He knew perfectly that he
+was staring rudely, but he was without the power to turn his eyes. Her
+dark eyes fell under his gaze.
+
+The truth was that Ben's life had been singularly untouched by the
+influence of women. Mostly his life had been spent in the unpeopled
+forest, away from women of all kinds; and such creatures as had admired
+him in Seattle's underworld had never got close to him. He had had many
+dreams; but some way it had never been credible to him that he should
+ever know womanhood as a source of comradeship and happiness. Love and
+marriage had always seemed infinitely apart from his wild, adventurous
+life.
+
+In his days in prison he had given up all dream of this happiness; but
+now he could begin to dream again. Everything was changed now that he
+had come home. The girl's regard for him was friendly, even somewhat
+admiring, and the speculations of ripening womanhood were in her eyes.
+He returned her gaze with frankest interest and admiration. His senses
+had been made sharp in his wilderness life; and his respect for her grew
+apace. She was not only innocent and girlish; she had those traits,
+innate, that a strong man loves in women: such worth and depth of
+character as he wishes bequeathed to his children.
+
+Ben drew a long breath. It was good to be home. He had not only found
+his forests, just as he had left them, but now again he was among the
+forest people. This girl was of his own breed, not a stranger; her
+standards were his; she was a woods girl no less than he was a woodsman.
+It is good to be among one's own people, those who can follow through
+and understand. She too knew the urge of unbridled vitality and spirit,
+common to all the woods children; and life's vivid meaning was her
+inheritance, no less than his. Her arms and lips were warm from
+fast-flowing blood, her nerves were vibrant and singing like his own. A
+virgin still, her eyes were tender with the warmheartedness that is such
+a dominant trait of frontier peoples; but what fire, what passion might
+burn in them to-morrow! They were dark, lovely eyes, rather somber now
+in their earnestness, seeming shadowed by the dark shadows of the spruce
+themselves.
+
+No human face had ever given him such an image of beauty as that of this
+dark-eyed forest child before him. Yet she was not piquant, demure, like
+the girls he had met in France; not stylish and sophisticated like those
+of the great cities he had visited since his return. Her garb became
+her: simple, not holding the eye in itself but calling attention to the
+brunette beauty of her throat and face, the warm redness of her childish
+mouth, and the brown, warm color of her arms. She had dark, waving hair,
+lovely to touch, wistful red lips. Because he was the woodsman, now and
+always, he marked with pleasure that there was no indication of
+ill-health or physical weakness about her. Her body was lithe and
+strong, with the grace of the wild creatures.
+
+It would be good to know her, and walk beside her in the tree aisles.
+All manner of delectable possibilities occurred to him. But all at once
+he checked his dreams with an iron will.
+
+There must be no thought of women in his life--for now. He still had his
+way to make. A few hours more would find him plunging deeper into the
+forest, perhaps never to see her again. He felt an all-pervading sense
+of regret.
+
+"There's nothing I can say--to thank you," the girl was murmuring. "I
+never saw anything like it; it was just as if the wolf understood every
+word you said."
+
+"Old Hiram had him pretty well trained, I suspect." The man's eyes fell
+to the shaggy form at his feet. "I'm glad I happened along Miss--"
+
+"Miss Neilson," the girl prompted him. "Beatrice Neilson. I live here."
+
+Neilson! His mind seemed to leap and catch at the name. Just that day he
+had heard it from the lips of the merchant. And this was the house next
+door where dwelt his fellow traveler for the morrow.
+
+"Then it's your father--or brother--who's going to the Yuga--"
+
+"No," the girl answered doubtfully. "My father is already there. I'm
+here alone--"
+
+Then the gray eyes lighted and a smile broke about Ben's lips. Few times
+in his life had he smiled in quite this vivid way.
+
+"Then it's you," he exulted, "who is going to be my fellow traveler
+to-morrow!"
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+Ben found, rather as he had expected, that the girl was not at all
+embarrassed by the knowledge that they were to have a lonely all-day
+ride together. She looked at the matter from a perfectly natural and
+wholesome point of view, and she could see nothing in it amiss or
+improper. The girls of the frontier rarely feel the need of chaperones.
+Their womanhood comes early, and the open places and the
+fresh-life-giving air they breathe give them a healthy confidence in
+their ability to take care of themselves. Beatrice had a pistol, and she
+could shoot it like a man. She loved the solitude of the forest, but she
+also knew it was good to hear the sound of a human voice when journeying
+the lonely trails.
+
+The frontier had also taught her to judge men. Here foregathered many
+types, strong-thewed frontiersmen whose reverence for women surpassed,
+perhaps, that of any other class of men on earth, as well as the most
+villainous renegades, brutish offspring of the wilds, but she knew them
+apart. She realized from the first that this tall woodsman would have
+only kindness and respect for her; and that he was to be trusted even in
+those lonely forest depths beyond Spruce Pass.
+
+Ben knew the wild beasts of the field better than he knew women, so her
+actual reception of the plan was lost to him. He felt that she was not
+displeased: in reality the delight and anticipation she felt were beyond
+any power of hers to tell. She had been tremendously thrilled and
+impressed by his dominance over the wolf. She liked his bright, steady,
+friendly eyes; because she was a woods girl her heart leaped at the
+sight of his upright, powerful body; but most of all she felt that he
+was very near indeed to an ideal come true, a man of terrific strength
+and prowess yet not without those traits that women love best in
+men,--courage and character and gentleness.
+
+"I'm surely glad I'm going to have a companion," he told her. "I won't
+miss Ez--"
+
+But just then remembrance came to him, cutting the word off short. The
+letter he carried in his pocket contained certain advice in regard to
+silence, and perhaps now was a good time to follow it. There was no need
+to tell the people of Snowy Gulch about Ezram and the claim. He
+remembered that he had been warned of the danger of claim jumpers.
+
+For an instant his mind seemed to hover at the edge of a more elusive
+memory; but he could not quite seize upon it. He only knew that it
+concerned the matter in hand, and that it left him vaguely troubled.
+
+"You were saying," the girl prompted him.
+
+"Nothing very important--except how glad I am you are going my way. The
+woods are certainly lonesome by yourself. I suppose you'll be willing to
+make an early start."
+
+"The earlier the better. I've got a long way to go."
+
+They made their plans, and soon they parted to complete preparations for
+the journey. The girl went into her house: Ben took the rifle, and
+followed by the wolf, struck down the main street of the village.
+
+It can be said for Ben that he aroused no little conjecture and interest
+in the minds of the townspeople, striding through the street with the
+savage woods creature following abjectly at his heels. Evidently Ben's
+conquest was complete: the animal obeyed his every command as quickly
+as an intelligent dog. It was noticeable, however, that even the
+hardiest citizens kept an apprehensive eye on the wolf during the course
+of any conversation with Ben.
+
+He bought supplies--flour and salt and a few other essentials--simple
+tools and utensils such as are carried by prospectors, blankets, shells
+for his rifle, and a few, simple, hard-wearing clothes. He went to bed
+dead tired, his funds materially reduced. But before dawn he was up,
+wholly refreshed; and after a hasty breakfast went to pack his horses
+for the trip.
+
+Beatrice came stealing out of the shadows, more than ever suggestive of
+some timid creature of the forest, and the three of them saddled and
+packed the animals. As daylight broke they started out, down the
+shadowed street of the little town.
+
+"The last we'll see of civilization for a long, long time," the girl
+reminded him.
+
+The man thrilled deeply. "And I'm glad of it," he answered. "Nothing
+ahead but the long trail!"
+
+It was a long trail, that which they followed along Poor Man's creek in
+the morning hours. The girl led, by right of having some previous
+acquaintance with the trail. The three pack horses walked in file
+between, heads low, tails whisking; and Ben, with Fenris at his horse's
+hoofs, brought up the rear. Almost at once the spruce forest dropped
+over them, the silence and the gloom that Ben had known of old.
+
+This was not like gliding in a boat down-river. The narrow, winding
+trail offered a chance for the most intimate study of the wilderness.
+From the river the woodsfolk were but an occasional glimpse, the stir of
+a thicket on the bank: here they were living, breathing
+realities,--vivid pictures perfectly framed by the frosty green of the
+spruce.
+
+From the first mile these two riders were the best of companions. They
+talked gaily, their voices carrying to each other with entire ease
+through the still glades. He found her spirited, warm-hearted,
+responding with an eager gladness to every fresh manifestation of the
+wild; and in spite of his gay laughter she read something of the dark
+moodiness and intensity that were his dominant traits. But he was kind,
+too. His attitude toward the Little People met with on the trail--the
+little, scurrying folk--was particularly appealing: like that of a
+strong man toward children. She saw that he was sympathetic,
+instinctively chivalrous; and she got past his barrier of reserve as few
+living beings had ever done before.
+
+She saw at once that he was an expert horseman. Riding a half-broken
+mustang over the winding, brush-grown moose trails of the North is not
+like cantering a thoroughbred along a park avenue, and a certain amount
+of difficulty is the rule rather than the exception; but he controlled
+his animal as no man of her acquaintance had ever done. He rode a bay
+mare that was not, by a long way, the most reliable piece of horseflesh
+McClurg owned, yet she gave him the best she had in her, scrambling with
+a burst of energy on the pitches, leaping the logs, battling the mires,
+and obeying his every wish. The joy of the Northern trails depends
+largely upon the service rendered by the horse between one's knees, and
+Ben knew it to the full.
+
+Before the first two hours were past Beatrice found herself thrilling
+with admiration at Ben's woodcraft. Not only by experience but by
+instinct and character he was wholly fitted for life in the waste
+places. Just as some artists are born with the soul of music, he had
+come to the earth with the Red Gods at his beck and call; the spirit of
+the wild things seemed to move in his being. She didn't wholly
+understand. She only knew that this man, newly come from "The States,"
+riding so straight and talking so gaily behind her, had qualities native
+to the forest that were lacking not only in her, but in such men as her
+father and Ray Brent. Seemingly he had inherited straight from the
+youngest days of the earth those traits by which aboriginal man
+conquered the wild.
+
+The first real manifestation of this truth occurred soon after they
+reached the bank of Poor Man's creek. All at once he had shouted at her
+and told her to stop her horse. She drew up and turned in her saddle,
+questioning.
+
+"There's something stirring in the thicket beside you. Don't you hear
+him?"
+
+Beatrice had sharp ears, but she strained in vain for the sound that,
+forty feet farther distant, Ben heard easily. She shook her head, firmly
+believing his imagination had led him astray. But an instant later a
+coyote--one of those gray skulkers whose waging cries at twilight every
+woodfarer knows--sprang out of his covert and darted away.
+
+Beatrice was amazed. The significance of the incident went further than
+the fact of mere good hearing. The coyote, except when he chooses to
+wail out his wrongs at the fall of night, is one of the forest shadows
+for silence--yet Ben had heard him. It meant nothing less than that
+strange quickening of the senses found in but few--master woodsmen--that
+is the especial trait and property of the beasts themselves.
+
+Now that they climbed toward Spruce Pass their talk died away, and more
+and more they yielded themselves to the hushed mood of the forest. Their
+trail was no longer clearly pronounced. It was a wilderness
+thoroughfare in the true sense,--a winding path made by the feet of the
+great moose journeying from valley to valley.
+
+Wild life became ever more manifest. They saw the grouse, Franklin's
+fowl so well beloved by tenderfeet because of their propensity to sit
+still under fire and give an unsteady marksman a second shot. Fool hens,
+the woodsman called them, and the motley and mark of their weak
+mentality were a red badge near the eye. The fat birds perched on the
+tree limbs over the trail, relying on their mottled plumage, blending
+perfectly with the dull grays and browns of the foliage, to keep them
+out of sight. But such wiles did not deceive Ben. And once, in provision
+for their noon lunch, a fat cock tumbled through the branches at
+Beatrice's pistol shot.
+
+The pine squirrels seemed to be having some sort of a competitive field
+meet, and the tricks they did in the trees above the trail filled the
+two riders with delight. They sped up and down the trunks; they sprang
+from limb to limb; they flicked their tails and turned their heads
+around backward and stood on their haunches, all the time chattering in
+the greatest excitement. Once a porcupine--stupid, inoffensive old Urson
+who carries his fort around on his back--rattled his quills in a near-by
+thicket; and once they caught a glimpse of a mule deer on the hillside.
+This was rather too cold and hard a country, however, to be beloved by
+deer. Mostly they dwelt farther upriver.
+
+All manner of wild creatures, great and small, had left signs on the
+trails. There were tracks of otter and mink, those two river hunters
+whose skins, on ladies' shoulders, are better known than the animals
+themselves. They might be only patches of fur in cities, but they were
+living, breathing personages here. Particularly they were personages to
+the trout. Ben knew perfectly how the silver fish had learned to dart
+with such rapidity in the water. They learned it keeping out of the way
+of the otter and the mink.
+
+They saw the tracks of marten--the mink that has gone into the tree tops
+to live; the doglike imprints of a coyote at which Fenris whimpered and
+scratched in excitement (doubtless wishing to run him down and bite him,
+as is the usual reception to the detested coyote by the more important
+woods creatures) and once the fresh mud showed that an old grizzly--the
+forest monarch, the ancient, savage despot of the woods of which all
+foresters, near and far, speak with deep respect--had passed that way
+but a few minutes before. Foresters both, the two riders had every
+reason to believe that the old gray tyrant was lurking somewhere in the
+thickets beside the trail, half in anger, half in curiosity watching
+them ride past. And of course the tracks of moose, and of their fellows
+of mighty antlers, the caribou, were in profusion.
+
+To all these things Beatrice responded with the joy of a true nature
+lover. Her heart thrilled and her eyes were bright; and every new track
+was a fresh surprise and delight. But Ben was affected more deeply
+still. The response he made had its origin and font in deeply hidden
+centers of his spirit; mysterious realms that no introspection could
+reveal or words lay bare.
+
+He knew nothing of Beatrice's sense of constant surprise. In his own
+heart he had known that all these woodspeople would be waiting for
+him--just as they were--and he would have known far greater amazement to
+have found some of them gone. And instead of sprightly delight he knew
+only an all-pervading sense of comfort, as a man feels upon returning to
+his home country, among the people whom he knows and understands.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+At the very headquarters of Poor Man's Creek, where the stream had
+dwindled to a silver thread between mossy banks, Beatrice and Ben made
+their noon camp. They were full in the heart of the wild, by now, and
+had mounted to those high levels and park lands beloved by the caribou.
+They built a small fire beside the stream and drew water from the deep,
+clear pools that lay between cascade and cascade.
+
+Ben Darby slowly became aware that this was one of the happiest hours
+of his life. He watched, with absorbed delight, the deft, sure motions
+of the girl as she fried the grouse and sliced bread, while Ben
+himself tended to the coffee. Already the two were on the friendliest
+terms, and since they were to be somewhere in the same region, the
+future offered the most pleasing vistas to both of them. When the
+horses were rested and Ben's pipe was out, they ventured on. Following
+a caribou trail, they ascended a majestic range of mountains--a trail
+too steep to ride and which the pack horses accomplished only with
+great difficulty--emerging onto a high plateau of open parks and small
+clumps of the darkest spruce. It was, of course, the most scenic part
+of the journey; and the inclination to talk died speedily from the
+lips.
+
+They rode in silence, watching. Both of them were sure that words, no
+matter how beautiful and eloquent, could be only a sacrilege. The very
+tone of the high ranges is that of silence vast and eternal beyond scope
+of thought, and the only sounds that can fittingly shatter that mighty
+breathlessness are the great, calamitous phenomena of nature,--the
+thunder crashing in the sky and the avalanche on the slope. The forests
+they had just left were deeply silent, but the far hush had been
+alleviated by the soft noises of wild creatures stirring about their
+occupations; perhaps also by the feeling that the thickets were full of
+sound pitched just too high or just too low for human ears to hear; but
+even this relief was absent here. The high peaks stretched before them,
+one after another, until they faded into the horizon,--majestic, aloof,
+utterly and grandly silent.
+
+The snow still lay deep over the plateau, packed to the consistency of
+ice, and the marmots had not yet emerged to welcome the spring with
+their shrill, joyous whistling. From their high place they could see the
+hills spread out below them,--fold after fold as of a great cloak,
+deeply green, seemingly infinite in expanse, broken only by the blue
+glint of the Agnes lakes, like two great twin sapphires hidden in the
+forest. But they couldn't make out a single roof top of Snowy Gulch. The
+forest had already claimed it utterly.
+
+This was the caribou range; wherever they looked they saw the tracks of
+the noble animals in the snow. Later they caught a glimpse of the
+creatures themselves, a small herd of perhaps half a dozen swinging
+along the snow in their indescribable pacing gait. They were in fitting
+surroundings, their color inexpressibly vivid against the snow, and
+Ben's heart warmed and thumped in his breast at the sight.
+
+But the trail descended at last into the great valley of the Yuga. Mile
+after mile, it seemed to them, they went down, leaving the snow, leaving
+the open glades, into the dark, still glens of spruce. At last they
+paused on the river bank.
+
+Ben was somewhat amazed at the size of the stream when it emerged below
+the rapids. It was, at its present high stage, fully one hundred and
+fifty yards across, such a stream as would bear the traffic of commerce
+in any inhabited region. They turned down the moose trail that followed
+its bank.
+
+But it was not to be that this journey should hold only delight for Ben.
+A half-mile down the river he suddenly made a most momentous and
+disturbing discovery.
+
+He had stopped his horse to reread the copy of Hiram Melville's letter,
+intending to verify his course. In the shadow of the tall, dark
+spruce--darkening ever as the light grew less--his eye sped swiftly over
+it. His gaze came to rest upon a familiar name.
+
+"Look out for Jeff Neilson and his gang," the letter read. "They seen
+some of my dust."
+
+Neilson--no wonder Ben had been perplexed when Beatrice had first spoken
+her name. No wonder it had sounded familiar. And the hot beads moistened
+his brow when he conceived of all the dreadful possibilities of that
+coincidence of names.
+
+Yet because he was a woodsman of nature and instinct, blood and birth,
+he retained the most rigid self-control. He made no perceptible start.
+At first he did not glance at Beatrice. Slowly he folded the letter and
+put it back into his pocket.
+
+"I'm going all right," he announced. He urged his horse forward. His
+perfect self-discipline had included his voice: it was deep, but wholly
+casual and unshaken. "And how about you, Miss Neilson?"
+
+He pronounced her name distinctly, giving her every chance to correct
+him in case he had misunderstood her. But there was no hope here. "I'm
+going all right, I know."
+
+"It seems to me we must be heading into about the same country," Ben
+went on. "You see, Miss Neilson, I'm going to make my first permanent
+camp somewhere along this still stretch; I've had inside dope that
+there's big gold possibilities around here."
+
+"It has never been a gold country except for pockets, some of them
+remarkably rich," she told him doubtfully, evidently trying not to
+discourage him. "But my father has come to the conclusion that it's
+really worth prospecting. He's in this same country now."
+
+"I suppose I'll meet him--I'll likely meet him to-night when I take you
+to the cabin on the river. You said his name was--"
+
+"Jeffery Neilson."
+
+For all that he was prepared for it, the name was a straight-out body
+blow to Ben. He had still dared to hope that this girl was of no blood
+kin of the claim-jumper, Jeffery Neilson. The truth was now only too
+plain. By the girl's own word he was operating in Hiram Melville's
+district and unquestionably had already jumped the claim. His daughter
+was joining him now, probably to keep house for him; and for all that
+Ben knew, already possessing guilty knowledge of her father's crime.
+
+It was hard to hold the head erect, after that. Already he had builded
+much on his friendship with this girl, only to find that she was allied
+with the enemy camp. He saw in a flash how unlikely it would be that
+Ezram and himself could drive the usurpers out: the claim-jumper is a
+difficult problem, even when the original discoverer is living and in
+possession, much more so when he is silent in his grave.
+
+Ben had known the breed since boyhood, and he hated them as he hated
+coyotes and pack-rats. They lacked the manhood to brave the unknown in
+pursuit of the golden fleece; they waited until after years of grinding
+labor the strike was made and then pounced down upon the claim like
+vultures on the dead. Ben was glad he had not obeyed his impulse to tell
+the girl of his true reason for coming to the Yuga. He knew now, with
+many foes against him, he could best operate in the dark.
+
+His thought flashed to Ezram. The recovery of the mine had been the old
+man's fondest dream, the last hope of his declining years, and this
+setback would go hard with him. The blow was ever so much more cruel on
+Ezram's account than his own. Ben could picture his downcast face,
+trying yet to smile; his sobered eyes that he would try to keep bright.
+But there would be certain planning, when they met again over their camp
+fire. And there were three of them allied now. Fenris the wolf had come
+into his service.
+
+He glanced back at the gray-black creature that followed at the heels of
+his horse; and now, at twilight's graying, he saw that a significant and
+startling change had come over him. He no longer trotted easily behind
+them. He came stalking, almost as if in the hunt, his ears pointing, his
+neck hairs bristling, and there were the beginnings of curious, lurid
+lightnings in his eyes. There could be but one answer. He had been swept
+away in the current of madness that sweeps the forest at the fall of
+darkness: the age-old intoxication of the wilderness night. The hunting
+hours were at hand. The creatures of claw and fang were coming into
+their own. Fenris was shivering all over with those dark wood's passions
+that not even the wisest naturalist can fully understand.
+
+The air was tingling and electric, just as Ben recalled it a thousand
+nights. Everywhere the hunters were leaving their lairs and starting
+forth; grasses moved and brush-clumps rustled; blood was hot and savage
+eyes were shot with fire. The mink, with unspeakable savagery, took the
+trail of a snow-shoe rabbit beside the river-bed; a lynx with pale,
+green, luminous eyes began his stalk of a tree squirrel, and various of
+Fenris' fellows--pack brothers except for his own relations with
+men--sang a song that was old when the mountains were new as they raced,
+black in silhouette against the paling sky, along a snowy ridge.
+
+Ben felt a quickening of his own senses, not knowing why. _His_ blood,
+too, spurted inordinately fast through his veins, and his flesh seemed
+to creep and tingle. There could be no surer proof of his legitimacy as
+a son of the wilderness. The passions that maddened the first men, near
+to the beasts they hunted in their ancient forests, returned in all
+their fullness. The dusk deepened. The trail dimmed so that the eye had
+to strain to follow it.
+
+Complex and weird were the passions invoked to-night, but not even to
+the gray wolf that is, beyond all other creatures, the embodiment of the
+wilderness spirit, did there come such a madness, such a dark and
+terrible lust, as that which cursed a certain wayfarer beyond the next
+bend in the river. This was not one of the forest people, neither the
+lynx, nor the hunting otter, nor even the venerable grizzly with whom no
+one contests the trail. It was a human being,--a man of youthful body
+and strong, deeply lined, yet savage face.
+
+A close observer would have noticed the faintest tremor and shiver
+throughout his body. His eyes were very bright, vivid even in the dying
+day. He was deeply lost in his own mood, seemingly oblivious to the
+whole world about him. He carried a rifle in his hands.
+
+He was on his way to report to his chief; and just what would be
+forthcoming he did not know. But if too much objection were raised and
+affairs got to a crucial stage, he had nothing to fear. He had learned a
+certain lesson--an avenue to triumph. It was strange that he had never
+hit upon it before.
+
+His blood was scalding hot, and he was swept by exultation. Not for an
+instant had he hesitated, nor Would he ever hesitate again. There was no
+one in the North of greater might than he! No one could bend his will
+from now on. He had found the road to triumph.
+
+Ray Brent had discovered a new power within himself. Perhaps even his
+chief, Jeffery Neilson, must yield before his new-found strength.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+As twilight darkened to the full gloom of the forest night, Ben and
+Beatrice rode to a lonely cabin on the Yuga River,--one that had been
+built by Hiram Melville years past and was just at the mouth of the
+little creek on which, less than a half-mile distant, he had his claim.
+They had seen a lighted window from afar, marking the end of Beatrice's
+hard day's ride.
+
+"Of course you won't try to go on to-night?" she asked Ben. "You'll stay
+at the cabin?"
+
+"There likely won't be room for three," he answered. "But it's a clear
+night. I can make a fire and sleep out."
+
+It was true. The stars were emerging, faint points of light through the
+darkening canopy of the sky; and to the East a silver glint on the
+horizon forecast the rising moon.
+
+They halted at last; and Beatrice saw her father's form, framed in the
+doorway. She hastened into his arms: waiting in the darkness Ben could
+not help but hear his welcome. Many things were doubtful; but there
+could be no doubt of the love that Neilson bore his daughter. The
+amused, half-teasing words with which he received her did not in the
+least disguise it. "The joy and the light of his life," Ben commented to
+himself. The gray old claim-jumper had this to redeem him, at least.
+
+"But why so many horses, Beatrice?" he asked. "You--brought some one
+with you?"
+
+Ben was not so far distant that he failed to discern the instant change
+in Neilson's tone. It had a strained, almost an apprehensive quality
+such as few men had ever heard in his voice before. Plainly all visitors
+in this end of the mountains were regarded with suspicion.
+
+"He's a prospector--Mr. Darby," the girl replied. "Come here, Ben--and
+be introduced." She turned toward her new-found friend; and the latter
+walked near, into the light that streamed over him from the doorway.
+"This is my father, Mr. Darby--Mr. Neilson. Some one told him this was a
+good gold country."
+
+Ben had already decided upon his course of action and had his answer
+ready. He knew perfectly that it would only put Neilson on his guard if
+he stated his true position; and besides, he wanted word of Ezram. "I
+may have a wrong steer, Mr. Neilson," he said, "but a man I met down on
+the river-trail, out of Snowy Gulch, advised me to come here. He said
+that he had some sort of a claim up here that his brother left him, and
+though it was a pocket country, he thought there'd soon be a great rush
+up this way."
+
+"I hardly know who it could have been that you met," Neilson began
+doubtfully. "He didn't tell you his name--"
+
+"Melville. I believe that was it. And if you'll tell me how to find him,
+I'll try to go on to-night. I brought him some of his belongings from
+Snowy Gulch--"
+
+"Melville, eh? I guess I know who you mean now. But no--I don't know of
+any claim unless it's over east, beyond here. Maybe further down the
+river."
+
+Ben made no reply at once; but his mind sped like lightning. Of course
+Neilson was lying about the claim: he knew perfectly that at that moment
+he was occupying one of Hiram Melville's cabins. He was a first-class
+actor, too--his voice indicating scarcely no acquaintance with or
+interest in the name.
+
+"He hasn't come up this way?" Ben asked casually.
+
+"He hasn't come through here that I know of. Of course I'm working at my
+claim--with my partners--and he might have gone through without our
+seeing him. It seems rather unlikely."
+
+Ben was really puzzled now. If Ezram had already made his presence known
+and was camping somewhere in the hills about, there was no reason
+immediately evident why Neilson should deny his presence. Ben found
+himself wondering whether by any chance Ezram had been delayed along the
+trail, perhaps had even lost his way, and had not yet put in an
+appearance.
+
+"He told me, in the few minutes that I talked to him, that his cabin was
+somewhere close to this one--I thought he said up this creek."
+
+"There is a cabin up the creek a way," Neilson admitted, "but it isn't
+the one he meant. It's on my claim, and my two partners are living in
+it. But when he said near to this one, he might have meant ten miles.
+That's the way we Northern men speak of distance."
+
+There was nothing more to say, nothing to do at present. He said his
+farewells to the girl, refused an invitation to pass the night in the
+cabin, and made his way to the green bank of the stream. Four hundred
+yards from the cabin, and perhaps a like number from the cabin of Ray
+and Charley--obscured from both by the thickets--he pitched his camp.
+
+In the cabin he had left Jeffery Neilson catechized his daughter, trying
+to learn all he could concerning Ben. It was true that he carried the
+dead Hiram's rifle, and that the latter's pet wolf followed at his
+heels, but it was wholly probable that the old man, Hiram's brother,
+with whom he had conversed at the river, had designated him to get them.
+He had been courteous and respectful throughout the journey to the Yuga,
+Beatrice said, and he had also saved her from possible death in the
+fangs of the wolf the evening previous. Neilson decided that he would
+take no steps at present but merely wait and watch developments.
+
+Meanwhile Ben had made his fire and unpacked his horses. He confined his
+riding horse with a picket rope; the others he turned loose. Then he
+cooked a simple meal for himself and the gaunt servant at his heels.
+
+When the night had come down in full, and as he sat about the glowing
+coals of his supper fire, he had time to devote serious thought to the
+fate of Ezram. It occurred to him that perhaps the old man had
+discovered, at a distance, the presence of the claim-jumpers; and was
+merely waiting in the thickets for a chance to take action. If such were
+the case, sooner or later they could join their fortunes again. It was
+also easy to imagine that Ezram had lost his way on the journey out.
+
+He stood at the edge of the firelight, gazing out into the darkened
+forest. The wolf crouched beside him: alert, watching his face for any
+command. It was wholly plain that the gaunt woods creature had accepted
+him at once as his master; and that the bond between them, because of
+some secret similarity of spirit, was already far closer than between
+most masters and their pets.
+
+Ben sensed another side of the forest to-night because of his inborn
+love of the waste places not often seen. The thickets were menacing,
+sinister to-night. The spruce crept up to the skyline with darkness and
+mystery: he realized the eternal malevolence that haunts their silent
+fastnesses. They would have tricks in plenty to play on such as would
+lose their way on their dusky trails! Oh, they would have no mercy or
+remorse for any one who was lost, _out there_, to-night! Ben felt a
+heavy burden of dread!
+
+Even now, old Ezram might be wandering, vainly, through the gloomy,
+whispering woods, ever penetrating farther into their merciless
+solitudes. And no homes smoked in the clearings, no camps glowed in the
+immensity of the dark--out there. This was just the beginning of the
+forest; clear into the shadow of the Arctic Circle, where the woodlands
+gave way to the Weary wastes of barrens, there was no break, no tilled
+fields or fisher's villages, only an occasional Indian encampment which
+not even a wolf, running through the night, might find. His supply of
+food would quickly be exhausted, fatigue would break his valiant spirit.
+Ben planned an extensive search for his tracks as soon as the morning
+light permitted him to see.
+
+He missed the old man's comradeship with a deep and fervid longing. They
+had come to count on each other, these past weeks. It wasn't alone
+infinite gratitude that he felt for him now. The thing went too deep to
+tell. Yet there was no use seeking for him to-night.
+
+He turned to the wolf and dropped his hand upon the animal's shoulder.
+Fenris started, then quivered in ecstasy. "I wish I had your nose,
+to-night, old boy," Ben told him. "I'd find that old buddy of mine. I
+wish I had your eyes to see in the dark, and your legs to run. Fenris,
+do you know where he is?"
+
+The wolf turned his wild eyes toward his master's face, as if he were
+trying to understand.
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+Impelled by an urge within himself Ben suddenly knelt beside his lupine
+friend. He could not understand the flood of emotion, the vague sense of
+impending and dramatic events that stirred him to the quick. He only
+knew, with a knowledge akin to inspiration, that in Fenris lay the
+answer to his problem.
+
+The moment was misted over with a quality of unreality. In the east rose
+the moon, shining incredibly on the tree tops, showering down through
+the little rifts in the withholding branches, enchanting the place as by
+the weaving of a dream. The moon madness caught up Ben like a flame,
+enthralling him as never before. He knew that white sphere of old. And
+all at once he realized that here, at his knees, was one who knew it
+too,--with a knowledge as ancient and as infinite as his own. Not for
+nothing had the wolf breed lived their lives beneath it through the long
+roll of the ages. Its rising and its setting had regulated the hunting
+hours of the pack time without end; its beams had lighted the game
+trails where the gray band had bayed after the deer; its light had
+beheld, since the world was young, the rapturous mating of the old pack
+leader and his female. Fenris too knew the moon-madness; but unlike Ben
+he had a means of expression of the wonder and mystery and vague longing
+that thrilled his wild heart. No man who has heard the pack song to the
+moon could doubt this fact. It is a long, melancholy wail, poignant with
+the pain of living, but it tells what man can not.
+
+Ben knew, now, why he was a forester, a woodsman famed even among
+woodsmen. Most of his fellows had been tamed by civilization; they had
+lived beneath roofs instead of the canopy of heaven, and they had almost
+forgotten about the moon. Ben, on the other hand, was a recurrence of an
+earlier type, inheriting little from his immediate ancestors but
+reverting back a thousand centuries to the Cave and the Squatting Place.
+His nature was that of prehistoric man rather than that of the son of
+civilization; and in this lay the explanation for all that had set him
+apart from the great run of men and had made him the master woodsman
+that he was. And because his spirit was of the wildwood, because he also
+knew the magic of the moon, he was able to make this wildwood thing at
+his feet understand and obey his will.
+
+The world of to-day seemed to fade out for him and left only the wolf,
+its fierce eyes on his own. Time swung back, and this might have been a
+scene of forgotten ages,--the wolf, the human hunter, the smoldering
+camp fire, the dark, jagged line of spruce against the sky. It was thus
+at the edge of the ice. Wolf and man--both children of the wild--had
+understood each other then; and they could understand each other now.
+
+"Fenris, old boy," the man whispered. "Can you find him for me, Fenris?
+He's out there somewhere--" the man motioned toward the dark--"and I
+want him. Can you take me to him?"
+
+The wolf trembled all over, struggling to get his meaning. This was no
+creature of subordinate intelligence: the great wolf of the North. He
+had, besides the cunning of the wild hunters, the intelligence that is
+the trait of the whole canine breed. Nor did he depend on his sense of
+hearing alone. He watched his master's face, and more than that, he was
+tuned and keyed to those mysterious vibrations that carry a message from
+brain to brain no less clearly and swift than words themselves,--the
+secret wireless of the wild.
+
+"He's my buddy, old boy, and I want you to find him for me," Ben went
+on, more patiently. He searched his pockets, drawing out at last the
+copy of the letter Ezram had given him that morning, and, because the
+old man had carried it for many days, it could still convey a message to
+the keen nose of the wolf. He put it to the animal's nostrils, then
+pointed away into the darkness.
+
+Fenris followed the motion with his eyes; and presently his long body
+stiffened. Ben watched him, fascinated. Then the wolf sniffed at the
+paper again and trotted away into the night.
+
+In one leap Ben was on his feet, following him. The wolf turned once,
+saw that his master was at his heels, and sped on. They turned up a
+slight draw, toward the hillside.
+
+It became clear at once that Fenris was depending upon his marvelous
+sense of smell. His nose would lower to the ground, and sometimes he
+tacked back and forth, uncertainly. At such times Ben watched him with
+bated breath. But always he caught the scent again.
+
+Once more he paused, sniffing eagerly; then turned, whining. Just as
+clearly as if they had possessed a mutual language Ben understood: the
+animal had caught the clear scent at last. The wolf loped off, and his
+fierce bay rang through the hushed forest.
+
+It was a long-drawn, triumphant note; and the wild creatures paused in
+their mysterious, hushed occupations to listen. It was also significant
+that it made certain deadly inroads in the spirit of Ray Brent, sitting
+in his distant cabin. He marked the direction of the sound, and he
+cursed, half in awe, under his breath. He had always hated the gray
+rangers. They were the uncanny demons of the forest.
+
+Ben followed the running wolf as fast as he could; and in his eagerness
+he had no opportunity for conjecture as to what he would find at the end
+of the pursuit. Yet he did not believe for an instant this was a false
+trail. The wolf's deep, full-ringing bays were ever more urgent and
+excited, filling the forest with their uproar. But quite suddenly the
+silence closed down again, seemingly more deep and mysterious than ever.
+
+Ben's first sensation was one of icy terror that crept to the very
+marrow of his bones. He knew instantly that there was a meaning of
+dreadful portent in the abrupt cessation of the cries. He halted an
+instant, listening, but at first could hear no more than the throb of
+his heart in his breast and the whisper of his own troubled breathing.
+But presently, at a distance of one hundred yards, he distinguished the
+soft whining of the wolf.
+
+Fenris was no longer running! He had halted at the edge of a distant
+thicket. The cold sweat sprang out on Ben's forehead, and he broke into
+a headlong run.
+
+There was no later remembrance of traversing that last hundred yards.
+The hillside seemed to whip under his feet. He paused at last, just at
+the dark margin of an impenetrable thicket. The wolf whined
+disconsolately just beyond the range of his vision.
+
+"Ezram!" he called, a curious throbbing quality in his voice. "Are you
+there, Ez? It's me--Ben."
+
+But the thickets neither rustled nor spoke. The cracked old voice he had
+learned to love did not speak in relief, in that moment of unutterable
+suspense. Indeed, the silence seemed to deepen about him. The spruce
+trees were hushed and impassive as ever; the moon shone and the wind
+breathed softly in his face. Fenris came whimpering toward him.
+
+Together, the man and the wolf, they crept on into the thicket. They
+halted at last before a curious shadow in the silvered covert. Ben knew
+at once he had found his ancient comrade.
+
+He and Ezram had had their last laugh together. He lay very still, the
+moonlight ensilvering his droll, kindly face,--sleeping so deeply that
+no human voice could ever waken him. An ugly rifle wound yawned darkly
+at his temple.
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+The first effect of a great shock is usually a semi-paralysis of the
+entire mental mechanism and is, as a rule, beneficent. The brain seems
+to be enclosed in a great preoccupation, like a wall, and the messages
+of pain and horror brought by the nerves batter against it in vain. The
+senses are dulled, the perceptions blunted, and full realization does
+not come.
+
+For a long time, in which time itself stood still, Ben sat beside the
+dead body of his old counselor and friend as a child might sit among
+flowers. He half leaned forward, his arms limp, his hands resting in his
+lap, a deep wonder and bewilderment in his eyes. Dully he watched the
+moon lifting in the sky and felt the caress of the wind against his
+face, glancing only from time to time at the huddled body before him.
+The wolf whined softly, and sometimes Ben reached his hand to caress the
+furry shoulder.
+
+But slowly his wandering faculties returned to him. He began to
+understand. Ezram was dead--that was it--gone from his life as smoke
+goes in the air. Never to hear him again, or see him, or make plans with
+him, or have high adventures beside him along the lonely trails. Fenris
+had found him in the darkness: here he lay--the old family friend, the
+man who had saved him, redeemed him and given him his chance, his old
+"buddy" who had brought him home. The thing was not credible at first:
+that here, dead as a stone, lay the shell of that life that had been his
+own salvation. He studied intently the gray face, missed its habitual
+smile and for really the first time his gaze rested upon the yawning
+wound in the temple.
+
+He gazed at it in speechless, growing horror, and something like an
+incredible cold descended upon him. The entire hydraulic system of his
+blood seemed to be freezing. His hands were cold, his vitals icy and
+lifeless. There was, however, the beginning of heat somewhere back of
+his eyes. He could feel it but dimly, but it was increasing, slowly,
+like a smoldering coal that eats its way into wood and soon will burst
+into a flame. Slowly he began to grow rigid, his muscles flexing. His
+face underwent a tangible change. The lines deepened, the lips set in a
+hard line, the eyes were like those of a reptile,--cold, passionless,
+unutterably terrible. His face was pale like the paleness of death, but
+it appeared more like hard, white metal than flesh. His mind began to
+work clear again; he began to understand.
+
+Ezram had been shot, murdered by the men who had jumped his claim.
+Beatrice's father, who had talked to him, had probably committed the
+crime: if not he, one of his understrappers at his order. He found
+himself recalling what Jeffery Neilson had said. Oh, the man had been
+sharp! Believing that in the depth of the forest the body would never be
+discovered, he had tried to send Ben farther into the interior in search
+of him.
+
+He arose, wholly self-mastered, and with hard, strong hands made a
+detailed examination of Ezram's wound. He had evidently been shot by a
+rifle of large caliber, probably at close range. Ezram's own gun lay at
+his feet, loaded but not cocked.
+
+"They shot you down in cold blood, old boy, didn't they?" he found
+himself asking. "You didn't have a chance!"
+
+But the gray lips were setting with death, and could not answer. Ben
+had forgotten for the instant; he must keep better hold of himself. The
+time was not ripe to turn himself loose. But he did wish for one more
+word with Ezram, just a few little minutes of planning. They could
+doubtless work out something good together. They could decide what to
+do.
+
+From this point his mind naturally fell to Ezram's parting advice to
+him. "I've only got one decent place to keep things safe, and that ain't
+so all-fired decent," the old man had told him. "I always put 'em down
+my bootleg, between the sock and the leather. If I ever get shuffled
+off, all of a sudden, I want you to look there careful."
+
+Still with the same deathly pallor he crept over the dead leaves to
+Ezram's feet. His hands were perfectly steady as he unlooped the laces,
+one after another, and quietly pulled off the right boot. In the boot
+leg, just as Ezram had promised, Ben found a scrap of white paper.
+
+He spread it on his knee, and unfolded it with care. The moonlight was
+not sufficiently vivid, however, for him to read the penciled scrawl. He
+felt in his pocket for a match.
+
+Because his mind was operating clear and sure, his thoughts flashed at
+once to his enemies in their cabins along the creek. He did not want
+them to know he had found the body. His first instinct was to work in
+the dark, to achieve his ends by stealth and cunning! It was strange
+what capacity for cunning had come upon him. Oh, he would be
+crafty--sharp--sure in every motion.
+
+It was unlikely, however, that the faint glare of a match could carry so
+far. To make sure he walked behind the covert, then turned his back to
+the canyon through which the creek flowed. The match cracked,
+inordinately loud in the silence, and his eyes followed the script.
+Ezram had been faithful to the last:
+
+ To WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
+
+ In case of my death I leave all I die possessed of including my
+ brother Hiram's claim near Yuga River to my pard and buddy, Ben
+ Darby.
+
+ (Signed) EZRA MELVILLE.
+
+The document was as formal as Ezram could make it, with a carefully
+drawn seal, and for all its quaint wording, it was a will to stand in
+any court. But Ezram had not been able to hold his dignity for long. He
+had added a postscript:
+
+ Son, old Hiram made a will, and I guess I can make one too. I just
+ found out about them devils that jumped our claim. I left you back
+ there at the river because I didn't want you taking any dam fool
+ risks till I found out how things lay.
+
+ I just got one thing to ask. If them devils get me--get them. My
+ life ain't worth much but I want you to make them pay for the little
+ it is worth. Never stop till you've done it.
+
+Ben lighted match after match until he had absorbed every word. Then he
+folded the paper and placed it in his pocket; but the action did not in
+the least take his eyes from the words. He could still see them, written
+in fire. They were branded on his spirit.
+
+He stood wholly motionless for a space of almost a minute, as if
+listening. The heat back of his eyes was more intense now. The red coals
+were about to burst into flame. All the blood of his huge body seemed to
+be collecting there, searing his brain.
+
+The moon was no longer white in the sky. It had turned a fiery red. The
+stars were red too,--all of them more red than the Star of War. "I want
+you to make them pay," a voice said clearly in his ears. "Never stop
+till you've done it."
+
+And now Ben was no longer pale. His face was no longer hard and set.
+Rather it was dark--dark as dark earth. His eyes glowed like coals
+beneath his black brows. He was not standing still and lifeless now. He
+was shivering all over with the blackest hate, the most deadly fury.
+
+"Make them pay," he said aloud again, "and never stop till you've done
+it."
+
+A sudden snarl from the lips of the wolf drew his eyes downward. Heaven
+help him; for the moment he had forgotten Fenris! But he must not forget
+him again. They had work to do, the two of them.
+
+Fenris was no longer whining disconsolately. His master's fury had
+passed to him, and Ben looked and saw before him not the docile pet, but
+the savage beast of the wild. The hair was erect on his shoulders, his
+lips were drawn, too; he was crouched as if for battle. The eyes, sunken
+in their sockets, were red and terrible to see. Yet he was still Ben's
+servant. That quality could never pass from him. The eyes of two
+met,--the wolf and the man.
+
+At that instant the little tongue of flame that had been mounting in
+Ben's brain burst into a dreadful conflagration. It was the explosion at
+last, no less terrible because of its silence--because the sound of the
+least, little wind was still discernible in the distant thickets. He
+dropped to his knees before the wolf, seizing its head in a terrific
+grasp. He half jerked it off its feet, till he held it so that its eyes
+burned straight into his.
+
+"Fenris, Fenris!" he breathed. "We've got to make them pay. And we must
+not stop till we're done."
+
+It was more than a command. It had the quality of a vow. And now, as
+they knelt, eyes looking into eyes, it was like a pagan rite in the
+ancient world.
+
+Their separate identities were no longer greatly pronounced. They were
+not man and beast, they were simply the wolves of the forest. The old
+qualities most often associated with manhood--gentleness, forbearance,
+mercy--seemed to pass away from Ben as a light passes into darkness.
+Only the Wolf was left, the dominant Beast--that darker, hidden side of
+himself from which no man can wholly escape and which civilization has
+only smothered, as fresh fuel smothers a flame. Not for nothing had his
+fellows known him as "Wolf" Darby; and now the name was true.
+
+The Beast that dwells under every man's skin, in a greater or less
+degree, was in the full ascendancy at last. The unnamable ferocity that
+marks the death-leap of the wild hunters was in his face. In his eyes
+was cunning,--such craft as marks the pack in its hunting. All over him
+was written that unearthly rage that is alone the property and trait of
+the woods creatures: the fury with which a she-wolf fights for her cubs
+or a rattlesnake avenges the death of its mate. Mercy, remorse,
+compassion there was none.
+
+And the demon gods of the wilderness rejoiced. For uncounted thousands
+of years the tide of battle had flowed against them; and it was long and
+long since they had won such a victory as this. Mostly their men
+children had forsaken their leafy bowers to live in houses. They tilled
+the ground rather than hunt in the forest. The cattle that had once run
+wild in the marshes now fed dully in enclosed pastures; the horses--that
+mighty breed that once mated and fought and died in freedom on the high
+lands--pulled lowly burdens in the cultivated fields. Even some of the
+canine people too--first cousins to the wolves themselves--had sold
+themselves into slavery for a gnawed bone and a chimney corner. But
+to-night the wild had claimed its own again.
+
+Here was one, at least, who had come back into his own. The forest
+seemed to whisper and thrill with rapture.
+
+
+
+
+
+PART TWO
+
+THE WOLF-MAN
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+As a wolf might plan a hunt in the forest, Ben planned his war against
+Neilson and his subordinates. He knew perfectly that he must not attempt
+open warfare. The way of the wolf is the way of cunning and stealth: the
+stalk through the thicket and the ferocious attack upon the
+unsuspecting; and such example must guide Ben in his operations. He
+could not be too careful, too furtive.
+
+His foes were three against one, and they were on their own ground. They
+knew the trails and the lay of the country; and as always, in the
+science of warfare, this was an advantage hardly to be overcome. Ben
+knew that his only hope lay in the finest strategy. First he must make a
+surprise attack, and second, he must utilize all natural advantages.
+
+He was well aware that he could lie in ambush, close to the mine, and
+probably send one man to a speedy death with a rifle bullet. But he did
+not have one enemy; he had three. The survivors of the first shot would
+immediately seek shelter--probably returning shot for shot--and that
+would insert an element of uncertainty into the venture. At the distance
+he would be obliged to shoot, he would possibly only succeed in wounding
+one of his enemies, and he might miss him altogether. Such a plan as
+this was wholly too uncertain for adoption.
+
+There must be no sporting chances in his strategy. The way of the wolf
+is to cover every opening, to prepare for every contingency that his
+brute mind can foresee. He would give and receive no quarter, and the
+ancient fairness and honor must be likewise forgotten. He must take no
+risk with his own life until the last of the three was down. What
+happened thereafter did not greatly concern him. The world could shatter
+to atoms after that for all he would care. He was a son of forest
+solitude; and he had but one dream left in life.
+
+It was not his aim to give his foes the least chance to fight back, the
+slightest hope of battle. He would use any advantage, descend to any
+wile. This was not to be a sportsmen's war, but a grim battle to the
+death, inexorable and merciless.
+
+These things were all fully known to him before ever he left the
+hillside, and like a man asleep, walked down to his camp. The fire had
+burned down to coals--sullen and angry--but he heaped on fuel, and they
+broke into a blaze. Then, Fenris at his side, he squatted on the ground
+beside the dancing flame.
+
+He watched it, fascinated; mostly silent but sometimes muttering and
+whispering half-enunciated words. His red eyes and the black hair,
+matted about his lips and shadowing the backs of his hands, gave him a
+wild, fierce look; and it was as if the primal blood-lust and hatred
+that seared him had literally swept him back into the forgotten
+centuries,--the first, savage human hunter at the edge of the retreating
+glaciers. The scene had not changed: dark spruce and the red glow of
+fire; and there was atavism in his very posture. The first men had
+squatted beside their camp fires this same way, their wolfine pets
+beside them, as they made their battle plans.
+
+The eager flames held Ben's fascinated gaze as a crystal ball might hold
+the eyes of a seer. They seemed to have a message for him if he could
+just grasp it, a course whereby he might achieve success. Oh, they could
+be cruel, relentless--mercilessly eating their way into sensitive flesh.
+They were no respecters of persons, these creeping, leaping tongues. Nor
+must _he_ have any scruples or qualms as to how he gained his ends. He
+too must be merciless, and if necessary, strike down the innocent in
+order to reach the guilty.
+
+As he watched certain knowledge reached him of life and death. The
+conclusion slowly came to him that just blind killing was not enough.
+For all he knew death might bring instant forgetfulness--and thus not
+constitute in itself a satisfactory measure of vengeance. The _fear_ of
+death was a reality and a torment: for all he knew, the thing itself
+might be a change for the better. It might be that, suddenly hurled out
+of this world of three dimensions, his enemies would have no knowledge
+nor carry no memories of the hand that struck them down. There could be
+no satisfaction in this. To murder from ambush might be a measure of
+expedience, but never one of self-gratification. When Ben struck he
+wanted them to know who was their enemy, and for what crime they were
+laid low.
+
+The best way of all, of course, was to strike indirectly at them,
+perhaps through some one they loved. Soon, perhaps, he would see the
+way.
+
+He went to his blankets, but sleep did not come to him. The wolf stood
+on guard. Beatrice Neilson had fallen into happy dreams long since, but
+there was further wakefulness in Hiram Melville's newer cabin, farther
+up-creek. Ray Brent and Chan Heminway still sat over their cups, the
+fiery liquid running riot in their veins, but slumber did not come
+easily to-night. And when Beatrice was asleep, Neilson stole down the
+moonlit moose trail and joined his men.
+
+"I've brought news," he began, when the door had closed out the stars
+and the breath of the night. Chan, his small eyes glazed from strong
+drink, staggered to his feet to offer his chair to his chief. Brent,
+however, was in no mood for servility to-night. He had done man's work
+in the early evening; and his triumph and his new-found sense of power
+had not yet died in his body. Perhaps he had learned the way to all
+success. There was a curious sullen defiance in the blearing gaze over
+his glass.
+
+"What's your news?" Ray's voice harshened, possessing a certain quality
+of grim levity. "I guess old Hiram's brother hasn't come to life again,
+has he?"
+
+It was a significant thing that both Chan and Neilson looked oppressed
+and uneasy at the words. Like all men of low moral status they were
+secretly superstitious, and these boasting words crept unpleasantly
+under their skins. It is never a good thing to taunt the dead! Ray had
+spoken sheerly to frighten and shock them, thus revealing his own
+fearlessness and strength; yet his voice rang louder than he had meant.
+He had no desire for it to carry into the silver mystery of the night.
+
+"The less you say about Hiram's brother the better," Neilson answered
+sternly. "We've thrashed it out once to-night." He straightened as he
+read the insolence, the gathering insubordination in the other's
+contemptuous glance; and his voice lacked its old ring of power when he
+spoke again. "Jumpin' claims is one thing and murder is another."
+
+Ray, spurred on by the false strength of wickedness, drunk with his new
+sense of power, was already feeling the first surge of deadly anger in
+his veins. "I suppose if you had been doin' it, you'd let that old whelp
+take back this claim, worth a quarter million if it's worth a cent. Not
+if I know it. It was the only way--and the safe way too."
+
+"Safe! What if by a thousandth chance some one would blunder on to that
+body you left in the brush? What if some sergeant of mounted police
+would say to his man, 'Go get Ray Brent!' Where would you be then?
+You've always been a murderer at heart, Brent--but some time you'll slip
+up--"
+
+"Only a fool slips up. Don't think I didn't figure on everything. As you
+say, there's not one chance in a thousand any one will ever find him. If
+they do, there wouldn't be any kind of a case. Likely the old man hasn't
+got a friend or relation on earth. I've searched his pockets--there's
+nothing to tell who he is. We'll have our claim recorded soon, and it
+would be easy to make him out the claim-jumper rather than us--"
+
+"Wait just a minute before you say he ain't got any friends, or at least
+acquaintances. That's what I came to see you about to-night." Neilson
+paused, for the sake of suspense. "Beatrice came up to-night, as agreed,
+and she had a prospector with her--and he knew old Hiram's brother."
+
+A short, tense silence followed his words, and Ray stared into his cup.
+It might be that just for an instant the reckless light went out of his
+eyes and left them startled and glazing. Then he got to his feet. "Then
+God Almighty!" he cried. "What you waiting for? Why don't you croak him
+off before this night's over?"
+
+"Wait, you fool, till you've heard everything," Neilson replied.
+"There's no hurry about killing. As I told you, the less work of that
+kind we do, the more chance we've got of dying in our beds. It may be
+reasonable for one prospector to disappear, but some one's going to be
+suspicious if two of 'em do. I think I've already handled the matter."
+
+"I'd handle it, and quick too," Ray protested.
+
+"You'd handle yourself up a gallows, too. He doesn't seem to be a close
+friend of this old man; he just seems to have met up with him at the
+river, and the old man steered him up here. He asked me where the old
+man's claim was, and said he wanted to go over and see him. He was
+taking Hiram's wolf and his gun up to him. I told him I hadn't heard of
+the claim, that it must be farther inside, and I think I put it over. He
+ain't got the least suspicion. What he'll do is hang around here a
+while, I suppose, prospecting--and likely enough soon forget all about
+the old devil. I just came down here to tell you he was here and to
+watch your step."
+
+"Then the first thing up," Chan Heminway suggested, "is to bury the
+stiff."
+
+"Spoke up like a fool!" Ray answered. "Not till this man is dead or out
+of the country. It's well hidden, and don't go prowling anywheres near
+it. If he's the least bit suspicious, or even if he's on the lookout for
+gold, he'd likely enough follow you. But there's one thing we can
+do--and that quick."
+
+"And what's that?"
+
+"Start Chan off to-morrow to the office in Bradleyburg and record this
+claim in our names. We've waited too long already."
+
+"Ray, you're talking like a man now," Neilson agreed. "You and I stay
+here and work away, innocent as can be, on the claim. Chan, put that
+bottle away and get to bed. Take the trail down first thing to-morrow.
+Then we can laugh at all the prospectors that want to come."
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+Soon after the break of dawn Ben put his pick and shovel on his
+shoulder, and leisurely walked up the creek past Ray's cabin. Since Chan
+Heminway had already departed down the long trail to Bradleyburg--a town
+situated nearly forty miles from Snowy Gulch--Ray alone saw him pass;
+and he eyed him with some apprehension. Daylight had brought a more
+vivid consciousness of his last night's crime; and a little of his
+bravado had departed from him. He moved closer to his rifle.
+
+Yet in a moment his suspicions were allayed. Ben was evidently a
+prospector, just as he claimed to be, and was venturing forth to get his
+first "lay of the land." The latter continued up the draw, crossed a
+ridge, halted now and then in the manner of the wild creatures to see if
+he were being followed, and finally by a roundabout route returned to
+the lifeless form of his only friend. The wolf still trotted in silence
+behind him.
+
+The vivid morning light only revealed the crime in more dreadful detail.
+The withered form lay huddled in the stained leaves; and Ben stood a
+long time beside it, in deep and wondering silence, even now scarcely
+able to believe the truth. How strange it was that this old comrade
+could not waken and go on with him again! But in a moment he remembered
+his work.
+
+Slowly, laboriously, with little outward sign of the emotion that rent
+his heart, he dug a shallow grave He knew perfectly that this was a
+serious risk to his cause. Should the murderer return for any purpose,
+to his dead, the grave would of course show that the body had been
+discovered and would put him on his guard against Ben. Nevertheless, the
+latter could not leave these early remains to the doubtful mercy of the
+wilderness: the agents of air and sun, and the wild beasts.
+
+He threw the last clod and stood looking down at the upturned earth.
+"Sleep good, old Ez," he murmured in simple mass for the dead. "I'll do
+what you said."
+
+Then, at the head of the grave, he thrust the barrel of Ezram's rifle
+into the ground, a monument grim as his own thoughts. The last rite was
+completed; he was free to work now. From now on he could devote every
+thought to the work in hand,--the payment of his debts.
+
+By the same roundabout route he circled back to his camp, cooked his
+meager lunch, and in the afternoon ventured forth again. But he was
+prospecting in earnest this time, though the prospects that he sought
+were those of victory to his cause, rather than of gold. He was seeking
+simply a good, general idea of the nature and geography of the country
+so that he might know better how to plan his attack.
+
+His excursion took him at last to the wooded bank of the river. He stood
+a long time, quite motionless, listening to the water voices that only
+the wise can understand. This was really a noble stream. It flowed with
+such grandeur in its silence and solitude; old and gray and austere, it
+was a mighty expression of wilderness power,--resistless, immortal,
+eternally secretive. The waters flowed darkly, icy cold from the melting
+snow; but like a sleeping giant they would be quick to seize upon and
+destroy such as would try to brave their currents, likely never to
+yield them up again. Flowing forever through the uninhabited forest no
+man would ever know the fate of those the river claimed.
+
+He was above the camp when he descended to its banks, but he worked his
+way down through the thickets toward Jeffery Neilson's cabin. The river
+flowed quietly here, a long, still stretch that afforded safe boating.
+Yet the smooth waters did not in the least alleviate Ben's haunting
+sense of their sinister power and peril. The old gray she-wolf is not to
+be trusted in her peaceful moments. His keen ears could distinctly hear
+the roar and rumble of wild waters, just below.
+
+The river was of great depth as well as breadth,--one of the king rivers
+of the land. Ben found himself staring into its depths with a quickening
+pulse. He had a momentary impression that this great stream was his
+ally, a mighty agent that he could bend to his will.
+
+He approached the long, sloping bank on which stood Neilson's cabin; and
+he suddenly drew up short at the sight of a light, staunch canoe on the
+open water. It was a curious fact that he noticed the craft itself
+before ever he glanced at its occupant. A thrill of excitement passed
+over him. He realized that this boat simplified to some degree his own
+problem, in that it afforded him means of traversing this great
+water-body, certainly to be a factor in the forthcoming conflict. The
+boat had evidently been the property of Hiram Melville.
+
+Then he noticed, with a strange, inexplicable leap of his heart, that
+its lone occupant was Beatrice Neilson. His eye kindled at the
+recognition, and the beginnings of a smile flashed to his lips. But at
+once remembrance came to him, crushing his joy as the heel crushes a
+tender flower. The girl was of the enemy camp, the daughter of the
+leader of the triumvirate of murderers. While she herself could have had
+no part in the crime, perhaps she already had guilty knowledge of it,
+and at least she was of her father's hated blood.
+
+He had builded much on his friendship with this girl; but he felt it
+withering, turning black--like buds under frost--in his cold breast.
+There could be no friendly words, except in guile; no easy comradeship
+between them now. They were on opposite sides, hated foes to the last.
+Perhaps she would be one of the innocents that must suffer with the
+guilty; but he felt no remorse. Not even this lovely, tender wood child
+must stand in his way.
+
+Nevertheless, he must not put her on guard. He must simulate friendship.
+He lifted his hat in answer to her gay signal.
+
+She wore a white middy blouse, and her brown, bare forearms flashed
+pleasantly in the spring sun. Her brown hair was disarranged by the wind
+that found a passway down the river, and her eyes shone with the sheer,
+unadorned love of living. Evidently she had just enjoyed a brisk paddle
+through the still stretches of the river. With sure, steady strokes she
+pushed the craft close to the little, board landing where Ben stood. She
+reached up to him, and in an instant was laughing--at nothing in
+particular but the fun of life--at his side.
+
+The man glanced once at Fenris, spoke in command, then turned to the
+girl. "All rested from the ride, I see," he began easily.
+
+Her instincts keyed to the highest pitch, for an instant she thought she
+discerned an unfamiliar tone, hard and hateful, in his voice. But his
+eyes and his lips were smiling; and evidently she was mistaken. "I never
+get tired," she responded. She glanced at the tools in his arms. "I
+suppose you've found a dozen rich lodes already this morning."
+
+"Only one." He smiled, significantly, into her eyes. Because she was a
+forest girl, unused to flattery, the warm color grew in her brown
+cheeks. "And how was paddling? The water looks still enough from here."
+
+"It's not as still as it looks, but it is easy going for a half-mile
+each way. If you aren't an expert boatman, however--I hardly think--I'd
+try it."
+
+"Why not? I'm fair enough with a canoe, of course--but it looks safe as
+a lake."
+
+"But it isn't." She paused. "Listen with those keen ears of yours, Mr.
+Darby. Don't you hear anything?"
+
+Ben did not need particularly keen ears to hear: the far-off sound of
+surging waters reached him with entire clearness. He nodded.
+
+"That's the reason," the girl went on. "If something should happen--and
+you'd get carried around the bend--a little farther than you meant to
+go--you'd understand. And we wouldn't see any more of Mr. Darby around
+these parts."
+
+Her dark eyes, brimming with light and laughter, were on his face, but
+she failed to see him slowly stiffen to hide the sudden, wild leaping of
+his heart. Could it be that he saw the far-off vision of his triumph?
+
+His eyes glowed, and he fought off with difficulty a great preoccupation
+that seemed to be settling over him.
+
+"Tell me about it," he said at last, casually. "I was thinking of making
+a boat and going down on a prospecting trip."
+
+"I'll tell you about it, and then I think you'll change your mind. The
+first cataract is the one just above where we first saw the
+river--coming in; then there's this mile of quiet water. From that
+point on the Yuga flows into a gorge--or rather one gorge after another;
+and sometime they'll likely be almost as famous as some of the great
+gorges of your country. The walls are just about straight up on each
+side, and of course are absolutely impassable. I don't know how many
+miles the first gorge is--but for nearly two hundred miles the river is
+considered impassable for boats. Two hundred and fifty miles or so below
+there is an Indian village--but they never try to go down the river from
+here. A few white men, however, have tried to go down with canoe-loads
+of fur."
+
+"And all drowned?" Ben asked.
+
+"All except one party. Once two men went down when the river was
+high--just as it is now. They were good canoeists, and they made it
+through. No one ever expected they would come out again."
+
+"And after you've once got into the rapids, there's no getting out--or
+landing?"
+
+"Of course not. I suppose there are places where you might get on the
+bank, but the gorge above is impassable."
+
+"You couldn't follow the river down--with horses?"
+
+"Yes, in time. Of course it would be slow going, as there are no trails,
+the brush is heavy, and the country is absolutely unexplored. You see it
+has never been considered a gold country--and of course the Indians
+won't go except where they can go in canoes. Some of the hills must be
+impassable, too. I've heard my father speak about it--how that if any
+criminal--or any one like that--could take down this river in a canoe in
+high water--and get through into that great, virgin, trackless country a
+hundred miles below, it would be almost impossible to get him out.
+Unless the officers could chase him down the same way he went--by
+canoe--it would take literally weeks and months for them to get in, and
+by that time he could be hidden and located and his tracks covered up."
+
+"And with good ambushes, able to hold off and kill a dozen of them, eh?"
+Ben's hands shook, and he locked them behind him. "They call that
+country--what?"
+
+"'Back There.' That's all I've ever heard it called--'Back There.'"
+
+"It's as good a name as any. Of course, the reason they were able to
+make it through in high water was due to the fact that most of the rocks
+and ledges were submerged, and they could slide right over them."
+
+"Of course. Many of our rivers are safer in high water. But you
+seriously don't intend to take such a trip--"
+
+He looked up to find her eyes wide and full upon his. Yet her concern
+for him touched him not at all. She was his enemy: that fact could never
+be forgotten or forgiven.
+
+"I want to hear about it, anyway. I heard in town the river is higher
+than it's been for years--due to the Chinook--"
+
+"It _is_ higher than I've ever seen it. But it's reached its peak and
+has started to fall, and it won't come up again, at least, till fall.
+When the Yuga rises it comes up in a flood, and it falls the same way.
+It's gone down quite a little since this morning; by the day after
+to-morrow no one could hope to get through Devil's Gate--the first
+cataract in the gorge."
+
+"Not even with a canoe? Of course a raft would be broken to pieces."
+
+"Not a canoe, either, in two or three days, if the river falls like it
+usually does. But tell me--you aren't serious--"
+
+"I suppose not. But it gets my imagination--just the same. I suppose a
+man would average better than twenty miles an hour down through that
+gorge, and would come out at _Back There_."
+
+Their talk moved easily to other subjects; yet it seemed to Ben that
+some secondary consciousness held up his end of the conversation. His
+own deeper self was lost in curious and dark conjectures. Her
+description of the river lingered in his thoughts, and he seemed to be
+groping for a great inspiration that was hovering just beyond his
+reach--as plants grope for light in far-off leafy jungles. He felt that
+it would come to him in a moment: he would know the dark relation that
+these facts about the river bore to his war with Neilson. It was as if
+an inner mind, much more subtle and discerning than his normal
+consciousness, had seen great possibilities in them, but as yet had not
+divulged their significance.
+
+"I must be going now," the girl was saying. "Father pretty near goes
+crazy when I stay away too long. You can't imagine how he loves me and
+worries about me--and how fearful he is of me--"
+
+His mind seemed to leap and gather her words. It was true: she was the
+joy and the pride and the hope of the old man's life. All his work, his
+dreams were for her. And now he remembered a fact that she had told him
+on the outward journey: that Ray Brent, the stronger of Neilson's two
+subordinates, loved her too.
+
+"To strike at them indirectly--through some one they love--" such had
+been his greatest wish. To put them at a disadvantage and overcome his
+own--to lead them into his own ambushes. And was it for the Wolf to care
+what guiltless creatures fell before his fangs in the gaining of his
+dreadful ends? Was the gratification of his hate to be turned aside
+through pity for an innocent girl? Mercy and remorse were two things
+that he had put from him. It was the way of the Wolf to pay no attention
+to methods, only to achieve his own fierce desires. He stood lost in
+dark and savage reverie.
+
+"Good-by," the girl was saying. "I'll see you soon--"
+
+He turned toward her, a smile at his lips. His voice held steady when he
+spoke.
+
+"It'll have to be soon, if at all," he replied. "I've got to really get
+to work in a few days. How about a little picnic to-morrow--a grouse
+hunt, say--on the other side of the river? It's going to be a beautiful
+day--"
+
+The girl's eyes shone, and the color rose again in her tanned cheeks.
+"I'd think that would be very nice," she told him.
+
+"Then I'll meet you here--at eight."
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+Alone by the fire Ben had opportunity to balance one thing with another
+and think out the full consequences of his plan. As far as he could
+discern, it stood every test. It meant not only direct and indirect
+vengeance upon Neilson and his followers; but it would also, past all
+doubt, deliver them into his hands. That much was sure. When finally
+they came to grips--if indeed they did not go down to a terrible death
+before ever that time came--he would be prepared for them, with every
+advantage of ground and fortress, able to combat them one by one and
+shatter them from ambush. Best of all, they would know at whose hands,
+and for what crime, they received their retribution.
+
+One by one he checked the chances against him. First of all, he had to
+face the great chance of failure and the consequent loss of his own
+life. But there was even recompense in this. He would not die unavenged.
+The blow that he would thereby deal to his enemies would be terrible
+beyond any reckoning, but he would have no regrets.
+
+There were two outstanding points in his favor, one of them being that
+the river was rapidly falling. By the time a canoe could be built the
+river would be wholly unnavigable. There were no canoes procurable in
+Snowy Gulch, if indeed a lightning trip could be made there and back to
+secure one, before the river fell. The conversation with the
+frontiersman at the river bank brought out this fact. Lastly, a raft
+could not live a moment in the rapids.
+
+Very methodically he began to make his preparations. He untied his
+horse, leaving it free to descend to Snowy Gulch. Then he packed a few
+of his most essential supplies, his gun and shells, such necessary camp
+equipment as robes, matches, soap and towels, cooking and table ware, an
+axe and similar necessaries. In the way of food he laid out flour, rice,
+salt, and sugar, plus a few pounds of tea--nothing else. The entire
+outfit weighed less than two hundred pounds, easily carried in three
+loads upon the back.
+
+In the still hour of midnight, when the forest world was swept in
+mystery, he carried the equipment down to the canoe that Beatrice had
+left the evening before. He loaded the craft with the greatest care,
+balancing it now and then with his hands at the sides, and covering up
+the food supplies with robes and blankets. Then he drew from his pocket
+a sheet of paper--evidently a paper sack that had once held provisions,
+cut open and spread--and wrote carefully, a long time, with a pencil.
+
+He had no envelope to enclose it, no wax to seal it. He did, however,
+carry a stub of a candle--a requisite to most northern men who are
+obliged to build supper fires in wet forest. Folding his letter
+carefully, he sealed it with tallow. Then wrapping one of his blankets
+about him, he prepared to wait for the dawn. Fenris growled and murmured
+in his sleep.
+
+Ben himself had not slept the night before; and moved and stirred by his
+plan of the morrow, slumber did not come easily to him now. He too
+murmured in his sleep and had weird, tragic dreams between sleep and
+wakefulness. But the shadows paled at last. A ribbon of light spread
+along the eastern horizon; the more familiar landmarks emerged--ghosts
+at first, then in vivid outline, the wooded sky line strengthened; the
+nebulous magic of the moon died in the forest. Birds wakened and sang;
+the hunting creatures crept to their lairs; sleeping flowers opened.
+Morning broke on a clear, warm day.
+
+Ben devoured a heavy breakfast--all that he could force himself to
+swallow--then prepared to wait for Beatrice. He knew perfectly that
+explanations would be difficult if Neilson or one of his followers found
+him with the loaded boat. It was not likely, however, that any of his
+enemies--except, of course, Beatrice herself--would venture down that
+way.
+
+Just before eight he saw her come,--first the glint of her white blouse
+in the green of the forest, and then the flash of her brown arms. Her
+voice rang clear and sweet through the hushed depths as she called a
+greeting. A moment later she was beside him.
+
+"Go back and get your heavy coat," he commanded. "I've already been out
+on the water, and it'll freeze you stiff."
+
+He was not overly pleased with himself for speaking thus. He had
+resolved to put mercy from him; and he was taking a serious risk to his
+own cause by the delay of sending her back for her warmer garments. She
+smiled into his eyes, but she came of a breed of women that had learned
+obedience to men, and she immediately turned. But Ben had builded better
+than he thought. His eyes were no longer on her radiant face. They had
+dropped to the pistol, in its holster, that she carried in her hands,
+preparatory to strapping it about her waist. It was disconcerting that
+he had forgotten about her pistol. It was one of those insignificant
+trifles that before now have disrupted the mightiest plans of nations
+and of men. His mind sped like lightning, and he thanked his stars that
+he had seen it in time. This pistol and a small package, the contents
+of which he did not know, were the only equipment she had.
+
+"It's going to be a bright day," the girl said hesitatingly. "I don't
+think I'll need the fur coat--"
+
+"Get it, anyway," Ben advised. "The wind's keen on the river. Leave your
+pistol and your package here--and go up and back at top speed. I'll be
+arranging the canoe--"
+
+She laid down the things, and in a moment the thickets had hidden her.
+Swiftly Ben reached for the gun, and for a few speeding seconds his
+fingers worked at its mechanism. He was busy about the canoe when the
+girl returned.
+
+Evidently Beatrice was in wonderful spirits. The air itself was
+sparkling, the sun--beloved with an ardor too deep for words by all
+northern peoples--was warm and genial in the sky; the spruce forest was
+lush with dew, fragrant with hidden blossoms. It was a Spring
+Day--nothing less. Both of them knew perfectly that miracle was abroad
+in the forest,--flowers opening, buds breaking into blossoms, little
+grass blades stealing, shy as fairies, up through the dead leaves; birds
+fluttering and gossiping and carrying all manner of building materials
+for their nests.
+
+Spring is not just a time of year to the forest folk, and particularly
+to those creatures whose homes are the far spruce forests of the North.
+It is a magic and a mystery, a recreation and a renewed lease on life
+itself. It is hope come again, the joy of living undreamed of except by
+such highly strung, nerve-tingling, wild-blooded creatures as these; and
+in some measure at least it is the escape from Fear. For there is no
+other name than Fear for the great, white, merciless winter that had
+just departed.
+
+High and low, every woods creature knows this dread, this age-old
+apprehension of the deepening snow. Perhaps it had its birth in eons
+past, when the great glaciers brought their curse of gold into the
+temperate regions, locking land and sea under tons of ice. Never the
+frost comes, and the snow deepens on the land, and the rivers and lakes
+are struck silent as if by a cruel magician's magic, but that this old
+fear returns, creeping like poison into the nerves, bowing down the
+heart and chilling the warm wheel of the blood. For the rodents and the
+digging people--even for the mighty grizzly himself--the season means
+nothing but the cold and the darkness of their underground lairs. For
+those that try to brave the winter, the portion is famine and cold; the
+vast, far-spreading silence broken only by the sobbing song of the wolf
+pack, starving and afraid on the distant ridges. Man is the conqueror,
+the Mighty One who can strike the fire, but yet he too knows the creepy,
+haunting dread and deep-lying fear of the northern winter. But that
+dread season was gone now, yielding for a few happy months to a gay
+invader from the South; and the whole forest world rejoiced.
+
+Both Beatrice and Ben could sense the new wakening and revival in the
+still depths about them. The forest was hushed, tremulous, yet vibrant
+and ecstatic with renewed life. The old grizzly bear had left his winter
+lair; and good feeding was putting the fat again on his bones; the old
+cow moose had stolen away into the farther marshes for some mystery and
+miracle of her own. Everywhere young calves of caribou were breathing
+the air for the first time, trying to stand on wobbly legs and pushing
+with greedy noses into overflowing udders. The rich new grass yielded
+milk in plenty for all these wilderness nurslings. Even the she-wolf
+forgot her wicked savagery to nurse and fondle her whelps in the lair;
+even the she-lynx, hunting with renewed fervor through the branches,
+knew of a marvelous secret in a hollow log that she would be torn to
+scraps of fur rather than reveal.
+
+The she-ermine, her white hair falling out, was brooding a litter of
+cutthroats and murderers in a nest of grass and twigs, and each one of
+them was a source of pride and joy to her mother heart. Even the
+wolverine had some wicked-eyed little cubs that, to her, were precious
+beyond rubies; but which would ultimately receive all the oaths in the
+language for stealing bait on the trap lines out from the settlements.
+
+Beatrice, a woods creature herself, knew the stir and thrill of spring;
+but there were also more personal, more deeply hidden reasons why she
+was happy to-day. She was certainly a very girlish-girl in most ways,
+with even more than the usual allowance of romance and sentiment, and
+the idea of an all-day picnic with this stalwart forester went straight
+home to her imagination. She had been tremendously impressed with him
+from the first, and the day's ride out from Snowy Gulch had brought him
+very close to her indeed. And what might not the day bring forth! What
+mystery and wonder might come to pass!
+
+Her dark eyes were lustrous, and the haunting sadness they often held
+was quite gone. Her face was faintly flushed, her red lips wistful,
+every motion eager and happy as a child's. But Ben looked at her
+unmoved.
+
+Coldly his eye leaped over her supple, slender form. He saw with relief
+that she was stoutly clad in middy and skirt of wool, wool stockings,
+and solid little boots. The heavy coat she had brought was not
+particularly noteworthy in these woods, but it would have drawn instant
+admiration from knowing people of a great city. It was not cut with
+particular style, neither was it beautifully lined, but the fabric
+itself was plucked otter,--the dark, well-wearing fur of many lights and
+of matchless luster and beauty.
+
+"For goodness sake, Mr. Darby," the girl cried. "What have you got in
+this boat? Surely that isn't just the lunch--" She pointed to the pile
+of supplies, covered by the blankets, in the center of the craft.
+
+"It looks like we had enough to stay a month, doesn't it?" he laughed.
+"There's blankets there, of course--for table cloths and to make us
+comfortable--and the lunch, and a pillow or two--and some little
+surprises. The rest is just some stores that I'm going to take this
+opportunity to put across the river--to my next camp. Now, Miss
+Neilson--if you'll take the seat in the bow. Fenris is going to ride in
+the middle--"
+
+The girl's eyes fell with some apprehension on the shaggy wolf. "I
+haven't established very friendly relations with Fenris--"
+
+"I'd leave him at home, but he won't stand for it. Besides I'd like to
+teach him how to retrieve grouse. Lie down, old boy." Ben motioned, and
+Fenris sprawled at his feet. "Now come here and pet him, Miss Neilson.
+His fur, at this season, is wonderful--"
+
+Reluctant to show her fear before Ben, the girl drew near. The wolf
+shivered as the soft hand touched his side and moved slowly to his
+fierce head; but he gave no further sign of enmity.
+
+"He understands," Ben explained. "He realizes that I've accepted you,
+and you're all right. Until he's given orders otherwise, he'll treat you
+with the greatest respect."
+
+She was deeply and sincerely pleased. It did not occur to her, in the
+least, little degree, that occasion could possibly arise whereby
+contradictory orders would be given. Ben started to help her into the
+boat.
+
+"You've not forgotten anything?" he asked casually.
+
+"Nothing I can think of."
+
+"Got plenty of extra shells?"
+
+"Part of a box. It's a small caliber automatic, you see, and a box holds
+fifty."
+
+"It is, eh?" Ben's tone indicated deep interest. "May I see 'em a
+minute? I think I had a gun like it once. Not the gun--just the box of
+shells."
+
+She had strapped the weapon around her waist, by now, so she didn't
+attempt to put it in his hands. From her pocket she procured a small box
+of shells, and these she passed to him. He examined them with a great
+show of interest, balancing their weight in the palm of his hand; then
+he carelessly threw the box down among the duffle in front of the stern
+seat. Presently he started to push off.
+
+"You're not taking the other paddle?" the girl asked curiously.
+
+"No. I don't believe in letting young ladies work when I take 'em on an
+outing. You are just to sit in the bow and enjoy yourself. Fenris, sit
+still and don't rock the boat!"
+
+Just one moment more he hesitated. From his pocket he drew a piece of
+paper, carefully folded and sealed with tallow. This he inserted into a
+little crack in the blade of the second paddle--the one that was to be
+left at the landing.
+
+"Just a little note for your father," he explained, "to tell him where
+we are, in case he worries about you."
+
+"That's very considerate of you," the girl answered in a thoughtful
+voice.
+
+She wondered at the curious glowings, lurid as red coals, that came and
+went in his eyes.
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+After the manner of backwoods fathers Jeffery Neilson had offered no
+objections to his daughter's all-day excursion with Ben. The ways of the
+frontier are informal; and besides, he had every confidence in her
+ability to take care of herself. The only unfortunate phase of the
+affair concerned Ray. The latter would look with no favor upon the
+venture; and in all probability a disagreeable half-hour would ensue
+with him if he found it out.
+
+The control of Ray Brent had been an increasingly difficult problem.
+Always sullen and envious, once or twice he had not been far from open
+rebellion. There is a certain dread malady that comes to men at the
+sight of naked gold, and Ray's degenerate type was particularly subject
+to it. Every day the mine had shown itself increasingly rich, and Ray's
+ambition had given way to greed, and his greed to avarice of the most
+dangerous sort. For instance, he had a disquieting way of gathering the
+nuggets into his hands, fondling them with an unholy love. Neilson
+realized perfectly, now, that the younger man would not be content with
+a fourth share or less; and on the other hand he resolutely refused to
+yield any of his own, larger share. Sometime the issue would bring them
+to grips. Ray's dreadful crime of a few days past had given him an added
+insolence and self-assurance that complicated the problem still further.
+The leopard that has once tasted human flesh is not to be trusted again.
+Finally, there remained this matter of Beatrice.
+
+Neilson's love for his daughter forbade that he should force her to
+receive unwelcome attentions. Ray, on the other hand, had always
+insisted that his chief allow him a clear field. He would be infuriated
+when he heard of the trip she was taking with Ben to-day. Neilson
+straightened, resolving to meet the issue with old-time firmness.
+
+When he heard his daughter's voice on the canoe landing, one hundred
+yards below, he was inordinately startled. She had not told him that
+their picnic would take them on to the water. The reason had been, of
+course, that Beatrice knew her father's distrust of the treacherous
+stream and either feared his refusal to her plan or wished to save him
+worry. Even now they were starting. He could hear the first stroke of
+the paddle through the hushed woods.
+
+He turned toward the door, instinctively alarmed; then hesitated. After
+all, he could not tell her to come back. Beatrice would be mortified;
+and besides, there was nothing definite to fear. The river was almost as
+still as a lake for a long stretch immediately in front of the landing;
+even a poor canoeist could cross with ease. It was true that rapids,
+mile after mile of them past counting, lay just below, but surely the
+canoeists would stay at a safe distance above them. And if by any chance
+this young prospector had no skill with a canoe, Beatrice herself was an
+expert.
+
+Yet what, in reality, did he know of Ben Darby? He had liked the man's
+face: whence he came and what was his real business on the Yuga he had
+not the least idea. All at once a baffling apprehension crept like a
+chill through his frame.
+
+He could not laugh it away. It laid hold of him, refusing to be
+dispelled. It was as if an inner voice was warning him, telling him to
+rush down to the river bank and check that canoe ride at all costs. It
+occurred to him, for the moment, that this might be premonition of a
+disastrous accident, yet vaguely he sensed a plot, an obscure design
+that filled him with ghastly terror. Once more the man started for the
+door.
+
+Unaware of his ground, he did not hurry at first. He hardly knew what to
+say, by what excuse he could call Beatrice back to the landing. His
+heart was racing incomprehensibly in his breast, and all at once he
+started to run.
+
+At the first step he fell sprawling, and stark panic was upon him when
+he got to his feet again. And when he reached the landing the canoe was
+already near the opposite shore, heading swiftly downstream.
+
+He saw in one glance that the craft was rather heavily laden, Fenris
+atop the pile of duffle, and that Ben was paddling with a remarkably
+fast, easy stroke. "Come back, Beatrice," he shouted. "You've forgotten
+something."
+
+The girl turned, waving, but Ben's voice drowned out hers. "We'll see
+you later," he called in a gay voice. "We can't come back now."
+
+"Come back!" Neilson called again. "I order you--"
+
+He stared intently, hoping that the man would turn. Already they were
+practically out of hearing; and not even Beatrice was dipping her paddle
+in obedience to his command. Looking more closely, he saw that the man
+only was paddling.
+
+Then his eye fell to the landing on which he stood, instinctively trying
+to locate the second paddle. It lay at his feet. A foolhardy thing to
+do, he thought, a broken paddle, out there above the rapids, would mean
+death and no other thing. Helpless in the current, the canoe could not
+be guided through those fearful gates of peril below. If by a
+thousandth chance it escaped the rocks, it would be carried for
+unnumbered miles into a land unknown, a territory that could be entered
+only by the greatest difficulty--packing day after day over range and
+through thicket with a great train of pack horses--and from which the
+egress, except by the same perilous water route, would be almost
+impossible. But the thought passed as he discerned the white paper that
+had been fastened in the paddle blade.
+
+He bent for it with eager hand. He knew instinctively that it contained
+an all-important and sinister message for him. His eyes leaped over the
+bold writing on the exterior.
+
+"To Ezra Melville's murderers," Ben had written. And with that reading
+Jeffery Neilson knew a terror beyond any experienced in the darkest
+nightmare of his iniquitous life.
+
+It did not occur to him to bring the note, unopened, to Ray Brent. As
+yet he did not fully understand; yet he knew that the issue was one of
+seconds. _Seconds_ must decide everything; his whole world hung in the
+balance. His hand ripped apart the sealed fold, and he held the sheet
+before his eyes.
+
+Possessing only an elementary education Jeffery Neilson was not,
+ordinarily, a fast reader. Usually he sounded out his words only with
+the greatest difficulty. But to-day, one glance at the page conveyed to
+him the truth: from half a dozen words he got a general idea of the
+letter's full, dread meaning. Ben had written:
+
+ TO NEILSON AND HIS GANG:--
+
+ When you get this, Beatrice will be on her way to Back There--either
+ there or on her way to hell.
+
+ Ezra Melville was my pard. A letter leaving his claim to me is in my
+ pocket, and I alone know where Hiram's will is, leaving it to Ezram.
+ Your title will never stand as long as those papers aren't
+ destroyed. If you don't care enough about saving your daughter from
+ me, at least you'll want those letters. Come and get them. I'll be
+ waiting for you.
+
+ BEN DARBY.
+
+As the truth flashed home, Neilson's first thought was of his rifle. He
+was a wilderness man, trained to put his trust in the weapon of steel;
+and if it were only in his hands, there might yet be time to prevent the
+abduction. One well-aimed bullet over the water, shooting with all his
+old-time skill, might yet hurl the avenger to his death in the moment of
+his triumph. Just one keen, long gaze over the sights,--heaven or earth
+could not yield him a vision half so glorious as this! For all his
+terror he knew that he could shoot as he had never shot before, true as
+a light-ray. His remorseless eyes for once could see clear and sure. One
+shot--and then Beatrice could seize the paddle and save herself. And he
+cursed himself, more bitterly than he had ever cursed an enemy, when his
+empty hands showed him that he had left his rifle in his cabin.
+
+His pistol, however, was at his belt, and his hand reached for it. But
+the range was already too far for any hope of accurate pistol fire. His
+hard eyes gazed along the short, black barrel. His steady finger pressed
+back against the trigger.
+
+The first shot fell far short. The pistol was of large caliber but small
+velocity; and a hundred yards was its absolute limit of point-blank
+range. He lifted the gun higher and shot again. Again he shot low. But
+the third bullet fell just a few feet on the near side of the canoe.
+
+He had the range now, and he shot again. It was like a dream, outside
+his consciousness, that Beatrice was screaming with fear and amazement.
+She was already too far to give or receive a message: all hope lay in
+the pistol alone. The fifth shot splashed water beyond the craft.
+
+Once more he fired, but the boat was farther distant now, and the bullet
+went wild. The pistol was empty. Like a moose leaping through a marsh he
+turned back to his cabin for his rifle.
+
+But already he knew that he was lost. Before ever he could climb up the
+hundred yards to the cabin, and back again, the craft would be around
+the bend in the river. Heavy brush would hide it from then on. He
+hastened frantically up the narrow, winding trail.
+
+
+
+XX
+
+Ben was fully aware, as he pushed the canoe from landing, that the
+success of his scheme was not yet guaranteed. Long ago, in the hard
+school of the woods, he had found out life; and one of the things he had
+learned was that nothing on earth is infallible and no man's plans are
+sure. There are always coincidents of which the scheming brain has not
+conceived: the sudden interjection of unexpected circumstances. The
+unforeseen appearance of Beatrice's father on the landing had been a
+case in point.
+
+Most of all he had been afraid that Beatrice herself would leap from the
+canoe and attempt to swim to safety. He had learned in his past
+conversations with her that she had at least an elementary knowledge of
+swimming. Had she not confessed at the same time fear of the water, his
+plan could have never been adopted. The northern girls have few
+opportunities to obtain real proficiency in swimming. Their rivers are
+icy cold, their villages do not afford heated natatoriums. Yet he
+realized that he must quiet her suspicions as long as possible.
+
+"I've got the landing picked out," he told her as they started off.
+"I've been all over the river this morning. It is quite a way
+down--around the bend--but it's perfectly safe. So don't be afraid."
+
+"I'm not afraid--with you. And how fast you paddle!"
+
+It was true: in all her days by rivers she had never seen such perfect
+control of a canoe. He paddled as if without effort, but the streaming
+shore line showed that the boat moved at an astonishing rate. He was a
+master canoeist, and whatever fears she might have had vanished at once.
+
+She talked gayly to him, scarcely aware that they were heading across
+and down the stream.
+
+When her father had appeared on the bank, calling, she had not been in
+the least alarmed. Ben's gay shouts kept her from understanding exactly
+what he was saying. And when the old man had drawn his pistol and fired,
+and the bullet had splashed in the water some twenty yards toward shore,
+her mind had refused to accept the evidence of her senses.
+
+The second shot followed the first, and the third the second, resulting
+in, for her part, only the impotence of bewilderment. Her first thought
+was that her father's fierce temper, long known to her, had engulfed him
+in murderous rage. Trusting Ben wholly, the real truth did not occur to
+her.
+
+She screamed shrilly at the fourth shot; and Ben looked up to find her
+pale as the foam from his flashing paddle. "Turn around and go back,"
+she cried to Ben. "He'll kill you if you don't! Oh, please--turn
+around--"
+
+"And get in range of him so he _can_ kill me?" Ben replied savagely.
+"Can't you see he's shooting at me?"
+
+"Then throw up your hands--it's all some dreadful mistake. Can't you
+hear me--turn and go back."
+
+The fifth and sixth shots were fired by now; and Neilson had gone to his
+cabin for his rifle. Ben smiled grimly into her white face.
+
+"We'd better keep on going to our landing place," he advised. "There's
+no place to land above it--I went all over the shore this morning. That
+will give him time to cool down. I only want to get around this curve
+before he comes with his rifle."
+
+She stared at him aghast, too confused and terrified to make rational
+answer. He was pale, too; but she had a swift feeling that the cold,
+rugged face was in some way exultant, too. The first chill of fear of
+him brushed her like a cold wind.
+
+But they were around the bend by now, and Ben's breath caught as if in a
+triumphant gasp. Already all opportunity for the girl to swim to shore
+was irremediably past. While he could still control the canoe with
+comparative ease, the river was a swift-moving sheet of water that would
+carry any one but the strongest swimmer remorselessly into the rapids
+below. Ben smiled, like a man who has come into a great happiness, and
+rested on his paddle.
+
+"Push into shore," the girl urged. "The home shore--if you can. Then
+I'll go and find him and try to quiet him. He'll kill you if you don't."
+
+A short pause followed the girl's words. The man smiled coldly into her
+eyes.
+
+"He'll kill me, will he?" he repeated.
+
+The response to the simple question was simply unmitigated terror, swift
+and deadly, surging through the girl's frame. It caught and twisted her
+throat muscles like a cruel hand; and her childish eyes widened and
+darkened under his contemptuous gaze.
+
+"What do you mean?" she asked breathlessly. "What--are you going to do?"
+
+"He won't kill me," Ben went on. "I may kill him--and I will if I
+can--but he won't kill me. See--we're going faster all the time."
+
+It was true. Strokes of the paddle were no longer necessary to propel
+the craft at the breakneck pace. It sped like an arrow--straight toward
+the perilous cataracts below.
+
+The girl watched him with transcending horror, and slowly the truth went
+home. The supplies in the boat, her father's desperate attempt to rescue
+her, even at the risk of her own life and the cost of Ben's, this white,
+exultant face before her, more terrible than that of the wolf between,
+the cold reptile eyes so full of some unhallowed emotion,--at last she
+saw their meaning and relation. Was it _death_--was _that_ what this mad
+man in the stern had for her? She remembered what she had told him the
+day before, her description of the cataracts that lay below. She
+struggled to shake off the trance that her terror had cast about her.
+
+"Turn into the shore," she told him, half-whispering. There was no
+pleading in her tone: the hard eyes before her told her only too plainly
+how futile her pleas would be. "You still have time to steer into shore.
+I'll jump overboard if you don't."
+
+He shook his head. "Don't jump overboard, Beatrice," he answered, some
+of the harshness gone from his tones. "It isn't my purpose to kill
+you--and to jump over into this stream only means to die--'for any one
+except the most powerful swimmer. You'd be carried down in an instant."
+
+The girl knew he spoke the truth. Only death dwelt in those cold and
+rushing waters. "What do you mean to do?" she asked.
+
+Her tone was more quiet now, and he waited an instant before he
+answered. The canoe glided faster--ever faster down the stream. Somewhat
+afraid, but still trusting in the imperial mind of his master, the wolf
+raised his head to watch the racing shore line.
+
+"It's just a little debt I owe your father--and his gang," Ben
+explained. "I'll tell you some time, in the days to come. It was a debt
+of blood--"
+
+The girl's dark eyes charged with red fire. "And you, a coward, take
+your payment on a woman. Turn the canoe into the bank."
+
+"The payment won't be taken from you," he explained soberly. "You'll be
+safe enough--even the fate that Neilson fears for you won't happen. I
+hate him too much to take _that_ payment from you. I'd die before I'd
+touch the flesh of his flesh to mine! Do you understand that?"
+
+His fury had blazed up, for the instant, and she saw the deadly zeal of
+a fanatic in his gray eyes. A hatred beyond all naming, a bitterness and
+a rage such as she had never dreamed could blast a human heart was
+written in his brown, rugged face. Her woman's intuition gave her added
+vision, and she glimpsed something of the fire that smoldered and seared
+behind his eyes. They were of one blood, this man in the stern and the
+wolf on the duffle.
+
+"Then why--"
+
+"You're safe with me--the daughter of Jeff Neilson can't ever be
+anything but safe with me--as far as the thing you fear is concerned.
+Don't be afraid for that. I'm simply paying an honest debt, and you're
+the unfortunate agent. Don't you know the things he's fearing now are
+more torment to him than anything I could do to his flesh? If we should
+be killed in these rapids that are coming, it will be fair enough too;
+he'll know what it is to lose the dearest thing on earth he has. For you
+and me it will only be a minute that won't greatly matter. For him it
+will be weeks--months! But that's only a part of it. I hope to bring you
+through. The main thing is--that sooner or later they'll come for
+you--into a country where I'll have every advantage. Where there won't
+be any escape or chance for them. Where I can watch the trails, and
+shatter them--every one--as slow or as fast as I like. Where they'll
+have to hunt for me, week on week and month on month, their fears eating
+into them. That's my game, Beatrice. There will be discomfort for
+you--and some danger--but I'll make it as light as I can. And in another
+moment--"
+
+"You've still got time to turn back," the girl answered him, seemingly
+without feeling. "Glide into shore, and we'll try to catch an
+overhanging limb. It's my last warning."
+
+It was true that a few seconds remained in which they might, with heroic
+effort, save themselves. But these were passing: already they could see
+the gleaming whitecaps of the cataract below.
+
+The roar of the wild waters was in their ears. Ahead they could see
+great rocks, emerging like fangs above the water, sharp-edged and wet
+with spray. The boat was shuddering; the water seemed to covet them, and
+a great force, like the hand of a river god, reached at them from
+beneath as if to crush them in a merciless grasp. A hundred yards
+farther the smooth, swift water fell into a seething, roaring
+cataract--such a manifestation of the mighty powers of nature as checks
+the breath and awes the heart--a death stream in which seemingly the
+canoe would be shattered to pieces in an instant.
+
+Ben shook his head. The girl's white hand flashed to her side, then rose
+sure and steady, holding her pistol. "Turn quick, or I'll fire," she
+said.
+
+He felt that, if such action were in her power, she told the truth. No
+mercy dwelt in her clear gaze. His eye fell to the box of cartridges,
+now fallen safely among the duffle. Presently he smiled into her eyes.
+
+"Your gun is empty, Beatrice," he told her quietly. He heard her sob,
+and he smiled a little, reassuringly. "Never mind--and pray for a good
+voyage," he advised. "We're going through."
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+The craft and its occupants were out of sight by the time Jeffery
+Neilson reached the river bank with his rifle. The flush had swept from
+his bronze skin, leaving it a ghastly yellow, and for once in his life
+no oaths came to his lips. He could only mutter, strangely, from a
+convulsed throat.
+
+Like an insane man he hastened down the river bank, fighting his way
+through the brush. The thickets were dense, ordinarily impenetrable to
+any mortal strength except to that mighty, incalculable power of the
+moose and grizzly; yet they could not restrain him now. The tough
+clothes he wore were nearly torn from his body; his face and hands were
+scratched as if by the claws of a lynx; but he did not pause till he
+reached the bank of the gray river.
+
+Only one more glimpse of the canoe was vouchsafed him, and that glimpse
+came too late. He saw the light barge just as it hovered at the crest of
+the rapids. Even if he could have shot straight at so great a range and
+had killed the man in the stern, no miracle could have saved his
+daughter. She would have been instantly swept to her death against the
+crags.
+
+Some measure of self-control returned to him then, and he made his way
+fast as he could toward the claim. Sensing the older man's distress, Ray
+straightened from his work at the sight of him.
+
+The face before him was drawn and white; but there was no time for
+questions. Hard hands seized his arm.
+
+"Ray, do you know of a canoe anywhere--up or down this river?"
+
+"There's one at the landing. None other I know of."
+
+"Think, man! You don't know where we can get one?"
+
+"No. Old Hiram's canoe was the only one. What's the matter?"
+
+"Do you think there's one chance in a million of getting down through
+those rapids on a raft?"
+
+Ray's eyes opened wide. "A raft!" he echoed. "Man, are you crazy? Even
+at this high water a canoe wouldn't have a chance in ten of making it.
+The river's falling every hour--"
+
+"I know it. Do you suppose there's a canoe in town?"
+
+"No! Of course there isn't--one that you could even dream about shooting
+those rapids in. Besides, by the time we got there and packed it up--it
+would take two days to pack it the best we could do--the river would be
+too far down to tackle the trip at all. And it won't come up again till
+fall--you know that. Tell me what's the matter. Has Beatrice--"
+
+"Beatrice has gone down, that's all."
+
+"Then she's dead--no hope of anything else. Only an expert could hope to
+take her through, and there's nothing to live on Back There. What's the
+use of trying to follow--?"
+
+Neilson straightened, his eyes searching Ray's. "She's got food, I
+suppose. And she's got an expert paddler to take her there."
+
+Ray's face seemed to darken before his eyes. His hands half closed,
+shook in his face, then caught at Neilson's shoulders. "You don't
+mean--she's run away?"
+
+"Don't be a fool. Not run away--abducted. The prospector I told you
+about--Darby--was the old man's partner. He's paying us back. Heaven
+only knows what the girl's fate will be--I don't dare to think of it.
+Ray, I wish to God I had died before I ever saw this day!"
+
+Ray stared blankly. "Then he found out--about the murder?" he gasped.
+
+"Yes. Here's his letter. Take time--and read it. There's no use to try
+to act before we think--how to act. If I could only see a way--"
+
+Ray read the letter carefully, crumpling it at last in savage wrath.
+"It's your fault!" he cried. "Why didn't you save her for me as I've
+always asked you to do; why did you let her go out with him at all? I'll
+bet she wanted to go--"
+
+"I'd rather she had, instead of being taken by force!" The older
+man--aged incredibly in a few little minutes--slowly straightened. "But
+don't storm at me, Ray!" he warned, carefully and quietly. "I've stood a
+lot from you, but to-day I'd kill you for one word!"
+
+They faced each other in black disdain, but Ray knew he spoke the truth.
+There was no toying with this man's wrath to-day.
+
+"And if you'd let me croak this devil like I wanted to, it wouldn't have
+happened either. But there's no use crying about either one. The girl's
+a goner, sure; she's deep in the rapids by now."
+
+"Yes, and it's part of this man's hellish plan to take her clear through
+to Back There. You see, he dares us to come for her--and he'll be
+waiting and ready for us, mark my words. My God, she's probably
+dead--smashed to pieces--already!"
+
+"He says he's got the old man's letter, leaving the claim to him. That
+messes up things even worse."
+
+"I wish I'd never heard of the claim. There's only one thing to do, and
+that's to rush into Snowy Gulch and get a big outfit--all the horses and
+supplies we can find--and go after her by land."
+
+"Yes, and walk right into his trap. Think again, Neilson. It would take
+weeks and months to get in that way. Besides, what would happen to the
+claim while we're gone?"
+
+"You needn't fear for the claim! Of course, I'd expect you to think of
+that first--you who loved Beatrice so dearly!" Neilson's face was white
+with disdain. "It'll be recorded in our names, by then--likely Chan is
+already in Bradleyburg--and Darby himself is the only man on earth we
+have to fear." He paused, putting his faith in desperate craft. "If you
+want to cinch the claim, the first thing to do is go and stamp the life
+out of Darby; otherwise he'll turn up and make us trouble, just as he
+says."
+
+"He can't do much if the claim's recorded in our names!"
+
+"He can make us plenty of trouble. If you want the girl, Ray--don't lose
+a minute. Put your things together as fast as you can. We'll try to get
+some men in Snowy Gulch to come with us--to join in the hunt--and we'll
+hire every pack horse in the country. Get busy, and get busy quick."
+
+Reluctant to leave his gold, yet seeing the truth in Neilson's words,
+Ray hastened to his cabin to get such few supplies as would be needed
+for the day's march into Snowy Gulch. In less than five minutes they
+were on their way--tramping in file down the narrow moose trail.
+
+They crossed the divide, thus reaching the headwaters of Poor Man's
+Creek; then took the trail down toward the settlements. But the two
+claim-jumpers had not yet learned all the day's ill news. Half-way to
+the mouth of the stream they met Chan Heminway on his way back to the
+claim.
+
+At the first sight of him, riding in the rear of a long train of laden
+pack horses, they could hardly believe their eyes. It was not to be
+credited that he had made the trip to Bradleyburg and back in the few
+days he had been absent. Only an aeroplane could have made so fast a
+trip. Could it be that in spite of his definite orders he was returning
+with the duty of recording the claim still unperformed? To Neilson,
+however, the sight of the long pack train brought some measure of
+satisfaction. Here were horses laden with the summer supplies that Chan
+had been told to procure, and they could be utilized in the pursuit of
+Beatrice. Two days at least could be saved.
+
+"What in the devil you coming back for?" Ray shouted, when Chan's
+identity became certain.
+
+Chan rode nearer as if he had not heard. He checked his horse
+deliberately, undoubtedly inwardly excited by the news he had to tell
+and perhaps somewhat triumphant because he was its bearer. "I'm coming
+back because there ain't no use in staying at Snowy Gulch any longer,"
+he answered at last. "I've got the supplies, and I'm packin' up to the
+claim, just as I was told."
+
+"But why didn't you go to Bradleyburg and record the claim?" Ray
+stormed. "Don't you know until that's done we're likely to be chased off
+any minute?"
+
+Chan looked into his partner's angry eyes, and his own lips drew in a
+scowl. "Because there wasn't any use in goin' to Bradleyburg."
+
+Ray was stricken with terror, and his words faltered. "You mean you
+could tend to it in Snowy Gulch--"
+
+"I don't mean nothing of the kind. Shut up a minute, and I'll tell you
+about it. A few days ago Steve Morris got a letter addressed to old
+Hiram Melville--in care of Steve. He opened it and read it, and I heard
+about it soon as I got into town. There ain't no use of our trying to
+record that claim."
+
+"For God's sake, why?"
+
+"Because it's already recorded, that's why. We all felt so sure, and we
+wasn't sure at all. Before old Hiram died he wrote a letter--one of them
+two letters you heard about, Neilson--and which you wished you'd got
+hold of. Who that letter was to was an official in Bradleyburg--an old
+friend of Hiram's--and in it was a description of the claim. This letter
+Morris got was a notice that his claim was all properly filed in
+his--Hiram's--name. Whatever formalities was necessary was cut out
+because the old man had been too sick to make the trip--the recorder got
+special permission from Victoria. To be plain, I didn't file the claim
+because it's already filed, and I didn't want to show myself up as a
+claim-jumper quite as bad as that."
+
+"It's all over town--about the claim?"
+
+"Sure, but there won't be a rush. There's quite a movement over
+Bradleyburg way for one thing; for another, this is a pocket country,
+once and for always."
+
+For some seconds thereafter his partners could make no intelligent
+response. This bitter blow had been anticipated by neither. But Ray was
+a strong man, and his self-control quickly returned to him.
+
+"You see what that means, don't you?" he asked Neilson.
+
+"It means we've lost!"
+
+The eyes before him narrowed and gleamed. "So that's what it means to
+you! Well, I don't look at it just that way. It means to me that we've
+got to take these supplies and these pack horses and start out and find
+Ben Darby--and never stop hunting till we've found him."
+
+"Of course we've got to rescue Beatrice--"
+
+"Rescuing Beatrice isn't all of it now, by a long shot. For the Lord's
+sake, Neilson--use your head a minute. Didn't old Hiram leave a will,
+giving this claim to his brother Ezra? If the claim wasn't recorded that
+will wouldn't mean much--but it is. And hasn't this Ben got a letter
+from Ezra leaving the claim to him? Now do you want to know who owns
+that claim? Ben Darby owns it, and as long as he can kick, that quarter
+of a million in gold can never be ours."
+
+"You mean we've got to find him--and destroy that letter--"
+
+"We've got to; that's all. He wrote us he had it, just to taunt us, and
+we've got to burn that up whether we find the girl or not. But that
+ain't all we've got to destroy--that piece of paper. You see that, don't
+you?"
+
+Neilson breathed heavily. "It's all plain enough."
+
+"I want it to be plain, so next time I want to let daylight through a
+man you won't stand in the way. It ain't just enough to burn up that
+letter. We've got to get the man who owns it, too. If we don't he'd
+still have a good enough case against us--with a good lawyer. Likely
+enough lots of people knew of their partnership, maybe have seen the
+letter--and they'd all be good witnesses in a suit. Our reputation ain't
+so good, after that Jenkins deal, that we'd shine very bright in a suit.
+Even if he couldn't prove his own claim, he could lug out the will old
+Hiram left--he alone knows where it's hid--and then his next nearest
+relatives would come in and get the claim. On the other hand, if we
+smash him, the thing will all quiet down; there'll be no claimants to
+work the mine; and after a few months we can step in and put up our own
+notices. But we've got to do that first--smash him wide-open as soon as
+we can catch up with him. He'll be way out in Back There, and no man
+would ever know what became of him, and there'd be nobody left to oppose
+us any more. But we can't be safe any other way."
+
+Neilson nodded slowly. His subordinate had put the matter clearly; and
+there was truth in his words. In Ben's murder alone lay their safety.
+
+He had always been adverse to bloodshed; but further reluctance meant
+ruin. Ben was one whom he could strike down without mercy or regret. And
+the blow would not be for expediency alone. There would be a personal
+debt to pay after the long months of searching. He could not forget that
+Beatrice was helpless in his hands.
+
+"The thing to do is to turn back with Chan, at once," he said.
+
+"Of course," Ray agreed. "That plan of yours to get help in chasing 'em
+down don't go any more. We don't want any spectators for what's ahead of
+us. Here's grub and horses a-plenty, and we needn't lose any time."
+
+So they turned back toward the Yuga, on their quest of hate.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+Beatrice Neilson was a mountain girl, with the strong thews of Jael, yet
+she hid her face as the canoe shot into the crest of the rapids. It
+seemed incredible to her that the light craft should buffet that wild
+cataract and yet live. She was young and she loved life; and death
+seemed very near.
+
+The scene that her eyes beheld in that last little instant in which the
+boat seemed to hang, shuddering, at the crest of the descent was branded
+indelibly on her memory. She saw Ben's face, set like iron, the muscles
+bunching beneath his flannel sleeves as he set his paddle. He was
+leaning forward, aware of nothing in the world but the forthcoming
+crisis. And in that swift flash of vision she saw not only the steel
+determination and the brutal savagery of the avenger. A little glimpse
+of the truth went home to her, and she beheld something of the
+misdirected idealism of the man, the intensity and steadfastness that
+were the dominant traits of his nature. She could not doubt his belief
+in the reality of his cause. Whether fancied or real the injury, deep
+wells of emotion in his heart had broken their seals and flowed forth.
+
+The wolf crouched on the heap of supplies, fearful to the depths of his
+wild heart of this mighty stream, yet still putting his faith in his
+master in the stern. Beatrice saw his wild, frightened eyes as he gazed
+down into the frightful whirlpools. The banks seemed to whip past.
+
+Then the rushing waters caught the craft and seemed to fling it into
+the air. There was the swift sense of lightning and incredible movement,
+of such incalculable speed as that with which a meteor blazes through
+the sky, and then a mighty surging, struggle; an interminable instant of
+ineffable and stupendous conflict. The bow dipped, split the foam; then
+the raging waters seized the craft again, and with one great impulse
+hurled it through the clouds of spray, down between the narrow portals
+of rocks.
+
+Beatrice came to herself with the realization that she had uttered a
+shrill cry. Part of the impulse behind it was simply terror; but it was
+also the expression of an intensity of sensation never before
+experienced. She could have understood, now, the lure of the rapids to
+experienced canoeists. She forced herself to look into the wild
+cataract.
+
+The boat sped at an unbelievable pace. Ben held his paddle like iron,
+yet with a touch as delicate as that of a great musician upon piano
+keys, and he steered his craft to the last inch. His face was still like
+metal, but the eyes, steely, vivid, and magnetic, had a look of triumph.
+The first of the great tests had been passed.
+
+Sudden confidence in Ben's ability to guide her through to safety began
+to warm the girl's frozen heart. There were no places more dangerous
+than that just past; and he had handled his craft like a master. He was
+a voyageur: as long as his iron control was sustained, as long as his
+nerve was strong and his eye true she had every chance of coming out
+alive. But they had irremediably cast their fortunes upon the river,
+now. They could not turn back. She was in his whole charge, an agent of
+vengeance against her own father and his confederates.
+
+Hot, blinding tears suddenly filled her eyes. Her frantic fear of the
+river had held them back for a time; but they flowed freely enough now
+the first crisis was past. In utter misery and despair her head bowed in
+her hands; and her brown hair, disheveled, dropped down.
+
+Ben gazed at her with a curious mingling of emotions. It had not been
+part of his plan to bring sorrow to this girl. After all, she was not in
+the least responsible for her father's crimes. He had sworn to have no
+regrets, no matter what innocent flesh was despoiled in order that he
+might strike the guilty; yet the sight of that bowed, lovely head went
+home to him very deeply indeed. She was the instrument of his vengeance,
+necessary to his cause, but there was nothing to be gained by afflicting
+her needlessly. At least, he could give her his pity. It would not
+weaken him, dampen his fiery resolution, to give her that.
+
+As he guided his craft he felt growing compassion for her; yet it was a
+personal pity only and brought no regrets that he had acted as he did.
+
+"I wish you wouldn't cry," he said, rather quietly.
+
+Amazed beyond expression at the words, Beatrice looked up. For the
+instant her woe was forgotten in the astounding fact that she had won
+compassion from this cast-iron man in the stern.
+
+"I'll try not to," she told him, her dark eyes ineffably beautiful with
+their luster of tears. "I don't see why I should try--why I should try
+to do anything you ask me to--but yet I will--"
+
+Further words came to him, and he could not restrain them. "You're sort
+of--the goat, Beatrice," he told her soberly. "It was said, long ago,
+that the sins of the father must be visited upon the children; and maybe
+that's the way it is with you. I can't help but feel sorry--that you had
+to undergo this--so that I could reach your father and his men. If you
+had seen old Ezram lying there--the life gone from, his kind, gray old
+face--the man who brought me home and gave me my one chance--maybe you'd
+understand."
+
+They were speechless a long time, Beatrice watching the swift leap of
+the shore line, Ben guiding, with steady hand, the canoe. Neither of
+them could guess at what speed they traveled this first wild half-hour;
+but he knew that the long miles--so heart-breaking with their ridges and
+brush thickets to men and horses--were whipping past them each in a few,
+little breaths. Ever they plunged deeper into the secret, hushed heart
+of the wild--a land unknown to the tread of white men, a region so still
+and changeless that it seemed excluded from the reign and law of, time.
+The spruce grew here, straight and dark and tall, a stalwart army whose
+measureless march no human eyes beheld. Already they had come farther
+than a pack train could travel, through the same region, in weary days.
+
+Already they were at the border of Back There. They had cut the last
+ties with the world of men. There were no trails here, leading slowly
+but immutably to the busy centers of civilization; not a blaze on a tree
+for the eyes of a woodsman riding on some forest venture, not the ashes
+of a dead camp fire or a charred cooking rack, where an Indian had
+broiled his caribou flesh. Except by the slow process of exploration
+with pack horses, traveling a few miles each day, fording unknown rivers
+and encircling impassable ranges, or by waiting patiently until the fall
+rains swelled the river, they might never leave this land they had so
+boldly entered. They could not go out the way they had come--over those
+seething waters--and the river, falling swiftly, would soon be too low
+to permit them to push down to its lower waters where they might find
+Indian encampments.
+
+Nothing was left but the wilderness, ancient and unchanged. The spruce
+forest had a depth and a darkness that even Ben had never seen; the wild
+creatures that they sometimes glimpsed on the bank stared at them wholly
+without knowledge as to what they were, and likely amazed at the
+strength whereby they had braved this seething torrent that swept
+through their sylvan home. Here was a land where the grizzly had not yet
+learned of a might greater than his, where he had not yet surrendered
+his sovereignty to man. Here the moose--mightiest of the antlered
+herd--reached full maturity and old age without ever mistaking the call
+of a birch-bark horn for that of his rutting cow. Young bulls with only
+a fifty-inch spread of horns and ten points on each did not lead the
+herds, as in the more accessible provinces of the North. All things were
+in their proper balance, since the forest had gone unchanged for time
+immemorial; and as the head-hunters had not yet come the bull moose did
+not rank as a full-grown warrior until he wore thirty points and had
+five feet of spread, and he wasn't a patriarch until he could no longer
+walk free between two tree trunks seventy inches apart. Certain of the
+lesser forest people were not in unwonted numbers because that fierce
+little hunter, the marten, had been exterminated by trappers; the otter,
+yet to know the feel of cold iron, fished to his heart's content in
+rivers where an artificial fly had never fallen and the trout swarmed in
+uncounted numbers in the pools.
+
+Darting down the rapids Ben felt the beginnings of an exquisite
+exhilaration. Part of it arose from the very thrill and excitement of
+their headlong pace; but partly it had a deeper, more portentous origin.
+Here was his own country--this Back There. While all the spruce forest
+in which he had lived had been his natural range and district--his own
+kind of land with which he felt close and intimate relations--this was
+even more his home than his own birthplace. By light of a secret
+quality, hard to recognize, he was of it, and it was of him. He felt the
+joy of one who sees the gleam of his own hearth through a distant
+window.
+
+He _knew_ this land; it was as if he had simply been away, through the
+centuries, and had come home. The shadows and the stillness had the
+exact depth and tone that was true and right; the forest fragance was
+undefiled; the dark sky line was like something he had dreamed come
+true. He felt a strange and growing excitement, as if magnificent
+adventure were opening out before him. His gaze fell, with a queer sense
+of understanding, to Fenris.
+
+The wolf had recovered from his fear of the river, by now, and he was
+crouched, alert and still, in his place. His gaze was fast upon the
+shore line; and the green and yellow fires that mark the beast were
+ablaze again in his eyes. Fenris too made instinctive response to those
+breathless forests; and Ben knew that the bond between them was never so
+close as now.
+
+Fenris also knew that here was his own realm, the land in which the
+great Fear had not yet laid its curse. The forest still thronged with
+game, the wood trails would be his own. Here was the motherland, not
+only to him but to his master, too. They were its fierce children: one
+by breed, the other because he answered, to the full, the call of the
+wild from which no man is wholly immune.
+
+Ben could have understood the wolf's growing exultation. The war he was
+about to wage with Neilson. would be on his own ground, in a land that
+enhanced and developed his innate, natural powers, and where he had
+every advantage. The wolf does not run into the heart of busy cities in
+pursuit of his prey. He tries to decoy it into his own fastnesses.
+
+A sudden movement on the part of Beatrice, in the bow of the canoe,
+caught his eye. She had leaned forward and was reaching among the
+supplies. His mind at once leaped to the box of shells for her pistol
+that he had thrown among the duffle, but evidently this was not the
+object of her search. She lifted into her hands a paper parcel, the same
+she had brought from her cabin early that morning.
+
+He tried to analyze the curious mingling of emotions in her face. It was
+neither white with disdain nor dark with wrath; and the tears were gone
+from her eyes. Rather her expression was speculative, pensive. Presently
+her eyes met his.
+
+His heart leaped; why he did not know. "What is, it?" he asked.
+
+"Ben--I called you that yesterday and there's no use going back to last
+names now--I've made an important decision."
+
+"I hope it's a happy one," he ventured.
+
+"It's as happy as it can be, under the circumstances. Ben, I came of a
+line of frontiersmen--the forest people--and if the woods teach one
+thing it is to make the best of any bad situation."
+
+Ben nodded. For all his long training he had not entirely mastered this
+lesson himself, but he knew she spoke true.
+
+"We've found out how hard Fate can hit--if I can make it plain," she
+went on. "We've found out there are certain powers--or devils--or
+something else, and what I don't know--that are always lying in wait for
+people, ready to strike them down. Maybe you would call it Destiny. But
+the Destiny city men know isn't the Destiny we know out here--I don't
+have to tell you that. We see Nature just as she is, without any gay
+clothes, and we know the cruelty behind her smile, and the evil plans
+behind her gentle words."
+
+The man was amazed. Evidently the stress and excitement of the morning
+had brought out the fanciful and poetic side of the girl's nature.
+
+"We don't look for good luck," she told him. "We don't expect to live
+forever. We know what death is, and that it is sure to come, and that
+misfortune comes always--in the snow and the cold and the falling
+tree--and when we have good luck we're glad--we don't take it for
+granted. Living up here, where life is real, we've learned that we have
+to make the best of things in order to be happy at all."
+
+"And you mean--you're going to try to make the best of _this_?" His
+voice throbbed ever so slightly, because he could not hold it even.
+
+"There's nothing else I can do," she replied. "You've taken me here and
+as yet I don't see how I can get away. This doesn't mean I've gone over
+to your side."
+
+He nodded. He understood _that_ very well.
+
+"I'm just admitting that at present I'm in your hands--helpless--and
+many long weeks in before us," she went on. "I'm on my father's side,
+last and always, and I'll strike back at you if the chance comes. Expect
+no mercy from me, in case I ever see my way to strike."
+
+The man's eyes suddenly gleamed. "Don't you know--that you'd have a
+better chance of fighting me--if you didn't put me on guard?"
+
+"I don't think so. I don't believe you'd be fooled that easy.
+Besides--I can't pretend to be a friend--when I'm really an enemy."
+
+For one significant instant the man looked down. This was what he had
+done--pretended friendship when he was a foe. But his was a high cause!
+
+"I'm warning you that I'm against you to the last--and will beat you if
+I see my way," the girl went on. "But at the same time I'm going to make
+the best of a bad situation, and try to get all the comfort I can. I'm
+in your hands at present, and we're foes, but just the same we can talk,
+and try to make each other comfortable so that we can be comfortable
+ourselves, and try not to be any more miserable than we can help. I'm
+not going to cry any more."
+
+As she talked she was slowly unwrapping the little parcel she had
+brought. Presently she held it out to him.
+
+It was just a box of homemade candy--fudge made with sugar and canned
+milk--that she had brought for their day's picnic. But it was a peace
+offering not to be despised. A heavy load lifted from Ben's heart.
+
+He waited his chance, guiding the boat with care, and then reached a
+brown hand. He crushed a piece of the soft, delicious confection between
+his lips. "Thanks, Beatrice," he said. "I'll remember all you've told
+me."
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+It is a peculiar fact that no one is more deeply moved by the great
+works and phenomena of nature than those who live among them. It is the
+visitor from distant cities, or the callow youth with tawdry clothes and
+tawdry thoughts who disturbs the great silences and austerity of
+majestic scenes with half-felt effusive words or cheap impertinences.
+Oddly enough, the awe that the wilderness dweller knows at the sight of
+some great, mysterious canyon or towering peak seems to increase, rather
+than decrease, with familiarity. His native scenes never grow old to
+him. Their beauty and majesty is eternal.
+
+Perhaps the reason lies in the fact that the native woodsman knows
+nature as she really is: living ever close to her he knows her power
+over his life. Perhaps there is a religious side to the matter, too. In
+the solitudes the religious instincts receive an impulse that is
+impossible to those who know only the works of man. The religion that
+this gives is true and deep, and the eye instinctively lifts in
+reverence to the manifestations of divine might.
+
+When the swirling waters carried the canoe down into the gorge of the
+Yuga both Ben and Beatrice were instinctively awed and stilled. Ever the
+walls of the gorge grew more steep, until the sunlight was cut off and
+they rode as if in twilight. The stone of the precipices presented a
+marvellous array of color; and the spruce, almost black in the subdued
+light, stood in startling contrast. Ben saw at once that even were they
+able to land they could not--until they had emerged from the
+gorge--climb to the highlands. A mountain goat, most hardy of all
+mountaineers, could scarcely scale the abrupt wall.
+
+During this time of half-light they saw none of the larger forest
+creatures that at first had gazed at them with such wonder from the
+banks. The reason was simply that they could not descend and ascend the
+steep walls.
+
+Mostly Ben had time only for an occasional glimpse at the colossus above
+him. His work was to guide the craft between the perilous boulders.
+Occasionally the river slackened its wild pace, and at such times he
+stretched his arms and rested his straining eyes.
+
+Both had largely forgotten the danger of the ride. Because she was
+trying bravely to make the best of a tragic situation Beatrice had
+resolved to keep danger from her thoughts. Ben had known from the first
+that danger was an inevitable element in his venture, and he accepted it
+just as he had considered it,--with entire coldness. Yet both of them
+knew, in their secret thoughts, that the balance of life and death was
+so fine that the least minor incident might cast them into darkness. It
+would not have to be a great disaster, a wide departure from the
+commonplace. They were traveling at a terrific rate of speed, and a
+sharp rock too close to the surface would rip the bottom from their
+craft. Any instant might bring the shock and shudder of the end.
+
+There would scarcely be time to be afraid. Both would be hurled into the
+stream; and the wild waters, pounding against the rocks, would close the
+matter swiftly. It awed them and humbled them to realize with what
+dispatch and ease this wilderness power could snuff out their mortal
+lives. There would be no chance to fight back, no element of
+uncertainty in the outcome. Here was a destiny against which the
+strength of man was as thistledown in the wind! The thought was good
+spiritual medicine for Ben, just as it would have been for most other
+men, and his egoism died a swift and natural death.
+
+One crash, one shock, and then the darkness and silence of the end! The
+river would rage on, unsatiated by their few pounds of flesh, storming
+by in noble fury; but no man would know whither they had gone and how
+they had died. The walls of the gorge would not tremble one whit, or
+notice; and the spruce against the sky would not bow their heads to show
+that they had seen.
+
+But the canyon broke at last, and the craft emerged into the sunlight.
+It was good to see the easy slope of the hills again, the spruce
+forests, and the forms of the wild creatures on the river bank, startled
+by their passing. Noon came and passed, and for lunch they ate the last
+of the fudge. And now a significant change was manifest in both of them.
+
+Psychologists are ever astounded at the ability of mortals, men and
+animals, to become adjusted to any set of circumstances. The wax of
+habit sets almost in a day. The truth was, that in a certain measure
+with very definite and restricted limits, both Ben and Beatrice were
+becoming adjusted even to this amazing situation in which they found
+themselves. This did not mean that Beatrice was in the least degree
+reconciled to it. She had simply accepted it with the intention of
+making the best of it. She had been abducted by an enemy of her father
+and was being carried down an unknown and dangerous river; but the
+element of surprise, the life of which is never but a moment, was
+already passing away. Sometimes she caught herself with a distinct
+start, remembering everything with a rage and a bitter load on her
+heart; but the mood would pass quickly.
+
+It is impossible, through any ordinary change of fortune, for a normal
+person to lose his sense of self-identity. As long as that remains
+exterior conditions can make no vital change, or make him feel greatly
+different than he felt before. The change from a peasant to a
+millionaire brings only a moment's surprise, and then readjustment.
+Beatrice was still herself; the man in the stern remained Ben Darby and
+no one else. Very naturally she began to talk to him, and he to answer
+her.
+
+The fact that they were bitter foes, one the victim of the other, did
+not decree they could not have friendly conversation, isolated as they
+were. From time to time Ben pointed out objects of interest on the
+shore; and she found herself remarking, in a casual voice, about them.
+And before the afternoon he had made her laugh, in spite of herself,--a
+gay sound in which fear and distress had little echo.
+
+"We're bound to see a great deal of each other in the next few weeks,"
+he had said; and this fact could not be denied. The sooner both became
+adjusted to it the better. Actual fear of him she had none; she
+remembered only too well the steel in his eyes and the white flame on
+his cheeks as he had assured her of her safety.
+
+In mid-afternoon Ben began to think of making his night's camp. From
+time to time the bank became an upright precipice where not even a tree
+could find foothold; and it had occurred to him, with sudden vividness,
+that he did not wish the darkness to overtake him in such a place. The
+river rocks would make short work of him, in that case. It was better to
+pick out a camp site in plenty of time lest they could not find one at
+the day's end.
+
+In one of the more quiet stretches of water he saw the place--a small
+cove and a green, tree-clad bank, with the gorge rising behind. Handling
+his canoe with greatest care he slanted toward it. A moment later he had
+caught the brush at the water's edge, stepped off into shallow water,
+and was drawing the canoe up onto the bank.
+
+"We're through for the day," he said happily, as he helped Beatrice out
+of the boat. "I'll confess I'm ready to rest."
+
+Beatrice made no answer because her eyes were busy. Coolly and quietly
+she took stock of the situation, trying to get an idea of the
+geographical features of the camp site. She saw in a glance, however,
+that there was no path to freedom up the gorge behind her. The rocks
+were precipitate: besides, she remembered that over a hundred miles of
+impassable wilderness lay between her and her father's cabin. Without
+food and supplies she could not hope to make the journey.
+
+The racing river, however, wakened a curious, inviting train of thought.
+The torrent continued largely unabated for at least one hundred miles
+more, she knew, and the hours that it would be passable in a canoe were
+numbered. The river had fallen steadily all day; driftwood was left on
+the shore; rocks dried swiftly in the sun, cropping out like fangs above
+the foam of the stream. Was there still time to drift on down the Yuga a
+hundred or more miles to the distant Indian encampment? She shut the
+thought from her mind, at present, and turned her attention to the work
+of making camp.
+
+With entire good humor she began to gather such pieces of dead wood as
+she could find for their fire.
+
+"Your prisoner might as well make herself useful," she said.
+
+Ben's face lighted as she had not seen it since their outward journey
+from Snowy Gulch. "Thank God you're taking it that way, Beatrice," he
+told her fervently. "It was a proposition I couldn't help--"
+
+But the girl's eyes flashed, and her lips set in a hard line. "I'm doing
+it to make my own time go faster," she told him softly, rather slowly.
+"I want you to remember that."
+
+But instantly both forgot their words to listen to a familiar clucking
+sound from a near-by shrub. Peering closely they made out the plump,
+genial form of Franklin's grouse,--a bird known far and wide in the
+north for her ample breast and her tender flesh.
+
+"Good Lord, there's supper!" Ben whispered. "Beatrice, get your
+pistol--"
+
+Her eyes smiled as she looked him in the face. "You remember--my pistol
+isn't loaded!"
+
+"Excuse me. I forgot. Give it to me."
+
+She handed him the little gun, and he slipped in the shells he had taken
+from it. Then--for the simple and sensible reason that he didn't want to
+take any chance on the loss of their dinner--he stole within twenty feet
+of the bird. Very carefully he drew down on the plump neck.
+
+"Dinner all safe," he remarked rather gayly, as the grouse came tumbling
+through the branches.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+Quietly Beatrice retrieved the bird and began to remove its feathers.
+Ben built the fire, chopped sturdily at a half-grown spruce until it
+shattered to the earth, and then chopped it into lengths for fuel. When
+the fire was blazing bright, he cut away the green branches and laid
+them, stems overlapping, into a fragrant bed.
+
+"Here's where you sleep to-night, Beatrice," he informed her.
+
+She stopped in her work long enough to try the springy boughs with her
+arms; then she gave him an answering smile. Even a tenderfoot can make
+some sort of a comfortable pallet out of evergreen boughs--ends
+overlapping and plumes bent--but a master woodsman can fashion a
+veritable cradle, soft as silk with never a hard limb to irritate the
+flesh, and yielding as a hair mattress. Such softness, with the
+fragrance of the balsam like a sleeping potion, can not help but bring
+sweet dreams.
+
+Ben had been wholly deliberate in the care with which he had built the
+pallet. He had simply come to the conclusion that she was paying a high
+price for her father's sins; and from now on he intended to make all
+things as easy as he could for her. Moreover, she had been a sportswoman
+of the rarest breed and merited every kindness he could do for her.
+
+He was not half so careful with his own bed, built sixty feet on the
+opposite side of the fire. He threw it together rather hastily. And when
+he walked back to the fire he found an amazing change.
+
+Already Beatrice had established sovereignty over the little patch of
+ground they had chosen for the camp,--and the wilderness had drawn back.
+This spot was no longer mere part of the far-spreading, trackless wilds.
+It had been set off and marked so that the wilderness creatures could no
+longer mistake it for part of their domain. Over the fire she had
+erected a cooking rack; and water was already boiling in a small bucket
+suspended from it. In another container a fragrant mixture was in the
+process of cooking. She had spread one of the blankets on the grass for
+a tablecloth.
+
+As twilight lowered they sat down to their simple meal,--tea, sweetened
+with sugar, and vegetables and meat happily mingled in a stew. It was
+true that the vegetable end was held up by white grains of rice alone,
+but the meat was the white, tender flesh of grouse, permeating the
+entire dish with its tempting flavor. As a whole, the stew was greatly
+satisfying to the inner man.
+
+"I wish I'd brought more tea," Ben complained, as he sipped that most
+delightful of all drinks, the black tea beloved of the northern men.
+
+"You a woodsman, and don't know how to remedy that!" the girl responded.
+"I know of a native substitute that's almost as good as the real
+article."
+
+About the embers of the fire they sat and watched the tremulous wings of
+night close round them. The copse grew breathless. The distant trees
+blended into shadow, the nearer trunks dimmed and finally faded; the
+large, white northern stars emerged in infinite troops and companies,
+peering down through the rifts in the trees. Here about their fire they
+had established the domain of man. For a few short hours they had routed
+the forces of the wilderness; but the foe pressed close upon them. Just
+at the fluctuating ring of firelight he waited, clothed in darkness and
+mystery,--the infinite, brooding spirit of the ancient forest.
+
+They had never known such silence, broken only by the prolonged chord of
+the river, as descended upon them now. It was new and strange to the
+conscious life of Ben, himself, the veritable offspring of the woods;
+although infinitely old and familiar to a still, watching, secret self
+within him. It was as if he had searched forever for this place and had
+just found it, and it answered, to the full, a queer mood of silence in
+his own heart. The wind had died down now. The last wail of a
+coyote--disconsolate on a far-away ridge--had trembled away into
+nothingness; the voices of the Little People who had chirped and rustled
+in the tree aisles during the daylight hours were stilled with a
+breathless, dramatic stillness. Such sound as remained over the
+interminable breadth of that dark forest was only the faint stirrings
+and rustlings of the beasts of prey going to their hunting; and this was
+only a moving tone in the great chord of silence.
+
+To Ben the falling night brought a return of his most terrible moods.
+Beatrice sensed them in his pale, set face and his cold, wolfish eyes.
+The wolf sat beside him, swept by his master's mood, gazing with deadly
+speculations into the darkness. Beatrice saw them as one breed to-night.
+The wild had wholly claimed this repatriated son. The paw of the Beast
+was heavy upon him; the softening influences of civilization seemed
+wholly dispelled. There was little here to remind her that this was the
+twentieth century. The primitive that lies just under the skin in all
+men was in the ascendancy; and there was little indeed to distinguish
+him from the hunter of long ago, a grizzled savage at the edge of the
+ice who chased the mammoth and wild pony, knowing no home but the
+forest and no gentleness unknown to the wolf that ran at his heels....
+The tenderness and sympathy he had had for her earlier that day seemed
+quite gone now. She searched for it in vain in the dark and savage lines
+of his pale face.
+
+Because it has always been that the happiness of women must depend upon
+the mood of men, her own spirits fell. The despair that descended upon
+her brought also resentment and rage; and soon she slipped away quietly
+to her bed. She drew the blankets over her face; but no tears wet her
+cheeks to-night. She was dry-eyed, thoughtful--full of vague plans.
+
+She lay awake a long time, until at last a little, faint ray of hope
+beamed bright and clear. More than a hundred miles farther down the
+Yuga, past the mouth of Grizzly River, not far from the great,
+north-flowing stream of which the Yuga was a tributary, lay an Indian
+village--and if only she could reach it she might enlist the aid of the
+natives and make a safe return, by a long, roundabout route, to her
+father's arms. The plan meant deliverance from Ben and the defeat of all
+his schemes of vengeance,--perhaps the salvation of her father and his
+subordinates.
+
+She realized perfectly the reality of her father's danger. She had read
+the iron resolve in Ben's face. She knew that if she failed to make an
+immediate escape from him, all his dreadful plans were likely to
+succeed: his enemies would follow him into the unexplored mazes of Back
+There to effect her rescue and fall helpless in his trap. What quality
+of mercy he would extend to them then she could readily guess.
+
+Just to get down to the Indian village: this was her whole problem. But
+it was Ben's plan to land and enter the interior somewhere in the vast
+wilderness between, from which escape could not be made until the flood
+waters of fall. The way would remain open but a few hours more, due to
+the simple fact that the waters were steadily falling and the
+river-bottom crags, forming impassable barriers at some points, would be
+exposed. _If she made her escape at all it must be soon._
+
+Yet she could not attempt it at night. She could not see to guide the
+canoe while the darkness lay over the river. Just one further chance
+remained--to depart in the first gray of dawn.
+
+She fell into troubled sleep, but true to her resolution, wakened when
+the first ribbon of light stretched along the eastern horizon. She sat
+up, laying the blankets back with infinite care. This was her chance:
+Ben still lay asleep.
+
+Just to steal down to the water's edge, push off the canoe, and trust
+her life to the doubtful mercy of the river. The morning soon would
+break; if she could avoid the first few crags, she had every chance to
+guide her craft through to deliverance and safety. By no conceivable
+chance could Ben follow her. He would be left in the shadow of the
+gorge, a prisoner without hope or prayer of deliverance. There was no
+crossing the cliffs that lifted so stern and gray just behind. Before he
+could build any kind of a craft with axe and fire, the waters would fall
+to a death level, beyond any hope of carrying him to safety. The tables
+would be turned; he would be left as helpless to follow her as Neilson
+had been to follow him.
+
+The plan meant deliverance for her; but surely it meant _death_ to him.
+Starvation would drive him to the river and destruction, before men
+could ever come the long way to rescue him. But this was not her
+concern. She was a forest girl and he her enemy: he must pay the price
+for his own deeds.
+
+She got to her feet, stalking with absolute silence. She must not waken
+him now. Softly she pressed her unshod foot into the grass. He stirred
+in his sleep; and she paused, scarcely breathing.
+
+She looked toward him. Dimly she could see his face, tranquil in sleep
+and gray in the soft light; and an instantaneous surge of remorse sped
+through her. There was a sweetness, a hint of kindly boyishness in his
+face now, so changed since she had left him beside the glowing coals.
+Yet he was her deadly enemy; and she must not let her woman's heart cost
+her her victory in its moment of fulfillment. She crept on down to the
+water.
+
+She could discern the black shadow of the canoe. One swift surge of her
+shoulders, one leap, the splash of the stern in the water and the swift
+stroke of the paddle, and she would be safe. She stepped nearer.
+
+But at that instant a subdued note of warning froze her in her tracks.
+It was only a small sound, hushed and hardly sharp enough to arouse Ben
+from his sleep; but it was deadly, savage, unutterably sinister. She had
+forgotten that Ben did not wage war alone. For the moment she had given
+no thought to his terrible ally,--a pack brother faithful to the death.
+
+A great, gaunt form raised up from the pile of duffle in the canoe; and
+his fangs showed ivory white in the wan light. It was Fenris, and he
+guarded the canoe. He crouched, ready to spring if she drew near.
+
+The girl sobbed once, then stole back to her blankets.
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+Ben wakened refreshed, at peace with the world as far as he could ever
+be until his ends were attained; and immediately built a roaring fire.
+Beatrice still slept, exhausted from the stress and suspense of her
+attempt to escape. When the leaping flames had dispelled the frost from
+the grass about the fire Ben stepped to her side and touched her
+shoulder.
+
+"It's time to get up and go on," he said. "We have only a few hours more
+of travel."
+
+It was true. The river had fallen appreciably during the night. Not many
+hours remained in which to make their permanent landing. Although the
+river was somewhat less violent from this point on, the lower water line
+would make traveling practically as perilous as on the preceding day.
+
+The girl opened her eyes. "I'd rather hoped--I had dreamed it all," she
+told him miserably.
+
+The words touched him. He looked into her face, moved by the girlishness
+and appeal about the red, wistful mouth and the dark, brimming eyes.
+"It's pretty tough, but I'm afraid it's true," he said, more kindly than
+he had spoken since they had left the landing. "Do you want me to cook
+breakfast and bring it to you here?"
+
+"No, I want to do that part myself. It makes the time pass faster to
+have something to do."
+
+He went to look for fresh meat, and she slipped into her outer garments.
+She found water already hot in a bucket suspended from the cooking rack,
+permitting a simple but refreshing toilet. With Ben's comb she
+straightened out the snarls in her dark tresses, parted them, and
+braided them into two dusky ropes to be worn Indian fashion in front of
+her shoulders. Then she prepared the meal.
+
+It was a problem to tax the ingenuity of any housekeeper,--to prepare an
+appetizing breakfast out of such limited supplies. But in this art,
+particularly, the forest girls are trained. A quantity of rice had been
+left from the stew of the preceding night, and mixing it with flour and
+water and salt, she made a batter. Sooner or later fresh fat could be
+obtained from game to use in frying: to-day she saw no course other than
+to melt a piece of candle. The reverberating roar of the rifle a hundred
+yards down the river bank, however, suggested another alternative.
+
+A moment later Ben appeared--and the breakfast problem was solved. It
+was another of the woods people that his rifle had brought down,--one
+that wore fur rather than feathers and which had just come in from night
+explorations along the river bank. It was a yearling black bear--really
+no larger than a cub--and he had an inch of fat under his furry hide.
+
+The fat he yielded was not greatly different from lard; and the
+pancakes--or fritters, as Ben termed them--were soon frying merrily.
+Served with hot tea they constituted a filling and satisfactory
+breakfast for both travelers.
+
+After breakfast they took to the river, yielding themselves once more to
+the whims of the current. Once more the steep banks whipped past them in
+ever-changing vista; and Ben had to strain at his paddle to guide the
+craft between the perilous crags. The previous day the high waters had
+carried them safely above the boulders of the river bed: to-day some of
+the larger crags all but scraped the bottom of the canoe. It did not
+tend toward peace of mind to know that any instant they might encounter
+a submerged crag that would rip their craft in twain. Ben felt a growing
+eagerness to land.
+
+But within an hour they came out once more upon the open forest. The
+river broadened, sped less swiftly, the bank sloped gradually to the
+distant hills. This was the heart of Back There,--a virgin and primeval
+forest unchanged since the piling-up of the untrodden ranges. The wild
+pace of the craft was checked, and they kept watch for a suitable place
+to land.
+
+There was no need to push on through the seething cataracts that lay
+still farther below. Shortly before the noon hour Ben's quick eye saw a
+break in the heavy brushwood that lined the bank and quickly paddled
+toward it. In a moment it was revealed as the mouth, of a small, clear
+stream, flowing out of a beaver meadow where the grass was rank and
+high. In a moment more he pushed the canoe into the mud of the creek
+bank.
+
+They both got out, rather sober of mien, and she helped him haul the
+canoe out upon the bank. They unloaded it quickly, carrying the supplies
+in easy loads fifty yards up into the edge of the forest, on
+well-drained dry ground.
+
+The entire forest world was hushed and breathless, as if startled by
+this intrusion. Neither of the two travelers felt inclined to speak. And
+the silence was finally broken by the splashing feet of a moose, running
+through a little arm of the marsh that the forest hid from view.
+
+"Is this our permanent camp?" the girl asked at last.
+
+"Surely not," was the reply. "It's too near the river for one
+thing--too easily found. It's too low, too--there'll be mosquitoes in
+plenty in that marsh two months from now. The first thing is--to look
+around and find a better site."
+
+"You want me to come?"
+
+"I'd rather, if you don't mind."
+
+She understood perfectly. He did not intend to give her complete freedom
+until the river fell so low that the rapids farther down would be wholly
+impassable.
+
+"I'll come." Beatrice smiled grimly. "We can have that picnic we
+planned, after all."
+
+They found a moose trail leading into the forest, and leaving the wolf
+on guard over the supplies, they filed swiftly along it in that
+peculiar, shuffling, mile-speeding gait that all foresters learn. At
+once both were aware of a subdued excitement. In the first place, this
+was unknown country and they experienced the incomparable thrill of
+exploration. Besides they were seeking a permanent camp where their
+fortunes would be cast, the drama of their lives be enacted, for weeks
+to come.
+
+Almost at once they began to catch glimpses of wild life,--a squirrel
+romping on a limb; or a long line of grouse, like children in school,
+perched on a fallen log. The trapper had not yet laid his lines in this
+land, and the tracks of the little fur-bearers weaved a marvelous and
+intricate pattern on the moose trail. Once a marten with orange throat
+peered at them from a covert, and once a caribou raced away, too fast
+for a shot.
+
+Mostly the wild things showed little fear or understanding of the two
+humans. The grouse relied on their protective coloration, just as when
+menaced by the beasts of prey. An otter, rarely indeed seen in daylight,
+hovered a moment beside a little stream to consider them; and a coyote,
+greatest of all cowards, lingered in their trail until they were within
+fifty feet of his grey form, then trotted shyly away.
+
+"We won't starve for meat, that's certain," Ben informed her. His voice
+was subdued; he had fallen naturally into the mood of quietness that
+dwells ever in the primeval forest.
+
+Because the trail seemed to be leading them too far from the waterways,
+they took a side trail circling about a wooded hill. Ever Ben studied
+the landmarks, looked carefully down the draws and tried to learn as
+much as possible of the geography of the country; and Beatrice
+understood his purpose with entire clearness. He wished to locate his
+camp so that it would have every natural advantage and insurance against
+surprise attack. He desired that every advantage of warfare be in his
+favor when finally he came to grips with Neilson and his men.
+
+They crossed a low ridge, following down another of the thousand creeks
+that water the northern lands. In a moment it led them to a long, narrow
+lake, blue as a sapphire in its frame of dusky spruce.
+
+For a moment both of them halted on its bank, held by its virgin beauty.
+Lost in the solitudes as it was, perhaps never before gazed upon by the
+eyes of men, still it gave no impression of bleakness and stagnation.
+Rather it was a scene of scintillating life, vivid past all expression.
+Far out of range on the opposite shore a huge bull moose stood like a
+statue in black marble, gazing out over the shimmering expanse. Trout
+leaped, flashing silver, anywhere they might look; and a flock of loon
+shrieked demented cries from its center. The burnished wings of a flock
+of mallard flashed in the air, startled by some creeping hunter.
+
+Slowly, delighted in spite of themselves by the lovely spot, they
+followed along its shore. They climbed the bank; and now Ben began to
+examine his surroundings with great care.
+
+He had suddenly realized that he was in a region wonderfully fitted for
+his permanent camp. The low ridge between the lake and the creek gave a
+clear view of a large part of the surrounding country, affording him
+every chance of seeing his enemies before they saw him. If they came
+along the river--the course they would naturally follow--they would be
+obliged to cross the beaver marsh--a half-mile of open grassland with no
+protecting coverts. Beatrice saw, dismayed, that his gray eyes were
+kindling with unholy fire under his heavy, dark brows.
+
+What if he should see them, deep in the wet grass, filing across the
+open marsh! How many shots would be needed to bring his war to a
+triumphant end? There were no thickets in which they might find shelter:
+hidden himself, they could not return his fire. Before they could break
+and run to cover he could destroy them all!
+
+Should they cross the narrow neck of the marsh, higher up, he would have
+every chance to see them on the lake shore. The site was good from the
+point of health and comfort--high enough to escape the worst of the
+insect pests, close to fresh water, plenty of fuel, and within a few
+hundred yards of a lake that simply swarmed with fish and waterfowl.
+
+Still following a narrow, racing trout stream that flowed into the lake
+they advanced a short distance farther, clear to the base of a rock
+wall. And all at once Beatrice, walking in front, drew up with a gasp.
+
+She stood at the edge of a little glade, perhaps thirty yards across,
+laying at the base of the cliff. The creek flowed through it, the grass
+was green and rich, beloved by the antlered herds that came to graze,
+the tall spruce shaded it on three sides. But it was not these things
+that caught the girl's eye. Just at the edge of a glade a dark hole
+yawned in the face of the cliff.
+
+In an instant more they were beside it, gazing into its depths. It was a
+natural cavern with rock walls and a clean floor of sand--a roomy place,
+and yet a perfect stronghold against either mortal enemies or the powers
+of wind and rain.
+
+"It's home," the man said simply.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+Ben and Beatrice went together back to the canoe, and in two trips they
+carried the supplies to the cave. By instinct a housekeeper, Beatrice
+showed him where to stow the various supplies, what part of the cave was
+to be used for provisions, where their cots would be laid, and where to
+erect the cooking rack. Shadows had fallen over the land before they
+finished the work.
+
+Tired from the hard tramp, yet sustained by a vague excitement neither
+of them could name or trace, they began to prepare for the night. Ben
+cut boughs as before, placing Beatrice's bed within the portals of the
+cave and his own on the grass outside. He cut fuel and made his fire:
+Beatrice prepared the evening meal.
+
+The flesh of the cub-bear they had procured that morning would have to
+serve them to-night; but more delicious meat could be procured
+to-morrow. Ben knew that the white-maned caribou fed in the high park
+lands. Beatrice made biscuits and brewed tea; and they ate the simple
+food in the firelight. Already the darkness was pressing close upon
+them, tremulous, vaguely sinister, inscrutably mysterious.
+
+They had talked gayly at first; but they grew silent as the fire burned
+down to coals. A great preoccupation seemed to hold them both. When one
+spoke the other started, and word did not immediately come in answer.
+Beatrice's despair was not nearly so dominating to-night; and Ben
+harbored a secret excitement that was almost happiness.
+
+Its source and origin Ben could not trace. Perhaps it was just relief
+that the perilous journey was over. The strain of his hours at the
+paddle had been severe; but now they were safe upon the sustaining
+earth. Yet this fact alone could hardly have given him such a sense of
+security,--an inner comfort new to his adventurous life.
+
+The forest was oppressive to-night, tremulous with the passions of the
+Young World; yet he did not respond to it as before. The excitement that
+sparkled in the red wine of his veins was not of the chase and death,
+and he had difficulty in linking it up with the thoughts of his
+forthcoming vengeance. Rather it was a mood that sprang from their
+surroundings here, their shelter at the mouth of the cave. He felt
+deeply at peace.
+
+The fire blazed warmly at the cavern maw; the wolf stood tense and
+still, by means of the secret wireless of the wild fully aware of the
+tragic drama, the curtain of which was the dark just fallen; yet Ben's
+wild, bitter thoughts of the preceding night did not come readily back
+to him. There was a quality here--in the firelight and the haven of the
+cave--that soothed him and comforted him. The powers of the wild were
+helpless against him now. The wind might hurl down the dead trees, but
+the rock of the cavern Wall would stand against them. Even the dreaded
+avalanche could roar and thunder on the steep above in vain.
+
+There was no peril in the hushed, breathless forest for him to-night.
+This was his stronghold, and none could assail it. And it was a
+significant fact that his sense of intimate relationship with the wolf,
+Fenris, Was someway lessened. Fenris was a creature of the open forest,
+sleeping where he chose on the trail; but his master had found a cavern
+home. There was a strange and bridgeless chasm between such breeds as
+roamed abroad and those that slept, night after night, in the shelter of
+the same walls.
+
+He watched the girl's face, ruddy in the firelight, and it was
+increasingly hard to remember that she was of the enemy camp,--the
+daughter of his arch foe. To-night she was just a comrade, a habitat of
+his own cave.
+
+For the first time since he had found Ezram's body--so huddled and
+impotent in the dead leaves--he remembered the solace of tobacco. He
+hunted through his pockets, found his pipe and a single tin of the weed,
+and began to inhale the fragrant, peace-giving smoke. When he raised his
+eyes again he found the girl studying him with intent gaze.
+
+She looked away, embarrassed, and he spoke to put her at ease. "You are
+perfectly comfortable, Beatrice?" he asked gently.
+
+"As good as I could expect--considering everything. I'm awfully relieved
+that we're off the water."
+
+"Of course." He paused, looking away into the tremulous shadows. "Is
+that all? Don't you feel something else, too--a kind of satisfaction?"
+
+The coals threw their lurid glow on her lovely, deeply tanned face.
+"It's for you to feel satisfaction, not me. You couldn't expect me to
+feel very satisfied--taken from my home--as a hostage--in a feud with my
+father. But I think I know what you mean. You mean--the comfort of the
+fire, and a place to stay."
+
+"That's it. Of course."
+
+"I feel it--but every human being does who has a fire when this big,
+northern night comes down and takes charge of things. It's just an
+instinct, I suppose, a comfort and a feeling of safety--and likely only
+the wild beasts are exempt from it." Her voice changed and softened, as
+her girlish fancy reached ever farther. "I suppose the first men that
+you were telling me about on the way out, the hairy men of long ago,
+felt the same way when the cold drove them to their caves for the first
+time. A great comfort in the protecting walls and the fire."
+
+"It's an interesting thought--that perhaps the love of home sprang from
+that hour."
+
+"Quite possibly. Perhaps it came only when they had to fight for their
+homes--against beasts, and such other hairy men as tried to take their
+homes away from them. Perhaps, after all, that's one of the great
+differences between men and beasts. Men have a place to live in and a
+place to fight for--and the fire is the symbol of it all. And the beasts
+run in the forest and make a new lair every day."
+
+Thoughts of the stone age were wholly fitting in this stone-age forest,
+and Ben's fancy caught on fire quickly. "And perhaps, when the hairy men
+came to the caves to live, they forgot their wild passions they knew on
+the open trails--their blood-lust and their wars among themselves--and
+began to be men instead of beasts." Ben's voice had dropped to an even,
+low murmur. "Perhaps they got gentle, and the Brute died in their
+bodies."
+
+"Yes. Perhaps then they began to be tamed."
+
+The silence dropped about them, settling slowly; and all except the
+largest heap of red coals burned down to gray ashes. The darkness
+pressed ever nearer. The girl stretched her slender, brown arms.
+
+"I'm sleepy," she said. "I'm going in."
+
+He got up, with good manners; and he smiled, quietly and gently, into
+her sober, wistful face. "Sleep good," he prayed. "You've got solid
+walls around you to-night--and some one on guard, too. Good night."
+
+A like good wish was on her lips, but she pressed it back. She had
+almost forgotten, for the moment, that this man was her abductor and her
+father's enemy. She ventured into the darkness of the cave.
+
+Scratching a match Ben followed her, so that she could see her way. For
+the instant the fireside was deserted. And then both of them grew
+breathless and alert as the brush cracked and rustled just beyond the
+glowing coals.
+
+Some huge wilderness creature was venturing toward them, at the edge of
+the little glade.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+The match flared out in Ben's fingers, and the only light that was left
+was the pale moonlight, like a cobweb on the floor of the glade, and the
+faint glow from the dying fire. About the glade ranged the tall spruce,
+Watching breathlessly; and for a termless second or two a profound and
+portentous silence descended on the camp. No leaf rustled, not a tree
+limb cracked. The creature that had pushed through the thickets to the
+edge of the glade was evidently standing motionless, deciding on his
+course.
+
+Only the wild things seem to know what complete absence of motion means.
+To stand like a form in rock, not a muscle quivering or a hair stirring,
+is never a feat for ragged, over stretched human nerves; and it requires
+a perfect muscle control that is generally only known to the beasts of
+the forest. Only a few times in a lifetime in human beings are the
+little, outward motions actually suspended; perhaps under the paralysis
+of great terror or, with painstaking effort, before a photographer's
+camera. But with the beasts it is an everyday accomplishment necessary
+to their survival. The fawn that can not stand absolutely motionless,
+his dappled skin blending perfectly with the background of shrubbery
+shot with sunlight, comes to an end quickly in the fangs of some great
+beast of prey. The panther that can not lurk, not a muscle quivering, in
+his ambush beside the deer trail, never knows full feeding. The creature
+on the opposite side of the glade seemed as bereft of motion as the
+spruce trees in the moonlight, or the cliff above the cave.
+
+"What is it?" Beatrice whispered. The man's eyes strained into the
+gloom.
+
+"I don't know. It may be just a moose, or maybe a caribou. But it may
+be--"
+
+He tiptoed to the door of the cave, and his eye fell to the crouching
+form of Fenris. The creature outside was neither moose nor caribou. The
+great wolf of the North does not stand at bay to the antlered people. He
+was poised to spring, his fangs bared and his fierce eyes hot with fire,
+but he was not hunting. Whatever moved in the darkness without, the wolf
+had no desire to go forth and attack. Perhaps he would fight to the
+death to protect the occupants of the cave; but surely an ancient and
+devastating fear had hold of him. Evidently he recognized the intruder
+as an ancestral enemy that held sovereignty over the forest.
+
+At that instant Ben leaped through the cavern maw to reach his gun.
+There was nothing to be gained by waiting further. This was a savage and
+an uninhabited land; and the great beasts of prey that ranged the forest
+had not yet learned the restraint born of the fear of man. And he knew
+one breathless instant of panic when his eye failed to locate the weapon
+in the faint light of the fire.
+
+Holding hard, he tried to remember where he had left it. The form across
+the glade was no longer motionless. Straining, Ben saw the soft roll of
+a great shadow, almost imperceptible in the gloom--advancing slowly
+toward him. Then the faint glow of the fire caught and reflected in the
+creature's eyes.
+
+They suddenly glowed out in the half-darkness, two rather small circles
+of dark red, close together and just alike. This night visitor was not
+moose or caribou, or was it one of the lesser hunters, lynx or
+wolverine, or a panther wandered far from his accustomed haunts. The
+twin circles were too far above the ground. And whatever it was, no
+doubt remained but that the creature was steadily stalking him across
+the soft grass.
+
+At that instant Ben's muscles snapped into action. Only a second
+remained in which to make his defense--the creature had paused, setting
+his muscles for a death-dealing charge. "Go back into the cave--as far
+as you can," he said swiftly to Beatrice. His own eyes, squinted and
+straining for the last iota of vision in that darkened scene, made a
+last, frantic search for his rifle. Suddenly he saw the gleam of its
+barrel as it rested against the wall of the cliff, fifteen feet distant.
+
+At once he knew that his only course was to spring for it in the instant
+that remained, and trust to its mighty shocking power to stop the charge
+that would in a moment ensue. Yet it seemed to tear the life fiber of
+the man to do it. His inmost instincts, urgent and loud in his ear, told
+him to remain on guard, not to leave that cavern maw for an instant but
+to protect with his own body the precious life that it sheltered. His
+mind worked with that incredible speed that is usually manifest in a
+crisis; and he knew that the creature might charge into the cavern
+entrance in the second that he left it. Yet only in the rifle lay the
+least chance or hope for either of them.
+
+"At him, Fenris!" he shouted. The wolf leaped forward like a thrown
+spear,--almost too fast for the eye to follow. He was deathly afraid,
+with full knowledge of the power of the enemy he went to combat, but his
+fears were impotent to restrain him at the first sound of that masterful
+voice. These were the words he had waited for. He could never disobey
+such words as these--from the lips of his god. And Ben's mind had worked
+true; he knew that the wolf could likely hold the creature at bay until
+he could seize his rifle.
+
+In an instant it was in his hands, and he had sprung back to his post in
+front of the cavern maw. And presently he remembered, heartsick, that
+the weapon was not loaded.
+
+For his own safety he had kept it empty on the outward journey, partly
+to prevent accident, partly to be sure that his prisoner could not turn
+it against him. But he had shells in the pocket of his jacket. His hand
+groped, but his reaching fingers found but one shell, dropping it
+swiftly into the gun. And now he knew that no time remained to seek
+another. The beast in the darkness had launched into the charge.
+
+Thereafter there was only a great confusion, event piled upon event with
+incredible rapidity, and a whole lifetime of stress and fear lived in a
+single instant. The creature's first lunge carried him into the brighter
+moonlight; and at once Ben recognized its breed. No woodsman could
+mistake the high, rocking shoulders, the burly form, the wicked ears
+laid back against the flat, massive head, the fangs gleaming white, the
+long, hooked claws slashing through the turf as he ran. It was a
+terrible thing to see and stand against, in the half-darkness. The
+shadows accentuated the towering outline; and forgotten terrors,
+lurking, since the world was young, in the labyrinth of the germ plasm
+wakened and spread like icy streams through the mortal body and seemed
+to threaten to extinguish the warm flame of the very soul.
+
+The grizzly bawled as he came, an explosive, incredible storm of sound.
+Few indeed are the wilderness creatures that can charge in silence:
+muscular exertion can not alone relieve their gathered flood of madness
+and fury. And at once Ben sensed the impulse behind the attack. He and
+the girl had made their home in the grizzly's cave--perhaps the lair
+wherein he had hibernated through the winter and which he still slept in
+from time to time--and he had come to drive them out. Only death could
+pay for such insolence as this,--to make a night's lair in the den of
+his sovereignty, the grizzly.
+
+It is not the accustomed thing for a grizzly to make an unprovoked
+attack. He has done it many times, in the history of the west, but
+usually he is glad enough to turn aside, only launching into his
+terrible death-charge when a mortal wound obliterates his fear of man,
+leaving only his fear of death. But this grizzly, native to these
+uninhabited wilds, had no fear of man to forget. He did not know what
+man was, and he had not learned the death that dwells in the shining
+weapon he carries in his arms. No trappers mushed through his snows of
+spring; no woodsman rode his winding trails. True, from the first
+instant that the human smell had reached him on the wind he had been
+disturbed and discomfited; yet it was not grizzly nature to yield his
+den without a fight. The sight of the wolf--known to him of old--only
+wakened an added rage in his fierce heart.
+
+The wolf met him at his first leap, springing with noble courage at his
+grizzled throat; and the bear paused in his charge to strike him away.
+He lashed out with his great forepaw; and if that blow had gone straight
+home the ribs of the wolf would have been smashed flat on his heart and
+lungs. The tough trunk of a young spruce would have been broken as
+quickly under that terrible, blasting full-stroke of a grizzly. The
+largest grizzly weighs but a thousand pounds, but that weight is simple
+fiber and iron muscle, of a might incredible to any one but the woodsmen
+who know this mountain king in his native haunts. But Fenris whipped
+aside, and the paw missed him.
+
+Immediately the wolf sprang in again, with a courage scarcely compatible
+with lupine characteristics, ready to wage this unequal battle to the
+death. But his brave fight was tragically hopeless. For all that his
+hundred and fifty pounds were, every ounce, lightning muscle and vibrant
+sinew, it was as if a gopher had waged war with a lynx. Yet by the law
+of his wild heart he could not turn and flee. His master--his stalwart
+god whose words thrilled him to the uttermost depths--had given his
+orders, and he must obey them to the end.
+
+The second blow missed him also, but the third caught a small shrub that
+grew twenty feet beyond the dying fire. The shrub snapped off under the
+blow, and its branchy end smote the wolf across the head and neck. As if
+struck by a tornado he was hurled into the air, and curtailed and
+indirect though the blow was, he sprawled down stunned and insensible in
+the grass. The bear paused one instant; then lunged forth again.
+
+But the breath in which the wolf had stayed the charge had given Ben his
+chance. With a swift motion of his arm he had projected the single rifle
+shell into the chamber of the weapon. The stock snapped to his shoulder;
+and his keen, glittering eyes sought the sights.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII
+
+Few wilderness adventures offer a more stern test to human nerves than
+the frightful rush of a maddened grizzly. It typifies all that is primal
+and savage in the wild: the insane rage that can find relief only in the
+cruel rending of flesh; the thundering power that no mere mortal
+strength can withstand. But Ben was a woodsman. He had been tried in the
+fire. He knew that not only his life, but that of the girl in the cavern
+depended upon this one shot; and it was wholly characteristic of Wolf
+Darby that his eye held true and his arm was steady as a vice of iron.
+
+He was aware that he must wait until the bear was almost upon him, in
+order to be sure to send the bullet home to a vital place. This alone
+was a test requiring no small measure of self-control. The instinct was
+to fire at once. In the moonlight it was difficult to see his sights:
+his only chance was to enlarge his target to the last, outer limit of
+safety. He aimed for the great throat, below the slavering jaw.
+
+His finger pressed back steadily against the trigger. The slightest
+flinching, the smallest motion might yet throw off his aim. The rifle
+spoke with a roar.
+
+But this wilderness battle was not yet done. The ball went straight
+home, down through the throat, mushrooming and plowing on into the neck,
+inflicting a wound that was bound to be mortal within a few seconds. The
+bear recoiled; but the mighty engine of its life was not yet destroyed.
+Its incalculable fonts of vitality had not yet run down.
+
+The grizzly bounded forward again. The ball had evidently missed the
+vertebrae and spinal column. His crashing, thunderous roar of pain
+smothered instantly the reechoing report of the rifle and stifled the
+instinctive cry that had come to Ben's lips. He was a forester; and he
+had known of old what havoc a mortally wounded bear can wreak in a few
+seconds of life. In that strange, vivid instant Ben knew that his own
+and the girl's life still hung in the balance, with the beam inclining
+toward death.
+
+The grizzly was in his death-agony, nothing more; yet in that final
+convulsion he could rip into shreds the powerful form that opposed him.
+Ben knew, with a cold, sure knowledge, that if he failed to slay the
+beast, it would naturally crawl into its lair for its last breath. As
+this dreadful thought flashed home he dropped the empty rifle and seized
+the axe that leaned against a log of spruce beside the fire.
+
+There was no time at all to search out another shell and load his rifle.
+If the shock of the heavy bullet had not slackened the bear's pace he
+would not even have had time to seize the axe. Finally, if the bear had
+not been all but dead, in his last, threshing agony, Ben's mortal
+strength could not have sent home one blow. As it was they found
+themselves facing each other over the embers of the fire, well-matched
+contestants whose stake was life and whose penalty was death. The
+grizzly turned his head, caught sight of Ben, identified him as the
+agent of his agony, and lurched forward.
+
+Just in time Ben sprang aside, out of the reach of those terrible
+forearms; and his axe swung mightly in the air. Its blade gleamed and
+descended--a blow that might have easily broken the bear's back if it
+had gone true but which now seemed only to infuriate him the more. The
+bear reared up, reeled, and lashed down; and dying though he was, he
+struck with incredible power. One slashing stroke of that vast forepaw,
+one slow closing of those cruel fangs upon skull or breast, and life
+would have gone out like a light. But Ben leaped aside again, and again
+swung down his axe.
+
+These were but the first blows of a terrific battle that carried like a
+storm through the still reaches of the forest. Far in the distant tree
+aisles the woods people paused in their night's occupation to listen,
+stirred and terrified by the throb and thrill in the air; the grazing
+caribou lifted his growing horns and snorted in terror; the beasts of
+prey paused in the chase, growling uneasily, gazing with fierce,
+luminous eyes in the direction of the battle.
+
+It is beyond the ken of man whether or not, in their wild hearts, these
+forest folk sensed what was taking place,--that their gray monarch, the
+sovereign grizzly, was at the death-fight with some dreadful invader
+from the South. They heard the bear's fierce bawls, unimitatable by any
+other voice as he lashed down blow after blow; and they heard the thud
+and crunch of the axe against his body. Had this monarch of the trails
+found his master at last?
+
+Gazing out through the aperture of the cave Beatrice beheld the whole
+picture: the ring of spruce trees, the glade so strange and ensilvered
+in the moonlight, and these two fighting beasts, magnificent in fury
+over the embers of the dying fire. And Ben's powers increased, rather
+than lessened. Ever he swung his terrible axe with greater power.
+
+He fought like the wolf that was his blood brother,--lunging, striking
+down, recoiling out of harm's way, and springing forward to strike
+again. This man was Wolf Darby, a forester known in many provinces for
+his woods prowess, but even those who had seen his most spectacular
+feats, in past days, had not appreciated the real extent of his powers.
+There was a fury and a might in his blows that was hard to associate
+with the world of human beings,--such ferociousness and wolf-like
+savagery, welling strength and prowess of battle that mostly men have
+forgotten in their centuries of civilization, but which still mark the
+death-fight between beasts.
+
+Ben had always recalled the earlier types of man--his great-thewed
+ancestors, wild hunters in the forests of ancient Germany--but never so
+much as to-night. He was in his natural surroundings--at the mouth of
+his cave in which the Woman watched and exulted in his blows, enclosed
+by the primeval forest and beside the ashes of his fire. There could be
+nothing strange or unreal about this scene to Beatrice. It was more true
+than any soft vista of a far-away city could possibly be. It was life
+itself,--man battling for his home and his woman against the raw forces
+of the wild.
+
+All superficialities and superfluities were gone, and only the basic
+stuff of life remained,--the cave, the fire, the man who fought the
+beast in the light of the ancient moon. At that moment Ben was no more
+of the twentieth century than he was of the first, or of the first more
+than of some dark, unnumbered century of the world's young days. He was
+simply the male of his species, the man-child of all time, forgetting
+for the moment all the little lessons civilization had taught, and
+fighting his fight in the basic way for the basic things.
+
+This was no new war which Ben and the grizzly fought in the pale light
+of the moon. It had begun when the race began, and it would continue,
+in varied fields, until men perished from the earth. Ben fought for
+_life_--not only his own but the girl's--that old, beloved privilege to
+breathe the air and see and know and be. He represented, by a strange
+symbolism, the whole race that has always fought in merciless and
+never-ending battle with the cruel and oppressive powers of nature. In
+the grizzly were typified all those ancient enemies that have always
+opposed, with claw and fang, this stalwart, self-knowing breed that has
+risen among the primates: he symbolized not only the Beast of the
+forest, but the merciless elements, storm and flood and cold and all the
+legions of death. And had they but known their ultimate fate if this
+intruder survived the battle and brought his fellows into this, their
+last stronghold, the watching forest creatures would have prayed to see
+the grizzly strike him to the earth.
+
+Ben knew, too, that he was fighting for his home; and this also lent him
+strength. _Home_! His shelter from the storm and the cold, the thing
+that marked him a man instead of a beast. The grizzly had come to drive
+him forth; and they had met beside the ashes of his fire.
+
+The old exhilaration and rapture of battle flashed through him as he
+swung his axe, sending home blow after blow. Sometimes he cried out,
+involuntarily, in his fury and hatred; and as the bear weakened he waged
+the fight at closer quarters. His muscles made marvelous response,
+flinging him out of danger in the instant of necessity and giving
+terrific power to his blows.
+
+He danced about the shaggy, bleeding form of the bear, swinging his axe,
+howling in his rage, and escaping the smashing blows of the bear with
+miraculous agility,--a weird and savage picture in the moonlight. But
+at last the grizzly lunged too far. Ben sprang aside, just in time, and
+he saw his chance as the great, reeling form sprawled past. He aimed a
+terrific blow just at the base of the skull.
+
+The silence descended quickly thereafter. The blow had gone straight
+home, and the last flicker of waning life fled from the titanic form. He
+went down sprawling; Ben stood waiting to see if another blow was
+needed. Then the axe fell from his hands.
+
+For a moment he stood as if dazed. It was hard to remember all that
+occurred in the countless life times he had lived since the grizzly had
+stolen out of the spruce forest. But soon he remembered Fenris and
+walked unsteadily to his side.
+
+The wolf, however, was already recovering from the blow. He had been
+merely stunned; seemingly no bones were broken. Once more Ben turned to
+the mouth of the cavern.
+
+Sobbing and white as the moonlight itself Beatrice met him in the
+doorway. She too had been uninjured; his arm had saved her from the
+rending fangs. She was closer to him now, filling a bigger part of his
+life. He didn't know just why. He had fought for her; and some way--they
+were more to each other.
+
+And this was his cavern,--his stronghold of rock where he might lay his
+head, his haven and his hearth, and the symbol of his dominance over the
+beasts of the field. He had fought for this, too. And he suddenly knew a
+great and inner peace and a love for the sheltering walls that would
+dwell forever in the warp and woof of his being.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART THREE
+
+THE TAMING
+
+
+
+
+XXIX
+
+Ben rose at daybreak, wonderfully refreshed by the night's sleep, and
+built the fire at the cavern mouth. Beatrice was still asleep, and he
+was careful not to waken her. The days would be long and monotonous for
+her, he knew, and the more time she could spend in sleep the better.
+
+He did, however, steal to the opening of the cavern and peer into her
+face. The soft, morning light fell gently upon it, bringing out its
+springtime freshness and the elusive shades of gold in her hair. She
+looked more a child than a woman, some one to shelter and comfort rather
+than to harry as a foe. "Poor little girl," he murmured under his
+breath. "I'm going to make it as easy for you as I can."
+
+He meant what he said. He could do that much, at least--extend to her
+every courtesy and comfort that was in his power, and place his own
+great strength at her service.
+
+His first work was to remove the skin of last night's invader,--the huge
+grizzly that lay dead just outside the cavern opening. They would have
+use for this warm, furry hide before their adventure was done. It would
+supplement their supply of blankets; and if necessary it could be cut
+and sewed with threads of sinew into clothes. Because the animal had
+but recently emerged from hibernation his fur, except for a few rubbed
+places, was long and rich,--a beautiful, tawny-gray that shimmered like
+cloth-of-gold in the light.
+
+It taxed his strength to the utmost to roll over the huge body and skin
+it. When the heavy skin was removed he laid it out, intending to stretch
+it as soon as he could build a rack. He cut off some of the fat; then
+quartering the huge body, he dragged it away into the thickets.
+
+The hour was already past ten; but Beatrice--worn out by the stress of
+the night before--did not waken until she heard the crack of her pistol.
+She lay a while, resting, watching through the cavern opening Ben's
+efforts to prepare breakfast. A young grouse had fallen before the
+pistol, and her companion was busy preparing it for the skillet.
+
+The girl watched with some pleasure his rather awkward efforts to go
+about his work in silence,--evidently still believing her asleep. She
+laughed secretly at his distress as he tripped clumsily over a piece of
+firewood; then watched him with real interest as he mixed batter for
+griddle cakes and fried the white breast of the grouse in bear fat.
+Filling one of the two tin plates he stole into the cavern.
+
+Falling into his mood the girl pretended to be asleep. She couldn't have
+understood why her pulse quickened as he knelt beside her, looking so
+earnestly and soberly into her face. Then she felt the touch of his
+fingers on her shoulder.
+
+"Wake up, Beatrice," he commanded, with pretended gruffness. "It's after
+ten, and you've got to cook my breakfast."
+
+She stirred, pretending difficulty in opening her eyes.
+
+"Get right up," he commanded again. "D'ye think I'm going to wait all
+morning?"
+
+She opened her eyes to find him regarding her with boyish glee. Then--as
+a surprise--he proffered the filled plate, meanwhile raising his arm in
+feigned fear of a blow.
+
+She laughed; then began upon her breakfast with genuine relish. Then he
+brought her hot water and the meager toilet articles; and left the cave
+to prepare his own breakfast.
+
+"I'm going on a little hunt," he said, when this rite was over. "We
+can't depend on grouse and bear forever. I hate to ask you to go--"
+
+His tone was hopeful; and she could not doubt but that the lonely spirit
+of these solitudes had hold of him. They were two human beings in a vast
+and uninhabited wilderness, and although they were foes, they felt the
+primitive need of each other's companionship. "I don't mind going," she
+told him. "I'd rather, than stay in the cave."
+
+"It's a fine morning. And what's your favorite meat--moose or caribou?"
+
+"Caribou--although I like both."
+
+He might have expected this answer. There are few meats in this
+imperfect earth to compare in flavor with that of the great, woodland
+caribou, monarch of the high park-lands.
+
+"That means we do some climbing, instead of watching in the beaver
+meadows. I'm ready--any time."
+
+They took the game trail up the ridge, venturing at once into the heavy
+spruce; but curiously enough, the mysterious hush, the dusky shadows did
+not appall Beatrice greatly to-day. The miles sped swiftly under her
+feet. Always there were creatures to notice or laugh at,--a squirrel
+performing on a branch, a squawking Canada Jay surprised and utterly
+baffled by their tall forms, a porcupine hunched into a spiny ball and
+pretending a ferociousness that deceived not even such hairbrained folk
+as the chipmunks in the tree roots, or those queens of stupidity, the
+fool hens on the branch. In the way of more serious things sometimes
+they paused to gaze down on some particularly beautiful glen--watered,
+perhaps, by a gleaming stream--or a long, dark valley steeped deeply in
+the ancient mysticism of the trackless wilds.
+
+He helped her over the steeps, waited for her at bad crossings; and
+meanwhile his thoughts found easy expression in words. He had to stop
+and remind himself that she was his foe. Beatrice herself attempted no
+such remembrance; she was simply carrying out her resolve to make the
+best of a deplorable situation.
+
+She could see, however, that he kept close watch of her. He intended to
+give her no opportunity to strike back at him. He carried his rifle
+unloaded, so that if she were able, in an unguarded moment, to wrest it
+from him she could not turn it against him. But there was no joy for her
+in noticing these small precautions. They only reminded her of her
+imprisonment; and she wisely resolved to ignore them.
+
+They climbed to the ridge top, following it on to the plateau where
+patches of snow still gleamed white and the spruce grew in dark clumps,
+leaving open, lovely parks between. Here they encountered their first
+caribou.
+
+This animal, however, was not to their liking in the way of meat for the
+table. A turn in the trail suddenly revealed him at the edge of the
+glade, his white mane gleaming and his graceful form aquiver with that
+unquenchable vitality that seems to be the particular property of
+northern wild animals; but Ben let him go his way. He was an old bull,
+the monarch of his herd; he had ranged and mated and fought his rivals
+for nearly a score of years in the wild heart of Back There,--and his
+flesh would be mostly sinew.
+
+Ten minutes later, however, the girl touched his arm. She pointed to a
+far glade, fully three hundred yards across the canyon. Her quick eyes
+made out a tawny form against the thicket.
+
+It was a young caribou--a yearling buck--and his flesh would be tender
+as a spring fowl.
+
+"It's just what we want, but there's not much chance of getting him at
+that range," he said.
+
+"Try, anyway. You've got a long-range rifle. If you can hold true, he's
+yours."
+
+This was one thing that Ben was skilled at,--holding true. He raised the
+weapon to his shoulder, drawing down finely on that little speck of
+brown across the gulch. Few times in his life had he been more anxious
+to make a successful shot. Yet he would never have admitted the true
+explanation: that he simply desired to make good in the girl's eyes.
+
+He held his breath and pressed the trigger back.
+
+Beatrice could not restrain a low, happy cry of triumph. She had
+forgotten all things, for the moment, but her joy at his success. And
+truly, Ben had made a remarkable shot. Most hunters who boast of
+long-range hits do not step off the distance shot; fifty yards is called
+a hundred, a hundred and fifty yards three hundred; and to kill true at
+this range is not the accustomed thing on the trails of sport. The
+bullet had gone true as a light-shaft, striking the animal through the
+shoulders, and he had never stirred out of his tracks. With that joy of
+conquest known to all owners of rod and gun--related darkly to the
+blood-lust of the beasts--they raced across the gully toward the
+fallen.
+
+Ben quartered the animal, and again he saw fit to save the hide. It is
+the best material of all for the parka, the long, full winter garment of
+the North.
+
+Ben carried the meat in four trips back to the camp. By the time this
+work was done, and one of the quarters was drying over a fire of
+quivering aspen chips, the day was done. Again they saw the twilight
+shadows grow, and the first sable cloak of night was drawn over the
+shoulders of the forest. Beatrice prepared a wonderful roast of caribou
+for their evening meal; and thereafter they sat a short time at the
+mouth of the cavern, looking quietly into the red coals of the dying
+fire. Again Ben knew the beneficence and peace of the sheltering walls
+of home. Again he felt a sweet security,--a taming, gentling influence
+through the innermost fiber of his being.
+
+But Fenris the wolf gazed only into the darkened woods, and the hair
+stood stiff at his shoulders, and his eyes glowed and shone with the
+ancient hunting madness induced by the rising moon.
+
+
+
+
+XXX
+
+June passed away in the wilds of Back There, leaving warmer, longer
+days, a more potent sun, and a greener, fresher loveliness to the land.
+The spring calves no longer tottered on wabbly legs, but could follow
+their swift mothers over the most steep and difficult trails. Fledglings
+learned to fly, the wolf cubs had their first lessons in hunting on the
+ridges. The wild Yuga had fallen to such an extent that navigation--down
+to the Indian villages on the lower waters--was wholly impossible.
+
+The days passed quickly for Ben and Beatrice. They found plenty of work
+and even of play to pass the time. Partly to fill her lonely moments,
+but more because it was an instinct with her, Beatrice took an
+ever-increasing interest in her cave home. She kept it clean and cooked
+the meals, performing her tasks with goodwill, even at times a gaiety
+that was as incomprehensible to herself as to Ben.
+
+Their diet was not so simple now. Of course their flour and sugar and
+rice, and the meat that they took in the chase furnished the body of
+their meals, and without these things they could not live; but Beatrice
+was a woods child, and she knew how to find manna in the wilderness.
+Almost every morning she ventured out into the still, dew-wet forest,
+and nearly always she came in with some dainty for their table. She
+gathered watercress in the still pools and she knew a dozen ways to
+serve it. Sometimes she made a dressing out of animal oil, beaten to a
+cream; and it was better than lettuce salad. Other tender plant tops
+were used as a garnish and as greens, and many and varied were the
+edible roots that supplied their increasing desire for fresh vegetables.
+
+Sometimes she found wocus in the marsh--the plant formerly in such
+demand by the Indians--and by patient experiment she learned how to
+prepare it for the table. Washing the plant carefully she would pound it
+into paste that could be used as the base for a nutty and delicious
+bread. Other roots were baked in ashes or served fried in animal fat,
+and once or twice she found patches of wild strawberries, ripening on
+the slopes.
+
+This was living! They plucked the sweet, juicy berries from the vines;
+they served as dessert and were also used in the fashioning of delicious
+puddings with rice and sugar. Several times she found certain treasures
+laid by for winter use by the squirrels or the digging people--and
+perfectly preserved nuts and acorns, The latter, parched over coals,
+became one of the staples of their diet.
+
+She gathered leaves of the red weed and dried them for tea. She searched
+out the nests of the grouse and robbed them of their eggs; and always
+high celebration in the cave followed such a find as this. Fried eggs,
+boiled eggs, poached eggs tickled their palates for mornings to come.
+And she traced down, one memorable day when their sugar was all but
+gone, a tree that the wild bees had stored with honey.
+
+In the way of meat they had not only caribou, but the tender veal of
+moose and all manner of northern small game. Ben did not, however, spend
+rifle cartridges in reckless shooting. When at last his enemies came
+filing down through the beaver meadow he had no desire to be left with a
+half-empty gun. He had never fired this more powerful weapon since he
+had felled their first caribou. The moose calves and all the small game
+were taken with Beatrice's pistol.
+
+Sometimes he took ptarmigan--those whistling, sprightly grouse of the
+high steeps--and Beatrice served uncounted numbers of them, like the
+famous blackbirds, baked in a pie. Fried ptarmigan was a dish never to
+forget; roast ptarmigan had a distinctive flavor all its own, and the
+memory of ptarmigan fricassee often called Ben home to the cavern an
+hour before the established mealtime. Indeed, they partook of all the
+northern species of that full-bosomed clan, the upland game birds;
+little, brown quail, willow grouse, fool hens, and the incomparable blue
+grouse, half of the breast of which was a meal. It was true that their
+little store of pistol cartridges was all but gone, but worlds of big
+game remained to fall back upon.
+
+Ben never ceased regretting that he had not brought a single fishhook
+and a piece of line. He had long since carried the canoe from the river
+bank and hid it in the tall reeds of the lake shore, not only for
+pleasure's sake, but to preserve it for the autumn floods when they
+might want to float on down to the Indian villages; and surely it would
+have afforded the finest sport in the way of trolling for lake trout.
+But with utter callousness he made his pistol serve as a hook and line.
+Often he would crawl down, cautiously as a stalking wolf, to the edge of
+a trout pool, then fire mercilessly at a great, spotted beauty below.
+The bullet itself did not penetrate the water, but the shock carried
+through and the fish usually turned a white belly to the surface. A fat
+brook or lake trout, dipped in flour and fried to a chestnut brown, was
+a delight that never grew old.
+
+At every fresh find Beatrice would come triumphant into Ben's presence;
+and at such times they scarcely conducted themselves like enemies. An
+unguessed boyishness and charm had come to Ben in these ripe, full
+summer days: the hard lines softened in his face and mostly the hard
+shine left his eyes. Beatrice found herself curiously eager to please
+him, taking the utmost care and pains with every dish she prepared for
+the table; and it was true that he made the most joyful, exultant
+response to her efforts. The searing heat back of his eyes was quite
+gone, now. Even the scarlet fluid of his veins seemed to flow more
+quietly, with less fire, with less madness. A gentling influence had
+come to bear upon him; a great kindness, a new forbearance had
+brightened his outlook toward all the world. A great redemption was even
+now hovering close to him,--some unspeakable and ultimate blessing that
+he could not name.
+
+Their days were not without pleasure. Often they ventured far into the
+heavy forest, and always fresh delight and thrilling adventure awaited
+them. Ever they learned more of the wild things that were their only
+neighbors,--creatures all the way down the scale from the lordly moose,
+proud of his growing antlers and monarch of the marshes, to the small
+pika, squeaking on the slide-rock of the high peaks. They knew and loved
+them all; they found ever-increasing enjoyment in the study of their shy
+ways and furtive occupations; they observed with delight the droll
+awkwardness of the moose calves, the impertinence and saucy speech of
+the jays, the humor of the black bear and the surly arrogance of the
+grizzly. They knew that superlative cunning of his wickedness, the
+wolverine; the stealth of the red fox; the ferociousness of the ermine
+whose brown skin, soon to be white, suggested only something silken and
+soft and tender instead of a fiendish cutthroat, terror of the Little
+People; the skulking cowardice of the coyote; and the incredible
+savagery and agility of the fisher,--that middle-sized hunter that
+catches and kills everything he can master except fish. They climbed
+high hills and descended into still, mysterious valleys; they paddled
+long, dreamy twilight hours on the lake; they traversed marshes where
+the moose wallowed; and they walked through ancient forests where the
+decayed vegetation was a mossy pulp under their feet. Sometimes they
+forgot the poignancy of their strange lives, romping sometimes,
+gossiping like jays in the tree-limbs, and sometimes, forgetting enmity,
+they told each other their secret beliefs and philosophies. They had
+picnics in the woods; and long, comfortable evenings before their
+dancing fire. But there was one enduring joy that always surpassed all
+the rest, a happiness that seemed to have its origin in the silent
+places of their hearts. It was just the return, after a fatiguing day in
+forest and marsh, to the sheltering walls of the cave.
+
+With his axe and hunting knife Ben prepared a complete set of furniture
+for their little abode. His first Work was a surpassing-marvelous
+dining-room suite of a table and two chairs. Then he put up shelves for
+their rapidly dwindling supplies of provisions and cut chunks of spruce
+log, with a bit of bark remaining, for fireside seats. And for more than
+a week, Beatrice was forbidden to enter a certain covert just beyond the
+glade lest she should prematurely discover an even greater wonder that
+Ben, in off hours, was preparing for a surprise.
+
+From time to time she heard him busily at work, the ring of his axe and
+his gay whistling as he whittled bolts of wood; but other than that it
+concerned the grizzly skin she had not the least idea of his task. But
+the work was completed at last, and then came two days of rather
+significant silence,--quite incomprehensible to the girl. She was at a
+loss why Ben did not reveal his treasure.
+
+But one morning she missed the familiar sounds of his fire-building,
+usually his first work on wakening. The very fact of their absence
+startled her wide-awake, while otherwise she would have perhaps slept
+late into the morning. Ben had seemingly vanished into the heavy timber
+across the glade.
+
+Presently she heard him muttering and grunting as he moved some heavy
+object to the door of the cave. Boyishly, he could not wait for the
+usual late hour when she wakened. He made a wholly unnecessary amount of
+noise as he built the fire. Then he thrust his lean head into the cavern
+opening.
+
+"I hope I haven't waked you up?" he said.
+
+The girl smiled secretly. "I wanted to wake up, anyway--to-day."
+
+"I wish you'd get up and come and look at something ugly I've got just
+outside the door."
+
+She hurried into her outer garments, and in a moment appeared. It was
+ugly, certainly, the object that he had fashioned with such tireless
+toil: not fitted at all for a stylish city home; yet the girl, for one
+short instant, stopped breathing. It was a hammock, suspended on a stout
+frame, to take the place of her tree-bough bed on the cave floor. He had
+used the grizzly skin, hanging it with unbreakable sinew, and fashioning
+it in such a manner that folds of the hide could be turned over her on
+cold nights. For a moment she gazed, very earnestly, into the rugged,
+homely, raw-boned face of her companion.
+
+Beatrice was deeply and inexplicably sobered, yet a curious happiness
+took swift possession of her heart. Reading the gratitude in her eyes,
+Ben's lips broke into a radiant smile.
+
+"I guess you've forgotten what day it is," he said.
+
+"Of course. I hardly know the month."
+
+"I've notched each day, you know. And maybe you've forgotten--on the
+ride out from Snowy Gulch--we talked of birthdays. To-day is yours."
+
+She stared at him in genuine astonishment. She had not dreamed that this
+little confidence, given in a careless moment of long weeks before, had
+lingered in the man's memory. She had supposed that the fury and
+savagery of his war with her father and the latter's followers had
+effaced all such things as this.
+
+And it was true that had this birthday come a few weeks before, on the
+river journey and previous to their occupation of the cave, Ben would
+have let it pass unnoticed. The smoldering fire in his brain would have
+seared to ashes any such kindly thought as this. But when the wild
+hunter leaves his leafy lair and goes to dwell, a man rather than a
+beast, in a permanent abode, he has thought for other subjects than his
+tribal wars and the blood-lust of his hates. The hearth, and the care
+and friendship of the girl had tamed Ben to this degree, at least.
+
+But wonders were not done. The look in the girl's eyes suddenly melted,
+as the warm sun melts ice, some of the frozen bitterness of his spirit.
+"It's your birthday--and I hope you have many of 'em," he went on. "No
+more like this--but all of 'em happy,--as you deserve."
+
+He walked toward her, and her eyes could not leave his. He bent soberly,
+and brushed her lips with his own.
+
+There were always worlds to talk about in the warm gleam of their fire.
+When the day's work was done, and the hush of early night gathered the
+land to its arms, they would sit on their fireside seats and settle all
+problems, now and hereafter, to the perfect satisfaction of them both.
+
+From Ben, Beatrice gained a certain strength of outlook as well as depth
+of insight, but she gave him in return more than she received. He felt
+that her influence, in his early years, would have worked wonders for
+him. She straightened out his moral problems for him, taught him lessons
+in simple faith; and her own childish sweetness and absolute purity
+showed his whole world in a new light.
+
+Sometimes they talked of religion and ethics, sometimes of science and
+economics, and particularly they talked of what was nearest to
+them,--the mysteries and works of nature. She had been a close observer
+of the forest. She had received some glimpse of its secret laws that
+were, when all was said and done, the basic laws of life. But for all
+her love of science she was not a mere biologist. She had a full and
+devout faith in Law and Judgment beyond any earthly sphere.
+
+"No one can live in this boundless wilderness and not believe," she told
+him earnestly, her dark eyes brimming with her fervor. "Perhaps I can't
+tell you why--maybe it's just a feeling of need, of insufficiency of
+self. Besides, God is close, like He was to the Israelites when they
+were in the wilderness; but you will remember that He never came close
+again.--This forest is so big and so awful, He knows he must stay close
+to keep you from dying of fear.--God may not be a reality to the people
+of the cities, where they see only buildings and streets, but Ben, He is
+to me. You can't forget Him up here. He stands on every mountain, just
+as the sons of Aaron saw Him."
+
+He found, to his surprise, that she was not ill-read, particularly in
+the old-time classics. But her environment had also influenced her
+choice of reading. She loved the old legends in the minor,--far-off and
+plaintive things that reflected the mood of the dusky forest in which
+she lived.
+
+One night, when the moon was in the sky, he told her of his war record,
+of the shell-shock and the strange, criminal mania that followed it; and
+then of his swift recovery. With an over-powering need of
+self-justification he told her of his further adventures with Ezram, of
+the old man's murder and the theft of the claim. She heard him out,
+listening attentively; but in loyalty to her father she did not let
+herself believe him entirely. The answer she gave him was the same as
+she had always given at his every reference to his side of the case.
+
+"If you were in the right, you'd take me back and let the law take its
+course," she told him. "You'd not be out here laying an ambush for them,
+to kill them when they try to rescue me."
+
+He could never make her understand how, by the intricacies of law, it
+would be a rare chance that he would be able to fasten the crime on the
+murderers: that he had taken the only sure way open to make them pay for
+Ezram's death. He told her of the old man's, final request; how that his
+war with her father and his men was a debt that, by secret, inscrutable
+laws of his being, could never be written off or disavowed. But he could
+never fully find words to uphold his position. The thing went back to
+his instincts, traced at last to the remorseless spirit of the wolf that
+was his heritage.
+
+Yet these hours of talk were immensely good for him. While they never
+met on common grounds, the girl's true outlook and nobility of character
+were ever more manifest to him; and were not without a gentling, healing
+influence upon him. He could not blind himself to them. And sometimes
+when he sat alone by his dying fire, as the dark menaced him, and the
+girl that was his charge slept within the portals of stone, he had the
+unescapable feeling that the very structure of his life was falling and
+shattering down; but even now he could see, an enchanted vista in the
+distance, a mightier, more glorious tower, builded and shaped by this
+woman's hand.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+While Beatrice was at her household tasks--cooking the meals, cleaning
+the cave, washing and repairing their clothes--Ben never forgot his more
+serious work. Certain hours every day he spent in exploration, seeking
+out the passes over the hills, examining every possible means of
+entrance and egress into his valley, getting the lay of the land and
+picking out the points from which he would make his attack. Already he
+knew every winding game trail and every detail of the landscape for five
+miles or more around. His ultimate vengeance seemed just as sure as the
+night following the day.
+
+Ever he listened for the first sound of the pack train in the forest;
+and even in his hours of pleasure his eyes ever roamed over the sweep of
+valley and marsh below. He was prepared for his enemies now. One or
+five, they couldn't escape him. He had provided for every contingency
+and had seemingly perfected his plan to the last detail.
+
+He had not the slightest fear that his eagerness would cost him his aim
+when finally his eye looked along the sights at the forms of his
+enemies, helpless in the marsh. He was wholly cold about the matter now.
+The lust and turmoil in his veins, remembered like a ghastly dream from
+that first night, returned but feebly now, if at all. This change, this
+restraint had been increasingly manifest since his occupation of the
+cave, and it had marked, at the same time, a growing barrier between
+himself and Fenris. But he could not deny but that such a development
+was wholly to have been expected. Fenris was a child of the open forest
+aisles, never of the fireside and the hearth. It was not that the wolf
+had ceased to give him his dint of faithful service, or that he loved
+him any the less. But each of them had other interests,--one his home
+and hearth; the other the ever-haunting, enticing call of the wildwood.
+Lately Fenris had taken to wandering into the forest at night, going and
+coming like a ghost; and once his throat and jowls had been stained with
+dark blood.
+
+"It's getting too tame for you here, old boy, isn't it?" Ben said to him
+one hushed, breathless night. "But wait just a little while more. It
+won't be tame then."
+
+It was true: the hunting party, if they had started at once, must be
+nearing their death valley by now. Except for the absolute worst of
+traveling conditions they would have already come. Ben felt a growing
+impatience: a desire to do his work and get it over. His pulse no longer
+quickened and leaped at the thought of vengeance; and the wolflike
+pleasure in simple killing could no longer be his. It would merely be
+the soldier's work--a dreadful obligation to perform speedily and to
+forget. Even the memory of the huddled form of his savior and friend, so
+silent and impotent in the dead leaves, did not stir him into madness
+now.
+
+Yet he never thought of disavowing his vengeance. It was still the main
+purpose of his life. He had no theme but that: when that work was done
+he could conceive of nothing further of interest on earth, nothing else
+worth living for. Not for an instant had he relented: except for that
+one kiss, on the occasion of her birthday, he had never broken his
+promise in regard to his relations with Beatrice. His first trait was
+steadfastness, a trait that, curiously enough, is inherent in all living
+creatures who are by blood close to the wild wolf, from the German
+police dog to the savage husky of the North. But he was certainly and
+deeply changed in these weeks in the cave. He no longer hated these
+three murderous enemies of his. The power to hate had simply died in his
+body. He regarded their destruction rather as a duty he owed old Ezram,
+an obligation that he would die sooner than forego.
+
+The hushed, dark, primal forest had a different appeal for him now. He
+loved it still, with the reverence and adoration of the forester he was,
+but no longer with that love a servant bears his master. He had
+distinctly escaped from its dominance. The passion and mounting fire
+that it wakened at the fall of darkness could no longer take possession
+of him, as strong drink possesses the brain, bending his will, making of
+him simply a tool and a pawn to gratify its cruel desires and to achieve
+its mysterious ends. He had been, in spirit, a brother of the wolf,
+before: a runner in the packs. Such had been the outgrowth of innate
+traits; part of his strange destiny. Now, after these weeks in the cave,
+he was a man. It was hard for him to explain even to himself. It was as
+if in the escape from his own black passions, he had also escaped the
+curious tyranny of the wild; not further subject to its cruel moods and
+whims, but rather one of a Dominant Breed, a being who could lift his
+head in defiance to the storm, obey his own will, go his own way. This
+was no little change. Perhaps, when all is said and done, it marks the
+difference between man and the lesser mammals, the thing that has
+evolved a certain species of the primates--simply woods creatures that
+trembled at the storm and cowered in the night--into the rulers and
+monarchs of the earth.
+
+Ben had come out from the darkened forest trails where he made his lairs
+and had gone into a cave to live! He had found a permanent abode--a
+lasting, shelter from the cold and the storm. It suggested a curious
+allegory to him. Some time in the long-forgotten past, probably when the
+later glaciers brought their promise of cold, all his race left their
+leafy bowers and found cave homes in the cliffs. Before that time they
+were merely woods children, blind puppets of nature, sleeping where
+exhaustion found them; wandering without aim in the tree aisles; mating
+when they met the female of their species on the trails and venturing on
+again; knowing the ghastly, haunting fear of the night and the blind
+terror of the storm and elements: merely higher beasts in a world of
+beasts. But they came to the caves. They established permanent abodes.
+They began to be men.
+
+All that now stands as civilization, all the conquest of the earth and
+sea and air began from that moment. It was the Great Epoch,--and Ben had
+illustrated it in his own life. The change had been infinitely slow, but
+certain as the movement of the planets in their spheres. Behind the
+sheltering walls they got away from fear,--that cruel bondage in which
+Nature holds all her wild creatures, the burden that makes them her
+slaves. Never to shudder with horror when the darkness fell in silence
+and mystery; never to have the heart freeze with terror when the thunder
+roared in the sky and the wind raged in the trees. The cave dwellers
+began to come into their own. Sheltered behind stone walls they could
+defy the elements that had enslaved them so long. This freedom gained
+they learned to strike the fire; they took one woman to keep the cave,
+instead of mating indiscriminately in the forest, thus marking the
+beginning of family life. Love instead of deathless hatred, gentleness
+rather than cruelty, peace in the place of passion, mercy and tolerance
+and self-control: all these mighty bulwarks of man's dominance grew into
+strength behind the sheltering walls of home.
+
+Thus in these few little weeks Ben Darby--a beast of the forest in his
+unbridled passions--had in some measure imaged the life history of the
+race. He had lived again the momentous regeneration. The protecting
+walls, the hearth, particularly Beatrice's wholesome and healing
+influence, had tamed him. He was still a forester, bred in the
+bone--loving these forest depths with an ardor too deep for words--but
+the mark of the beast was gone from his flesh.
+
+He could still deal justice to Ezram's murderers and thus keep faith
+with his dead partner; but the primal passions could no longer dominate
+him. His pet, however, remained the wolf. The sheltering cavern walls
+were never for him. He loved Ben with an undying devotion, yet a barrier
+was rising between them. They could not go the same paths forever.
+
+Matters reached a crisis between Fenris and himself one still, warm
+night in late July. The two were sitting side by side at the cavern maw,
+watching the slow enchantment of the forest under the spell of the
+rising moon; Beatrice had already gone to her hammock. As the last
+little blaze died in the fire, and it crackled at ever longer intervals,
+Ben suddenly made a moving discovery. The fringe of forest about him,
+usually so dreamlike and still, was simply breathing and throbbing with
+life.
+
+Ben dropped his hand to the wolf's shoulders. "The little folks are
+calling on us to-night," he said quietly.
+
+In all probability he spoke the truth. It was not an uncommon thing for
+the creatures of the wood--usually the lesser people such as rodents and
+the small hunters--to crowd close to the edge of the glade and try to
+puzzle out this ruddy mystery in its center. Unused to men they could
+never understand. Sometimes the lynx halted in his hunt to investigate,
+sometimes an old black bear--kindly, benevolent good-humored old
+bachelor that every naturalist loves--grunted and pondered at the edge
+of shadow, and sometimes even such lordly creatures as moose and caribou
+paused in their night journeys to see what was taking place.
+
+Curiously, the wolf started violently at Ben's touch. The man suddenly
+regarded him with a gaze of deepest interest. The hair was erect on the
+powerful neck, the eyes swam in pale, blue fire, and he was staring away
+into the mysterious shadows.
+
+"What do you see, old-timer?" Ben asked. "I wish I could see too."
+
+He brought his senses to the finest focus, trying hard to understand. He
+was aware only of the strained silence at first. Then here and there,
+about the dimmining circle of firelight, he heard the soft rustle of
+little feet, the subdued crack of a twig or the scratch of a dead leaf.
+The forest smells--of which there is no category in heaven or
+earth--reached him with incredible clarity. These were faint, vaguely
+exciting smells, some of them the exquisite fragrances of summer
+flowers, others beyond his ken. And presently two small, bright circles
+appeared in a distant covert, glowed once, and then went out.
+
+By peering closely, with unwinking eyes, he began to see other
+twin-circles of green and yellow light. Yet they were furtive little
+radiances--vanishing swiftly--and they were nothing of which to be
+afraid.
+
+"They _are_ out to-night," he murmured. "No wonder you're excited,
+Fenris. What is it--some celebration in the forest?"
+
+There was no possible explanation. Foresters know that on certain nights
+the wilderness seems simply to teem with life--scratchings and rustlings
+in every covert--and on other nights it is still and lifeless as a
+desert. The wild folk were abroad to-night and were simply paying
+casual, curious visits to Ben's fire.
+
+Once more Ben glanced at the wolf. The animal no longer crouched. Rather
+he was standing rigid, his head half-turned and lifted, gazing away
+toward a distant ridge behind the lake. A wilderness message had reached
+him, clear as a voice.
+
+But presently Ben understood. Throbbing through the night he heard a
+weird, far-carrying call--a long-drawn note, broken by half-sobs--the
+mysterious, plaintive utterance of the wild itself. Yet it was not an
+inanimate voice. He recognized it at once as the howl of a wolf, one of
+Fenris' wild brethren.
+
+The creature at his feet started as if from a blow. Then he stood
+motionless, listening, and the cry came the second time. He took two
+leaps into the darkness.
+
+Deeply moved, Ben watched him. The wolf halted, then stole back to his
+master's side. He licked the man's hand with his warm tongue, whining
+softly.
+
+"What is it, boy?" Ben asked. "What do you want me to do?"
+
+The wolf whined louder, his eyes luminous with ineffable appeal. Once
+more he leaped into the shadows, pausing as if to see if Ben would
+follow him.
+
+The man shook his head, rather soberly. A curious, excited light was in
+his eyes. "I can't go, old boy," he said. "This is my place--here.
+Fenris, I can't leave the cave."
+
+For a moment they looked eyes into eyes--in the glory of that moon as
+strange a picture as the wood gods ever beheld. Once more the wolf call
+sounded. Fenris whimpered softly.
+
+"Go ahead if you like," Ben told him. "God knows it's your destiny."
+
+The wolf seemed to understand. With a glad bark he sped away and almost
+instantly vanished into the gloom.
+
+But Fenris had not broken all ties with the cave. The chain was too
+strong for that, the hold on his wild heart too firm. If there is one
+trait, far and near in the wilds, that distinguishes the woods children,
+it is their inability to forget. Fenris had joined his fellows, to be
+sure; but he still kept watch over the cave.
+
+The strongest wolf in the little band, the nucleus about which the
+winter pack would form, he largely confined their hunting range to the
+district immediately about the cave. It held him like a chain of iron.
+Although the woods trails beguiled him with every strong appeal, the
+sight of his master was a beloved thing to him still, and scarcely a
+night went by but that he paused to sniff at the cavern maw, seeing that
+all was well. At such times his followers would linger, trembling and
+silent, in the farther shadows. Because they had never known the love of
+man they utterly failed to understand. But in an instant Fenris would
+come back to them, the wild urge in his heart seemingly appeased by the
+mere assurance of Ben's presence and safety.
+
+Ben himself was never aware of these midnight visits. The feet of the
+wolves were like falling feathers on the grass; and if sometimes,
+through the cavern maw, he half-wakened to catch the gleam of their
+wild eyes, he attributed it merely to the presence of skulking coyotes,
+curious concerning the dying coals of the fire.
+
+
+
+
+XXXII
+
+Beatrice had kept only an approximate track of the days; yet she knew
+that an attempt to rescue her must be almost at hand. Even traveling but
+half a dozen miles a day, and counting out a reasonable time for
+exploration and delays, her father's party must be close upon them. And
+the thought of the forthcoming battle between her abductor and her
+rescuers filled every waking moment with dread.
+
+She could not escape the thought of it. It lingered, hovering like a
+shadow, over all her gayest moments; it haunted her more sober hours,
+and it brought evil dreams at night. Her one hope was that her father
+had given her up for lost and had not attempted her rescue.
+
+She realized perfectly the perfection of Ben's plans. She knew that he
+had provided for every contingency; and besides, he had every natural
+advantage in his favor. The end was inevitable: his victory and the
+destruction of his foes. There would be little mercy for these three in
+the hands of this iron man from the eastern provinces. If they were to
+be saved it must be soon, not a week from now, nor when another moon had
+waned. If Ben was to be checkmated there were not many hours to waste.
+
+She had had no opportunity to escape, at first. Ben knew that she could
+not make her way over the hundreds of miles of howling wilderness
+without food supplies, and always the wolf had been on guard. He was
+like a were-wolf, a demon, anticipating her every move, knowing her
+secret thoughts. But the wolf had gone now to join his fellows. She was
+not aware of his almost nightly return. Perhaps the fact of his absence
+gave her an opportunity, her one chance to save her father from Ben's
+ambush.
+
+Conditions for escape were more favorable than at any time since their
+departure from the canoe landing, that late spring day of long ago. The
+wolf was gone; Ben's guard of her was ever more lax. The season was
+verdant: she could supplement what supplies she took from the cave with
+roots and berries, and the warm nights would enable her to carry a
+minimum of blankets. She knew that she could never hope to succeed in
+the venture except by traveling light and fast. On the other hand she
+would need all of Ben's remaining supplies to bring her through: in a
+few more days the stores would be so low that she could not attempt the
+trip. Human beings cannot survive, in the forests of the north, on roots
+and berries alone. Tissue-building flour and sustaining meat are
+necessary to climb the ridges and battle the thicket.
+
+How could she obtain these things? For all his seeming carelessness Ben
+kept a fairly close watch on her actions, and he would discover her
+flight within a few hours. Stronger than she, and knowing every trail
+and pass for miles around he could overtake her with ease. He gave her
+no opportunity to seize his rifle, load it and turn it against him, thus
+making her escape by force.
+
+The fact that she would leave him without food mattered not one way or
+another. He would still have his rifle, and his small stock of rifle
+cartridges would procure sufficient big game to sustain him for weeks
+and months to come. After all, the whole issue depended on the
+rifle,--the symbol of force. It would be his instrument of vengeance
+when his chance came. If she could only take this weapon from him she
+need not fear the coming of her rescuers. In that case Ben would be
+helpless against them.
+
+Unfortunately, the gun rarely left his hands. If indeed she should
+attempt to seize it he would wrest it away from her before she could
+destroy or injure it. But it was a hopeful fact that the rifle was
+useless without its shells!
+
+To procure these, however, presented an unsolvable problem. Any way she
+turned she found a barrier Ben kept them in his shell belt, and he wore
+the belt about his waist, waking or sleeping. Only to procure it, run
+like a deer and hurl it into the rapids of the Yuga,--and her problem
+would be absolutely solved. Ben would be obliged to leave the cave home
+at once and return with her to the Yuga cabins, utilizing the few stores
+they had left for the journey--simply because to stay, unarmed, would
+mean to die of starvation. Indeed the few remaining supplies would not
+more than last them through now, traveling early and late, so if the
+venture were to be attempted at all it must be at once. On the other
+hand his rifle and shells would enable the two of them to remain in the
+cavern indefinitely on a diet of meat alone.
+
+As she worked about the cavern she brooded over the plan; but at first
+she could conceive of no possible way to procure the shells. If the
+chance came, however, she wanted to be ready. She planned all other
+details of the venture; the shortest route to the nearest rapids of the
+river where she might dispose of the deadly cylinders of brass. It
+became necessary, also, to consider the lesser weapon for the plain
+reason that it might defeat her in the moment of her success.
+
+Ben kept the weapon in his cartridge belt, but the extra pistol shells
+were among the supplies. They could easily be procured. It would also be
+necessary to induce him to fire away the few shells that he carried in
+the pistol magazine; but this would likely be easy enough to do. He put
+little reliance on the weapon, trusting rather to his rifle both for the
+impending war and the procurance of big game; and he would not harbor
+the pistol shells as long as he had his rifle.
+
+But the days were passing! Any attempt at deliverance must be made
+before the food stores were further depleted. They could not make the
+march without food. Days and nights overtook her with her triumph as far
+distant as ever. The moment of opportunity she had watched for, in which
+she might seize the cartridge belt and destroy it, had never come to
+pass. The plans she had made while the night lay soft and mysterious in
+the solitudes had all come to nothing. He had never, as she had hoped,
+removed his belt and forgotten to replace it, nor had his slumber ever
+been so deep that she could steal it from him.
+
+His own triumph surely was almost at hand. Surely his pursuers had
+almost overtaken him. The stores had already fallen far below the margin
+of safety for the long journey home. The thought was with her, and she
+was desperate one long, warm afternoon as she searched for roots and
+berries in the forest. Edible plants were ever more hard to find, these
+past days; but what there were she gathered almost automatically,
+herself lost in a deep preoccupation. And all at once her hand reached
+toward a little vine of black berries, each with a green tuft at the
+end, not unlike gooseberries in southern gardens.
+
+As if by instinct, hardly aware of the motion, she withdrew her hand.
+She knew this vine. She was enough of a forester never to mistake it.
+It was the deadly nightshade, and a handful of the berries spelt death.
+She started to look elsewhere.
+
+But presently she paused, arrested by an idea so engrossing and yet so
+terrible that her heart seemed to pause in her breast. Had any rules
+been laid down for her to follow in her war with Ben? Was she to
+consider methods at such a time as this? Was she not a woods girl,--a
+woman, not a child, trained and tutored in the savage code of the wild
+that knows no ethics other than might, whether might of arm or craft, of
+brain or fell singleness of purpose? Should she consider ethics now?
+
+Her father's life was in imminent danger. Another day might find him
+stretched lifeless before her. Ben had not hesitated to use every weapon
+in his power; she should not hesitate now. Ben had made his war; she
+would wage it by his own code.
+
+For a moment she stood almost without outward motion, intrigued by the
+possibilities of this little handful of berries. She shuddered once,
+nervously, but there was no further impulse of remorse. Perhaps she
+trembled slightly; and her eyes were simply depthless shadows under her
+brows.
+
+They were so little, seemingly so inoffensive: these dark berries in the
+shadows of the covert. They were scarcely to be noticed twice. But not
+even the savage grizzly was of such might; storms or seas were not so
+deadly. There they were, inconspicuous among their sister plants,
+waiting for her hand.
+
+It was right that they should be black in color. Their blackness was as
+of a black night without a star shining through,--a black cloud with
+never a rainbow to promise hope. She could not turn her eyes away! How
+black they were among the green leaves--lightless as death itself.
+
+A handful of them meant death: her father had warned her about them long
+ago. But half a handful--perhaps a dozen of the sable berries in the
+palm of her hand--what did _they_ mean? Just a sickness wherein one
+could no longer guard a prisoner. They were a powerful alkaloid, she
+knew; and a dozen of them would likely mean hours and hours of deep,
+dreamless sleep,--a sleep in which one could take no reckoning of hands
+fumbling at a cartridge belt! Half a handful would, in all probability,
+fail to strike the life from such a powerful frame as Ben's, but would
+certainly act upon him like a powerful opiate and leave him helpless in
+her hands.
+
+Eagerly her fingers plucked the black berries.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII
+
+In one of the tin cups Beatrice pressed the juice from the nightshade,
+obtaining perhaps a tablespoonful of black liquor. To this she added
+considerable sugar, barely tasting the mixture on the end of her finger.
+The balance was inclining toward the success of her plan. The sugar
+mostly killed the pungent taste of the berries.
+
+Then she concealed the cup in a cluster of vines, ready for the moment
+of need. Her next act was to procure from among the supplies the little
+cardboard box containing half a dozen or so of her pistol shells. The
+way of safety was to destroy these first. The effect of the poison might
+be of only a few minutes' duration, and every motion might count. Under
+any conditions, they would be out of the way. She was careful, with a
+superlative cunning, to take the box as well as its contents. She
+foresaw that in all likelihood Ben would seek the shells as soon as he
+fired the few that remained in his pistol magazine; and an empty
+container might put him upon his guard. On the other hand, if he could
+not find the box at all, he could easily be led to believe that it had
+been simply misplaced among the other supplies.
+
+She scattered the shells in the heavy brush where not even the bright,
+searching eyes of the Canada jay might ever find them. Then she hastened
+up the ridge to meet Ben on his way to the cave.
+
+She waited a few minutes, then spying his stalwart form at the edge of
+the beaver meadow, she tripped down to meet him. He was not in the least
+suspicious of this little act of friendship. It was quite the customary
+thing, lately, for her thus to watch for his coming; and his brown face
+always lighted with pleasure at the first glimpse of her graceful form
+framed by the spruce. She too had always taken pleasure in these little
+meetings and in the gay talk they had as they sped down toward the
+cavern; but her delight was singularly absent to-day. She tried to
+restrain the wild racing of her heart.
+
+She knew she must act her part. Her plan was to put him off his guard,
+to hide her treachery with pretended friendship. To meet him here--far
+distant from the poison cup hidden in the vines--would give her time to
+master her leaping heart and to strengthen her self-control.
+
+Yet she had hardly expected him to greet her in just this way,--with
+such a light in his eyes and such obvious delight in his smile. He had a
+rather boyish, friendly smile, this foe of hers whom she was about to
+despatch into the very shadow of death. She dispelled quickly a small,
+faltering voice of remorse. This was no time for remorse, for gentleness
+and mercy. She hurried to his side.
+
+"You're flushed from hurrying down that hill," he told her gayly.
+"Beatrice, you're getting prettier every day."
+
+"It's the simple life that's doing it, Ben! No late hours, no
+indigestible food--"
+
+"Speaking of food--I'm famished. I hope you've got something nice for
+lunch--and I know you have."
+
+She _had_ been careful with to-day's lunch; but it had merely been part
+of her plot to put him off his guard. "Caribou tenderloin--almost the
+last of him--wocus bread and strawberries," she assured him. "Does that
+suit your highness?"
+
+He made a great feint of being overwhelmed by the news. "Then let's
+hurry. Take my arm and we'll fly."
+
+She seized the strong forearm, thrilled in spite of herself by the
+muscles of steel she felt through the sleeves. He fell into his fastest
+walking stride,--long steps that sped the yards under them. They emerged
+from the marsh and started to climb the ridge.
+
+At a small hollow beside the creek bed her fingers suddenly tightened on
+his arm. A thrill that was more of wonder than of joy coursed through
+her; and her dark eyes began to glitter with excitement. The wilderness
+was her ally to-day. She suddenly saw her chance--in a manner that could
+not possibly waken his suspicions of her intentions--of disposing of the
+remainder of his pistol cartridges.
+
+On a log thirty feet distant sat an old grouse with half a dozen of her
+brood, all of them perched in a row and relying on their protective
+coloring to save them from sight. They were Franklin's grouse--and they
+had appeared as if in answer to Beatrice's secret wish.
+
+These birds were common enough in their valley, and not a day passed
+without seeing from five to fifty of them, yet the sight went straight
+home to Beatrice's superstitions. "Get them with your pistol," she
+whispered. "I want them all--for a big grouse pie to-night."
+
+"But our pistol shells are getting low," Ben objected. "I've hardly got
+enough shells in the gun to get 'em all--"
+
+"No matter. You have to use them some time. There's a few more in the
+cave, I think. We'll have to rely on big game from now on, anyway. Don't
+miss one."
+
+Ben drew his pistol, then walked up within twenty feet. He drew slowly
+down, knocking the old bird from her perch with a bullet through the
+neck.
+
+"Good work," Beatrice exulted. "Now for the chicks."
+
+Ben took the bird on the extreme right, and again the bullet sped true.
+The remainder of the flock had become uneasy now; and at the next shot
+all except one flew into the branches of the surrounding trees. This
+shot was equally successful, and with the fourth he knocked the
+remaining bird from the log.
+
+Each of the four birds he had downed with a shot either through the head
+or the neck; and such shooting would have been marvelous indeed in the
+eyes of the tenderfoot. But both these two foresters knew that there was
+nothing exceptional about it. Pistol shooting is simply a matter of a
+sure eye and steady nerves, combined with a greater or less period of
+practice. Few were the trappers or woodsmen north of fifty-three that
+could not have done as much.
+
+Ben turned his attention to the fowl on the lower tree limbs, hitting
+once but missing the second time. To correct this unpardonable
+proceeding, he knocked with his seventh a fat cock, his spurs just
+starting, from almost the top of a young spruce.
+
+"Here's one more," Beatrice urged him. "I'll need every one for the
+pie."
+
+But the gun was empty. The firing pin snapped harmlessly against the
+breach. They gathered the grouse and sped on down to the cavern.
+
+Her heart seemingly leaped into her throat at every beat; but with
+steady hands and smiling face she went about the preparation of the
+meal. She fried the venison and baked the wocus bread, and with more
+than usual spirit and gaiety set the dishes at Ben's place at the
+table. "Draw up your chair," she told him. "I'll have the tea in a
+minute."
+
+Ben peered with sudden interest into her face. "What's troubling you,
+Bee?" he asked gently. "You're pale as a ghost."
+
+"I'm not feeling overly well." Her eyes dropped before his gaze. "I'm
+not hungry--at all. But it's nothing to worry about--"
+
+She saw by his eyes that he _was_ worrying; yet it was evident that he
+had not the slightest suspicion of the real cause of the sudden pallor
+in her cheeks. She saw his face cloud and his eyes darken; and again she
+heard that faint, small voice of remorse--whispering deep in her heart's
+heart. He was always so considerate of her, this jailer of hers. His
+concern was always so real and deep. Yet in a moment more the kindly
+sympathy would be gone from his face. He would be lying very still--and
+his face would be even more pale than hers.
+
+Listlessly she walked to the door of the cave, procuring a handful of
+dried red-root leaves that she used for tea. Through the cavern opening
+he saw her drop them into the bucket that served as their teapot.
+
+Then she came back for the oiled, cloth bag that contained the last of
+their sugar. This was always one of her little kindnesses,--to sweeten
+his tea for him before she brought it to him. He began to eat his steak.
+
+In one glance the girl saw that he was wholly unsuspecting. He trusted
+her; in their weeks together he had lost all fear of treachery from her.
+There he was, exulting over the frugal lunch she had prepared, with no
+inkling of the deadly peril that even now was upon him. She wished he
+did not trust her so completely; it would be easier for her if he was
+just a little wary, a little more on guard.
+
+She felt cold all over. She could hardly keep from shivering. But this
+was the moment of trial; the thing would be done in a moment more. She
+mustn't give way yet to the growing weakness in her muscles. She walked
+to the vine where she had left the potion.
+
+How much of it there was--it seemed to have doubled in quantity since
+she had left it. A handful of the black berries meant death--certain as
+the sunrise--but what did half a handful mean? The question came to her
+again. How did she know that half a handful did not mean death too,--not
+just hours of slumber, but relentless and irremediable death! Would that
+be the end of her day's work--to see this tall, friendly warden of hers
+lying dead before her gaze, the laughter gone from his lips and the
+light faded from his eyes? She would be free then to strip the shell
+belt from his waist. He would never waken to prevent her. She could
+escape too--back to her father's home--and leave him in the cave.
+
+All that he had told her concerning his war with her father recurred to
+her in one vivid flash. Could it have been that he had told the
+truth--that her father and his followers had been the attackers in the
+beginning? She had never believed him fully; but could it be that he was
+in the right? His claim had been invaded, he said, and his one friend
+murdered in cold blood. Was this not cause enough, by the code of the
+North, for a war of reprisal?
+
+But even as these thoughts came to her, she had walked boldly to the
+fire and emptied the contents of the cup into the boiling water in the
+teapot. Ben would have only had to look up to see her do it. Yet still
+he did not suspect.
+
+She waited an instant, steadying herself for the ordeal to come. Then
+she took the pot off the fire and poured the hot contents into the cup
+that had just held the potion. She had been careful not to put enough
+water into the pot to weaken the drink. The cup brimmed; but none was
+left. She brought it steaming to Ben's side.
+
+No kindly root tripped her feet as she entered, no merciful unsteadiness
+caused her to drop this cup of death and spill its contents.
+
+"Thanks, Beatrice." Ben looked up, smiling. "I'm a brute to let you fix
+my tea when you are feeling so bad. But I sure am grateful, if that
+helps any--"
+
+His voice sounded far away, like a voice in a nightmare. "It's pretty
+strong, I'm afraid," she told him. "The leaves weren't very good, and I
+boiled them too long. I'm afraid you'll find it bitter."
+
+"I'll drink it, if it's bitter as gall," he assured her, "after your
+kindness to fix it."
+
+His hand reached and seized the handle of the cup. Even now--_now_--he
+was raising it to his lips. In an instant more he would be pouring it
+down his throat, too considerate of her to admit its unwholesome taste,
+drinking it down though it tasted the potion of death that it was! The
+hair seemed to start on her head.
+
+Then she seemed to writhe as in a convulsion. Her voice rose in a
+piercing scream. "Ben--_Ben_--_don't drink it_!" she cried. "God have
+mercy on my soul!"
+
+But with that utterance a strength surpassing that of sinew and muscle
+returned to her. She reached and knocked the cup from his hand; and its
+black contents, like dark blood, stained the sandy floor of the cavern.
+
+Ben's first thought was curiously not of his own narrow escape, but was
+rather in concern for Beatrice. Whether or not he had actually
+swallowed any of the liquor in the cup he did not know; nor did he give
+the matter a thought. He was aware of only the terror-stricken girl
+before him, her face deathly white and her eyes starting and wide. He
+leaped to his feet.
+
+Fearing that she was about to faint he steadied her with his hand. The
+echo of her scream died in the cavern, the cup rolled on the floor and
+came to a standstill against the wall; but still she made no sound, only
+gazing as if entranced. But slowly, as he steadied her, the blessed
+tears stole into her eyes and rolled down her white cheeks; and once
+more breath surged into her lungs.
+
+"Never mind, Beatrice," the man was saying, his deep, rough voice gentle
+as a woman's. "Don't cry--please don't cry--just forget all about it.
+Let's go over to your hammock and rest awhile."
+
+With a strong arm he guided her to her cot, and smiling kindly, pushed
+her down into it. "Just take it easy," he advised. "And forget all about
+it. You'll be all right in a minute."
+
+"But you don't understand--you don't know--what I tried to do--"
+
+"No matter. Tell me after a while, if you want to. Don't tell me at all
+if you'd rather not. I'm going back to my lunch." He laughed, trying to
+bring her to herself. "I wouldn't miss that caribou steak for
+anything--even though I can't have my tea. Just lay down a while, and
+rest."
+
+His rugged face lighted as he smiled, kindly and tolerantly, and then he
+turned to go. But her solemn voice arrested him.
+
+"Wait, Ben. I want you to know--now--so you won't trust me again--or
+give me another chance. The cup--was poisoned."
+
+But the friendly light did not yet wane in his eyes. "I didn't think it
+was anything very good--the way you knocked it out of my hand. We'll
+just pretend it was very bad tea--and let it go at that."
+
+"No. It was nightshade--it might have killed you." She spoke in a flat,
+lifeless voice. "I didn't want it to kill you--I just wanted to give you
+enough to put you to sleep--so I could take your rifle shells and throw
+them away--but I was willing to let you drink it, even if it _did_ kill
+you."
+
+The man looked at her, in infinite compassion, then came and sat beside
+her in the hammock. Rather quietly he took one of her hands and gazed at
+it, without seeing it, a long time. Then he pressed it to his lips.
+
+For a breath he held it close to his cheek, his eyes lightless and far
+away, and she gazed at him in amazement.
+
+"You'd kiss my hand--after what I did--?"
+
+"After what you _didn't_ do," he corrected. "Please, Beatrice--don't
+blame yourself. Some way--I understand things better--than I used to.
+Even if you had killed me--I don't see why it wouldn't have been your
+right. I've held you here by force. Yet you didn't let me drink the
+stuff. You knocked it out of my hand."
+
+And now, for the first time, an inordinate amazement came into his face.
+He looked at her intently, yet with no unfriendliness, no passion.
+Rather it was with overwhelming wonder.
+
+"_You knocked it out of my hands_!" he repeated, more loudly. "Oh,
+Beatrice--it's my turn to beg forgiveness now! When I was at your mercy,
+and the cup at my lips--you spared me. Why did you do it, Beatrice?"
+
+He gazed at her with growing ardor. She shook her head. She simply did
+not know the reason.
+
+"It's not your place to feel penitent," he told her, with infinite
+sincerity. "If you had let me take it, you'd have just served me
+right--you'd have just paid me back in my own coin. It was fair
+enough--to use every advantage you had. Good Lord, have you forgotten
+that I am holding you here by force? But instead--you saved me, when you
+might have killed me--and won the fight. All you've done is to show
+yourself the finer clay--that's what you've done. God knows I suppose
+the woman is always finer clay than the man--yet it comes with a jolt,
+just the same. It's not for you to be down-hearted--Heaven knows the
+strength you've shown is above any I ever had, or ever will have. You've
+shown how to feel mercy--I could never show anything but hate, and
+revenge. You've shown me a bigger and stronger code than mine. And
+there's nothing--nothing I can say."
+
+The tone changed once more to the personal and solicitous. "But it's
+been a big strain on you--I can see that. I believe I'd lie here and
+rest awhile if I were you. I'll eat my dinner--and the fire's about out
+too. That's the girl--Beatrice."
+
+Gently he picked her up, seemingly with no physical effort and laid her
+in her hammock. "Then--you'll forgive me?" she asked brokenly.
+
+"Good Heavens, I wish there was something to forgive--so we'd be a
+little more even. But you've accomplished something, Beatrice--and I
+don't know what it is yet--I only know you've changed me--and softened
+me--as I never dreamed any one in the world could. Now go to sleep."
+
+He turned from her, but the food on the table no longer tempted him. For
+a full hour he stood before the ashes of the fire, deeply and
+inextricably bewildered with himself, with life, and with all these
+thoughts and hopes and regrets that thronged him. He was like ashes now
+himself; the fires of his life seemed burned out. The thought recalled
+him to the need of cutting fuel for the night's fire.
+
+He might be able to quiet the growing turmoil in his brain when the
+still shadows of the spruce closed around him. He seized his axe, then
+peered into the cave. Beatrice, worn out by the stress of the hour
+before and immensely comforted by Ben's words, was already deeply
+asleep. His rifle leaned against the wall of the cavern, and he put it
+in the hollow of his arm. It was not that he feared Beatrice would
+attempt to procure it. The act was mostly habit, combined with the fact
+that their supply of meat was all but exhausted and he did not wish to
+miss any opportunity for big game.
+
+The forest was particularly gloomy to-day. Its shadows lay deep. And
+this was not merely the result of his own darkened outlook: glancing up,
+he saw that clouds were gathering in the sky. They would need fuel in
+plenty to keep the fire bright to-night. Evidently rain was
+impending,--one of those cold, steady downpours that are disliked so
+cordially by the folk of the upper Selkirks.
+
+He went a full two hundred yards before he found a tree to his liking.
+It was a tough spruce of medium height and just at the edge of the
+stream. He laid his rifle down, leaning it against a fallen log; then
+began his work.
+
+It was an awkward place to stand; but he gave no thought to it. His mind
+dwelt steadily on the events in the cavern of the hour before; the
+girl's remorse in the instant that she had him at her mercy and the
+example it set for him. The blade bit into the wood with slow
+encroachments. Perhaps the expenditure of brute energy in swinging the
+axe would relieve his pent-up feelings.
+
+He was not watching his work. His blows struck true from habit. Now the
+tree was half-severed: it was time to cut on the opposite side. Suddenly
+his axe crashed into yielding, rotten wood.
+
+Instantly the powers of the wilderness took their long-awaited toll. Ben
+had been unwary, too absorbed by his swirling thoughts to mark the
+ambush of death that had been prepared for him. Ever to keep watch, ever
+to be on guard: such is the first law of the wild; and Ben had
+disregarded it. Half of the tree had been rotten, changing the direction
+of its fall and crashing it down before its time.
+
+Ben leaped for his life, instinctively aiming for the shelter of the log
+against which he had inclined his rifle; but the blow came too soon. He
+was aware only of the rush of air as he leaped, an instant's hovering at
+the crest of a depthless chasm, then the sense of a mighty, resistless
+blow hurling him into infinity.
+
+Ben's rifle, catching the full might of the blow, was broken like a
+match. Ben himself was crushed to earth as beneath a meteor, the branchy
+trunk shattering down upon his stalwart form like the jaws of a great
+trap. He uttered one short, half-strangled cry.
+
+Then the darkness, shot with varied and multiple lights, dropped over
+him. The noise of the falling tree died away; the forest-dwellers
+returned to their varied activities. The rain clouds deepened and spread
+above his motionless form.
+
+
+
+XXXIV
+
+Beatrice's dreams were troubled after Ben's departure into the forest.
+She tossed and murmured, secretly aware that all was not well with her.
+Yet in the moments that she half-wakened she ascribed the vague warning
+to nervousness only, falling immediately to sleep again. Wakefulness
+came vividly to her only with the beginnings of twilight.
+
+She opened her eyes; the cavern was deep with shadow. She lay resting a
+short time, adjusting her eyes to the soft light. In an instant all the
+dramatic events of the day were recalled to her: the tin cup that had
+held the poison still lay against the wall, and the liquor still stained
+the sandy floor, or was it only a patch of deeper shadow?
+
+She wondered why Ben did not come into the cave. Was he embittered
+against her, after all; had he spoken as he did just from kindness, to
+save her remorse? She listened for the familiar sounds of his fuel
+cutting, or his other work about the camp. Wherever he was, he made no
+sound at all.
+
+She sat up then, staring out through the cavern maw. For an instant she
+experienced a deep sense of bewilderment at the pressing gloom, so
+mysterious and unbroken over the face of the land. But soon she
+understood what was missing. The fire was out.
+
+The fact went home to her with an inexplicable shock. She had become so
+accustomed to seeing the bright, cheerful blaze at the cavern mouth that
+its absence was like a little tragedy in itself. Always it had been the
+last vista of her closing eyes as she dropped off to sleep--the soft,
+warm glow of the coals--and the sight always comforted her. She could
+scarcely remember the morning that it wasn't crackling cheerily when she
+wakened. Ben had always been so considerate of her in this
+regard--removing the chill of the cave with its radiating heat to make
+it comfortable for her to dress. Not even coals were left now--only
+ashes, gray as death.
+
+She got up, then walked to the cavern maw. For a moment she stood
+peering into the gloom, one hand resting against the portals of stone.
+The twilight was already deep. It was the supper hour and past; dark
+night was almost at hand. There could be no further doubt of Ben's
+absence. He was not at the little creek getting water, nor did she hear
+the ring of his axe in the forest. She wondered if he had gone out on
+one of his scouting expeditions and had not yet returned. Of course this
+was the true explanation; she had no real cause to worry.
+
+Likely enough he had little desire to return to the cavern now. She
+could picture him following at his tireless pace one of the winding
+woods trails, lost in contemplation, his vivid eyes clouded with
+thought.
+
+She looked up for the sight of the familiar stars that might guide him
+home. They were all hidden to-night. Not a gleam of light softened the
+stark gloom of the spruce. As she watched the first drops of rain fell
+softly on the grass.
+
+The drops came in ever-increasing frequency, cold as ice on her hand.
+She heard them rustling in the spruce boughs; and far in the forest she
+discerned the first whine of the wakening wind. The sound of the rain
+was no longer soft. It swelled and grew, and all at once the wind caught
+it and swept it into her face. And now the whole forest moaned and
+soughed under the sweep of the wind.
+
+There is no sound quite like the beat of a hard rain on dense forest. It
+has no startling discords, but rather a regular cadence as if the wood
+gods were playing melodies in the minor on giant instruments,--melodies
+remembered from the first, unhappy days of the earth and on instruments
+such as men have never seen. But this was never a melody to fill the
+heart with joy. It touches deep chords of sorrow in the most secret
+realms of the spirit. The rain song grew and fell as the gusts of the
+wind swept it, and the rock walls of the cliff swam in clouds of spray.
+
+The storm could not help but bring Ben to camp, she thought. At least
+she did not fear that he would lose his way: he knew every trail and
+ridge for miles around the cave. Even such pressing, baleful darkness as
+this could not bewilder him. She went back to her cot to wait his
+coming.
+
+The minutes seemed interminable. Time had never moved so slowly before.
+She tried to lie still, to relax; then to direct her thought in other
+channels; but all of these meandering streams flowed back into the main
+current which was Ben. Yet it was folly to worry about him; any moment
+she would hear his step at the edge of the forest. But the night was so
+dark, and the storm so wild. A half-hour dragged its interminable length
+away.
+
+Her uneasiness was swiftly developing into panic. Just to-day she was
+willing to risk his life for her freedom: it was certainly folly now to
+goad herself to despair by dwelling on his mysterious absence. It might
+speed the passing minutes if she got up and found some work to do about
+the cave; but she simply had no heart for it. Once she sat up, only to
+lie down again.
+
+The moments dragged by. Surely he would have had time to reach camp by
+now. The storm neither increased nor decreased; only played its mournful
+melodies in the forest. The song of the rain was despairing,--low
+mournful notes rising to a sharp crescendo as the fiercer gusts swept it
+into the tree tops. The limbs murmured unhappily as they smote together;
+and a tall tree, swaying in the wind, creaked with a maddening
+regularity. She was never so lonely before, so darkly miserable.
+
+"I want him to come," her voice suddenly spoke aloud. It rang strangely
+in the gloomy cave. "I want him to come back to me."
+
+She felt no impulse for the words. They seemed to speak themselves.
+Presently she sat erect, her heart leaping with inexpressible relief, at
+the sound of a heavy tread at the edge of the glade.
+
+The steps came nearer, and then paused. She sprang to her feet and went
+to the mouth of the cave. A silence that lived between the beating rain
+and the complaining wind settled down about her. Her eyes could not
+pierce the darkness.
+
+"Is that you, Ben?" she called.
+
+She strained into the silence for his reply. The cold drops splashed
+into her face.
+
+"Ben?" she called again. "Is that you?"
+
+Then something leaped with an explosive sound, and running feet splashed
+in the wet grass in flight. The little spruce trees at the edge of the
+glade whipped and rustled as a heavy body crashed through. The steps had
+been only those of some forest beast--a caribou, perhaps, or a
+moose--come to mock her despair.
+
+She remembered that Ben had been wishing for just such a visitation
+these past few days; of course in the daylight hours when he could see
+to shoot. Their meat supply was almost gone.
+
+She did not go to her cot again. She stood peering into the gloom. All
+further effort to repel her fears came to nothing. The storm was already
+of two hours' duration, and Ben would have certainly returned to the
+cave unless disaster had befallen him. Was he lost somewhere in the
+intertwining trails, seeking shelter in a heavy thicket until the dawn
+should show him his way? There were so many pitfalls for the
+unsuspecting in these trackless wilds.
+
+Yet she could be of no aid to him. The dark woods stretched
+interminably; she would not even know which way to start. It would just
+mean to be lost herself, should she attempt to seek him. The trails that
+wound through the glades and over the ridges had no end.
+
+"Ben!" she called again. Then with increasing volume. "Ben!"
+
+But no echo returned. The darkness swallowed the sound at once.
+
+The night was chill: she longed for the comfort of the fire. The actual
+labor of building it might take her mind from her fears for a while at
+least; and its warm glow might dispel the growing cold of fear and
+loneliness in her breast. Besides, it might be a beacon light for Ben.
+She turned at once to the pile of kindling Ben had prepared.
+
+But before she could build a really satisfactory fire, one that would
+endure the rain, she must cut fuel from some of the logs Ben had hewn
+down and dragged to the cave. She lighted a short piece of pitchy wood,
+intending to locate the heavy camp axe. Then, putting on her heavy
+coat--the same garment of lustrous fur which Ben had sent her back for
+the day of her abduction--she ventured into the storm.
+
+The rain splashed in vain at her torch. The pitch burned with a fierce
+flame. But her eyes sought in vain for the axe.
+
+This was a strange thing: Ben always left it leaning against one of the
+chunks of spruce. Presently she halted, startled, gazing into the black
+depths of the forest.
+
+Ben had taken it; he had plainly gone forth after fuel. Trees stood all
+about the little glade: he couldn't have gone far. The inference was
+obvious: whatever disaster had befallen him must have occurred within a
+few hundred yards of the cave.
+
+Holding her torch high she went to the edge of the glade and again
+called into the gloom. There was no repression in her voice now. She
+called as loudly as she could. She started to push on into the fringe of
+timber.
+
+But at once she paused, holding hard on her self-control. It was folly
+to make a blind search. To penetrate the dark mystery of the forest with
+only this little light--already flickering out--would probably result in
+becoming lost herself. Such a course would not help Ben's cause.
+Evidently he was lying within a few hundred feet of her,
+unconscious--perhaps dead--or he would have replied to her call.
+
+Dead! The thought sped an icy current throughout the hydraulic system of
+her veins.
+
+She was a mountain girl, and she made no further false motions. She
+turned at once to the cave, and piling up her kindling, built a fire
+just at the mouth of the cave. It was protected here in some degree from
+the rain, and the wind was right to carry the smoke away. This fire
+would serve to keep her direction and lead her back to the cavern.
+
+Once more she ventured into the storm, and gathering all the cut fuel
+she could find, piled it on her fire. The two spruce chunks that Ben had
+cut for their fireside seats were placed as back logs. Then she hunted
+for pine knots taken from the scrub pines that grew in scattering clumps
+among the spruce, and which were laden with pitch.
+
+One of these knots she put in the iron pan they used for frying, then
+lighted it. Then she pushed into the timber.
+
+Holding her light high she began to encircle the glade clear to the
+barrier of the cliffs. To the eyes of the wild creatures this might have
+been a never-to-be-forgotten picture: the slight form of the girl, her
+face blanched and her eyes wide and dark in the flaring light, her
+grotesque torch and its weird shadows, and then rain sweeping down
+between. She reached the cliff, then started back, making a wider
+circle.
+
+Adding fresh fuel to the torch, she peered into every covert and
+examined with minute care any human-shaped shadow in that eerie world of
+shadows; but the long half-circle brought her back to the cliff wall
+without results. She was already wet to the skin, and her pine knots
+were nearly spent. Ever the load of dread was heavier at her heart. In
+the hour or more she had searched--she had no way of estimating
+time--she had already gone farther than Ben usually went for his fuel.
+
+As yet no tears came; only the raindrops lay on her face and curled her
+dark hair in ringlets. But she must not give up yet. It was hard to hold
+her shoulders straight; but she must make the long circle once more.
+
+With courage and strength such as she had not dreamed she possessed,
+she launched forward again. But fatigue was breaking her now. The tree
+roots tripped her faltering feet, the branches clutched at her as she
+passed. It was hard to tell what territory she had searched, or how far
+she had gone. But when she was halfway around, she suddenly halted,
+motionless as an image, at the edge of the stream.
+
+The flickering light revealed a tree, freshly cut, its, naked stump
+gleaming and its tall form lying prone. Yet beneath it the shadows were
+of strange, unearthly shape, and something showed stark white through
+the green foliage. Great branches stretched over it, like bars over a
+prison window.
+
+Just one curious deep sob wracked her whole body. The life-heat, the
+mystery that is being, seemed to steal away from her. Her strength
+wilted; and for an instant she could only stand and gaze with fixed,
+unbelieving eyes. But almost at once the unquenchable fires of her
+spirit blazed up anew. She saw her task, and with a faith and
+steadfastness conformable more to the sun and the earth than to human
+frailty, her muscles made instant and incredible response.
+
+Instantly she was beside the form of her comrade and enemy, struggling
+with the cruel limbs that pinned him to the earth.
+
+
+
+
+XXXV
+
+Beatrice knew one thing and one alone: that she must not give way to the
+devastating terror in her heart. There was mighty work to do, and she
+must keep strong. Her only wish was to kneel beside him, to lift the
+bleeding head into her arms and let the storm and the darkness smother
+her existence; but her stern woods training came to her aid. She began
+the stupendous task of freeing him from the imprisoning tree limbs.
+
+The pine knots flickered feebly; and by their light she looked about for
+Ben's axe. Her eyes rested on the broken gun first: then she saw the
+blade, shining in the rain, protruding from beneath a broken bough. She
+drew it out and swung it down.
+
+Some of the lesser limbs she broke off, with a strength in her hands she
+did not dream she possessed. The larger ones were cut away with blows
+incredibly strong and accurate. How and by what might she did not know,
+but almost at once the man's body was free except for the tree trunk
+that wedged him against a dead log toward which he had leaped for
+shelter.
+
+She seemed powerless to move it. Her shoulders surged against it in
+vain. A desperate frenzy seized her, but she fought it remorselessly
+down. Her self-discipline must not break yet. Seeing that she could not
+move the tree itself, she thrust with all her power against the dead log
+beside which Ben lay. In a moment she had rolled it aside.
+
+Then for the first time she went to her knees beside the prone form.
+Ben was free of the imprisoning limbs, but was his soul already free of
+the stalwart body broken among the broken boughs? She had to know this
+first; further effort was unavailing until she knew this. Her hand stole
+over his face.
+
+She found no reassuring warmth. It was wet with the rain, cold to the
+touch. His hair was wet too, and matted from some dreadful wound in the
+scalp. Very softly she felt along the skull for some dreadful fracture
+that might have caused instant death; but the descending trunk had
+missed his head, at least. Very gently she shook him by the shoulders.
+
+Her stern self-control gave way a little now. The strain had been too
+much for human nerves to bear. She gathered him into her arms, still
+without sobbing, but the hot tears dropped on to his face.
+
+"Speak to me, Ben," she said quietly. The wind caught her words and
+whisked them away; and the rain played its unhappy music in the tree
+foliage; but Ben made no answer. "Speak to me," she repeated, her tone
+lifting. "My man, my baby--tell me you're not dead!"
+
+Dead! Was that it--struck to the earth like the caribou that fell before
+his rifle? And in that weird, dark instant a light far more bright than
+that the flickering pine knots cast so dim and strange over the scene
+beamed forth from the altar flame of her own soul. It was only the light
+of knowledge, not of hope, but it transfigured her none the less.
+
+All at once she knew why she had hurled the poisoned cup from his hand,
+even though her father's life might be the price of her weakness. She
+understood, now, why these long weeks had been a delight rather than a
+torment; why her fears for him had gone so straight to her heart. She
+pressed his battered head tight against her breast.
+
+"My love, my love," she crooned in his ear, pressing her warm cheek
+close to his. "I do love you, I do, I do," she told him confidingly, as
+if this message would call him back to life. Her lips sought his, trying
+to give them warmth, and her voice was low and broken when she spoke
+again. "Can't you hear me, Ben--won't you try to come back to me? If
+you're dead I'll die too--"
+
+But the man did not open his eyes. Would not even this appeal arouse him
+from this deep, strange sleep in which he lay? He had always been so
+watchful of her--since that first day--so zealous for her safety. She
+held him closer, her lips trembling against his.
+
+But she must get herself in hand again! Perhaps life had not yet
+completely flickered out; and she could nurse it back. She dropped her
+ear to his breast, listening.
+
+Yes, she felt the faint stirring of his heart. It was so feeble, the
+throbs were so far apart, yet they meant life,--life that might flush
+his cheeks again, and might yet bring him back to her, into her arms. He
+was breathing, too; breaths so faint that she hardly dared to believe in
+their reality. And presently she realized that his one hope of life lay
+in getting back to the fire.
+
+For long hours he had been lying in the cold rain; a few more minutes
+would likely extinguish the spark of life that remained in his breast.
+Her hand stole over his powerful frame, in an effort to get some idea of
+the nature of his wounds.
+
+One of his arms was broken; its position indicated that. Some of his
+ribs were crushed too--what internal injuries he had that might end him
+before the morning she did not know. But she could not take time to
+build a sledge and cut away the brush. She worked her shoulder under his
+body.
+
+Wrenching with all her fine, young strength she lifted him upon her
+shoulder; then, kneeling in the vines, she struggled for breath. Then
+thrusting with her arm she got on her feet.
+
+His weight was over fifty pounds greater than her own; but her woods
+training, the hard work she had always done, had fitted her for just
+such a test as this. She started with her burden toward the cave.
+
+She had long known how to carry an injured man, suspending him over her
+shoulder, head pointed behind her, her arms clasping his thigh. With her
+free arm she seized the tree branches to sustain her. She had no light
+now; she was guided only by the faint glow of the fire at the cavern
+mouth.
+
+After a hundred feet the load seemed unbearable. Except for the fact
+that she soon got on the well-worn moose trail that followed the creek,
+she could scarcely have progressed a hundred feet farther. As it was,
+she was taxed to the utmost: every ounce of her reserve strength would
+be needed before the end.
+
+At the end of a hundred yards she stopped to rest, leaning against a
+tree and still holding the beloved weight upon her shoulder. If she laid
+it down she knew she could not lift it again. But soon she plunged on,
+down toward the beacon light.
+
+Except for her love for him, and that miraculous strength that love has
+always given to women, she could not have gone on that last, cruel
+hundred yards. But slowly, steadily, the circle of light grew brighter,
+larger, nearer; ever less dense were the thickets of evergreen between.
+Now she was almost to the glade; now she felt the wet grass at her
+ankles. She lunged on and laid her burden on her bed.
+
+Then she relaxed at his feet, breathing in sobbing gasps. Except for the
+crackle of the fire and the beat of the rain, there was no sound in the
+cave but this,--those anguished sobs from her wracked lungs.
+
+But far distant though Ben was and deep as he slept--just outside the
+dark portals of death itself--those sounds went down to him. He heard
+them dimly at first, like a far-distant voice in a dream, but as the
+moments passed he began to recognize their nature and their source. Sobs
+of exhaustion and distress--from the girl that was in his charge. He lay
+a long time, trying to understand.
+
+On her knees beside him Beatrice saw the first flutter of his eyelids.
+In awe, rather than rapture, her arms crept around him, and she kissed
+his rain-wet brow. His eyes opened, looking wonderingly into hers.
+
+She saw the first light of recognition, then a half-smile, gentle as a
+girl's, as he realized his own injuries. Of course Ben Darby would smile
+in such a moment as this; his instincts, true and manly, were always to
+try to cheer her. Presently he spoke in the silence.
+
+"The tree got me, didn't it?" he asked.
+
+"Don't try to talk," she cautioned. "Yes--the tree fell on you. But
+you're not going to die. You're going to live, live--"
+
+He shook his head, the half-smile flickering at his lips. "Let me talk,
+Beatrice," he said, with just a whisper of his old determination. "It's
+important--and I don't think--I have much time."
+
+Her eyes widened in horror. "You don't mean--"
+
+"I'm going back in a minute--I can't hardly keep awake," he said. His
+voice, though feeble, was preternaturally clear. She heard every kind
+accent, every gentle tone even above the crackle of the fire without and
+the beat of the rain. "I think it's the limit," he went on. "I believe
+the tree got me--clear inside--but you must listen to everything I say."
+
+She nodded. In that eerie moment of suspense she knew she must hear what
+he had to tell her.
+
+"Don't wait to see what happens to me," he went on. "I'll either go out
+or I'll live--you really can't help me any. Where's the rifle?"
+
+"The rifle was broken--when the tree fell."
+
+"I knew it would be. I saw it coming." He rested, waiting for further
+breath. "Beatrice--please, please don't stay here, trying to save me."
+
+"Do you think I would go?" she cried.
+
+"You must. The food--is about gone. Just enough to last one person
+through to the Yuga cabins--with berries, roots. Take the pistol.
+There's six shots or so--in the box. Make every one tell. Take the dead
+grouse too. The rifle's broken and we can't get meat. It's
+just--death--if you wait. You can just make it through now."
+
+"And leave you here to die, as long as there's a chance to save you?"
+the girl answered. "You couldn't get up to get water--or build a fire--"
+
+He listened patiently, but shook his head at the end. "No, Bee--please
+don't make me talk any more. It's just death for both of us if you stay.
+The food is gone--the rifle broken. Your father's gang'll be here sooner
+or later--and they'd smash me, anyway. I could hardly fight 'em off with
+those few pistol shells--but by God I'd like to try--"
+
+He struggled for breath, and she thought he had slipped back into
+unconsciousness. But in a moment the faltering current of his speech
+began again.
+
+"Take the pistol--and go," he told her. "You showed me to-day how to
+give up--and I don't want to kill--your father--any more. I renounce it
+all! Ezram--forgive me--old Ez that lay dead in the leaves." He smiled
+at the girl again. "So don't mind leaving me. Life work's all
+spent--given over. Please, Beatrice--you'd just kill yourself without
+aiding me. Wait till the sun comes up--then follow up the river--"
+
+Unconsciousness welled high above him, and the lids dropped over his
+eyes. The gloom still pressed about the cavern, yet a sun no less
+effulgent than that of which he had spoken had risen for Ben. It was his
+moment of renunciation, glorious past any moment of his life. He had
+renounced his last, little fighting chance that the girl might live. And
+Ezram, watching high and afar, and with infinite serenity knowing at
+last the true balance of all things one with another, gave him his full
+forgiveness.
+
+The girl began to strip the wet clothes from his injured body.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVI
+
+The trail was long and steep into Back There for Jeffery Neilson and his
+men. Day after day they traveled with their train of pack horses,
+pushing deeper into the wilds, fording mighty rivers, traversing silent
+and majestic mountain ranges, climbing slopes so steep that the packs
+had to be lightened to half before the gasping animals could reach the
+crest. They could go only at a snail's pace,--even in the best day's
+travel only ten miles, and often a single mile was a hard, exhausting
+day's work.
+
+Of course there was no kind of a trail for them to follow. As far as
+possible they followed the winding pathways of big game--as long as
+these led them in their general direction--but often they were obliged
+to cut their way through the underbrush. Time after time they
+encountered impassable cliffs or rivers from which they were obliged to
+turn back and seek new routes; they found marshes that they could not
+penetrate; ranges they could not climb; wastes of slide rock where they
+could make headway only at a creeping pace and with hourly risk of their
+lives.
+
+They had counted on slow travel, but the weeks grew into the months
+before they even neared the obscure heart of Back There where they
+thought Ben and Beatrice might be hidden. The way was hard as they had
+never dreamed. Every day, it seemed to them, brought its fresh tragedy:
+a long back-trailing to avoid some impassable place, a fatiguing
+digression, perhaps several hours of grinding work with the axe in order
+to cut a trail. Sometimes the harness broke, requiring long stops on
+the trail to repair it, the packs slipped continually from the hard
+going; and they found it increasingly difficult to secure horse feed for
+the animals.
+
+Even Indian ponies cannot keep fat on such grass as grows in the deep
+shade of the spruce. They need the rich growths of the open park lands
+to stiffen them for the grinding toil; and even with good feeding,
+foresters know that pack animals must not be kept on the trail for too
+many days in succession. Jeffery Neilson and his men disregarded both
+these facts, with the result that the animals lost flesh and strength,
+cutting down the speed of their advance. Oaths and shouts were
+unavailing now: only cruel blows could drive them forward at all.
+
+They seemed to sense a great hopelessness in their undertaking. Usually
+well-trained pack horses will follow their leader without question, walk
+almost in his tracks, and the rider in front only has to show the way.
+After the first few days of grinding toil, the morale of the entire
+outfit began to break. The horses broke away into thickets on each side;
+and time after time, one hour upon another, the horsemen had to round
+them up again. When they came to the great rivers--wild tributaries of
+the Yuga--they had to follow up the streams for days in search of a
+place to ford. Then they were obliged to carry the packs across in small
+loads, making trip after trip with the utmost patience and toil. The
+horses, broken in spirit, took the wild waters just as they climbed the
+steep slopes, with little care whether they lived or died.
+
+The days passed, June and July. Ever they moved at a slower pace. One of
+the horses, giving up on a steep pitch and frenzied by Ray's cruel,
+lashing blows, fell off the edge of the trail and shot down like a
+plummet two hundred feet into the canyon below--and thereupon it became
+necessary not only to spend the rest of the day in retrieving and
+repairing the supplies that had fallen with him, but also to heap bigger
+loads on the backs of the remaining horses. And always they were faced
+by the cruel possibility that this whole, mighty labor was in
+vain,--that Ben and Beatrice might have gone to their deaths in the
+rapids, weeks before.
+
+The food stores brought for the journey were rapidly depleted. The
+result was that they had to depend more and more upon a diet of meat.
+Men can hold up fairly well on meat alone, particularly if it has a fair
+amount of fat, but the effort of hunting and drying the flesh into jerky
+served to cut down their speed.
+
+The constant delays, the grinding, blasting toil of the day's march, and
+particularly the ever-recurring crises of ford and steep, made serious
+inroads on the morale of the three men. Just the work of urging on the
+exhausted horses drained their nervous energy in a frightful stream: the
+uncertainty of their quest, the danger, the scarcity of any food but
+meat, and most of all the burning hatred in their hearts for the man who
+had forced the expedition upon them combined to torment them; even now,
+Ben Darby had received no little measure of vengeance.
+
+No experience of their individual lives had ever presented such a daily
+ordeal of physical distress; none had ever been so devastating to hope
+and spirit. There was not one moment of pleasure, one instant of relief
+from the day's beginning to its end. At night they went to sleep on
+hastily made beds, cursing at all things in heaven and earth; they
+blasphemed with growing savagery all that men hold holy and true; and
+degeneracy grew upon them very swiftly. They quarreled over their
+tasks, and they hated each other with a hatred only second to that they
+bore Darby himself. All three had always been reckless, wicked, brutal
+men; but now, particularly in the case of Ray and Chan, the ordeal
+brought out and augmented the latent abnormalities that made them
+criminals in the beginning, developing those odd quirks in human minds
+that make toward perversion and the most fiendish crime.
+
+Jeffery Neilson had almost forgotten the issue of the claim by now. He
+had told the truth, those weary weeks before, when he had wished he had
+never seen it. His only thought was of his daughter, the captive of a
+relentless, merciless man in these far wilds. Never the moon rose or the
+sun declined but that he was sick with haunting fear for her. Had she
+gone down to her death in the rapids? This was Neilson's fondest wish:
+the enfolding oblivion of wild waters would be infinitely better than
+the fate Ben had hinted at in his letter. Yet he dared not turn back.
+She might yet live, held prisoner in some far-off cave.
+
+At first all three agreed on this point: that they must not turn back
+until either Ben was crushed under their heels or they had made sure of
+his death. Ray had not forgotten that Ben alone stood between him and
+the wealth and power he had always craved. He dreamed, at first, that
+the deadly hardships of the journey could be atoned for by years of
+luxury and ease. His mind was also haunted with dark conjectures as to
+the fate of Beatrice, but jealousy, rather than concern for her, was the
+moving impulse.
+
+Neilson knew his young partner now. He saw clearly at last that Ray was
+not and had never been a faithful confederate, but indeed a malicious
+and bitter enemy, only waiting his chance to overthrow his leader. They
+were still partners in their effort to rescue the girl and slay her
+abductor; otherwise they were at swords' points. And there would be
+something more than plain, swift slaying, now. If Neilson could read
+aright, the actual, physical change that had been wrought in Ray's face
+foretold no ordinary end for Ben. His features were curiously drawn; and
+his eyes had a fixed, magnetic, evil light. Occasionally in his darker
+hours Neilson foresaw even more sinister possibilities in this change in
+Ray: the abnormal intensity manifest in every look and word, the weird,
+evil preoccupation that seemed ever upon him. There was not only the
+fate of Ben to consider, but that of Beatrice too, out in these desolate
+forests. But surely Ray's degenerate impulses could be mastered. Neilson
+need not fear this, at least.
+
+Chan Heminway, also, had developed marvelously in the journey. He also
+was more assertive, less the underling he had been. He had developed a
+brutality that, though it contained nothing of the exquisite fineness of
+cruelty of which Ray's diseased thought might conceive, was nevertheless
+the full expression of his depraved nature. He no longer cowered in fear
+of Neilson. Rather he looked to Ray as his leader, took him as his
+example, tried to imitate him, and at last really began to share in his
+mood. In cruelty to the horses he was particularly adept; but he was
+also given to strange, savage bursts of insane fury.
+
+"We must be close on them now," Neilson said one morning when they had
+left the main gorge of the Yuga far behind them. "If they're not dead
+we're bound to find trace of 'em in a few days."
+
+The hope seemed well-founded. It is impossible for even most of the wild
+creatures--furtive as twilight shadows--to journey through wood spaces
+without leaving trace of their goings and comings: much less clumsy
+human beings. Ultimately the searchers would find their tracks in the
+soft earth, the ashes of a camp fire, or a charred cooking rack.
+
+"And when we get 'em, we can wait and live on meat until the river goes
+up in fall--then float on down to the Indian villages in their canoe,"
+Chan answered. "It will carry four of us, all right."
+
+Ray, Chan, Neilson and Neilson's daughter--these made four. What
+remained of Ben when Ray was through could be left, silent upon some
+hushed hillside, to the mercy of the wild creatures and the elements.
+
+Surely they were in the enemy-country now; and now a fresh fear began to
+oppress them. They might expect an attack from their implacable foe at
+any moment. It did not make for ease of mind to know that any brush
+clump might be their enemy's ambush; that any instant a concealed rifle
+might speak death to them in the silence. Ben would have every advantage
+of fortress and ambush. They had not thought greatly of this matter at
+first; but now the fear increased with the passing days. Even Neilson
+was not wholly exempt from it. It seemed a hideous, deadly thing,
+incompatible with life and hope, that they should be plunging deeper,
+farther into helplessness and peril.
+
+If mental distress and physical discomfort can constitute vengeance Ben
+was already avenged. Now that they were in the hill-lands, out from the
+gorge and into a region of yellow beaver meadows lying between gently
+sloping hills, their apprehension turned to veritable terror. A blind
+man could see how small was their fighting chance against a hidden foe
+who had prepared for their coming. The skin twitched and crept when a
+twig cracked about their camp at night, and a cold like death crept
+over the frame when the thickets crashed under a leaping moose.
+
+Ray found himself regretting, for the first time, that murderous crime
+of his of months before. Even riches might not pay for these days of
+dread and nights of terror: the recovery of the girl from Ben's arms
+could not begin to recompense. Indeed, the girl's memory was
+increasingly hard to call up. The mind was kept busy elsewhere.
+
+"We're walking right into a death trap," he told Neilson one morning.
+"If he is here, what chance have we got; he'd have weeks to explore the
+country and lay an ambush for us. Besides, I believe he's dead. I don't
+believe a human being could have got down this far, alive."
+
+Chan too had found himself inclining toward this latter belief; without
+Ray's energy and ambition he had less to keep him fronted to the chase.
+Neilson, however, was not yet ready to turn back. He too feared Ben's
+attack, but already in the twilight of advancing years, he did not
+regard physical danger in the same light as these two younger men.
+Besides, he was made of different stuff. The safety of his daughter was
+the one remaining impulse in his life.
+
+And more and more, in the chill August nights, the talk about the camp
+fire took this trend: the folly of pushing on. It was better to turn
+back and wait his chances to strike again, Ray argued, than to walk
+bald-faced into death. Sometime Ben must return to the claim: a chance
+might come to lay him low. Besides, ever it seemed more probable that
+the river had claimed him.
+
+One rainy, disagreeable morning, as they camped beside the river near
+the mouth of a small creek, affairs reached their crisis. They had
+caught and saddled the horses; Ray was pulling tight the last hitch.
+Chan stood beside him, speaking in an undertone. When he had finished
+Ray cursed explosively in the silence.
+
+Neilson turned. He seemed to sense impending developments. "What now?"
+he asked.
+
+"I'm not going on, that's what it is," Ray replied. "Neilson, it's two
+against one--if you want to go on you can--but Ray and I are going back.
+That devil's dead. Beatrice is, too--sure as hell. If they ain't dead,
+he'll get us. I was a fool ever to start out. And that's final."
+
+"You're going back, eh--scared out!" Neilson commented coldly.
+
+"I'm going back--and don't say too much about being scared out, either."
+
+"And you too, Chan? You're against me, too?"
+
+Chan cursed. "I'd gone a week ago if it'd been me. We knew the way
+home, at least."
+
+The old man looked a long time into the river depths. Only too well he
+realized that their decision was final. But there was no answer, in the
+swirling depths, to the question that wracked his heart: whether or not
+in these spruce-clad hills his daughter still lived. It could only
+murmur and roar, without shaping words that human ears could grasp,
+never relieving the dreadful uncertainty that would be his life's curse
+from henceforth. He sighed, and the lines across his brow were dark and
+deep.
+
+"Then turn the horses around, you cowards," he answered. "I can't go on
+alone."
+
+For once neither Ray nor Chan had outward resentment for the epithet.
+Secretly they realized that old Neilson was to the wall at last, and
+like a grizzly at bay, it was safer not to molest him. Chan went down
+to the edge of the creek to water his saddle horse.
+
+But presently they heard him curse, in inordinate and startled
+amazement, as he gazed at some imprint in the mud of the shore. They saw
+the color sweep from his face. In an instant his two companions were
+beside him.
+
+Clear and unmistakable in the mud they saw the stale imprint of Ben's
+canoe as they had landed, and the tracks of both the man and the girl as
+they had turned into the forest.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVII
+
+The dawn that crept so gray and mysterious over the frosty green of
+spruce brought no hope to Beatrice, sitting beside the unconscious form
+of Ben in the cave fronting the glade. Rather it only brought the tragic
+truth home more clearly. Her love for him had manifested itself too late
+to give happiness to either of them: even now his life seemed to be
+stealing from her, into the valley of the shadow.
+
+She had watched beside him the whole night; and now she beheld a
+sinister change in his condition. He was still unconscious, but he no
+longer drew his breath at long intervals, softly and quietly. He was
+breathing in short, troubled gasps, and an ominous red glow was in his
+cheeks. She touched his brow, only to find it burning with fever.
+
+The fact was not hard to understand. The downpour of cold rain in which
+he had lain, wounded, for so many hours had drawn the life heat out of
+him, and some organic malady had combined with his bodily injuries to
+strike out his life. Her predicament was one of absolute helplessness.
+She was hundreds of miles--weary weeks of march--from medical attention,
+and she could neither leave him nor carry him. The wilderness forces,
+resenting the intrusion into their secret depths, had seemingly taken
+full vengeance at last. They had seemingly closed all gates to life and
+safety. They had set the trap with care; and the cruel jaws had sprung.
+
+She sat dry-eyed, incoherent prayers at her trembling lips. Mostly she
+did not touch the man, only sat at his bedside in the crude chair Ben
+had fashioned for her while the minutes rolled into hours and the hours
+sped the night away,--in tireless vigil, watching with lightless eyes.
+Once she bent and touched her lips to his.
+
+They were not cold now. They were warm with fever. But in the strange
+twilight-world of unconsciousness he could neither know of nor respond
+to her kiss. She patted down his covering and sometimes held his hard
+hands warm between hers, as if she could thus keep death from seizing
+them and leading him away. But her courage did not break again.
+
+The wan light showed her his drawn face; and just for an instant her
+arms pressed about it. "I won't give up, Ben," she promised. "I'll keep
+on fighting--to the last minute. And maybe I can pull you through."
+
+Beatrice meant exactly what she said: to the last minute. That did not
+mean to the gray hour when, by all dictate of common sense, further
+fight is useless. She meant that she would battle tirelessly as long as
+one pale spark glowed in his spirit, as long as his breath could cloud a
+glass. The best thing for her now, however, was rest. She was exhausted
+by the strain of the night; and she must save herself for the crisis
+that was sure to come. Ben was sleeping easily now; the instant when his
+life hung in the balance still impended.
+
+She built up the fire, put on water to heat, covered the man with added
+blankets, then lay down on Ben's cot. Soon she drifted into uneasy
+slumber, waking at intervals to serve her patient.
+
+The hours dragged by, the night sloped down to the forest; and the dawn
+followed the night. Ben's life still flickered, like a flame in the
+wind, in the twilight land between life and death.
+
+Yet little could she do for him these first few days, except, in her
+simple faith, to pray. Never an hour passed but that prayers were at her
+lips, childlike, direct, entreating prayers from her woman's heart. Of
+all her offices these were first: she had no doubt but that they counted
+most. She sat by his bedside, kept him covered with the warmest robes,
+hewed wood for the fire; but as yet he had never fully emerged from his
+unconsciousness. Would he slip away in the night without ever wakening?
+
+But in the morning of the fourth day he opened his eyes vividly,
+muttered, and fell immediately to sleep. He woke again at evening; and
+his moving lips conveyed a message. In response she brought him steaming
+grouse broth, administering it a spoonful at a time until he fell to
+sleep again.
+
+In the days that followed he was conscious to the degree that he could
+drink broth, yet never recognizing Beatrice nor seeming to know where he
+was. His fever still lingered, raging; yet in these days she began to
+notice a slow improvement in his condition. The healing agents of his
+body were hard at work; and doubt was removed that he had received
+mortal internal injuries. She had set his broken arm the best she could,
+holding the bones in place with splints; but in all likelihood it would
+have to be broken and set again when he reached the settlements. She
+began to notice the first cessation of his fever; although weeks of
+sickness yet remained, she believed that the crisis was past. Yet in
+spite of these hopeful signs, she was face to face with the most tragic
+situation of all. Their food was almost gone.
+
+It would be long weeks before Ben could hope for sufficient strength to
+start the journey down to the settlements, even if the way were open. As
+it was their only chance lay in the fall rains that would flood the
+Yuga and enable them to journey down to the native villages in their
+canoe. These rains would not fall till October. For all that she had
+hoarded their supplies to the last morsel, eating barely enough herself
+to sustain life in her body, the dread spectre of starvation waited just
+without the cave. She had realized perfectly that Ben could not hope to
+throw off the malady without nutritious food and she had not stinted
+with him; and now, just when she had begun to hope for his recovery, she
+shook the last precious cup of flour from the sack.
+
+The rice and sugar were gone, long since. The honey she had hoarded to
+give Ben--knowing its warming, nutritive value--not tasting a drop
+herself. Of all their stores only a few pieces of jerked caribou
+remained; she had used the rest to make rich broth for Ben, and there
+was no way under heaven whereby they might procure more.
+
+The rifle was broken. The last of the pistol shots was fired the day she
+had prepared the poisoned cup for Ben.
+
+Yet she still waged the fight, struggling with high courage and tireless
+resolution against the frightful odds that opposed her. Her faith was as
+of that nameless daughter of the Gileadite; and she could not yield. Not
+ambition, not hatred--not even such fire of fury as had been wakened in
+Wolf Darby's heart that first frenzied night on the hillside--could have
+been the impulse for such fortitude and sacrifice as hers. It was not
+one of these base passions--known in the full category to her rescuers
+who were even now bearing down upon her valley--that kept the steel in
+her thews and the steadfastness in her heart. She loved this man; her
+love for him was as wholesome and as steadfast as her own self; and the
+law of that love was to give him all she had.
+
+There were few witnesses to this infinite giving of hers. Ben himself
+still lingered in a strange stupor, remembering nothing, knowing neither
+the girl nor himself. Perhaps the wild things saw her desperate efforts
+to find food in the wilderness,--the long hours of weary searching for a
+handful of berries that gave such little nourishment to his weakened
+body, or for a few acorns stored for winter by bird or rodent. Sometimes
+a great-antlered moose--an easy trophy if the rifle had been
+unbroken--saw her searching for wocus like a lost thing in the tenacious
+mud of the marshes; and almost nightly a silent wolf, pausing in his
+hunting, gazed uneasily through the cavern maw. But mostly her long
+hours of service in the cave, the chill nights that she sat beside Ben's
+cot, the dreary mornings when she cooked her own scanty breakfast and
+took her uneasy rest, the endless labor of fire-mending so that the cave
+could be kept at an even heat went unobserved by mortal eyes. The
+healing forces of his body called for warmth and nourishment; but for
+all the might of her efforts she waged a losing fight.
+
+What little wocus she was able to find she made into bread for Ben; yet
+it was never enough to satisfy his body's craving. The only meat she had
+herself was the vapid flesh that had been previously boiled for Ben's
+broth; and now only a few pieces of the jerked meat remained. She
+herself tried to live on such plants as the wilderness yielded, and she
+soon began to notice the tragic loss of her own strength. Her eyes were
+hollow, preternaturally large; she experienced a strange, floating
+sensation, as if spirit and flesh were disassociated.
+
+Still Ben lingered in his mysterious stupor, unaware of what went on
+about him; but his fever was almost gone by now, and the first
+beginnings of strength returned to his thews. His mind had begun to
+grope vaguely for the key that would open the doors of his memory and
+remind him again of some great, half-forgotten task that still
+confronted him, some duty unperformed. Yet he could not quite seize it.
+The girl who worked about his cot was without his bourne of knowledge;
+her voice reached him as if from an infinite distance, and her words
+penetrated only to the outer edges of his consciousness. It was not
+strictly, however, a return of his amnesia. It was simply an outgrowth
+of delirium caused by his sickness and injuries, to be wholly dispelled
+as soon as he was wholly well.
+
+But now the real hour of crisis was at hand,--not from his illness, but
+from the depletion of their food supplies. Beatrice had spent a hard
+afternoon in the forest in search of roots and berries, and as she crept
+homeward, exhausted and almost empty-handed, the full, tragic truth was
+suddenly laid bare. Her own strength had waned. Without the miracle of a
+fresh food supply she could hardly keep on her feet another day. Plainly
+and simply, the wolf was at the door. His cruel fangs menaced not only
+her, but this stalwart man for whose life she had fought so hard.
+
+The fear of the obliterating darkness known to all the woods people
+pressed close upon her and appalled her. She loved life simply and
+primitively; and it was an unspeakable thing to lose at the end of such
+a battle. Out so far, surrounded by such endless, desolate wastes of
+gloomy forest, the Shadow was cold, inhospitable; and she was afraid to
+face it alone. If Ben would only waken and sustain her drooping spirit
+with his own! She was lonely and afraid, in the shadow of the inert
+spruce, under the gray sky.
+
+She could hardly summon strength for the evening's work of cutting fuel.
+The blade would not drive with its old force into the wood. The blaze
+itself burned dully; and she could not make it leap and crackle with its
+old cheer. And further misfortune was in store for her when she crept
+into the cave to prepare Ben's supper.
+
+A pack rat--one of those detested rodents known so well to all northern
+peoples--had carried off in her absence two of the three remaining
+sticks of jerked caribou. For a moment she gazed in unbelieving and
+speechless horror, then made a frenzied search in the darkened corners
+of the cabin.
+
+This was no little tragedy: the two sticks of condensed and concentrated
+protein might have kept Ben alive for a few days more. It was disaster,
+merciless and sweeping. And the brave heart of the girl seemed to break
+under the blow.
+
+The hot, bitter tears leaped forth; but she suppressed the bitter,
+hopeless sobs that clutched at her throat. She must not let Ben know of
+this catastrophe. Likely in his stupor he would not understand; yet she
+must not take the chance. She must nourish the spark of hope in his
+breast to the last hour. She walked to the mouth of the cave; and Famine
+itself stood close, waiting in the shadows. She gazed out into the
+gathering gloom.
+
+The tears blinded her eyes at first. Slowly the dark profile of the
+spruce against the gray sky penetrated to her consciousness: the somber
+beauty of the wilderness sky line that haunts the woodsman's dreams.
+With it came full realization of the might and the malevolency of these
+shadowed wilds she had battled so long. They had got her down at last;
+they had crushed her and beaten her, and had held up to scorn her
+sacrifice and her mortal strength. She knew the wild wood now: its
+savage power, its remorselessness, and yet, woods girl that she was, she
+could not forget its dark and moving beauty.
+
+The forest was silent to-night. Not a twig cracked or a branch rustled.
+It was hushed, breathless, darkly sinister. All at once her eyes peered
+and strained into the dusk.
+
+Far across the valley, beyond the beaver marsh and on the farther shore
+of the lake she saw a little glimmer of light through the rift in the
+trees. She dared not believe in its reality at first. Perhaps it was a
+trick of her imagination only, a hallucination born of her starvation,
+child of her heartfelt prayer. She looked away, then peered again. But,
+yes--a tiny gleam of yellow light twinkled through the gloom! It was
+real, _it was true_! A gleam of hope in the darkness of despair.
+
+Her rescuers had come. There could be no other explanation. She hastened
+into the cave, drew the blankets higher about Ben's shoulders, then
+crept out into the dusk. Half running, she hastened toward their distant
+camp fire.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVIII
+
+Beatrice's first impulse was to run at a breakneck pace down the ridge
+and about the lake into her father's camp, beseeching instant aid to the
+starving man in the cave. She wished that she had a firearm with which
+to signal to them and bring them at once to the cavern. And it was not
+until she had descended the ridge and stood at the edge of the beaver
+meadow that her delirious joy began to give way to serious, thought.
+
+She was brought to a halt first by the sight of the horses that had
+wandered about the long loop of the lake and were feeding in the rich
+grass of the meadow. The full moon rising in the east had cast a
+nebulous glow over the whole countryside by now; and she could make a
+hasty estimation of their numbers. It was evident at once that her
+father had not made the expedition alone. The large outfit implied a
+party of at least three,--indicating that Ray Brent and Chan Heminway
+had accompanied him.
+
+She had only fear and disdain for these two younger men; but surely they
+would not refuse aid to Ben. Yet perhaps it was best to proceed with
+some caution. These were her lover's enemies; if for no other reason
+than their rage at her own abduction they might be difficult to control.
+Her father, in all probability, would willingly show mercy to the
+helpless man in the cavern--particularly after she told him of Ben's
+consideration and kindness--but she put no faith in Ray and Chan. She
+knew them of old. Besides, she remembered there was a further
+consideration,--that of a gold claim.
+
+Could Ben have told her the truth when he had maintained that they would
+kill him on sight if he did not destroy them first? Was it true that he
+had waged the war in defense of his own rights? Weeks and months had
+passed since she had seen her father's face: perhaps her old control of
+him could no longer be relied upon. If indeed their ownership of a rich
+claim depended upon Ben's death, Ray and Chan could not be trusted at
+all.
+
+She resolved to proceed with the utmost caution. Abruptly she turned out
+of the beaver marsh, where the moonlight might reveal her, and followed
+close to the edge of the timber, a course that could not be visible from
+beyond the lake. She approached the lake at its far neck, then followed
+back along the margin clear to the edge of the woods in which the fire
+was built.
+
+In her years in the woods Beatrice had learned to stalk, and the
+knowledge was of value to her now. With never a misstep she took down a
+little game trail toward the camp fire. She was within fifty yards of it
+now--she could make out three dark figures seated in the circle of
+firelight. Walking softly but upright she pushed within ninety feet of
+the fire.
+
+Then she waited, in doubt as to her course. She was still too far
+distant to hear more than the murmur of their voices. If she could just
+get near enough to catch their words she could probably glean some idea
+of their attitude toward Ben. She pushed on nearer, through the dew-wet
+brush.
+
+Impelled by the excitement under which she advanced, her old agility of
+motion had for the moment returned to her; and she crept softly as a
+fawn between the young trees. One misstep, one rustling branch or
+crackling twig might give her away; but she took each step with
+consummate care, gently thrusting the tree branches from her path.
+
+Once a rodent stirred beneath her feet, and she froze--like a hunting
+wolf--in her tracks. One of the three men looked up, and she saw his
+face plainly through the low spruce boughs. And for a moment she thought
+that this was a stranger. It was with a distinct foreboding of disaster
+that she saw, on second glance, that the man was Ray Brent.
+
+She had never seen such change in human countenance in the space of a
+few months. She did not pause to analyze it. She only knew that his eyes
+were glittering and fixed; and that she herself was deeply,
+unexplainably appalled. The man cursed once, blasphemously, his face
+dusky and evil in the eerie firelight, but immediately turned back to
+his talk. Beatrice crept closer.
+
+Now she was near enough to catch an occasional word, but not discern
+their thoughts. It was evident, however, that their conversation was of
+Ben and herself,--the same topic they had discussed nights without end.
+She caught her own name; once Chan used an obscene epithet as he spoke
+of their enemy.
+
+Her instincts were true and infallible to-night; and she was ever more
+convinced of their deadly intentions toward Ben. It was not wise to
+announce herself yet. Perhaps she would have to rely upon a course other
+than a direct appeal for aid. Now her keen eyes could see the whole
+camp: the three seated figures of the men, their rifles leaning near
+them, their supplies spread out about the fire.
+
+At one side, quite to the edge of the firelight, she saw a kyack--one of
+those square boxes that are hung on a pack saddle--which seemed to be
+heaped with jerked caribou or moose flesh. For the time of a breath she
+could not take her eyes from it. It was food--food in plenty to sustain
+Ben through his illness and the remaining weeks of their exile--and her
+eyes moistened and her hands trembled at the sight. She had been taught
+the meaning of famine, these last, bitter days. In reality she was now
+in the first stage of starvation, experiencing the first, vague
+hallucinations, the sense of incorporeality, the ever-declining
+strength, the constant yearning that is nothing but the vitals'
+submerged demand for food. The contents of the kyack meant _life_ to
+herself and to Ben,--deliverance and safety when all seemed lost.
+
+A daughter of the cities far to the south--even a child of
+poverty--rarely could have understood the unutterable craving that
+overswept her at the sight of this simple food. It was unadorned,
+unaccompanied by the delicacies that most human beings have come to look
+upon as essentials and to expect with every meal: it was only animal
+flesh dried in the smoke and the sun. It not only attracted her
+physically; but in that moment it possessed real objective beauty for
+her; as it would have possessed for the most cultivated esthete that
+might be standing in her place. This girl was down to the most stern
+realities, and life and death hung in the balance.
+
+She went on her hands and knees, creeping nearer. Still she did not make
+the slightest false motion, creeping with an uncanny silence in the
+under shrubbery. And now the words came plain.
+
+"But we must be near," Chan was saying. "They can't be more than a mile
+or so from here. We'll find 'em in the morning--"
+
+"If he doesn't find us first and shoot up our camp," Ray replied. "I
+wish we'd built our fire further into the woods. Here we've looked all
+day without even finding a track except those tracks in the mud."
+
+"They might be beyond the marsh," Neilson suggested.
+
+"But Chan went over that way and didn't find a trace," Ray objected.
+"But just the same--we'll make a real search to-morrow. I believe we'll
+find the devil. And then--we can leave this hellish country and go back
+in peace--if we don't want to wait for the flood."
+
+Beatrice's eyes were on his face, wondering what growth of wickedness,
+what degeneracy had so filled his cruel eyes with light and stamped his
+face with evil. This was the man to whom she must look for mercy. Ben's
+life, if she led the three men to the cave, would be in his hands. She
+sensed from his authoritative tone that her father's control over him
+was largely broken. She hovered, terrified and motionless, in her
+covert.
+
+Ray reached for his rifle, glancing at the sights and drawing the lever
+back far enough to see the brass of its shells. Chan's lean face was
+drawn with a cruel glee.
+
+"You can't keep your hands off that gun, Ray," he said. "You sure are
+gettin' anxious."
+
+"I won't use it on him," Ray replied, slowly and carefully. "It's too
+good for him--except maybe the stock. He didn't lead me clear out here
+just to see him puff out and blow up in a minute with a rifle ball
+through his head. Just the same I want the gun near me, all the time."
+
+The two men looked at him, sardonic-eyed; and both of them seemed to
+understand fully what he meant. They seemed to catch more from the slow
+tones, so full of lust and frenzy that they seemed to drop from his
+lips in an ugly monotone, than they did from the words themselves. They
+took a certain grim amusement in these quirks of abnormal depravity that
+had begun to manifest themselves in Ray. The man's fingers were wide
+spread as he spoke, and his lip twitched twice, sharply, when he had
+finished.
+
+The words came clear and distinct to the listening girl. She tried to
+take them literally--that Ray would not shoot Ben! _"It's too good for
+him--except maybe the stock!"_ Did he mean _that_ too! Was there any
+possible meaning in the world other than that he was planning some
+unearthly, more terrible fate for the man she loved! She would not yet
+yield to the dreadful truth, yet even now terror was clutching at her
+throat, strangling her; and the cold drops were beading her brow. Still
+the dark drama of the fireside continued before her eyes.
+
+Chan suddenly turned to Neilson, evidently imbued with Ray's fervor.
+"What do you think of that, old man?" he asked menacingly. Thus Chan,
+too, had escaped from Neilson's dominance: plainly Ray was his idol now.
+It was also plain that he recognized attributes of mercy and decency in
+his grizzled leader that might interfere with his own and his
+companion's plans. "What's worrying me--whether you're goin' to join in
+on the sport when we catch the weasel!"
+
+Sport! The word was more terrible to Beatrice than the vilest oath he
+had used to emphasize it. She crouched, shivering. Watching intently,
+she saw Ray look up, too, waiting for the reply; and her father, sensing
+his lost dominance, bowed his head.
+
+"You could hardly expect me to let him off easy--seeing what he did to
+my daughter--"
+
+"What he done to your daughter ain't all--I don't care if he treated her
+like a queen of the realm all the time," Ray interrupted harshly. "That
+makes no difference to neither me nor Chan. The main thing is--he
+brought us out here, away from the claim--and gave us months of the
+worst hell I ever hope to spend. I guess you ain't forgotten what Chan
+found out in Snowy Gulch--that the claim's recorded--in old Hiram's
+name. This Darby's got a letter in his pocket from Hiram's brother that
+would stand in any court. We've got to get that first. If Darby was an
+angel I'd mash him under my heel just the same; we've gone too far to
+start crawfishing. Just let me see him tied up in front of me--"
+
+Beatrice did not linger to hear more. She had her answer: only in Ben's
+continued concealment lay the least hope of his salvation. These wolves
+about the fire meant what they said. But already her plans were shaping;
+and now she saw the light.
+
+In the kyack of venison lay her own and her lover's safety: it contained
+enough nutritious food to sustain them until the fall rains could swell
+the Yuga and enable them to escape down to the Indian encampment. Her
+mind was swift and keen as never before: swiftly she perfected the last
+detail of her plan. The canoe, due to Ben's foresight, was securely
+hidden in a maze of tall reeds on the lake shore: they were certain to
+overlook it. The cavern, however, was almost certain to be discovered in
+the next day's search. They must make their escape to-night.
+
+Ben, though terribly weakened, would be able to walk a short distance
+with her help. They could slip into the deepest forest, concealing
+themselves in the coverts until the three men had given up the search
+and gone away. She would take their robes and blankets to keep them
+warm; a camp fire would of course reveal their hiding place. The work
+could easily be accomplished in the midnight shadows: deliverance,
+salvation, life itself depended on the tide of fate in the next few
+hours.
+
+She intended to steal the kyack of dried meat without which Ben and
+herself could not live. She crept back farther into the underbrush; then
+waited, scarcely breathing, while the fire died down. Already the three
+men were preparing to go to their bunks. Chan had already lain down; her
+father was removing his coat and boots. Ray, however, still sat in the
+firelight.
+
+The moments passed. Would he never rise and go? The fire, however, was
+dying: its circle of ruddy light ever drew inward. The kyack was quite
+in the shadow now, yet she dared not attempt its theft until the three
+men were asleep. She waited, thrilling with excitement.
+
+Chan and Neilson were seemingly asleep, and now Ray was knocking the
+ashes from his pipe. He yawned, stretching wide his arms; then, as if
+held by some intriguing thought, sat almost motionless, gazing into the
+graying coals. Presently Beatrice heard him curse, softly, in the
+shadows.
+
+He got up, and removing his outer coat, rolled in his blankets. The
+night hours began their mystic march across the face of the wilderness.
+
+Now was the time to act. As far as she could tell, the three men were
+deeply asleep: at least the likelihood would be as great as at any time
+later in the night. The fire was a heap of gray ashes except for its
+red-hot center: the kyack was in gloom. Very softly she crept through
+the thickets, meanwhile encircling the dying fire, and came up behind
+it.
+
+Now it was almost in reach: now her hands were at its loops. She started
+to lift it in her arms.
+
+But disaster still dogged her trail. Ray Brent had been too wary of
+attack, to-night, to sink easily into deep slumber. He heard the soft
+movement as Beatrice lifted the heavy canvas bag off the ground; and
+with a startled oath sprang to his feet.
+
+He leaped like a panther. "Who's there?" he cried.
+
+Sensing immediate discovery the girl placed all her hope in flight.
+Perhaps yet she could lose her pursuers in the darkness. Still trying to
+hold the kyack of food that meant life to Ben, she turned and darted
+into the shadows.
+
+Like a wolf Ray sped after her. The moonlight showed her fleeing figure
+in the trees, and shouting aloud he sprang through the coverts to
+intercept her flight. The chase was of short duration thereafter.
+Emburdened by the heavy box she could not watch her step; and a
+protruding root caught cruelly at her ankle. She was hurled with
+stunning force to the ground.
+
+Desperate and intent, but in realization of impending triumph, Ray's
+strong arms went about her.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIX
+
+For the second time in his life Ray Brent felt the sting of Beatrice's
+strong hand against his face. In the desperation of fear she had smote
+him with all her force. His arms withdrew quickly from about her; and
+her wide, disdainful eyes beheld a sinister change in his expression.
+The moonlight was in his eyes, silver-white; and they seemed actually to
+redden with fury, and again she saw that queer, ghastly twitching at the
+corner of his lips. The girl's defiance was broken with that one blow.
+She dropped her head, then walked past him into the presence of her
+father.
+
+Neilson and Chan were on their feet now, and they regarded her in the
+utter silence of amazement. Breathing fast, Ray came behind her.
+
+"Build up the fire, Chan," he said in a strange, grim voice. "We want to
+see what we've caught."
+
+Obediently Chan kicked the coals from under the ashes, and began to heap
+on broken pieces of wood. The sticks smoked, then a little tongue of
+yellow flame crept about the fuel. But still the emburdened silence
+continued--the white-faced girl in the ring of silent, watching men.
+
+Slowly the fire's glow crept out to her, revealing--even better than the
+bright moonlight--her wide, frightened eyes and the dark, speculative
+faces of the men. Then Ray spoke sharply in his place.
+
+"Well, why don't you question her?" he demanded of Neilson. "I suppose
+you know what she was doing. She was trying to steal food. It looks to
+me like she's gone over to the opposite camp."
+
+Her father sighed, a peculiar sound that seemed to come from above the
+tree tops, as if fast-flying waterfowl were passing overhead. "Is that
+so, daughter?" he asked simply.
+
+"I was trying to take some of your food--to Ben," Beatrice replied
+softly. "He's in need of it."
+
+"You see, they're on intimate terms," Ray suggested viciously. "Ben was
+in need of food--so she came here to steal it."
+
+But Neilson acted as if he had not heard. "Why didn't you speak to
+us--and tell us you were safe?" he asked. "We've come all the way here
+to find you."
+
+"Perhaps _you_ did. If you had been here alone, I would have told you.
+But Ray and Chan came all the way here to find Ben. I heard what they
+said--back there in the brush. They intend to kill him when they find
+him. I--I didn't want him killed."
+
+Her father stared at her from under his bushy brows. "After carrying you
+from your home--taking you into danger and keeping you a prisoner--you
+still want to protect him?"
+
+The girl nodded. "And I want you to protect him, too," she said.
+"Against these men." Suddenly she moved forward in earnest appeal. "Oh,
+Father--I want you to save him. He's never touched me--he's treated me
+with every respect--done everything he could for me. When he was injured
+he told me to go back--to take what little food there was, and go
+back--"
+
+"I can take it, then, that you're out of food?" Ray asked.
+
+"We're starving--and Ben's sick. Father, I make this one appeal--if your
+love for me isn't all gone, you'll grant it. I love him. You might as
+well know that now, as later. I want you to save the man your daughter
+loves."
+
+Chan cursed in the gloom, his lean face darkened; but Neilson made no
+answer. Ray in his place sharply inhaled; but the sullen glow in his
+eyes snapped into a flame.
+
+If Beatrice had glanced at Ray, she would have ceased her appeal and
+trusted everything to the doubtful mercy of flight,--into the gloom of
+the forest. As it was, she did not fully comprehend the cruel lust, like
+flame, that sped through his veins. She would have hoped for no mercy if
+she could have seen the strange, black surge of wrath in his face.
+
+"He has been kind to me--and he was in the right, not in the wrong. I
+know about the claim-jumping. Father, I want you to stand between him
+and these men--help him--and give him food. I didn't speak to you
+because I was afraid for him--afraid you'd kill him or do some other
+awful thing to him--"
+
+Slowly her father shook his head. "But I can't save him now. He brought
+this on himself."
+
+"Remember, he was in the right," the girl pleaded brokenly. "You
+won't--you couldn't be a partner to murder. That's all it would
+be--murder--brutal, terrible, cold-blooded murder--if you kill him
+without a fight. It couldn't be in defense of me--I tell you he hasn't
+injured me--but was always kind to me. It would be just to take that
+letter away from him--"
+
+"So he has the letter, has he?" Ray interrupted. He smiled grimly, and
+his tone was again flat and strained. "And he's sick--and starving. It
+isn't for your father to say, Beatrice, what's to be done with Ben.
+There's three of us here, and he's just one. Don't go interfering with
+what doesn't concern you, either--about the claim. You take us where he
+is, and we'll decide what to do with him."
+
+Her eyes went to his face; and her lips closed tight. Here was one
+thing, on this mortal earth, that she must not tell. Perhaps, by the
+mercy of heaven, they would not find the cave, hidden as it was at the
+edge of the little glade. The forests were boundless; perhaps they would
+miss the place in their search. She straightened, scarcely perceptibly.
+
+"Yes, tell us where he is," her father urged. "That's the first thing.
+We'll find him, anyway, in the morning."
+
+The girl shook her head. She knew now that even if they promised mercy
+she must not reveal Ben's whereabouts. Their rage and cruelty would not
+be stayed for a spoken promise. The only card she had left, her one
+last, feeble hope of preserving Ben's life, lay in her continued
+silence. Ray's foul-nailed, eager hands could claw her lips apart, but
+he could not make her speak.
+
+"I won't tell you," she answered at last, more clearly than she had
+spoken since her capture. "You said a few minutes ago I had gone
+over--to the opposite camp. I am, from now on. He was in the right, and
+he gave up his fight against you long ago. Now I want to go."
+
+Fearing that Neilson might show mercy, Ray leaped in front of her. "You
+don't go yet awhile," he told her grimly. "I've got a few minutes'
+business with you yet. I tell you that we'll find him, if we have to
+search all year. And he'll have twice the chance of getting out alive if
+you tell us where he is."
+
+She looked into his face, and she knew what that chance was. Her eyelids
+dropped halfway, and she shook her head. "I'd die first," she answered.
+
+"It never occurred to you, did it, that there's ways of _making_ people
+tell things." He suddenly whirled, with drawn lips, to her father.
+"Neilson, is there any reason for showing any further consideration to
+this wench of yours? She's betrayed us--gone over to the opposite
+camp--lived for weeks, willing, with Ben. I for one am never going to
+see her leave this camp till she tells us where he is. I'm tired of
+talking and waiting. I'm going to get that paper away from him, and I'm
+going to smash his heart with my heel. We've almost won out--and I'm
+going to go the rest of the way."
+
+Neilson straightened, his eyes steely and bright under his grizzled
+brows. Only too well he knew that this was the test. Affairs were at
+their crisis at last. But in this final moment his love for his daughter
+swept back to him in all its unmeasured fullness,--and when all was said
+and done it was the first, the mightiest impulse in his life. Ben had
+been kind to her, and she loved him; and all at once he knew that he
+could not yield him or her to the mercy of this black-hearted man before
+him.
+
+He had lived an iniquitous life; he was inured to all except the worst
+forms of wickedness; but for the moment--in love of his daughter--he
+stood redeemed. He was on the right side at last. His hand drew back,
+and his face was like iron.
+
+"Shut that foul mouth!" he cautioned, with a curious, deadly evenness of
+tone. "I haven't surrendered yet to you two wolves. If one of you dares
+to lay a hand on Beatrice, I'll kill him where he stands."
+
+Even as he spoke his thought went to his rifle, leaning against a dead
+log ten feet away. This was the moment of test: the jealousy and rivalry
+and hatred between himself and Ray had reached the crisis. And the
+spirit of murder, terrible past any demon of the Pit, came stalking from
+the savage forest into the ruddy firelight.
+
+Ray leered, his muscles bunching. "And I say to you, you're a dirty
+traitor too," he answered. "She ain't your daughter any more. She's Ben
+Darby's squaw. She's not fit for a white man to touch any more, for all
+her lies. You say one word and you'll get it too."
+
+And at that instant the speeding pace of time seemed to halt, showing
+this accursed scene, so savage and terrible in the eerie light of the
+camp fire, at the edge of the haunted, breathless darkness, in vivid and
+ghastly detail. Neilson leaped forward with all his power; and if his
+blow had gone home, Ray would have been shattered beneath it like a tree
+in the lightning blast. But Ray's arms were incredibly swift, and his
+rifle leaped in his hands.
+
+The barrel gleamed. The roar reechoed in the silence. Neilson's head
+bowed strangely; and for a moment he stood swaying, a ghastly blankness
+on his face; then pitched forward in the dew-wet grass.
+
+Beatrice's last defense had fallen, seriously wounded; and Ray's arm
+seized her as, screaming, she tried to flee.
+
+
+
+
+XL
+
+The shot that wounded Jeffery Neilson carried far through the forest
+aisles, reëchoing against the hills, and arresting, for one breathless
+moment, all the business of the wilderness. The feeding caribou swung
+his horns and tried to catch the scent; the moose, grubbing for water
+roots in the lake bottom, lifted his grotesque head and stood like a
+form in black iron. It came clear as a voice to the cavern where Ben
+lay.
+
+The man started violently in his cot. His entire nervous system seemed
+to react. Then there ensued a curious state in which his physical
+functions seemed to cease,--his heart motionless in his breast, his body
+tensely rigid, his breath held. There was an infinite straining and
+travail in his mind.
+
+The truth was that the sound acted much as a powerful stimulant to his
+retarded nervous forces. It was the one thing his resting nerve-system
+needed; it was as if chemicals were in suspension in a crucible, and at
+a slight jar of the glass they made mysterious union and expelled a
+precipitation. Almost instantly he recognized the sound that had reached
+him, with a clear and unmistakable recognition such as he had not
+experienced since the night of the accident, as the report of a rifle.
+His mind gave a great leap and remembered its familiar world.
+
+A rifle--probably discharged by Beatrice in a hunt after big game. It
+was true that their meat supply was low; he remembered now. Yet it was
+curious that she should be hunting after dark. The gloom was deep at
+the cavern mouth. Besides, he had always kept his rifle from her,
+fearing that she might turn it against him. He looked about him, trying
+to locate the source of the flood of light on the cavern floor. It was
+the moon, and it showed that the girl was gone. He started to sit up.
+
+But his left arm did not react just properly to the command of his
+brain. It impeded him, and its old strength was impaired. For a moment
+more he lay quiet, deep in thought. Of course--he had been injured by
+the falling tree. He remembered clearly, now. And the rifle had been
+broken.
+
+The only possible explanation for the shot was that a rifle had been
+fired by some invader in their valley--in all probability Neilson or one
+of his men. Beatrice's absence would also indicate this fact: perhaps
+she had already joined her father and was on her way back to Snowy Gulch
+with him. In that case, why had he himself been spared?
+
+He looked out of the door of the cavern, trying to get some idea of the
+lateness of the hour. The very quality of the darkness indicated that
+the night was far advanced. Neilson would not be hunting game at this
+hour. Was his own war--planned long ago--even now being waged in ways
+beyond his ken?
+
+His old concern for Beatrice swept through him. With considerable
+difficulty he got to his feet, then holding on to the wail, guided
+himself to the shelf where they ordinarily kept their little store of
+matches. He scratched one of them against the wall.
+
+In the flaring light his eyes made a swift but careful appraisal of his
+surroundings. The girl's cot had not been slept in; and to his great
+amazement he saw that their food supplies were spent. Still holding to
+the wall he walked to the cave mouth.
+
+Instantly his keen eyes saw the far-off gleam of the camp fire on the
+distant margin of the lake. For all that the hour was late, it burned
+high and bright. He watched it, vaguely conscious of the insidious
+advance of a ghastly fear. Beatrice was his ally now--if these weeks had
+sent home one fact to him it was this--and her absence might easily
+indicate that she was helpless in the enemy's hands. The thing suggested
+ugly possibilities. Yet he could not aid her. He could scarcely walk;
+even the knife that he wore at his belt was missing, probably carried by
+Beatrice when she gathered roots in the woods.
+
+But presently all questions as to his course were settled for him. His
+straining ear caught the faintest, almost imperceptible vibration in the
+air--a soundwave so dim and obscure that it seemed impossible that the
+human mind could interpret it--but Ben recognized it in a flash. In some
+great trouble and horror, in the sullen light of that distant camp fire,
+Beatrice had screamed for aid.
+
+Only by the grace of the Red Gods had he heard the sound at all. Except
+for the fact that the half-mile intervening was as still as death, and
+that half the way the sound sped over water, he couldn't have hoped to
+perceive it. If the wind had blown elsewhere than straight toward him
+from the enemy camp, or if his marvelous sense of hearing had been less
+acute, the result would have been the same; and there could have been no
+answer from this dark man at the cave mouth who stood so tense and
+still. Finally, by instinct as much as by conscious intelligence, he
+identified the sound, marked it as a reality rather than a fancy, and
+read the tragic need behind it. Swiftly he started down the glade toward
+her.
+
+Yet in a moment he knew that unless he conserved his strength he could
+not hope to make a fourth of the distance. At the first steps he swayed,
+half staggering. He had paid the price for his weeks of illness and his
+injuries. If he had been in a sick room, under a physician's care, he
+would have believed it impossible to walk unsupported across the room.
+But need is the mother of strength, and this was the test. Besides, he
+had had several days of convalescence that had put back into his sinews
+a measure of his mighty strength. Mostly he progressed by holding on to
+the trees, pulling himself forward step by step.
+
+Likely he would come too late to change the girl's fate. Yet even now he
+knew he must not turn back. If the penalty were death, there must be no
+hesitancy in him; he must not withhold one step.
+
+But it was a losing fight. The hill itself seemed endless; a hundred
+cruel yards of marsh must be traversed before ever he reached the
+nearest point by the lake. The enemy camp from where Beatrice had called
+to him lay on the far side of the lake, a distance of a full mile if he
+followed around the curving shore. And black and bitter self-hatred
+swept like fire through him when he realized that he could not possibly
+keep on his feet for so long a way.
+
+Was this all he had fought for--surging upward through these long, weary
+weeks out of the shadow of death--only to fall dead on the trail in the
+moment of Beatrice's need? Instantly he knew that nothing in his life,
+no other desire or dream, had ever meant as much to him as this: that he
+might reach her side in time. Even his desire for vengeance, in that
+twilight madness, like Roland's, that had shaped his destiny, had been
+wavering and feeble compared to this. And no moment of his existence had
+ever been so dark, so bereft of the last, dim star of hope that lights
+men's way in the deep night of despair.
+
+He gave no thought to the fact of his own helplessness against three
+armed men in case he did succeed in reaching their camp. The point could
+not possibly be considered. The imperious instincts that forced him on
+simply could not take it into reckoning. He knew only he must reach her
+side and put in her service all that he had.
+
+He fell again and again as he tried to make headway in the marsh. But
+always he forced himself up and on. Only too plain he saw that the time
+was even now upon him when he could no longer keep his feet at all. But
+still he plunged on, and with tragically slow encroachments the shore
+line drew up to him.
+
+But he could not go on. The fire itself was hardly a quarter of a mile
+distant, directly across the lake, but to follow the long shore was an
+insuperable mile. Already his leg muscles were failing him, refusing to
+the respond to the impulse of his nerves. Yet it might be that if he
+could make himself heard his enemies would leave the girl for a moment,
+at least--give her an instant's respite--while they came and dispatched
+his own life. Whatever they were doing to her, there in that ring of
+firelight, might be stayed for a moment, at least.
+
+But at that instant he remembered the canoe. He had always kept it
+hidden in a little thicket of tall reeds,--if only the girl had not
+removed it from its place in his weeks of sickness! He plunged down into
+the tall tules. Yes, the boat was still in place.
+
+It took all the strength of his weakened body to push it out from the
+reeds into the water. Then he seized the long pole they had sometimes
+used to propel themselves over the lake. Except for his injured arm,
+the paddle would have been better--he could have made better time and
+escaped the danger of being stranded in deep water--but he doubted that
+he could handle it with his faltering arm. He pushed off, putting most
+of the strain on his uninjured right arm.
+
+The canoe was strongly but lightly made, so that it could be portaged
+with greatest possible ease; and his strokes, though feeble, propelled
+it slowly through the water. The great, white full moon, beloved of long
+ago, looked down from above the tall, dark heads of the spruce and
+changed the little water-body into a miracle of burnished silver. In its
+light Ben's face showed pale, but with a curious, calm strength.
+
+The lake seemed untouched by the faint breath of wind that blew from the
+distant shore. The waters lay quiet, and the trout beneath saw the black
+shadow of the canoe as it passed. A cow moose and her calf sprang up the
+bank with a splash, frightened by the poling figure in the stern. And on
+the far shore, clear where the lake had its outlet in a small river,
+even more keen wilderness eyes might have beheld the black, moving dot
+that was the craft. But the distance was too far and the wind was wrong
+for the keen mind behind the eyes to make any sort of an interpretation.
+
+It might have been that Fenris the wolf, running with a female and two
+younger males that he had mastered that long-ago night on the ridge,
+paused in his hunting to watch and wonder. But his wild brute thoughts
+were not under the bondage of memory to-night; his savage heart was
+thrilled and full; and more than likely he did not even turn his head.
+
+Ray and Chan, standing beside their prisoner in their grisly camp on the
+opposite shore, might have beheld Ben's approach if weightier matters
+had not occupied their minds. They had only to walk to the edge of the
+firelight and stare down through a rift in the trees to see him. But
+they stood with the angry glare revealing a strange and sinister
+intentness in their drawn faces and ominous speculations in their evil
+eyes.
+
+
+
+
+XLI
+
+It was a wilderness moon that rose over the spruce to-night,--white as
+new silver, incredibly large, inscrutably mysterious. The winds had
+whisked away the last pale cloud that might have dimmed its glory, and
+its light poured down with equal bounty on peak and hill, forest and
+yellow marsh. The heavy woods partook most deeply of its enchantment:
+tall, stately trees pale and nebulous as if with silver frost, each
+little stream dancing and shimmering in its light, every glade laid with
+a fairy tapestry, every shadow dreadful and black in contrast. The
+wilderness breathed and shivered as if swept with passion.
+
+The wilderness moon is the moon of desire; and all this great space of
+silence seemed to respond. It seemed to throb, like one living entity,
+as if in longing for something lost long ago--a half-forgotten
+happiness, a glory and a triumph that were gone never to return. No
+creatures that followed the woods trails were dull and flat to-night.
+They were all swept with mystery, knowing vague longings or fierce
+desires. It was the harvest moon; but here it did not light the fields
+so that men might harvest grain. Rather it illumined the hunting trails
+so that the beasts of prey might find relief from the wild lusts and
+seething ferment that was in their veins. But mostly the forest mood was
+disconsolate, rather than savage, to-night. The wild geese on the lake
+called their weird and plaintive cries, their strange complaints that no
+man understands; the loons laughed in insane despair; and the coyotes
+on the ridge wailed out the pain of living and the vague longings of
+their wild hearts.
+
+In the glory of that moon Fenris the wolf knew the same, resistless
+longings that so many times before had turned him from the game trails.
+There was something here that was unutterably dear to him,--something
+that drew him, called him like a voice, and he could not turn aside.
+Because he was a beast, he likely did not know the force that was
+drawing him again along the lake shore. Yet the souls of the lower
+creatures no man knows; and perhaps he had conscious longings,
+profoundly intense, for a moment's touch of a strong hand on his
+shoulder,--one never-to-be-forgotten caress from a certain god that had
+gone to a cave to live. It was true that his wild instincts, ever more
+in dominance these past weeks, would likely halt him at the cavern maw,
+permitting no intimacy other than to ascertain that all was well. They
+were too strong ever to brook man's control again. The moon was a moon
+of desire, but only because it was also the moon of memory,--and perhaps
+memories, stirring and exalting, were sweeping through him. Straight as
+an arrow he turned toward the cave.
+
+His followers--the gaunt female and two younger males, the structure
+about which the winter pack would form--hesitated at first. They had no
+commanding memories of the cavern on the far side of the lake. Yet
+Fenris was their leader; by the deep-lying laws of the pack they must
+follow where he led. They could not decoy him into the trails of game.
+As ever they sped swiftly, silently after him.
+
+In this forest of desires Ben knew but one,--that he might yet be of aid
+to Beatrice. But he knew in his heart that it was a vain hope. He was
+within a hundred yards of Ray's camp now, but the struggle to reach the
+lake and the poling across its waters had brought him seemingly to the
+absolute limit of his strength, clear to the brink of utter exhaustion.
+Never in his life before had he known the full meaning of
+fatigue,--fatigue that was like a paralysis, blunting the mechanism of
+the brain, burning like a slow fire in his muscles, poisoning the vital
+fluids of his nerves. Stroke after stroke, never ceasing!--The flame was
+high, crackling--just before him. Through a rift in the trees he could
+see the outline of two men and the slim form of the girl. Just a few
+yards more.
+
+But of all the desires that the moon invoked in the woods people there
+were none so unredeemed, so wicked and cruel as this that slowly wakened
+in the evil hearts of these two degenerate men, Beatrice's captors. She
+sensed it only vaguely at first. All the disasters that had fallen upon
+her had not taught her to accept such a thing as this: surely this would
+be spared her, at least. There is a kindly blind spot in the brain that
+often will not let the ugly truth go home.
+
+For a strange, still moment Ray's face seemed devoid of all expression.
+It was flat and lifeless as dark clay. Then Beatrice felt the insult of
+his quickening gaze.
+
+"Put a rope around her wrists, Chan," he said. "We don't want to take
+chances on her getting away."
+
+He spoke slowly, rather flatly. There was nothing that her senses could
+seize upon--either in his face or voice to justify the swift,
+strangling, killing horror that came upon her. He stood simply gazing,
+and as she met his gaze her lips parted and drew back in a grimace of
+terror; thus they stood until the blood began to leap fast in Chan's
+veins. She needed no further disillusionment. Chan spoke behind her, a
+startled oath cut off short, and she felt him moving swiftly toward her.
+It was her last instant of respite; and her muscle set and drew for a
+final, desperate attempt at self-defense.
+
+She wore Ben's knife at her belt, and her hand sped toward it. But the
+motion, fast as it was, came too late. Chan saw it; and leaping swiftly,
+his arms went about her and pinned her own arms to her sides.
+
+She tried in vain to fight her way out of his grasp. She writhed,
+screaming; and in the frenzy of her fear she all but succeeded in
+hurling him off. She managed to draw the knife clear of the sheath, yet
+she couldn't raise her arm to strike. Ray was aiding his confederate
+now; and in an instant more she was helpless.
+
+Their drawn faces bent close to hers. She felt their hot hands as they
+drew her wrists in front of her and fastened them with a rope. "Not too
+tight, Chan," Ray advised. "We don't want her to get uncomfortable
+before we're done with her. Don't tie her ankles; she can't run through
+the brush with her arms tied.--Now give her a moment to breathe."
+
+They stood on each side of her, regarding her with secret, growing
+excitement. Already they had descended too far to know pity for this
+girl. The wide-open eyes, so dark with terror and in contrast with the
+stark paleness of her face, the lips that trembled so piteously, the
+slender, girlish figure so helpless to their depraved desires moved them
+not at all.
+
+The scene was one of never-to-be-forgotten vividness. The tenderness and
+mercy, most of all the restraint that has become manifest in men in
+these centuries since they have left their forest lairs to live in
+permanent abodes, had no place here. About them ringed the primeval
+forest, ensilvered by the moon; the fire crackled with a dread ferocity;
+and at the edge of the thickets the motionless form of Jeffery Neilson
+lay with face buried in the soft, summer grass. All was silent and
+motionless, except the fierce crackling of the fire; except a curious,
+intermittent, upward twitching of the corner of Ray's lips.
+
+"So you and Ben are bunkies now, are you?" he asked slowly, without
+emphasis.
+
+But the girl made no reply, only gazing at him with starting eyes.
+
+"A traitor to us, and Ben's squaw!" He turned fiercely to Chan. "I guess
+that gives us right to do what we want to with her. And now she can yell
+if she wants to for her lover to come and save her."
+
+She did not even try to buy their mercy by informing them where they
+might find Ben. Only too well she knew that their dreadful intentions
+could not be turned aside: she would only sacrifice Ben without aiding
+herself. Ray moved toward her, his eyes deeply sunken, the pupils
+abnormally enlarged.
+
+"You haven't lost all your looks," he told her breathlessly. "That mouth
+is still pretty enough to kiss. And I guess you won't slap--this time--"
+
+He drew her toward him, his dark face lowering toward hers. She
+struggled, trying to wrench away from him. Helpless and alone, the
+moment of final horror was at hand. In this last instant her whole being
+leaped again to Ben,--the man whose strength had been her fort
+throughout all their first weeks in the wilds, but whom she had left
+helpless and sick in the distant cavern. Yet even now he would rise and
+come to her if he knew of her peril. Her voice rose shrilly to a scream.
+"Ben--help me!"
+
+And Ray's hands fell from her shoulders as he heard the incredible
+answer from the shore of the lake. The brush rustled and cracked: there
+was a strange sound of a heavy footfall,--slow, unsteady, but
+approaching them as certain as the speeding stars approach their
+mysterious destinations in the far reaches of the sky. Ray
+straightened, staring; Chan stood as if frozen, his hands half-raised,
+his eyes wide open.
+
+"I'm coming, Beatrice," some one said in the coverts. Her cries, uttered
+when her father fell, had not gone unheard. In the last stages of
+exhaustion, deathly pale yet with a face of iron, Ben came reeling
+toward them out of the moonlight.
+
+
+
+
+XLII
+
+Ben walked quietly into the circle of firelight and stood at Beatrice's
+side. But while Ray and Chan gazed at him as if he were a spectre from
+the grave, Beatrice's only impulse was one of immeasurable and
+unspeakable thankfulness. No fate on earth was so dreadful but that it
+would be somewhat alleviated by the fact of his presence: just the sight
+of him, standing beside her, put her in some vague way out of Ray's
+power to harm. Exhausted, reeling, he was still the prop of her life and
+hope.
+
+"Here I am," he said quietly. "The letter's in my pocket. Do what you
+want with me--but let Beatrice go."
+
+His words brought Ray to himself in some degree at least. The ridiculous
+fear of the moment before speedily passed away. Why, the man was
+exhausted--helpless in their hands--and the letter was in his pocket. It
+meant _triumph_--nothing else. All Ray's aims had been attained. With
+Ben's death the claim, a fourth of which had been his motive when he had
+slain Ezram, would pass entirely to him,--except for such share as he
+would have to give Chan. His star of fortune was in the sky. It was his
+moment of glory,--long-awaited but enrapturing him at last.
+
+Neilson lay seriously wounded, perhaps dead by now. Whatever his
+injuries, he would not go back with them to share in the gold of the
+claim. The girl, also, was his prey,--to do with what he liked.
+
+"I see you've come," he answered. "You might as well; we'd have found
+you to-morrow." His voice was no longer flat, but rather exultant,
+boasting. "You thought you could get away--but we've shown you."
+
+Ben nodded. "You are--" he strained for the name he had heard Beatrice
+speak so often--"Ray Brent?" His eyes fell to the form of Neilson,
+wounded beyond the fire. "I see you've been at your old job--killing. It
+was you who killed Ezra Melville."
+
+Ray smiled, ever so faintly: this was what he loved. "You're talking to
+the right man. Anything you'd like to do about it?"
+
+Ben's face hardened. "There is nothing I can do, now. You came too late.
+But I would have had something to do if I had my rifle. I'm glad it was
+you, not Beatrice's father. I ask you this--will you accept my
+proposition. To take Ezram's letter, destroy it and me too--and let the
+girl go in safety?"
+
+Beatrice stretched her bound arms and touched his hairy wrist. "No,
+Ben," she told him quietly. "There's no use of trying to make such a
+bargain as that. Men that murder--and assault women,--won't keep their
+word."
+
+"They were about to attack you, were they?" His voice dropped a tone;
+otherwise it seemed the same.
+
+"Yes--just as you came."
+
+He turned once more to Ray, eyeing him with such a look of contempt and
+scorn that it smarted like a whiplash in spite of the protecting mantel
+of his new-found triumph. "Oh, you depraved dogs!" he told them quietly
+and distinctly. "You yellow, mongrel cowards!"
+
+Ray straightened, stung by the words. "And I'll make you wish you was
+dead before you ever said that," he threatened. "I'll tell you what you
+wanted to know a minute ago--and I tell you no. I won't make any deal
+with you. We'll do what we like to you, and we'll do what we like with
+your dirty squaw, too--the woman you've been living with all these
+months. We've got you where we want you. You're in no fix to make terms.
+Chan--put a rope around his legs and a gag in his rotten mouth!"
+
+They moved toward him simultaneously, and Ben summoned the last jot of
+his almost-spent strength to hurl them off. They did not need deadly
+weapons for this wasted form. Yet for the duration of one second Ben
+fought with an incredible ferocity and valor.
+
+He hurled Chan from his path, and his sound right arm leaped to Ray's
+throat in a death grip. For that one instant his old-time strength
+returned to him,--as to Samson as his arms went about the pillars of the
+temple. They found him no weakling, in that first instant, but a deadly,
+fighting beast, the "Wolf" Darby of the provinces,--his finger nails
+sinking ever deeper into the flesh of Ray's throat, his body braced
+against Chan's attack. And for all that Beatrice's arms were tied, she
+leaped like a she-wolf to her lover's aid.
+
+But such an unequal battle could last only an instant. Ray focused his
+attack upon Ben's injured left arm, Chan struck once at the girl,
+hurling her to the ground with a base blow, then lashed brutal blows
+into Ben's face. The burst of strength ebbed as quickly as it had come:
+his legs wilted under him, and he sank slowly to the ground.
+
+Maddened with battle, for a moment more Chan lashed cowardly blows into
+his face; and he left the brutal labor only to help Ray affix ropes
+about his ankles. Then the two conquerors stood erect, breathing loudly.
+
+Seemingly the utter limit of their brutality was reached,--but for the
+moment only. A strange and foreboding silence fell over the camp: only
+the sound of troubled breathing was heard above the lessening crackle of
+the fire. They did not turn at once again to the work of crushing Ben's
+life out with their fists and boots, nor did they restrain Beatrice as
+she crawled over the blood-stained grass to reach her lover's side.
+
+"Let her go," Ray said to Charley. "She can't help him any."
+
+It was true. They had put up their last defense. The girl crept nearer,
+lying almost prone beside him, and her soft hands stole over his bruised
+flesh. But no tears came now. She was past the kindly mercy of tears.
+She could only gaze at him, and sometimes dry half-sobs clutched at her
+throat. The man half-opened his eyes, smiling.
+
+Life still remained in his rugged body. Even the cruel test of the last
+hour had not taken that from him. The sturdy heart still beat, and the
+breath still whispered through his lips: there was life in plenty to
+afford such sport as Ray and Chan might have for him.
+
+The last, least quality of redemption--such magic and beauty as might
+have been wrought by the firelight dancing over the moonlit glade--was
+quite gone now. The powers of wickedness were in the ascendency, and
+this was only the abode of horror. Yet it was all tragically true, not a
+nightmare from which she would soon waken. This was the remote heart of
+Back There--a primeval land where the demons of lust and death walked
+unrestrained--and the shadow of the moonlit trees fell dark upon her.
+
+The back logs were burning dully now, and the coals were red, and Chan
+and Ray took seats on a huge, dead spruce to talk over their further
+plans. It was all easy enough. They could linger here, living mostly on
+meat, until the rising waters of the Yuga could carry them down to the
+Indian villages. Their methods and procedure in regard to Ben were the
+only remaining questions.
+
+For a few minutes they took little notice of the prone figures at the
+far edge of the fading firelight. In their hands they were as helpless
+as Jeffery Neilson, left already by the receding radiance to the soft
+mercy of the shadows. Attention could be given them soon enough. Their
+own triumph was beginning to give way to deep fatigue.
+
+Ben and Beatrice had talked softly at first, accepting their fate at
+last and trying to forget all things but the fact of each other's
+presence. They had kept the faith to-night, they had both been true; and
+perhaps they had conquered, in some degree, the horror of death. His
+right hand held hers close to his lips, and only she could understand
+the message in its soft pressure, and the gentle, kindly shadows in his
+quiet eyes. But presently her gaze fastened on some object in the grass
+beside him.
+
+He did not understand at first. He knew enough not to attract his
+enemies' attention by trying to turn. The girl relaxed again, but her
+hand throbbed in his, and her eyes shone somberly as if the luster of
+some strange, dark hope.
+
+"What is it?" he asked whispering.
+
+"I see a way out--for us both," she told him. She knew he would not
+misunderstand and dream that she saw an actual avenue to life and
+safety. "Don't give any sign."
+
+"Then hurry," he urged. "They may be back any instant. What is it?"
+
+"A way to cheat 'em--to keep them from torturing you--and to save
+me--from all the things they'll do to me--when you're dead. Oh,
+Ben--you won't fail me--you'll do it for me."
+
+He smiled, gently and strongly. "Do you think I'd fail you now?"
+
+"Then reach your good arm on the other side--soft as you can. There's a
+knife lying there--your own knife--they knocked out of my hand. They'll
+jump at the first gleam. You know what to do--first me, in the
+throat--then yourself."
+
+His face showed no horror at her words. They were down to the most
+terrible realities; and as she had said, this was the way out! The great
+kindness still dwelt in his eyes--and she knew he would do as she asked.
+
+One gleam of steal, one swift touch at the throat--and they would never
+know the unspeakable fate that their depraved captors planned for them.
+_It was no less than victory in the last instant of despair!_ It was
+freedom: although they did not know into what Mystery and what Fear the
+act would dispatch them, it was freedom from Ray and Chan, none the
+less. And Ben welcomed the plan as might a prisoner, waiting in the
+death-cell, welcome a reprieve.
+
+He turned, groping with his hand. There was no use of waiting longer.
+The knife lay just beyond his reach; and softly he moved his body
+through the grass.
+
+But this gate to mercy was closed before they reached it. A sudden
+flaring of the fire revealed them--the gleam of the blade and Ben's
+stretching hand--and Ray left his log in a swift, catlike leap.
+
+If Ben had possessed full use of both hands there still might have been
+time to send home the two crucial blows, or at least to dispatch
+Beatrice out of Ray's power to harm. But his injured arm impeded him,
+and his hand fumbled as he tried to seize the hilt. With a sharp oath
+Ray crushed the blade into the ground with his heel; then kicked
+viciously at the prone body of his enemy.
+
+And at that first base blow his rage and blood-lust that had been
+gathering was swiftly freed. It was all that was needed to set him at
+the work of torture. For an instant he stood almost motionless except
+for the spasmodic twitching--now almost continuous--at his lips and for
+the slow turning of his head as he looked about for a weapon with which
+he could more quickly satiate the murder-madness in his veins. The knife
+appealed to him not at all; but his eye fell on a long, heavy club of
+spruce that had been cut for fuel. He bent and his strong hands seized
+it.
+
+As he swung it high the girl leaped between--with a last, frantic
+effort, wholly instinctive--to shield Ben's body with her own. But it
+was only an instant's reprieve. Chan had followed Ben, and sharing Ray's
+fiendish mood, jerked her aside. Ben raised himself up as far as he
+could at a final impulse to thrust the girl out of harm's way.
+
+Yet it was to be that Ray's murderous blow was never to go home. A
+mighty and terrible ally had come to Ben's aid. He came pouncing from
+the darkness, a gaunt and dreadful avenger whose code of death was as
+remorseless as Ray's own.
+
+It was Fenris the wolf, and he had found his master at last. Missing him
+at the accustomed place in the cave, he had trailed him to the lake
+margin: a smell on the wind had led him the rest of the way. He was not
+one to announce his coming by an audible footfall in the thicket. Like a
+ghost he had glided almost to the edge of the firelight, lingering
+there--with a caution learned in these last wild weeks of running with
+his brethren--until he had made up his brute mind in regard to the
+strangers in the camp. But he had waited only until he saw Ray kick the
+helpless form before him,--that of the god that Fenris, for all the wild
+had claimed him, still worshipped in his inmost heart. With fiendish,
+maniacal fury he had sprung to avenge the blow.
+
+And his three followers, trained by the pack laws to follow where he
+led, and keyed to the highest pitch by their leader's fury, leaped like
+gray demons of the Pit in his wake.
+
+
+
+XLII
+
+As a young tree breaks and goes down in the gale Ray Brent went down
+before the combined attack of the wolves. What desperate struggle he
+made only seemed to increase their fury and shatter him the faster.
+Utterly futile were all his blows: his frantic, piercing screams of fear
+and agony raised to heaven, but were answered with no greater mercy than
+that he would have shown to Ben a moment before.
+
+Seemingly in an instant he was on his back and the ravening pack were
+about him in a ring. In that lurid firelight their fangs gleamed like
+ivory as they flashed, here and there, over his body and throat, and
+their fierce eyes blazed with pale-blue fire,--the mark and sign of the
+blood madness of the beasts of prey.
+
+Seemingly in a single instant the life had been torn from him, leaving
+only a strange, huddled, ghastly thing beside the dying fire. But the
+pack leaped from him at once. Fenris had caught sight of Chan's figure
+as he ran for the nearest tree and seemingly with one leap he was upon
+him. He sprang at him from the side; and his fangs gleamed once.
+
+He had struck true, his fangs went home, and the life went out of Chan
+Heminway in a single, neighing scream. He pitched forward, shuddered
+once in the soft grass, and lay still. The pack surged around his body,
+struck at it once or twice, then stood growling as if waiting for their
+leader's command.
+
+Before ever Ray fell, Ben had taken what measures of self-defense he
+could in case the pack, forgetting its master's master, might turn on
+himself and the girl. He had reached the knife hilt and severed the
+ropes about the girl's wrists. "Stay behind me," he cautioned. "Don't
+move a muscle."
+
+He knew that any attempt to reach and climb a tree would attract the
+attention of the pack and send them ravening about her. Again he knew
+that her life as well as his own depended on his control of the pack
+leader. He saw Chan go down, seemingly in a single instant, and he
+braced himself against attack. "Down, Fenris!" he shouted. "Down--get
+down!"
+
+The great wolf started at the voice, then stood beside the fallen,
+gazing at Ben with fierce, luminous eyes. "Down, down, boy," Ben
+cautioned, in a softer voice. "There, old fellow--down--down."
+
+Then Fenris whined in answer, and Ben knew that he was no longer to be
+feared. The three lesser wolves seemed startled, standing in a nervous
+group, yet growling savagely and eyeing him across the dying fire. For a
+moment Fenris's fury had passed to them, but now that his rage was dead,
+all they had left was an inborn fear of such a breed as this,--these
+tall forms that died so easily in their fangs. Fenris trotted slowly
+toward Ben, but with the true instincts of the wild his followers knew
+that this was no affair of fangs and death. He came in love, in a
+remembered comradeship, just as often he had led them to the mouth of
+the cavern, and they did not understand. They slowly backed away into
+the shadows, fading like ghosts.
+
+Ben's arms, in unspeakable gratitude, went about the shoulders of the
+wolf. Beatrice, sobbing uncontrollably yet swept with that infinite
+thankfulness of the redeemed, crept to his side. Fenris whined and
+shivered in the arms of his god.
+
+Quietude came at last to that camp beside the lake, in the far, hidden
+heart of Back There. Once more the blood moved with sweet, normal
+tranquillity in the veins, the thrill and stir died in the air, and the
+moonlight was beautiful on the spruce.
+
+The wolves had gone. Fenris's three brethren had slipped away, perhaps
+wholly mystified and deeply awed by their madness of a moment before;
+and from the ridge top they had called for their leader to join them. He
+had done his work, he had avenged the base blow that had seemed to
+strike at his own wild heart, he had received the caress he had
+craved,--and there was no law for him to stay. The female called
+enticingly; the wild game was running for his pleasure on the trails.
+
+Ben had watched the struggle in his fierce breast, and Beatrice's eyes
+were soft and wonderfully lustrous in the subdued light as she gave the
+wolf a parting caress. But he could not stay with them. The primal laws
+of his being bade otherwise. His was the way of the open trails, the
+nights of madness and the rapture of hunting--and these were folk of the
+caves! They were not his people, although his love for them burned like
+fire in his heart.
+
+He could not deny the call of his followers on the ridge. It was like a
+chain, drawing him remorselessly to them. Whining, he had sped away into
+the darkness.
+
+The fire had been built up, Beatrice had rallied her spent strength by
+full feeding of the rich, dried meat, and had done what she could for
+Neilson's injury. Ben, exhausted, had lain down in some of the blankets
+of his enemy's outfit. Neilson was not, however, mortally hurt. The
+bullet had coursed through the region of his shoulder, missing his heart
+and lungs, and although he was all but unconscious, they had every
+reason to believe that a few weeks of rest would see him well again.
+
+Beatrice bathed the wound, bandaged it the best she could, then covered
+him up warmly and let him go to sleep. And the time came at last, long
+past the midnight hour, that she crept once more to Ben's side.
+
+There was little indeed for them to say. The stress of the night had
+taken from them almost all desire to talk. But Ben took her hand in his
+feebly, and held it against his lips.
+
+"We're safe now," Beatrice told him, her eye's still bright with tears.
+"We've seen it through, and we're safe."
+
+Ben nodded happily. It was true: there was nothing further for them to
+fear. With the aid of the rifles of the three fallen, they could procure
+meat in plenty for their remaining time at Back There; besides, the
+store of jerked caribou and moose was enough to hold them over. When the
+rains came again, the three of them--Neilson and Ben and Beatrice--could
+glide on down to the Indian encampments in the canoe. Thence they could
+reach the white settlements beyond the mountains.
+
+Her glance into the future went still farther, because she knew certain
+news that as yet Ben had not heard. She had heard from Ray's lips that
+night that Ben's claim had been legally filed; he had only to return and
+take possession. It straightened out the future, promised success in the
+battle of life, gave him an interest to hold him in these northern
+forests. But she would not tell him to-night. It could wait for a more
+quiet hour.
+
+Presently she saw that he was trying to speak to her, whispering; trying
+to draw her ear down to his lips. She smiled, with an infinite
+tenderness. Dimly though he spoke, she heard him every word.
+
+"I love you," he told her simply. He watched her face, as intently as
+the three Wise Men watched the East, for a sign. And he saw it, clear
+and ineffably wonderful, in the stars that came into her eyes.
+
+"I love you," she answered, with equal simplicity. They lay a while in
+silence, blissful in this wonder each had for the other, wholly content
+just that their hands and lips should touch.
+
+The same miracle was upon them both; and the girl's thought, ranging
+far, seized upon a deep and moving discovery. "All this belongs to us,"
+she told him, indicating with one movement of her arm the boundless
+solitudes about them. "This is our own country, isn't it, Ben? We can't
+ever--go away."
+
+It was true: they could never leave the forest for long. They were its
+children, bred in the bone. Their strong thews would waste in a gentler
+land. It was their heritage. They must not go where they could not
+behold the dark line of the forest against the sky.
+
+The fire burned down. The moon wheeled through the sky. The tall spruce
+saw the dawn afar and beckoned.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Sky Line of Spruce, by Edison Marshall
+
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Sky Line of Spruce, by Edison Marshall
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Sky Line of Spruce
+
+Author: Edison Marshall
+
+Release Date: March 2, 2004 [EBook #11402]
+Last updated: March 20, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SKY LINE OF SPRUCE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Audrey Longhurst and the Online Distributed Proofreading
+Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<p style="text-align: center;"><img style=
+"width: 400px; height: 605px;" alt="Cover" src=
+"images/ss001.jpg"></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h1>THE SKY LINE<br>
+OF SPRUCE</h1>
+<br>
+<h2>By EDISON MARSHALL</h2>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3>AUTHOR OF</h3>
+<h3>"The Voice of the Pack," "The Strength of the Pines,"<br>
+"The Snowshoe Trail," "Shepherds of the Wild," etc.</h3>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3>1922</h3>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+<br>
+<div class="content"><br>
+<a href="#PART_ONE">PART ONE<br>
+THE WAKENING</a><br>
+<br>
+<a href="#PART_TWO">PART TWO<br>
+THE WOLF-MAN</a><br>
+<br>
+<a href="#PART_THREE">PART THREE<br>
+THE TAMING</a></div>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="PART_ONE"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<h2>PART ONE</h2>
+<h3>THE WAKENING</h3>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="I"></a>
+<h2>I</h2>
+<p>The convict gang had a pleasant place to work to-day. Their road
+building had taken them some miles from the scattered outskirts of
+Walla Walla, among fields green with growing barley. The air was
+fresh and sweet; the Western meadow larks, newly come, seemed in
+imminent danger of splitting their own throats through the
+exuberance of their song. Even the steel rails of the Northern
+Pacific, running parallel to the stretch of new road, gleamed
+pleasantly in the spring sun.</p>
+<p>The convicts themselves were in a genial mood, easily moved to
+wide grins; and with a single exception they looked much like any
+other road gang at work anywhere in the land. An expert might have
+recognized purely criminal types among them: to a layman they
+suggested merely the lower grades of unskilled labor. Some of the
+faces were distinctly brutal; there was the sullen visage of a
+powerful negro who, with different environment, might have been a
+Congo prince; but the face of "Plug" Spanos, a notorious gunman who
+was by far the worst character in the gang, might have been that of
+an artless plow-boy in a distant land under a warm sun. There
+remained, however, the "exception." Curiously enough, whenever the
+warden's thought dwelt upon the inmates of his prison, classifying
+them into various groups, there was always one wind-tanned, vivid
+face, one brawny, towering form that seemed to demand individual
+consideration. The man who was listed on the records as Ben Kinney
+was distinctly an individual. He some way failed to classify among
+the groups of his fellows. Because he had been sent out to-day with
+the road gang the two armed guards had an interesting subject of
+conversation.</p>
+<p>In the first place he habitually did two men's work. He did not
+do it with any idea of trying to ingratiate himself with his
+keepers: no inmate of the institution at Walla Walla made any such
+mistake as that. He did it purely because he could not tone down
+his mighty strength and energy to stay even with his fellows.
+To-day Sprigley, the guard in first command of the gang, had placed
+him opposite Judy, the burly negro, but the latter was being driven
+straight toward absolute exhaustion. Yet Kinney at least knew how
+to subdue and direct the pouring fountain of his vitality and
+energy, for the robust blows of his pick fell with the regularity
+of a tireless machine. It was as if a wild stallion, off the
+plains, had been trained to draw the plow. His great muscles moved
+with marvelous precision; but for all the monotony and rhythm of
+his motions he conveyed no image of stolidity and dullness.</p>
+<p>He was a great, dark man, his skin darkly brown from exposure;
+his straight hair showed almost coal black in spite of the fact
+that it had but recently been clipped close; his eyebrows were
+similarly black; and black hairs spread down his hands almost to
+the finger nails and cropped up from his chest at his open throat.
+It was a mighty, deep, full chest, the chest of a runner and a
+fighter, sustained by a strong, flat abdomen and by powerful,
+sturdy legs. Yet physical might and development were not all of Ben
+Kinney. The image conveyed was never one of sheer brutality. For
+all their black hair, the large, brawny hands were well-shaped and
+sensitive; he had a healthy, good-humored mouth that could
+evidently, on occasion, be the seat of a most pleasant, boyish
+smile. He had a straight, good nose, rather high cheek bones, and a
+broad, brown forehead, straight rather than sloping swiftly like
+that of the negro opposite. But none of his features, nor yet his
+brawny form, caught and held the attention as did his vivid,
+dark-gray eyes. They were deeply dark, even against his deeply
+tanned face, yet now and then one caught distinct surface lights,
+denoting the presence of unmeasured animal spirits, and perhaps,
+too, the surprising health and vitality of the engine of his life.
+They were keen eyes, alert, fiery with a zealot's fire: evidently
+the eyes of a steadfast, headstrong, purposeful man. Some
+complexity of lines about them, hard to trace, indicated a
+recklessness, too; a willingness to risk all that he had for his
+convictions.</p>
+<p>"That's the queerest case we ever had here at Walla Walla,"
+Sprigley told his fellow guard, as they watched the man's pick
+swing in the air. "Sometimes I wonder whether he ought to be here
+or not. Look at that face&mdash;he hasn't any more of a criminal
+face than I have."</p>
+<p>The other guard, Howard, scanned his companion's face with mock
+care. "That ain't sayin' so much for him," he observed. But at once
+he began to evince real interest. "I maintain you can't tell
+anything from their faces," he answered seriously. "There's nothin'
+in it. The man's a crook, isn't he? Wasn't he caught
+red-handed?"</p>
+<p>"Let me tell you about it. I was interested in the case and
+found out all I could concerning it. He apparently showed up in
+Seattle some time during the summer of 1919, a crook of the crooks,
+as you say. No one knows where he came from&mdash;and that's queer
+in itself. You know very well that his face and form are going to
+be remembered and noticed, yet he wasn't in any rogue's gallery, in
+any city. Desperate crook though he was, no one had ever heard of
+him before he showed up in Seattle.</p>
+<p>"The crooks down there called him 'Wild' Kinney, and were pretty
+well scared of him. Swanson, one of the lieutenants of the Seattle
+force, whom I know well as I know you, told me that he was a power,
+sort of a king in the underworld from the very first, largely
+because he was afraid of nothing, absolutely desperate, and willing
+to take any chance. He wasn't a hop-head, yet they all looked at
+him as sort of queer; though ready to follow him to the last ditch,
+yet some way they thought him off his head. And Swanson believes
+that his career of crime started <i>after</i> he reached Seattle,
+not before&mdash;that he hadn't grown up to crime like most of the
+men in his gang. He didn't know anything about the
+'profession'&mdash;as far as skill went he was a rank amateur, but
+he made it up with daring and cunning. Once or twice he got in a
+fight down there, and they all agree he fought like a mad man, the
+most terrible fighter in the whole district, and it took about a
+half dozen to stop him."</p>
+<p>"You don't have to tell me that. Anybody who can swing a pick
+like that&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Now let me tell you how they happened to catch him. Maybe you
+heard&mdash;he and Dago Frank were in the act of breaking into the
+Western-Danish Bank. Part of this I'm giving you now came straight
+from Frank himself. He says that they were in the alley, in the act
+of jimmying a window, and all at once Kinney straightened up as if
+something had hit him and let the jimmy fall with a thump to the
+pavement. Frank said he thought that the man had 'gone off his
+nut,' but it's my private opinion that he had been somewhat
+deranged all the time he was in Seattle, and he just came to, more
+or less, that minute. The man hardly seemed to know what he was
+doing. 'Have you lost your guts, Kinney?' Frank asked him; and
+Kinney stood there, staring like he didn't know he was being spoken
+to. He put his hands to his head, then, like a man with a headache.
+And the next instant a cop came running from the mouth of the
+alley.</p>
+<p>"Kinney was heeled, but he didn't even pull his gun. He still
+stood with his hands to his head. All his pards in the underworld
+always said he'd die before he'd give up, but he let the cop take
+him like he was a baby. Frank got away, but they got him, you
+remember, three weeks later. After some kind of a trial Kinney was
+sent down here."</p>
+<p>Sprigley paused and shifted his gun from his right to his left
+shoulder. "You'll say that's all common enough," he went on. "Now
+let me tell you another queer thing. You know, the chief has
+started a system here to keep track of all the prisoners, with the
+idea of making them good citizens when they get out. He has them
+all fill out a card. Well, when this man Kinney turned in his card,
+he had written 'Ben' on it, but the rest was absolutely blank.</p>
+<p>"Mr. Mitchell thought at first that the man couldn't write. It
+turned out, though, that he can write&mdash;an intelligent hand,
+and spell good too. Then Mitchell decided he was just sulking. But
+his second guess was no better than his first. I haven't got
+Mitchell persuaded yet, and maybe never will have him persuaded,
+but I'm confident I know the answer. The reason he didn't fill out
+that card was because he couldn't remember.</p>
+<p>"He couldn't remember where or when he was born, or who were his
+folks, or where he had come from, or how he had spent his life. He
+knew that 'Ben,' his first name, sounded right to him, but 'Kinney'
+didn't&mdash;the reason likely being that Kinney was an alias
+adopted during his life as a criminal. I suppose you've noticed
+that queer, bewildered look he has when any one calls him Kinney.
+What his real name is he doesn't know. He can't even remember that.
+And the explanation is&mdash;complete loss of memory.</p>
+<p>"You mark my words, Howard&mdash;that man hasn't been a criminal
+always. Something got wrong with his head, and he turned
+crook&mdash;you might say that the criminal side that all of us has
+simply took possession of him. That night in the alley he came to
+himself&mdash;only his mind was left a blank not only in regard to
+his life as a criminal, but all that had gone before."</p>
+<p>"Then why don't you do something about it&mdash;besides talk?
+Mitchell says you're gettin' so you talk of nothin' else."</p>
+<p>"It's not for me to do anything about it. The man was a
+criminal. The State can't go any further than that. I suppose if
+every man was set free who wasn't, in the last analysis,
+responsible for his crimes, we wouldn't have anybody left in the
+penitentiary. He's in for five years&mdash;considering what he'll
+pick up here, it might as well be for life. Amnesia&mdash;that's
+what the doctors call it&mdash;amnesia following some sort of a
+mental trouble. In the end you'll see that I'm right."</p>
+<p>Sprigley was right. To Ben Kinney life was like a single pale
+light in a long, dark street. Complete loss of memory prevented him
+from looking backward. Complete loss of hope kept him from looking
+ahead.</p>
+<p>It had been this way for months now&mdash;ever since the night
+the policeman had found him, the "jimmy" dropped from his hands, in
+the alley. Heaven knows what he had done, what madness had been
+upon him, before that time. But as Sprigley had said, that night
+had marked a change. It was true that so far as facts went he was
+no better off: when he had come to himself he had found his mind a
+blank regarding not only his career of crime, but all the years
+that had gone before. Even his own name eluded him. That of Kinney
+had an alien sound in his ears.</p>
+<p>The past had simply ceased to exist for him; and because it is
+some way the key to the future, the latter seemed likewise
+blank,&mdash;a toneless gray that did not in the least waken his
+interest. Indeed the only light that flung into the unfathomable
+darkness of his forgetfulness was that which played in his dreams
+at night. Sometimes these were inordinately vivid, quite in
+contrast to the routine of prison life.</p>
+<p>He felt if he could only recall these dreams clearly they would
+interpret for him the mystery of his own life. He wakened, again
+and again, with the consciousness of having dreamed the most
+stirring, amazing dreams, but what they were he couldn't tell. He
+could only remember fragments, such as a picture of rushing waters
+recurring again and again&mdash;and sometimes an amazing horizon, a
+dark line curiously notched against a pale green background.</p>
+<p>They were not all bad dreams: in reality many of them stirred
+him and moved him happily, and he would waken to find the mighty
+tides of his blood surging fiercely through the avenues of veins.
+Evidently they recalled some happiness that was forgotten. And
+there was one phase, at least, of this work in the road gangs that
+brought him moving, intense delight. It was merely the sight of the
+bird life, abounding in the fields and meadows about the towns.</p>
+<p>There had been quite a northern migration lately, these late
+spring days. The lesser songsters were already mating and nesting,
+and he found secret pleasure in their cheery calls and bustling
+activity. But they didn't begin to move him as did the waterfowl,
+passing in long V-shaped flocks. That strange, wild wanderer's
+greeting that the gray geese called down to their lesser brethren
+in the meadows had a really extraordinary effect upon him. It
+always caught him up and held him, stirring some deep, strange part
+of him that he hardly knew existed. Sometimes the weird, wailing
+sound brought him quite to the edge of a profound discovery, but
+always the flocks sped on and out of hearing before he could quite
+grasp it. When the moon looked down, through the barred window of
+his cell, he sometimes felt the same way. A great, white mysterious
+moon that he had known long ago. It was queer that there should be
+a relationship between the gray geese and the cold, white satellite
+that rode in the sky. Ben Kinney never tried to puzzle out what it
+was; but he always knew it with a knowledge not to be denied.</p>
+<p>The last of the waterfowl had passed by now, but the northern
+migration was not yet done. The sun still moved north; warm,
+north-blowing winds blew the last of the lowering, wintry clouds
+back to the Arctic Seas whence they had come. And because the road
+work the convicts were doing brought them, this afternoon, in sight
+of the railroad right-of-way, Ben now and then caught sight of
+other wayfarers moving slowly, but no less steadily, toward the
+north. The open road beckoned northward, these full, balmy,
+late-April days, and various tattered men, mostly vagabonds and
+tramps, passed the gang from time to time on this same, northern
+quest.</p>
+<p>Ben thought about them as birds of passage, and the thought
+amused him. And at the sight of a small, stooped figure advancing
+toward him up the railroad right-of-way he paused, leaning on his
+pick.</p>
+<p>Because Ben had paused, for the first time in an hour, his two
+guards looked up to see what had attracted his attention. They saw
+what seemed to them a white-haired old wanderer of sixty years or
+more; but at first they were wholly at a loss to explain Ben's
+fascinated look of growing interest.</p>
+<p>It was true that the old man scarcely represented the usual
+worthless, criminal type that took to vagabondage. As he paused to
+scrutinize the convict gang neither insolence nor fear, one of
+which was certainly to be expected, became manifest in his face.
+They had anticipated certain words in greeting, a certain look out
+of bleary, shifty eyes, but neither materialized. True, the old man
+was following the cinder trail northward, but plainly he did not
+belong to the brotherhood of tramps. They saw that he was
+white-haired and withered, but upright; and that undying youth
+dwelt in his twinkling blue eyes and the complexity of little,
+good-natured lines about his mouth. Poverty, age, the hardships of
+the cinder trail had not conquered him in the least. He was small
+physically, but his skinny arms and legs looked as if they were
+made of high-tension wire. His face was shrewd, but also kindly,
+and the gray stubble on his cheeks and chin did not in the least
+hide a smile that was surprisingly boyish and winning. And when he
+spoke his cracked good-natured voice was perfectly in character,
+evidently that of a man possessing full self-respect and
+confidence, yet brimming over with easy kindliness and humor.</p>
+<p>Both guards would have felt instantly, instinctively friendly
+toward him if they had been free to feel at all. Instead they were
+held and amazed by the apparent fact that at the first scrutiny of
+the man's outline, his carriage and his droll, wrinkled face, the
+prisoner Kinney was moved and stirred as if confronted by the risen
+dead.</p>
+<p>The old man himself halted, returning Kinney's stare. The moment
+had, still half concealed, an unmistakable quality of drama. In the
+contagion of suppressed excitement, the other prisoners paused,
+their tools held stiffly in their hands. Kinney's mind seemed to be
+reaching, groping for some astonishing truth that eluded him.</p>
+<p>The old man ran, in great strides, toward him. "My God, aren't
+you Ben Darby?" he demanded.</p>
+<p>The convict answered him as from a great distance, his voice
+cool and calm with an infinite certainty. "Of course," he said. "Of
+course I'm Darby."</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="II"></a>
+<h2>II</h2>
+<p>For the moment that chance meeting thrilled all the spectators
+with the sense of monumental drama. The convicts stared; Howard,
+the second guard, forgot his vigilance and stared with open mouth.
+He started absurdly, rather guiltily, when the old man whirled
+toward him.</p>
+<p>"What are you doing with Ben Darby in a convict gang?" the old
+wanderer demanded.</p>
+<p>"What am I doin'?" Howard's astonishment gave way to righteous
+indignation. "I'm guardin' convicts, that's what I'm a-doin'." He
+composed himself then and shifted his gun from his left to his
+right shoulder. "He's here in this gang because he's a convict. Ask
+my friend, here, if you want to know the details. And who might you
+be?"</p>
+<p>There was no immediate answer to that question. The old man had
+turned his eyes again to the tall, trembling figure of Ben, trying
+to find further proof of his identity. To Ezra Melville there could
+no longer be any shadow of doubt as to the truth: even that he had
+found the young man working in a gang of convicts could not impugn
+the fact that the dark-gray vivid eyes, set in the vivid face under
+dark, beetling brows, were unquestionably those of the boy he had
+seen grow to manhood's years, Ben Darby.</p>
+<p>It was true that he had changed. His face was more deeply lined,
+his eyes more bright and nervous; there was a long, dark scar just
+under the short hair at his temple that Melville had never seen
+before. And the finality of despair seemed to settle over the droll
+features as he walked nearer and took Darby's hand.</p>
+<p>"Ben, Ben!" he said, evidently struggling with deep emotion.
+"What are you doing here?"</p>
+<p>The younger man gave him his hand, but continued to stare at him
+in growing bewilderment. "Five years&mdash;for burglary," he
+answered simply. "Guilty, too&mdash;I don't know anything more. And
+I can't remember&mdash;who you are."</p>
+<p>"You don't know me?" Some of Ben's own bewilderment seemed to
+pass to him. "You know Ezra Melville&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Sprigley, whose beliefs in regard to Ben had been strengthened
+by the little episode, stepped quickly to Melville's side. "He's
+suffering loss of memory," he explained swiftly. "At least, he's
+either lost his memory or he's doing a powerful lot of faking. This
+is the first time he ever recalled his own name."</p>
+<p>"I'm not faking," Ben told them quietly. "I honestly don't
+remember you&mdash;I feel that I ought to, but I don't. I honestly
+didn't remember my name was Darby until a minute ago&mdash;then
+just as soon as you spoke it, I knew the truth. Nothing can
+surprise me, any more. I suppose you're kin of mine&mdash;?"</p>
+<p>Melville gazed at him in incredulous astonishment, then turned
+to Sprigley. "May I talk to you about this case?" he asked quietly.
+"If not to you, who can I talk to? There are a few points that
+might help to clear up&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Ordering his men to their work, Melville and Sprigley stood
+apart, and for nearly an hour engaged in the most earnest
+conversation. The afternoon was shadow-flaked and paling when they
+had finished, and before Sprigley led his men back within the gray
+walls he had arranged for Melville to come to the prison after the
+dinner hour and confer with Mitchell, the warden.</p>
+<p>Many and important were the developments arising from this
+latter conference. One of the least of them was that Melville's
+northward journey was postponed for some days, and that within a
+week this same white-haired, lean old man, dressed in the garb of
+the cinder trail, was pleading his case to no less a personage than
+the governor of the State of Washington in whom authority for
+dealing with Ben's case was absolutely vested. It came about, from
+the same cause, that a noted alienist, Forest, of Seattle, visited
+Ben Darby in his cell; and finally that the prisoner himself, under
+the strict guard of Sprigley, was taken to the capital at
+Olympia.</p>
+<p>The brief inquisition that followed, changing the entire current
+of Ben Darby's life, occurred in the private office of McNamara,
+the Governor. McNamara himself stood up to greet them when they
+entered, the guard and the convict. Ezra Melville and Forest, the
+alienist from Seattle, were already in session. The latter
+conducted the examination.</p>
+<p>He tried his subject first on some of the most simple tests for
+sanity. It became evident at once, however, that except for his
+amnesia Ben's mind was perfectly sound: he passed all general
+intelligence tests with a high score, he conversed easily, he
+talked frankly of his symptoms. He had perfect understanding of the
+general sweep of events in the past twenty years: his amnesia
+seemed confined to his own activities and the activities of those
+intimately connected with him. Where he had been, what he had done,
+all the events of his life up to the night of his arrest remained,
+for all his effort to remember them, absolutely in darkness.</p>
+<p>"You don't remember this man?" Forest asked him quietly,
+indicating Ezra Melville.</p>
+<p>Again Ben's eyes studied the droll, gray face. "With the vaguest
+kind of memory. I know I've seen him before&mdash;often. I can't
+tell anything else."</p>
+<p>"He's a good friend of your family. He knew your folks. I should
+say he was a <i>very</i> good friend, to take the trouble and time
+he has, in your behalf."</p>
+<p>Ben nodded. He did not have to be told that fact. The
+explanation, however, was beyond him.</p>
+<p>Forest leaned forward. "You remember the Saskatchewan
+River?"</p>
+<p>Ben straightened, but the dim images in his mind were not clear
+enough for him to answer in the affirmative. "I'm afraid not."</p>
+<p>Melville leaned forward in his chair. "Ask him if he remembers
+winning the canoe race at Lodge Pole&mdash;or the time he shot the
+Athabaska Rapids."</p>
+<p>Ben turned brightly to him, but slowly shook his head. "I can't
+remember ever hearing of them before."</p>
+<p>"I think you would, in time," Forest remarked. "They must have
+been interesting experiences. Now what do these mean to
+you?&mdash;Thunder Lake&mdash;Abner Darby&mdash;Edith
+Darby&mdash;MacLean's College----"</p>
+<p>Ben relaxed, focusing his attention on the names. For the
+instant the scene about him, the anxious, interested faces, faded
+from his consciousness. Thunder Lake! Somewhere, some time, Thunder
+Lake had had the most intimate associations with his life. The name
+stirred him and moved him; dim voices whispered in his ears about
+it, but he couldn't quite catch what they said. He groped and
+reached in vain.</p>
+<p>There was no doubt but that an under-consciousness had full
+knowledge of the name and all that it meant. But it simply could
+not reach that knowledge up into his conscious mind.</p>
+<p>Abner Darby! It was curious what a flood of tenderness swept
+through him as, whispering, he repeated the name. Some one old and
+white-haired had been named Abner Darby: some one whom he had once
+worshipped with the fervor of boyhood, but who had leaned on his
+own, strong shoulders in latter years. Since his own name was
+Darby, Abner Darby was, in all probability, his father; but his
+reasoning intelligence, rather than his memory, told him so.</p>
+<p>The name of Edith Darby conjured up in his mind a childhood
+playmate,&mdash;a girl with towzled yellow curls and chubby,
+confiding little hands.... But these dim memory-pictures went no
+further: there were no later visions of Edith as a young woman,
+blossoming with virgin beauty. They stopped short, and he had a
+deep, compelling sense of grief. The child, unquestionably a
+sister, had likely died in early years. The third name of the
+three, MacLean's College, called up no memories whatever.</p>
+<p>"I can hardly say that I remember much about them," he responded
+at last. "I think they'll come plainer, though, the more I think
+about them. I just get the barest, vague ideas."</p>
+<p>"They'll strengthen in time, I'm sure," Forest told him. "Put
+them out of your mind, for now. Let it be blank." The alienist
+again leaned toward him, his eyes searching. There ensued an
+instant's pause, possessing a certain quality of suspense. Then
+Forest spoke quickly, sharply. "<i>Wolf</i> Darby!"</p>
+<p>In response a curious tremor passed over Ben's frame, giving in
+some degree the effect of a violent start. "<i>Wolf</i> Darby," he
+repeated hesitantly. "Why do you call me that?"</p>
+<p>"The very fact that you know the name refers to you, not some
+one else, shows that that blunted memory of yours has begun to
+function in some degree. Now think. What do you know about 'Wolf'
+Darby?"</p>
+<p>Ben tried in vain to find an answer. A whole world of meaning
+lingered just beyond the reach of his groping mind; but always it
+eluded him. It was true, however, that the name gave him a certain
+sense of pleasure and pride, as if it had been used in compliment
+to some of his own traits. Far away and long ago, men had called
+<i>him</i> "Wolf" Darby: he felt that perhaps the name had carried
+far, through many sparsely settled districts. But what had been the
+occasion for it he did not know.</p>
+<p>He described these dim memory pictures; and Forest's air of
+satisfaction seemed to imply that his own theories in regard to
+Ben's case were receiving justification. He appeared quite a little
+flushed, deeply intent, when he turned to the next feature of the
+examination. He suddenly spoke quietly to old Ezra Melville; and
+the latter put a small, cardboard box into his hands.</p>
+<p>"I want you to see what I have here," Forest told Ben. "They
+were your own possessions once&mdash;you sent them yourself to
+Abner Darby, your late father&mdash;and I want you to see if you
+remember them."</p>
+<p>Ben's eyes fastened on the box; and the others saw a queer
+drawing of the lines of his face, a curious tightening and clasping
+of his fingers. There was little doubt but that his
+subconsciousness had full cognizance of the contents of that box.
+He was trembling slightly, too&mdash;in excitement and
+expectation&mdash;and Ezra Melville, suddenly standing erect, was
+trembling too. The moment was charged with the uttermost
+suspense.</p>
+<p>Evidently this was the climax in the examination. Even McNamara,
+the Governor, was breathless with interest in his chair; Forest had
+the rapt look of a scientist in some engrossing experiment. He
+opened the box, taking therefrom a roll of white cotton. This he
+slowly unrolled, revealing two small, ribboned ornaments of gold or
+bronze.</p>
+<p>Ben's starting eyes fastened on them. No doubt he recognized
+them. A look of veritable anguish swept his brown face, and all at
+once small drops of moisture appeared on his brow and through the
+short hairs at his temples. The dark scar at his temple was
+suddenly brightly red from the pounding blood beneath.</p>
+<p>"The Victoria Cross, of course," he said slowly, brokenly. "I
+won it, didn't I&mdash;the day&mdash;that day at Ypres&mdash;the
+day my men were trapped&mdash;"</p>
+<p>His words faltered then. The wheels of <i>his</i> memory,
+starting into motion, were stilled once more. Again the great
+darkness dropped over him; there were only the medals left in their
+roll of cotton, and the broken fragments of a story&mdash;of some
+wild, stirring event of the war just gone&mdash;remaining in his
+mind. Yet to Forest the experiment was an unqualified success.</p>
+<p>"There's no doubt of it!" he exclaimed. He turned to McNamara,
+the Governor. "His brain is just as sound as yours or mine. With
+the right environment, the right treatment, he'd be on the straight
+road to recovery. In a general way of speaking he has recovered
+now, largely, from the purely temporary trouble that he had
+before."</p>
+<p>McNamara focused an intent gaze first on Ben, then on the
+alienist. "It is, then&mdash;as you guessed."</p>
+<p>"Absolutely. The night of his arrest marked the end of his
+trouble; you might say that his brain simply snapped back into
+health and began to function normally again, after a period of
+temporary mania from shell-shock. It is true that his memory was
+left blank, but there doesn't seem to be any organic reason for it
+to be blank&mdash;other than lack of incentive to remember. Catch
+me up, if you don't follow me. In other words, he has been slowly
+convalescing since that night: under the proper stimuli I have no
+doubt that everything would come back to him."</p>
+<p>"And our friend here&mdash;Melville&mdash;offers to supply those
+stimuli."</p>
+<p>"Exactly. And it's up to you to say whether he gets a
+chance."</p>
+<p>Thoughtfully the executive drummed his desk with his pencil.
+Presently a smile, markedly boyish and pleasant, broke over his
+face. More than once, in the line of duty imposed by his high
+office, he had been obliged to make decisions contrary to every
+dictate of mercy. He was all the more pleased at this opportunity
+to do, with a clear conscience, the thing that his kindness
+prompted. He turned slowly in his chair.</p>
+<p>"Darby, I suppose you followed what the doctor said?" he asked
+easily.</p>
+<p>"Fairly well, I think."</p>
+<p>"I'll review it, if I may. It seems, Ben, that you have been the
+victim of a strange set of unfortunate circumstances. Due to the
+efforts of an old family friend&mdash;a most devoted and earnest
+friend if I may say so&mdash;we've looked up your record, and now
+we know more about you than you know about yourself. You served in
+France with Canadian troops and there, you will be proud to know,
+you won among other honors the highest honor that the Government of
+England can award a hero. There you were shell-shocked, in the last
+months of the war.</p>
+<p>"You did not return to your home. Shell-shock, Forest tells me,
+is a curious thing, resulting in many forms of mania. Yours led you
+into crime. For some months you lived as a desperate criminal in
+Seattle. You came to yourself in the act of breaking into a bank,
+only to find that your memory of not only your days of crime but
+all that had gone before was left a blank. That night, as you know,
+marked your arrest.</p>
+<p>"Forest has just explained that you are organically
+sound&mdash;that the recovery of your memory is just a matter of
+time and the proper stimuli. Now, Ben, it isn't the purpose of this
+State to punish men when they are not responsible for their deeds.
+Melville tells me that your record, in your own home, was the best;
+your war record alone, I believe, would entitle you to the limit of
+mercy from the State. I don't see how we can hold you responsible
+for deeds done while you were mentally disabled from
+shell-shock.</p>
+<p>"All you need for complete recovery, to call everything back in
+your mind, is the proper stimuli. At least that is the opinion of
+Doctor Forest. What those proper stimuli are of course no one knows
+for sure&mdash;but Doctor Forest has a theory; and I think he will
+tell you that he will share the credit for it with the same man who
+has been your friend all the way through. They think they know what
+is best for you. The final decision has been put up to me as to
+whether or not they shall be permitted to give it a trial.</p>
+<p>"This good friend of yours has offered to try to put it through.
+He has a plan outlined that he'll tell you of later, that will not
+only be the best possible influence toward recalling your memory,
+but will also give you a clean, new start in life. A chance for
+every success.</p>
+<p>"So you needn't return to Walla Walla, Darby. I'm going to
+parole you&mdash;under the charge of your benefactor. Melville,
+from now on it's up to you."</p>
+<p>The little, withered gray man looked very solemn as he rose. The
+others were stricken instantly solemn too, surprised that the droll
+smile they were so used to seeing had died on the homely, kindly
+face. Even his twinkling eyes were sobered too.</p>
+<p>Vaguely amused, yet without scorn, McNamara and Forest got up to
+shake his hand. "I'll look after him," Melville assured them.
+"Never fear for that."</p>
+<p>Slight as he was, wasted by the years, his was a figure of
+unmistakable dignity as he thanked them, gravely and earnestly, for
+their kindness in Ben's behalf. Soon after he and his young charge
+went out together.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="III"></a>
+<h2>III</h2>
+<p>There was a great house-cleaning in the dome of the heavens one
+memorable night that flashed like a jewel from the murky desolation
+of a rainy spring. The little winds came in troops, some from the
+sea, some with loads of balsam from the great forests of the
+Olympic Peninsula, and some, quite tired out, from the stretching
+sage plains to the east, and they swept the sky of clouds as a
+housekeeper sweeps the ceiling of cobwebs. Not a wisp, not one
+trailing streamer remained.</p>
+<p>The Seattle citizenry, for the first time in some weeks,
+recalled the existence of the stars. These emerged in legions and
+armies, all the way from the finest diamond dust to great, white
+spheres that seemed near enough to reach up and touch. Little
+forgotten stars that had hidden away since Heaven knows when in the
+deepest recesses of the skies came out to join in the celebration.
+Aged men, half blind, beheld so many that they thought their sight
+was returning to them, and youths saw whole constellations that
+they had never beheld before. They continued their high revels
+until a magnificent moon rose in the east, too big and too bright
+to compete with.</p>
+<p>It was not just a crescent moon, about to fade away, or even a
+rain moon&mdash;one of those standing straight up in the sky so
+that water can run out as out of a dipper. It was almost at its
+full, large and nearly round, and it made the whole city, which is
+rather like other cities in the daylight, seem a place of
+enchantment. It was so bright that the electric signs along Second
+Avenue were not even counter-attractions.</p>
+<p>No living creature who saw it remained wholly unmoved by it.
+Wary young men, crafty and slick as foxes, found themselves
+proposing to their sweethearts before they could catch themselves;
+and maidens who had looked forward to some years yet of independent
+gaiety found themselves accepting. Old tom-cats went wooing; old
+spinsters got out old letters; old husbands thought to return and
+kiss their wives before venturing down to old, moth-eaten clubs.
+Old dogs, too well-bred to howl, were lost and absent-minded with
+dreams that were older than all the rest of these things put
+together.</p>
+<p>But to no one in the city was the influence of the moon more
+potent than to Ben Darby, once known as "Wolf" Darby through
+certain far-spreading districts, and now newly come from the State
+capital, walking Seattle's streets with his ward and benefactor,
+Ezra Melville. No matter how faltering was his memory in other
+regards, the moon, at least, was an old acquaintance. He had known
+it in the nights when its light had probed into his barred cell;
+but his intimate acquaintance with it had begun long, long before
+that. Not even the names that the alienist, Forest, had
+spoken&mdash;the names of places and people close to his own
+heart&mdash;stirred his memory like the sight of the mysterious
+sphere rolling through the empty places of the sky. It recalled,
+clearer than any other one thing, the time and place of his early
+years.</p>
+<p>He could not put into words just how it affected him. From first
+to last, even through his days of crime, it had been the one thing
+constant&mdash;the unchanging symbol&mdash;that in any manner
+connected his present with his shadowed past. It had served to
+recall in him, more than any other one thing, the fact that there
+was a past to look for&mdash;the assurance that somewhere, far
+away, he had been something more than a reckless criminal in city
+slums. The love he had for it was an old love, proving to him
+conclusively that his past life had been intimately associated,
+some way, with moonlight falling in open places. Yet the mood that
+was wakened in him went even farther. It was as if the sight of the
+argent satellite stirred and moved deep-buried instincts innate in
+him, in no way connected with any experience of his immediate life.
+Rather it was as if his love for it were a racial love, reaching
+back beyond his own life: something inborn in him. It was as if he
+were recalling it, not alone from his own past, but from a racial
+existence a thousand-thousand years before his own birth. His
+memory was strangely stifled, but, oh, he remembered the moon!
+Forest had spoken of stimuli! The mere sight of the blue-white
+beams was the best possible stimulus to call him to himself.</p>
+<p>Ezra Melville and he walked under it, talking little at first,
+and mostly the old, blue twinkling eyes watched his face. Seemingly
+with no other purpose than to escape the bright glare of the street
+lights they walked northward along the docks, below Queen Anne
+Hill, passed old Rope Walk, through the suburb of Ballard, finally
+emerging on the Great Northern Railroad tracks heading toward
+Vancouver and the Canadian border. For all that Ben's long legs had
+set a fast pace Melville kept cheerfully beside him throughout the
+long walk, seemingly without trace of fatigue.</p>
+<p>They paused at last at a crossing, and Ben faced the open
+fields. Evidently, before crime had claimed him, he had been deeply
+sensitive to nature's beauty. Ezra saw him straighten, his dark,
+vivid face rise; his quiet talk died on his lips. Evidently the
+peaceful scene before him went home to him very straight. He was
+very near thralldom from some quality of beauty that dwelt here,
+some strange, deep appeal that the moonlit realm made to his
+heart.</p>
+<p>For the moment Ben had forgotten the old, tried companion at his
+side. Vague memories stirred him, trying to convey him an urgent
+message. He could all but hear: the sight of the meadows,
+ensilvered under the moon, were making many things plain to him
+which before were shadowed and vague. The steel rails gleamed like
+platinum, the tree tops seemed to have white, molten metal poured
+on them. It was hard to take his eyes off those moonlit trees. They
+got to him, deep inside; thrilling to him, stirring. Perhaps in his
+Lost Land the moon shone on the trees this same way.</p>
+<p>There were no prison walls around him to-night. The high
+buildings behind him, pressing one upon another, had gone to
+sustain the feeling of imprisonment, but it had quite left him now.
+There were no cold, watchful lights,&mdash;only the moon and the
+stars and an occasional mellow gleam from the window of a home.
+There was scarcely any sound at all; not even a stir&mdash;as of
+prisoners tossing and uneasy in their cells. His whole body felt
+rested.</p>
+<p>The air was marvelously sweet. Clover was likely in blossom in
+nearby fields. He breathed deep, an unknown delight stealing over
+him. He stole on farther, into the mystery of the
+night&mdash;ravished, tingling and almost breathless from an inner
+and inexplicable excitement. Melville walked quietly beside
+him.</p>
+<p>Forest had given over the case: it was Melville's time for
+experiments to-night. All the way out he had watched his patient,
+sounding him, studying his reactions and all that he had beheld had
+gone to strengthen his own convictions. And now, after this moment
+in the meadows, the old man was ready to go on with his plan.</p>
+<p>"Let's set down here," he invited casually. Ben started,
+emerging from his revery. The old man's cheery smile had returned,
+in its full charm, to his droll face. "You'll want to know what
+it's all about&mdash;and what I have in mind. And I sure think
+you've done mighty well to hold onto your patience this long."</p>
+<p>He sat himself on the rail, and Ben quietly took a seat beside
+him. "There are plenty of things I'd like to know," he
+admitted.</p>
+<p>"And plenty of things I ain't goin' to tell you,
+neither&mdash;for the reason that Forest advised against it," Ezra
+went on. "I don't understand it&mdash;but he says you've got a lot
+better chance to get your memory workin' clear again if things are
+recalled to you by the aid of 'stimuli' instead of having any one
+tell you. I've agreed to supply the 'stimuli.'</p>
+<p>"I don't see any harm in tellin' you that the guesses you've
+already made are right. Your name is Ben Darby&mdash;and you used
+to be known as 'Wolf' Darby&mdash;for reasons that sooner or later
+you may know. Abner Darby was your father. Edith Darby was your
+sister that ain't no more. You went awhile to MacLean's College, in
+Ontario.</p>
+<p>"Now, Ben, I'm going to put a proposition up to you. I'm hoping
+you'll see fit to accept it. And I might as well say right here,
+that while it's the best plan possible to bring you back your
+memory, and that while it offers just the kind of 'stimuli' you're
+supposed to need, neither 'stimuli' nor stimulus or stimulum has
+got very much to do with it. I argued that point mighty strong
+because I knew it would appeal to Forest, and through him, to the
+governor. I don't see it makes a whale of a lot of difference
+whether you get your memory back or not.</p>
+<p>"Maybe you don't foller me. But you know and I know you're all
+right now, remembering clear enough everything that happened since
+you was arrested, and I don't see what difference it makes whether
+or not you remember who your great-aunt was, and the scrapes you
+got in as a kid. You can talk and walk and figger, get by in any
+comp'ny, and you suit me for a buddy just as you are. However,
+Forest seemed to think it was mighty important&mdash;and it may
+be.</p>
+<p>"The reason I'm goin' to take you where I'm goin' to take you is
+for your own good. I'm sort of responsible for you, bein' your
+folks are dead. I know you from head to heel, and I think I know
+what's good for you, what you can do and what you can't do and
+where you succeed and where you fail. And I'll say right here you
+wasn't born to be no gangman in a big city like Seattle. You'll
+find that isn't your line at all."</p>
+<p>"I'm willing to take your word for that, Mr. Melville," Ben
+interposed quietly.</p>
+<p>"And I might say, now a good time as any, to let up on the
+'<i>Mister</i>.' My name is Ezra Melville, and I've been known as
+'Ezram' as long as I can remember, to my friends. The Darbys in
+particular called me that, and you're a Darby.</p>
+<p>"I'll say in the beginning I can't do for you all I'd like to
+do, simply because I haven't the means. The first time you saw me I
+was walkin' ties, and you'll see me walkin' some more of 'em before
+you're done. I know you ain't got any money, and due to the poker
+habit I ain't got much either&mdash;in spite of the fact I've done
+two men's work for something over forty years. On this expedition
+to come we'll have to go on the cheaps. No Pullmans, no
+hotels&mdash;sleeping out the hay when we're caught out at night.
+Maybe ridin' the blinds, whenever we can. I'm awful sorry, but it
+jest can't be helped. But I will say&mdash;when it comes to work I
+can do my full share, without kickin'."</p>
+<p>Ben stared in amazement. It was almost as if the old man were
+pleading a case, rather than giving glorious alms to one to whom
+hope had seemed dead. Ben tried to cut in, to ask questions, but
+the old man's words swept his own away.</p>
+<p>"To begin at the beginning, I've got a brother&mdash;leastwise I
+had him a few weeks ago&mdash;Hiram Melville by name," Ezram went
+on. "You'd remember him well enough. He was a prospector up to a
+place called Snowy Gulch&mdash;a town way up in the Caribou
+Mountains, in Canada. Some weeks ago, herdin' cattle in Eastern
+Oregon, I got a letter from him, and started north, runnin' into
+you on the way up. The letter's right here."</p>
+<p>He drew a white envelope from his coat pocket, opening it
+slowly. "This is a real proposition, son," he went on in a sobered
+voice. "I'm mighty glad that I've got something, at least worth
+lookin' into, to let you in on. I only wish it was more."</p>
+<p>"Why should you want to let me in on anything?" Ben asked
+clearly.</p>
+<p>The direct question received only a stare of blank amazement
+from Ezram. "Why should I&mdash;" he repeated, seemingly surprised
+out of his life by the question. "Shucks, and quit interruptin' me.
+But I'll say right here I've got my own ideas, if you must know.
+Didn't I hear that while you was rampin' around the underworld, you
+showed yourself a mighty good fighter? Well, there's likely to be
+some fightin' where we're goin', and I want some one to do it
+besides myself. If there ain't fightin', at least they'll be
+worklots of work. Maybe I'm gettin' a little too old to do much of
+it. I want a buddy&mdash;some one who will go halfway with me."</p>
+<p>"Therefore I suppose you go to the 'pen' to find one," Ben
+commented, wholly unconvinced.</p>
+<p>"I'm going to make this proposition good," Ezram went on as if
+he had not heard, "probably a fourth&mdash;maybe even a
+third&mdash;to you. And I ain't such a fool as I look, neither. I
+know the chances of comin' out right on it are twice as good if
+somebody young and strong, and who can fight, is in on it with me.
+Listen to this."</p>
+<p>Opening the letter, he read laboriously:</p>
+<div class="ltr">
+<p>Snowy Gulch, B.C.</p>
+<p>DEAR BROTHER EZRA:&mdash;</p>
+<p>I rite this with what I think is my dying hand. It's my will
+too. I'm at the hotel at Snowy Gulch&mdash;and not much more time.
+You know I've been hunting a claim. Well, I found it&mdash;rich a
+pocket as any body want, worth a quarter million any how and in a
+district where the Snowy Gulch folks believe there ain't a grain of
+gold.</p>
+<p>It's yours. Come up and get it quick before some thieves up hear
+jump it. Lookout for Jeffery Neilson and his gang they seen some of
+my dust. I'm too sick to go to recorder in Bradleyburg and record
+claim. Get copy of this letter to carry, put this in some safe
+place. The only condition is you take good care of Fenris, the pet
+I raised from a pup. You'll find him and my gun at Steve
+Morris's.</p>
+<p>I felt myself going and just did get hear. You get supplies
+horses at Snowy Gulch go up Poor Man Creek through Spruce Pass over
+to Yuga River. Go down Yuga River past first rapids along still
+place to first creek you'll know it cause there's an old cabin just
+below and my canoe landing. Half mile up, in creek bed, is the
+pocket and new cabin. And don't tell no one in Snowy Gulch who you
+are and where you going. Go quick brother Ez and put up a stone for
+me at Snowy Gulch.</p>
+<p>Your brother</p>
+<p>HIRAM MELVILLE.</p>
+</div>
+<br>
+<p>There was a long pause after Ezram's voice had died away. Ben's
+eyes glowed in the moonlight.</p>
+<p>"And you haven't heard&mdash;whether your brother is still
+alive?"</p>
+<p>"I got a wire the hotel man sent me. It reached me weeks before
+the letter came, and I guess he must have died soon after he wrote
+it. I suppose you see what he means when he says to carry a copy of
+this letter, instead of the original."</p>
+<p>"Of course&mdash;because it constitutes his will, your legal
+claim. Just the fact that you are his brother would be claim
+enough, I should think, but since the claim isn't recorded, this
+simplifies matters for you. You'd better make a copy of it and you
+can leave it in some safe place. And of course this claim is what
+you offered to let me in on."</p>
+<p>"That's it. Not much, but all what I got. What I want to know
+is&mdash;if it's a go."</p>
+<p>"Wait just a minute. You've asked me to go in with you on a
+scheme that looks like a clear quarter of a million, even though I
+can't give anything except my time and my work. You found me in a
+penitentiary, busted and all in&mdash;a thief and a gangster.
+Before we go any further, tell me what service I've done you, what
+obligation you're under to me, that gives me a right to accept so
+much from you?"</p>
+<p>It might have been in the moonlight that Ezram's eyes glittered
+perceptibly. "You're in my charge," he grinned. "I guess you ain't
+got any say comin'."</p>
+<p>"Wait&mdash;wait." Ben sprang to his feet, and caught by his
+earnestness, Ezram got up too. "I sure&mdash;I sure appreciate the
+trust you put in me," Ben went on slowly. "For my own part I'd give
+everything I've got and all I'd hope to ever get to go with you.
+It's a chance such as I never dared believe would come to me
+again&mdash;a chance for big success&mdash;a chance to go away and
+get a new start in a country where I feel, instinctively, that I'd
+make good. But that's only the beginning of it."</p>
+<p>The dark vivid eyes seemed to glow in the soft light. "Forgive
+me if I talk frank; and if it sounds silly I can't help it," Ben
+continued. "You've never been in prison&mdash;with a five-year
+sentence hanging over you&mdash;and nobody giving a damn. For some
+reason I can't guess you've already done more for me than I can
+ever hope to repay. You got me out of prison, you wakened hope and
+self-respect in me when I thought they were dead, and you've proved
+a friend when I'd given up any thought of ever knowing human
+friendship again. I was down and out, Ezram. Anything you want me
+to do I'll do to the last ditch. You know I can fight&mdash;you
+know how a man can fight if it's his last chance. I've got some
+bonus money coming to me from the Canadian Government&mdash;and
+I'll put that in too, because we'll be needing horses and supplies
+and things that cost money. But I can't take all that from a
+stranger. You must know how it is. A man can't, while he's young
+and strong, accept charity&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Good Lord, it ain't charity!" the old man shouted, drowning him
+out. "I'm gettin' as much pleasure out of it as you." His voice
+sank again; and there was no line of mirth in his face.</p>
+<p>"It was long ago, in Montreal," Ezram went on, after a pause. "I
+knew your mother, as a girl. She married a better man, but I told
+her that every wish of hers was law to me. You're her son."</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="IV"></a>
+<h2>IV</h2>
+<br>
+<p>Night is always a time of mystery in Snowy Gulch&mdash;that
+little cluster of frame shacks lost and far in the northern reaches
+of the Caribou Range. Shadows lie deep, pale lights spring up here
+and there in windows, with gaping, cavernous darkness between; a
+wet mist is clammy on the face. At such times one forgets that here
+is a town, an enduring outpost of civilization, and can remember
+only the forests that stretch so heavy and dark on every side.
+Indeed the town seems simply swallowed up in these forests,
+immersed in their silence, overspread by their gloom, and the red
+gods themselves walk like sentries in the main street.</p>
+<p>The breath that is so fragrant and strange between the fronting
+rows of shacks is simply that of the forest: inept the woodsman who
+would not recognize it at once. The silence is a forest silence,
+and if the air is tense and electric, it is because certain
+wilderness forces that no white man can name but which surely dwell
+in the darker thickets have risen and are in possession.</p>
+<p>It is not a time when human beings are at their best and
+strongest. There is an instinctive, haunting feeling which, though
+not fear, wakens a feeling of inadequacy and meekness. Only a
+few&mdash;those who have given their love and their lives to the
+wild places&mdash;have any idea of sympathetic understanding with
+it. Among these was Beatrice Neilson, and she herself did not fully
+understand the dreams and longings that swept her ever at the fall
+of the mysterious wilderness night.</p>
+<p>The forest had never grown old to her. Its mystery was undying.
+Born in its shadow, her love had gone out to it in her earliest
+years, and it held her just as fast to-day. All her
+dreams&mdash;the natural longings of an imaginative girl born to
+live in an uninhabited portion of the earth&mdash;were inextricably
+bound up in it; whatever plans she had for the future always
+included it. Not that she was blind to its more terrible qualities:
+its might and its utter remorselessness that all foresters, sooner
+or later, come to recognize. Her thews were strong, and she loved
+it all the more for the tests that it put to its children.</p>
+<p>She was a daughter of the forests, and its mark was on her.
+To-night the same moon that, a thousand miles to the south, was
+lighting the way for Ben and Ezram on their northern journey, shone
+on her as she hastened down the long, shadowed street toward her
+father's shack, revealing her forest parentage for all to see. The
+quality could be discerned in her very carriage&mdash;swift and
+graceful and silent&mdash;vaguely suggesting that of the wild
+creatures themselves. But there was no coarseness or ruggedness
+about her face and form such as superficial observation might have
+expected. Physically she was like a deer, strong, straight-limbed,
+graceful, slender rather than buxom, dainty of hands and feet. A
+perfect constitution and healthful surroundings had done all this.
+And good fairies had worked further magic: as she passed beneath
+the light at the door of the rude hotel there was revealed an
+unquestioned and rather startling facial beauty.</p>
+<p>It seemed hardly fitting in this stern, rough land&mdash;the
+soft contour and delicacy of the girl's features. It had come
+straight from her mother, a woman who, in gold-rush days, had been
+the acknowledged beauty of the province. Nor was it merely the
+attractive, animal beauty that is so often seen in healthy, rural
+girls. Rather its loveliness was of a mysterious, haunting kind
+that one associates with old legends and far distant lands.</p>
+<p>Perhaps its particular appeal lay in her eyes. They seemed to be
+quite marvelously deep and clear, so darkly gray that they looked
+black in certain lights, and they were so shadowed and pensive that
+sometimes they gave the image of actual sadness. For all the
+isolation of her home she was no stranger to romance; but the
+romance that was to be seen, like a gentleness, in her face was
+that of the great, shadowed forest in which she dwelt.</p>
+<p>Pensive, wistful, enthralled in a dreamy sadness,&mdash;what
+could be nearer the tone and pitch of the northern forest itself?
+There might have been also depths of latent passion such as is
+known to all who live the full, strong life of the woods. The lines
+were soft about her lips and eyes, indicating a marked sweetness
+and tenderness of nature; but these traits did not in the least
+deny her parentage. No one but the woodsman knows how gentle, how
+hospitably tender, the forest may be at times.</p>
+<p>She had fine, dark straight brows that served to darken her
+eyes, dark brown hair waving enough to soften every line of her
+face, a girlish throat and a red mouth surprisingly tender and
+childish. As might have been expected her garb was neither rich nor
+smart, but it was pretty and well made and evidently fitted for her
+life: a loose "middy," blue skirt, woolen stockings and rather
+solid little boots.</p>
+<p>As she passed the door of the hotel one of the younger men who
+had been lounging about the stove strode out and accosted her. She
+half-turned, recognized his face in the lamplight, and frankly
+recoiled.</p>
+<p>She had been lost in dreams before, vaguely pensive, for
+Beatrice had been watching the darkness overspread and encompass
+the dark fringe of the spruce forest that enclosed the town. Now,
+because she recognized the man and knew his type&mdash;born of the
+wild places even as herself, but a bastard breed&mdash;the tender,
+wistful half-smile sped from her childish mouth and her eyes grew
+alert and widened as if with actual fear. She halted, evidently in
+doubt as to her course.</p>
+<p>"Going home?" the man asked. "I'm going up to see your pop, and
+I'll see you there, if you don't mind."</p>
+<p>Ray Brent's voice had an undeniable ring of power. It was deeply
+bass, evidently the voice of a passionate, reckless, brutal man.
+The covetous caress of his thick hand upon her arm indicated that
+he was wholly sure of himself in regard to her.</p>
+<p>She stared with growing apprehension into his even-featured, not
+unhandsome face. Evidently she found it hard to meet his
+eyes,&mdash;eyes wholly lacking in humor and kindliness, but
+unquestionably vivid and compelling under his heavy, dark brows.
+"I'm going home," she told him at last. "I guess, if you're going
+up to see Pop, you can walk along too."</p>
+<p>The man fell in beside her, his powerful frame overshadowing
+hers. It was plain at once that the manner of her consent did not
+in the least disturb him. "You're just letting me because I'm going
+up there anyway, eh?" he asked. "I'll walk along further than that
+with you before I'm done."</p>
+<p>The girl paused, as if in appeal. "Ray, we've thrashed that out
+long ago," she responded. "I wish you wouldn't keep talking about
+it. If you want to walk with me&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"All right, but you'll be changing your mind one of these days."
+Ray's voice rang in the silence, indicating utter indifference to
+the fact that many of the loungers on the street were listening to
+the little scene. "I've never seen anything I wanted yet that I
+didn't get&mdash;and I want you. Why don't you believe what your
+pop says about me? He thinks Ray Brent is the goods."</p>
+<p>"I'm not going to talk about it any more. I've already given you
+my answer&mdash;twenty times."</p>
+<p>The man talked on, but the girl walked with lifted chin,
+apparently not hearing. They followed the board sidewalk into the
+shadows, finally turning in at a ramshackle, three-room house that
+was perched on the hillside almost at the end of the street at the
+outer limits of the village.</p>
+<p>The girl turned to go in, but the man held fast to her arm.
+"Wait just a minute, Bee," he urged. "I've got one thing more to
+say to you."</p>
+<p>The girl looked into his face, now faintly illumined by the full
+moon that was rising, incredibly large and white, above the dark
+line of the spruce tops. For all the regularity of his rather
+handsome features, his was never an attractive face to her, even in
+first, susceptible girlhood; and in the moonlight it suddenly
+filled her with dread. Ray Brent was a dangerous type: imperious
+willed, slave to his most degenerate instincts, reckless, as free
+from moral restraint as the most savage creatures that roamed his
+native wilds. Now his facial lines appeared noticeably deep, dark
+like scars, and curious little flakes of iniquitous fire danced in
+his sunken eyes.</p>
+<p>"Just one minute, Bee," he went on, wholly rapt in his own,
+devouring desires. The dark passions of the man, always just under
+the skin, seemed to be getting out of bounds. "When I want
+something, I don't know how to quit till I get it. It's part of my
+nature. Your pop knows that&mdash;and that's why he's made me his
+pardner in a big deal."</p>
+<p>"If my father wants men like you&mdash;for his pardners, I can't
+speak for his judgment."</p>
+<p>"Wait just a minute. He's told me&mdash;and I know he's told you
+too&mdash;that I'd suit him all right for a son-in-law. He and I
+agree on that. And this country ain't like the places you read
+about in your story books&mdash;it's a man's country. Oh, I know
+you well enough. It's time you got down to brass tacks. If you're
+going to be a northern woman, you've got to be content with the
+kind of men that grow up here. Up here, the best man wins, the
+hardest, strongest man. That's why I'm going to win you."</p>
+<p>Because he was secretly attacking her dreams, the dearest part
+of her being, she felt the first surge of rising anger.</p>
+<p>"You're not the best man here," she told him, straightening. "If
+you were, I'd move out. You may be the strongest in your body, and
+certainly the hardest, going further to get your own way&mdash;but
+a real man would break you in two in a minute. Some one more than a
+brute to beat horses to death and jump claims. I'm going in now.
+Please take away your hand."</p>
+<p>"One thing more. This is the North. We do things in a man's way
+up here&mdash;not a story-book way. The strong man gets what he
+wants&mdash;and I want you. And I'll get you, too&mdash;just like I
+get this kiss."</p>
+<p>He suddenly snatched her toward him. A powerful man; she was
+wholly helpless in his grasp. His arms went about her and he
+pressed his lips to hers&mdash;three times. Then he released her,
+his eyes glowing like red coals.</p>
+<p>But she was a northern girl, trained to self-defense. As he
+freed her, her strong, slender arm swung out and up&mdash;with
+really startling force. Her half-closed hand struck with a sharp,
+drawing motion across his lips, a blow that extinguished his
+laughter as the wind extinguishes a match-blaze.</p>
+<p>"You little&mdash;devil!"</p>
+<p>The tempest of the forest was upon her, and her eyes blazed as
+she hastened around the house.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="V"></a>
+<h2>V</h2>
+<p>Jeffery Neilson and Chan Heminway were already in session when
+Ray Brent, his face flushed and his eyes still angry and red,
+joined them. Neilson was a tall, gaunt man, well past
+fifty&mdash;from his manner evidently the leader of the three. He
+had heavy, grizzled brows and rather quiet eyes, a man of deep
+passions and great resolve. Yet his lean face had nothing of the
+wickedness of Brent's. There had evidently been some gentling,
+redeeming influence in his life, and although it was not in the
+ascendancy, it had softened his smile and the hard lines about his
+lips. Notorious as he was through the northern provinces he was
+infinitely to be preferred to Chan Heminway, who sat at his left
+who, a weaker man than either Ray or Neilson, was simply a tool in
+the latter's hand,&mdash;a smashing sledge or a cruel blade as his
+master wished. He was vicious without strength, brutal without
+self-control. Locks of his blond hair, unkempt, dropped over his
+low forehead into his eyes.</p>
+<p>"Where's Beatrice?" Neilson asked at once. "I thought I heard
+her voice."</p>
+<p>Ray searched for a reply, and in the silence all three heard the
+girl's tread as she went around the house. "She's going in the back
+door. Likely she didn't want to disturb us."</p>
+<p>Ray looked up to find Neilson's eyes firmly fixed upon his face.
+Try hard as he might he couldn't restrain a surge of color in his
+cheeks. "Yes, and what's the rest of it?" Neilson asked.</p>
+<p>"Nothing&mdash;I know of."</p>
+<p>"You've got some white marks on your cheeks&mdash;where it ain't
+red. The kid can slap, can't she&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Ray flushed deeper, but the lines of Neilson's face began to
+deepen and draw. Then his voice broke in a great, hearty chuckle.
+He had evidently tried to restrain it&mdash;but it got away from
+him at last. No man could look at him, his twinkling eyes and his
+joyous face, and doubt but that this soft-eyed, strong-handed
+daughter of his was the joy and pride of his life. He had heard the
+ringing slap through the ramshackle walls of the house, and for all
+that he favored Ray as his daughter's suitor, the independence and
+spirit behind the action had delighted him to the core.</p>
+<p>But Ray's sense of humor did not run along these lines. The
+first danger signal of rising anger leaped like a little, hot spark
+into his eyes. Many times before Ray had been obliged to curb his
+wrath against Neilson: to-night he found it more difficult than
+ever. The time would come, he felt, when he would no longer be
+obliged to submit to Neilson's dictation. Sometime the situation
+would be reversed; he would be leader instead of underling, taking
+the lion's share of the profit of their enterprises instead of the
+left-overs, and when that time came he would not be obliged to
+endure Neilson's jests in silence. Neilson himself, as he eyed the
+stiffening figure, had no realization of Ray's true attitude toward
+him. He thought him a willing helper, a loyal partner, and he would
+not have sat with such content in his chair if he could have beheld
+the smoldering fires of jealousy and ambition in the other's
+breasts The time would come when Ray would assert himself, he
+thought&mdash;when Beatrice was safe in his hands.</p>
+<p>"It may seem like a joke to you, but it doesn't to me," he
+answered shortly. Nor was he able to keep his anger entirely from
+his voice. "Everything that girl does you think is perfect. Instead
+of encouraging her in her meanness you ought to help me out." His
+tones harshened, and he lost the fine edge of his self-control.
+"I've stood enough nonsense from that little&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Seemingly, Neilson made no perceptible movement in his chair.
+What change there was showed merely in the lines of his face, and
+particularly in the light that dwelt in the gray, straightforward
+eyes. "Don't finish it," he ordered simply.</p>
+<p>For an instant eyes met eyes in bitter hatred&mdash;and Chan
+Heminway began to wonder just where he would seek cover in case
+matters got to a shooting stage. But Ray's gaze broke before that
+of his leader. "I'm not going to say anything I shouldn't," he
+protested sullenly. "But this doesn't look like you're helping out
+my case any. You told me you'd do everything you could for me. You
+even went so far as to say you'd take matters in your own
+hands&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"And I will, in reason. I'm keeping away the rest of the boys so
+you can have a chance. But if you think I'm going to tie her up to
+anybody against her will, you're barking up the wrong tree. She's
+my daughter, and her happiness happens to be my first object." Then
+his voice changed, good-humored again. "But cool down,
+boy&mdash;wait till you hear everything I've got to tell you, and
+you'll feel better. Of course, you know what it's about&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I suppose&mdash;Hiram Melville's claim."</p>
+<p>"That's it. Of course we don't know that he had a
+claim&mdash;but he had a pocket full of the most beautiful nuggets
+you ever want to see. No one knows that fact but me&mdash;I saw 'em
+by accident&mdash;and I got 'em now. You know he's always had an
+idea that the Yuga country was worth prospecting, but we always
+laughed at him. Of course it is a pocket country; but it's my
+opinion he found a pocket that would make many a placer look sick,
+before he died."</p>
+<p>"But he might have got the nuggets somewheres else&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Hold your horses. Where would he get 'em? There's something
+else suspicious too. He wrote a letter, the day before he died, and
+addressed it to Ezra Melville, somewhere in Oregon. He must just
+about got it by now&mdash;maybe a few days ago. He had the clerk
+mail it for him, and got him to witness it, saying it was his
+will&mdash;and what did that old hound have to will except a mine?
+Next day he wrote another letter somewhere too&mdash;but I didn't
+find out who it was to. If I'd had any gumption I'd got ahold of
+'em both. The point is&mdash;I'm convinced it's worth a trip, at
+least."</p>
+<p>"I should say it was worth a trip," Ray agreed. "And a fast one,
+too. There might be some competition&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"There won't be a rush, if that's what you mean. Everybody knows
+it's a pocket country, and the men in this town wouldn't any more
+get excited about the Yuga River&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"True enough&mdash;but that Ezra Melville will be showin' up one
+of these days. We want to be settin' pretty when he comes."</p>
+<p>"You've got the idea. It ought to be the easiest job we ever
+did. It's my idea he had his claim all laid out, monuments up and
+everything, and was on his way down to Bradleyburg to record it
+when he died. He just went out before he could make the rest of the
+trip. All we'll have to do is go up there, locate in his cabin, and
+sit tight."</p>
+<p>"Wait just a second." Ray was lost in thought. "There's an old
+cabin up that way somewhere&mdash;along that still place&mdash;on
+the river. It was a trapping cabin belonging to old Bill
+Foulks."</p>
+<p>"That's true enough&mdash;but it likely ain't near his mine.
+Boys, it's a clean, open-and-shut job&mdash;with absolutely nothing
+to interfere. If his brother does come up, he'll find us in
+possession&mdash;and nothing to do but go back. So to-morrow we'll
+load up and pack horses and light out."</p>
+<p>"Up Poor Man creek, through Spruce Pass&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Sure. Then over to the Yuga. Old Hiram was hunting down some
+kind of a scent in the vicinity of that old cabin you speak of,
+last heard of him. And I wouldn't be surprised, on second thought,
+if it wasn't his base of operations."</p>
+<p>"All easy enough," Ray agreed. He paused, and a queer,
+speculative look came into his wild-beast's eyes. "But what I don't
+see&mdash;how you can figure all this is going to help me out with
+Beatrice."</p>
+<p>Jeffery Neilson turned in his chair. "You can't, eh? You need
+spectacles. Just think a minute&mdash;say you had fifty or sixty
+thousand all your own&mdash;to spend on a wife and buy her clothes
+and automobiles. Don't you think that would make you more
+attractive to the feminine eye?"</p>
+<p>At first Ray made no apparent answer. He merely sat staring
+ahead. But plainly the words had wakened riot in his imagination.
+Such a sum meant <i>wealth</i>, the power his ambitious nature had
+always craved, idleness and the gratification of all his lusts. He
+was no stranger to greed, this degenerate son of the North. "It'd
+help some," he admitted in a low voice. "But what makes you think
+it would be worth that much?"</p>
+<p>"Because old Hiram talked a little, half-delirious, before he
+died. 'A quarter of a million,' he kept saying. 'Right there in
+sight&mdash;a quarter of a million.' If he really found that much
+stowed away in the rocks, that's fifty or sixty apiece for you and
+Chan."</p>
+<p>Ray's mind worked swiftly. Sixty thousand apiece&mdash;and that
+left one hundred and thirty thousand for their leader's portion.
+The old rage and jealousy that had preyed upon his mind so long
+swept over him, more compelling than ever. "Go on," he urged.
+"What's the rest of it?"</p>
+<p>"The second thing is&mdash;we'll need some one to cook, and look
+after us, when we get up there. Who should it be but Beatrice? She
+wouldn't want to stay here; you know how she loves the woods. And
+if you know anything about girls, you know that nothing counts like
+having 'em alone. There wouldn't be any of the other boys up there
+to trouble you. You'd have a clear field."</p>
+<p>Ray's dark eyes shone. "It'd help some," he admitted. "That
+means&mdash;hunt up an extra horse for her to-morrow."</p>
+<p>"No. I don't intend she should come up now. Not till we're
+settled."</p>
+<p>"Why not?"</p>
+<p>"Think a minute, and you'll see why not. You know how she
+regards this business of jumping claims. She's dead against it if
+any one could be&mdash;bless her heart!"</p>
+<p>"Don't go getting sentimental, Neilson."</p>
+<p>"And don't let that mouth of yours get you into trouble,
+either." Once more their eyes locked: once more Ray looked away. "I
+hope she'll always stay that way, too. As I say, she's dead against
+it, and she's been a little suspicious ever since that Jenkins
+deal. Besides, it wouldn't be any pleasure for her until we find a
+claim and get settled. When she comes up we'll be established in a
+couple of cabins&mdash;one for her and me and one for you
+two&mdash;and she won't know but that we made the original
+find."</p>
+<p>"How will she know just where to find us?"</p>
+<p>"We're bound to be somewhere near that old cabin on the Yuga.
+We'll set a date for her to come, and I can meet her there."</p>
+<p>It was, Ray was forced to admit, a highly commendable scheme. He
+sat back, contemplating all its phases. "It's slick enough," he
+agreed. "It ought to do the trick."</p>
+<p>But if he had known the girl's thoughts, as she sat alone in the
+back part of the house, he wouldn't have felt so confident. She was
+watching the moon over the spruce forest, and she was thinking,
+with repugnance in her heart, of the indignity to which she had
+been subjected at her father's door. Yet the kisses Ray had forced
+on her were no worse than his blasphemy of her dreams. The spirit
+of romance was abroad to-night&mdash;in the enchantment of the
+moon&mdash;and she was wistful and imaginative as never before.
+This was just the normal expression of her starved
+girlhood&mdash;the same childlike wistfulness with which a
+Cinderella might long for her prince&mdash;just as natural and as
+wholesome and as much a part of youth as laughter and
+happiness.</p>
+<p>"I won't believe him, I won't believe him," she told herself.
+Her thought turned to other channels, and her heart spoke its wish.
+"Wherever he is&mdash;sometime he'll come to me."</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="VI"></a>
+<h2>VI</h2>
+<p>At a little town at the end of steel Ben and Ezram ended the
+first lap of their journey. They had had good traveling these past
+days. Steadily they had gone north, through the tilled lands of
+Northern Washington, through the fertile valleys of lower British
+Columbia, traversing great mountain ranges and penetrating gloomy
+forests, and now had come to the bank of a north-flowing
+river,&mdash;a veritable flood and one of the monarch rivers of the
+North. Every hour their companionship had been more close and their
+hopes higher. Every waking moment Ben had been swept with
+thankfulness for the chance that had come to him.</p>
+<p>They had worked for their meals and passage&mdash;hard, manual
+toil&mdash;but it had seemed only play to them both. Sometimes they
+mended fence, sometimes helped at farm labor, and one gala morning,
+with entire good will and cheer, they beat into cleanliness every
+carpet in a widow's cottage. And the sign of the outcast was fading
+from Ben's flesh.</p>
+<p>The change was marked in his face. His eye seemed more clear and
+steadfast, his lips more firm, the lines of his face were not so
+hard and deep. His fellows of the underworld would have scarcely
+known him now,&mdash;his lips and chin darkening with beard and
+this new air of self-respect upon him. Perhaps they had forgotten
+him, but it was no less than he had done to them. The prison walls
+seemed already as if they hadn't been true. He loved every minute
+of the journey, freshness instead of filth, freedom instead of
+confinement, fragrant fields and blossoming flowers. Ever the stars
+and the moon, remembered of old, yielded him a peace and happiness
+beyond his power to tell. And his gratitude to Ezram grew
+apace.</p>
+<p>Besides self-confidence and the constant, slow unraveling of his
+memory problems, each day yielded rich gifts: no less than added
+trust in each other. Always they found each other steadfast,
+utterly to be relied upon. Ezram never regretted for a moment his
+offer to Ben. The young man had seemingly developed under his eye
+and was a real aid to him in all the problems of the journey.</p>
+<p>As the days passed, the whole tone and key of the land had
+seemed to change. They were full in the mountains now, snow
+gleaming on the heights, forests blue-black on the slopes; and
+Ben's response was a growing excitement that at first he could not
+analyze. The air was sweeter, more bracing, and sometimes he
+discerned a fleeting, delicate odor that drew him up short in his
+talk and held him entranced. There was a sparkle and stir in the
+air, unknown in the cities he had left; and to breathe it deeply
+thrilled him with an unexplainable happiness.</p>
+<p>Some way it was all familiar, all dear to him as if it had once
+been close to his life. The sparkle in the air was not new, only
+recalled: long and long ago he had wakened to find just such a
+delicate fragrance in his nostrils. But the key hadn't come to him
+yet. His memory pictures were ever stronger of outline, clearer in
+his mind's eye, yet they were still too dim for him to interpret
+them. In these days Ezram watched him closely, with a curious,
+intense interest.</p>
+<p>It was no longer pleasant to sleep out in the hay. For the sake
+of warmth alone they were obliged to hire their night's lodging at
+cheap hotels. Spring was full in the land they had left: it was
+just beginning here. The mountains, visible from the village of
+Saltsville where they left the railroad, were still swept with
+snow.</p>
+<p>Ben felt that he would have liked to take a day off at this
+point and venture with his companion into the high, wooded hills
+that fronted the town, but he agreed with Ezram that they could not
+spare the time. They swiftly made preparations for their journey
+down-river. A canoe was bought for a reasonable sum&mdash;they were
+told they had a good chance of selling it again when they left the
+river near Snowy Gulch&mdash;and at the general store they bought
+an axe, rudimentary fishing tackle, tobacco, blankets, and all
+manner of simpler provisions, such as flour, rice, bacon, coffee,
+canned milk, and sugar. And for a ridiculously small sum which he
+mysteriously produced from the pocket of his faded jeans Ezram
+bought a second-hand rifle&mdash;an ancient gun of large caliber
+but of enduring quality&mdash;and a box of shells to match.</p>
+<p>"Old Hiram left me a gun, but we'll each need one," Ezram
+explained. "And they tell me there's a chance to pick up game, like
+as not, goin' down the river."</p>
+<p>They would have need of good canoe-craft before the journey's
+end, the villagers told them. Ezram had not boasted of any such
+ability, and at first Ben regarded the plan with considerable
+misgivings. And it was with the most profound amazement that, when
+they pushed off, he saw Ezram deliberately seat himself in the bow,
+leaving the more important place to his young companion.</p>
+<p>"Good heavens, I'll capsize you in a minute," Ben said. "How do
+you dare risk it----"</p>
+<p>"Push off and stop botherin' me," Ezram answered. "There's a
+paddle&mdash;go ahead and shoot 'er."</p>
+<p>The waters caught the canoe, speeding it downstream; and in
+apprehension of immediate disaster Ben seized the paddle. Swiftly
+he thrust it into the streaming water at his side.</p>
+<p>He was not further aware of Ezram's searching gaze. He did not
+know of the old man's delight at the entire incident&mdash;first
+the anxious, hurried stroke of the paddle, then the movement of
+Ben's long fingers as he caught a new hold, finally the white flame
+of exultation that came into his face. For himself, Ben instantly
+knew that this was his own sphere. He suddenly found himself an
+absolute master of his craft: at the touch of the paddle
+controlling it as a master mechanic controls a delicate
+machine.</p>
+<p>The white waters were no more to be feared. He found that he
+knew, as if by instinct, every trick of the riverman's
+trade,&mdash;the slow stroke, the fast stroke, the best stroke for
+a long day's sail, the little half-turn in his hands that put the
+blade on edge in the water and gave him the finest control. It was
+all so familiar, so unspeakably dear to him. Clear, bright memories
+hovered close to him, almost within his grasp.</p>
+<p>"Do you remember when you shot the Athabaska Rapids?" Ezram had
+asked. It was all clear enough. In that life that was forgotten he
+had evidently lived much in a canoe, knowing every detail of river
+life. Perhaps he had been a master canoeist; at least he felt a
+strange, surging sense of self-confidence and power. He understood,
+now, why the image of rushing waters had come so often into his
+dreams. Dim pictures of river scenes&mdash;cataracts white with
+foam, rapids with thunderous voices, perilous eddies, and then,
+just beyond, glassy waters where the shadow of the canoe was
+unbroken in the blue depths&mdash;streamed through his mind, but
+they were not yet bright enough for him to seize and hold.</p>
+<p>He enjoyed the first few hours of paddling, but in the long,
+warm afternoon came indolence, and they were both willing to glide
+with the current and watch the ever-changing vista of the shore.
+For the first time since they had come into the real North, Ben
+found opportunity to observe and study the country.</p>
+<p>Already they were out of sight of the last vestige of a
+habitation; and the evergreen forests pushed down to the water's
+edge. From the middle of the stream the woods appeared only as a
+dark wall, but this was immeasurably fascinating to Ben. It
+suggested mystery, adventure; yet its deeper appeal, the thing that
+stirred him and thrilled him to the quick, he could neither
+understand nor analyze.</p>
+<p>Sometimes a little clump of trees stood apart, and from their
+shape he identified them as the incomparable spruce, perhaps the
+most distinguished and beautiful of all the evergreens. He marked
+their great height, their slender forms, their dark foliage that
+ever seemed to be silvered with frost; and they seemed to him to
+answer, to the fullest extent, some vague expectation of which he
+had scarcely been aware.</p>
+<p>The wild life of the river filled him with speechless delight.
+Sometimes he saw the waters break and gleam at the leap of a mighty
+salmon&mdash;the king fish of the North on his spring rush to the
+headwaters where he would spawn and die&mdash;and often the canoe
+sent flocks of waterfowl into flight. Ben dimly felt that on the
+tree-clad shores larger, more glorious living creatures were
+standing, hiding, watching the canoe glide past. The thought
+thrilled him.</p>
+<p>Late afternoon, and they worked closer to the shore. They were
+watching for a place to land. But because the shadows of twilight
+were already falling, the forest itself was hardly more vivid to
+their eyes. Once it seemed to Ben that he saw the underbrush move
+and waver at the water's edge, and his heart leaped; but whatever
+stirred kept itself concealed. And now, in the gray of twilight,
+Ezram saw the place to land.</p>
+<p>It was a small lagoon into which a creek emptied, and beyond was
+an open meadow, found so often and so unexpectedly in the North
+woods. Swiftly Ben turned the canoe into shore.</p>
+<p>Ezram climbed out and made fast, and so busy was he with his
+work that he did not glance at Ben, otherwise he might have beheld
+a phenomenon that would have been of keen interest to the alienist,
+Forest. His young charge had suddenly grown quite pale. Ben himself
+was neither aware of this nor of the fact that his heart was
+hammering wildly in his breast and his blood racing, like wild
+rivers, through his veins: he was only thrilled and held by a sense
+of vast, impending developments. Every nerve tingled and thrilled,
+and why he did not know.</p>
+<p>Ezram began to unload; but now, his blue eyes shining, he began
+a covert watch of his young companion. He saw the man from prison
+suddenly catch his breath in inexpressible awe and his eye kindle
+with a light of unknown source. A great question was shaping itself
+in Ben's mind, but as yet he could not find the answer.</p>
+<p>All at once Ben knew this place. Here was nothing strange or
+new: it was all as he had known it would be in his inmost heart.
+All of it spoke to him with familiar voice, seemingly to welcome
+him as a son is welcomed after long absence. There was nothing here
+that had not been known and beloved of old. Vivid memories, bright
+as lightning, swept through him.</p>
+<p>He had always known this wholesome, sweet breath that swept into
+his face. It was merely that of the outdoors, the open places that
+were his own haunts. It was wholly fitting and true that the
+silence should lie over the dark spruce that ringed about him, a
+silence that, in its infinite harmony with some queer mood of
+silence in his own heart, was more moving than any voice. All was
+as he had secretly known: the hushed tree aisles, the gray
+radiance&mdash;soft as a hand upon the brow&mdash;of the afterglow;
+the all-pervading health and peace of the wilderness. Except for an
+old and trusted companion, he was alone with it all, and that too
+was as it should be. Just he and the forest, his companion and the
+gliding river.</p>
+<p>He didn't try to understand, at first, the joy and the wonder
+that thrilled him, nor could he speak aloud the thoughts that came
+to him. Ravished and mystified, he walked softly to the dark, still
+edge of the forest, penetrated it a distance, then sat down to
+wait.</p>
+<p>For the first time in years, it seemed to him, he was at peace.
+A strange sense of self-realization&mdash;lost to him in his years
+of exile&mdash;climbed like fire through him; and with it the
+return of a lost virility, a supreme vigor tingling each little
+nerve; a sense of strength and power that was almost blinding.</p>
+<p>He sat still. He saw the twilight descending, ever heavier, over
+the forest. The sharp edges of the individual trees faded and
+blended, the trunks blurred. He turned one fleeting glance of
+infinite, inexpressible gratitude toward Ezram&mdash;the man who
+had brought him here and who now was busily engaged in unpacking
+the canoe and making camp&mdash;then looked back to his forests.
+The wind brought the wood smells,&mdash;spruce and moldering earth
+and a thousand more no man could name. The great, watchful,
+brooding spirit of the forest went in to him.</p>
+<p>All at once his heart seemed to pause in his breast. He was
+listening,&mdash;for what he did not know. His eyes strained into
+the shadows. Brush wavered, a twig cracked with a miniature
+explosion. And then two figures emerged into the beaver meadow
+opposite him.</p>
+<p>They were only creatures of the wild, an old cow moose, black
+and ungainly, and her long-legged, awkward calf. Yet they supplied
+the detail that was missing. They were the one thing needed to
+complete the picture&mdash;the crowning touch that revealed this
+land as it was&mdash;the virgin wilderness where the creatures of
+the wild still held full sway.</p>
+<p>But it did more. All at once a great clarity seemed to take
+possession of his mind. Here, in these dark forests, were the
+<i>stimuli</i> of which Forest, the alienist, had spoken; and his
+brain seemed to leap, as in one impulse, to the truth. Suddenly he
+knew the answer to all the questions and problems that had troubled
+him so long.</p>
+<p>Many times, in the past years, he had seen logs jammed in the
+water, a veritable labyrinth that defied dissolution. Suddenly, as
+if by magic, the key log would be ejected, and the whole jam would
+break, shatter down in one stupendous crash, settle and dissolve,
+leaving at last only drift logs floating quietly in the river. Thus
+it was with the confusion in his brain. All at once it seemed to
+dissolve, the tangled skeins straightened out, the association
+areas of his mind stirred full into life once more. As he sat
+there, pale as the twilight sky, the mists of amnesia lifted from
+him. He was cured as if by the touch of a holy man.</p>
+<p>No wonder these forests depths were familiar. His boyhood and
+early manhood, clear until the vortex of war had engulfed him, had
+been spent amid just such surroundings, in just such silences, on
+the banks of just such wilderness rivers. The same sky line of
+dark, heaven-reaching spruce had fronted him of old. He sprang up,
+his eyes blazing. "I remember everything," an inaudible voice spoke
+within him. Then he whispered, fervently, to his familiar wilds.
+"And I have come home."</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="VII"></a>
+<h2>VII</h2>
+<br>
+<p>Everything was as it should be, as he and Ezram made the camp.
+He himself cut the boughs for their beds, laid them with his
+remembered skill, spread the blankets, and kept the fire blazing
+while Ezram cooked; afterwards he knew the indescribable peace of a
+pipe smoke beside the glowing coals. He saw the moon come up at
+last, translating the spruce forest into a fairy land.</p>
+<p>Of course he had remembered the moon. How many times had he
+watched for its argent gleam on the sky line, the vivid, detailed
+silhouette of the spruce against it; and then its slow-spreading
+glory through the still, dark forests! The spires of the trees grew
+ensilvered, as always; immense nebulous patches lay between the
+trunks, shadows stole mysteriously, phantoms met, lingered, and
+vanished.</p>
+<p>This was his own North! The stir and vigor in the very air told
+him that. This was the land he had dreamed of, under the moon; the
+primeval forests that had tried him, tested him, staked their cruel
+might against him, but yet had blessed him with their infinite
+beneficence and hospitality. It was ever somber, yet its dusky
+beauty stirred him more than any richness he had seen in bright
+cities. He knew its every mood: ecstasy in spring; gentleness in
+summer; brooding melancholy in the gray days of fall; remorseless,
+savage, but unspeakably beautiful in the winter. He felt his old
+pity for the spring flowers, blossoming so hopefully in this gentle
+season. How soon they would be covered with many feet of snow!</p>
+<p>"It's all come clear again," he told Ezram. And the two men
+talked over, quietly and happily, old days at Thunder Lake. He
+remembered now that Ezram had always been the most intimate friend
+of his own family: a spry old godfather to himself and young
+sister, a boon companion to his once successful rival, Ben's
+father. Ben did not wonder, now, at his own perplexity when Forest
+had spoken of "Wolf" Darby. That was his own name known throughout
+hundreds of square miles of forest and in dozens of little river
+hamlets in an Eastern province. Partly the name was in token of his
+skill as a woodsman and frontiersman, partly in recognition of
+certain traits that his fellow woodsmen had seen and wondered at in
+him. It was not an empty nickname, in his case. It was simply that
+the name suited him.</p>
+<p>"The boys had reason a-plenty for callin' you that," Ezram told
+him. "Up here, as you know, men don't get no complimentary epithets
+unless they deserve 'em. Some men, Ben, are like weasels. You've
+seen 'em. You've seen human rats, too. As if the souls they carried
+around with 'em was the souls of rats. Of course you remember
+'Grizzly' Silverdale? Did you ever see any one who in disposition
+and looks and walk and everything reminded you so much of a grizzly
+bear? I've known men like sheep, and men with the faithful souls of
+dogs. You remember when you got in the big fight in the Le Perray
+bar?"</p>
+<p>"I don't think I'll ever forget it again."</p>
+<p>"That's the night the name came on you, to stay. You remember
+how you'd drive into one of them, leap away, then tear into
+another. Like a wolf for all the world! You was always hard to get
+into a fight, but you know as well as I do, and I ain't salvin' you
+when I say it, that you're the most terrible, ferocious fighter,
+forgettin' everything but blood, that ever paddled a canoe on the
+Athabaska. Some men, Ben, seem to have the spirit of the wolf right
+under their skins, a sort of a wild instinct that might have come
+straight down from the stone age, for all I know. You happen to be
+one of 'em, the worst I ever saw. Maybe you don't remember, but you
+took your bull moose before you was thirteen years old."</p>
+<p>Ben sat dreaming. The Athabaska Rapids was not an empty name to
+him now. He remembered the day he had won the canoe race at Lodge
+Pole. Other exploits occurred to him,&mdash;of brutal, savage
+brawls in river taverns, of adventures on the trail, of struggling
+with wild rivers when his canoe capsized, of running the great logs
+down through white waters. It was his world, these far-stretching
+wildernesses. And he blessed, with all the fervency of his heart,
+the man who had brought him home.</p>
+<p>He went to his bed, but sleep did not at once come to him. He
+lay with hushed breathing, listening to the little, secret noises,
+known so well, of the wilderness night. He heard the wild creatures
+start forth on their midnight journeys. Once a lynx mewed at the
+edge of the forest; and he laughed aloud when some large
+creature&mdash;probably a moose&mdash;grunted and splashed water in
+the near-by beaver meadow.</p>
+<p>Thus ended the first of a brilliant succession of joyous days,
+descending the stream in the daylight hours and camping on the bank
+at night. Every day they plunged deeper into the heart of the
+wilderness, and every hour Ben felt more at home.</p>
+<p>It was only play for him,&mdash;to meet and shoot successfully
+the rapids of the river. In the long stillnesses he paddled hour
+upon hour, not only to make time but to find an outlet for his
+surging energy. His old-time woodsman's pleasures were recalled
+again: shooting waterfowl for their mess in the still dawns, racing
+the swimming moose when they ran on him in the water. One day, fish
+hungry, he rigged up the elementary fishing tackle that they had
+brought from Saltsville and tried for a salmon.</p>
+<p>To a long, tough rod cut on the river bank he attached thirty
+feet of cheap, white cord, and to the cord he fastened a bright
+spoon hook&mdash;the spinner that salmon fishers know. He had no
+leader, no reel, no delicately balanced salmon rod&mdash;and Ezram
+was full of scorn for the whole proceeding. And it was certainly
+true that, by all the rules of angling, Ben had no chance whatever
+to get a bite.</p>
+<p>The cord was visible in the clear water, and the spoon itself
+was scarcely more than twenty feet from the rear of the boat. But
+this northern stream was not at all like the famous salmon rivers
+known to sportsmen. In years to come, when the lines of
+communication are better and tourist hotels are established on its
+banks, the river may then begin to conform to the qualifications of
+a conventional fishing stream, and then Ben's crude tackle will be
+unavailing. But at present the salmon were not so particular. As
+fishermen came but rarely, the fish were in countless numbers; and
+in such a galaxy there were bound to be few misguided fish that did
+not know a sportsman's tackle from a dub's.</p>
+<p>The joy of angling, once known, dwells in the body until death,
+and Ben was a born fisherman. The old delight that can never die
+crept back to him the instant he felt the clumsy rod in his hands
+and the faint throb of the line through the delicate mechanism of
+his nerves. And apparently for no other reason than that the river
+hordes wished to welcome him home, almost at once a gigantic bull
+salmon took his spoon.</p>
+<p>Ezram's first knowledge of it was a wild yell that almost
+startled him over the side&mdash;the same violent outcry that old
+anglers still can not restrain when the fish takes hold, even after
+a lifetime of angling. When he recovered himself he looked to see
+Ben kneeling frantically in the stern, hanging for dear life to his
+rod and seemingly in grave danger of being pulled overboard.</p>
+<p>No man who has felt that first, overpowering jolt of a striking
+salmon can question the rapture of that first moment. The jolt
+carried through all the intricacies of the nerves, jarred the soul
+within the man, and seemingly registered in the germ plasm itself
+an impression that could be recalled, in dreams, ten generations
+hence. Fortunately the pole withstood that first, frantic rush, and
+then things began to happen in earnest.</p>
+<p>The great trout seemed to dance on the surface of the water. He
+tugged, he swam in frantic circles, he flopped and darted and
+sulked and rushed and leaped. If he hadn't been securely hooked,
+and if it had not been for a skill earned in a hundred such
+battles, Ben would not have held him a moment.</p>
+<p>But the time came at last, after a sublime half-hour, when his
+steam began to die. His rushes were less powerful, and often he
+hung like a dead weight on the line. Slowly Ben worked him in, not
+daring to believe that he was conquering, willing to sell his soul
+for the privilege of seeing the great fish safe in the boat. His
+eyes protruded, perspiration gleamed on his brow, he talked
+foolishly and incessantly to Ezram, the fish, the river-gods, and
+himself. Ezram, something of an old Isaac Walton himself, managed
+the canoe with unusual dexterity and chuckled in the contagion of
+Ben's delight. And lo&mdash;in a moment more the thing was
+done.</p>
+<p>"You'd think you never had a rod in your hand before," Ezram
+commented in mock disgust. "Such hollerin' and whoopin' I never
+heard."</p>
+<p>Ben grinned widely. "That's fishing&mdash;the sport that keeps a
+man an amateur all his days&mdash;with an amateur's delight." His
+vivid smile quivered at his lips and was still. "That's why I love
+the North; it can never, never grow old. You're just as excited at
+the close as at the beginning. Ezram, old man, it's life!"</p>
+<p>Ezram nodded. Perhaps, in the moment's fire, Ben had touched at
+the truth. Perhaps <i>life</i>, in its fullest sense, is something
+more than being born, breathing air, consuming food, and moving the
+lips in speech. <i>Life</i> is a thing that wilderness creatures
+know, realized only when the blood, leaping red, sweeps away
+lifeless and palsied tissue and builds a more sentient structure in
+its place; invoked by such forces as adventure and danger and
+battle and triumph. For the past half-hour Ben had lived in the
+fullest sense, and Ezram was a little touched by the look of
+unspeakable gratitude with which his young companion regarded
+him.</p>
+<p>But the journey ended at last. They saw the white peak they had
+been told to watch for, and soon after they came to a green bank
+from which the forest had been cut away. Softly, rather
+regretfully, they pushed up and made landing on the banks of a
+small stream, tributary to the great river, that marked the end of
+the water route.</p>
+<p>This stream, Ezram knew, was Poor Man's Creek, the stream of
+which his brother had written and which they must ascend to reach
+Spruce Pass. Only five miles distant, in a quartering direction
+from the river, was Snowy Gulch, the village where they were to
+secure supplies and, from Steve Morris, the late Hiram's gun and
+his pet, Fenris.</p>
+<p>For a time, at least, they had left the utter solitudes of the
+wild. Men had cut away the forest and had built a crude wagon road
+to Snowy Gulch. And before they were fully unpacked they made out
+the figure of a middle-aged frontiersman, his back loaded,
+advancing up the road toward them.</p>
+<p>Both men knew something of the ways of the frontier and turned
+in greeting. "Howdy," Ezram began pleasantly.</p>
+<p>"Howdy," the stranger replied. "How was goin'?"</p>
+<p>"Oh, good enough."</p>
+<p>"Come all the way from Saltsville?"</p>
+<p>"Yes. Goin' to Snowy Gulch."</p>
+<p>"It's only five miles, up this road," the stranger ventured.
+"I'm goin' up Saltsville way myself, but I won't have no river to
+tow me. I've got to do my own paddlin'. Thank the lord I'm only
+goin' a small part of the way."</p>
+<p>"You ain't goin' to swim, are you? Where's your boat."</p>
+<p>"My pard's got an old craft, and he and I are goin' to pack it
+out next trip." The stranger paused, blinking his eyes. "Say,
+partners&mdash;you don't want to sell your boat, do you?"</p>
+<p>Ben started to speak, but the doubtful look on Ezram's face
+checked him. "Oh, I don't know," the old man replied, in the
+discouraging tones of a born tradesman. In reality the old
+Shylock's heart was leaping gayly in his breast. This was almost
+too good to be true: a purchaser for the boat in the first hour.
+"Yet we might," he went on. "We was countin' on goin' back in it
+soon."</p>
+<p>"I'd just as leave buy it, if you want to sell it. In this
+jerked-off town there ain't a fit canoe to be had. Our boat is the
+worst tub you ever seen. How much you want for it?"</p>
+<p>Ezram stated his figure, and Ben was prone to believe that he
+had adopted a highwayman for a buddy. The amount named was nearly
+twice that which they had paid. And to his vast amazement the
+stranger accepted the offer in his next breath.</p>
+<p>"It's worth something to bring it up here, you dub," Ezram
+informed his young partner, when the latter accused him of
+profiteering.</p>
+<p>After the sale was made Ezram and the stranger soon got on the
+intimate terms that almost invariably follow a mutually
+satisfactory business deal, and in the talk that ensued the old man
+learned a fact of the most vital importance to their venture. And
+it came like a bolt from the blue.</p>
+<p>"So you don't know any folks in Snowy Gulch, then?" the stranger
+had asked politely. "But you'll get acquainted soon
+enough&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I've got a letter to a feller named Morris," Ezram replied.
+"And I've heard of one or two more men too&mdash;Jeffery Neilson
+was one of 'em&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"You'll find Morris in town all right," the stranger ventured to
+assure him. "He lives right next to Neilson's.
+And&mdash;say&mdash;what do you know about this man Neilson?"</p>
+<p>"Oh, nothin' at all. Why?"</p>
+<p>"If you fellows is prospectin', Jeffery Neilson is a first-class
+man to stay away from&mdash;and his understrapers, too&mdash;Ray
+Brent and Chan Heminway. But they're out of town right now. They
+skinned out all in a bunch a few weeks ago&mdash;and I can't tell
+you what kind of a scent they got."</p>
+<p>Ezram felt cold to the marrow of his bones. He glanced covertly
+at Ben; fortunately his partner was busy among the supplies and was
+not listening to this conversation. Yet likely enough it was a
+false alarm! Doubtless the ugly possibility that occurred to him
+had no justification whatever in fact. Nevertheless, he couldn't
+restrain the question that was at his lips.</p>
+<p>"You don't know where they went, do you?" he asked.</p>
+<p>"Not exactly. They took up this creek here a ways, through
+Spruce Pass, and over to Yuga River&mdash;the country that kind of
+a crazy old chap named Hiram Melville, who died here a few weeks
+ago, has always prospected."</p>
+<p>The stranger marvelled that his old listener should have
+suddenly gone quite pale.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="VIII"></a>
+<h2>VIII</h2>
+<p>Ezram had only a moment's further conversation with his new
+friend. He put two or three questions&mdash;in a rather curious,
+hushed voice&mdash;and got his answer. Yes, it was true that the
+shortest way to go to the Yuga River was to follow up the creek by
+which he was now standing. It was only out of the way to go into
+Snowy Gulch: they would have to come back to this very point. And
+yes, a pedestrian, carrying a light pack, could make much better
+time than a horseman with pack animals. The horses could go no
+faster than a walk, and the time required to sling packs and care
+for the animals cut down the day's march by half.</p>
+<p>These things learned, Ezram strolled over to his young partner.
+And at that moment he revealed the possession of a talent that
+neither he nor any of his friends had ever suspected. The stage had
+lost an artist of no mean ability when Ezra Melville had taken to
+the cattle business. Outwardly, to the last, little lines about his
+lips and eyes, he was his genial, optimistic, droll old self. His
+eye twinkled, his face beamed in the gray stubble, his voice was
+rollicking with the fun of life the same as ever. And like
+Pagliacci in his masque there was not the slightest exterior sign
+of the fear and despair that chilled his heart.</p>
+<p>"What have you and your poor victim been talking about, all this
+time?" Ben asked.</p>
+<p>"Oh, just a gab-fest&mdash;a tat-i-tat as you'd call it. But you
+know, Ben, I've got a idea all a-sudden." Ben straightened, lighted
+his pipe, and prepared to listen.</p>
+<p>"This old boy tells me that we'd save just twelve miles by
+striking off front here, instead of goin' into town. Snowy Gulch is
+six miles, and we have to come back to this very place. What's the
+use of goin' into town at all?"</p>
+<p>"Good heavens, Ez? Have you forgotten we've got to get supplies?
+And your brother's gun&mdash;and his dog?"</p>
+<p>"How do you know he's got a dog?"</p>
+<p>"He said a pup, didn't he? But it may be an elephant for all I
+know. Of course, we've got to go on in."</p>
+<p>"Yes, I know&mdash;one of us has. But, Ben, it seems to me that
+one of us ought to strike off now and figure out the way and sort
+of get located. One of us could take a little food and a couple of
+blankets and make it through in less than a day. Half a day,
+almost. Then we could have the cabin all ready, and everything laid
+out for to begin work. He could blaze any dim spots in the trail
+and save time for the other feller, comin' with the horses."</p>
+<p>"Oh, it would be all right," Ben began rather doubtfully. "I
+don't see that much is to be gained by it. But I'll strike off on
+foot, if you want me to."</p>
+<p>Ezram's mind was flashing with thoughts like lightning, and his
+answer was ready. "Ben, if you don't mind, I'll do that," he said.
+"I can get along without gazin' at the sky-scrapers of Snowy Gulch,
+and to tell the truth, that twelve miles of extra walkin' don't
+appeal to me one bit. I'd as soon have you tend to all the things
+in town."</p>
+<p>"But you'd get a ride, if you waited&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I hate a horse, anyway&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"You've surely changed a lot since the war."</p>
+<p>"I was thrown off not long ago&mdash;and have been leery of the
+dum things ever since. I'd walk, sooner than ride, even if I did
+have a horse. So you roll me that big Hudson Bay blanket and give
+me a couple of day's rations. I'll make a pack for my back that I
+can't feel. Then you strike off into town."</p>
+<p>Without especial enthusiasm Ben agreed. Ezram gave a great sigh
+of satisfaction. He had put through the deal: Ben's secret thought
+was that Ezram's curiosity&mdash;always a pronounced trait with the
+old&mdash;had mastered him, and he could not wait longer to explore
+the mine. Not one glimpse of the truth as to Ezram's real reason
+for desiring to push on alone as much as occurred to him.</p>
+<p>Ezram was wholly deliberate. He knew what waited him on arrival
+at his brother's claim. Jeffery Neilson and his gang had assembled
+there, had already jumped the claim just as his brother had warned
+him that they would do; and coolly and quietly he had resolved to
+face them alone. They were desperate men, not likely to be driven
+from the gold by threats or persuasion only. But there was no law
+in his life, no precept in his code, whereby he could subject his
+young partner to the risk.</p>
+<p>It was true that the desire to arrive on the scene at the
+earliest possible moment had been a factor in his decision. One of
+them could hurry on, unimpeded by the pack animals, and the other
+must linger to secure their supplies; and there could really be no
+question, in Ezram's mind, which should go and which should stay.
+He had known perfectly that if Ben had realized the true need for
+haste, he would never have submitted so tamely to Ezram's will. The
+old man knew Wolf Darby. The strong dark eyes in the lean,
+raw-boned face reassured him as to this knowledge. Ben would go
+too, if he knew the truth. Likely he would insist on going
+alone.</p>
+<p>Ezram had decided the whole thing in a flash, realizing that a
+lone pedestrian would be practically as effective in dealing with
+the usurpers as two horsemen, impeded by the pack animals. If they
+didn't shoot to kill at first sight of him Ezram would have time in
+plenty to seek refuge in the forest and do a sharpshooter's
+business that would fill his old heart with joy. And there really
+wasn't any question as to which of the two should go. Their
+partnership was of long duration; their comradeship was deep; Ben
+was young, and Ezram himself was old!</p>
+<p>Ezram made his decision entirely casually, and he would have
+been surprised out of his wits if any one had expressed wonder of
+it. He knew no self-pity or sentimentality, only the knowledge that
+he did not desire that his young buddy should be shot full of holes
+in the first moment of play. The only fear that had visited him was
+that Ben might catch on and not let him go. And now he could
+scarcely restrain his triumphant chuckles in Ben's hearing.</p>
+<p>He made his pack&mdash;a few simple provisions wrapped in his
+blanket&mdash;and a knife and camp axe swung on his belt. He took
+his trusted pipe&mdash;because he knew well that he could never
+acquit himself creditably in a fight without a few lungfuls of
+tobacco smoke first&mdash;and he also took his rifle. "You'll be
+gettin' my brother's gun when you get to Snowy Gulch," he
+explained, "and I may see game on the way out. And you keep this
+copy of the letter." He handed Ben the copy he had made of Hiram's
+will. "I'm the worst hand for losin' things you ever seen."</p>
+<p>"You're sure you've got the directions straight?"</p>
+<p>"Sure.&mdash;And I guess that's all."</p>
+<p>They said their simple good-bys, shaking hands over a pile of
+stores. "I've only got one decent place to keep things safe," Ezra
+confided, "and that ain't so all-fired decent, either. When I get
+any papers that are extra precious, I always stick 'em down the leg
+of these high old boots, between the sock and the leather. But it's
+too much work to take the boot off now, so you keep the
+letter."</p>
+<p>"I suppose you've got a million-dollar bank note hidden down
+there now," Ben remarked.</p>
+<p>"No, not a cent. Just the same, if ever I get shuffled off all
+of a sudden&mdash;rollin' down one of these mountains, say&mdash;I
+want you to look there mighty careful. There may be a document or
+two of importance&mdash;letter to my old home, and all that."</p>
+<p>"I won't forget," Ben promised.</p>
+<p>"See that you don't." They shook hands again, lightly and
+happily. "So good-by, son, and&mdash;'<i>take keer of
+yerself</i>!'"</p>
+<p>The old man turned away, and soon his withered figure vanished
+into the thickets farther up the river. He was following a fairly
+well-worn moose trail, and he went swiftly. Soon he was out of
+hearing of the sound of the great river.</p>
+<p>Then the little woods people&mdash;marten and ermine and rodent
+and such other small forest creatures that&mdash;who can
+say?&mdash;might watch with exceeding interest the travelers on the
+trails, could have thought that old Ezram was already fatigued. He
+sat down beside a tree and drew a soiled sheet of paper from his
+pocket. Searching further he found then the stub of a pencil. Then
+he wrote.</p>
+<p>Having written he unlaced his boot on the right foot, folded the
+paper, and thrust it into the bootleg. Then, relacing the shoe, he
+arose and journeyed blithely on.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="IX"></a>
+<h2>IX</h2>
+<p>On arriving in Snowy Gulch, Ben's first efforts were to inquire
+in regard to horses. Both pack and saddle animals, he learned, were
+to be hired of Sandy McClurg, the owner of the general store and
+leading citizen of the village; and at once he made his way to
+confer with him.</p>
+<p>"Most of my mustangs are rented out," the merchant informed him
+when they met in the rear of the general store, "but if you can get
+along with three, I guess I can fix you up. You can pack two of
+'em, and ride the third."</p>
+<p>"Good enough," Ben agreed. "And after I once get in, I'd like to
+turn back two of them, and maybe all three&mdash;to save the hire
+and the bother of taking care of them. I suppose, after the fashion
+of cayuses, they'll leg it right home."</p>
+<p>"Just a little faster than a dog. Horses don't much care to grub
+their food out of them spruce forests. They're good plugs, so of
+course I don't want to rent 'em to any one who'll abuse 'em, or
+take 'em on too hard trips. Where are you heading, if the
+question's fair?"</p>
+<p>"Through Spruce Pass and down into the Yuga River."</p>
+<p>"Prospecting, eh? There's been quite a movement down that way
+lately, considering it never was anything but a pocket country. By
+starting early you can make it through in a day. And you said your
+name was&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Darby. Ben Darby."</p>
+<p>The merchant opened his eyes. "Not the Ben Darby that took all
+the prizes at the meet at Lodge Pole&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Ben's rugged face lit with the brilliancy of his smile. "The
+same Darby," he admitted.</p>
+<p>"Well, well! I hope you'll excuse them remarks about abusing the
+horses. If I had known who you was, 'Wolf' Darby, I'd have known
+you knew how to take care of cayuses. Take 'em for as long as you
+want, or where you want. And when did you say you was going?"</p>
+<p>"First thing to-morrow."</p>
+<p>"Well, you're pretty likely to have companionship on the road,
+too. There is another party that is going up that way either
+to-morrow or the day after. Pretty lucky for you."</p>
+<p>"I'm glad of it, if he isn't a tenderfoot. That must be a pretty
+thickly settled region&mdash;where I'm heading."</p>
+<p>"On the contrary, there's only three human beings in the whole
+district&mdash;and there's a thousand of square miles back of it
+without even one. These three are some men that went up that way
+prospecting some time ago, and this other party will make four." He
+paused, smiling. "Yes, I think you will enjoy this trip to-morrow,
+after you see who it is. I'd enjoy it, and I'm thirty years older
+than you are."</p>
+<p>Ben's thought was elsewhere, and he only half heard. "All
+right&mdash;I'll be here before dawn to-morrow and get the horses.
+And now will you tell me&mdash;where Steve Morris lives? I've got
+some business with him."</p>
+<p>"Right up the street&mdash;clear to the end of the row."
+McClurg's humor had quite engulfed him by now, and he chuckled
+again. "And if I was you, I'd stop in the door just this
+side&mdash;and get acquainted with your fellow traveler."</p>
+<p>"What's his name?" Ben asked.</p>
+<p>"The party is named Neilson."</p>
+<p>Unfortunately the name had no mental associations for Ben. It
+wakened no interest or stirred no memories. He had read the letter
+the copy of which he carried but once, and evidently the name of
+the man Ezram had been warned against had made no lasting
+impression on Ben's mind.</p>
+<p>"All right. Maybe I'll look him up."</p>
+<p>Ben turned, then made his way up the long, straggly row of
+unpainted shacks that marked the village street. A few moments
+later he was standing in the Morris home, facing the one friend
+that Hiram Melville had possessed on earth.</p>
+<p>Ben stated his case simply. He was the partner of Hiram's
+brother, he said, and he had been designated to take care of Fenris
+and such other belongings as Hiram had left. Morris studied his
+face with the quiet, far-seeing eyes of a woodsman.</p>
+<p>"You've got means of identification?" he asked.</p>
+<p>Ben realized with something of a shock that he had none at all.
+The letter he carried was merely a copy without Hiram's signature;
+besides, he had no desire to reveal its contents. For an instant he
+was considerably embarrassed. But Morris smiled quietly.</p>
+<p>"I guess I won't ask you for any," he said. "Hiram didn't leave
+anything, far as I know, except his old gun and his pet. Lord
+knows, I'd let anybody take that pet of his that's fool enough to
+say he's got any claim to him, and you can be sure I ain't going to
+dispute his claim."</p>
+<p>"Fenris, then, is,&mdash;something of a problem?"</p>
+<p>"The worst I ever had. His old gun is a good enough weapon, but
+I'm willing to trust you with it to get rid of Fenris. If you don't
+turn out to be the right man, I'll dig up for the gun&mdash;and
+feel lucky at that. I won't be able to furnish another Fenris,
+though, and I guess nobody'll be sorry. And if I was you&mdash;I'd
+take him out in a nice quiet place and shoot him."</p>
+<p>He turned, with the intention of securing the gun from an inner
+room. He did not even reach the door. It was as if both of them
+were struck motionless, frozen in odd, fixed attitudes, by a shrill
+scream for help that penetrated like a bullet the thin walls of the
+house.</p>
+<p>Instinctively both of them recognized it, unmistakably, as the
+piercing cry of a woman in great distress and terror. It rose
+surprisingly high, hovered a ghastly instant, and then was almost
+drowned out and obliterated by another sound, such a sound as left
+Ben only wondering and appalled.</p>
+<p>The sound was in the range between a growl and a bay, instantly
+identifying itself as the utterance of an animal, rather than a
+human being. And it was savage and ferocious simply beyond power of
+words to tell. Ben's first thought was of some enormous, vicious
+dog, and yet his wood's sense told him that the utterance was not
+that of a dog. Rather it contained that incredible fierceness and
+savagery that marks the killing cries of the creatures of the
+wild.</p>
+<p>He heard it even as he leaped through the door in answer to the
+scream for aid. His muscles gathered with that mysterious power
+that had always sustained him in his moments of crisis. He took the
+steps in one leap, Morris immediately behind him.</p>
+<p>"Fenris is loose," he heard the man say. "He'll kill some
+one----!"</p>
+<p>Ben could still hear the savage cries of the animal, seemingly
+from just behind the adjoining house. A girl's terrified voice
+still called for help. And deeply appalled by the sounds, Ben
+wished that the rifle, such a weapon as had been his trust since
+early boyhood, was ready and loaded in his hands.</p>
+<p>He raced about the house; and at once the scene, in every vivid
+detail, was revealed to him. Pressed back against the wall of a
+little woodshed that stood behind her house a girl stood at
+bay,&mdash;a dark-eyed girl whose beautiful face was drawn and
+stark-white with horror. She was screaming for aid, her fascinated
+gaze held by a gray-black, houndlike creature that crouched,
+snarling, twenty yards distant.</p>
+<p>Evidently the creature was stealing toward her in stealthy
+advance more like a stalking cat than a frenzied hound. Nor was
+this creature a hound, in spite of the similarity of outline. Such
+fearful, lurid surface-lights as all of them saw in its fierce eyes
+are not characteristic of the soft, brown orbs of the dog, ancient
+friend to man, but are ever the mark of the wild beast of the
+forest. The fangs were bared, gleaming in foam, the hair stood
+erect on the powerful shoulders; and instantly Ben recognized its
+breed. It was a magnificent specimen of that huge, gaunt runner of
+the forests, the Northern wolf. Evidently from the black shades of
+his fur he was partly of the Siberian breed of wolves that
+beforetime have migrated down on the North American side of Bering
+Sea.</p>
+<p>A chain was attached to the animal's collar, and this in turn to
+a stake that had been freshly pulled from the ground. This beast
+was Fenris,&mdash;the woods creature that old Hiram Melville had
+raised from cubdom.</p>
+<p>There could be no doubt as to the reality of the girl's peril.
+The animal was insane with the hunting madness, and he was plainly
+stalking her, just as his fierce mother might have stalked a fawn,
+across the young grass. Already he was almost near enough to leap,
+and the girl's young, strong body could be no defense against the
+hundred and fifty pounds of wire sinew and lightning muscle that
+constituted the wolf. The bared fangs need flash but once for such
+game as this. And yet, after the first, startled glance, Ben Darby
+felt himself complete master of the situation.</p>
+<p>No man could tell him why. No fact of his life would have been
+harder to explain, no impulse in all his days had had a more
+inscrutable origin. The realization seemed to spring from some
+cool, sequestered knowledge hidden deep in his spirit. He knew, in
+one breathless instant, that he was the master&mdash;and that the
+girl was safe.</p>
+<p>He seemed to know, again, that he had found his ordained sphere.
+He knew this breed,&mdash;this savage, blood-mad, fierce-eyed
+creature that turned, snarling, at his approach. He had something
+in common with the breed, knowing their blood-lusts and their
+mighty moods; and dim, dreamlike memory reminded him that he had
+mastered them in a long war that went down to the roots of time.
+Fenris was only a fellow wilderness creature, a pack brother of the
+dark forests, and he had no further cause for fear.</p>
+<p>"Fenris!" he ordered sharply. "Come here!" His voice was
+commanding and clear above the animal's snarls.</p>
+<p>There followed a curious, long instant of utter silence and
+infinite suspense. The girl's scream died on her lips: the wolf
+stood tense, wholly motionless. Morris, who had drawn his knife and
+had prepared to leap with magnificent daring upon the wolf, turned
+with widening eyes, instinctively aware of impending miracle. Ben's
+eyes met those of the wolf, commanding and unafraid.</p>
+<p>"Down, Fenris," Ben said again. "Down!"</p>
+<p>Then slowly, steadily, Ben moved toward him. Watching
+unbelieving, Morris saw the fierce eyes begin to lose their fire.
+The stiff hair on the shoulders fell into place, tense muscle
+relaxed. He saw in wonder that the animal was trembling all
+over.</p>
+<p>Ben stood beside him now, his hand reaching. "Down, down," he
+cautioned quietly. Suddenly the wolf crouched, cowering, at his
+feet.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="X"></a>
+<h2>X</h2>
+<p>Ben straightened to find himself under a wondering scrutiny by
+both Morris and the girl. "Good Lord, Darby!" the former exclaimed.
+"How did you do it&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Now that the suspense was over, Ben himself stood smiling, quite
+at ease. "Can't say just how. I just felt that I could&mdash;I've
+always been able to handle animals. He's tame, anyway."</p>
+<p>"Tame, is he? You ought to have had to care for him the last few
+weeks, and you'd think tame. Not once have I dared go in reach of
+his rope. And there he is, crouched at your feet! I was always
+dreading he'd get away&mdash;" Morris paused, evidently remembering
+the girl. "Beatrice, are you hurt?"</p>
+<p>The girl moved toward them. "No. He didn't touch me. But you
+came just in time&mdash;" The girl's voice wavered; and Ben stepped
+to her side. "I'm all right now&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"But you'd better sit down," Ben advised quietly. "It was enough
+to scare any one to death&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Any one&mdash;but you&mdash;" the girl replied, her voice still
+unsteady. But she paused when she saw the warm color spread over
+Ben's rugged, brown face. And his embarrassment was real. Naturally
+shy and unassuming, such effusive praise as this always disturbed
+him&mdash;just as it would have embarrassed any really masculine
+man alive. Women, more extravagant in speech and loving flattery
+with a higher ardor, would have found it hard to believe how really
+distressed he was; but Morris, an outdoor man to the core,
+understood completely. Besides, Ben knew that the praise was not
+deserved. Excessive bravery had played no part in the scene of a
+moment before. He had been brave just as far as Morris was brave,
+leaping freely in response to a call for help: the same degree of
+bravery that can be counted on in most men, over the face of the
+earth. Bravery does not lie alone in facing danger: there must also
+be the consciousness of danger, the conquest of fear. In this case
+Ben had felt no fear. He knew with a sure, true knowledge that he
+was master of the wolf. He knew the wolf's response to his words
+before ever he spoke. And now all the words in the language could
+not convey to these others whence that knowledge had come.</p>
+<p>He vaguely realized that this had always been some way part of
+his destiny,&mdash;the imposition of his will over the beasts of
+the forest. He had never tried to puzzle out why, knowing that such
+trial would be unavailing. He had instinctively understood such
+creatures as these. To-day he felt that he knew the wild, fierce
+heart beating in the lean breast as a man might know his brother's
+heart. The bond between them was hidden from his sight, something
+back of him, beyond him, enfolded within a secret self that was
+mysterious as a dream, and it reached into the countless years; yet
+it was real, an ancient relationship that was no less intimate
+because it could not be named. In turn, the wolf had seemed to know
+that this tall form was a born habitant of the forests, even as
+himself, one that would kill him as unmercifully as he himself
+would kill a fall, and whose dark eyes, swept with fire, and whose
+cool, strong words must never be disobeyed.</p>
+<p>"You never seen this wolf before?" Morris asked him, calling him
+from his revery.</p>
+<p>"Never."</p>
+<p>"Then you must be old Hiram's brother himself, to control him
+like you did. Lord, look at him. Crouching at your feet."</p>
+<p>Suddenly Ben reached and took the wolf's head between his hands.
+Slowly he lifted the savage face till their eyes met. The wolf
+growled, then, whimpering, tried to avert its gaze. Then a rough
+tongue lapped at the man's hand.</p>
+<p>"There's nothing to be afraid of, now," he told the girl.</p>
+<p>"He's right, Beatrice," Morris agreed. "He's tamed him. Even I
+can see that much. And I never saw anything like it, since the day
+I was born."</p>
+<p>It was true: as far as Ben was concerned, the terrible
+Fenris&mdash;named by a Swedish trapper, acquaintance of Hiram
+Melville's, for the dreadful wolf of Scandinavian legend&mdash;was
+tamed. He had found a new master; Ben had won a servant and friend
+whose loyalty would never waver as long as blood flowed in his
+veins and breath surged in his lungs. "Lay still, now, Fenris," he
+ordered. "Don't get up till I tell you."</p>
+<p>It seems to be true that as a rule the lower animals catch the
+meaning of but few words; usually the tone of the voice and the
+gesture that accompanies it interpret a spoken order in a dog's
+brain. On this occasion, it was as if Fenris had read his master's
+thought. He lay supine, his eyes intent on Ben's rugged face.</p>
+<p>And now, for the first time, Ben found himself regarding
+Beatrice. He could scarcely take his eyes from her face. He knew
+perfectly that he was staring rudely, but he was without the power
+to turn his eyes. Her dark eyes fell under his gaze.</p>
+<p>The truth was that Ben's life had been singularly untouched by
+the influence of women. Mostly his life had been spent in the
+unpeopled forest, away from women of all kinds; and such creatures
+as had admired him in Seattle's underworld had never got close to
+him. He had had many dreams; but some way it had never been
+credible to him that he should ever know womanhood as a source of
+comradeship and happiness. Love and marriage had always seemed
+infinitely apart from his wild, adventurous life.</p>
+<p>In his days in prison he had given up all dream of this
+happiness; but now he could begin to dream again. Everything was
+changed now that he had come home. The girl's regard for him was
+friendly, even somewhat admiring, and the speculations of ripening
+womanhood were in her eyes. He returned her gaze with frankest
+interest and admiration. His senses had been made sharp in his
+wilderness life; and his respect for her grew apace. She was not
+only innocent and girlish; she had those traits, innate, that a
+strong man loves in women: such worth and depth of character as he
+wishes bequeathed to his children.</p>
+<p>Ben drew a long breath. It was good to be home. He had not only
+found his forests, just as he had left them, but now again he was
+among the forest people. This girl was of his own breed, not a
+stranger; her standards were his; she was a woods girl no less than
+he was a woodsman. It is good to be among one's own people, those
+who can follow through and understand. She too knew the urge of
+unbridled vitality and spirit, common to all the woods children;
+and life's vivid meaning was her inheritance, no less than his. Her
+arms and lips were warm from fast-flowing blood, her nerves were
+vibrant and singing like his own. A virgin still, her eyes were
+tender with the warmheartedness that is such a dominant trait of
+frontier peoples; but what fire, what passion might burn in them
+to-morrow! They were dark, lovely eyes, rather somber now in their
+earnestness, seeming shadowed by the dark shadows of the spruce
+themselves.</p>
+<p>No human face had ever given him such an image of beauty as that
+of this dark-eyed forest child before him. Yet she was not piquant,
+demure, like the girls he had met in France; not stylish and
+sophisticated like those of the great cities he had visited since
+his return. Her garb became her: simple, not holding the eye in
+itself but calling attention to the brunette beauty of her throat
+and face, the warm redness of her childish mouth, and the brown,
+warm color of her arms. She had dark, waving hair, lovely to touch,
+wistful red lips. Because he was the woodsman, now and always, he
+marked with pleasure that there was no indication of ill-health or
+physical weakness about her. Her body was lithe and strong, with
+the grace of the wild creatures.</p>
+<p>It would be good to know her, and walk beside her in the tree
+aisles. All manner of delectable possibilities occurred to him. But
+all at once he checked his dreams with an iron will.</p>
+<p>There must be no thought of women in his life&mdash;for now. He
+still had his way to make. A few hours more would find him plunging
+deeper into the forest, perhaps never to see her again. He felt an
+all-pervading sense of regret.</p>
+<p>"There's nothing I can say&mdash;to thank you," the girl was
+murmuring. "I never saw anything like it; it was just as if the
+wolf understood every word you said."</p>
+<p>"Old Hiram had him pretty well trained, I suspect." The man's
+eyes fell to the shaggy form at his feet. "I'm glad I happened
+along Miss&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Miss Neilson," the girl prompted him. "Beatrice Neilson. I live
+here."</p>
+<p>Neilson! His mind seemed to leap and catch at the name. Just
+that day he had heard it from the lips of the merchant. And this
+was the house next door where dwelt his fellow traveler for the
+morrow.</p>
+<p>"Then it's your father&mdash;or brother&mdash;who's going to the
+Yuga&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"No," the girl answered doubtfully. "My father is already there.
+I'm here alone&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Then the gray eyes lighted and a smile broke about Ben's lips.
+Few times in his life had he smiled in quite this vivid way.</p>
+<p>"Then it's you," he exulted, "who is going to be my fellow
+traveler to-morrow!"</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XI"></a>
+<h2>XI</h2>
+<p>Ben found, rather as he had expected, that the girl was not at
+all embarrassed by the knowledge that they were to have a lonely
+all-day ride together. She looked at the matter from a perfectly
+natural and wholesome point of view, and she could see nothing in
+it amiss or improper. The girls of the frontier rarely feel the
+need of chaperones. Their womanhood comes early, and the open
+places and the fresh-life-giving air they breathe give them a
+healthy confidence in their ability to take care of themselves.
+Beatrice had a pistol, and she could shoot it like a man. She loved
+the solitude of the forest, but she also knew it was good to hear
+the sound of a human voice when journeying the lonely trails.</p>
+<p>The frontier had also taught her to judge men. Here foregathered
+many types, strong-thewed frontiersmen whose reverence for women
+surpassed, perhaps, that of any other class of men on earth, as
+well as the most villainous renegades, brutish offspring of the
+wilds, but she knew them apart. She realized from the first that
+this tall woodsman would have only kindness and respect for her;
+and that he was to be trusted even in those lonely forest depths
+beyond Spruce Pass.</p>
+<p>Ben knew the wild beasts of the field better than he knew women,
+so her actual reception of the plan was lost to him. He felt that
+she was not displeased: in reality the delight and anticipation she
+felt were beyond any power of hers to tell. She had been
+tremendously thrilled and impressed by his dominance over the wolf.
+She liked his bright, steady, friendly eyes; because she was a
+woods girl her heart leaped at the sight of his upright, powerful
+body; but most of all she felt that he was very near indeed to an
+ideal come true, a man of terrific strength and prowess yet not
+without those traits that women love best in men,&mdash;courage and
+character and gentleness.</p>
+<p>"I'm surely glad I'm going to have a companion," he told her. "I
+won't miss Ez&mdash;"</p>
+<p>But just then remembrance came to him, cutting the word off
+short. The letter he carried in his pocket contained certain advice
+in regard to silence, and perhaps now was a good time to follow it.
+There was no need to tell the people of Snowy Gulch about Ezram and
+the claim. He remembered that he had been warned of the danger of
+claim jumpers.</p>
+<p>For an instant his mind seemed to hover at the edge of a more
+elusive memory; but he could not quite seize upon it. He only knew
+that it concerned the matter in hand, and that it left him vaguely
+troubled.</p>
+<p>"You were saying," the girl prompted him.</p>
+<p>"Nothing very important&mdash;except how glad I am you are going
+my way. The woods are certainly lonesome by yourself. I suppose
+you'll be willing to make an early start."</p>
+<p>"The earlier the better. I've got a long way to go."</p>
+<p>They made their plans, and soon they parted to complete
+preparations for the journey. The girl went into her house: Ben
+took the rifle, and followed by the wolf, struck down the main
+street of the village.</p>
+<p>It can be said for Ben that he aroused no little conjecture and
+interest in the minds of the townspeople, striding through the
+street with the savage woods creature following abjectly at his
+heels. Evidently Ben's conquest was complete: the animal obeyed his
+every command as quickly as an intelligent dog. It was noticeable,
+however, that even the hardiest citizens kept an apprehensive eye
+on the wolf during the course of any conversation with Ben.</p>
+<p>He bought supplies&mdash;flour and salt and a few other
+essentials&mdash;simple tools and utensils such as are carried by
+prospectors, blankets, shells for his rifle, and a few, simple,
+hard-wearing clothes. He went to bed dead tired, his funds
+materially reduced. But before dawn he was up, wholly refreshed;
+and after a hasty breakfast went to pack his horses for the
+trip.</p>
+<p>Beatrice came stealing out of the shadows, more than ever
+suggestive of some timid creature of the forest, and the three of
+them saddled and packed the animals. As daylight broke they started
+out, down the shadowed street of the little town.</p>
+<p>"The last we'll see of civilization for a long, long time," the
+girl reminded him.</p>
+<p>The man thrilled deeply. "And I'm glad of it," he answered.
+"Nothing ahead but the long trail!"</p>
+<p>It was a long trail, that which they followed along Poor Man's
+creek in the morning hours. The girl led, by right of having some
+previous acquaintance with the trail. The three pack horses walked
+in file between, heads low, tails whisking; and Ben, with Fenris at
+his horse's hoofs, brought up the rear. Almost at once the spruce
+forest dropped over them, the silence and the gloom that Ben had
+known of old.</p>
+<p>This was not like gliding in a boat down-river. The narrow,
+winding trail offered a chance for the most intimate study of the
+wilderness. From the river the woodsfolk were but an occasional
+glimpse, the stir of a thicket on the bank: here they were living,
+breathing realities,&mdash;vivid pictures perfectly framed by the
+frosty green of the spruce.</p>
+<p>From the first mile these two riders were the best of
+companions. They talked gaily, their voices carrying to each other
+with entire ease through the still glades. He found her spirited,
+warm-hearted, responding with an eager gladness to every fresh
+manifestation of the wild; and in spite of his gay laughter she
+read something of the dark moodiness and intensity that were his
+dominant traits. But he was kind, too. His attitude toward the
+Little People met with on the trail&mdash;the little, scurrying
+folk&mdash;was particularly appealing: like that of a strong man
+toward children. She saw that he was sympathetic, instinctively
+chivalrous; and she got past his barrier of reserve as few living
+beings had ever done before.</p>
+<p>She saw at once that he was an expert horseman. Riding a
+half-broken mustang over the winding, brush-grown moose trails of
+the North is not like cantering a thoroughbred along a park avenue,
+and a certain amount of difficulty is the rule rather than the
+exception; but he controlled his animal as no man of her
+acquaintance had ever done. He rode a bay mare that was not, by a
+long way, the most reliable piece of horseflesh McClurg owned, yet
+she gave him the best she had in her, scrambling with a burst of
+energy on the pitches, leaping the logs, battling the mires, and
+obeying his every wish. The joy of the Northern trails depends
+largely upon the service rendered by the horse between one's knees,
+and Ben knew it to the full.</p>
+<p>Before the first two hours were past Beatrice found herself
+thrilling with admiration at Ben's woodcraft. Not only by
+experience but by instinct and character he was wholly fitted for
+life in the waste places. Just as some artists are born with the
+soul of music, he had come to the earth with the Red Gods at his
+beck and call; the spirit of the wild things seemed to move in his
+being. She didn't wholly understand. She only knew that this man,
+newly come from "The States," riding so straight and talking so
+gaily behind her, had qualities native to the forest that were
+lacking not only in her, but in such men as her father and Ray
+Brent. Seemingly he had inherited straight from the youngest days
+of the earth those traits by which aboriginal man conquered the
+wild.</p>
+<p>The first real manifestation of this truth occurred soon after
+they reached the bank of Poor Man's creek. All at once he had
+shouted at her and told her to stop her horse. She drew up and
+turned in her saddle, questioning.</p>
+<p>"There's something stirring in the thicket beside you. Don't you
+hear him?"</p>
+<p>Beatrice had sharp ears, but she strained in vain for the sound
+that, forty feet farther distant, Ben heard easily. She shook her
+head, firmly believing his imagination had led him astray. But an
+instant later a coyote&mdash;one of those gray skulkers whose
+waging cries at twilight every woodfarer knows&mdash;sprang out of
+his covert and darted away.</p>
+<p>Beatrice was amazed. The significance of the incident went
+further than the fact of mere good hearing. The coyote, except when
+he chooses to wail out his wrongs at the fall of night, is one of
+the forest shadows for silence&mdash;yet Ben had heard him. It
+meant nothing less than that strange quickening of the senses found
+in but few&mdash;master woodsmen&mdash;that is the especial trait
+and property of the beasts themselves.</p>
+<p>Now that they climbed toward Spruce Pass their talk died away,
+and more and more they yielded themselves to the hushed mood of the
+forest. Their trail was no longer clearly pronounced. It was a
+wilderness thoroughfare in the true sense,&mdash;a winding path
+made by the feet of the great moose journeying from valley to
+valley.</p>
+<p>Wild life became ever more manifest. They saw the grouse,
+Franklin's fowl so well beloved by tenderfeet because of their
+propensity to sit still under fire and give an unsteady marksman a
+second shot. Fool hens, the woodsman called them, and the motley
+and mark of their weak mentality were a red badge near the eye. The
+fat birds perched on the tree limbs over the trail, relying on
+their mottled plumage, blending perfectly with the dull grays and
+browns of the foliage, to keep them out of sight. But such wiles
+did not deceive Ben. And once, in provision for their noon lunch, a
+fat cock tumbled through the branches at Beatrice's pistol
+shot.</p>
+<p>The pine squirrels seemed to be having some sort of a
+competitive field meet, and the tricks they did in the trees above
+the trail filled the two riders with delight. They sped up and down
+the trunks; they sprang from limb to limb; they flicked their tails
+and turned their heads around backward and stood on their haunches,
+all the time chattering in the greatest excitement. Once a
+porcupine&mdash;stupid, inoffensive old Urson who carries his fort
+around on his back&mdash;rattled his quills in a near-by thicket;
+and once they caught a glimpse of a mule deer on the hillside. This
+was rather too cold and hard a country, however, to be beloved by
+deer. Mostly they dwelt farther upriver.</p>
+<p>All manner of wild creatures, great and small, had left signs on
+the trails. There were tracks of otter and mink, those two river
+hunters whose skins, on ladies' shoulders, are better known than
+the animals themselves. They might be only patches of fur in
+cities, but they were living, breathing personages here.
+Particularly they were personages to the trout. Ben knew perfectly
+how the silver fish had learned to dart with such rapidity in the
+water. They learned it keeping out of the way of the otter and the
+mink.</p>
+<p>They saw the tracks of marten&mdash;the mink that has gone into
+the tree tops to live; the doglike imprints of a coyote at which
+Fenris whimpered and scratched in excitement (doubtless wishing to
+run him down and bite him, as is the usual reception to the
+detested coyote by the more important woods creatures) and once the
+fresh mud showed that an old grizzly&mdash;the forest monarch, the
+ancient, savage despot of the woods of which all foresters, near
+and far, speak with deep respect&mdash;had passed that way but a
+few minutes before. Foresters both, the two riders had every reason
+to believe that the old gray tyrant was lurking somewhere in the
+thickets beside the trail, half in anger, half in curiosity
+watching them ride past. And of course the tracks of moose, and of
+their fellows of mighty antlers, the caribou, were in
+profusion.</p>
+<p>To all these things Beatrice responded with the joy of a true
+nature lover. Her heart thrilled and her eyes were bright; and
+every new track was a fresh surprise and delight. But Ben was
+affected more deeply still. The response he made had its origin and
+font in deeply hidden centers of his spirit; mysterious realms that
+no introspection could reveal or words lay bare.</p>
+<p>He knew nothing of Beatrice's sense of constant surprise. In his
+own heart he had known that all these woodspeople would be waiting
+for him&mdash;just as they were&mdash;and he would have known far
+greater amazement to have found some of them gone. And instead of
+sprightly delight he knew only an all-pervading sense of comfort,
+as a man feels upon returning to his home country, among the people
+whom he knows and understands.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XII"></a>
+<h2>XII</h2>
+<p>At the very headquarters of Poor Man's Creek, where the stream
+had dwindled to a silver thread between mossy banks, Beatrice and
+Ben made their noon camp. They were full in the heart of the wild,
+by now, and had mounted to those high levels and park lands beloved
+by the caribou. They built a small fire beside the stream and drew
+water from the deep, clear pools that lay between cascade and
+cascade.</p>
+<p>Ben Darby slowly became aware that this was one of the happiest
+hours of his life. He watched, with absorbed delight, the deft,
+sure motions of the girl as she fried the grouse and sliced bread,
+while Ben himself tended to the coffee. Already the two were on the
+friendliest terms, and since they were to be somewhere in the same
+region, the future offered the most pleasing vistas to both of
+them. When the horses were rested and Ben's pipe was out, they
+ventured on. Following a caribou trail, they ascended a majestic
+range of mountains&mdash;a trail too steep to ride and which the
+pack horses accomplished only with great difficulty&mdash;emerging
+onto a high plateau of open parks and small clumps of the darkest
+spruce. It was, of course, the most scenic part of the journey; and
+the inclination to talk died speedily from the lips.</p>
+<p>They rode in silence, watching. Both of them were sure that
+words, no matter how beautiful and eloquent, could be only a
+sacrilege. The very tone of the high ranges is that of silence vast
+and eternal beyond scope of thought, and the only sounds that can
+fittingly shatter that mighty breathlessness are the great,
+calamitous phenomena of nature,&mdash;the thunder crashing in the
+sky and the avalanche on the slope. The forests they had just left
+were deeply silent, but the far hush had been alleviated by the
+soft noises of wild creatures stirring about their occupations;
+perhaps also by the feeling that the thickets were full of sound
+pitched just too high or just too low for human ears to hear; but
+even this relief was absent here. The high peaks stretched before
+them, one after another, until they faded into the
+horizon,&mdash;majestic, aloof, utterly and grandly silent.</p>
+<p>The snow still lay deep over the plateau, packed to the
+consistency of ice, and the marmots had not yet emerged to welcome
+the spring with their shrill, joyous whistling. From their high
+place they could see the hills spread out below them,&mdash;fold
+after fold as of a great cloak, deeply green, seemingly infinite in
+expanse, broken only by the blue glint of the Agnes lakes, like two
+great twin sapphires hidden in the forest. But they couldn't make
+out a single roof top of Snowy Gulch. The forest had already
+claimed it utterly.</p>
+<p>This was the caribou range; wherever they looked they saw the
+tracks of the noble animals in the snow. Later they caught a
+glimpse of the creatures themselves, a small herd of perhaps half a
+dozen swinging along the snow in their indescribable pacing gait.
+They were in fitting surroundings, their color inexpressibly vivid
+against the snow, and Ben's heart warmed and thumped in his breast
+at the sight.</p>
+<p>But the trail descended at last into the great valley of the
+Yuga. Mile after mile, it seemed to them, they went down, leaving
+the snow, leaving the open glades, into the dark, still glens of
+spruce. At last they paused on the river bank.</p>
+<p>Ben was somewhat amazed at the size of the stream when it
+emerged below the rapids. It was, at its present high stage, fully
+one hundred and fifty yards across, such a stream as would bear the
+traffic of commerce in any inhabited region. They turned down the
+moose trail that followed its bank.</p>
+<p>But it was not to be that this journey should hold only delight
+for Ben. A half-mile down the river he suddenly made a most
+momentous and disturbing discovery.</p>
+<p>He had stopped his horse to reread the copy of Hiram Melville's
+letter, intending to verify his course. In the shadow of the tall,
+dark spruce&mdash;darkening ever as the light grew less&mdash;his
+eye sped swiftly over it. His gaze came to rest upon a familiar
+name.</p>
+<p>"Look out for Jeff Neilson and his gang," the letter read. "They
+seen some of my dust."</p>
+<p>Neilson&mdash;no wonder Ben had been perplexed when Beatrice had
+first spoken her name. No wonder it had sounded familiar. And the
+hot beads moistened his brow when he conceived of all the dreadful
+possibilities of that coincidence of names.</p>
+<p>Yet because he was a woodsman of nature and instinct, blood and
+birth, he retained the most rigid self-control. He made no
+perceptible start. At first he did not glance at Beatrice. Slowly
+he folded the letter and put it back into his pocket.</p>
+<p>"I'm going all right," he announced. He urged his horse forward.
+His perfect self-discipline had included his voice: it was deep,
+but wholly casual and unshaken. "And how about you, Miss
+Neilson?"</p>
+<p>He pronounced her name distinctly, giving her every chance to
+correct him in case he had misunderstood her. But there was no hope
+here. "I'm going all right, I know."</p>
+<p>"It seems to me we must be heading into about the same country,"
+Ben went on. "You see, Miss Neilson, I'm going to make my first
+permanent camp somewhere along this still stretch; I've had inside
+dope that there's big gold possibilities around here."</p>
+<p>"It has never been a gold country except for pockets, some of
+them remarkably rich," she told him doubtfully, evidently trying
+not to discourage him. "But my father has come to the conclusion
+that it's really worth prospecting. He's in this same country
+now."</p>
+<p>"I suppose I'll meet him&mdash;I'll likely meet him to-night
+when I take you to the cabin on the river. You said his name
+was&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Jeffery Neilson."</p>
+<p>For all that he was prepared for it, the name was a straight-out
+body blow to Ben. He had still dared to hope that this girl was of
+no blood kin of the claim-jumper, Jeffery Neilson. The truth was
+now only too plain. By the girl's own word he was operating in
+Hiram Melville's district and unquestionably had already jumped the
+claim. His daughter was joining him now, probably to keep house for
+him; and for all that Ben knew, already possessing guilty knowledge
+of her father's crime.</p>
+<p>It was hard to hold the head erect, after that. Already he had
+builded much on his friendship with this girl, only to find that
+she was allied with the enemy camp. He saw in a flash how unlikely
+it would be that Ezram and himself could drive the usurpers out:
+the claim-jumper is a difficult problem, even when the original
+discoverer is living and in possession, much more so when he is
+silent in his grave.</p>
+<p>Ben had known the breed since boyhood, and he hated them as he
+hated coyotes and pack-rats. They lacked the manhood to brave the
+unknown in pursuit of the golden fleece; they waited until after
+years of grinding labor the strike was made and then pounced down
+upon the claim like vultures on the dead. Ben was glad he had not
+obeyed his impulse to tell the girl of his true reason for coming
+to the Yuga. He knew now, with many foes against him, he could best
+operate in the dark.</p>
+<p>His thought flashed to Ezram. The recovery of the mine had been
+the old man's fondest dream, the last hope of his declining years,
+and this setback would go hard with him. The blow was ever so much
+more cruel on Ezram's account than his own. Ben could picture his
+downcast face, trying yet to smile; his sobered eyes that he would
+try to keep bright. But there would be certain planning, when they
+met again over their camp fire. And there were three of them allied
+now. Fenris the wolf had come into his service.</p>
+<p>He glanced back at the gray-black creature that followed at the
+heels of his horse; and now, at twilight's graying, he saw that a
+significant and startling change had come over him. He no longer
+trotted easily behind them. He came stalking, almost as if in the
+hunt, his ears pointing, his neck hairs bristling, and there were
+the beginnings of curious, lurid lightnings in his eyes. There
+could be but one answer. He had been swept away in the current of
+madness that sweeps the forest at the fall of darkness: the age-old
+intoxication of the wilderness night. The hunting hours were at
+hand. The creatures of claw and fang were coming into their own.
+Fenris was shivering all over with those dark wood's passions that
+not even the wisest naturalist can fully understand.</p>
+<p>The air was tingling and electric, just as Ben recalled it a
+thousand nights. Everywhere the hunters were leaving their lairs
+and starting forth; grasses moved and brush-clumps rustled; blood
+was hot and savage eyes were shot with fire. The mink, with
+unspeakable savagery, took the trail of a snow-shoe rabbit beside
+the river-bed; a lynx with pale, green, luminous eyes began his
+stalk of a tree squirrel, and various of Fenris' fellows&mdash;pack
+brothers except for his own relations with men&mdash;sang a song
+that was old when the mountains were new as they raced, black in
+silhouette against the paling sky, along a snowy ridge.</p>
+<p>Ben felt a quickening of his own senses, not knowing why.
+<i>His</i> blood, too, spurted inordinately fast through his veins,
+and his flesh seemed to creep and tingle. There could be no surer
+proof of his legitimacy as a son of the wilderness. The passions
+that maddened the first men, near to the beasts they hunted in
+their ancient forests, returned in all their fullness. The dusk
+deepened. The trail dimmed so that the eye had to strain to follow
+it.</p>
+<p>Complex and weird were the passions invoked to-night, but not
+even to the gray wolf that is, beyond all other creatures, the
+embodiment of the wilderness spirit, did there come such a madness,
+such a dark and terrible lust, as that which cursed a certain
+wayfarer beyond the next bend in the river. This was not one of the
+forest people, neither the lynx, nor the hunting otter, nor even
+the venerable grizzly with whom no one contests the trail. It was a
+human being,&mdash;a man of youthful body and strong, deeply lined,
+yet savage face.</p>
+<p>A close observer would have noticed the faintest tremor and
+shiver throughout his body. His eyes were very bright, vivid even
+in the dying day. He was deeply lost in his own mood, seemingly
+oblivious to the whole world about him. He carried a rifle in his
+hands.</p>
+<p>He was on his way to report to his chief; and just what would be
+forthcoming he did not know. But if too much objection were raised
+and affairs got to a crucial stage, he had nothing to fear. He had
+learned a certain lesson&mdash;an avenue to triumph. It was strange
+that he had never hit upon it before.</p>
+<p>His blood was scalding hot, and he was swept by exultation. Not
+for an instant had he hesitated, nor Would he ever hesitate again.
+There was no one in the North of greater might than he! No one
+could bend his will from now on. He had found the road to
+triumph.</p>
+<p>Ray Brent had discovered a new power within himself. Perhaps
+even his chief, Jeffery Neilson, must yield before his new-found
+strength.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XIII"></a>
+<h2>XIII</h2>
+<p>As twilight darkened to the full gloom of the forest night, Ben
+and Beatrice rode to a lonely cabin on the Yuga River,&mdash;one
+that had been built by Hiram Melville years past and was just at
+the mouth of the little creek on which, less than a half-mile
+distant, he had his claim. They had seen a lighted window from
+afar, marking the end of Beatrice's hard day's ride.</p>
+<p>"Of course you won't try to go on to-night?" she asked Ben.
+"You'll stay at the cabin?"</p>
+<p>"There likely won't be room for three," he answered. "But it's a
+clear night. I can make a fire and sleep out."</p>
+<p>It was true. The stars were emerging, faint points of light
+through the darkening canopy of the sky; and to the East a silver
+glint on the horizon forecast the rising moon.</p>
+<p>They halted at last; and Beatrice saw her father's form, framed
+in the doorway. She hastened into his arms: waiting in the darkness
+Ben could not help but hear his welcome. Many things were doubtful;
+but there could be no doubt of the love that Neilson bore his
+daughter. The amused, half-teasing words with which he received her
+did not in the least disguise it. "The joy and the light of his
+life," Ben commented to himself. The gray old claim-jumper had this
+to redeem him, at least.</p>
+<p>"But why so many horses, Beatrice?" he asked. "You&mdash;brought
+some one with you?"</p>
+<p>Ben was not so far distant that he failed to discern the instant
+change in Neilson's tone. It had a strained, almost an apprehensive
+quality such as few men had ever heard in his voice before. Plainly
+all visitors in this end of the mountains were regarded with
+suspicion.</p>
+<p>"He's a prospector&mdash;Mr. Darby," the girl replied. "Come
+here, Ben&mdash;and be introduced." She turned toward her new-found
+friend; and the latter walked near, into the light that streamed
+over him from the doorway. "This is my father, Mr. Darby&mdash;Mr.
+Neilson. Some one told him this was a good gold country."</p>
+<p>Ben had already decided upon his course of action and had his
+answer ready. He knew perfectly that it would only put Neilson on
+his guard if he stated his true position; and besides, he wanted
+word of Ezram. "I may have a wrong steer, Mr. Neilson," he said,
+"but a man I met down on the river-trail, out of Snowy Gulch,
+advised me to come here. He said that he had some sort of a claim
+up here that his brother left him, and though it was a pocket
+country, he thought there'd soon be a great rush up this way."</p>
+<p>"I hardly know who it could have been that you met," Neilson
+began doubtfully. "He didn't tell you his name&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Melville. I believe that was it. And if you'll tell me how to
+find him, I'll try to go on to-night. I brought him some of his
+belongings from Snowy Gulch&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Melville, eh? I guess I know who you mean now. But no&mdash;I
+don't know of any claim unless it's over east, beyond here. Maybe
+further down the river."</p>
+<p>Ben made no reply at once; but his mind sped like lightning. Of
+course Neilson was lying about the claim: he knew perfectly that at
+that moment he was occupying one of Hiram Melville's cabins. He was
+a first-class actor, too&mdash;his voice indicating scarcely no
+acquaintance with or interest in the name.</p>
+<p>"He hasn't come up this way?" Ben asked casually.</p>
+<p>"He hasn't come through here that I know of. Of course I'm
+working at my claim&mdash;with my partners&mdash;and he might have
+gone through without our seeing him. It seems rather unlikely."</p>
+<p>Ben was really puzzled now. If Ezram had already made his
+presence known and was camping somewhere in the hills about, there
+was no reason immediately evident why Neilson should deny his
+presence. Ben found himself wondering whether by any chance Ezram
+had been delayed along the trail, perhaps had even lost his way,
+and had not yet put in an appearance.</p>
+<p>"He told me, in the few minutes that I talked to him, that his
+cabin was somewhere close to this one&mdash;I thought he said up
+this creek."</p>
+<p>"There is a cabin up the creek a way," Neilson admitted, "but it
+isn't the one he meant. It's on my claim, and my two partners are
+living in it. But when he said near to this one, he might have
+meant ten miles. That's the way we Northern men speak of
+distance."</p>
+<p>There was nothing more to say, nothing to do at present. He said
+his farewells to the girl, refused an invitation to pass the night
+in the cabin, and made his way to the green bank of the stream.
+Four hundred yards from the cabin, and perhaps a like number from
+the cabin of Ray and Charley&mdash;obscured from both by the
+thickets&mdash;he pitched his camp.</p>
+<p>In the cabin he had left Jeffery Neilson catechized his
+daughter, trying to learn all he could concerning Ben. It was true
+that he carried the dead Hiram's rifle, and that the latter's pet
+wolf followed at his heels, but it was wholly probable that the old
+man, Hiram's brother, with whom he had conversed at the river, had
+designated him to get them. He had been courteous and respectful
+throughout the journey to the Yuga, Beatrice said, and he had also
+saved her from possible death in the fangs of the wolf the evening
+previous. Neilson decided that he would take no steps at present
+but merely wait and watch developments.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Ben had made his fire and unpacked his horses. He
+confined his riding horse with a picket rope; the others he turned
+loose. Then he cooked a simple meal for himself and the gaunt
+servant at his heels.</p>
+<p>When the night had come down in full, and as he sat about the
+glowing coals of his supper fire, he had time to devote serious
+thought to the fate of Ezram. It occurred to him that perhaps the
+old man had discovered, at a distance, the presence of the
+claim-jumpers; and was merely waiting in the thickets for a chance
+to take action. If such were the case, sooner or later they could
+join their fortunes again. It was also easy to imagine that Ezram
+had lost his way on the journey out.</p>
+<p>He stood at the edge of the firelight, gazing out into the
+darkened forest. The wolf crouched beside him: alert, watching his
+face for any command. It was wholly plain that the gaunt woods
+creature had accepted him at once as his master; and that the bond
+between them, because of some secret similarity of spirit, was
+already far closer than between most masters and their pets.</p>
+<p>Ben sensed another side of the forest to-night because of his
+inborn love of the waste places not often seen. The thickets were
+menacing, sinister to-night. The spruce crept up to the skyline
+with darkness and mystery: he realized the eternal malevolence that
+haunts their silent fastnesses. They would have tricks in plenty to
+play on such as would lose their way on their dusky trails! Oh,
+they would have no mercy or remorse for any one who was lost,
+<i>out there</i>, to-night! Ben felt a heavy burden of dread!</p>
+<p>Even now, old Ezram might be wandering, vainly, through the
+gloomy, whispering woods, ever penetrating farther into their
+merciless solitudes. And no homes smoked in the clearings, no camps
+glowed in the immensity of the dark&mdash;out there. This was just
+the beginning of the forest; clear into the shadow of the Arctic
+Circle, where the woodlands gave way to the Weary wastes of
+barrens, there was no break, no tilled fields or fisher's villages,
+only an occasional Indian encampment which not even a wolf, running
+through the night, might find. His supply of food would quickly be
+exhausted, fatigue would break his valiant spirit. Ben planned an
+extensive search for his tracks as soon as the morning light
+permitted him to see.</p>
+<p>He missed the old man's comradeship with a deep and fervid
+longing. They had come to count on each other, these past weeks. It
+wasn't alone infinite gratitude that he felt for him now. The thing
+went too deep to tell. Yet there was no use seeking for him
+to-night.</p>
+<p>He turned to the wolf and dropped his hand upon the animal's
+shoulder. Fenris started, then quivered in ecstasy. "I wish I had
+your nose, to-night, old boy," Ben told him. "I'd find that old
+buddy of mine. I wish I had your eyes to see in the dark, and your
+legs to run. Fenris, do you know where he is?"</p>
+<p>The wolf turned his wild eyes toward his master's face, as if he
+were trying to understand.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XIV"></a>
+<h2>XIV</h2>
+<p>Impelled by an urge within himself Ben suddenly knelt beside his
+lupine friend. He could not understand the flood of emotion, the
+vague sense of impending and dramatic events that stirred him to
+the quick. He only knew, with a knowledge akin to inspiration, that
+in Fenris lay the answer to his problem.</p>
+<p>The moment was misted over with a quality of unreality. In the
+east rose the moon, shining incredibly on the tree tops, showering
+down through the little rifts in the withholding branches,
+enchanting the place as by the weaving of a dream. The moon madness
+caught up Ben like a flame, enthralling him as never before. He
+knew that white sphere of old. And all at once he realized that
+here, at his knees, was one who knew it too,&mdash;with a knowledge
+as ancient and as infinite as his own. Not for nothing had the wolf
+breed lived their lives beneath it through the long roll of the
+ages. Its rising and its setting had regulated the hunting hours of
+the pack time without end; its beams had lighted the game trails
+where the gray band had bayed after the deer; its light had beheld,
+since the world was young, the rapturous mating of the old pack
+leader and his female. Fenris too knew the moon-madness; but unlike
+Ben he had a means of expression of the wonder and mystery and
+vague longing that thrilled his wild heart. No man who has heard
+the pack song to the moon could doubt this fact. It is a long,
+melancholy wail, poignant with the pain of living, but it tells
+what man can not.</p>
+<p>Ben knew, now, why he was a forester, a woodsman famed even
+among woodsmen. Most of his fellows had been tamed by civilization;
+they had lived beneath roofs instead of the canopy of heaven, and
+they had almost forgotten about the moon. Ben, on the other hand,
+was a recurrence of an earlier type, inheriting little from his
+immediate ancestors but reverting back a thousand centuries to the
+Cave and the Squatting Place. His nature was that of prehistoric
+man rather than that of the son of civilization; and in this lay
+the explanation for all that had set him apart from the great run
+of men and had made him the master woodsman that he was. And
+because his spirit was of the wildwood, because he also knew the
+magic of the moon, he was able to make this wildwood thing at his
+feet understand and obey his will.</p>
+<p>The world of to-day seemed to fade out for him and left only the
+wolf, its fierce eyes on his own. Time swung back, and this might
+have been a scene of forgotten ages,&mdash;the wolf, the human
+hunter, the smoldering camp fire, the dark, jagged line of spruce
+against the sky. It was thus at the edge of the ice. Wolf and
+man&mdash;both children of the wild&mdash;had understood each other
+then; and they could understand each other now.</p>
+<p>"Fenris, old boy," the man whispered. "Can you find him for me,
+Fenris? He's out there somewhere&mdash;" the man motioned toward
+the dark&mdash;"and I want him. Can you take me to him?"</p>
+<p>The wolf trembled all over, struggling to get his meaning. This
+was no creature of subordinate intelligence: the great wolf of the
+North. He had, besides the cunning of the wild hunters, the
+intelligence that is the trait of the whole canine breed. Nor did
+he depend on his sense of hearing alone. He watched his master's
+face, and more than that, he was tuned and keyed to those
+mysterious vibrations that carry a message from brain to brain no
+less clearly and swift than words themselves,&mdash;the secret
+wireless of the wild.</p>
+<p>"He's my buddy, old boy, and I want you to find him for me," Ben
+went on, more patiently. He searched his pockets, drawing out at
+last the copy of the letter Ezram had given him that morning, and,
+because the old man had carried it for many days, it could still
+convey a message to the keen nose of the wolf. He put it to the
+animal's nostrils, then pointed away into the darkness.</p>
+<p>Fenris followed the motion with his eyes; and presently his long
+body stiffened. Ben watched him, fascinated. Then the wolf sniffed
+at the paper again and trotted away into the night.</p>
+<p>In one leap Ben was on his feet, following him. The wolf turned
+once, saw that his master was at his heels, and sped on. They
+turned up a slight draw, toward the hillside.</p>
+<p>It became clear at once that Fenris was depending upon his
+marvelous sense of smell. His nose would lower to the ground, and
+sometimes he tacked back and forth, uncertainly. At such times Ben
+watched him with bated breath. But always he caught the scent
+again.</p>
+<p>Once more he paused, sniffing eagerly; then turned, whining.
+Just as clearly as if they had possessed a mutual language Ben
+understood: the animal had caught the clear scent at last. The wolf
+loped off, and his fierce bay rang through the hushed forest.</p>
+<p>It was a long-drawn, triumphant note; and the wild creatures
+paused in their mysterious, hushed occupations to listen. It was
+also significant that it made certain deadly inroads in the spirit
+of Ray Brent, sitting in his distant cabin. He marked the direction
+of the sound, and he cursed, half in awe, under his breath. He had
+always hated the gray rangers. They were the uncanny demons of the
+forest.</p>
+<p>Ben followed the running wolf as fast as he could; and in his
+eagerness he had no opportunity for conjecture as to what he would
+find at the end of the pursuit. Yet he did not believe for an
+instant this was a false trail. The wolf's deep, full-ringing bays
+were ever more urgent and excited, filling the forest with their
+uproar. But quite suddenly the silence closed down again, seemingly
+more deep and mysterious than ever.</p>
+<p>Ben's first sensation was one of icy terror that crept to the
+very marrow of his bones. He knew instantly that there was a
+meaning of dreadful portent in the abrupt cessation of the cries.
+He halted an instant, listening, but at first could hear no more
+than the throb of his heart in his breast and the whisper of his
+own troubled breathing. But presently, at a distance of one hundred
+yards, he distinguished the soft whining of the wolf.</p>
+<p>Fenris was no longer running! He had halted at the edge of a
+distant thicket. The cold sweat sprang out on Ben's forehead, and
+he broke into a headlong run.</p>
+<p>There was no later remembrance of traversing that last hundred
+yards. The hillside seemed to whip under his feet. He paused at
+last, just at the dark margin of an impenetrable thicket. The wolf
+whined disconsolately just beyond the range of his vision.</p>
+<p>"Ezram!" he called, a curious throbbing quality in his voice.
+"Are you there, Ez? It's me&mdash;Ben."</p>
+<p>But the thickets neither rustled nor spoke. The cracked old
+voice he had learned to love did not speak in relief, in that
+moment of unutterable suspense. Indeed, the silence seemed to
+deepen about him. The spruce trees were hushed and impassive as
+ever; the moon shone and the wind breathed softly in his face.
+Fenris came whimpering toward him.</p>
+<p>Together, the man and the wolf, they crept on into the thicket.
+They halted at last before a curious shadow in the silvered covert.
+Ben knew at once he had found his ancient comrade.</p>
+<p>He and Ezram had had their last laugh together. He lay very
+still, the moonlight ensilvering his droll, kindly
+face,&mdash;sleeping so deeply that no human voice could ever waken
+him. An ugly rifle wound yawned darkly at his temple.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XV"></a>
+<h2>XV</h2>
+<p>The first effect of a great shock is usually a semi-paralysis of
+the entire mental mechanism and is, as a rule, beneficent. The
+brain seems to be enclosed in a great preoccupation, like a wall,
+and the messages of pain and horror brought by the nerves batter
+against it in vain. The senses are dulled, the perceptions blunted,
+and full realization does not come.</p>
+<p>For a long time, in which time itself stood still, Ben sat
+beside the dead body of his old counselor and friend as a child
+might sit among flowers. He half leaned forward, his arms limp, his
+hands resting in his lap, a deep wonder and bewilderment in his
+eyes. Dully he watched the moon lifting in the sky and felt the
+caress of the wind against his face, glancing only from time to
+time at the huddled body before him. The wolf whined softly, and
+sometimes Ben reached his hand to caress the furry shoulder.</p>
+<p>But slowly his wandering faculties returned to him. He began to
+understand. Ezram was dead&mdash;that was it&mdash;gone from his
+life as smoke goes in the air. Never to hear him again, or see him,
+or make plans with him, or have high adventures beside him along
+the lonely trails. Fenris had found him in the darkness: here he
+lay&mdash;the old family friend, the man who had saved him,
+redeemed him and given him his chance, his old "buddy" who had
+brought him home. The thing was not credible at first: that here,
+dead as a stone, lay the shell of that life that had been his own
+salvation. He studied intently the gray face, missed its habitual
+smile and for really the first time his gaze rested upon the
+yawning wound in the temple.</p>
+<p>He gazed at it in speechless, growing horror, and something like
+an incredible cold descended upon him. The entire hydraulic system
+of his blood seemed to be freezing. His hands were cold, his vitals
+icy and lifeless. There was, however, the beginning of heat
+somewhere back of his eyes. He could feel it but dimly, but it was
+increasing, slowly, like a smoldering coal that eats its way into
+wood and soon will burst into a flame. Slowly he began to grow
+rigid, his muscles flexing. His face underwent a tangible change.
+The lines deepened, the lips set in a hard line, the eyes were like
+those of a reptile,&mdash;cold, passionless, unutterably terrible.
+His face was pale like the paleness of death, but it appeared more
+like hard, white metal than flesh. His mind began to work clear
+again; he began to understand.</p>
+<p>Ezram had been shot, murdered by the men who had jumped his
+claim. Beatrice's father, who had talked to him, had probably
+committed the crime: if not he, one of his understrappers at his
+order. He found himself recalling what Jeffery Neilson had said.
+Oh, the man had been sharp! Believing that in the depth of the
+forest the body would never be discovered, he had tried to send Ben
+farther into the interior in search of him.</p>
+<p>He arose, wholly self-mastered, and with hard, strong hands made
+a detailed examination of Ezram's wound. He had evidently been shot
+by a rifle of large caliber, probably at close range. Ezram's own
+gun lay at his feet, loaded but not cocked.</p>
+<p>"They shot you down in cold blood, old boy, didn't they?" he
+found himself asking. "You didn't have a chance!"</p>
+<p>But the gray lips were setting with death, and could not answer.
+Ben had forgotten for the instant; he must keep better hold of
+himself. The time was not ripe to turn himself loose. But he did
+wish for one more word with Ezram, just a few little minutes of
+planning. They could doubtless work out something good together.
+They could decide what to do.</p>
+<p>From this point his mind naturally fell to Ezram's parting
+advice to him. "I've only got one decent place to keep things safe,
+and that ain't so all-fired decent," the old man had told him. "I
+always put 'em down my bootleg, between the sock and the leather.
+If I ever get shuffled off, all of a sudden, I want you to look
+there careful."</p>
+<p>Still with the same deathly pallor he crept over the dead leaves
+to Ezram's feet. His hands were perfectly steady as he unlooped the
+laces, one after another, and quietly pulled off the right boot. In
+the boot leg, just as Ezram had promised, Ben found a scrap of
+white paper.</p>
+<p>He spread it on his knee, and unfolded it with care. The
+moonlight was not sufficiently vivid, however, for him to read the
+penciled scrawl. He felt in his pocket for a match.</p>
+<p>Because his mind was operating clear and sure, his thoughts
+flashed at once to his enemies in their cabins along the creek. He
+did not want them to know he had found the body. His first instinct
+was to work in the dark, to achieve his ends by stealth and
+cunning! It was strange what capacity for cunning had come upon
+him. Oh, he would be crafty&mdash;sharp&mdash;sure in every
+motion.</p>
+<p>It was unlikely, however, that the faint glare of a match could
+carry so far. To make sure he walked behind the covert, then turned
+his back to the canyon through which the creek flowed. The match
+cracked, inordinately loud in the silence, and his eyes followed
+the script. Ezram had been faithful to the last:</p>
+<div class="ltr">
+<p>To WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:</p>
+<p>In case of my death I leave all I die possessed of including my
+brother Hiram's claim near Yuga River to my pard and buddy, Ben
+Darby.</p>
+<p>(Signed) EZRA MELVILLE.</p>
+</div>
+<p>The document was as formal as Ezram could make it, with a
+carefully drawn seal, and for all its quaint wording, it was a will
+to stand in any court. But Ezram had not been able to hold his
+dignity for long. He had added a postscript:</p>
+<div class="ltr">
+<p>Son, old Hiram made a will, and I guess I can make one too. I
+just found out about them devils that jumped our claim. I left you
+back there at the river because I didn't want you taking any dam
+fool risks till I found out how things lay.</p>
+<p>I just got one thing to ask. If them devils get me&mdash;get
+them. My life ain't worth much but I want you to make them pay for
+the little it is worth. Never stop till you've done it.</p>
+</div>
+<p>Ben lighted match after match until he had absorbed every word.
+Then he folded the paper and placed it in his pocket; but the
+action did not in the least take his eyes from the words. He could
+still see them, written in fire. They were branded on his
+spirit.</p>
+<p>He stood wholly motionless for a space of almost a minute, as if
+listening. The heat back of his eyes was more intense now. The red
+coals were about to burst into flame. All the blood of his huge
+body seemed to be collecting there, searing his brain.</p>
+<p>The moon was no longer white in the sky. It had turned a fiery
+red. The stars were red too,&mdash;all of them more red than the
+Star of War. "I want you to make them pay," a voice said clearly in
+his ears. "Never stop till you've done it."</p>
+<p>And now Ben was no longer pale. His face was no longer hard and
+set. Rather it was dark&mdash;dark as dark earth. His eyes glowed
+like coals beneath his black brows. He was not standing still and
+lifeless now. He was shivering all over with the blackest hate, the
+most deadly fury.</p>
+<p>"Make them pay," he said aloud again, "and never stop till
+you've done it."</p>
+<p>A sudden snarl from the lips of the wolf drew his eyes downward.
+Heaven help him; for the moment he had forgotten Fenris! But he
+must not forget him again. They had work to do, the two of
+them.</p>
+<p>Fenris was no longer whining disconsolately. His master's fury
+had passed to him, and Ben looked and saw before him not the docile
+pet, but the savage beast of the wild. The hair was erect on his
+shoulders, his lips were drawn, too; he was crouched as if for
+battle. The eyes, sunken in their sockets, were red and terrible to
+see. Yet he was still Ben's servant. That quality could never pass
+from him. The eyes of two met,&mdash;the wolf and the man.</p>
+<p>At that instant the little tongue of flame that had been
+mounting in Ben's brain burst into a dreadful conflagration. It was
+the explosion at last, no less terrible because of its
+silence&mdash;because the sound of the least, little wind was still
+discernible in the distant thickets. He dropped to his knees before
+the wolf, seizing its head in a terrific grasp. He half jerked it
+off its feet, till he held it so that its eyes burned straight into
+his.</p>
+<p>"Fenris, Fenris!" he breathed. "We've got to make them pay. And
+we must not stop till we're done."</p>
+<p>It was more than a command. It had the quality of a vow. And
+now, as they knelt, eyes looking into eyes, it was like a pagan
+rite in the ancient world.</p>
+<p>Their separate identities were no longer greatly pronounced.
+They were not man and beast, they were simply the wolves of the
+forest. The old qualities most often associated with
+manhood&mdash;gentleness, forbearance, mercy&mdash;seemed to pass
+away from Ben as a light passes into darkness. Only the Wolf was
+left, the dominant Beast&mdash;that darker, hidden side of himself
+from which no man can wholly escape and which civilization has only
+smothered, as fresh fuel smothers a flame. Not for nothing had his
+fellows known him as "Wolf" Darby; and now the name was true.</p>
+<p>The Beast that dwells under every man's skin, in a greater or
+less degree, was in the full ascendancy at last. The unnamable
+ferocity that marks the death-leap of the wild hunters was in his
+face. In his eyes was cunning,&mdash;such craft as marks the pack
+in its hunting. All over him was written that unearthly rage that
+is alone the property and trait of the woods creatures: the fury
+with which a she-wolf fights for her cubs or a rattlesnake avenges
+the death of its mate. Mercy, remorse, compassion there was
+none.</p>
+<p>And the demon gods of the wilderness rejoiced. For uncounted
+thousands of years the tide of battle had flowed against them; and
+it was long and long since they had won such a victory as this.
+Mostly their men children had forsaken their leafy bowers to live
+in houses. They tilled the ground rather than hunt in the forest.
+The cattle that had once run wild in the marshes now fed dully in
+enclosed pastures; the horses&mdash;that mighty breed that once
+mated and fought and died in freedom on the high lands&mdash;pulled
+lowly burdens in the cultivated fields. Even some of the canine
+people too&mdash;first cousins to the wolves themselves&mdash;had
+sold themselves into slavery for a gnawed bone and a chimney
+corner. But to-night the wild had claimed its own again.</p>
+<p>Here was one, at least, who had come back into his own. The
+forest seemed to whisper and thrill with rapture.</p>
+<a name="PART_TWO"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<h2>PART TWO</h2>
+<h3>THE WOLF-MAN</h3>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XVI"></a>
+<h2>XVI</h2>
+<p>As a wolf might plan a hunt in the forest, Ben planned his war
+against Neilson and his subordinates. He knew perfectly that he
+must not attempt open warfare. The way of the wolf is the way of
+cunning and stealth: the stalk through the thicket and the
+ferocious attack upon the unsuspecting; and such example must guide
+Ben in his operations. He could not be too careful, too
+furtive.</p>
+<p>His foes were three against one, and they were on their own
+ground. They knew the trails and the lay of the country; and as
+always, in the science of warfare, this was an advantage hardly to
+be overcome. Ben knew that his only hope lay in the finest
+strategy. First he must make a surprise attack, and second, he must
+utilize all natural advantages.</p>
+<p>He was well aware that he could lie in ambush, close to the
+mine, and probably send one man to a speedy death with a rifle
+bullet. But he did not have one enemy; he had three. The survivors
+of the first shot would immediately seek shelter&mdash;probably
+returning shot for shot&mdash;and that would insert an element of
+uncertainty into the venture. At the distance he would be obliged
+to shoot, he would possibly only succeed in wounding one of his
+enemies, and he might miss him altogether. Such a plan as this was
+wholly too uncertain for adoption.</p>
+<p>There must be no sporting chances in his strategy. The way of
+the wolf is to cover every opening, to prepare for every
+contingency that his brute mind can foresee. He would give and
+receive no quarter, and the ancient fairness and honor must be
+likewise forgotten. He must take no risk with his own life until
+the last of the three was down. What happened thereafter did not
+greatly concern him. The world could shatter to atoms after that
+for all he would care. He was a son of forest solitude; and he had
+but one dream left in life.</p>
+<p>It was not his aim to give his foes the least chance to fight
+back, the slightest hope of battle. He would use any advantage,
+descend to any wile. This was not to be a sportsmen's war, but a
+grim battle to the death, inexorable and merciless.</p>
+<p>These things were all fully known to him before ever he left the
+hillside, and like a man asleep, walked down to his camp. The fire
+had burned down to coals&mdash;sullen and angry&mdash;but he heaped
+on fuel, and they broke into a blaze. Then, Fenris at his side, he
+squatted on the ground beside the dancing flame.</p>
+<p>He watched it, fascinated; mostly silent but sometimes muttering
+and whispering half-enunciated words. His red eyes and the black
+hair, matted about his lips and shadowing the backs of his hands,
+gave him a wild, fierce look; and it was as if the primal
+blood-lust and hatred that seared him had literally swept him back
+into the forgotten centuries,&mdash;the first, savage human hunter
+at the edge of the retreating glaciers. The scene had not changed:
+dark spruce and the red glow of fire; and there was atavism in his
+very posture. The first men had squatted beside their camp fires
+this same way, their wolfine pets beside them, as they made their
+battle plans.</p>
+<p>The eager flames held Ben's fascinated gaze as a crystal ball
+might hold the eyes of a seer. They seemed to have a message for
+him if he could just grasp it, a course whereby he might achieve
+success. Oh, they could be cruel, relentless&mdash;mercilessly
+eating their way into sensitive flesh. They were no respecters of
+persons, these creeping, leaping tongues. Nor must <i>he</i> have
+any scruples or qualms as to how he gained his ends. He too must be
+merciless, and if necessary, strike down the innocent in order to
+reach the guilty.</p>
+<p>As he watched certain knowledge reached him of life and death.
+The conclusion slowly came to him that just blind killing was not
+enough. For all he knew death might bring instant
+forgetfulness&mdash;and thus not constitute in itself a
+satisfactory measure of vengeance. The <i>fear</i> of death was a
+reality and a torment: for all he knew, the thing itself might be a
+change for the better. It might be that, suddenly hurled out of
+this world of three dimensions, his enemies would have no knowledge
+nor carry no memories of the hand that struck them down. There
+could be no satisfaction in this. To murder from ambush might be a
+measure of expedience, but never one of self-gratification. When
+Ben struck he wanted them to know who was their enemy, and for what
+crime they were laid low.</p>
+<p>The best way of all, of course, was to strike indirectly at
+them, perhaps through some one they loved. Soon, perhaps, he would
+see the way.</p>
+<p>He went to his blankets, but sleep did not come to him. The wolf
+stood on guard. Beatrice Neilson had fallen into happy dreams long
+since, but there was further wakefulness in Hiram Melville's newer
+cabin, farther up-creek. Ray Brent and Chan Heminway still sat over
+their cups, the fiery liquid running riot in their veins, but
+slumber did not come easily to-night. And when Beatrice was asleep,
+Neilson stole down the moonlit moose trail and joined his men.</p>
+<p>"I've brought news," he began, when the door had closed out the
+stars and the breath of the night. Chan, his small eyes glazed from
+strong drink, staggered to his feet to offer his chair to his
+chief. Brent, however, was in no mood for servility to-night. He
+had done man's work in the early evening; and his triumph and his
+new-found sense of power had not yet died in his body. Perhaps he
+had learned the way to all success. There was a curious sullen
+defiance in the blearing gaze over his glass.</p>
+<p>"What's your news?" Ray's voice harshened, possessing a certain
+quality of grim levity. "I guess old Hiram's brother hasn't come to
+life again, has he?"</p>
+<p>It was a significant thing that both Chan and Neilson looked
+oppressed and uneasy at the words. Like all men of low moral status
+they were secretly superstitious, and these boasting words crept
+unpleasantly under their skins. It is never a good thing to taunt
+the dead! Ray had spoken sheerly to frighten and shock them, thus
+revealing his own fearlessness and strength; yet his voice rang
+louder than he had meant. He had no desire for it to carry into the
+silver mystery of the night.</p>
+<p>"The less you say about Hiram's brother the better," Neilson
+answered sternly. "We've thrashed it out once to-night." He
+straightened as he read the insolence, the gathering
+insubordination in the other's contemptuous glance; and his voice
+lacked its old ring of power when he spoke again. "Jumpin' claims
+is one thing and murder is another."</p>
+<p>Ray, spurred on by the false strength of wickedness, drunk with
+his new sense of power, was already feeling the first surge of
+deadly anger in his veins. "I suppose if you had been doin' it,
+you'd let that old whelp take back this claim, worth a quarter
+million if it's worth a cent. Not if I know it. It was the only
+way&mdash;and the safe way too."</p>
+<p>"Safe! What if by a thousandth chance some one would blunder on
+to that body you left in the brush? What if some sergeant of
+mounted police would say to his man, 'Go get Ray Brent!' Where
+would you be then? You've always been a murderer at heart,
+Brent&mdash;but some time you'll slip up&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Only a fool slips up. Don't think I didn't figure on
+everything. As you say, there's not one chance in a thousand any
+one will ever find him. If they do, there wouldn't be any kind of a
+case. Likely the old man hasn't got a friend or relation on earth.
+I've searched his pockets&mdash;there's nothing to tell who he is.
+We'll have our claim recorded soon, and it would be easy to make
+him out the claim-jumper rather than us&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Wait just a minute before you say he ain't got any friends, or
+at least acquaintances. That's what I came to see you about
+to-night." Neilson paused, for the sake of suspense. "Beatrice came
+up to-night, as agreed, and she had a prospector with her&mdash;and
+he knew old Hiram's brother."</p>
+<p>A short, tense silence followed his words, and Ray stared into
+his cup. It might be that just for an instant the reckless light
+went out of his eyes and left them startled and glazing. Then he
+got to his feet. "Then God Almighty!" he cried. "What you waiting
+for? Why don't you croak him off before this night's over?"</p>
+<p>"Wait, you fool, till you've heard everything," Neilson replied.
+"There's no hurry about killing. As I told you, the less work of
+that kind we do, the more chance we've got of dying in our beds. It
+may be reasonable for one prospector to disappear, but some one's
+going to be suspicious if two of 'em do. I think I've already
+handled the matter."</p>
+<p>"I'd handle it, and quick too," Ray protested.</p>
+<p>"You'd handle yourself up a gallows, too. He doesn't seem to be
+a close friend of this old man; he just seems to have met up with
+him at the river, and the old man steered him up here. He asked me
+where the old man's claim was, and said he wanted to go over and
+see him. He was taking Hiram's wolf and his gun up to him. I told
+him I hadn't heard of the claim, that it must be farther inside,
+and I think I put it over. He ain't got the least suspicion. What
+he'll do is hang around here a while, I suppose,
+prospecting&mdash;and likely enough soon forget all about the old
+devil. I just came down here to tell you he was here and to watch
+your step."</p>
+<p>"Then the first thing up," Chan Heminway suggested, "is to bury
+the stiff."</p>
+<p>"Spoke up like a fool!" Ray answered. "Not till this man is dead
+or out of the country. It's well hidden, and don't go prowling
+anywheres near it. If he's the least bit suspicious, or even if
+he's on the lookout for gold, he'd likely enough follow you. But
+there's one thing we can do&mdash;and that quick."</p>
+<p>"And what's that?"</p>
+<p>"Start Chan off to-morrow to the office in Bradleyburg and
+record this claim in our names. We've waited too long already."</p>
+<p>"Ray, you're talking like a man now," Neilson agreed. "You and I
+stay here and work away, innocent as can be, on the claim. Chan,
+put that bottle away and get to bed. Take the trail down first
+thing to-morrow. Then we can laugh at all the prospectors that want
+to come."</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XVII"></a>
+<h2>XVII</h2>
+<p>Soon after the break of dawn Ben put his pick and shovel on his
+shoulder, and leisurely walked up the creek past Ray's cabin. Since
+Chan Heminway had already departed down the long trail to
+Bradleyburg&mdash;a town situated nearly forty miles from Snowy
+Gulch&mdash;Ray alone saw him pass; and he eyed him with some
+apprehension. Daylight had brought a more vivid consciousness of
+his last night's crime; and a little of his bravado had departed
+from him. He moved closer to his rifle.</p>
+<p>Yet in a moment his suspicions were allayed. Ben was evidently a
+prospector, just as he claimed to be, and was venturing forth to
+get his first "lay of the land." The latter continued up the draw,
+crossed a ridge, halted now and then in the manner of the wild
+creatures to see if he were being followed, and finally by a
+roundabout route returned to the lifeless form of his only friend.
+The wolf still trotted in silence behind him.</p>
+<p>The vivid morning light only revealed the crime in more dreadful
+detail. The withered form lay huddled in the stained leaves; and
+Ben stood a long time beside it, in deep and wondering silence,
+even now scarcely able to believe the truth. How strange it was
+that this old comrade could not waken and go on with him again! But
+in a moment he remembered his work.</p>
+<p>Slowly, laboriously, with little outward sign of the emotion
+that rent his heart, he dug a shallow grave He knew perfectly that
+this was a serious risk to his cause. Should the murderer return
+for any purpose, to his dead, the grave would of course show that
+the body had been discovered and would put him on his guard against
+Ben. Nevertheless, the latter could not leave these early remains
+to the doubtful mercy of the wilderness: the agents of air and sun,
+and the wild beasts.</p>
+<p>He threw the last clod and stood looking down at the upturned
+earth. "Sleep good, old Ez," he murmured in simple mass for the
+dead. "I'll do what you said."</p>
+<p>Then, at the head of the grave, he thrust the barrel of Ezram's
+rifle into the ground, a monument grim as his own thoughts. The
+last rite was completed; he was free to work now. From now on he
+could devote every thought to the work in hand,&mdash;the payment
+of his debts.</p>
+<p>By the same roundabout route he circled back to his camp, cooked
+his meager lunch, and in the afternoon ventured forth again. But he
+was prospecting in earnest this time, though the prospects that he
+sought were those of victory to his cause, rather than of gold. He
+was seeking simply a good, general idea of the nature and geography
+of the country so that he might know better how to plan his
+attack.</p>
+<p>His excursion took him at last to the wooded bank of the river.
+He stood a long time, quite motionless, listening to the water
+voices that only the wise can understand. This was really a noble
+stream. It flowed with such grandeur in its silence and solitude;
+old and gray and austere, it was a mighty expression of wilderness
+power,&mdash;resistless, immortal, eternally secretive. The waters
+flowed darkly, icy cold from the melting snow; but like a sleeping
+giant they would be quick to seize upon and destroy such as would
+try to brave their currents, likely never to yield them up again.
+Flowing forever through the uninhabited forest no man would ever
+know the fate of those the river claimed.</p>
+<p>He was above the camp when he descended to its banks, but he
+worked his way down through the thickets toward Jeffery Neilson's
+cabin. The river flowed quietly here, a long, still stretch that
+afforded safe boating. Yet the smooth waters did not in the least
+alleviate Ben's haunting sense of their sinister power and peril.
+The old gray she-wolf is not to be trusted in her peaceful moments.
+His keen ears could distinctly hear the roar and rumble of wild
+waters, just below.</p>
+<p>The river was of great depth as well as breadth,&mdash;one of
+the king rivers of the land. Ben found himself staring into its
+depths with a quickening pulse. He had a momentary impression that
+this great stream was his ally, a mighty agent that he could bend
+to his will.</p>
+<p>He approached the long, sloping bank on which stood Neilson's
+cabin; and he suddenly drew up short at the sight of a light,
+staunch canoe on the open water. It was a curious fact that he
+noticed the craft itself before ever he glanced at its occupant. A
+thrill of excitement passed over him. He realized that this boat
+simplified to some degree his own problem, in that it afforded him
+means of traversing this great water-body, certainly to be a factor
+in the forthcoming conflict. The boat had evidently been the
+property of Hiram Melville.</p>
+<p>Then he noticed, with a strange, inexplicable leap of his heart,
+that its lone occupant was Beatrice Neilson. His eye kindled at the
+recognition, and the beginnings of a smile flashed to his lips. But
+at once remembrance came to him, crushing his joy as the heel
+crushes a tender flower. The girl was of the enemy camp, the
+daughter of the leader of the triumvirate of murderers. While she
+herself could have had no part in the crime, perhaps she already
+had guilty knowledge of it, and at least she was of her father's
+hated blood.</p>
+<p>He had builded much on his friendship with this girl; but he
+felt it withering, turning black&mdash;like buds under
+frost&mdash;in his cold breast. There could be no friendly words,
+except in guile; no easy comradeship between them now. They were on
+opposite sides, hated foes to the last. Perhaps she would be one of
+the innocents that must suffer with the guilty; but he felt no
+remorse. Not even this lovely, tender wood child must stand in his
+way.</p>
+<p>Nevertheless, he must not put her on guard. He must simulate
+friendship. He lifted his hat in answer to her gay signal.</p>
+<p>She wore a white middy blouse, and her brown, bare forearms
+flashed pleasantly in the spring sun. Her brown hair was
+disarranged by the wind that found a passway down the river, and
+her eyes shone with the sheer, unadorned love of living. Evidently
+she had just enjoyed a brisk paddle through the still stretches of
+the river. With sure, steady strokes she pushed the craft close to
+the little, board landing where Ben stood. She reached up to him,
+and in an instant was laughing&mdash;at nothing in particular but
+the fun of life&mdash;at his side.</p>
+<p>The man glanced once at Fenris, spoke in command, then turned to
+the girl. "All rested from the ride, I see," he began easily.</p>
+<p>Her instincts keyed to the highest pitch, for an instant she
+thought she discerned an unfamiliar tone, hard and hateful, in his
+voice. But his eyes and his lips were smiling; and evidently she
+was mistaken. "I never get tired," she responded. She glanced at
+the tools in his arms. "I suppose you've found a dozen rich lodes
+already this morning."</p>
+<p>"Only one." He smiled, significantly, into her eyes. Because she
+was a forest girl, unused to flattery, the warm color grew in her
+brown cheeks. "And how was paddling? The water looks still enough
+from here."</p>
+<p>"It's not as still as it looks, but it is easy going for a
+half-mile each way. If you aren't an expert boatman,
+however&mdash;I hardly think&mdash;I'd try it."</p>
+<p>"Why not? I'm fair enough with a canoe, of course&mdash;but it
+looks safe as a lake."</p>
+<p>"But it isn't." She paused. "Listen with those keen ears of
+yours, Mr. Darby. Don't you hear anything?"</p>
+<p>Ben did not need particularly keen ears to hear: the far-off
+sound of surging waters reached him with entire clearness. He
+nodded.</p>
+<p>"That's the reason," the girl went on. "If something should
+happen&mdash;and you'd get carried around the bend&mdash;a little
+farther than you meant to go&mdash;you'd understand. And we
+wouldn't see any more of Mr. Darby around these parts."</p>
+<p>Her dark eyes, brimming with light and laughter, were on his
+face, but she failed to see him slowly stiffen to hide the sudden,
+wild leaping of his heart. Could it be that he saw the far-off
+vision of his triumph?</p>
+<p>His eyes glowed, and he fought off with difficulty a great
+preoccupation that seemed to be settling over him.</p>
+<p>"Tell me about it," he said at last, casually. "I was thinking
+of making a boat and going down on a prospecting trip."</p>
+<p>"I'll tell you about it, and then I think you'll change your
+mind. The first cataract is the one just above where we first saw
+the river&mdash;coming in; then there's this mile of quiet water.
+From that point on the Yuga flows into a gorge&mdash;or rather one
+gorge after another; and sometime they'll likely be almost as
+famous as some of the great gorges of your country. The walls are
+just about straight up on each side, and of course are absolutely
+impassable. I don't know how many miles the first gorge
+is&mdash;but for nearly two hundred miles the river is considered
+impassable for boats. Two hundred and fifty miles or so below there
+is an Indian village&mdash;but they never try to go down the river
+from here. A few white men, however, have tried to go down with
+canoe-loads of fur."</p>
+<p>"And all drowned?" Ben asked.</p>
+<p>"All except one party. Once two men went down when the river was
+high&mdash;just as it is now. They were good canoeists, and they
+made it through. No one ever expected they would come out
+again."</p>
+<p>"And after you've once got into the rapids, there's no getting
+out&mdash;or landing?"</p>
+<p>"Of course not. I suppose there are places where you might get
+on the bank, but the gorge above is impassable."</p>
+<p>"You couldn't follow the river down&mdash;with horses?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, in time. Of course it would be slow going, as there are no
+trails, the brush is heavy, and the country is absolutely
+unexplored. You see it has never been considered a gold
+country&mdash;and of course the Indians won't go except where they
+can go in canoes. Some of the hills must be impassable, too. I've
+heard my father speak about it&mdash;how that if any
+criminal&mdash;or any one like that&mdash;could take down this
+river in a canoe in high water&mdash;and get through into that
+great, virgin, trackless country a hundred miles below, it would be
+almost impossible to get him out. Unless the officers could chase
+him down the same way he went&mdash;by canoe&mdash;it would take
+literally weeks and months for them to get in, and by that time he
+could be hidden and located and his tracks covered up."</p>
+<p>"And with good ambushes, able to hold off and kill a dozen of
+them, eh?" Ben's hands shook, and he locked them behind him. "They
+call that country&mdash;what?"</p>
+<p>"'Back There.' That's all I've ever heard it called&mdash;'Back
+There.'"</p>
+<p>"It's as good a name as any. Of course, the reason they were
+able to make it through in high water was due to the fact that most
+of the rocks and ledges were submerged, and they could slide right
+over them."</p>
+<p>"Of course. Many of our rivers are safer in high water. But you
+seriously don't intend to take such a trip&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He looked up to find her eyes wide and full upon his. Yet her
+concern for him touched him not at all. She was his enemy: that
+fact could never be forgotten or forgiven.</p>
+<p>"I want to hear about it, anyway. I heard in town the river is
+higher than it's been for years&mdash;due to the
+Chinook&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"It <i>is</i> higher than I've ever seen it. But it's reached
+its peak and has started to fall, and it won't come up again, at
+least, till fall. When the Yuga rises it comes up in a flood, and
+it falls the same way. It's gone down quite a little since this
+morning; by the day after to-morrow no one could hope to get
+through Devil's Gate&mdash;the first cataract in the gorge."</p>
+<p>"Not even with a canoe? Of course a raft would be broken to
+pieces."</p>
+<p>"Not a canoe, either, in two or three days, if the river falls
+like it usually does. But tell me&mdash;you aren't
+serious&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I suppose not. But it gets my imagination&mdash;just the same.
+I suppose a man would average better than twenty miles an hour down
+through that gorge, and would come out at <i>Back There</i>."</p>
+<p>Their talk moved easily to other subjects; yet it seemed to Ben
+that some secondary consciousness held up his end of the
+conversation. His own deeper self was lost in curious and dark
+conjectures. Her description of the river lingered in his thoughts,
+and he seemed to be groping for a great inspiration that was
+hovering just beyond his reach&mdash;as plants grope for light in
+far-off leafy jungles. He felt that it would come to him in a
+moment: he would know the dark relation that these facts about the
+river bore to his war with Neilson. It was as if an inner mind,
+much more subtle and discerning than his normal consciousness, had
+seen great possibilities in them, but as yet had not divulged their
+significance.</p>
+<p>"I must be going now," the girl was saying. "Father pretty near
+goes crazy when I stay away too long. You can't imagine how he
+loves me and worries about me&mdash;and how fearful he is of
+me&mdash;"</p>
+<p>His mind seemed to leap and gather her words. It was true: she
+was the joy and the pride and the hope of the old man's life. All
+his work, his dreams were for her. And now he remembered a fact
+that she had told him on the outward journey: that Ray Brent, the
+stronger of Neilson's two subordinates, loved her too.</p>
+<p>"To strike at them indirectly&mdash;through some one they
+love&mdash;" such had been his greatest wish. To put them at a
+disadvantage and overcome his own&mdash;to lead them into his own
+ambushes. And was it for the Wolf to care what guiltless creatures
+fell before his fangs in the gaining of his dreadful ends? Was the
+gratification of his hate to be turned aside through pity for an
+innocent girl? Mercy and remorse were two things that he had put
+from him. It was the way of the Wolf to pay no attention to
+methods, only to achieve his own fierce desires. He stood lost in
+dark and savage reverie.</p>
+<p>"Good-by," the girl was saying. "I'll see you soon&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He turned toward her, a smile at his lips. His voice held steady
+when he spoke.</p>
+<p>"It'll have to be soon, if at all," he replied. "I've got to
+really get to work in a few days. How about a little picnic
+to-morrow&mdash;a grouse hunt, say&mdash;on the other side of the
+river? It's going to be a beautiful day&mdash;"</p>
+<p>The girl's eyes shone, and the color rose again in her tanned
+cheeks. "I'd think that would be very nice," she told him.</p>
+<p>"Then I'll meet you here&mdash;at eight."</p>
+<br>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XVIII"></a>
+<h2>XVIII</h2>
+<p>Alone by the fire Ben had opportunity to balance one thing with
+another and think out the full consequences of his plan. As far as
+he could discern, it stood every test. It meant not only direct and
+indirect vengeance upon Neilson and his followers; but it would
+also, past all doubt, deliver them into his hands. That much was
+sure. When finally they came to grips&mdash;if indeed they did not
+go down to a terrible death before ever that time came&mdash;he
+would be prepared for them, with every advantage of ground and
+fortress, able to combat them one by one and shatter them from
+ambush. Best of all, they would know at whose hands, and for what
+crime, they received their retribution.</p>
+<p>One by one he checked the chances against him. First of all, he
+had to face the great chance of failure and the consequent loss of
+his own life. But there was even recompense in this. He would not
+die unavenged. The blow that he would thereby deal to his enemies
+would be terrible beyond any reckoning, but he would have no
+regrets.</p>
+<p>There were two outstanding points in his favor, one of them
+being that the river was rapidly falling. By the time a canoe could
+be built the river would be wholly unnavigable. There were no
+canoes procurable in Snowy Gulch, if indeed a lightning trip could
+be made there and back to secure one, before the river fell. The
+conversation with the frontiersman at the river bank brought out
+this fact. Lastly, a raft could not live a moment in the
+rapids.</p>
+<p>Very methodically he began to make his preparations. He untied
+his horse, leaving it free to descend to Snowy Gulch. Then he
+packed a few of his most essential supplies, his gun and shells,
+such necessary camp equipment as robes, matches, soap and towels,
+cooking and table ware, an axe and similar necessaries. In the way
+of food he laid out flour, rice, salt, and sugar, plus a few pounds
+of tea&mdash;nothing else. The entire outfit weighed less than two
+hundred pounds, easily carried in three loads upon the back.</p>
+<p>In the still hour of midnight, when the forest world was swept
+in mystery, he carried the equipment down to the canoe that
+Beatrice had left the evening before. He loaded the craft with the
+greatest care, balancing it now and then with his hands at the
+sides, and covering up the food supplies with robes and blankets.
+Then he drew from his pocket a sheet of paper&mdash;evidently a
+paper sack that had once held provisions, cut open and
+spread&mdash;and wrote carefully, a long time, with a pencil.</p>
+<p>He had no envelope to enclose it, no wax to seal it. He did,
+however, carry a stub of a candle&mdash;a requisite to most
+northern men who are obliged to build supper fires in wet forest.
+Folding his letter carefully, he sealed it with tallow. Then
+wrapping one of his blankets about him, he prepared to wait for the
+dawn. Fenris growled and murmured in his sleep.</p>
+<p>Ben himself had not slept the night before; and moved and
+stirred by his plan of the morrow, slumber did not come easily to
+him now. He too murmured in his sleep and had weird, tragic dreams
+between sleep and wakefulness. But the shadows paled at last. A
+ribbon of light spread along the eastern horizon; the more familiar
+landmarks emerged&mdash;ghosts at first, then in vivid outline, the
+wooded sky line strengthened; the nebulous magic of the moon died
+in the forest. Birds wakened and sang; the hunting creatures crept
+to their lairs; sleeping flowers opened. Morning broke on a clear,
+warm day.</p>
+<p>Ben devoured a heavy breakfast&mdash;all that he could force
+himself to swallow&mdash;then prepared to wait for Beatrice. He
+knew perfectly that explanations would be difficult if Neilson or
+one of his followers found him with the loaded boat. It was not
+likely, however, that any of his enemies&mdash;except, of course,
+Beatrice herself&mdash;would venture down that way.</p>
+<p>Just before eight he saw her come,&mdash;first the glint of her
+white blouse in the green of the forest, and then the flash of her
+brown arms. Her voice rang clear and sweet through the hushed
+depths as she called a greeting. A moment later she was beside
+him.</p>
+<p>"Go back and get your heavy coat," he commanded. "I've already
+been out on the water, and it'll freeze you stiff."</p>
+<p>He was not overly pleased with himself for speaking thus. He had
+resolved to put mercy from him; and he was taking a serious risk to
+his own cause by the delay of sending her back for her warmer
+garments. She smiled into his eyes, but she came of a breed of
+women that had learned obedience to men, and she immediately
+turned. But Ben had builded better than he thought. His eyes were
+no longer on her radiant face. They had dropped to the pistol, in
+its holster, that she carried in her hands, preparatory to
+strapping it about her waist. It was disconcerting that he had
+forgotten about her pistol. It was one of those insignificant
+trifles that before now have disrupted the mightiest plans of
+nations and of men. His mind sped like lightning, and he thanked
+his stars that he had seen it in time. This pistol and a small
+package, the contents of which he did not know, were the only
+equipment she had.</p>
+<p>"It's going to be a bright day," the girl said hesitatingly. "I
+don't think I'll need the fur coat&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Get it, anyway," Ben advised. "The wind's keen on the river.
+Leave your pistol and your package here&mdash;and go up and back at
+top speed. I'll be arranging the canoe&mdash;"</p>
+<p>She laid down the things, and in a moment the thickets had
+hidden her. Swiftly Ben reached for the gun, and for a few speeding
+seconds his fingers worked at its mechanism. He was busy about the
+canoe when the girl returned.</p>
+<p>Evidently Beatrice was in wonderful spirits. The air itself was
+sparkling, the sun&mdash;beloved with an ardor too deep for words
+by all northern peoples&mdash;was warm and genial in the sky; the
+spruce forest was lush with dew, fragrant with hidden blossoms. It
+was a Spring Day&mdash;nothing less. Both of them knew perfectly
+that miracle was abroad in the forest,&mdash;flowers opening, buds
+breaking into blossoms, little grass blades stealing, shy as
+fairies, up through the dead leaves; birds fluttering and gossiping
+and carrying all manner of building materials for their nests.</p>
+<p>Spring is not just a time of year to the forest folk, and
+particularly to those creatures whose homes are the far spruce
+forests of the North. It is a magic and a mystery, a recreation and
+a renewed lease on life itself. It is hope come again, the joy of
+living undreamed of except by such highly strung, nerve-tingling,
+wild-blooded creatures as these; and in some measure at least it is
+the escape from Fear. For there is no other name than Fear for the
+great, white, merciless winter that had just departed.</p>
+<p>High and low, every woods creature knows this dread, this
+age-old apprehension of the deepening snow. Perhaps it had its
+birth in eons past, when the great glaciers brought their curse of
+gold into the temperate regions, locking land and sea under tons of
+ice. Never the frost comes, and the snow deepens on the land, and
+the rivers and lakes are struck silent as if by a cruel magician's
+magic, but that this old fear returns, creeping like poison into
+the nerves, bowing down the heart and chilling the warm wheel of
+the blood. For the rodents and the digging people&mdash;even for
+the mighty grizzly himself&mdash;the season means nothing but the
+cold and the darkness of their underground lairs. For those that
+try to brave the winter, the portion is famine and cold; the vast,
+far-spreading silence broken only by the sobbing song of the wolf
+pack, starving and afraid on the distant ridges. Man is the
+conqueror, the Mighty One who can strike the fire, but yet he too
+knows the creepy, haunting dread and deep-lying fear of the
+northern winter. But that dread season was gone now, yielding for a
+few happy months to a gay invader from the South; and the whole
+forest world rejoiced.</p>
+<p>Both Beatrice and Ben could sense the new wakening and revival
+in the still depths about them. The forest was hushed, tremulous,
+yet vibrant and ecstatic with renewed life. The old grizzly bear
+had left his winter lair; and good feeding was putting the fat
+again on his bones; the old cow moose had stolen away into the
+farther marshes for some mystery and miracle of her own. Everywhere
+young calves of caribou were breathing the air for the first time,
+trying to stand on wobbly legs and pushing with greedy noses into
+overflowing udders. The rich new grass yielded milk in plenty for
+all these wilderness nurslings. Even the she-wolf forgot her wicked
+savagery to nurse and fondle her whelps in the lair; even the
+she-lynx, hunting with renewed fervor through the branches, knew of
+a marvelous secret in a hollow log that she would be torn to scraps
+of fur rather than reveal.</p>
+<p>The she-ermine, her white hair falling out, was brooding a
+litter of cutthroats and murderers in a nest of grass and twigs,
+and each one of them was a source of pride and joy to her mother
+heart. Even the wolverine had some wicked-eyed little cubs that, to
+her, were precious beyond rubies; but which would ultimately
+receive all the oaths in the language for stealing bait on the trap
+lines out from the settlements.</p>
+<p>Beatrice, a woods creature herself, knew the stir and thrill of
+spring; but there were also more personal, more deeply hidden
+reasons why she was happy to-day. She was certainly a very
+girlish-girl in most ways, with even more than the usual allowance
+of romance and sentiment, and the idea of an all-day picnic with
+this stalwart forester went straight home to her imagination. She
+had been tremendously impressed with him from the first, and the
+day's ride out from Snowy Gulch had brought him very close to her
+indeed. And what might not the day bring forth! What mystery and
+wonder might come to pass!</p>
+<p>Her dark eyes were lustrous, and the haunting sadness they often
+held was quite gone. Her face was faintly flushed, her red lips
+wistful, every motion eager and happy as a child's. But Ben looked
+at her unmoved.</p>
+<p>Coldly his eye leaped over her supple, slender form. He saw with
+relief that she was stoutly clad in middy and skirt of wool, wool
+stockings, and solid little boots. The heavy coat she had brought
+was not particularly noteworthy in these woods, but it would have
+drawn instant admiration from knowing people of a great city. It
+was not cut with particular style, neither was it beautifully
+lined, but the fabric itself was plucked otter,&mdash;the dark,
+well-wearing fur of many lights and of matchless luster and
+beauty.</p>
+<p>"For goodness sake, Mr. Darby," the girl cried. "What have you
+got in this boat? Surely that isn't just the lunch&mdash;" She
+pointed to the pile of supplies, covered by the blankets, in the
+center of the craft.</p>
+<p>"It looks like we had enough to stay a month, doesn't it?" he
+laughed. "There's blankets there, of course&mdash;for table cloths
+and to make us comfortable&mdash;and the lunch, and a pillow or
+two&mdash;and some little surprises. The rest is just some stores
+that I'm going to take this opportunity to put across the
+river&mdash;to my next camp. Now, Miss Neilson&mdash;if you'll take
+the seat in the bow. Fenris is going to ride in the
+middle&mdash;"</p>
+<p>The girl's eyes fell with some apprehension on the shaggy wolf.
+"I haven't established very friendly relations with
+Fenris&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I'd leave him at home, but he won't stand for it. Besides I'd
+like to teach him how to retrieve grouse. Lie down, old boy." Ben
+motioned, and Fenris sprawled at his feet. "Now come here and pet
+him, Miss Neilson. His fur, at this season, is
+wonderful&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Reluctant to show her fear before Ben, the girl drew near. The
+wolf shivered as the soft hand touched his side and moved slowly to
+his fierce head; but he gave no further sign of enmity.</p>
+<p>"He understands," Ben explained. "He realizes that I've accepted
+you, and you're all right. Until he's given orders otherwise, he'll
+treat you with the greatest respect."</p>
+<p>She was deeply and sincerely pleased. It did not occur to her,
+in the least, little degree, that occasion could possibly arise
+whereby contradictory orders would be given. Ben started to help
+her into the boat.</p>
+<p>"You've not forgotten anything?" he asked casually.</p>
+<p>"Nothing I can think of."</p>
+<p>"Got plenty of extra shells?"</p>
+<p>"Part of a box. It's a small caliber automatic, you see, and a
+box holds fifty."</p>
+<p>"It is, eh?" Ben's tone indicated deep interest. "May I see 'em
+a minute? I think I had a gun like it once. Not the gun&mdash;just
+the box of shells."</p>
+<p>She had strapped the weapon around her waist, by now, so she
+didn't attempt to put it in his hands. From her pocket she procured
+a small box of shells, and these she passed to him. He examined
+them with a great show of interest, balancing their weight in the
+palm of his hand; then he carelessly threw the box down among the
+duffle in front of the stern seat. Presently he started to push
+off.</p>
+<p>"You're not taking the other paddle?" the girl asked
+curiously.</p>
+<p>"No. I don't believe in letting young ladies work when I take
+'em on an outing. You are just to sit in the bow and enjoy
+yourself. Fenris, sit still and don't rock the boat!"</p>
+<p>Just one moment more he hesitated. From his pocket he drew a
+piece of paper, carefully folded and sealed with tallow. This he
+inserted into a little crack in the blade of the second
+paddle&mdash;the one that was to be left at the landing.</p>
+<p>"Just a little note for your father," he explained, "to tell him
+where we are, in case he worries about you."</p>
+<p>"That's very considerate of you," the girl answered in a
+thoughtful voice.</p>
+<p>She wondered at the curious glowings, lurid as red coals, that
+came and went in his eyes.</p>
+<br>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XIX"></a>
+<h2>XIX</h2>
+<p>After the manner of backwoods fathers Jeffery Neilson had
+offered no objections to his daughter's all-day excursion with Ben.
+The ways of the frontier are informal; and besides, he had every
+confidence in her ability to take care of herself. The only
+unfortunate phase of the affair concerned Ray. The latter would
+look with no favor upon the venture; and in all probability a
+disagreeable half-hour would ensue with him if he found it out.</p>
+<p>The control of Ray Brent had been an increasingly difficult
+problem. Always sullen and envious, once or twice he had not been
+far from open rebellion. There is a certain dread malady that comes
+to men at the sight of naked gold, and Ray's degenerate type was
+particularly subject to it. Every day the mine had shown itself
+increasingly rich, and Ray's ambition had given way to greed, and
+his greed to avarice of the most dangerous sort. For instance, he
+had a disquieting way of gathering the nuggets into his hands,
+fondling them with an unholy love. Neilson realized perfectly, now,
+that the younger man would not be content with a fourth share or
+less; and on the other hand he resolutely refused to yield any of
+his own, larger share. Sometime the issue would bring them to
+grips. Ray's dreadful crime of a few days past had given him an
+added insolence and self-assurance that complicated the problem
+still further. The leopard that has once tasted human flesh is not
+to be trusted again. Finally, there remained this matter of
+Beatrice.</p>
+<p>Neilson's love for his daughter forbade that he should force her
+to receive unwelcome attentions. Ray, on the other hand, had always
+insisted that his chief allow him a clear field. He would be
+infuriated when he heard of the trip she was taking with Ben
+to-day. Neilson straightened, resolving to meet the issue with
+old-time firmness.</p>
+<p>When he heard his daughter's voice on the canoe landing, one
+hundred yards below, he was inordinately startled. She had not told
+him that their picnic would take them on to the water. The reason
+had been, of course, that Beatrice knew her father's distrust of
+the treacherous stream and either feared his refusal to her plan or
+wished to save him worry. Even now they were starting. He could
+hear the first stroke of the paddle through the hushed woods.</p>
+<p>He turned toward the door, instinctively alarmed; then
+hesitated. After all, he could not tell her to come back. Beatrice
+would be mortified; and besides, there was nothing definite to
+fear. The river was almost as still as a lake for a long stretch
+immediately in front of the landing; even a poor canoeist could
+cross with ease. It was true that rapids, mile after mile of them
+past counting, lay just below, but surely the canoeists would stay
+at a safe distance above them. And if by any chance this young
+prospector had no skill with a canoe, Beatrice herself was an
+expert.</p>
+<p>Yet what, in reality, did he know of Ben Darby? He had liked the
+man's face: whence he came and what was his real business on the
+Yuga he had not the least idea. All at once a baffling apprehension
+crept like a chill through his frame.</p>
+<p>He could not laugh it away. It laid hold of him, refusing to be
+dispelled. It was as if an inner voice was warning him, telling him
+to rush down to the river bank and check that canoe ride at all
+costs. It occurred to him, for the moment, that this might be
+premonition of a disastrous accident, yet vaguely he sensed a plot,
+an obscure design that filled him with ghastly terror. Once more
+the man started for the door.</p>
+<p>Unaware of his ground, he did not hurry at first. He hardly knew
+what to say, by what excuse he could call Beatrice back to the
+landing. His heart was racing incomprehensibly in his breast, and
+all at once he started to run.</p>
+<p>At the first step he fell sprawling, and stark panic was upon
+him when he got to his feet again. And when he reached the landing
+the canoe was already near the opposite shore, heading swiftly
+downstream.</p>
+<p>He saw in one glance that the craft was rather heavily laden,
+Fenris atop the pile of duffle, and that Ben was paddling with a
+remarkably fast, easy stroke. "Come back, Beatrice," he shouted.
+"You've forgotten something."</p>
+<p>The girl turned, waving, but Ben's voice drowned out hers.
+"We'll see you later," he called in a gay voice. "We can't come
+back now."</p>
+<p>"Come back!" Neilson called again. "I order you&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He stared intently, hoping that the man would turn. Already they
+were practically out of hearing; and not even Beatrice was dipping
+her paddle in obedience to his command. Looking more closely, he
+saw that the man only was paddling.</p>
+<p>Then his eye fell to the landing on which he stood,
+instinctively trying to locate the second paddle. It lay at his
+feet. A foolhardy thing to do, he thought, a broken paddle, out
+there above the rapids, would mean death and no other thing.
+Helpless in the current, the canoe could not be guided through
+those fearful gates of peril below. If by a thousandth chance it
+escaped the rocks, it would be carried for unnumbered miles into a
+land unknown, a territory that could be entered only by the
+greatest difficulty&mdash;packing day after day over range and
+through thicket with a great train of pack horses&mdash;and from
+which the egress, except by the same perilous water route, would be
+almost impossible. But the thought passed as he discerned the white
+paper that had been fastened in the paddle blade.</p>
+<p>He bent for it with eager hand. He knew instinctively that it
+contained an all-important and sinister message for him. His eyes
+leaped over the bold writing on the exterior.</p>
+<p>"To Ezra Melville's murderers," Ben had written. And with that
+reading Jeffery Neilson knew a terror beyond any experienced in the
+darkest nightmare of his iniquitous life.</p>
+<p>It did not occur to him to bring the note, unopened, to Ray
+Brent. As yet he did not fully understand; yet he knew that the
+issue was one of seconds. <i>Seconds</i> must decide everything;
+his whole world hung in the balance. His hand ripped apart the
+sealed fold, and he held the sheet before his eyes.</p>
+<p>Possessing only an elementary education Jeffery Neilson was not,
+ordinarily, a fast reader. Usually he sounded out his words only
+with the greatest difficulty. But to-day, one glance at the page
+conveyed to him the truth: from half a dozen words he got a general
+idea of the letter's full, dread meaning. Ben had written:</p>
+<div class="ltr">
+<p>TO NEILSON AND HIS GANG:&mdash;</p>
+<p>When you get this, Beatrice will be on her way to Back
+There&mdash;either there or on her way to hell.</p>
+<p>Ezra Melville was my pard. A letter leaving his claim to me is
+in my pocket, and I alone know where Hiram's will is, leaving it to
+Ezram. Your title will never stand as long as those papers aren't
+destroyed. If you don't care enough about saving your daughter from
+me, at least you'll want those letters. Come and get them. I'll be
+waiting for you.</p>
+<p>BEN DARBY.</p>
+</div>
+<p>As the truth flashed home, Neilson's first thought was of his
+rifle. He was a wilderness man, trained to put his trust in the
+weapon of steel; and if it were only in his hands, there might yet
+be time to prevent the abduction. One well-aimed bullet over the
+water, shooting with all his old-time skill, might yet hurl the
+avenger to his death in the moment of his triumph. Just one keen,
+long gaze over the sights,&mdash;heaven or earth could not yield
+him a vision half so glorious as this! For all his terror he knew
+that he could shoot as he had never shot before, true as a
+light-ray. His remorseless eyes for once could see clear and sure.
+One shot&mdash;and then Beatrice could seize the paddle and save
+herself. And he cursed himself, more bitterly than he had ever
+cursed an enemy, when his empty hands showed him that he had left
+his rifle in his cabin.</p>
+<p>His pistol, however, was at his belt, and his hand reached for
+it. But the range was already too far for any hope of accurate
+pistol fire. His hard eyes gazed along the short, black barrel. His
+steady finger pressed back against the trigger.</p>
+<p>The first shot fell far short. The pistol was of large caliber
+but small velocity; and a hundred yards was its absolute limit of
+point-blank range. He lifted the gun higher and shot again. Again
+he shot low. But the third bullet fell just a few feet on the near
+side of the canoe.</p>
+<p>He had the range now, and he shot again. It was like a dream,
+outside his consciousness, that Beatrice was screaming with fear
+and amazement. She was already too far to give or receive a
+message: all hope lay in the pistol alone. The fifth shot splashed
+water beyond the craft.</p>
+<p>Once more he fired, but the boat was farther distant now, and
+the bullet went wild. The pistol was empty. Like a moose leaping
+through a marsh he turned back to his cabin for his rifle.</p>
+<p>But already he knew that he was lost. Before ever he could climb
+up the hundred yards to the cabin, and back again, the craft would
+be around the bend in the river. Heavy brush would hide it from
+then on. He hastened frantically up the narrow, winding trail.</p>
+<br>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XX"></a>
+<h2>XX</h2>
+<p>Ben was fully aware, as he pushed the canoe from landing, that
+the success of his scheme was not yet guaranteed. Long ago, in the
+hard school of the woods, he had found out life; and one of the
+things he had learned was that nothing on earth is infallible and
+no man's plans are sure. There are always coincidents of which the
+scheming brain has not conceived: the sudden interjection of
+unexpected circumstances. The unforeseen appearance of Beatrice's
+father on the landing had been a case in point.</p>
+<p>Most of all he had been afraid that Beatrice herself would leap
+from the canoe and attempt to swim to safety. He had learned in his
+past conversations with her that she had at least an elementary
+knowledge of swimming. Had she not confessed at the same time fear
+of the water, his plan could have never been adopted. The northern
+girls have few opportunities to obtain real proficiency in
+swimming. Their rivers are icy cold, their villages do not afford
+heated natatoriums. Yet he realized that he must quiet her
+suspicions as long as possible.</p>
+<p>"I've got the landing picked out," he told her as they started
+off. "I've been all over the river this morning. It is quite a way
+down&mdash;around the bend&mdash;but it's perfectly safe. So don't
+be afraid."</p>
+<p>"I'm not afraid&mdash;with you. And how fast you paddle!"</p>
+<p>It was true: in all her days by rivers she had never seen such
+perfect control of a canoe. He paddled as if without effort, but
+the streaming shore line showed that the boat moved at an
+astonishing rate. He was a master canoeist, and whatever fears she
+might have had vanished at once.</p>
+<p>She talked gayly to him, scarcely aware that they were heading
+across and down the stream.</p>
+<p>When her father had appeared on the bank, calling, she had not
+been in the least alarmed. Ben's gay shouts kept her from
+understanding exactly what he was saying. And when the old man had
+drawn his pistol and fired, and the bullet had splashed in the
+water some twenty yards toward shore, her mind had refused to
+accept the evidence of her senses.</p>
+<p>The second shot followed the first, and the third the second,
+resulting in, for her part, only the impotence of bewilderment. Her
+first thought was that her father's fierce temper, long known to
+her, had engulfed him in murderous rage. Trusting Ben wholly, the
+real truth did not occur to her.</p>
+<p>She screamed shrilly at the fourth shot; and Ben looked up to
+find her pale as the foam from his flashing paddle. "Turn around
+and go back," she cried to Ben. "He'll kill you if you don't! Oh,
+please&mdash;turn around&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"And get in range of him so he <i>can</i> kill me?" Ben replied
+savagely. "Can't you see he's shooting at me?"</p>
+<p>"Then throw up your hands&mdash;it's all some dreadful mistake.
+Can't you hear me&mdash;turn and go back."</p>
+<p>The fifth and sixth shots were fired by now; and Neilson had
+gone to his cabin for his rifle. Ben smiled grimly into her white
+face.</p>
+<p>"We'd better keep on going to our landing place," he advised.
+"There's no place to land above it&mdash;I went all over the shore
+this morning. That will give him time to cool down. I only want to
+get around this curve before he comes with his rifle."</p>
+<p>She stared at him aghast, too confused and terrified to make
+rational answer. He was pale, too; but she had a swift feeling that
+the cold, rugged face was in some way exultant, too. The first
+chill of fear of him brushed her like a cold wind.</p>
+<p>But they were around the bend by now, and Ben's breath caught as
+if in a triumphant gasp. Already all opportunity for the girl to
+swim to shore was irremediably past. While he could still control
+the canoe with comparative ease, the river was a swift-moving sheet
+of water that would carry any one but the strongest swimmer
+remorselessly into the rapids below. Ben smiled, like a man who has
+come into a great happiness, and rested on his paddle.</p>
+<p>"Push into shore," the girl urged. "The home shore&mdash;if you
+can. Then I'll go and find him and try to quiet him. He'll kill you
+if you don't."</p>
+<p>A short pause followed the girl's words. The man smiled coldly
+into her eyes.</p>
+<p>"He'll kill me, will he?" he repeated.</p>
+<p>The response to the simple question was simply unmitigated
+terror, swift and deadly, surging through the girl's frame. It
+caught and twisted her throat muscles like a cruel hand; and her
+childish eyes widened and darkened under his contemptuous gaze.</p>
+<p>"What do you mean?" she asked breathlessly. "What&mdash;are you
+going to do?"</p>
+<p>"He won't kill me," Ben went on. "I may kill him&mdash;and I
+will if I can&mdash;but he won't kill me. See&mdash;we're going
+faster all the time."</p>
+<p>It was true. Strokes of the paddle were no longer necessary to
+propel the craft at the breakneck pace. It sped like an
+arrow&mdash;straight toward the perilous cataracts below.</p>
+<p>The girl watched him with transcending horror, and slowly the
+truth went home. The supplies in the boat, her father's desperate
+attempt to rescue her, even at the risk of her own life and the
+cost of Ben's, this white, exultant face before her, more terrible
+than that of the wolf between, the cold reptile eyes so full of
+some unhallowed emotion,&mdash;at last she saw their meaning and
+relation. Was it <i>death</i>&mdash;was <i>that</i> what this mad
+man in the stern had for her? She remembered what she had told him
+the day before, her description of the cataracts that lay below.
+She struggled to shake off the trance that her terror had cast
+about her.</p>
+<p>"Turn into the shore," she told him, half-whispering. There was
+no pleading in her tone: the hard eyes before her told her only too
+plainly how futile her pleas would be. "You still have time to
+steer into shore. I'll jump overboard if you don't."</p>
+<p>He shook his head. "Don't jump overboard, Beatrice," he
+answered, some of the harshness gone from his tones. "It isn't my
+purpose to kill you&mdash;and to jump over into this stream only
+means to die&mdash;'for any one except the most powerful swimmer.
+You'd be carried down in an instant."</p>
+<p>The girl knew he spoke the truth. Only death dwelt in those cold
+and rushing waters. "What do you mean to do?" she asked.</p>
+<p>Her tone was more quiet now, and he waited an instant before he
+answered. The canoe glided faster&mdash;ever faster down the
+stream. Somewhat afraid, but still trusting in the imperial mind of
+his master, the wolf raised his head to watch the racing shore
+line.</p>
+<p>"It's just a little debt I owe your father&mdash;and his gang,"
+Ben explained. "I'll tell you some time, in the days to come. It
+was a debt of blood&mdash;"</p>
+<p>The girl's dark eyes charged with red fire. "And you, a coward,
+take your payment on a woman. Turn the canoe into the bank."</p>
+<p>"The payment won't be taken from you," he explained soberly.
+"You'll be safe enough&mdash;even the fate that Neilson fears for
+you won't happen. I hate him too much to take <i>that</i> payment
+from you. I'd die before I'd touch the flesh of his flesh to mine!
+Do you understand that?"</p>
+<p>His fury had blazed up, for the instant, and she saw the deadly
+zeal of a fanatic in his gray eyes. A hatred beyond all naming, a
+bitterness and a rage such as she had never dreamed could blast a
+human heart was written in his brown, rugged face. Her woman's
+intuition gave her added vision, and she glimpsed something of the
+fire that smoldered and seared behind his eyes. They were of one
+blood, this man in the stern and the wolf on the duffle.</p>
+<p>"Then why&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"You're safe with me&mdash;the daughter of Jeff Neilson can't
+ever be anything but safe with me&mdash;as far as the thing you
+fear is concerned. Don't be afraid for that. I'm simply paying an
+honest debt, and you're the unfortunate agent. Don't you know the
+things he's fearing now are more torment to him than anything I
+could do to his flesh? If we should be killed in these rapids that
+are coming, it will be fair enough too; he'll know what it is to
+lose the dearest thing on earth he has. For you and me it will only
+be a minute that won't greatly matter. For him it will be
+weeks&mdash;months! But that's only a part of it. I hope to bring
+you through. The main thing is&mdash;that sooner or later they'll
+come for you&mdash;into a country where I'll have every advantage.
+Where there won't be any escape or chance for them. Where I can
+watch the trails, and shatter them&mdash;every one&mdash;as slow or
+as fast as I like. Where they'll have to hunt for me, week on week
+and month on month, their fears eating into them. That's my game,
+Beatrice. There will be discomfort for you&mdash;and some
+danger&mdash;but I'll make it as light as I can. And in another
+moment&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"You've still got time to turn back," the girl answered him,
+seemingly without feeling. "Glide into shore, and we'll try to
+catch an overhanging limb. It's my last warning."</p>
+<p>It was true that a few seconds remained in which they might,
+with heroic effort, save themselves. But these were passing:
+already they could see the gleaming whitecaps of the cataract
+below.</p>
+<p>The roar of the wild waters was in their ears. Ahead they could
+see great rocks, emerging like fangs above the water, sharp-edged
+and wet with spray. The boat was shuddering; the water seemed to
+covet them, and a great force, like the hand of a river god,
+reached at them from beneath as if to crush them in a merciless
+grasp. A hundred yards farther the smooth, swift water fell into a
+seething, roaring cataract&mdash;such a manifestation of the mighty
+powers of nature as checks the breath and awes the heart&mdash;a
+death stream in which seemingly the canoe would be shattered to
+pieces in an instant.</p>
+<p>Ben shook his head. The girl's white hand flashed to her side,
+then rose sure and steady, holding her pistol. "Turn quick, or I'll
+fire," she said.</p>
+<p>He felt that, if such action were in her power, she told the
+truth. No mercy dwelt in her clear gaze. His eye fell to the box of
+cartridges, now fallen safely among the duffle. Presently he smiled
+into her eyes.</p>
+<p>"Your gun is empty, Beatrice," he told her quietly. He heard her
+sob, and he smiled a little, reassuringly. "Never mind&mdash;and
+pray for a good voyage," he advised. "We're going through."</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXI"></a>
+<h2>XXI</h2>
+<p>The craft and its occupants were out of sight by the time
+Jeffery Neilson reached the river bank with his rifle. The flush
+had swept from his bronze skin, leaving it a ghastly yellow, and
+for once in his life no oaths came to his lips. He could only
+mutter, strangely, from a convulsed throat.</p>
+<p>Like an insane man he hastened down the river bank, fighting his
+way through the brush. The thickets were dense, ordinarily
+impenetrable to any mortal strength except to that mighty,
+incalculable power of the moose and grizzly; yet they could not
+restrain him now. The tough clothes he wore were nearly torn from
+his body; his face and hands were scratched as if by the claws of a
+lynx; but he did not pause till he reached the bank of the gray
+river.</p>
+<p>Only one more glimpse of the canoe was vouchsafed him, and that
+glimpse came too late. He saw the light barge just as it hovered at
+the crest of the rapids. Even if he could have shot straight at so
+great a range and had killed the man in the stern, no miracle could
+have saved his daughter. She would have been instantly swept to her
+death against the crags.</p>
+<p>Some measure of self-control returned to him then, and he made
+his way fast as he could toward the claim. Sensing the older man's
+distress, Ray straightened from his work at the sight of him.</p>
+<p>The face before him was drawn and white; but there was no time
+for questions. Hard hands seized his arm.</p>
+<p>"Ray, do you know of a canoe anywhere&mdash;up or down this
+river?"</p>
+<p>"There's one at the landing. None other I know of."</p>
+<p>"Think, man! You don't know where we can get one?"</p>
+<p>"No. Old Hiram's canoe was the only one. What's the matter?"</p>
+<p>"Do you think there's one chance in a million of getting down
+through those rapids on a raft?"</p>
+<p>Ray's eyes opened wide. "A raft!" he echoed. "Man, are you
+crazy? Even at this high water a canoe wouldn't have a chance in
+ten of making it. The river's falling every hour&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I know it. Do you suppose there's a canoe in town?"</p>
+<p>"No! Of course there isn't&mdash;one that you could even dream
+about shooting those rapids in. Besides, by the time we got there
+and packed it up&mdash;it would take two days to pack it the best
+we could do&mdash;the river would be too far down to tackle the
+trip at all. And it won't come up again till fall&mdash;you know
+that. Tell me what's the matter. Has Beatrice&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Beatrice has gone down, that's all."</p>
+<p>"Then she's dead&mdash;no hope of anything else. Only an expert
+could hope to take her through, and there's nothing to live on Back
+There. What's the use of trying to follow&mdash;?"</p>
+<p>Neilson straightened, his eyes searching Ray's. "She's got food,
+I suppose. And she's got an expert paddler to take her there."</p>
+<p>Ray's face seemed to darken before his eyes. His hands half
+closed, shook in his face, then caught at Neilson's shoulders. "You
+don't mean&mdash;she's run away?"</p>
+<p>"Don't be a fool. Not run away&mdash;abducted. The prospector I
+told you about&mdash;Darby&mdash;was the old man's partner. He's
+paying us back. Heaven only knows what the girl's fate will
+be&mdash;I don't dare to think of it. Ray, I wish to God I had died
+before I ever saw this day!"</p>
+<p>Ray stared blankly. "Then he found out&mdash;about the murder?"
+he gasped.</p>
+<p>"Yes. Here's his letter. Take time&mdash;and read it. There's no
+use to try to act before we think&mdash;how to act. If I could only
+see a way&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Ray read the letter carefully, crumpling it at last in savage
+wrath. "It's your fault!" he cried. "Why didn't you save her for me
+as I've always asked you to do; why did you let her go out with him
+at all? I'll bet she wanted to go&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I'd rather she had, instead of being taken by force!" The older
+man&mdash;aged incredibly in a few little minutes&mdash;slowly
+straightened. "But don't storm at me, Ray!" he warned, carefully
+and quietly. "I've stood a lot from you, but to-day I'd kill you
+for one word!"</p>
+<p>They faced each other in black disdain, but Ray knew he spoke
+the truth. There was no toying with this man's wrath to-day.</p>
+<p>"And if you'd let me croak this devil like I wanted to, it
+wouldn't have happened either. But there's no use crying about
+either one. The girl's a goner, sure; she's deep in the rapids by
+now."</p>
+<p>"Yes, and it's part of this man's hellish plan to take her clear
+through to Back There. You see, he dares us to come for
+her&mdash;and he'll be waiting and ready for us, mark my words. My
+God, she's probably dead&mdash;smashed to
+pieces&mdash;already!"</p>
+<p>"He says he's got the old man's letter, leaving the claim to
+him. That messes up things even worse."</p>
+<p>"I wish I'd never heard of the claim. There's only one thing to
+do, and that's to rush into Snowy Gulch and get a big
+outfit&mdash;all the horses and supplies we can find&mdash;and go
+after her by land."</p>
+<p>"Yes, and walk right into his trap. Think again, Neilson. It
+would take weeks and months to get in that way. Besides, what would
+happen to the claim while we're gone?"</p>
+<p>"You needn't fear for the claim! Of course, I'd expect you to
+think of that first&mdash;you who loved Beatrice so dearly!"
+Neilson's face was white with disdain. "It'll be recorded in our
+names, by then&mdash;likely Chan is already in
+Bradleyburg&mdash;and Darby himself is the only man on earth we
+have to fear." He paused, putting his faith in desperate craft. "If
+you want to cinch the claim, the first thing to do is go and stamp
+the life out of Darby; otherwise he'll turn up and make us trouble,
+just as he says."</p>
+<p>"He can't do much if the claim's recorded in our names!"</p>
+<p>"He can make us plenty of trouble. If you want the girl,
+Ray&mdash;don't lose a minute. Put your things together as fast as
+you can. We'll try to get some men in Snowy Gulch to come with
+us&mdash;to join in the hunt&mdash;and we'll hire every pack horse
+in the country. Get busy, and get busy quick."</p>
+<p>Reluctant to leave his gold, yet seeing the truth in Neilson's
+words, Ray hastened to his cabin to get such few supplies as would
+be needed for the day's march into Snowy Gulch. In less than five
+minutes they were on their way&mdash;tramping in file down the
+narrow moose trail.</p>
+<p>They crossed the divide, thus reaching the headwaters of Poor
+Man's Creek; then took the trail down toward the settlements. But
+the two claim-jumpers had not yet learned all the day's ill news.
+Half-way to the mouth of the stream they met Chan Heminway on his
+way back to the claim.</p>
+<p>At the first sight of him, riding in the rear of a long train of
+laden pack horses, they could hardly believe their eyes. It was not
+to be credited that he had made the trip to Bradleyburg and back in
+the few days he had been absent. Only an aeroplane could have made
+so fast a trip. Could it be that in spite of his definite orders he
+was returning with the duty of recording the claim still
+unperformed? To Neilson, however, the sight of the long pack train
+brought some measure of satisfaction. Here were horses laden with
+the summer supplies that Chan had been told to procure, and they
+could be utilized in the pursuit of Beatrice. Two days at least
+could be saved.</p>
+<p>"What in the devil you coming back for?" Ray shouted, when
+Chan's identity became certain.</p>
+<p>Chan rode nearer as if he had not heard. He checked his horse
+deliberately, undoubtedly inwardly excited by the news he had to
+tell and perhaps somewhat triumphant because he was its bearer.
+"I'm coming back because there ain't no use in staying at Snowy
+Gulch any longer," he answered at last. "I've got the supplies, and
+I'm packin' up to the claim, just as I was told."</p>
+<p>"But why didn't you go to Bradleyburg and record the claim?" Ray
+stormed. "Don't you know until that's done we're likely to be
+chased off any minute?"</p>
+<p>Chan looked into his partner's angry eyes, and his own lips drew
+in a scowl. "Because there wasn't any use in goin' to
+Bradleyburg."</p>
+<p>Ray was stricken with terror, and his words faltered. "You mean
+you could tend to it in Snowy Gulch&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I don't mean nothing of the kind. Shut up a minute, and I'll
+tell you about it. A few days ago Steve Morris got a letter
+addressed to old Hiram Melville&mdash;in care of Steve. He opened
+it and read it, and I heard about it soon as I got into town. There
+ain't no use of our trying to record that claim."</p>
+<p>"For God's sake, why?"</p>
+<p>"Because it's already recorded, that's why. We all felt so sure,
+and we wasn't sure at all. Before old Hiram died he wrote a
+letter&mdash;one of them two letters you heard about,
+Neilson&mdash;and which you wished you'd got hold of. Who that
+letter was to was an official in Bradleyburg&mdash;an old friend of
+Hiram's&mdash;and in it was a description of the claim. This letter
+Morris got was a notice that his claim was all properly filed in
+his&mdash;Hiram's&mdash;name. Whatever formalities was necessary
+was cut out because the old man had been too sick to make the
+trip&mdash;the recorder got special permission from Victoria. To be
+plain, I didn't file the claim because it's already filed, and I
+didn't want to show myself up as a claim-jumper quite as bad as
+that."</p>
+<p>"It's all over town&mdash;about the claim?"</p>
+<p>"Sure, but there won't be a rush. There's quite a movement over
+Bradleyburg way for one thing; for another, this is a pocket
+country, once and for always."</p>
+<p>For some seconds thereafter his partners could make no
+intelligent response. This bitter blow had been anticipated by
+neither. But Ray was a strong man, and his self-control quickly
+returned to him.</p>
+<p>"You see what that means, don't you?" he asked Neilson.</p>
+<p>"It means we've lost!"</p>
+<p>The eyes before him narrowed and gleamed. "So that's what it
+means to you! Well, I don't look at it just that way. It means to
+me that we've got to take these supplies and these pack horses and
+start out and find Ben Darby&mdash;and never stop hunting till
+we've found him."</p>
+<p>"Of course we've got to rescue Beatrice&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Rescuing Beatrice isn't all of it now, by a long shot. For the
+Lord's sake, Neilson&mdash;use your head a minute. Didn't old Hiram
+leave a will, giving this claim to his brother Ezra? If the claim
+wasn't recorded that will wouldn't mean much&mdash;but it is. And
+hasn't this Ben got a letter from Ezra leaving the claim to him?
+Now do you want to know who owns that claim? Ben Darby owns it, and
+as long as he can kick, that quarter of a million in gold can never
+be ours."</p>
+<p>"You mean we've got to find him&mdash;and destroy that
+letter&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"We've got to; that's all. He wrote us he had it, just to taunt
+us, and we've got to burn that up whether we find the girl or not.
+But that ain't all we've got to destroy&mdash;that piece of paper.
+You see that, don't you?"</p>
+<p>Neilson breathed heavily. "It's all plain enough."</p>
+<p>"I want it to be plain, so next time I want to let daylight
+through a man you won't stand in the way. It ain't just enough to
+burn up that letter. We've got to get the man who owns it, too. If
+we don't he'd still have a good enough case against us&mdash;with a
+good lawyer. Likely enough lots of people knew of their
+partnership, maybe have seen the letter&mdash;and they'd all be
+good witnesses in a suit. Our reputation ain't so good, after that
+Jenkins deal, that we'd shine very bright in a suit. Even if he
+couldn't prove his own claim, he could lug out the will old Hiram
+left&mdash;he alone knows where it's hid&mdash;and then his next
+nearest relatives would come in and get the claim. On the other
+hand, if we smash him, the thing will all quiet down; there'll be
+no claimants to work the mine; and after a few months we can step
+in and put up our own notices. But we've got to do that
+first&mdash;smash him wide-open as soon as we can catch up with
+him. He'll be way out in Back There, and no man would ever know
+what became of him, and there'd be nobody left to oppose us any
+more. But we can't be safe any other way."</p>
+<p>Neilson nodded slowly. His subordinate had put the matter
+clearly; and there was truth in his words. In Ben's murder alone
+lay their safety.</p>
+<p>He had always been adverse to bloodshed; but further reluctance
+meant ruin. Ben was one whom he could strike down without mercy or
+regret. And the blow would not be for expediency alone. There would
+be a personal debt to pay after the long months of searching. He
+could not forget that Beatrice was helpless in his hands.</p>
+<p>"The thing to do is to turn back with Chan, at once," he
+said.</p>
+<p>"Of course," Ray agreed. "That plan of yours to get help in
+chasing 'em down don't go any more. We don't want any spectators
+for what's ahead of us. Here's grub and horses a-plenty, and we
+needn't lose any time."</p>
+<p>So they turned back toward the Yuga, on their quest of hate.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXII"></a>
+<h2>XXII</h2>
+<p>Beatrice Neilson was a mountain girl, with the strong thews of
+Jael, yet she hid her face as the canoe shot into the crest of the
+rapids. It seemed incredible to her that the light craft should
+buffet that wild cataract and yet live. She was young and she loved
+life; and death seemed very near.</p>
+<div class="figure" style="width: 450px;"><img src=
+"images/ss002.jpg" height="586" width="400" alt=
+"He was leaning forward, aware of nothing in the world but the forthcoming crisis.">
+</div>
+<br>
+<p>The scene that her eyes beheld in that last little instant in
+which the boat seemed to hang, shuddering, at the crest of the
+descent was branded indelibly on her memory. She saw Ben's face,
+set like iron, the muscles bunching beneath his flannel sleeves as
+he set his paddle. He was leaning forward, aware of nothing in the
+world but the forthcoming crisis. And in that swift flash of vision
+she saw not only the steel determination and the brutal savagery of
+the avenger. A little glimpse of the truth went home to her, and
+she beheld something of the misdirected idealism of the man, the
+intensity and steadfastness that were the dominant traits of his
+nature. She could not doubt his belief in the reality of his cause.
+Whether fancied or real the injury, deep wells of emotion in his
+heart had broken their seals and flowed forth.</p>
+<p>The wolf crouched on the heap of supplies, fearful to the depths
+of his wild heart of this mighty stream, yet still putting his
+faith in his master in the stern. Beatrice saw his wild, frightened
+eyes as he gazed down into the frightful whirlpools. The banks
+seemed to whip past.</p>
+<p>Then the rushing waters caught the craft and seemed to fling it
+into the air. There was the swift sense of lightning and incredible
+movement, of such incalculable speed as that with which a meteor
+blazes through the sky, and then a mighty surging, struggle; an
+interminable instant of ineffable and stupendous conflict. The bow
+dipped, split the foam; then the raging waters seized the craft
+again, and with one great impulse hurled it through the clouds of
+spray, down between the narrow portals of rocks.</p>
+<p>Beatrice came to herself with the realization that she had
+uttered a shrill cry. Part of the impulse behind it was simply
+terror; but it was also the expression of an intensity of sensation
+never before experienced. She could have understood, now, the lure
+of the rapids to experienced canoeists. She forced herself to look
+into the wild cataract.</p>
+<p>The boat sped at an unbelievable pace. Ben held his paddle like
+iron, yet with a touch as delicate as that of a great musician upon
+piano keys, and he steered his craft to the last inch. His face was
+still like metal, but the eyes, steely, vivid, and magnetic, had a
+look of triumph. The first of the great tests had been passed.</p>
+<p>Sudden confidence in Ben's ability to guide her through to
+safety began to warm the girl's frozen heart. There were no places
+more dangerous than that just past; and he had handled his craft
+like a master. He was a voyageur: as long as his iron control was
+sustained, as long as his nerve was strong and his eye true she had
+every chance of coming out alive. But they had irremediably cast
+their fortunes upon the river, now. They could not turn back. She
+was in his whole charge, an agent of vengeance against her own
+father and his confederates.</p>
+<p>Hot, blinding tears suddenly filled her eyes. Her frantic fear
+of the river had held them back for a time; but they flowed freely
+enough now the first crisis was past. In utter misery and despair
+her head bowed in her hands; and her brown hair, disheveled,
+dropped down.</p>
+<p>Ben gazed at her with a curious mingling of emotions. It had not
+been part of his plan to bring sorrow to this girl. After all, she
+was not in the least responsible for her father's crimes. He had
+sworn to have no regrets, no matter what innocent flesh was
+despoiled in order that he might strike the guilty; yet the sight
+of that bowed, lovely head went home to him very deeply indeed. She
+was the instrument of his vengeance, necessary to his cause, but
+there was nothing to be gained by afflicting her needlessly. At
+least, he could give her his pity. It would not weaken him, dampen
+his fiery resolution, to give her that.</p>
+<p>As he guided his craft he felt growing compassion for her; yet
+it was a personal pity only and brought no regrets that he had
+acted as he did.</p>
+<p>"I wish you wouldn't cry," he said, rather quietly.</p>
+<p>Amazed beyond expression at the words, Beatrice looked up. For
+the instant her woe was forgotten in the astounding fact that she
+had won compassion from this cast-iron man in the stern.</p>
+<p>"I'll try not to," she told him, her dark eyes ineffably
+beautiful with their luster of tears. "I don't see why I should
+try&mdash;why I should try to do anything you ask me to&mdash;but
+yet I will&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Further words came to him, and he could not restrain them.
+"You're sort of&mdash;the goat, Beatrice," he told her soberly. "It
+was said, long ago, that the sins of the father must be visited
+upon the children; and maybe that's the way it is with you. I can't
+help but feel sorry&mdash;that you had to undergo this&mdash;so
+that I could reach your father and his men. If you had seen old
+Ezram lying there&mdash;the life gone from, his kind, gray old
+face&mdash;the man who brought me home and gave me my one
+chance&mdash;maybe you'd understand."</p>
+<p>They were speechless a long time, Beatrice watching the swift
+leap of the shore line, Ben guiding, with steady hand, the canoe.
+Neither of them could guess at what speed they traveled this first
+wild half-hour; but he knew that the long miles&mdash;so
+heart-breaking with their ridges and brush thickets to men and
+horses&mdash;were whipping past them each in a few, little breaths.
+Ever they plunged deeper into the secret, hushed heart of the
+wild&mdash;a land unknown to the tread of white men, a region so
+still and changeless that it seemed excluded from the reign and law
+of, time. The spruce grew here, straight and dark and tall, a
+stalwart army whose measureless march no human eyes beheld. Already
+they had come farther than a pack train could travel, through the
+same region, in weary days.</p>
+<p>Already they were at the border of Back There. They had cut the
+last ties with the world of men. There were no trails here, leading
+slowly but immutably to the busy centers of civilization; not a
+blaze on a tree for the eyes of a woodsman riding on some forest
+venture, not the ashes of a dead camp fire or a charred cooking
+rack, where an Indian had broiled his caribou flesh. Except by the
+slow process of exploration with pack horses, traveling a few miles
+each day, fording unknown rivers and encircling impassable ranges,
+or by waiting patiently until the fall rains swelled the river,
+they might never leave this land they had so boldly entered. They
+could not go out the way they had come&mdash;over those seething
+waters&mdash;and the river, falling swiftly, would soon be too low
+to permit them to push down to its lower waters where they might
+find Indian encampments.</p>
+<p>Nothing was left but the wilderness, ancient and unchanged. The
+spruce forest had a depth and a darkness that even Ben had never
+seen; the wild creatures that they sometimes glimpsed on the bank
+stared at them wholly without knowledge as to what they were, and
+likely amazed at the strength whereby they had braved this seething
+torrent that swept through their sylvan home. Here was a land where
+the grizzly had not yet learned of a might greater than his, where
+he had not yet surrendered his sovereignty to man. Here the
+moose&mdash;mightiest of the antlered herd&mdash;reached full
+maturity and old age without ever mistaking the call of a
+birch-bark horn for that of his rutting cow. Young bulls with only
+a fifty-inch spread of horns and ten points on each did not lead
+the herds, as in the more accessible provinces of the North. All
+things were in their proper balance, since the forest had gone
+unchanged for time immemorial; and as the head-hunters had not yet
+come the bull moose did not rank as a full-grown warrior until he
+wore thirty points and had five feet of spread, and he wasn't a
+patriarch until he could no longer walk free between two tree
+trunks seventy inches apart. Certain of the lesser forest people
+were not in unwonted numbers because that fierce little hunter, the
+marten, had been exterminated by trappers; the otter, yet to know
+the feel of cold iron, fished to his heart's content in rivers
+where an artificial fly had never fallen and the trout swarmed in
+uncounted numbers in the pools.</p>
+<p>Darting down the rapids Ben felt the beginnings of an exquisite
+exhilaration. Part of it arose from the very thrill and excitement
+of their headlong pace; but partly it had a deeper, more portentous
+origin. Here was his own country&mdash;this Back There. While all
+the spruce forest in which he had lived had been his natural range
+and district&mdash;his own kind of land with which he felt close
+and intimate relations&mdash;this was even more his home than his
+own birthplace. By light of a secret quality, hard to recognize, he
+was of it, and it was of him. He felt the joy of one who sees the
+gleam of his own hearth through a distant window.</p>
+<p>He <i>knew</i> this land; it was as if he had simply been away,
+through the centuries, and had come home. The shadows and the
+stillness had the exact depth and tone that was true and right; the
+forest fragance was undefiled; the dark sky line was like something
+he had dreamed come true. He felt a strange and growing excitement,
+as if magnificent adventure were opening out before him. His gaze
+fell, with a queer sense of understanding, to Fenris.</p>
+<p>The wolf had recovered from his fear of the river, by now, and
+he was crouched, alert and still, in his place. His gaze was fast
+upon the shore line; and the green and yellow fires that mark the
+beast were ablaze again in his eyes. Fenris too made instinctive
+response to those breathless forests; and Ben knew that the bond
+between them was never so close as now.</p>
+<p>Fenris also knew that here was his own realm, the land in which
+the great Fear had not yet laid its curse. The forest still
+thronged with game, the wood trails would be his own. Here was the
+motherland, not only to him but to his master, too. They were its
+fierce children: one by breed, the other because he answered, to
+the full, the call of the wild from which no man is wholly
+immune.</p>
+<p>Ben could have understood the wolf's growing exultation. The war
+he was about to wage with Neilson. would be on his own ground, in a
+land that enhanced and developed his innate, natural powers, and
+where he had every advantage. The wolf does not run into the heart
+of busy cities in pursuit of his prey. He tries to decoy it into
+his own fastnesses.</p>
+<p>A sudden movement on the part of Beatrice, in the bow of the
+canoe, caught his eye. She had leaned forward and was reaching
+among the supplies. His mind at once leaped to the box of shells
+for her pistol that he had thrown among the duffle, but evidently
+this was not the object of her search. She lifted into her hands a
+paper parcel, the same she had brought from her cabin early that
+morning.</p>
+<p>He tried to analyze the curious mingling of emotions in her
+face. It was neither white with disdain nor dark with wrath; and
+the tears were gone from her eyes. Rather her expression was
+speculative, pensive. Presently her eyes met his.</p>
+<p>His heart leaped; why he did not know. "What is, it?" he
+asked.</p>
+<p>"Ben&mdash;I called you that yesterday and there's no use going
+back to last names now&mdash;I've made an important decision."</p>
+<p>"I hope it's a happy one," he ventured.</p>
+<p>"It's as happy as it can be, under the circumstances. Ben, I
+came of a line of frontiersmen&mdash;the forest people&mdash;and if
+the woods teach one thing it is to make the best of any bad
+situation."</p>
+<p>Ben nodded. For all his long training he had not entirely
+mastered this lesson himself, but he knew she spoke true.</p>
+<p>"We've found out how hard Fate can hit&mdash;if I can make it
+plain," she went on. "We've found out there are certain
+powers&mdash;or devils&mdash;or something else, and what I don't
+know&mdash;that are always lying in wait for people, ready to
+strike them down. Maybe you would call it Destiny. But the Destiny
+city men know isn't the Destiny we know out here&mdash;I don't have
+to tell you that. We see Nature just as she is, without any gay
+clothes, and we know the cruelty behind her smile, and the evil
+plans behind her gentle words."</p>
+<p>The man was amazed. Evidently the stress and excitement of the
+morning had brought out the fanciful and poetic side of the girl's
+nature.</p>
+<p>"We don't look for good luck," she told him. "We don't expect to
+live forever. We know what death is, and that it is sure to come,
+and that misfortune comes always&mdash;in the snow and the cold and
+the falling tree&mdash;and when we have good luck we're
+glad&mdash;we don't take it for granted. Living up here, where life
+is real, we've learned that we have to make the best of things in
+order to be happy at all."</p>
+<p>"And you mean&mdash;you're going to try to make the best of
+<i>this</i>?" His voice throbbed ever so slightly, because he could
+not hold it even.</p>
+<p>"There's nothing else I can do," she replied. "You've taken me
+here and as yet I don't see how I can get away. This doesn't mean
+I've gone over to your side."</p>
+<p>He nodded. He understood <i>that</i> very well.</p>
+<p>"I'm just admitting that at present I'm in your
+hands&mdash;helpless&mdash;and many long weeks in before us," she
+went on. "I'm on my father's side, last and always, and I'll strike
+back at you if the chance comes. Expect no mercy from me, in case I
+ever see my way to strike."</p>
+<p>The man's eyes suddenly gleamed. "Don't you know&mdash;that
+you'd have a better chance of fighting me&mdash;if you didn't put
+me on guard?"</p>
+<p>"I don't think so. I don't believe you'd be fooled that easy.
+Besides&mdash;I can't pretend to be a friend&mdash;when I'm really
+an enemy."</p>
+<p>For one significant instant the man looked down. This was what
+he had done&mdash;pretended friendship when he was a foe. But his
+was a high cause!</p>
+<p>"I'm warning you that I'm against you to the last&mdash;and will
+beat you if I see my way," the girl went on. "But at the same time
+I'm going to make the best of a bad situation, and try to get all
+the comfort I can. I'm in your hands at present, and we're foes,
+but just the same we can talk, and try to make each other
+comfortable so that we can be comfortable ourselves, and try not to
+be any more miserable than we can help. I'm not going to cry any
+more."</p>
+<p>As she talked she was slowly unwrapping the little parcel she
+had brought. Presently she held it out to him.</p>
+<p>It was just a box of homemade candy&mdash;fudge made with sugar
+and canned milk&mdash;that she had brought for their day's picnic.
+But it was a peace offering not to be despised. A heavy load lifted
+from Ben's heart.</p>
+<p>He waited his chance, guiding the boat with care, and then
+reached a brown hand. He crushed a piece of the soft, delicious
+confection between his lips. "Thanks, Beatrice," he said. "I'll
+remember all you've told me."</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXIII"></a>
+<h2>XXIII</h2>
+<p>It is a peculiar fact that no one is more deeply moved by the
+great works and phenomena of nature than those who live among them.
+It is the visitor from distant cities, or the callow youth with
+tawdry clothes and tawdry thoughts who disturbs the great silences
+and austerity of majestic scenes with half-felt effusive words or
+cheap impertinences. Oddly enough, the awe that the wilderness
+dweller knows at the sight of some great, mysterious canyon or
+towering peak seems to increase, rather than decrease, with
+familiarity. His native scenes never grow old to him. Their beauty
+and majesty is eternal.</p>
+<p>Perhaps the reason lies in the fact that the native woodsman
+knows nature as she really is: living ever close to her he knows
+her power over his life. Perhaps there is a religious side to the
+matter, too. In the solitudes the religious instincts receive an
+impulse that is impossible to those who know only the works of man.
+The religion that this gives is true and deep, and the eye
+instinctively lifts in reverence to the manifestations of divine
+might.</p>
+<p>When the swirling waters carried the canoe down into the gorge
+of the Yuga both Ben and Beatrice were instinctively awed and
+stilled. Ever the walls of the gorge grew more steep, until the
+sunlight was cut off and they rode as if in twilight. The stone of
+the precipices presented a marvellous array of color; and the
+spruce, almost black in the subdued light, stood in startling
+contrast. Ben saw at once that even were they able to land they
+could not&mdash;until they had emerged from the gorge&mdash;climb
+to the highlands. A mountain goat, most hardy of all mountaineers,
+could scarcely scale the abrupt wall.</p>
+<p>During this time of half-light they saw none of the larger
+forest creatures that at first had gazed at them with such wonder
+from the banks. The reason was simply that they could not descend
+and ascend the steep walls.</p>
+<p>Mostly Ben had time only for an occasional glimpse at the
+colossus above him. His work was to guide the craft between the
+perilous boulders. Occasionally the river slackened its wild pace,
+and at such times he stretched his arms and rested his straining
+eyes.</p>
+<p>Both had largely forgotten the danger of the ride. Because she
+was trying bravely to make the best of a tragic situation Beatrice
+had resolved to keep danger from her thoughts. Ben had known from
+the first that danger was an inevitable element in his venture, and
+he accepted it just as he had considered it,&mdash;with entire
+coldness. Yet both of them knew, in their secret thoughts, that the
+balance of life and death was so fine that the least minor incident
+might cast them into darkness. It would not have to be a great
+disaster, a wide departure from the commonplace. They were
+traveling at a terrific rate of speed, and a sharp rock too close
+to the surface would rip the bottom from their craft. Any instant
+might bring the shock and shudder of the end.</p>
+<p>There would scarcely be time to be afraid. Both would be hurled
+into the stream; and the wild waters, pounding against the rocks,
+would close the matter swiftly. It awed them and humbled them to
+realize with what dispatch and ease this wilderness power could
+snuff out their mortal lives. There would be no chance to fight
+back, no element of uncertainty in the outcome. Here was a destiny
+against which the strength of man was as thistledown in the wind!
+The thought was good spiritual medicine for Ben, just as it would
+have been for most other men, and his egoism died a swift and
+natural death.</p>
+<p>One crash, one shock, and then the darkness and silence of the
+end! The river would rage on, unsatiated by their few pounds of
+flesh, storming by in noble fury; but no man would know whither
+they had gone and how they had died. The walls of the gorge would
+not tremble one whit, or notice; and the spruce against the sky
+would not bow their heads to show that they had seen.</p>
+<p>But the canyon broke at last, and the craft emerged into the
+sunlight. It was good to see the easy slope of the hills again, the
+spruce forests, and the forms of the wild creatures on the river
+bank, startled by their passing. Noon came and passed, and for
+lunch they ate the last of the fudge. And now a significant change
+was manifest in both of them.</p>
+<p>Psychologists are ever astounded at the ability of mortals, men
+and animals, to become adjusted to any set of circumstances. The
+wax of habit sets almost in a day. The truth was, that in a certain
+measure with very definite and restricted limits, both Ben and
+Beatrice were becoming adjusted even to this amazing situation in
+which they found themselves. This did not mean that Beatrice was in
+the least degree reconciled to it. She had simply accepted it with
+the intention of making the best of it. She had been abducted by an
+enemy of her father and was being carried down an unknown and
+dangerous river; but the element of surprise, the life of which is
+never but a moment, was already passing away. Sometimes she caught
+herself with a distinct start, remembering everything with a rage
+and a bitter load on her heart; but the mood would pass
+quickly.</p>
+<p>It is impossible, through any ordinary change of fortune, for a
+normal person to lose his sense of self-identity. As long as that
+remains exterior conditions can make no vital change, or make him
+feel greatly different than he felt before. The change from a
+peasant to a millionaire brings only a moment's surprise, and then
+readjustment. Beatrice was still herself; the man in the stern
+remained Ben Darby and no one else. Very naturally she began to
+talk to him, and he to answer her.</p>
+<p>The fact that they were bitter foes, one the victim of the
+other, did not decree they could not have friendly conversation,
+isolated as they were. From time to time Ben pointed out objects of
+interest on the shore; and she found herself remarking, in a casual
+voice, about them. And before the afternoon he had made her laugh,
+in spite of herself,&mdash;a gay sound in which fear and distress
+had little echo.</p>
+<p>"We're bound to see a great deal of each other in the next few
+weeks," he had said; and this fact could not be denied. The sooner
+both became adjusted to it the better. Actual fear of him she had
+none; she remembered only too well the steel in his eyes and the
+white flame on his cheeks as he had assured her of her safety.</p>
+<p>In mid-afternoon Ben began to think of making his night's camp.
+From time to time the bank became an upright precipice where not
+even a tree could find foothold; and it had occurred to him, with
+sudden vividness, that he did not wish the darkness to overtake him
+in such a place. The river rocks would make short work of him, in
+that case. It was better to pick out a camp site in plenty of time
+lest they could not find one at the day's end.</p>
+<p>In one of the more quiet stretches of water he saw the
+place&mdash;a small cove and a green, tree-clad bank, with the
+gorge rising behind. Handling his canoe with greatest care he
+slanted toward it. A moment later he had caught the brush at the
+water's edge, stepped off into shallow water, and was drawing the
+canoe up onto the bank.</p>
+<p>"We're through for the day," he said happily, as he helped
+Beatrice out of the boat. "I'll confess I'm ready to rest."</p>
+<p>Beatrice made no answer because her eyes were busy. Coolly and
+quietly she took stock of the situation, trying to get an idea of
+the geographical features of the camp site. She saw in a glance,
+however, that there was no path to freedom up the gorge behind her.
+The rocks were precipitate: besides, she remembered that over a
+hundred miles of impassable wilderness lay between her and her
+father's cabin. Without food and supplies she could not hope to
+make the journey.</p>
+<p>The racing river, however, wakened a curious, inviting train of
+thought. The torrent continued largely unabated for at least one
+hundred miles more, she knew, and the hours that it would be
+passable in a canoe were numbered. The river had fallen steadily
+all day; driftwood was left on the shore; rocks dried swiftly in
+the sun, cropping out like fangs above the foam of the stream. Was
+there still time to drift on down the Yuga a hundred or more miles
+to the distant Indian encampment? She shut the thought from her
+mind, at present, and turned her attention to the work of making
+camp.</p>
+<p>With entire good humor she began to gather such pieces of dead
+wood as she could find for their fire.</p>
+<p>"Your prisoner might as well make herself useful," she said.</p>
+<p>Ben's face lighted as she had not seen it since their outward
+journey from Snowy Gulch. "Thank God you're taking it that way,
+Beatrice," he told her fervently. "It was a proposition I couldn't
+help&mdash;"</p>
+<p>But the girl's eyes flashed, and her lips set in a hard line.
+"I'm doing it to make my own time go faster," she told him softly,
+rather slowly. "I want you to remember that."</p>
+<p>But instantly both forgot their words to listen to a familiar
+clucking sound from a near-by shrub. Peering closely they made out
+the plump, genial form of Franklin's grouse,&mdash;a bird known far
+and wide in the north for her ample breast and her tender
+flesh.</p>
+<p>"Good Lord, there's supper!" Ben whispered. "Beatrice, get your
+pistol&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Her eyes smiled as she looked him in the face. "You
+remember&mdash;my pistol isn't loaded!"</p>
+<p>"Excuse me. I forgot. Give it to me."</p>
+<p>She handed him the little gun, and he slipped in the shells he
+had taken from it. Then&mdash;for the simple and sensible reason
+that he didn't want to take any chance on the loss of their
+dinner&mdash;he stole within twenty feet of the bird. Very
+carefully he drew down on the plump neck.</p>
+<p>"Dinner all safe," he remarked rather gayly, as the grouse came
+tumbling through the branches.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXIV"></a>
+<h2>XXIV</h2>
+<p>Quietly Beatrice retrieved the bird and began to remove its
+feathers. Ben built the fire, chopped sturdily at a half-grown
+spruce until it shattered to the earth, and then chopped it into
+lengths for fuel. When the fire was blazing bright, he cut away the
+green branches and laid them, stems overlapping, into a fragrant
+bed.</p>
+<p>"Here's where you sleep to-night, Beatrice," he informed
+her.</p>
+<p>She stopped in her work long enough to try the springy boughs
+with her arms; then she gave him an answering smile. Even a
+tenderfoot can make some sort of a comfortable pallet out of
+evergreen boughs&mdash;ends overlapping and plumes bent&mdash;but a
+master woodsman can fashion a veritable cradle, soft as silk with
+never a hard limb to irritate the flesh, and yielding as a hair
+mattress. Such softness, with the fragrance of the balsam like a
+sleeping potion, can not help but bring sweet dreams.</p>
+<p>Ben had been wholly deliberate in the care with which he had
+built the pallet. He had simply come to the conclusion that she was
+paying a high price for her father's sins; and from now on he
+intended to make all things as easy as he could for her. Moreover,
+she had been a sportswoman of the rarest breed and merited every
+kindness he could do for her.</p>
+<p>He was not half so careful with his own bed, built sixty feet on
+the opposite side of the fire. He threw it together rather hastily.
+And when he walked back to the fire he found an amazing change.</p>
+<p>Already Beatrice had established sovereignty over the little
+patch of ground they had chosen for the camp,&mdash;and the
+wilderness had drawn back. This spot was no longer mere part of the
+far-spreading, trackless wilds. It had been set off and marked so
+that the wilderness creatures could no longer mistake it for part
+of their domain. Over the fire she had erected a cooking rack; and
+water was already boiling in a small bucket suspended from it. In
+another container a fragrant mixture was in the process of cooking.
+She had spread one of the blankets on the grass for a
+tablecloth.</p>
+<p>As twilight lowered they sat down to their simple
+meal,&mdash;tea, sweetened with sugar, and vegetables and meat
+happily mingled in a stew. It was true that the vegetable end was
+held up by white grains of rice alone, but the meat was the white,
+tender flesh of grouse, permeating the entire dish with its
+tempting flavor. As a whole, the stew was greatly satisfying to the
+inner man.</p>
+<p>"I wish I'd brought more tea," Ben complained, as he sipped that
+most delightful of all drinks, the black tea beloved of the
+northern men.</p>
+<p>"You a woodsman, and don't know how to remedy that!" the girl
+responded. "I know of a native substitute that's almost as good as
+the real article."</p>
+<p>About the embers of the fire they sat and watched the tremulous
+wings of night close round them. The copse grew breathless. The
+distant trees blended into shadow, the nearer trunks dimmed and
+finally faded; the large, white northern stars emerged in infinite
+troops and companies, peering down through the rifts in the trees.
+Here about their fire they had established the domain of man. For a
+few short hours they had routed the forces of the wilderness; but
+the foe pressed close upon them. Just at the fluctuating ring of
+firelight he waited, clothed in darkness and mystery,&mdash;the
+infinite, brooding spirit of the ancient forest.</p>
+<p>They had never known such silence, broken only by the prolonged
+chord of the river, as descended upon them now. It was new and
+strange to the conscious life of Ben, himself, the veritable
+offspring of the woods; although infinitely old and familiar to a
+still, watching, secret self within him. It was as if he had
+searched forever for this place and had just found it, and it
+answered, to the full, a queer mood of silence in his own heart.
+The wind had died down now. The last wail of a
+coyote&mdash;disconsolate on a far-away ridge&mdash;had trembled
+away into nothingness; the voices of the Little People who had
+chirped and rustled in the tree aisles during the daylight hours
+were stilled with a breathless, dramatic stillness. Such sound as
+remained over the interminable breadth of that dark forest was only
+the faint stirrings and rustlings of the beasts of prey going to
+their hunting; and this was only a moving tone in the great chord
+of silence.</p>
+<p>To Ben the falling night brought a return of his most terrible
+moods. Beatrice sensed them in his pale, set face and his cold,
+wolfish eyes. The wolf sat beside him, swept by his master's mood,
+gazing with deadly speculations into the darkness. Beatrice saw
+them as one breed to-night. The wild had wholly claimed this
+repatriated son. The paw of the Beast was heavy upon him; the
+softening influences of civilization seemed wholly dispelled. There
+was little here to remind her that this was the twentieth century.
+The primitive that lies just under the skin in all men was in the
+ascendancy; and there was little indeed to distinguish him from the
+hunter of long ago, a grizzled savage at the edge of the ice who
+chased the mammoth and wild pony, knowing no home but the forest
+and no gentleness unknown to the wolf that ran at his heels.... The
+tenderness and sympathy he had had for her earlier that day seemed
+quite gone now. She searched for it in vain in the dark and savage
+lines of his pale face.</p>
+<p>Because it has always been that the happiness of women must
+depend upon the mood of men, her own spirits fell. The despair that
+descended upon her brought also resentment and rage; and soon she
+slipped away quietly to her bed. She drew the blankets over her
+face; but no tears wet her cheeks to-night. She was dry-eyed,
+thoughtful&mdash;full of vague plans.</p>
+<p>She lay awake a long time, until at last a little, faint ray of
+hope beamed bright and clear. More than a hundred miles farther
+down the Yuga, past the mouth of Grizzly River, not far from the
+great, north-flowing stream of which the Yuga was a tributary, lay
+an Indian village&mdash;and if only she could reach it she might
+enlist the aid of the natives and make a safe return, by a long,
+roundabout route, to her father's arms. The plan meant deliverance
+from Ben and the defeat of all his schemes of
+vengeance,&mdash;perhaps the salvation of her father and his
+subordinates.</p>
+<p>She realized perfectly the reality of her father's danger. She
+had read the iron resolve in Ben's face. She knew that if she
+failed to make an immediate escape from him, all his dreadful plans
+were likely to succeed: his enemies would follow him into the
+unexplored mazes of Back There to effect her rescue and fall
+helpless in his trap. What quality of mercy he would extend to them
+then she could readily guess.</p>
+<p>Just to get down to the Indian village: this was her whole
+problem. But it was Ben's plan to land and enter the interior
+somewhere in the vast wilderness between, from which escape could
+not be made until the flood waters of fall. The way would remain
+open but a few hours more, due to the simple fact that the waters
+were steadily falling and the river-bottom crags, forming
+impassable barriers at some points, would be exposed. <i>If she
+made her escape at all it must be soon.</i></p>
+<p>Yet she could not attempt it at night. She could not see to
+guide the canoe while the darkness lay over the river. Just one
+further chance remained&mdash;to depart in the first gray of
+dawn.</p>
+<p>She fell into troubled sleep, but true to her resolution,
+wakened when the first ribbon of light stretched along the eastern
+horizon. She sat up, laying the blankets back with infinite care.
+This was her chance: Ben still lay asleep.</p>
+<p>Just to steal down to the water's edge, push off the canoe, and
+trust her life to the doubtful mercy of the river. The morning soon
+would break; if she could avoid the first few crags, she had every
+chance to guide her craft through to deliverance and safety. By no
+conceivable chance could Ben follow her. He would be left in the
+shadow of the gorge, a prisoner without hope or prayer of
+deliverance. There was no crossing the cliffs that lifted so stern
+and gray just behind. Before he could build any kind of a craft
+with axe and fire, the waters would fall to a death level, beyond
+any hope of carrying him to safety. The tables would be turned; he
+would be left as helpless to follow her as Neilson had been to
+follow him.</p>
+<p>The plan meant deliverance for her; but surely it meant
+<i>death</i> to him. Starvation would drive him to the river and
+destruction, before men could ever come the long way to rescue him.
+But this was not her concern. She was a forest girl and he her
+enemy: he must pay the price for his own deeds.</p>
+<p>She got to her feet, stalking with absolute silence. She must
+not waken him now. Softly she pressed her unshod foot into the
+grass. He stirred in his sleep; and she paused, scarcely
+breathing.</p>
+<p>She looked toward him. Dimly she could see his face, tranquil in
+sleep and gray in the soft light; and an instantaneous surge of
+remorse sped through her. There was a sweetness, a hint of kindly
+boyishness in his face now, so changed since she had left him
+beside the glowing coals. Yet he was her deadly enemy; and she must
+not let her woman's heart cost her her victory in its moment of
+fulfillment. She crept on down to the water.</p>
+<p>She could discern the black shadow of the canoe. One swift surge
+of her shoulders, one leap, the splash of the stern in the water
+and the swift stroke of the paddle, and she would be safe. She
+stepped nearer.</p>
+<p>But at that instant a subdued note of warning froze her in her
+tracks. It was only a small sound, hushed and hardly sharp enough
+to arouse Ben from his sleep; but it was deadly, savage,
+unutterably sinister. She had forgotten that Ben did not wage war
+alone. For the moment she had given no thought to his terrible
+ally,&mdash;a pack brother faithful to the death.</p>
+<p>A great, gaunt form raised up from the pile of duffle in the
+canoe; and his fangs showed ivory white in the wan light. It was
+Fenris, and he guarded the canoe. He crouched, ready to spring if
+she drew near.</p>
+<p>The girl sobbed once, then stole back to her blankets.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXV"></a>
+<h2>XXV</h2>
+<p>Ben wakened refreshed, at peace with the world as far as he
+could ever be until his ends were attained; and immediately built a
+roaring fire. Beatrice still slept, exhausted from the stress and
+suspense of her attempt to escape. When the leaping flames had
+dispelled the frost from the grass about the fire Ben stepped to
+her side and touched her shoulder.</p>
+<p>"It's time to get up and go on," he said. "We have only a few
+hours more of travel."</p>
+<p>It was true. The river had fallen appreciably during the night.
+Not many hours remained in which to make their permanent landing.
+Although the river was somewhat less violent from this point on,
+the lower water line would make traveling practically as perilous
+as on the preceding day.</p>
+<p>The girl opened her eyes. "I'd rather hoped&mdash;I had dreamed
+it all," she told him miserably.</p>
+<p>The words touched him. He looked into her face, moved by the
+girlishness and appeal about the red, wistful mouth and the dark,
+brimming eyes. "It's pretty tough, but I'm afraid it's true," he
+said, more kindly than he had spoken since they had left the
+landing. "Do you want me to cook breakfast and bring it to you
+here?"</p>
+<p>"No, I want to do that part myself. It makes the time pass
+faster to have something to do."</p>
+<p>He went to look for fresh meat, and she slipped into her outer
+garments. She found water already hot in a bucket suspended from
+the cooking rack, permitting a simple but refreshing toilet. With
+Ben's comb she straightened out the snarls in her dark tresses,
+parted them, and braided them into two dusky ropes to be worn
+Indian fashion in front of her shoulders. Then she prepared the
+meal.</p>
+<p>It was a problem to tax the ingenuity of any
+housekeeper,&mdash;to prepare an appetizing breakfast out of such
+limited supplies. But in this art, particularly, the forest girls
+are trained. A quantity of rice had been left from the stew of the
+preceding night, and mixing it with flour and water and salt, she
+made a batter. Sooner or later fresh fat could be obtained from
+game to use in frying: to-day she saw no course other than to melt
+a piece of candle. The reverberating roar of the rifle a hundred
+yards down the river bank, however, suggested another
+alternative.</p>
+<p>A moment later Ben appeared&mdash;and the breakfast problem was
+solved. It was another of the woods people that his rifle had
+brought down,&mdash;one that wore fur rather than feathers and
+which had just come in from night explorations along the river
+bank. It was a yearling black bear&mdash;really no larger than a
+cub&mdash;and he had an inch of fat under his furry hide.</p>
+<p>The fat he yielded was not greatly different from lard; and the
+pancakes&mdash;or fritters, as Ben termed them&mdash;were soon
+frying merrily. Served with hot tea they constituted a filling and
+satisfactory breakfast for both travelers.</p>
+<p>After breakfast they took to the river, yielding themselves once
+more to the whims of the current. Once more the steep banks whipped
+past them in ever-changing vista; and Ben had to strain at his
+paddle to guide the craft between the perilous crags. The previous
+day the high waters had carried them safely above the boulders of
+the river bed: to-day some of the larger crags all but scraped the
+bottom of the canoe. It did not tend toward peace of mind to know
+that any instant they might encounter a submerged crag that would
+rip their craft in twain. Ben felt a growing eagerness to land.</p>
+<p>But within an hour they came out once more upon the open forest.
+The river broadened, sped less swiftly, the bank sloped gradually
+to the distant hills. This was the heart of Back There,&mdash;a
+virgin and primeval forest unchanged since the piling-up of the
+untrodden ranges. The wild pace of the craft was checked, and they
+kept watch for a suitable place to land.</p>
+<p>There was no need to push on through the seething cataracts that
+lay still farther below. Shortly before the noon hour Ben's quick
+eye saw a break in the heavy brushwood that lined the bank and
+quickly paddled toward it. In a moment it was revealed as the
+mouth, of a small, clear stream, flowing out of a beaver meadow
+where the grass was rank and high. In a moment more he pushed the
+canoe into the mud of the creek bank.</p>
+<p>They both got out, rather sober of mien, and she helped him haul
+the canoe out upon the bank. They unloaded it quickly, carrying the
+supplies in easy loads fifty yards up into the edge of the forest,
+on well-drained dry ground.</p>
+<p>The entire forest world was hushed and breathless, as if
+startled by this intrusion. Neither of the two travelers felt
+inclined to speak. And the silence was finally broken by the
+splashing feet of a moose, running through a little arm of the
+marsh that the forest hid from view.</p>
+<p>"Is this our permanent camp?" the girl asked at last.</p>
+<p>"Surely not," was the reply. "It's too near the river for one
+thing&mdash;too easily found. It's too low, too&mdash;there'll be
+mosquitoes in plenty in that marsh two months from now. The first
+thing is&mdash;to look around and find a better site."</p>
+<p>"You want me to come?"</p>
+<p>"I'd rather, if you don't mind."</p>
+<p>She understood perfectly. He did not intend to give her complete
+freedom until the river fell so low that the rapids farther down
+would be wholly impassable.</p>
+<p>"I'll come." Beatrice smiled grimly. "We can have that picnic we
+planned, after all."</p>
+<p>They found a moose trail leading into the forest, and leaving
+the wolf on guard over the supplies, they filed swiftly along it in
+that peculiar, shuffling, mile-speeding gait that all foresters
+learn. At once both were aware of a subdued excitement. In the
+first place, this was unknown country and they experienced the
+incomparable thrill of exploration. Besides they were seeking a
+permanent camp where their fortunes would be cast, the drama of
+their lives be enacted, for weeks to come.</p>
+<p>Almost at once they began to catch glimpses of wild
+life,&mdash;a squirrel romping on a limb; or a long line of grouse,
+like children in school, perched on a fallen log. The trapper had
+not yet laid his lines in this land, and the tracks of the little
+fur-bearers weaved a marvelous and intricate pattern on the moose
+trail. Once a marten with orange throat peered at them from a
+covert, and once a caribou raced away, too fast for a shot.</p>
+<p>Mostly the wild things showed little fear or understanding of
+the two humans. The grouse relied on their protective coloration,
+just as when menaced by the beasts of prey. An otter, rarely indeed
+seen in daylight, hovered a moment beside a little stream to
+consider them; and a coyote, greatest of all cowards, lingered in
+their trail until they were within fifty feet of his grey form,
+then trotted shyly away.</p>
+<p>"We won't starve for meat, that's certain," Ben informed her.
+His voice was subdued; he had fallen naturally into the mood of
+quietness that dwells ever in the primeval forest.</p>
+<p>Because the trail seemed to be leading them too far from the
+waterways, they took a side trail circling about a wooded hill.
+Ever Ben studied the landmarks, looked carefully down the draws and
+tried to learn as much as possible of the geography of the country;
+and Beatrice understood his purpose with entire clearness. He
+wished to locate his camp so that it would have every natural
+advantage and insurance against surprise attack. He desired that
+every advantage of warfare be in his favor when finally he came to
+grips with Neilson and his men.</p>
+<p>They crossed a low ridge, following down another of the thousand
+creeks that water the northern lands. In a moment it led them to a
+long, narrow lake, blue as a sapphire in its frame of dusky
+spruce.</p>
+<p>For a moment both of them halted on its bank, held by its virgin
+beauty. Lost in the solitudes as it was, perhaps never before gazed
+upon by the eyes of men, still it gave no impression of bleakness
+and stagnation. Rather it was a scene of scintillating life, vivid
+past all expression. Far out of range on the opposite shore a huge
+bull moose stood like a statue in black marble, gazing out over the
+shimmering expanse. Trout leaped, flashing silver, anywhere they
+might look; and a flock of loon shrieked demented cries from its
+center. The burnished wings of a flock of mallard flashed in the
+air, startled by some creeping hunter.</p>
+<p>Slowly, delighted in spite of themselves by the lovely spot,
+they followed along its shore. They climbed the bank; and now Ben
+began to examine his surroundings with great care.</p>
+<p>He had suddenly realized that he was in a region wonderfully
+fitted for his permanent camp. The low ridge between the lake and
+the creek gave a clear view of a large part of the surrounding
+country, affording him every chance of seeing his enemies before
+they saw him. If they came along the river&mdash;the course they
+would naturally follow&mdash;they would be obliged to cross the
+beaver marsh&mdash;a half-mile of open grassland with no protecting
+coverts. Beatrice saw, dismayed, that his gray eyes were kindling
+with unholy fire under his heavy, dark brows.</p>
+<p>What if he should see them, deep in the wet grass, filing across
+the open marsh! How many shots would be needed to bring his war to
+a triumphant end? There were no thickets in which they might find
+shelter: hidden himself, they could not return his fire. Before
+they could break and run to cover he could destroy them all!</p>
+<p>Should they cross the narrow neck of the marsh, higher up, he
+would have every chance to see them on the lake shore. The site was
+good from the point of health and comfort&mdash;high enough to
+escape the worst of the insect pests, close to fresh water, plenty
+of fuel, and within a few hundred yards of a lake that simply
+swarmed with fish and waterfowl.</p>
+<p>Still following a narrow, racing trout stream that flowed into
+the lake they advanced a short distance farther, clear to the base
+of a rock wall. And all at once Beatrice, walking in front, drew up
+with a gasp.</p>
+<p>She stood at the edge of a little glade, perhaps thirty yards
+across, laying at the base of the cliff. The creek flowed through
+it, the grass was green and rich, beloved by the antlered herds
+that came to graze, the tall spruce shaded it on three sides. But
+it was not these things that caught the girl's eye. Just at the
+edge of a glade a dark hole yawned in the face of the cliff.</p>
+<p>In an instant more they were beside it, gazing into its depths.
+It was a natural cavern with rock walls and a clean floor of
+sand&mdash;a roomy place, and yet a perfect stronghold against
+either mortal enemies or the powers of wind and rain.</p>
+<p>"It's home," the man said simply.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXVI"></a>
+<h2>XXVI</h2>
+<p>Ben and Beatrice went together back to the canoe, and in two
+trips they carried the supplies to the cave. By instinct a
+housekeeper, Beatrice showed him where to stow the various
+supplies, what part of the cave was to be used for provisions,
+where their cots would be laid, and where to erect the cooking
+rack. Shadows had fallen over the land before they finished the
+work.</p>
+<p>Tired from the hard tramp, yet sustained by a vague excitement
+neither of them could name or trace, they began to prepare for the
+night. Ben cut boughs as before, placing Beatrice's bed within the
+portals of the cave and his own on the grass outside. He cut fuel
+and made his fire: Beatrice prepared the evening meal.</p>
+<p>The flesh of the cub-bear they had procured that morning would
+have to serve them to-night; but more delicious meat could be
+procured to-morrow. Ben knew that the white-maned caribou fed in
+the high park lands. Beatrice made biscuits and brewed tea; and
+they ate the simple food in the firelight. Already the darkness was
+pressing close upon them, tremulous, vaguely sinister, inscrutably
+mysterious.</p>
+<p>They had talked gayly at first; but they grew silent as the fire
+burned down to coals. A great preoccupation seemed to hold them
+both. When one spoke the other started, and word did not
+immediately come in answer. Beatrice's despair was not nearly so
+dominating to-night; and Ben harbored a secret excitement that was
+almost happiness.</p>
+<p>Its source and origin Ben could not trace. Perhaps it was just
+relief that the perilous journey was over. The strain of his hours
+at the paddle had been severe; but now they were safe upon the
+sustaining earth. Yet this fact alone could hardly have given him
+such a sense of security,&mdash;an inner comfort new to his
+adventurous life.</p>
+<p>The forest was oppressive to-night, tremulous with the passions
+of the Young World; yet he did not respond to it as before. The
+excitement that sparkled in the red wine of his veins was not of
+the chase and death, and he had difficulty in linking it up with
+the thoughts of his forthcoming vengeance. Rather it was a mood
+that sprang from their surroundings here, their shelter at the
+mouth of the cave. He felt deeply at peace.</p>
+<p>The fire blazed warmly at the cavern maw; the wolf stood tense
+and still, by means of the secret wireless of the wild fully aware
+of the tragic drama, the curtain of which was the dark just fallen;
+yet Ben's wild, bitter thoughts of the preceding night did not come
+readily back to him. There was a quality here&mdash;in the
+firelight and the haven of the cave&mdash;that soothed him and
+comforted him. The powers of the wild were helpless against him
+now. The wind might hurl down the dead trees, but the rock of the
+cavern Wall would stand against them. Even the dreaded avalanche
+could roar and thunder on the steep above in vain.</p>
+<p>There was no peril in the hushed, breathless forest for him
+to-night. This was his stronghold, and none could assail it. And it
+was a significant fact that his sense of intimate relationship with
+the wolf, Fenris, Was someway lessened. Fenris was a creature of
+the open forest, sleeping where he chose on the trail; but his
+master had found a cavern home. There was a strange and bridgeless
+chasm between such breeds as roamed abroad and those that slept,
+night after night, in the shelter of the same walls.</p>
+<p>He watched the girl's face, ruddy in the firelight, and it was
+increasingly hard to remember that she was of the enemy
+camp,&mdash;the daughter of his arch foe. To-night she was just a
+comrade, a habitat of his own cave.</p>
+<p>For the first time since he had found Ezram's body&mdash;so
+huddled and impotent in the dead leaves&mdash;he remembered the
+solace of tobacco. He hunted through his pockets, found his pipe
+and a single tin of the weed, and began to inhale the fragrant,
+peace-giving smoke. When he raised his eyes again he found the girl
+studying him with intent gaze.</p>
+<p>She looked away, embarrassed, and he spoke to put her at ease.
+"You are perfectly comfortable, Beatrice?" he asked gently.</p>
+<p>"As good as I could expect&mdash;considering everything. I'm
+awfully relieved that we're off the water."</p>
+<p>"Of course." He paused, looking away into the tremulous shadows.
+"Is that all? Don't you feel something else, too&mdash;a kind of
+satisfaction?"</p>
+<p>The coals threw their lurid glow on her lovely, deeply tanned
+face. "It's for you to feel satisfaction, not me. You couldn't
+expect me to feel very satisfied&mdash;taken from my home&mdash;as
+a hostage&mdash;in a feud with my father. But I think I know what
+you mean. You mean&mdash;the comfort of the fire, and a place to
+stay."</p>
+<p>"That's it. Of course."</p>
+<p>"I feel it&mdash;but every human being does who has a fire when
+this big, northern night comes down and takes charge of things.
+It's just an instinct, I suppose, a comfort and a feeling of
+safety&mdash;and likely only the wild beasts are exempt from it."
+Her voice changed and softened, as her girlish fancy reached ever
+farther. "I suppose the first men that you were telling me about on
+the way out, the hairy men of long ago, felt the same way when the
+cold drove them to their caves for the first time. A great comfort
+in the protecting walls and the fire."</p>
+<p>"It's an interesting thought&mdash;that perhaps the love of home
+sprang from that hour."</p>
+<p>"Quite possibly. Perhaps it came only when they had to fight for
+their homes&mdash;against beasts, and such other hairy men as tried
+to take their homes away from them. Perhaps, after all, that's one
+of the great differences between men and beasts. Men have a place
+to live in and a place to fight for&mdash;and the fire is the
+symbol of it all. And the beasts run in the forest and make a new
+lair every day."</p>
+<p>Thoughts of the stone age were wholly fitting in this stone-age
+forest, and Ben's fancy caught on fire quickly. "And perhaps, when
+the hairy men came to the caves to live, they forgot their wild
+passions they knew on the open trails&mdash;their blood-lust and
+their wars among themselves&mdash;and began to be men instead of
+beasts." Ben's voice had dropped to an even, low murmur. "Perhaps
+they got gentle, and the Brute died in their bodies."</p>
+<p>"Yes. Perhaps then they began to be tamed."</p>
+<p>The silence dropped about them, settling slowly; and all except
+the largest heap of red coals burned down to gray ashes. The
+darkness pressed ever nearer. The girl stretched her slender, brown
+arms.</p>
+<p>"I'm sleepy," she said. "I'm going in."</p>
+<p>He got up, with good manners; and he smiled, quietly and gently,
+into her sober, wistful face. "Sleep good," he prayed. "You've got
+solid walls around you to-night&mdash;and some one on guard, too.
+Good night."</p>
+<p>A like good wish was on her lips, but she pressed it back. She
+had almost forgotten, for the moment, that this man was her
+abductor and her father's enemy. She ventured into the darkness of
+the cave.</p>
+<p>Scratching a match Ben followed her, so that she could see her
+way. For the instant the fireside was deserted. And then both of
+them grew breathless and alert as the brush cracked and rustled
+just beyond the glowing coals.</p>
+<p>Some huge wilderness creature was venturing toward them, at the
+edge of the little glade.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXVII"></a>
+<h2>XXVII</h2>
+<p>The match flared out in Ben's fingers, and the only light that
+was left was the pale moonlight, like a cobweb on the floor of the
+glade, and the faint glow from the dying fire. About the glade
+ranged the tall spruce, Watching breathlessly; and for a termless
+second or two a profound and portentous silence descended on the
+camp. No leaf rustled, not a tree limb cracked. The creature that
+had pushed through the thickets to the edge of the glade was
+evidently standing motionless, deciding on his course.</p>
+<p>Only the wild things seem to know what complete absence of
+motion means. To stand like a form in rock, not a muscle quivering
+or a hair stirring, is never a feat for ragged, over stretched
+human nerves; and it requires a perfect muscle control that is
+generally only known to the beasts of the forest. Only a few times
+in a lifetime in human beings are the little, outward motions
+actually suspended; perhaps under the paralysis of great terror or,
+with painstaking effort, before a photographer's camera. But with
+the beasts it is an everyday accomplishment necessary to their
+survival. The fawn that can not stand absolutely motionless, his
+dappled skin blending perfectly with the background of shrubbery
+shot with sunlight, comes to an end quickly in the fangs of some
+great beast of prey. The panther that can not lurk, not a muscle
+quivering, in his ambush beside the deer trail, never knows full
+feeding. The creature on the opposite side of the glade seemed as
+bereft of motion as the spruce trees in the moonlight, or the cliff
+above the cave.</p>
+<p>"What is it?" Beatrice whispered. The man's eyes strained into
+the gloom.</p>
+<p>"I don't know. It may be just a moose, or maybe a caribou. But
+it may be&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He tiptoed to the door of the cave, and his eye fell to the
+crouching form of Fenris. The creature outside was neither moose
+nor caribou. The great wolf of the North does not stand at bay to
+the antlered people. He was poised to spring, his fangs bared and
+his fierce eyes hot with fire, but he was not hunting. Whatever
+moved in the darkness without, the wolf had no desire to go forth
+and attack. Perhaps he would fight to the death to protect the
+occupants of the cave; but surely an ancient and devastating fear
+had hold of him. Evidently he recognized the intruder as an
+ancestral enemy that held sovereignty over the forest.</p>
+<p>At that instant Ben leaped through the cavern maw to reach his
+gun. There was nothing to be gained by waiting further. This was a
+savage and an uninhabited land; and the great beasts of prey that
+ranged the forest had not yet learned the restraint born of the
+fear of man. And he knew one breathless instant of panic when his
+eye failed to locate the weapon in the faint light of the fire.</p>
+<p>Holding hard, he tried to remember where he had left it. The
+form across the glade was no longer motionless. Straining, Ben saw
+the soft roll of a great shadow, almost imperceptible in the
+gloom&mdash;advancing slowly toward him. Then the faint glow of the
+fire caught and reflected in the creature's eyes.</p>
+<p>They suddenly glowed out in the half-darkness, two rather small
+circles of dark red, close together and just alike. This night
+visitor was not moose or caribou, or was it one of the lesser
+hunters, lynx or wolverine, or a panther wandered far from his
+accustomed haunts. The twin circles were too far above the ground.
+And whatever it was, no doubt remained but that the creature was
+steadily stalking him across the soft grass.</p>
+<p>At that instant Ben's muscles snapped into action. Only a second
+remained in which to make his defense&mdash;the creature had
+paused, setting his muscles for a death-dealing charge. "Go back
+into the cave&mdash;as far as you can," he said swiftly to
+Beatrice. His own eyes, squinted and straining for the last iota of
+vision in that darkened scene, made a last, frantic search for his
+rifle. Suddenly he saw the gleam of its barrel as it rested against
+the wall of the cliff, fifteen feet distant.</p>
+<p>At once he knew that his only course was to spring for it in the
+instant that remained, and trust to its mighty shocking power to
+stop the charge that would in a moment ensue. Yet it seemed to tear
+the life fiber of the man to do it. His inmost instincts, urgent
+and loud in his ear, told him to remain on guard, not to leave that
+cavern maw for an instant but to protect with his own body the
+precious life that it sheltered. His mind worked with that
+incredible speed that is usually manifest in a crisis; and he knew
+that the creature might charge into the cavern entrance in the
+second that he left it. Yet only in the rifle lay the least chance
+or hope for either of them.</p>
+<p>"At him, Fenris!" he shouted. The wolf leaped forward like a
+thrown spear,&mdash;almost too fast for the eye to follow. He was
+deathly afraid, with full knowledge of the power of the enemy he
+went to combat, but his fears were impotent to restrain him at the
+first sound of that masterful voice. These were the words he had
+waited for. He could never disobey such words as these&mdash;from
+the lips of his god. And Ben's mind had worked true; he knew that
+the wolf could likely hold the creature at bay until he could seize
+his rifle.</p>
+<p>In an instant it was in his hands, and he had sprung back to his
+post in front of the cavern maw. And presently he remembered,
+heartsick, that the weapon was not loaded.</p>
+<p>For his own safety he had kept it empty on the outward journey,
+partly to prevent accident, partly to be sure that his prisoner
+could not turn it against him. But he had shells in the pocket of
+his jacket. His hand groped, but his reaching fingers found but one
+shell, dropping it swiftly into the gun. And now he knew that no
+time remained to seek another. The beast in the darkness had
+launched into the charge.</p>
+<p>Thereafter there was only a great confusion, event piled upon
+event with incredible rapidity, and a whole lifetime of stress and
+fear lived in a single instant. The creature's first lunge carried
+him into the brighter moonlight; and at once Ben recognized its
+breed. No woodsman could mistake the high, rocking shoulders, the
+burly form, the wicked ears laid back against the flat, massive
+head, the fangs gleaming white, the long, hooked claws slashing
+through the turf as he ran. It was a terrible thing to see and
+stand against, in the half-darkness. The shadows accentuated the
+towering outline; and forgotten terrors, lurking, since the world
+was young, in the labyrinth of the germ plasm wakened and spread
+like icy streams through the mortal body and seemed to threaten to
+extinguish the warm flame of the very soul.</p>
+<p>The grizzly bawled as he came, an explosive, incredible storm of
+sound. Few indeed are the wilderness creatures that can charge in
+silence: muscular exertion can not alone relieve their gathered
+flood of madness and fury. And at once Ben sensed the impulse
+behind the attack. He and the girl had made their home in the
+grizzly's cave&mdash;perhaps the lair wherein he had hibernated
+through the winter and which he still slept in from time to
+time&mdash;and he had come to drive them out. Only death could pay
+for such insolence as this,&mdash;to make a night's lair in the den
+of his sovereignty, the grizzly.</p>
+<p>It is not the accustomed thing for a grizzly to make an
+unprovoked attack. He has done it many times, in the history of the
+west, but usually he is glad enough to turn aside, only launching
+into his terrible death-charge when a mortal wound obliterates his
+fear of man, leaving only his fear of death. But this grizzly,
+native to these uninhabited wilds, had no fear of man to forget. He
+did not know what man was, and he had not learned the death that
+dwells in the shining weapon he carries in his arms. No trappers
+mushed through his snows of spring; no woodsman rode his winding
+trails. True, from the first instant that the human smell had
+reached him on the wind he had been disturbed and discomfited; yet
+it was not grizzly nature to yield his den without a fight. The
+sight of the wolf&mdash;known to him of old&mdash;only wakened an
+added rage in his fierce heart.</p>
+<p>The wolf met him at his first leap, springing with noble courage
+at his grizzled throat; and the bear paused in his charge to strike
+him away. He lashed out with his great forepaw; and if that blow
+had gone straight home the ribs of the wolf would have been smashed
+flat on his heart and lungs. The tough trunk of a young spruce
+would have been broken as quickly under that terrible, blasting
+full-stroke of a grizzly. The largest grizzly weighs but a thousand
+pounds, but that weight is simple fiber and iron muscle, of a might
+incredible to any one but the woodsmen who know this mountain king
+in his native haunts. But Fenris whipped aside, and the paw missed
+him.</p>
+<p>Immediately the wolf sprang in again, with a courage scarcely
+compatible with lupine characteristics, ready to wage this unequal
+battle to the death. But his brave fight was tragically hopeless.
+For all that his hundred and fifty pounds were, every ounce,
+lightning muscle and vibrant sinew, it was as if a gopher had waged
+war with a lynx. Yet by the law of his wild heart he could not turn
+and flee. His master&mdash;his stalwart god whose words thrilled
+him to the uttermost depths&mdash;had given his orders, and he must
+obey them to the end.</p>
+<p>The second blow missed him also, but the third caught a small
+shrub that grew twenty feet beyond the dying fire. The shrub
+snapped off under the blow, and its branchy end smote the wolf
+across the head and neck. As if struck by a tornado he was hurled
+into the air, and curtailed and indirect though the blow was, he
+sprawled down stunned and insensible in the grass. The bear paused
+one instant; then lunged forth again.</p>
+<p>But the breath in which the wolf had stayed the charge had given
+Ben his chance. With a swift motion of his arm he had projected the
+single rifle shell into the chamber of the weapon. The stock
+snapped to his shoulder; and his keen, glittering eyes sought the
+sights.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXVIII"></a>
+<h2>XXVIII</h2>
+<p>Few wilderness adventures offer a more stern test to human
+nerves than the frightful rush of a maddened grizzly. It typifies
+all that is primal and savage in the wild: the insane rage that can
+find relief only in the cruel rending of flesh; the thundering
+power that no mere mortal strength can withstand. But Ben was a
+woodsman. He had been tried in the fire. He knew that not only his
+life, but that of the girl in the cavern depended upon this one
+shot; and it was wholly characteristic of Wolf Darby that his eye
+held true and his arm was steady as a vice of iron.</p>
+<p>He was aware that he must wait until the bear was almost upon
+him, in order to be sure to send the bullet home to a vital place.
+This alone was a test requiring no small measure of self-control.
+The instinct was to fire at once. In the moonlight it was difficult
+to see his sights: his only chance was to enlarge his target to the
+last, outer limit of safety. He aimed for the great throat, below
+the slavering jaw.</p>
+<p>His finger pressed back steadily against the trigger. The
+slightest flinching, the smallest motion might yet throw off his
+aim. The rifle spoke with a roar.</p>
+<p>But this wilderness battle was not yet done. The ball went
+straight home, down through the throat, mushrooming and plowing on
+into the neck, inflicting a wound that was bound to be mortal
+within a few seconds. The bear recoiled; but the mighty engine of
+its life was not yet destroyed. Its incalculable fonts of vitality
+had not yet run down.</p>
+<p>The grizzly bounded forward again. The ball had evidently missed
+the vertebrae and spinal column. His crashing, thunderous roar of
+pain smothered instantly the reechoing report of the rifle and
+stifled the instinctive cry that had come to Ben's lips. He was a
+forester; and he had known of old what havoc a mortally wounded
+bear can wreak in a few seconds of life. In that strange, vivid
+instant Ben knew that his own and the girl's life still hung in the
+balance, with the beam inclining toward death.</p>
+<p>The grizzly was in his death-agony, nothing more; yet in that
+final convulsion he could rip into shreds the powerful form that
+opposed him. Ben knew, with a cold, sure knowledge, that if he
+failed to slay the beast, it would naturally crawl into its lair
+for its last breath. As this dreadful thought flashed home he
+dropped the empty rifle and seized the axe that leaned against a
+log of spruce beside the fire.</p>
+<p>There was no time at all to search out another shell and load
+his rifle. If the shock of the heavy bullet had not slackened the
+bear's pace he would not even have had time to seize the axe.
+Finally, if the bear had not been all but dead, in his last,
+threshing agony, Ben's mortal strength could not have sent home one
+blow. As it was they found themselves facing each other over the
+embers of the fire, well-matched contestants whose stake was life
+and whose penalty was death. The grizzly turned his head, caught
+sight of Ben, identified him as the agent of his agony, and lurched
+forward.</p>
+<p>Just in time Ben sprang aside, out of the reach of those
+terrible forearms; and his axe swung mightly in the air. Its blade
+gleamed and descended&mdash;a blow that might have easily broken
+the bear's back if it had gone true but which now seemed only to
+infuriate him the more. The bear reared up, reeled, and lashed
+down; and dying though he was, he struck with incredible power. One
+slashing stroke of that vast forepaw, one slow closing of those
+cruel fangs upon skull or breast, and life would have gone out like
+a light. But Ben leaped aside again, and again swung down his
+axe.</p>
+<p>These were but the first blows of a terrific battle that carried
+like a storm through the still reaches of the forest. Far in the
+distant tree aisles the woods people paused in their night's
+occupation to listen, stirred and terrified by the throb and thrill
+in the air; the grazing caribou lifted his growing horns and
+snorted in terror; the beasts of prey paused in the chase, growling
+uneasily, gazing with fierce, luminous eyes in the direction of the
+battle.</p>
+<p>It is beyond the ken of man whether or not, in their wild
+hearts, these forest folk sensed what was taking place,&mdash;that
+their gray monarch, the sovereign grizzly, was at the death-fight
+with some dreadful invader from the South. They heard the bear's
+fierce bawls, unimitatable by any other voice as he lashed down
+blow after blow; and they heard the thud and crunch of the axe
+against his body. Had this monarch of the trails found his master
+at last?</p>
+<p>Gazing out through the aperture of the cave Beatrice beheld the
+whole picture: the ring of spruce trees, the glade so strange and
+ensilvered in the moonlight, and these two fighting beasts,
+magnificent in fury over the embers of the dying fire. And Ben's
+powers increased, rather than lessened. Ever he swung his terrible
+axe with greater power.</p>
+<p>He fought like the wolf that was his blood
+brother,&mdash;lunging, striking down, recoiling out of harm's way,
+and springing forward to strike again. This man was Wolf Darby, a
+forester known in many provinces for his woods prowess, but even
+those who had seen his most spectacular feats, in past days, had
+not appreciated the real extent of his powers. There was a fury and
+a might in his blows that was hard to associate with the world of
+human beings,&mdash;such ferociousness and wolf-like savagery,
+welling strength and prowess of battle that mostly men have
+forgotten in their centuries of civilization, but which still mark
+the death-fight between beasts.</p>
+<p>Ben had always recalled the earlier types of man&mdash;his
+great-thewed ancestors, wild hunters in the forests of ancient
+Germany&mdash;but never so much as to-night. He was in his natural
+surroundings&mdash;at the mouth of his cave in which the Woman
+watched and exulted in his blows, enclosed by the primeval forest
+and beside the ashes of his fire. There could be nothing strange or
+unreal about this scene to Beatrice. It was more true than any soft
+vista of a far-away city could possibly be. It was life
+itself,&mdash;man battling for his home and his woman against the
+raw forces of the wild.</p>
+<p>All superficialities and superfluities were gone, and only the
+basic stuff of life remained,&mdash;the cave, the fire, the man who
+fought the beast in the light of the ancient moon. At that moment
+Ben was no more of the twentieth century than he was of the first,
+or of the first more than of some dark, unnumbered century of the
+world's young days. He was simply the male of his species, the
+man-child of all time, forgetting for the moment all the little
+lessons civilization had taught, and fighting his fight in the
+basic way for the basic things.</p>
+<p>This was no new war which Ben and the grizzly fought in the pale
+light of the moon. It had begun when the race began, and it would
+continue, in varied fields, until men perished from the earth. Ben
+fought for <i>life</i>&mdash;not only his own but the
+girl's&mdash;that old, beloved privilege to breathe the air and see
+and know and be. He represented, by a strange symbolism, the whole
+race that has always fought in merciless and never-ending battle
+with the cruel and oppressive powers of nature. In the grizzly were
+typified all those ancient enemies that have always opposed, with
+claw and fang, this stalwart, self-knowing breed that has risen
+among the primates: he symbolized not only the Beast of the forest,
+but the merciless elements, storm and flood and cold and all the
+legions of death. And had they but known their ultimate fate if
+this intruder survived the battle and brought his fellows into
+this, their last stronghold, the watching forest creatures would
+have prayed to see the grizzly strike him to the earth.</p>
+<p>Ben knew, too, that he was fighting for his home; and this also
+lent him strength. <i>Home</i>! His shelter from the storm and the
+cold, the thing that marked him a man instead of a beast. The
+grizzly had come to drive him forth; and they had met beside the
+ashes of his fire.</p>
+<p>The old exhilaration and rapture of battle flashed through him
+as he swung his axe, sending home blow after blow. Sometimes he
+cried out, involuntarily, in his fury and hatred; and as the bear
+weakened he waged the fight at closer quarters. His muscles made
+marvelous response, flinging him out of danger in the instant of
+necessity and giving terrific power to his blows.</p>
+<p>He danced about the shaggy, bleeding form of the bear, swinging
+his axe, howling in his rage, and escaping the smashing blows of
+the bear with miraculous agility,&mdash;a weird and savage picture
+in the moonlight. But at last the grizzly lunged too far. Ben
+sprang aside, just in time, and he saw his chance as the great,
+reeling form sprawled past. He aimed a terrific blow just at the
+base of the skull.</p>
+<p>The silence descended quickly thereafter. The blow had gone
+straight home, and the last flicker of waning life fled from the
+titanic form. He went down sprawling; Ben stood waiting to see if
+another blow was needed. Then the axe fell from his hands.</p>
+<p>For a moment he stood as if dazed. It was hard to remember all
+that occurred in the countless life times he had lived since the
+grizzly had stolen out of the spruce forest. But soon he remembered
+Fenris and walked unsteadily to his side.</p>
+<p>The wolf, however, was already recovering from the blow. He had
+been merely stunned; seemingly no bones were broken. Once more Ben
+turned to the mouth of the cavern.</p>
+<p>Sobbing and white as the moonlight itself Beatrice met him in
+the doorway. She too had been uninjured; his arm had saved her from
+the rending fangs. She was closer to him now, filling a bigger part
+of his life. He didn't know just why. He had fought for her; and
+some way&mdash;they were more to each other.</p>
+<p>And this was his cavern,&mdash;his stronghold of rock where he
+might lay his head, his haven and his hearth, and the symbol of his
+dominance over the beasts of the field. He had fought for this,
+too. And he suddenly knew a great and inner peace and a love for
+the sheltering walls that would dwell forever in the warp and woof
+of his being.</p>
+<a name="PART_THREE"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<h2>PART THREE</h2>
+<h3>THE TAMING</h3>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXIX"></a>
+<h2>XXIX</h2>
+<p>Ben rose at daybreak, wonderfully refreshed by the night's
+sleep, and built the fire at the cavern mouth. Beatrice was still
+asleep, and he was careful not to waken her. The days would be long
+and monotonous for her, he knew, and the more time she could spend
+in sleep the better.</p>
+<p>He did, however, steal to the opening of the cavern and peer
+into her face. The soft, morning light fell gently upon it,
+bringing out its springtime freshness and the elusive shades of
+gold in her hair. She looked more a child than a woman, some one to
+shelter and comfort rather than to harry as a foe. "Poor little
+girl," he murmured under his breath. "I'm going to make it as easy
+for you as I can."</p>
+<p>He meant what he said. He could do that much, at
+least&mdash;extend to her every courtesy and comfort that was in
+his power, and place his own great strength at her service.</p>
+<p>His first work was to remove the skin of last night's
+invader,&mdash;the huge grizzly that lay dead just outside the
+cavern opening. They would have use for this warm, furry hide
+before their adventure was done. It would supplement their supply
+of blankets; and if necessary it could be cut and sewed with
+threads of sinew into clothes. Because the animal had but recently
+emerged from hibernation his fur, except for a few rubbed places,
+was long and rich,&mdash;a beautiful, tawny-gray that shimmered
+like cloth-of-gold in the light.</p>
+<p>It taxed his strength to the utmost to roll over the huge body
+and skin it. When the heavy skin was removed he laid it out,
+intending to stretch it as soon as he could build a rack. He cut
+off some of the fat; then quartering the huge body, he dragged it
+away into the thickets.</p>
+<p>The hour was already past ten; but Beatrice&mdash;worn out by
+the stress of the night before&mdash;did not waken until she heard
+the crack of her pistol. She lay a while, resting, watching through
+the cavern opening Ben's efforts to prepare breakfast. A young
+grouse had fallen before the pistol, and her companion was busy
+preparing it for the skillet.</p>
+<p>The girl watched with some pleasure his rather awkward efforts
+to go about his work in silence,&mdash;evidently still believing
+her asleep. She laughed secretly at his distress as he tripped
+clumsily over a piece of firewood; then watched him with real
+interest as he mixed batter for griddle cakes and fried the white
+breast of the grouse in bear fat. Filling one of the two tin plates
+he stole into the cavern.</p>
+<p>Falling into his mood the girl pretended to be asleep. She
+couldn't have understood why her pulse quickened as he knelt beside
+her, looking so earnestly and soberly into her face. Then she felt
+the touch of his fingers on her shoulder.</p>
+<p>"Wake up, Beatrice," he commanded, with pretended gruffness.
+"It's after ten, and you've got to cook my breakfast."</p>
+<p>She stirred, pretending difficulty in opening her eyes.</p>
+<p>"Get right up," he commanded again. "D'ye think I'm going to
+wait all morning?"</p>
+<p>She opened her eyes to find him regarding her with boyish glee.
+Then&mdash;as a surprise&mdash;he proffered the filled plate,
+meanwhile raising his arm in feigned fear of a blow.</p>
+<p>She laughed; then began upon her breakfast with genuine relish.
+Then he brought her hot water and the meager toilet articles; and
+left the cave to prepare his own breakfast.</p>
+<p>"I'm going on a little hunt," he said, when this rite was over.
+"We can't depend on grouse and bear forever. I hate to ask you to
+go&mdash;"</p>
+<p>His tone was hopeful; and she could not doubt but that the
+lonely spirit of these solitudes had hold of him. They were two
+human beings in a vast and uninhabited wilderness, and although
+they were foes, they felt the primitive need of each other's
+companionship. "I don't mind going," she told him. "I'd rather,
+than stay in the cave."</p>
+<p>"It's a fine morning. And what's your favorite meat&mdash;moose
+or caribou?"</p>
+<p>"Caribou&mdash;although I like both."</p>
+<p>He might have expected this answer. There are few meats in this
+imperfect earth to compare in flavor with that of the great,
+woodland caribou, monarch of the high park-lands.</p>
+<p>"That means we do some climbing, instead of watching in the
+beaver meadows. I'm ready&mdash;any time."</p>
+<p>They took the game trail up the ridge, venturing at once into
+the heavy spruce; but curiously enough, the mysterious hush, the
+dusky shadows did not appall Beatrice greatly to-day. The miles
+sped swiftly under her feet. Always there were creatures to notice
+or laugh at,&mdash;a squirrel performing on a branch, a squawking
+Canada Jay surprised and utterly baffled by their tall forms, a
+porcupine hunched into a spiny ball and pretending a ferociousness
+that deceived not even such hairbrained folk as the chipmunks in
+the tree roots, or those queens of stupidity, the fool hens on the
+branch. In the way of more serious things sometimes they paused to
+gaze down on some particularly beautiful glen&mdash;watered,
+perhaps, by a gleaming stream&mdash;or a long, dark valley steeped
+deeply in the ancient mysticism of the trackless wilds.</p>
+<p>He helped her over the steeps, waited for her at bad crossings;
+and meanwhile his thoughts found easy expression in words. He had
+to stop and remind himself that she was his foe. Beatrice herself
+attempted no such remembrance; she was simply carrying out her
+resolve to make the best of a deplorable situation.</p>
+<p>She could see, however, that he kept close watch of her. He
+intended to give her no opportunity to strike back at him. He
+carried his rifle unloaded, so that if she were able, in an
+unguarded moment, to wrest it from him she could not turn it
+against him. But there was no joy for her in noticing these small
+precautions. They only reminded her of her imprisonment; and she
+wisely resolved to ignore them.</p>
+<p>They climbed to the ridge top, following it on to the plateau
+where patches of snow still gleamed white and the spruce grew in
+dark clumps, leaving open, lovely parks between. Here they
+encountered their first caribou.</p>
+<p>This animal, however, was not to their liking in the way of meat
+for the table. A turn in the trail suddenly revealed him at the
+edge of the glade, his white mane gleaming and his graceful form
+aquiver with that unquenchable vitality that seems to be the
+particular property of northern wild animals; but Ben let him go
+his way. He was an old bull, the monarch of his herd; he had ranged
+and mated and fought his rivals for nearly a score of years in the
+wild heart of Back There,&mdash;and his flesh would be mostly
+sinew.</p>
+<p>Ten minutes later, however, the girl touched his arm. She
+pointed to a far glade, fully three hundred yards across the
+canyon. Her quick eyes made out a tawny form against the
+thicket.</p>
+<p>It was a young caribou&mdash;a yearling buck&mdash;and his flesh
+would be tender as a spring fowl.</p>
+<p>"It's just what we want, but there's not much chance of getting
+him at that range," he said.</p>
+<p>"Try, anyway. You've got a long-range rifle. If you can hold
+true, he's yours."</p>
+<p>This was one thing that Ben was skilled at,&mdash;holding true.
+He raised the weapon to his shoulder, drawing down finely on that
+little speck of brown across the gulch. Few times in his life had
+he been more anxious to make a successful shot. Yet he would never
+have admitted the true explanation: that he simply desired to make
+good in the girl's eyes.</p>
+<p>He held his breath and pressed the trigger back.</p>
+<p>Beatrice could not restrain a low, happy cry of triumph. She had
+forgotten all things, for the moment, but her joy at his success.
+And truly, Ben had made a remarkable shot. Most hunters who boast
+of long-range hits do not step off the distance shot; fifty yards
+is called a hundred, a hundred and fifty yards three hundred; and
+to kill true at this range is not the accustomed thing on the
+trails of sport. The bullet had gone true as a light-shaft,
+striking the animal through the shoulders, and he had never stirred
+out of his tracks. With that joy of conquest known to all owners of
+rod and gun&mdash;related darkly to the blood-lust of the
+beasts&mdash;they raced across the gully toward the fallen.</p>
+<p>Ben quartered the animal, and again he saw fit to save the hide.
+It is the best material of all for the parka, the long, full winter
+garment of the North.</p>
+<p>Ben carried the meat in four trips back to the camp. By the time
+this work was done, and one of the quarters was drying over a fire
+of quivering aspen chips, the day was done. Again they saw the
+twilight shadows grow, and the first sable cloak of night was drawn
+over the shoulders of the forest. Beatrice prepared a wonderful
+roast of caribou for their evening meal; and thereafter they sat a
+short time at the mouth of the cavern, looking quietly into the red
+coals of the dying fire. Again Ben knew the beneficence and peace
+of the sheltering walls of home. Again he felt a sweet
+security,&mdash;a taming, gentling influence through the innermost
+fiber of his being.</p>
+<p>But Fenris the wolf gazed only into the darkened woods, and the
+hair stood stiff at his shoulders, and his eyes glowed and shone
+with the ancient hunting madness induced by the rising moon.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXX"></a>
+<h2>XXX</h2>
+<p>June passed away in the wilds of Back There, leaving warmer,
+longer days, a more potent sun, and a greener, fresher loveliness
+to the land. The spring calves no longer tottered on wabbly legs,
+but could follow their swift mothers over the most steep and
+difficult trails. Fledglings learned to fly, the wolf cubs had
+their first lessons in hunting on the ridges. The wild Yuga had
+fallen to such an extent that navigation&mdash;down to the Indian
+villages on the lower waters&mdash;was wholly impossible.</p>
+<p>The days passed quickly for Ben and Beatrice. They found plenty
+of work and even of play to pass the time. Partly to fill her
+lonely moments, but more because it was an instinct with her,
+Beatrice took an ever-increasing interest in her cave home. She
+kept it clean and cooked the meals, performing her tasks with
+goodwill, even at times a gaiety that was as incomprehensible to
+herself as to Ben.</p>
+<p>Their diet was not so simple now. Of course their flour and
+sugar and rice, and the meat that they took in the chase furnished
+the body of their meals, and without these things they could not
+live; but Beatrice was a woods child, and she knew how to find
+manna in the wilderness. Almost every morning she ventured out into
+the still, dew-wet forest, and nearly always she came in with some
+dainty for their table. She gathered watercress in the still pools
+and she knew a dozen ways to serve it. Sometimes she made a
+dressing out of animal oil, beaten to a cream; and it was better
+than lettuce salad. Other tender plant tops were used as a garnish
+and as greens, and many and varied were the edible roots that
+supplied their increasing desire for fresh vegetables.</p>
+<p>Sometimes she found wocus in the marsh&mdash;the plant formerly
+in such demand by the Indians&mdash;and by patient experiment she
+learned how to prepare it for the table. Washing the plant
+carefully she would pound it into paste that could be used as the
+base for a nutty and delicious bread. Other roots were baked in
+ashes or served fried in animal fat, and once or twice she found
+patches of wild strawberries, ripening on the slopes.</p>
+<p>This was living! They plucked the sweet, juicy berries from the
+vines; they served as dessert and were also used in the fashioning
+of delicious puddings with rice and sugar. Several times she found
+certain treasures laid by for winter use by the squirrels or the
+digging people&mdash;and perfectly preserved nuts and acorns, The
+latter, parched over coals, became one of the staples of their
+diet.</p>
+<p>She gathered leaves of the red weed and dried them for tea. She
+searched out the nests of the grouse and robbed them of their eggs;
+and always high celebration in the cave followed such a find as
+this. Fried eggs, boiled eggs, poached eggs tickled their palates
+for mornings to come. And she traced down, one memorable day when
+their sugar was all but gone, a tree that the wild bees had stored
+with honey.</p>
+<p>In the way of meat they had not only caribou, but the tender
+veal of moose and all manner of northern small game. Ben did not,
+however, spend rifle cartridges in reckless shooting. When at last
+his enemies came filing down through the beaver meadow he had no
+desire to be left with a half-empty gun. He had never fired this
+more powerful weapon since he had felled their first caribou. The
+moose calves and all the small game were taken with Beatrice's
+pistol.</p>
+<p>Sometimes he took ptarmigan&mdash;those whistling, sprightly
+grouse of the high steeps&mdash;and Beatrice served uncounted
+numbers of them, like the famous blackbirds, baked in a pie. Fried
+ptarmigan was a dish never to forget; roast ptarmigan had a
+distinctive flavor all its own, and the memory of ptarmigan
+fricassee often called Ben home to the cavern an hour before the
+established mealtime. Indeed, they partook of all the northern
+species of that full-bosomed clan, the upland game birds; little,
+brown quail, willow grouse, fool hens, and the incomparable blue
+grouse, half of the breast of which was a meal. It was true that
+their little store of pistol cartridges was all but gone, but
+worlds of big game remained to fall back upon.</p>
+<p>Ben never ceased regretting that he had not brought a single
+fishhook and a piece of line. He had long since carried the canoe
+from the river bank and hid it in the tall reeds of the lake shore,
+not only for pleasure's sake, but to preserve it for the autumn
+floods when they might want to float on down to the Indian
+villages; and surely it would have afforded the finest sport in the
+way of trolling for lake trout. But with utter callousness he made
+his pistol serve as a hook and line. Often he would crawl down,
+cautiously as a stalking wolf, to the edge of a trout pool, then
+fire mercilessly at a great, spotted beauty below. The bullet
+itself did not penetrate the water, but the shock carried through
+and the fish usually turned a white belly to the surface. A fat
+brook or lake trout, dipped in flour and fried to a chestnut brown,
+was a delight that never grew old.</p>
+<p>At every fresh find Beatrice would come triumphant into Ben's
+presence; and at such times they scarcely conducted themselves like
+enemies. An unguessed boyishness and charm had come to Ben in these
+ripe, full summer days: the hard lines softened in his face and
+mostly the hard shine left his eyes. Beatrice found herself
+curiously eager to please him, taking the utmost care and pains
+with every dish she prepared for the table; and it was true that he
+made the most joyful, exultant response to her efforts. The searing
+heat back of his eyes was quite gone, now. Even the scarlet fluid
+of his veins seemed to flow more quietly, with less fire, with less
+madness. A gentling influence had come to bear upon him; a great
+kindness, a new forbearance had brightened his outlook toward all
+the world. A great redemption was even now hovering close to
+him,&mdash;some unspeakable and ultimate blessing that he could not
+name.</p>
+<p>Their days were not without pleasure. Often they ventured far
+into the heavy forest, and always fresh delight and thrilling
+adventure awaited them. Ever they learned more of the wild things
+that were their only neighbors,&mdash;creatures all the way down
+the scale from the lordly moose, proud of his growing antlers and
+monarch of the marshes, to the small pika, squeaking on the
+slide-rock of the high peaks. They knew and loved them all; they
+found ever-increasing enjoyment in the study of their shy ways and
+furtive occupations; they observed with delight the droll
+awkwardness of the moose calves, the impertinence and saucy speech
+of the jays, the humor of the black bear and the surly arrogance of
+the grizzly. They knew that superlative cunning of his wickedness,
+the wolverine; the stealth of the red fox; the ferociousness of the
+ermine whose brown skin, soon to be white, suggested only something
+silken and soft and tender instead of a fiendish cutthroat, terror
+of the Little People; the skulking cowardice of the coyote; and the
+incredible savagery and agility of the fisher,&mdash;that
+middle-sized hunter that catches and kills everything he can master
+except fish. They climbed high hills and descended into still,
+mysterious valleys; they paddled long, dreamy twilight hours on the
+lake; they traversed marshes where the moose wallowed; and they
+walked through ancient forests where the decayed vegetation was a
+mossy pulp under their feet. Sometimes they forgot the poignancy of
+their strange lives, romping sometimes, gossiping like jays in the
+tree-limbs, and sometimes, forgetting enmity, they told each other
+their secret beliefs and philosophies. They had picnics in the
+woods; and long, comfortable evenings before their dancing fire.
+But there was one enduring joy that always surpassed all the rest,
+a happiness that seemed to have its origin in the silent places of
+their hearts. It was just the return, after a fatiguing day in
+forest and marsh, to the sheltering walls of the cave.</p>
+<p>With his axe and hunting knife Ben prepared a complete set of
+furniture for their little abode. His first Work was a
+surpassing-marvelous dining-room suite of a table and two chairs.
+Then he put up shelves for their rapidly dwindling supplies of
+provisions and cut chunks of spruce log, with a bit of bark
+remaining, for fireside seats. And for more than a week, Beatrice
+was forbidden to enter a certain covert just beyond the glade lest
+she should prematurely discover an even greater wonder that Ben, in
+off hours, was preparing for a surprise.</p>
+<p>From time to time she heard him busily at work, the ring of his
+axe and his gay whistling as he whittled bolts of wood; but other
+than that it concerned the grizzly skin she had not the least idea
+of his task. But the work was completed at last, and then came two
+days of rather significant silence,&mdash;quite incomprehensible to
+the girl. She was at a loss why Ben did not reveal his
+treasure.</p>
+<p>But one morning she missed the familiar sounds of his
+fire-building, usually his first work on wakening. The very fact of
+their absence startled her wide-awake, while otherwise she would
+have perhaps slept late into the morning. Ben had seemingly
+vanished into the heavy timber across the glade.</p>
+<p>Presently she heard him muttering and grunting as he moved some
+heavy object to the door of the cave. Boyishly, he could not wait
+for the usual late hour when she wakened. He made a wholly
+unnecessary amount of noise as he built the fire. Then he thrust
+his lean head into the cavern opening.</p>
+<p>"I hope I haven't waked you up?" he said.</p>
+<p>The girl smiled secretly. "I wanted to wake up,
+anyway&mdash;to-day."</p>
+<p>"I wish you'd get up and come and look at something ugly I've
+got just outside the door."</p>
+<p>She hurried into her outer garments, and in a moment appeared.
+It was ugly, certainly, the object that he had fashioned with such
+tireless toil: not fitted at all for a stylish city home; yet the
+girl, for one short instant, stopped breathing. It was a hammock,
+suspended on a stout frame, to take the place of her tree-bough bed
+on the cave floor. He had used the grizzly skin, hanging it with
+unbreakable sinew, and fashioning it in such a manner that folds of
+the hide could be turned over her on cold nights. For a moment she
+gazed, very earnestly, into the rugged, homely, raw-boned face of
+her companion.</p>
+<p>Beatrice was deeply and inexplicably sobered, yet a curious
+happiness took swift possession of her heart. Reading the gratitude
+in her eyes, Ben's lips broke into a radiant smile.</p>
+<p>"I guess you've forgotten what day it is," he said.</p>
+<p>"Of course. I hardly know the month."</p>
+<p>"I've notched each day, you know. And maybe you've
+forgotten&mdash;on the ride out from Snowy Gulch&mdash;we talked of
+birthdays. To-day is yours."</p>
+<p>She stared at him in genuine astonishment. She had not dreamed
+that this little confidence, given in a careless moment of long
+weeks before, had lingered in the man's memory. She had supposed
+that the fury and savagery of his war with her father and the
+latter's followers had effaced all such things as this.</p>
+<p>And it was true that had this birthday come a few weeks before,
+on the river journey and previous to their occupation of the cave,
+Ben would have let it pass unnoticed. The smoldering fire in his
+brain would have seared to ashes any such kindly thought as this.
+But when the wild hunter leaves his leafy lair and goes to dwell, a
+man rather than a beast, in a permanent abode, he has thought for
+other subjects than his tribal wars and the blood-lust of his
+hates. The hearth, and the care and friendship of the girl had
+tamed Ben to this degree, at least.</p>
+<p>But wonders were not done. The look in the girl's eyes suddenly
+melted, as the warm sun melts ice, some of the frozen bitterness of
+his spirit. "It's your birthday&mdash;and I hope you have many of
+'em," he went on. "No more like this&mdash;but all of 'em
+happy,&mdash;as you deserve."</p>
+<p>He walked toward her, and her eyes could not leave his. He bent
+soberly, and brushed her lips with his own.</p>
+<p>There were always worlds to talk about in the warm gleam of
+their fire. When the day's work was done, and the hush of early
+night gathered the land to its arms, they would sit on their
+fireside seats and settle all problems, now and hereafter, to the
+perfect satisfaction of them both.</p>
+<p>From Ben, Beatrice gained a certain strength of outlook as well
+as depth of insight, but she gave him in return more than she
+received. He felt that her influence, in his early years, would
+have worked wonders for him. She straightened out his moral
+problems for him, taught him lessons in simple faith; and her own
+childish sweetness and absolute purity showed his whole world in a
+new light.</p>
+<p>Sometimes they talked of religion and ethics, sometimes of
+science and economics, and particularly they talked of what was
+nearest to them,&mdash;the mysteries and works of nature. She had
+been a close observer of the forest. She had received some glimpse
+of its secret laws that were, when all was said and done, the basic
+laws of life. But for all her love of science she was not a mere
+biologist. She had a full and devout faith in Law and Judgment
+beyond any earthly sphere.</p>
+<p>"No one can live in this boundless wilderness and not believe,"
+she told him earnestly, her dark eyes brimming with her fervor.
+"Perhaps I can't tell you why&mdash;maybe it's just a feeling of
+need, of insufficiency of self. Besides, God is close, like He was
+to the Israelites when they were in the wilderness; but you will
+remember that He never came close again.&mdash;This forest is so
+big and so awful, He knows he must stay close to keep you from
+dying of fear.&mdash;God may not be a reality to the people of the
+cities, where they see only buildings and streets, but Ben, He is
+to me. You can't forget Him up here. He stands on every mountain,
+just as the sons of Aaron saw Him."</p>
+<p>He found, to his surprise, that she was not ill-read,
+particularly in the old-time classics. But her environment had also
+influenced her choice of reading. She loved the old legends in the
+minor,&mdash;far-off and plaintive things that reflected the mood
+of the dusky forest in which she lived.</p>
+<p>One night, when the moon was in the sky, he told her of his war
+record, of the shell-shock and the strange, criminal mania that
+followed it; and then of his swift recovery. With an over-powering
+need of self-justification he told her of his further adventures
+with Ezram, of the old man's murder and the theft of the claim. She
+heard him out, listening attentively; but in loyalty to her father
+she did not let herself believe him entirely. The answer she gave
+him was the same as she had always given at his every reference to
+his side of the case.</p>
+<p>"If you were in the right, you'd take me back and let the law
+take its course," she told him. "You'd not be out here laying an
+ambush for them, to kill them when they try to rescue me."</p>
+<p>He could never make her understand how, by the intricacies of
+law, it would be a rare chance that he would be able to fasten the
+crime on the murderers: that he had taken the only sure way open to
+make them pay for Ezram's death. He told her of the old man's,
+final request; how that his war with her father and his men was a
+debt that, by secret, inscrutable laws of his being, could never be
+written off or disavowed. But he could never fully find words to
+uphold his position. The thing went back to his instincts, traced
+at last to the remorseless spirit of the wolf that was his
+heritage.</p>
+<p>Yet these hours of talk were immensely good for him. While they
+never met on common grounds, the girl's true outlook and nobility
+of character were ever more manifest to him; and were not without a
+gentling, healing influence upon him. He could not blind himself to
+them. And sometimes when he sat alone by his dying fire, as the
+dark menaced him, and the girl that was his charge slept within the
+portals of stone, he had the unescapable feeling that the very
+structure of his life was falling and shattering down; but even now
+he could see, an enchanted vista in the distance, a mightier, more
+glorious tower, builded and shaped by this woman's hand.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXI"></a>
+<h2>XXXI</h2>
+<p>While Beatrice was at her household tasks&mdash;cooking the
+meals, cleaning the cave, washing and repairing their
+clothes&mdash;Ben never forgot his more serious work. Certain hours
+every day he spent in exploration, seeking out the passes over the
+hills, examining every possible means of entrance and egress into
+his valley, getting the lay of the land and picking out the points
+from which he would make his attack. Already he knew every winding
+game trail and every detail of the landscape for five miles or more
+around. His ultimate vengeance seemed just as sure as the night
+following the day.</p>
+<p>Ever he listened for the first sound of the pack train in the
+forest; and even in his hours of pleasure his eyes ever roamed over
+the sweep of valley and marsh below. He was prepared for his
+enemies now. One or five, they couldn't escape him. He had provided
+for every contingency and had seemingly perfected his plan to the
+last detail.</p>
+<p>He had not the slightest fear that his eagerness would cost him
+his aim when finally his eye looked along the sights at the forms
+of his enemies, helpless in the marsh. He was wholly cold about the
+matter now. The lust and turmoil in his veins, remembered like a
+ghastly dream from that first night, returned but feebly now, if at
+all. This change, this restraint had been increasingly manifest
+since his occupation of the cave, and it had marked, at the same
+time, a growing barrier between himself and Fenris. But he could
+not deny but that such a development was wholly to have been
+expected. Fenris was a child of the open forest aisles, never of
+the fireside and the hearth. It was not that the wolf had ceased to
+give him his dint of faithful service, or that he loved him any the
+less. But each of them had other interests,&mdash;one his home and
+hearth; the other the ever-haunting, enticing call of the wildwood.
+Lately Fenris had taken to wandering into the forest at night,
+going and coming like a ghost; and once his throat and jowls had
+been stained with dark blood.</p>
+<p>"It's getting too tame for you here, old boy, isn't it?" Ben
+said to him one hushed, breathless night. "But wait just a little
+while more. It won't be tame then."</p>
+<p>It was true: the hunting party, if they had started at once,
+must be nearing their death valley by now. Except for the absolute
+worst of traveling conditions they would have already come. Ben
+felt a growing impatience: a desire to do his work and get it over.
+His pulse no longer quickened and leaped at the thought of
+vengeance; and the wolflike pleasure in simple killing could no
+longer be his. It would merely be the soldier's work&mdash;a
+dreadful obligation to perform speedily and to forget. Even the
+memory of the huddled form of his savior and friend, so silent and
+impotent in the dead leaves, did not stir him into madness now.</p>
+<p>Yet he never thought of disavowing his vengeance. It was still
+the main purpose of his life. He had no theme but that: when that
+work was done he could conceive of nothing further of interest on
+earth, nothing else worth living for. Not for an instant had he
+relented: except for that one kiss, on the occasion of her
+birthday, he had never broken his promise in regard to his
+relations with Beatrice. His first trait was steadfastness, a trait
+that, curiously enough, is inherent in all living creatures who are
+by blood close to the wild wolf, from the German police dog to the
+savage husky of the North. But he was certainly and deeply changed
+in these weeks in the cave. He no longer hated these three
+murderous enemies of his. The power to hate had simply died in his
+body. He regarded their destruction rather as a duty he owed old
+Ezram, an obligation that he would die sooner than forego.</p>
+<p>The hushed, dark, primal forest had a different appeal for him
+now. He loved it still, with the reverence and adoration of the
+forester he was, but no longer with that love a servant bears his
+master. He had distinctly escaped from its dominance. The passion
+and mounting fire that it wakened at the fall of darkness could no
+longer take possession of him, as strong drink possesses the brain,
+bending his will, making of him simply a tool and a pawn to gratify
+its cruel desires and to achieve its mysterious ends. He had been,
+in spirit, a brother of the wolf, before: a runner in the packs.
+Such had been the outgrowth of innate traits; part of his strange
+destiny. Now, after these weeks in the cave, he was a man. It was
+hard for him to explain even to himself. It was as if in the escape
+from his own black passions, he had also escaped the curious
+tyranny of the wild; not further subject to its cruel moods and
+whims, but rather one of a Dominant Breed, a being who could lift
+his head in defiance to the storm, obey his own will, go his own
+way. This was no little change. Perhaps, when all is said and done,
+it marks the difference between man and the lesser mammals, the
+thing that has evolved a certain species of the
+primates&mdash;simply woods creatures that trembled at the storm
+and cowered in the night&mdash;into the rulers and monarchs of the
+earth.</p>
+<p>Ben had come out from the darkened forest trails where he made
+his lairs and had gone into a cave to live! He had found a
+permanent abode&mdash;a lasting, shelter from the cold and the
+storm. It suggested a curious allegory to him. Some time in the
+long-forgotten past, probably when the later glaciers brought their
+promise of cold, all his race left their leafy bowers and found
+cave homes in the cliffs. Before that time they were merely woods
+children, blind puppets of nature, sleeping where exhaustion found
+them; wandering without aim in the tree aisles; mating when they
+met the female of their species on the trails and venturing on
+again; knowing the ghastly, haunting fear of the night and the
+blind terror of the storm and elements: merely higher beasts in a
+world of beasts. But they came to the caves. They established
+permanent abodes. They began to be men.</p>
+<p>All that now stands as civilization, all the conquest of the
+earth and sea and air began from that moment. It was the Great
+Epoch,&mdash;and Ben had illustrated it in his own life. The change
+had been infinitely slow, but certain as the movement of the
+planets in their spheres. Behind the sheltering walls they got away
+from fear,&mdash;that cruel bondage in which Nature holds all her
+wild creatures, the burden that makes them her slaves. Never to
+shudder with horror when the darkness fell in silence and mystery;
+never to have the heart freeze with terror when the thunder roared
+in the sky and the wind raged in the trees. The cave dwellers began
+to come into their own. Sheltered behind stone walls they could
+defy the elements that had enslaved them so long. This freedom
+gained they learned to strike the fire; they took one woman to keep
+the cave, instead of mating indiscriminately in the forest, thus
+marking the beginning of family life. Love instead of deathless
+hatred, gentleness rather than cruelty, peace in the place of
+passion, mercy and tolerance and self-control: all these mighty
+bulwarks of man's dominance grew into strength behind the
+sheltering walls of home.</p>
+<p>Thus in these few little weeks Ben Darby&mdash;a beast of the
+forest in his unbridled passions&mdash;had in some measure imaged
+the life history of the race. He had lived again the momentous
+regeneration. The protecting walls, the hearth, particularly
+Beatrice's wholesome and healing influence, had tamed him. He was
+still a forester, bred in the bone&mdash;loving these forest depths
+with an ardor too deep for words&mdash;but the mark of the beast
+was gone from his flesh.</p>
+<p>He could still deal justice to Ezram's murderers and thus keep
+faith with his dead partner; but the primal passions could no
+longer dominate him. His pet, however, remained the wolf. The
+sheltering cavern walls were never for him. He loved Ben with an
+undying devotion, yet a barrier was rising between them. They could
+not go the same paths forever.</p>
+<p>Matters reached a crisis between Fenris and himself one still,
+warm night in late July. The two were sitting side by side at the
+cavern maw, watching the slow enchantment of the forest under the
+spell of the rising moon; Beatrice had already gone to her hammock.
+As the last little blaze died in the fire, and it crackled at ever
+longer intervals, Ben suddenly made a moving discovery. The fringe
+of forest about him, usually so dreamlike and still, was simply
+breathing and throbbing with life.</p>
+<p>Ben dropped his hand to the wolf's shoulders. "The little folks
+are calling on us to-night," he said quietly.</p>
+<p>In all probability he spoke the truth. It was not an uncommon
+thing for the creatures of the wood&mdash;usually the lesser people
+such as rodents and the small hunters&mdash;to crowd close to the
+edge of the glade and try to puzzle out this ruddy mystery in its
+center. Unused to men they could never understand. Sometimes the
+lynx halted in his hunt to investigate, sometimes an old black
+bear&mdash;kindly, benevolent good-humored old bachelor that every
+naturalist loves&mdash;grunted and pondered at the edge of shadow,
+and sometimes even such lordly creatures as moose and caribou
+paused in their night journeys to see what was taking place.</p>
+<p>Curiously, the wolf started violently at Ben's touch. The man
+suddenly regarded him with a gaze of deepest interest. The hair was
+erect on the powerful neck, the eyes swam in pale, blue fire, and
+he was staring away into the mysterious shadows.</p>
+<p>"What do you see, old-timer?" Ben asked. "I wish I could see
+too."</p>
+<p>He brought his senses to the finest focus, trying hard to
+understand. He was aware only of the strained silence at first.
+Then here and there, about the dimmining circle of firelight, he
+heard the soft rustle of little feet, the subdued crack of a twig
+or the scratch of a dead leaf. The forest smells&mdash;of which
+there is no category in heaven or earth&mdash;reached him with
+incredible clarity. These were faint, vaguely exciting smells, some
+of them the exquisite fragrances of summer flowers, others beyond
+his ken. And presently two small, bright circles appeared in a
+distant covert, glowed once, and then went out.</p>
+<p>By peering closely, with unwinking eyes, he began to see other
+twin-circles of green and yellow light. Yet they were furtive
+little radiances&mdash;vanishing swiftly&mdash;and they were
+nothing of which to be afraid.</p>
+<p>"They <i>are</i> out to-night," he murmured. "No wonder you're
+excited, Fenris. What is it&mdash;some celebration in the
+forest?"</p>
+<p>There was no possible explanation. Foresters know that on
+certain nights the wilderness seems simply to teem with
+life&mdash;scratchings and rustlings in every covert&mdash;and on
+other nights it is still and lifeless as a desert. The wild folk
+were abroad to-night and were simply paying casual, curious visits
+to Ben's fire.</p>
+<p>Once more Ben glanced at the wolf. The animal no longer
+crouched. Rather he was standing rigid, his head half-turned and
+lifted, gazing away toward a distant ridge behind the lake. A
+wilderness message had reached him, clear as a voice.</p>
+<p>But presently Ben understood. Throbbing through the night he
+heard a weird, far-carrying call&mdash;a long-drawn note, broken by
+half-sobs&mdash;the mysterious, plaintive utterance of the wild
+itself. Yet it was not an inanimate voice. He recognized it at once
+as the howl of a wolf, one of Fenris' wild brethren.</p>
+<p>The creature at his feet started as if from a blow. Then he
+stood motionless, listening, and the cry came the second time. He
+took two leaps into the darkness.</p>
+<p>Deeply moved, Ben watched him. The wolf halted, then stole back
+to his master's side. He licked the man's hand with his warm
+tongue, whining softly.</p>
+<p>"What is it, boy?" Ben asked. "What do you want me to do?"</p>
+<p>The wolf whined louder, his eyes luminous with ineffable appeal.
+Once more he leaped into the shadows, pausing as if to see if Ben
+would follow him.</p>
+<p>The man shook his head, rather soberly. A curious, excited light
+was in his eyes. "I can't go, old boy," he said. "This is my
+place&mdash;here. Fenris, I can't leave the cave."</p>
+<p>For a moment they looked eyes into eyes&mdash;in the glory of
+that moon as strange a picture as the wood gods ever beheld. Once
+more the wolf call sounded. Fenris whimpered softly.</p>
+<p>"Go ahead if you like," Ben told him. "God knows it's your
+destiny."</p>
+<p>The wolf seemed to understand. With a glad bark he sped away and
+almost instantly vanished into the gloom.</p>
+<p>But Fenris had not broken all ties with the cave. The chain was
+too strong for that, the hold on his wild heart too firm. If there
+is one trait, far and near in the wilds, that distinguishes the
+woods children, it is their inability to forget. Fenris had joined
+his fellows, to be sure; but he still kept watch over the cave.</p>
+<p>The strongest wolf in the little band, the nucleus about which
+the winter pack would form, he largely confined their hunting range
+to the district immediately about the cave. It held him like a
+chain of iron. Although the woods trails beguiled him with every
+strong appeal, the sight of his master was a beloved thing to him
+still, and scarcely a night went by but that he paused to sniff at
+the cavern maw, seeing that all was well. At such times his
+followers would linger, trembling and silent, in the farther
+shadows. Because they had never known the love of man they utterly
+failed to understand. But in an instant Fenris would come back to
+them, the wild urge in his heart seemingly appeased by the mere
+assurance of Ben's presence and safety.</p>
+<p>Ben himself was never aware of these midnight visits. The feet
+of the wolves were like falling feathers on the grass; and if
+sometimes, through the cavern maw, he half-wakened to catch the
+gleam of their wild eyes, he attributed it merely to the presence
+of skulking coyotes, curious concerning the dying coals of the
+fire.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXII"></a>
+<h2>XXXII</h2>
+<p>Beatrice had kept only an approximate track of the days; yet she
+knew that an attempt to rescue her must be almost at hand. Even
+traveling but half a dozen miles a day, and counting out a
+reasonable time for exploration and delays, her father's party must
+be close upon them. And the thought of the forthcoming battle
+between her abductor and her rescuers filled every waking moment
+with dread.</p>
+<p>She could not escape the thought of it. It lingered, hovering
+like a shadow, over all her gayest moments; it haunted her more
+sober hours, and it brought evil dreams at night. Her one hope was
+that her father had given her up for lost and had not attempted her
+rescue.</p>
+<p>She realized perfectly the perfection of Ben's plans. She knew
+that he had provided for every contingency; and besides, he had
+every natural advantage in his favor. The end was inevitable: his
+victory and the destruction of his foes. There would be little
+mercy for these three in the hands of this iron man from the
+eastern provinces. If they were to be saved it must be soon, not a
+week from now, nor when another moon had waned. If Ben was to be
+checkmated there were not many hours to waste.</p>
+<p>She had had no opportunity to escape, at first. Ben knew that
+she could not make her way over the hundreds of miles of howling
+wilderness without food supplies, and always the wolf had been on
+guard. He was like a were-wolf, a demon, anticipating her every
+move, knowing her secret thoughts. But the wolf had gone now to
+join his fellows. She was not aware of his almost nightly return.
+Perhaps the fact of his absence gave her an opportunity, her one
+chance to save her father from Ben's ambush.</p>
+<p>Conditions for escape were more favorable than at any time since
+their departure from the canoe landing, that late spring day of
+long ago. The wolf was gone; Ben's guard of her was ever more lax.
+The season was verdant: she could supplement what supplies she took
+from the cave with roots and berries, and the warm nights would
+enable her to carry a minimum of blankets. She knew that she could
+never hope to succeed in the venture except by traveling light and
+fast. On the other hand she would need all of Ben's remaining
+supplies to bring her through: in a few more days the stores would
+be so low that she could not attempt the trip. Human beings cannot
+survive, in the forests of the north, on roots and berries alone.
+Tissue-building flour and sustaining meat are necessary to climb
+the ridges and battle the thicket.</p>
+<p>How could she obtain these things? For all his seeming
+carelessness Ben kept a fairly close watch on her actions, and he
+would discover her flight within a few hours. Stronger than she,
+and knowing every trail and pass for miles around he could overtake
+her with ease. He gave her no opportunity to seize his rifle, load
+it and turn it against him, thus making her escape by force.</p>
+<p>The fact that she would leave him without food mattered not one
+way or another. He would still have his rifle, and his small stock
+of rifle cartridges would procure sufficient big game to sustain
+him for weeks and months to come. After all, the whole issue
+depended on the rifle,&mdash;the symbol of force. It would be his
+instrument of vengeance when his chance came. If she could only
+take this weapon from him she need not fear the coming of her
+rescuers. In that case Ben would be helpless against them.</p>
+<p>Unfortunately, the gun rarely left his hands. If indeed she
+should attempt to seize it he would wrest it away from her before
+she could destroy or injure it. But it was a hopeful fact that the
+rifle was useless without its shells!</p>
+<p>To procure these, however, presented an unsolvable problem. Any
+way she turned she found a barrier Ben kept them in his shell belt,
+and he wore the belt about his waist, waking or sleeping. Only to
+procure it, run like a deer and hurl it into the rapids of the
+Yuga,&mdash;and her problem would be absolutely solved. Ben would
+be obliged to leave the cave home at once and return with her to
+the Yuga cabins, utilizing the few stores they had left for the
+journey&mdash;simply because to stay, unarmed, would mean to die of
+starvation. Indeed the few remaining supplies would not more than
+last them through now, traveling early and late, so if the venture
+were to be attempted at all it must be at once. On the other hand
+his rifle and shells would enable the two of them to remain in the
+cavern indefinitely on a diet of meat alone.</p>
+<p>As she worked about the cavern she brooded over the plan; but at
+first she could conceive of no possible way to procure the shells.
+If the chance came, however, she wanted to be ready. She planned
+all other details of the venture; the shortest route to the nearest
+rapids of the river where she might dispose of the deadly cylinders
+of brass. It became necessary, also, to consider the lesser weapon
+for the plain reason that it might defeat her in the moment of her
+success.</p>
+<p>Ben kept the weapon in his cartridge belt, but the extra pistol
+shells were among the supplies. They could easily be procured. It
+would also be necessary to induce him to fire away the few shells
+that he carried in the pistol magazine; but this would likely be
+easy enough to do. He put little reliance on the weapon, trusting
+rather to his rifle both for the impending war and the procurance
+of big game; and he would not harbor the pistol shells as long as
+he had his rifle.</p>
+<p>But the days were passing! Any attempt at deliverance must be
+made before the food stores were further depleted. They could not
+make the march without food. Days and nights overtook her with her
+triumph as far distant as ever. The moment of opportunity she had
+watched for, in which she might seize the cartridge belt and
+destroy it, had never come to pass. The plans she had made while
+the night lay soft and mysterious in the solitudes had all come to
+nothing. He had never, as she had hoped, removed his belt and
+forgotten to replace it, nor had his slumber ever been so deep that
+she could steal it from him.</p>
+<p>His own triumph surely was almost at hand. Surely his pursuers
+had almost overtaken him. The stores had already fallen far below
+the margin of safety for the long journey home. The thought was
+with her, and she was desperate one long, warm afternoon as she
+searched for roots and berries in the forest. Edible plants were
+ever more hard to find, these past days; but what there were she
+gathered almost automatically, herself lost in a deep
+preoccupation. And all at once her hand reached toward a little
+vine of black berries, each with a green tuft at the end, not
+unlike gooseberries in southern gardens.</p>
+<p>As if by instinct, hardly aware of the motion, she withdrew her
+hand. She knew this vine. She was enough of a forester never to
+mistake it. It was the deadly nightshade, and a handful of the
+berries spelt death. She started to look elsewhere.</p>
+<p>But presently she paused, arrested by an idea so engrossing and
+yet so terrible that her heart seemed to pause in her breast. Had
+any rules been laid down for her to follow in her war with Ben? Was
+she to consider methods at such a time as this? Was she not a woods
+girl,&mdash;a woman, not a child, trained and tutored in the savage
+code of the wild that knows no ethics other than might, whether
+might of arm or craft, of brain or fell singleness of purpose?
+Should she consider ethics now?</p>
+<p>Her father's life was in imminent danger. Another day might find
+him stretched lifeless before her. Ben had not hesitated to use
+every weapon in his power; she should not hesitate now. Ben had
+made his war; she would wage it by his own code.</p>
+<p>For a moment she stood almost without outward motion, intrigued
+by the possibilities of this little handful of berries. She
+shuddered once, nervously, but there was no further impulse of
+remorse. Perhaps she trembled slightly; and her eyes were simply
+depthless shadows under her brows.</p>
+<p>They were so little, seemingly so inoffensive: these dark
+berries in the shadows of the covert. They were scarcely to be
+noticed twice. But not even the savage grizzly was of such might;
+storms or seas were not so deadly. There they were, inconspicuous
+among their sister plants, waiting for her hand.</p>
+<p>It was right that they should be black in color. Their blackness
+was as of a black night without a star shining through,&mdash;a
+black cloud with never a rainbow to promise hope. She could not
+turn her eyes away! How black they were among the green
+leaves&mdash;lightless as death itself.</p>
+<p>A handful of them meant death: her father had warned her about
+them long ago. But half a handful&mdash;perhaps a dozen of the
+sable berries in the palm of her hand&mdash;what did <i>they</i>
+mean? Just a sickness wherein one could no longer guard a prisoner.
+They were a powerful alkaloid, she knew; and a dozen of them would
+likely mean hours and hours of deep, dreamless sleep,&mdash;a sleep
+in which one could take no reckoning of hands fumbling at a
+cartridge belt! Half a handful would, in all probability, fail to
+strike the life from such a powerful frame as Ben's, but would
+certainly act upon him like a powerful opiate and leave him
+helpless in her hands.</p>
+<p>Eagerly her fingers plucked the black berries.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXIII"></a>
+<h2>XXXIII</h2>
+<p>In one of the tin cups Beatrice pressed the juice from the
+nightshade, obtaining perhaps a tablespoonful of black liquor. To
+this she added considerable sugar, barely tasting the mixture on
+the end of her finger. The balance was inclining toward the success
+of her plan. The sugar mostly killed the pungent taste of the
+berries.</p>
+<p>Then she concealed the cup in a cluster of vines, ready for the
+moment of need. Her next act was to procure from among the supplies
+the little cardboard box containing half a dozen or so of her
+pistol shells. The way of safety was to destroy these first. The
+effect of the poison might be of only a few minutes' duration, and
+every motion might count. Under any conditions, they would be out
+of the way. She was careful, with a superlative cunning, to take
+the box as well as its contents. She foresaw that in all likelihood
+Ben would seek the shells as soon as he fired the few that remained
+in his pistol magazine; and an empty container might put him upon
+his guard. On the other hand, if he could not find the box at all,
+he could easily be led to believe that it had been simply misplaced
+among the other supplies.</p>
+<p>She scattered the shells in the heavy brush where not even the
+bright, searching eyes of the Canada jay might ever find them. Then
+she hastened up the ridge to meet Ben on his way to the cave.</p>
+<p>She waited a few minutes, then spying his stalwart form at the
+edge of the beaver meadow, she tripped down to meet him. He was not
+in the least suspicious of this little act of friendship. It was
+quite the customary thing, lately, for her thus to watch for his
+coming; and his brown face always lighted with pleasure at the
+first glimpse of her graceful form framed by the spruce. She too
+had always taken pleasure in these little meetings and in the gay
+talk they had as they sped down toward the cavern; but her delight
+was singularly absent to-day. She tried to restrain the wild racing
+of her heart.</p>
+<p>She knew she must act her part. Her plan was to put him off his
+guard, to hide her treachery with pretended friendship. To meet him
+here&mdash;far distant from the poison cup hidden in the
+vines&mdash;would give her time to master her leaping heart and to
+strengthen her self-control.</p>
+<p>Yet she had hardly expected him to greet her in just this
+way,&mdash;with such a light in his eyes and such obvious delight
+in his smile. He had a rather boyish, friendly smile, this foe of
+hers whom she was about to despatch into the very shadow of death.
+She dispelled quickly a small, faltering voice of remorse. This was
+no time for remorse, for gentleness and mercy. She hurried to his
+side.</p>
+<p>"You're flushed from hurrying down that hill," he told her
+gayly. "Beatrice, you're getting prettier every day."</p>
+<p>"It's the simple life that's doing it, Ben! No late hours, no
+indigestible food&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Speaking of food&mdash;I'm famished. I hope you've got
+something nice for lunch&mdash;and I know you have."</p>
+<p>She <i>had</i> been careful with to-day's lunch; but it had
+merely been part of her plot to put him off his guard. "Caribou
+tenderloin&mdash;almost the last of him&mdash;wocus bread and
+strawberries," she assured him. "Does that suit your highness?"</p>
+<p>He made a great feint of being overwhelmed by the news. "Then
+let's hurry. Take my arm and we'll fly."</p>
+<p>She seized the strong forearm, thrilled in spite of herself by
+the muscles of steel she felt through the sleeves. He fell into his
+fastest walking stride,&mdash;long steps that sped the yards under
+them. They emerged from the marsh and started to climb the
+ridge.</p>
+<p>At a small hollow beside the creek bed her fingers suddenly
+tightened on his arm. A thrill that was more of wonder than of joy
+coursed through her; and her dark eyes began to glitter with
+excitement. The wilderness was her ally to-day. She suddenly saw
+her chance&mdash;in a manner that could not possibly waken his
+suspicions of her intentions&mdash;of disposing of the remainder of
+his pistol cartridges.</p>
+<p>On a log thirty feet distant sat an old grouse with half a dozen
+of her brood, all of them perched in a row and relying on their
+protective coloring to save them from sight. They were Franklin's
+grouse&mdash;and they had appeared as if in answer to Beatrice's
+secret wish.</p>
+<p>These birds were common enough in their valley, and not a day
+passed without seeing from five to fifty of them, yet the sight
+went straight home to Beatrice's superstitions. "Get them with your
+pistol," she whispered. "I want them all&mdash;for a big grouse pie
+to-night."</p>
+<p>"But our pistol shells are getting low," Ben objected. "I've
+hardly got enough shells in the gun to get 'em all&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"No matter. You have to use them some time. There's a few more
+in the cave, I think. We'll have to rely on big game from now on,
+anyway. Don't miss one."</p>
+<p>Ben drew his pistol, then walked up within twenty feet. He drew
+slowly down, knocking the old bird from her perch with a bullet
+through the neck.</p>
+<p>"Good work," Beatrice exulted. "Now for the chicks."</p>
+<p>Ben took the bird on the extreme right, and again the bullet
+sped true. The remainder of the flock had become uneasy now; and at
+the next shot all except one flew into the branches of the
+surrounding trees. This shot was equally successful, and with the
+fourth he knocked the remaining bird from the log.</p>
+<p>Each of the four birds he had downed with a shot either through
+the head or the neck; and such shooting would have been marvelous
+indeed in the eyes of the tenderfoot. But both these two foresters
+knew that there was nothing exceptional about it. Pistol shooting
+is simply a matter of a sure eye and steady nerves, combined with a
+greater or less period of practice. Few were the trappers or
+woodsmen north of fifty-three that could not have done as much.</p>
+<p>Ben turned his attention to the fowl on the lower tree limbs,
+hitting once but missing the second time. To correct this
+unpardonable proceeding, he knocked with his seventh a fat cock,
+his spurs just starting, from almost the top of a young spruce.</p>
+<p>"Here's one more," Beatrice urged him. "I'll need every one for
+the pie."</p>
+<p>But the gun was empty. The firing pin snapped harmlessly against
+the breach. They gathered the grouse and sped on down to the
+cavern.</p>
+<p>Her heart seemingly leaped into her throat at every beat; but
+with steady hands and smiling face she went about the preparation
+of the meal. She fried the venison and baked the wocus bread, and
+with more than usual spirit and gaiety set the dishes at Ben's
+place at the table. "Draw up your chair," she told him. "I'll have
+the tea in a minute."</p>
+<p>Ben peered with sudden interest into her face. "What's troubling
+you, Bee?" he asked gently. "You're pale as a ghost."</p>
+<p>"I'm not feeling overly well." Her eyes dropped before his gaze.
+"I'm not hungry&mdash;at all. But it's nothing to worry
+about&mdash;"</p>
+<p>She saw by his eyes that he <i>was</i> worrying; yet it was
+evident that he had not the slightest suspicion of the real cause
+of the sudden pallor in her cheeks. She saw his face cloud and his
+eyes darken; and again she heard that faint, small voice of
+remorse&mdash;whispering deep in her heart's heart. He was always
+so considerate of her, this jailer of hers. His concern was always
+so real and deep. Yet in a moment more the kindly sympathy would be
+gone from his face. He would be lying very still&mdash;and his face
+would be even more pale than hers.</p>
+<p>Listlessly she walked to the door of the cave, procuring a
+handful of dried red-root leaves that she used for tea. Through the
+cavern opening he saw her drop them into the bucket that served as
+their teapot.</p>
+<p>Then she came back for the oiled, cloth bag that contained the
+last of their sugar. This was always one of her little
+kindnesses,&mdash;to sweeten his tea for him before she brought it
+to him. He began to eat his steak.</p>
+<p>In one glance the girl saw that he was wholly unsuspecting. He
+trusted her; in their weeks together he had lost all fear of
+treachery from her. There he was, exulting over the frugal lunch
+she had prepared, with no inkling of the deadly peril that even now
+was upon him. She wished he did not trust her so completely; it
+would be easier for her if he was just a little wary, a little more
+on guard.</p>
+<p>She felt cold all over. She could hardly keep from shivering.
+But this was the moment of trial; the thing would be done in a
+moment more. She mustn't give way yet to the growing weakness in
+her muscles. She walked to the vine where she had left the
+potion.</p>
+<p>How much of it there was&mdash;it seemed to have doubled in
+quantity since she had left it. A handful of the black berries
+meant death&mdash;certain as the sunrise&mdash;but what did half a
+handful mean? The question came to her again. How did she know that
+half a handful did not mean death too,&mdash;not just hours of
+slumber, but relentless and irremediable death! Would that be the
+end of her day's work&mdash;to see this tall, friendly warden of
+hers lying dead before her gaze, the laughter gone from his lips
+and the light faded from his eyes? She would be free then to strip
+the shell belt from his waist. He would never waken to prevent her.
+She could escape too&mdash;back to her father's home&mdash;and
+leave him in the cave.</p>
+<p>All that he had told her concerning his war with her father
+recurred to her in one vivid flash. Could it have been that he had
+told the truth&mdash;that her father and his followers had been the
+attackers in the beginning? She had never believed him fully; but
+could it be that he was in the right? His claim had been invaded,
+he said, and his one friend murdered in cold blood. Was this not
+cause enough, by the code of the North, for a war of reprisal?</p>
+<p>But even as these thoughts came to her, she had walked boldly to
+the fire and emptied the contents of the cup into the boiling water
+in the teapot. Ben would have only had to look up to see her do it.
+Yet still he did not suspect.</p>
+<p>She waited an instant, steadying herself for the ordeal to come.
+Then she took the pot off the fire and poured the hot contents into
+the cup that had just held the potion. She had been careful not to
+put enough water into the pot to weaken the drink. The cup brimmed;
+but none was left. She brought it steaming to Ben's side.</p>
+<p>No kindly root tripped her feet as she entered, no merciful
+unsteadiness caused her to drop this cup of death and spill its
+contents.</p>
+<p>"Thanks, Beatrice." Ben looked up, smiling. "I'm a brute to let
+you fix my tea when you are feeling so bad. But I sure am grateful,
+if that helps any&mdash;"</p>
+<p>His voice sounded far away, like a voice in a nightmare. "It's
+pretty strong, I'm afraid," she told him. "The leaves weren't very
+good, and I boiled them too long. I'm afraid you'll find it
+bitter."</p>
+<p>"I'll drink it, if it's bitter as gall," he assured her, "after
+your kindness to fix it."</p>
+<p>His hand reached and seized the handle of the cup. Even
+now&mdash;<i>now</i>&mdash;he was raising it to his lips. In an
+instant more he would be pouring it down his throat, too
+considerate of her to admit its unwholesome taste, drinking it down
+though it tasted the potion of death that it was! The hair seemed
+to start on her head.</p>
+<p>Then she seemed to writhe as in a convulsion. Her voice rose in
+a piercing scream. "Ben&mdash;<i>Ben</i>&mdash;<i>don't drink
+it</i>!" she cried. "God have mercy on my soul!"</p>
+<p>But with that utterance a strength surpassing that of sinew and
+muscle returned to her. She reached and knocked the cup from his
+hand; and its black contents, like dark blood, stained the sandy
+floor of the cavern.</p>
+<p>Ben's first thought was curiously not of his own narrow escape,
+but was rather in concern for Beatrice. Whether or not he had
+actually swallowed any of the liquor in the cup he did not know;
+nor did he give the matter a thought. He was aware of only the
+terror-stricken girl before him, her face deathly white and her
+eyes starting and wide. He leaped to his feet.</p>
+<p>Fearing that she was about to faint he steadied her with his
+hand. The echo of her scream died in the cavern, the cup rolled on
+the floor and came to a standstill against the wall; but still she
+made no sound, only gazing as if entranced. But slowly, as he
+steadied her, the blessed tears stole into her eyes and rolled down
+her white cheeks; and once more breath surged into her lungs.</p>
+<p>"Never mind, Beatrice," the man was saying, his deep, rough
+voice gentle as a woman's. "Don't cry&mdash;please don't
+cry&mdash;just forget all about it. Let's go over to your hammock
+and rest awhile."</p>
+<p>With a strong arm he guided her to her cot, and smiling kindly,
+pushed her down into it. "Just take it easy," he advised. "And
+forget all about it. You'll be all right in a minute."</p>
+<p>"But you don't understand&mdash;you don't know&mdash;what I
+tried to do&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"No matter. Tell me after a while, if you want to. Don't tell me
+at all if you'd rather not. I'm going back to my lunch." He
+laughed, trying to bring her to herself. "I wouldn't miss that
+caribou steak for anything&mdash;even though I can't have my tea.
+Just lay down a while, and rest."</p>
+<p>His rugged face lighted as he smiled, kindly and tolerantly, and
+then he turned to go. But her solemn voice arrested him.</p>
+<p>"Wait, Ben. I want you to know&mdash;now&mdash;so you won't
+trust me again&mdash;or give me another chance. The cup&mdash;was
+poisoned."</p>
+<p>But the friendly light did not yet wane in his eyes. "I didn't
+think it was anything very good&mdash;the way you knocked it out of
+my hand. We'll just pretend it was very bad tea&mdash;and let it go
+at that."</p>
+<p>"No. It was nightshade&mdash;it might have killed you." She
+spoke in a flat, lifeless voice. "I didn't want it to kill
+you&mdash;I just wanted to give you enough to put you to
+sleep&mdash;so I could take your rifle shells and throw them
+away&mdash;but I was willing to let you drink it, even if it
+<i>did</i> kill you."</p>
+<p>The man looked at her, in infinite compassion, then came and sat
+beside her in the hammock. Rather quietly he took one of her hands
+and gazed at it, without seeing it, a long time. Then he pressed it
+to his lips.</p>
+<p>For a breath he held it close to his cheek, his eyes lightless
+and far away, and she gazed at him in amazement.</p>
+<p>"You'd kiss my hand&mdash;after what I did&mdash;?"</p>
+<p>"After what you <i>didn't</i> do," he corrected. "Please,
+Beatrice&mdash;don't blame yourself. Some way&mdash;I understand
+things better&mdash;than I used to. Even if you had killed
+me&mdash;I don't see why it wouldn't have been your right. I've
+held you here by force. Yet you didn't let me drink the stuff. You
+knocked it out of my hand."</p>
+<p>And now, for the first time, an inordinate amazement came into
+his face. He looked at her intently, yet with no unfriendliness, no
+passion. Rather it was with overwhelming wonder.</p>
+<p>"<i>You knocked it out of my hands</i>!" he repeated, more
+loudly. "Oh, Beatrice&mdash;it's my turn to beg forgiveness now!
+When I was at your mercy, and the cup at my lips&mdash;you spared
+me. Why did you do it, Beatrice?"</p>
+<p>He gazed at her with growing ardor. She shook her head. She
+simply did not know the reason.</p>
+<p>"It's not your place to feel penitent," he told her, with
+infinite sincerity. "If you had let me take it, you'd have just
+served me right&mdash;you'd have just paid me back in my own coin.
+It was fair enough&mdash;to use every advantage you had. Good Lord,
+have you forgotten that I am holding you here by force? But
+instead&mdash;you saved me, when you might have killed me&mdash;and
+won the fight. All you've done is to show yourself the finer
+clay&mdash;that's what you've done. God knows I suppose the woman
+is always finer clay than the man&mdash;yet it comes with a jolt,
+just the same. It's not for you to be down-hearted&mdash;Heaven
+knows the strength you've shown is above any I ever had, or ever
+will have. You've shown how to feel mercy&mdash;I could never show
+anything but hate, and revenge. You've shown me a bigger and
+stronger code than mine. And there's nothing&mdash;nothing I can
+say."</p>
+<p>The tone changed once more to the personal and solicitous. "But
+it's been a big strain on you&mdash;I can see that. I believe I'd
+lie here and rest awhile if I were you. I'll eat my
+dinner&mdash;and the fire's about out too. That's the
+girl&mdash;Beatrice."</p>
+<p>Gently he picked her up, seemingly with no physical effort and
+laid her in her hammock. "Then&mdash;you'll forgive me?" she asked
+brokenly.</p>
+<p>"Good Heavens, I wish there was something to forgive&mdash;so
+we'd be a little more even. But you've accomplished something,
+Beatrice&mdash;and I don't know what it is yet&mdash;I only know
+you've changed me&mdash;and softened me&mdash;as I never dreamed
+any one in the world could. Now go to sleep."</p>
+<p>He turned from her, but the food on the table no longer tempted
+him. For a full hour he stood before the ashes of the fire, deeply
+and inextricably bewildered with himself, with life, and with all
+these thoughts and hopes and regrets that thronged him. He was like
+ashes now himself; the fires of his life seemed burned out. The
+thought recalled him to the need of cutting fuel for the night's
+fire.</p>
+<p>He might be able to quiet the growing turmoil in his brain when
+the still shadows of the spruce closed around him. He seized his
+axe, then peered into the cave. Beatrice, worn out by the stress of
+the hour before and immensely comforted by Ben's words, was already
+deeply asleep. His rifle leaned against the wall of the cavern, and
+he put it in the hollow of his arm. It was not that he feared
+Beatrice would attempt to procure it. The act was mostly habit,
+combined with the fact that their supply of meat was all but
+exhausted and he did not wish to miss any opportunity for big
+game.</p>
+<p>The forest was particularly gloomy to-day. Its shadows lay deep.
+And this was not merely the result of his own darkened outlook:
+glancing up, he saw that clouds were gathering in the sky. They
+would need fuel in plenty to keep the fire bright to-night.
+Evidently rain was impending,&mdash;one of those cold, steady
+downpours that are disliked so cordially by the folk of the upper
+Selkirks.</p>
+<p>He went a full two hundred yards before he found a tree to his
+liking. It was a tough spruce of medium height and just at the edge
+of the stream. He laid his rifle down, leaning it against a fallen
+log; then began his work.</p>
+<p>It was an awkward place to stand; but he gave no thought to it.
+His mind dwelt steadily on the events in the cavern of the hour
+before; the girl's remorse in the instant that she had him at her
+mercy and the example it set for him. The blade bit into the wood
+with slow encroachments. Perhaps the expenditure of brute energy in
+swinging the axe would relieve his pent-up feelings.</p>
+<p>He was not watching his work. His blows struck true from habit.
+Now the tree was half-severed: it was time to cut on the opposite
+side. Suddenly his axe crashed into yielding, rotten wood.</p>
+<p>Instantly the powers of the wilderness took their long-awaited
+toll. Ben had been unwary, too absorbed by his swirling thoughts to
+mark the ambush of death that had been prepared for him. Ever to
+keep watch, ever to be on guard: such is the first law of the wild;
+and Ben had disregarded it. Half of the tree had been rotten,
+changing the direction of its fall and crashing it down before its
+time.</p>
+<p>Ben leaped for his life, instinctively aiming for the shelter of
+the log against which he had inclined his rifle; but the blow came
+too soon. He was aware only of the rush of air as he leaped, an
+instant's hovering at the crest of a depthless chasm, then the
+sense of a mighty, resistless blow hurling him into infinity.</p>
+<p>Ben's rifle, catching the full might of the blow, was broken
+like a match. Ben himself was crushed to earth as beneath a meteor,
+the branchy trunk shattering down upon his stalwart form like the
+jaws of a great trap. He uttered one short, half-strangled cry.</p>
+<p>Then the darkness, shot with varied and multiple lights, dropped
+over him. The noise of the falling tree died away; the
+forest-dwellers returned to their varied activities. The rain
+clouds deepened and spread above his motionless form.</p>
+<br>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXIV"></a>
+<h2>XXXIV</h2>
+<p>Beatrice's dreams were troubled after Ben's departure into the
+forest. She tossed and murmured, secretly aware that all was not
+well with her. Yet in the moments that she half-wakened she
+ascribed the vague warning to nervousness only, falling immediately
+to sleep again. Wakefulness came vividly to her only with the
+beginnings of twilight.</p>
+<p>She opened her eyes; the cavern was deep with shadow. She lay
+resting a short time, adjusting her eyes to the soft light. In an
+instant all the dramatic events of the day were recalled to her:
+the tin cup that had held the poison still lay against the wall,
+and the liquor still stained the sandy floor, or was it only a
+patch of deeper shadow?</p>
+<p>She wondered why Ben did not come into the cave. Was he
+embittered against her, after all; had he spoken as he did just
+from kindness, to save her remorse? She listened for the familiar
+sounds of his fuel cutting, or his other work about the camp.
+Wherever he was, he made no sound at all.</p>
+<p>She sat up then, staring out through the cavern maw. For an
+instant she experienced a deep sense of bewilderment at the
+pressing gloom, so mysterious and unbroken over the face of the
+land. But soon she understood what was missing. The fire was
+out.</p>
+<p>The fact went home to her with an inexplicable shock. She had
+become so accustomed to seeing the bright, cheerful blaze at the
+cavern mouth that its absence was like a little tragedy in itself.
+Always it had been the last vista of her closing eyes as she
+dropped off to sleep&mdash;the soft, warm glow of the
+coals&mdash;and the sight always comforted her. She could scarcely
+remember the morning that it wasn't crackling cheerily when she
+wakened. Ben had always been so considerate of her in this
+regard&mdash;removing the chill of the cave with its radiating heat
+to make it comfortable for her to dress. Not even coals were left
+now&mdash;only ashes, gray as death.</p>
+<p>She got up, then walked to the cavern maw. For a moment she
+stood peering into the gloom, one hand resting against the portals
+of stone. The twilight was already deep. It was the supper hour and
+past; dark night was almost at hand. There could be no further
+doubt of Ben's absence. He was not at the little creek getting
+water, nor did she hear the ring of his axe in the forest. She
+wondered if he had gone out on one of his scouting expeditions and
+had not yet returned. Of course this was the true explanation; she
+had no real cause to worry.</p>
+<p>Likely enough he had little desire to return to the cavern now.
+She could picture him following at his tireless pace one of the
+winding woods trails, lost in contemplation, his vivid eyes clouded
+with thought.</p>
+<p>She looked up for the sight of the familiar stars that might
+guide him home. They were all hidden to-night. Not a gleam of light
+softened the stark gloom of the spruce. As she watched the first
+drops of rain fell softly on the grass.</p>
+<p>The drops came in ever-increasing frequency, cold as ice on her
+hand. She heard them rustling in the spruce boughs; and far in the
+forest she discerned the first whine of the wakening wind. The
+sound of the rain was no longer soft. It swelled and grew, and all
+at once the wind caught it and swept it into her face. And now the
+whole forest moaned and soughed under the sweep of the wind.</p>
+<p>There is no sound quite like the beat of a hard rain on dense
+forest. It has no startling discords, but rather a regular cadence
+as if the wood gods were playing melodies in the minor on giant
+instruments,&mdash;melodies remembered from the first, unhappy days
+of the earth and on instruments such as men have never seen. But
+this was never a melody to fill the heart with joy. It touches deep
+chords of sorrow in the most secret realms of the spirit. The rain
+song grew and fell as the gusts of the wind swept it, and the rock
+walls of the cliff swam in clouds of spray.</p>
+<p>The storm could not help but bring Ben to camp, she thought. At
+least she did not fear that he would lose his way: he knew every
+trail and ridge for miles around the cave. Even such pressing,
+baleful darkness as this could not bewilder him. She went back to
+her cot to wait his coming.</p>
+<p>The minutes seemed interminable. Time had never moved so slowly
+before. She tried to lie still, to relax; then to direct her
+thought in other channels; but all of these meandering streams
+flowed back into the main current which was Ben. Yet it was folly
+to worry about him; any moment she would hear his step at the edge
+of the forest. But the night was so dark, and the storm so wild. A
+half-hour dragged its interminable length away.</p>
+<p>Her uneasiness was swiftly developing into panic. Just to-day
+she was willing to risk his life for her freedom: it was certainly
+folly now to goad herself to despair by dwelling on his mysterious
+absence. It might speed the passing minutes if she got up and found
+some work to do about the cave; but she simply had no heart for it.
+Once she sat up, only to lie down again.</p>
+<p>The moments dragged by. Surely he would have had time to reach
+camp by now. The storm neither increased nor decreased; only played
+its mournful melodies in the forest. The song of the rain was
+despairing,&mdash;low mournful notes rising to a sharp crescendo as
+the fiercer gusts swept it into the tree tops. The limbs murmured
+unhappily as they smote together; and a tall tree, swaying in the
+wind, creaked with a maddening regularity. She was never so lonely
+before, so darkly miserable.</p>
+<p>"I want him to come," her voice suddenly spoke aloud. It rang
+strangely in the gloomy cave. "I want him to come back to me."</p>
+<p>She felt no impulse for the words. They seemed to speak
+themselves. Presently she sat erect, her heart leaping with
+inexpressible relief, at the sound of a heavy tread at the edge of
+the glade.</p>
+<p>The steps came nearer, and then paused. She sprang to her feet
+and went to the mouth of the cave. A silence that lived between the
+beating rain and the complaining wind settled down about her. Her
+eyes could not pierce the darkness.</p>
+<p>"Is that you, Ben?" she called.</p>
+<p>She strained into the silence for his reply. The cold drops
+splashed into her face.</p>
+<p>"Ben?" she called again. "Is that you?"</p>
+<p>Then something leaped with an explosive sound, and running feet
+splashed in the wet grass in flight. The little spruce trees at the
+edge of the glade whipped and rustled as a heavy body crashed
+through. The steps had been only those of some forest beast&mdash;a
+caribou, perhaps, or a moose&mdash;come to mock her despair.</p>
+<p>She remembered that Ben had been wishing for just such a
+visitation these past few days; of course in the daylight hours
+when he could see to shoot. Their meat supply was almost gone.</p>
+<p>She did not go to her cot again. She stood peering into the
+gloom. All further effort to repel her fears came to nothing. The
+storm was already of two hours' duration, and Ben would have
+certainly returned to the cave unless disaster had befallen him.
+Was he lost somewhere in the intertwining trails, seeking shelter
+in a heavy thicket until the dawn should show him his way? There
+were so many pitfalls for the unsuspecting in these trackless
+wilds.</p>
+<p>Yet she could be of no aid to him. The dark woods stretched
+interminably; she would not even know which way to start. It would
+just mean to be lost herself, should she attempt to seek him. The
+trails that wound through the glades and over the ridges had no
+end.</p>
+<p>"Ben!" she called again. Then with increasing volume. "Ben!"</p>
+<p>But no echo returned. The darkness swallowed the sound at
+once.</p>
+<p>The night was chill: she longed for the comfort of the fire. The
+actual labor of building it might take her mind from her fears for
+a while at least; and its warm glow might dispel the growing cold
+of fear and loneliness in her breast. Besides, it might be a beacon
+light for Ben. She turned at once to the pile of kindling Ben had
+prepared.</p>
+<p>But before she could build a really satisfactory fire, one that
+would endure the rain, she must cut fuel from some of the logs Ben
+had hewn down and dragged to the cave. She lighted a short piece of
+pitchy wood, intending to locate the heavy camp axe. Then, putting
+on her heavy coat&mdash;the same garment of lustrous fur which Ben
+had sent her back for the day of her abduction&mdash;she ventured
+into the storm.</p>
+<p>The rain splashed in vain at her torch. The pitch burned with a
+fierce flame. But her eyes sought in vain for the axe.</p>
+<p>This was a strange thing: Ben always left it leaning against one
+of the chunks of spruce. Presently she halted, startled, gazing
+into the black depths of the forest.</p>
+<p>Ben had taken it; he had plainly gone forth after fuel. Trees
+stood all about the little glade: he couldn't have gone far. The
+inference was obvious: whatever disaster had befallen him must have
+occurred within a few hundred yards of the cave.</p>
+<p>Holding her torch high she went to the edge of the glade and
+again called into the gloom. There was no repression in her voice
+now. She called as loudly as she could. She started to push on into
+the fringe of timber.</p>
+<p>But at once she paused, holding hard on her self-control. It was
+folly to make a blind search. To penetrate the dark mystery of the
+forest with only this little light&mdash;already flickering
+out&mdash;would probably result in becoming lost herself. Such a
+course would not help Ben's cause. Evidently he was lying within a
+few hundred feet of her, unconscious&mdash;perhaps dead&mdash;or he
+would have replied to her call.</p>
+<p>Dead! The thought sped an icy current throughout the hydraulic
+system of her veins.</p>
+<p>She was a mountain girl, and she made no further false motions.
+She turned at once to the cave, and piling up her kindling, built a
+fire just at the mouth of the cave. It was protected here in some
+degree from the rain, and the wind was right to carry the smoke
+away. This fire would serve to keep her direction and lead her back
+to the cavern.</p>
+<p>Once more she ventured into the storm, and gathering all the cut
+fuel she could find, piled it on her fire. The two spruce chunks
+that Ben had cut for their fireside seats were placed as back logs.
+Then she hunted for pine knots taken from the scrub pines that grew
+in scattering clumps among the spruce, and which were laden with
+pitch.</p>
+<p>One of these knots she put in the iron pan they used for frying,
+then lighted it. Then she pushed into the timber.</p>
+<p>Holding her light high she began to encircle the glade clear to
+the barrier of the cliffs. To the eyes of the wild creatures this
+might have been a never-to-be-forgotten picture: the slight form of
+the girl, her face blanched and her eyes wide and dark in the
+flaring light, her grotesque torch and its weird shadows, and then
+rain sweeping down between. She reached the cliff, then started
+back, making a wider circle.</p>
+<p>Adding fresh fuel to the torch, she peered into every covert and
+examined with minute care any human-shaped shadow in that eerie
+world of shadows; but the long half-circle brought her back to the
+cliff wall without results. She was already wet to the skin, and
+her pine knots were nearly spent. Ever the load of dread was
+heavier at her heart. In the hour or more she had
+searched&mdash;she had no way of estimating time&mdash;she had
+already gone farther than Ben usually went for his fuel.</p>
+<p>As yet no tears came; only the raindrops lay on her face and
+curled her dark hair in ringlets. But she must not give up yet. It
+was hard to hold her shoulders straight; but she must make the long
+circle once more.</p>
+<p>With courage and strength such as she had not dreamed she
+possessed, she launched forward again. But fatigue was breaking her
+now. The tree roots tripped her faltering feet, the branches
+clutched at her as she passed. It was hard to tell what territory
+she had searched, or how far she had gone. But when she was halfway
+around, she suddenly halted, motionless as an image, at the edge of
+the stream.</p>
+<p>The flickering light revealed a tree, freshly cut, its, naked
+stump gleaming and its tall form lying prone. Yet beneath it the
+shadows were of strange, unearthly shape, and something showed
+stark white through the green foliage. Great branches stretched
+over it, like bars over a prison window.</p>
+<p>Just one curious deep sob wracked her whole body. The life-heat,
+the mystery that is being, seemed to steal away from her. Her
+strength wilted; and for an instant she could only stand and gaze
+with fixed, unbelieving eyes. But almost at once the unquenchable
+fires of her spirit blazed up anew. She saw her task, and with a
+faith and steadfastness conformable more to the sun and the earth
+than to human frailty, her muscles made instant and incredible
+response.</p>
+<p>Instantly she was beside the form of her comrade and enemy,
+struggling with the cruel limbs that pinned him to the earth.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXV"></a>
+<h2>XXXV</h2>
+<p>Beatrice knew one thing and one alone: that she must not give
+way to the devastating terror in her heart. There was mighty work
+to do, and she must keep strong. Her only wish was to kneel beside
+him, to lift the bleeding head into her arms and let the storm and
+the darkness smother her existence; but her stern woods training
+came to her aid. She began the stupendous task of freeing him from
+the imprisoning tree limbs.</p>
+<p>The pine knots flickered feebly; and by their light she looked
+about for Ben's axe. Her eyes rested on the broken gun first: then
+she saw the blade, shining in the rain, protruding from beneath a
+broken bough. She drew it out and swung it down.</p>
+<p>Some of the lesser limbs she broke off, with a strength in her
+hands she did not dream she possessed. The larger ones were cut
+away with blows incredibly strong and accurate. How and by what
+might she did not know, but almost at once the man's body was free
+except for the tree trunk that wedged him against a dead log toward
+which he had leaped for shelter.</p>
+<p>She seemed powerless to move it. Her shoulders surged against it
+in vain. A desperate frenzy seized her, but she fought it
+remorselessly down. Her self-discipline must not break yet. Seeing
+that she could not move the tree itself, she thrust with all her
+power against the dead log beside which Ben lay. In a moment she
+had rolled it aside.</p>
+<p>Then for the first time she went to her knees beside the prone
+form. Ben was free of the imprisoning limbs, but was his soul
+already free of the stalwart body broken among the broken boughs?
+She had to know this first; further effort was unavailing until she
+knew this. Her hand stole over his face.</p>
+<p>She found no reassuring warmth. It was wet with the rain, cold
+to the touch. His hair was wet too, and matted from some dreadful
+wound in the scalp. Very softly she felt along the skull for some
+dreadful fracture that might have caused instant death; but the
+descending trunk had missed his head, at least. Very gently she
+shook him by the shoulders.</p>
+<p>Her stern self-control gave way a little now. The strain had
+been too much for human nerves to bear. She gathered him into her
+arms, still without sobbing, but the hot tears dropped on to his
+face.</p>
+<p>"Speak to me, Ben," she said quietly. The wind caught her words
+and whisked them away; and the rain played its unhappy music in the
+tree foliage; but Ben made no answer. "Speak to me," she repeated,
+her tone lifting. "My man, my baby&mdash;tell me you're not
+dead!"</p>
+<p>Dead! Was that it&mdash;struck to the earth like the caribou
+that fell before his rifle? And in that weird, dark instant a light
+far more bright than that the flickering pine knots cast so dim and
+strange over the scene beamed forth from the altar flame of her own
+soul. It was only the light of knowledge, not of hope, but it
+transfigured her none the less.</p>
+<p>All at once she knew why she had hurled the poisoned cup from
+his hand, even though her father's life might be the price of her
+weakness. She understood, now, why these long weeks had been a
+delight rather than a torment; why her fears for him had gone so
+straight to her heart. She pressed his battered head tight against
+her breast.</p>
+<p>"My love, my love," she crooned in his ear, pressing her warm
+cheek close to his. "I do love you, I do, I do," she told him
+confidingly, as if this message would call him back to life. Her
+lips sought his, trying to give them warmth, and her voice was low
+and broken when she spoke again. "Can't you hear me,
+Ben&mdash;won't you try to come back to me? If you're dead I'll die
+too&mdash;"</p>
+<p>But the man did not open his eyes. Would not even this appeal
+arouse him from this deep, strange sleep in which he lay? He had
+always been so watchful of her&mdash;since that first day&mdash;so
+zealous for her safety. She held him closer, her lips trembling
+against his.</p>
+<p>But she must get herself in hand again! Perhaps life had not yet
+completely flickered out; and she could nurse it back. She dropped
+her ear to his breast, listening.</p>
+<p>Yes, she felt the faint stirring of his heart. It was so feeble,
+the throbs were so far apart, yet they meant life,&mdash;life that
+might flush his cheeks again, and might yet bring him back to her,
+into her arms. He was breathing, too; breaths so faint that she
+hardly dared to believe in their reality. And presently she
+realized that his one hope of life lay in getting back to the
+fire.</p>
+<p>For long hours he had been lying in the cold rain; a few more
+minutes would likely extinguish the spark of life that remained in
+his breast. Her hand stole over his powerful frame, in an effort to
+get some idea of the nature of his wounds.</p>
+<p>One of his arms was broken; its position indicated that. Some of
+his ribs were crushed too&mdash;what internal injuries he had that
+might end him before the morning she did not know. But she could
+not take time to build a sledge and cut away the brush. She worked
+her shoulder under his body.</p>
+<p>Wrenching with all her fine, young strength she lifted him upon
+her shoulder; then, kneeling in the vines, she struggled for
+breath. Then thrusting with her arm she got on her feet.</p>
+<p>His weight was over fifty pounds greater than her own; but her
+woods training, the hard work she had always done, had fitted her
+for just such a test as this. She started with her burden toward
+the cave.</p>
+<p>She had long known how to carry an injured man, suspending him
+over her shoulder, head pointed behind her, her arms clasping his
+thigh. With her free arm she seized the tree branches to sustain
+her. She had no light now; she was guided only by the faint glow of
+the fire at the cavern mouth.</p>
+<p>After a hundred feet the load seemed unbearable. Except for the
+fact that she soon got on the well-worn moose trail that followed
+the creek, she could scarcely have progressed a hundred feet
+farther. As it was, she was taxed to the utmost: every ounce of her
+reserve strength would be needed before the end.</p>
+<p>At the end of a hundred yards she stopped to rest, leaning
+against a tree and still holding the beloved weight upon her
+shoulder. If she laid it down she knew she could not lift it again.
+But soon she plunged on, down toward the beacon light.</p>
+<p>Except for her love for him, and that miraculous strength that
+love has always given to women, she could not have gone on that
+last, cruel hundred yards. But slowly, steadily, the circle of
+light grew brighter, larger, nearer; ever less dense were the
+thickets of evergreen between. Now she was almost to the glade; now
+she felt the wet grass at her ankles. She lunged on and laid her
+burden on her bed.</p>
+<p>Then she relaxed at his feet, breathing in sobbing gasps. Except
+for the crackle of the fire and the beat of the rain, there was no
+sound in the cave but this,&mdash;those anguished sobs from her
+wracked lungs.</p>
+<p>But far distant though Ben was and deep as he slept&mdash;just
+outside the dark portals of death itself&mdash;those sounds went
+down to him. He heard them dimly at first, like a far-distant voice
+in a dream, but as the moments passed he began to recognize their
+nature and their source. Sobs of exhaustion and distress&mdash;from
+the girl that was in his charge. He lay a long time, trying to
+understand.</p>
+<p>On her knees beside him Beatrice saw the first flutter of his
+eyelids. In awe, rather than rapture, her arms crept around him,
+and she kissed his rain-wet brow. His eyes opened, looking
+wonderingly into hers.</p>
+<p>She saw the first light of recognition, then a half-smile,
+gentle as a girl's, as he realized his own injuries. Of course Ben
+Darby would smile in such a moment as this; his instincts, true and
+manly, were always to try to cheer her. Presently he spoke in the
+silence.</p>
+<p>"The tree got me, didn't it?" he asked.</p>
+<p>"Don't try to talk," she cautioned. "Yes&mdash;the tree fell on
+you. But you're not going to die. You're going to live,
+live&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He shook his head, the half-smile flickering at his lips. "Let
+me talk, Beatrice," he said, with just a whisper of his old
+determination. "It's important&mdash;and I don't think&mdash;I have
+much time."</p>
+<p>Her eyes widened in horror. "You don't mean&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I'm going back in a minute&mdash;I can't hardly keep awake," he
+said. His voice, though feeble, was preternaturally clear. She
+heard every kind accent, every gentle tone even above the crackle
+of the fire without and the beat of the rain. "I think it's the
+limit," he went on. "I believe the tree got me&mdash;clear
+inside&mdash;but you must listen to everything I say."</p>
+<p>She nodded. In that eerie moment of suspense she knew she must
+hear what he had to tell her.</p>
+<p>"Don't wait to see what happens to me," he went on. "I'll either
+go out or I'll live&mdash;you really can't help me any. Where's the
+rifle?"</p>
+<p>"The rifle was broken&mdash;when the tree fell."</p>
+<p>"I knew it would be. I saw it coming." He rested, waiting for
+further breath. "Beatrice&mdash;please, please don't stay here,
+trying to save me."</p>
+<p>"Do you think I would go?" she cried.</p>
+<p>"You must. The food&mdash;is about gone. Just enough to last one
+person through to the Yuga cabins&mdash;with berries, roots. Take
+the pistol. There's six shots or so&mdash;in the box. Make every
+one tell. Take the dead grouse too. The rifle's broken and we can't
+get meat. It's just&mdash;death&mdash;if you wait. You can just
+make it through now."</p>
+<p>"And leave you here to die, as long as there's a chance to save
+you?" the girl answered. "You couldn't get up to get water&mdash;or
+build a fire&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He listened patiently, but shook his head at the end. "No,
+Bee&mdash;please don't make me talk any more. It's just death for
+both of us if you stay. The food is gone&mdash;the rifle broken.
+Your father's gang'll be here sooner or later&mdash;and they'd
+smash me, anyway. I could hardly fight 'em off with those few
+pistol shells&mdash;but by God I'd like to try&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He struggled for breath, and she thought he had slipped back
+into unconsciousness. But in a moment the faltering current of his
+speech began again.</p>
+<p>"Take the pistol&mdash;and go," he told her. "You showed me
+to-day how to give up&mdash;and I don't want to kill&mdash;your
+father&mdash;any more. I renounce it all! Ezram&mdash;forgive
+me&mdash;old Ez that lay dead in the leaves." He smiled at the girl
+again. "So don't mind leaving me. Life work's all spent&mdash;given
+over. Please, Beatrice&mdash;you'd just kill yourself without
+aiding me. Wait till the sun comes up&mdash;then follow up the
+river&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Unconsciousness welled high above him, and the lids dropped over
+his eyes. The gloom still pressed about the cavern, yet a sun no
+less effulgent than that of which he had spoken had risen for Ben.
+It was his moment of renunciation, glorious past any moment of his
+life. He had renounced his last, little fighting chance that the
+girl might live. And Ezram, watching high and afar, and with
+infinite serenity knowing at last the true balance of all things
+one with another, gave him his full forgiveness.</p>
+<p>The girl began to strip the wet clothes from his injured
+body.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXVI"></a>
+<h2>XXXVI</h2>
+<p>The trail was long and steep into Back There for Jeffery Neilson
+and his men. Day after day they traveled with their train of pack
+horses, pushing deeper into the wilds, fording mighty rivers,
+traversing silent and majestic mountain ranges, climbing slopes so
+steep that the packs had to be lightened to half before the gasping
+animals could reach the crest. They could go only at a snail's
+pace,&mdash;even in the best day's travel only ten miles, and often
+a single mile was a hard, exhausting day's work.</p>
+<p>Of course there was no kind of a trail for them to follow. As
+far as possible they followed the winding pathways of big
+game&mdash;as long as these led them in their general
+direction&mdash;but often they were obliged to cut their way
+through the underbrush. Time after time they encountered impassable
+cliffs or rivers from which they were obliged to turn back and seek
+new routes; they found marshes that they could not penetrate;
+ranges they could not climb; wastes of slide rock where they could
+make headway only at a creeping pace and with hourly risk of their
+lives.</p>
+<p>They had counted on slow travel, but the weeks grew into the
+months before they even neared the obscure heart of Back There
+where they thought Ben and Beatrice might be hidden. The way was
+hard as they had never dreamed. Every day, it seemed to them,
+brought its fresh tragedy: a long back-trailing to avoid some
+impassable place, a fatiguing digression, perhaps several hours of
+grinding work with the axe in order to cut a trail. Sometimes the
+harness broke, requiring long stops on the trail to repair it, the
+packs slipped continually from the hard going; and they found it
+increasingly difficult to secure horse feed for the animals.</p>
+<p>Even Indian ponies cannot keep fat on such grass as grows in the
+deep shade of the spruce. They need the rich growths of the open
+park lands to stiffen them for the grinding toil; and even with
+good feeding, foresters know that pack animals must not be kept on
+the trail for too many days in succession. Jeffery Neilson and his
+men disregarded both these facts, with the result that the animals
+lost flesh and strength, cutting down the speed of their advance.
+Oaths and shouts were unavailing now: only cruel blows could drive
+them forward at all.</p>
+<p>They seemed to sense a great hopelessness in their undertaking.
+Usually well-trained pack horses will follow their leader without
+question, walk almost in his tracks, and the rider in front only
+has to show the way. After the first few days of grinding toil, the
+morale of the entire outfit began to break. The horses broke away
+into thickets on each side; and time after time, one hour upon
+another, the horsemen had to round them up again. When they came to
+the great rivers&mdash;wild tributaries of the Yuga&mdash;they had
+to follow up the streams for days in search of a place to ford.
+Then they were obliged to carry the packs across in small loads,
+making trip after trip with the utmost patience and toil. The
+horses, broken in spirit, took the wild waters just as they climbed
+the steep slopes, with little care whether they lived or died.</p>
+<p>The days passed, June and July. Ever they moved at a slower
+pace. One of the horses, giving up on a steep pitch and frenzied by
+Ray's cruel, lashing blows, fell off the edge of the trail and shot
+down like a plummet two hundred feet into the canyon
+below&mdash;and thereupon it became necessary not only to spend the
+rest of the day in retrieving and repairing the supplies that had
+fallen with him, but also to heap bigger loads on the backs of the
+remaining horses. And always they were faced by the cruel
+possibility that this whole, mighty labor was in vain,&mdash;that
+Ben and Beatrice might have gone to their deaths in the rapids,
+weeks before.</p>
+<p>The food stores brought for the journey were rapidly depleted.
+The result was that they had to depend more and more upon a diet of
+meat. Men can hold up fairly well on meat alone, particularly if it
+has a fair amount of fat, but the effort of hunting and drying the
+flesh into jerky served to cut down their speed.</p>
+<p>The constant delays, the grinding, blasting toil of the day's
+march, and particularly the ever-recurring crises of ford and
+steep, made serious inroads on the morale of the three men. Just
+the work of urging on the exhausted horses drained their nervous
+energy in a frightful stream: the uncertainty of their quest, the
+danger, the scarcity of any food but meat, and most of all the
+burning hatred in their hearts for the man who had forced the
+expedition upon them combined to torment them; even now, Ben Darby
+had received no little measure of vengeance.</p>
+<p>No experience of their individual lives had ever presented such
+a daily ordeal of physical distress; none had ever been so
+devastating to hope and spirit. There was not one moment of
+pleasure, one instant of relief from the day's beginning to its
+end. At night they went to sleep on hastily made beds, cursing at
+all things in heaven and earth; they blasphemed with growing
+savagery all that men hold holy and true; and degeneracy grew upon
+them very swiftly. They quarreled over their tasks, and they hated
+each other with a hatred only second to that they bore Darby
+himself. All three had always been reckless, wicked, brutal men;
+but now, particularly in the case of Ray and Chan, the ordeal
+brought out and augmented the latent abnormalities that made them
+criminals in the beginning, developing those odd quirks in human
+minds that make toward perversion and the most fiendish crime.</p>
+<p>Jeffery Neilson had almost forgotten the issue of the claim by
+now. He had told the truth, those weary weeks before, when he had
+wished he had never seen it. His only thought was of his daughter,
+the captive of a relentless, merciless man in these far wilds.
+Never the moon rose or the sun declined but that he was sick with
+haunting fear for her. Had she gone down to her death in the
+rapids? This was Neilson's fondest wish: the enfolding oblivion of
+wild waters would be infinitely better than the fate Ben had hinted
+at in his letter. Yet he dared not turn back. She might yet live,
+held prisoner in some far-off cave.</p>
+<p>At first all three agreed on this point: that they must not turn
+back until either Ben was crushed under their heels or they had
+made sure of his death. Ray had not forgotten that Ben alone stood
+between him and the wealth and power he had always craved. He
+dreamed, at first, that the deadly hardships of the journey could
+be atoned for by years of luxury and ease. His mind was also
+haunted with dark conjectures as to the fate of Beatrice, but
+jealousy, rather than concern for her, was the moving impulse.</p>
+<p>Neilson knew his young partner now. He saw clearly at last that
+Ray was not and had never been a faithful confederate, but indeed a
+malicious and bitter enemy, only waiting his chance to overthrow
+his leader. They were still partners in their effort to rescue the
+girl and slay her abductor; otherwise they were at swords' points.
+And there would be something more than plain, swift slaying, now.
+If Neilson could read aright, the actual, physical change that had
+been wrought in Ray's face foretold no ordinary end for Ben. His
+features were curiously drawn; and his eyes had a fixed, magnetic,
+evil light. Occasionally in his darker hours Neilson foresaw even
+more sinister possibilities in this change in Ray: the abnormal
+intensity manifest in every look and word, the weird, evil
+preoccupation that seemed ever upon him. There was not only the
+fate of Ben to consider, but that of Beatrice too, out in these
+desolate forests. But surely Ray's degenerate impulses could be
+mastered. Neilson need not fear this, at least.</p>
+<p>Chan Heminway, also, had developed marvelously in the journey.
+He also was more assertive, less the underling he had been. He had
+developed a brutality that, though it contained nothing of the
+exquisite fineness of cruelty of which Ray's diseased thought might
+conceive, was nevertheless the full expression of his depraved
+nature. He no longer cowered in fear of Neilson. Rather he looked
+to Ray as his leader, took him as his example, tried to imitate
+him, and at last really began to share in his mood. In cruelty to
+the horses he was particularly adept; but he was also given to
+strange, savage bursts of insane fury.</p>
+<p>"We must be close on them now," Neilson said one morning when
+they had left the main gorge of the Yuga far behind them. "If
+they're not dead we're bound to find trace of 'em in a few
+days."</p>
+<p>The hope seemed well-founded. It is impossible for even most of
+the wild creatures&mdash;furtive as twilight shadows&mdash;to
+journey through wood spaces without leaving trace of their goings
+and comings: much less clumsy human beings. Ultimately the
+searchers would find their tracks in the soft earth, the ashes of a
+camp fire, or a charred cooking rack.</p>
+<p>"And when we get 'em, we can wait and live on meat until the
+river goes up in fall&mdash;then float on down to the Indian
+villages in their canoe," Chan answered. "It will carry four of us,
+all right."</p>
+<p>Ray, Chan, Neilson and Neilson's daughter&mdash;these made four.
+What remained of Ben when Ray was through could be left, silent
+upon some hushed hillside, to the mercy of the wild creatures and
+the elements.</p>
+<p>Surely they were in the enemy-country now; and now a fresh fear
+began to oppress them. They might expect an attack from their
+implacable foe at any moment. It did not make for ease of mind to
+know that any brush clump might be their enemy's ambush; that any
+instant a concealed rifle might speak death to them in the silence.
+Ben would have every advantage of fortress and ambush. They had not
+thought greatly of this matter at first; but now the fear increased
+with the passing days. Even Neilson was not wholly exempt from it.
+It seemed a hideous, deadly thing, incompatible with life and hope,
+that they should be plunging deeper, farther into helplessness and
+peril.</p>
+<p>If mental distress and physical discomfort can constitute
+vengeance Ben was already avenged. Now that they were in the
+hill-lands, out from the gorge and into a region of yellow beaver
+meadows lying between gently sloping hills, their apprehension
+turned to veritable terror. A blind man could see how small was
+their fighting chance against a hidden foe who had prepared for
+their coming. The skin twitched and crept when a twig cracked about
+their camp at night, and a cold like death crept over the frame
+when the thickets crashed under a leaping moose.</p>
+<p>Ray found himself regretting, for the first time, that murderous
+crime of his of months before. Even riches might not pay for these
+days of dread and nights of terror: the recovery of the girl from
+Ben's arms could not begin to recompense. Indeed, the girl's memory
+was increasingly hard to call up. The mind was kept busy
+elsewhere.</p>
+<p>"We're walking right into a death trap," he told Neilson one
+morning. "If he is here, what chance have we got; he'd have weeks
+to explore the country and lay an ambush for us. Besides, I believe
+he's dead. I don't believe a human being could have got down this
+far, alive."</p>
+<p>Chan too had found himself inclining toward this latter belief;
+without Ray's energy and ambition he had less to keep him fronted
+to the chase. Neilson, however, was not yet ready to turn back. He
+too feared Ben's attack, but already in the twilight of advancing
+years, he did not regard physical danger in the same light as these
+two younger men. Besides, he was made of different stuff. The
+safety of his daughter was the one remaining impulse in his
+life.</p>
+<p>And more and more, in the chill August nights, the talk about
+the camp fire took this trend: the folly of pushing on. It was
+better to turn back and wait his chances to strike again, Ray
+argued, than to walk bald-faced into death. Sometime Ben must
+return to the claim: a chance might come to lay him low. Besides,
+ever it seemed more probable that the river had claimed him.</p>
+<p>One rainy, disagreeable morning, as they camped beside the river
+near the mouth of a small creek, affairs reached their crisis. They
+had caught and saddled the horses; Ray was pulling tight the last
+hitch. Chan stood beside him, speaking in an undertone. When he had
+finished Ray cursed explosively in the silence.</p>
+<p>Neilson turned. He seemed to sense impending developments. "What
+now?" he asked.</p>
+<p>"I'm not going on, that's what it is," Ray replied. "Neilson,
+it's two against one&mdash;if you want to go on you can&mdash;but
+Ray and I are going back. That devil's dead. Beatrice is,
+too&mdash;sure as hell. If they ain't dead, he'll get us. I was a
+fool ever to start out. And that's final."</p>
+<p>"You're going back, eh&mdash;scared out!" Neilson commented
+coldly.</p>
+<p>"I'm going back&mdash;and don't say too much about being scared
+out, either."</p>
+<p>"And you too, Chan? You're against me, too?"</p>
+<p>Chan cursed. "I'd gone a week ago if it'd been me. "We knew the
+way home, at least."</p>
+<p>The old man looked a long time into the river depths. Only too
+well he realized that their decision was final. But there was no
+answer, in the swirling depths, to the question that wracked his
+heart: whether or not in these spruce-clad hills his daughter still
+lived. It could only murmur and roar, without shaping words that
+human ears could grasp, never relieving the dreadful uncertainty
+that would be his life's curse from henceforth. He sighed, and the
+lines across his brow were dark and deep.</p>
+<p>"Then turn the horses around, you cowards," he answered. "I
+can't go on alone."</p>
+<p>For once neither Ray nor Chan had outward resentment for the
+epithet. Secretly they realized that old Neilson was to the wall at
+last, and like a grizzly at bay, it was safer not to molest him.
+Chan went down to the edge of the creek to water his saddle
+horse.</p>
+<p>But presently they heard him curse, in inordinate and startled
+amazement, as he gazed at some imprint in the mud of the shore.
+They saw the color sweep from his face. In an instant his two
+companions were beside him.</p>
+<p>Clear and unmistakable in the mud they saw the stale imprint of
+Ben's canoe as they had landed, and the tracks of both the man and
+the girl as they had turned into the forest.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXVII"></a>
+<h2>XXXVII</h2>
+<p>The dawn that crept so gray and mysterious over the frosty green
+of spruce brought no hope to Beatrice, sitting beside the
+unconscious form of Ben in the cave fronting the glade. Rather it
+only brought the tragic truth home more clearly. Her love for him
+had manifested itself too late to give happiness to either of them:
+even now his life seemed to be stealing from her, into the valley
+of the shadow.</p>
+<p>She had watched beside him the whole night; and now she beheld a
+sinister change in his condition. He was still unconscious, but he
+no longer drew his breath at long intervals, softly and quietly. He
+was breathing in short, troubled gasps, and an ominous red glow was
+in his cheeks. She touched his brow, only to find it burning with
+fever.</p>
+<p>The fact was not hard to understand. The downpour of cold rain
+in which he had lain, wounded, for so many hours had drawn the life
+heat out of him, and some organic malady had combined with his
+bodily injuries to strike out his life. Her predicament was one of
+absolute helplessness. She was hundreds of miles&mdash;weary weeks
+of march&mdash;from medical attention, and she could neither leave
+him nor carry him. The wilderness forces, resenting the intrusion
+into their secret depths, had seemingly taken full vengeance at
+last. They had seemingly closed all gates to life and safety. They
+had set the trap with care; and the cruel jaws had sprung.</p>
+<p>She sat dry-eyed, incoherent prayers at her trembling lips.
+Mostly she did not touch the man, only sat at his bedside in the
+crude chair Ben had fashioned for her while the minutes rolled into
+hours and the hours sped the night away,&mdash;in tireless vigil,
+watching with lightless eyes. Once she bent and touched her lips to
+his.</p>
+<p>They were not cold now. They were warm with fever. But in the
+strange twilight-world of unconsciousness he could neither know of
+nor respond to her kiss. She patted down his covering and sometimes
+held his hard hands warm between hers, as if she could thus keep
+death from seizing them and leading him away. But her courage did
+not break again.</p>
+<p>The wan light showed her his drawn face; and just for an instant
+her arms pressed about it. "I won't give up, Ben," she promised.
+"I'll keep on fighting&mdash;to the last minute. And maybe I can
+pull you through."</p>
+<p>Beatrice meant exactly what she said: to the last minute. That
+did not mean to the gray hour when, by all dictate of common sense,
+further fight is useless. She meant that she would battle
+tirelessly as long as one pale spark glowed in his spirit, as long
+as his breath could cloud a glass. The best thing for her now,
+however, was rest. She was exhausted by the strain of the night;
+and she must save herself for the crisis that was sure to come. Ben
+was sleeping easily now; the instant when his life hung in the
+balance still impended.</p>
+<p>She built up the fire, put on water to heat, covered the man
+with added blankets, then lay down on Ben's cot. Soon she drifted
+into uneasy slumber, waking at intervals to serve her patient.</p>
+<p>The hours dragged by, the night sloped down to the forest; and
+the dawn followed the night. Ben's life still flickered, like a
+flame in the wind, in the twilight land between life and death.</p>
+<p>Yet little could she do for him these first few days, except, in
+her simple faith, to pray. Never an hour passed but that prayers
+were at her lips, childlike, direct, entreating prayers from her
+woman's heart. Of all her offices these were first: she had no
+doubt but that they counted most. She sat by his bedside, kept him
+covered with the warmest robes, hewed wood for the fire; but as yet
+he had never fully emerged from his unconsciousness. Would he slip
+away in the night without ever wakening?</p>
+<p>But in the morning of the fourth day he opened his eyes vividly,
+muttered, and fell immediately to sleep. He woke again at evening;
+and his moving lips conveyed a message. In response she brought him
+steaming grouse broth, administering it a spoonful at a time until
+he fell to sleep again.</p>
+<p>In the days that followed he was conscious to the degree that he
+could drink broth, yet never recognizing Beatrice nor seeming to
+know where he was. His fever still lingered, raging; yet in these
+days she began to notice a slow improvement in his condition. The
+healing agents of his body were hard at work; and doubt was removed
+that he had received mortal internal injuries. She had set his
+broken arm the best she could, holding the bones in place with
+splints; but in all likelihood it would have to be broken and set
+again when he reached the settlements. She began to notice the
+first cessation of his fever; although weeks of sickness yet
+remained, she believed that the crisis was past. Yet in spite of
+these hopeful signs, she was face to face with the most tragic
+situation of all. Their food was almost gone.</p>
+<p>It would be long weeks before Ben could hope for sufficient
+strength to start the journey down to the settlements, even if the
+way were open. As it was their only chance lay in the fall rains
+that would flood the Yuga and enable them to journey down to the
+native villages in their canoe. These rains would not fall till
+October. For all that she had hoarded their supplies to the last
+morsel, eating barely enough herself to sustain life in her body,
+the dread spectre of starvation waited just without the cave. She
+had realized perfectly that Ben could not hope to throw off the
+malady without nutritious food and she had not stinted with him;
+and now, just when she had begun to hope for his recovery, she
+shook the last precious cup of flour from the sack.</p>
+<p>The rice and sugar were gone, long since. The honey she had
+hoarded to give Ben&mdash;knowing its warming, nutritive
+value&mdash;not tasting a drop herself. Of all their stores only a
+few pieces of jerked caribou remained; she had used the rest to
+make rich broth for Ben, and there was no way under heaven whereby
+they might procure more.</p>
+<p>The rifle was broken. The last of the pistol shots was fired the
+day she had prepared the poisoned cup for Ben.</p>
+<p>Yet she still waged the fight, struggling with high courage and
+tireless resolution against the frightful odds that opposed her.
+Her faith was as of that nameless daughter of the Gileadite; and
+she could not yield. Not ambition, not hatred&mdash;not even such
+fire of fury as had been wakened in Wolf Darby's heart that first
+frenzied night on the hillside&mdash;could have been the impulse
+for such fortitude and sacrifice as hers. It was not one of these
+base passions&mdash;known in the full category to her rescuers who
+were even now bearing down upon her valley&mdash;that kept the
+steel in her thews and the steadfastness in her heart. She loved
+this man; her love for him was as wholesome and as steadfast as her
+own self; and the law of that love was to give him all she had.</p>
+<p>There were few witnesses to this infinite giving of hers. Ben
+himself still lingered in a strange stupor, remembering nothing,
+knowing neither the girl nor himself. Perhaps the wild things saw
+her desperate efforts to find food in the wilderness,&mdash;the
+long hours of weary searching for a handful of berries that gave
+such little nourishment to his weakened body, or for a few acorns
+stored for winter by bird or rodent. Sometimes a great-antlered
+moose&mdash;an easy trophy if the rifle had been unbroken&mdash;saw
+her searching for wocus like a lost thing in the tenacious mud of
+the marshes; and almost nightly a silent wolf, pausing in his
+hunting, gazed uneasily through the cavern maw. But mostly her long
+hours of service in the cave, the chill nights that she sat beside
+Ben's cot, the dreary mornings when she cooked her own scanty
+breakfast and took her uneasy rest, the endless labor of
+fire-mending so that the cave could be kept at an even heat went
+unobserved by mortal eyes. The healing forces of his body called
+for warmth and nourishment; but for all the might of her efforts
+she waged a losing fight.</p>
+<p>What little wocus she was able to find she made into bread for
+Ben; yet it was never enough to satisfy his body's craving. The
+only meat she had herself was the vapid flesh that had been
+previously boiled for Ben's broth; and now only a few pieces of the
+jerked meat remained. She herself tried to live on such plants as
+the wilderness yielded, and she soon began to notice the tragic
+loss of her own strength. Her eyes were hollow, preternaturally
+large; she experienced a strange, floating sensation, as if spirit
+and flesh were disassociated.</p>
+<p>Still Ben lingered in his mysterious stupor, unaware of what
+went on about him; but his fever was almost gone by now, and the
+first beginnings of strength returned to his thews. His mind had
+begun to grope vaguely for the key that would open the doors of his
+memory and remind him again of some great, half-forgotten task that
+still confronted him, some duty unperformed. Yet he could not quite
+seize it. The girl who worked about his cot was without his bourne
+of knowledge; her voice reached him as if from an infinite
+distance, and her words penetrated only to the outer edges of his
+consciousness. It was not strictly, however, a return of his
+amnesia. It was simply an outgrowth of delirium caused by his
+sickness and injuries, to be wholly dispelled as soon as he was
+wholly well.</p>
+<p>But now the real hour of crisis was at hand,&mdash;not from his
+illness, but from the depletion of their food supplies. Beatrice
+had spent a hard afternoon in the forest in search of roots and
+berries, and as she crept homeward, exhausted and almost
+empty-handed, the full, tragic truth was suddenly laid bare. Her
+own strength had waned. Without the miracle of a fresh food supply
+she could hardly keep on her feet another day. Plainly and simply,
+the wolf was at the door. His cruel fangs menaced not only her, but
+this stalwart man for whose life she had fought so hard.</p>
+<p>The fear of the obliterating darkness known to all the woods
+people pressed close upon her and appalled her. She loved life
+simply and primitively; and it was an unspeakable thing to lose at
+the end of such a battle. Out so far, surrounded by such endless,
+desolate wastes of gloomy forest, the Shadow was cold,
+inhospitable; and she was afraid to face it alone. If Ben would
+only waken and sustain her drooping spirit with his own! She was
+lonely and afraid, in the shadow of the inert spruce, under the
+gray sky.</p>
+<p>She could hardly summon strength for the evening's work of
+cutting fuel. The blade would not drive with its old force into the
+wood. The blaze itself burned dully; and she could not make it leap
+and crackle with its old cheer. And further misfortune was in store
+for her when she crept into the cave to prepare Ben's supper.</p>
+<p>A pack rat&mdash;one of those detested rodents known so well to
+all northern peoples&mdash;had carried off in her absence two of
+the three remaining sticks of jerked caribou. For a moment she
+gazed in unbelieving and speechless horror, then made a frenzied
+search in the darkened corners of the cabin.</p>
+<p>This was no little tragedy: the two sticks of condensed and
+concentrated protein might have kept Ben alive for a few days more.
+It was disaster, merciless and sweeping. And the brave heart of the
+girl seemed to break under the blow.</p>
+<p>The hot, bitter tears leaped forth; but she suppressed the
+bitter, hopeless sobs that clutched at her throat. She must not let
+Ben know of this catastrophe. Likely in his stupor he would not
+understand; yet she must not take the chance. She must nourish the
+spark of hope in his breast to the last hour. She walked to the
+mouth of the cave; and Famine itself stood close, waiting in the
+shadows. She gazed out into the gathering gloom.</p>
+<p>The tears blinded her eyes at first. Slowly the dark profile of
+the spruce against the gray sky penetrated to her consciousness:
+the somber beauty of the wilderness sky line that haunts the
+woodsman's dreams. With it came full realization of the might and
+the malevolency of these shadowed wilds she had battled so long.
+They had got her down at last; they had crushed her and beaten her,
+and had held up to scorn her sacrifice and her mortal strength. She
+knew the wild wood now: its savage power, its remorselessness, and
+yet, woods girl that she was, she could not forget its dark and
+moving beauty.</p>
+<p>The forest was silent to-night. Not a twig cracked or a branch
+rustled. It was hushed, breathless, darkly sinister. All at once
+her eyes peered and strained into the dusk.</p>
+<p>Far across the valley, beyond the beaver marsh and on the
+farther shore of the lake she saw a little glimmer of light through
+the rift in the trees. She dared not believe in its reality at
+first. Perhaps it was a trick of her imagination only, a
+hallucination born of her starvation, child of her heartfelt
+prayer. She looked away, then peered again. But, yes&mdash;a tiny
+gleam of yellow light twinkled through the gloom! It was real,
+<i>it was true</i>! A gleam of hope in the darkness of despair.</p>
+<p>Her rescuers had come. There could be no other explanation. She
+hastened into the cave, drew the blankets higher about Ben's
+shoulders, then crept out into the dusk. Half running, she hastened
+toward their distant camp fire.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXVIII"></a>
+<h2>XXXVIII</h2>
+<p>Beatrice's first impulse was to run at a breakneck pace down the
+ridge and about the lake into her father's camp, beseeching instant
+aid to the starving man in the cave. She wished that she had a
+firearm with which to signal to them and bring them at once to the
+cavern. And it was not until she had descended the ridge and stood
+at the edge of the beaver meadow that her delirious joy began to
+give way to serious, thought.</p>
+<p>She was brought to a halt first by the sight of the horses that
+had wandered about the long loop of the lake and were feeding in
+the rich grass of the meadow. The full moon rising in the east had
+cast a nebulous glow over the whole countryside by now; and she
+could make a hasty estimation of their numbers. It was evident at
+once that her father had not made the expedition alone. The large
+outfit implied a party of at least three,&mdash;indicating that Ray
+Brent and Chan Heminway had accompanied him.</p>
+<p>She had only fear and disdain for these two younger men; but
+surely they would not refuse aid to Ben. Yet perhaps it was best to
+proceed with some caution. These were her lover's enemies; if for
+no other reason than their rage at her own abduction they might be
+difficult to control. Her father, in all probability, would
+willingly show mercy to the helpless man in the
+cavern&mdash;particularly after she told him of Ben's consideration
+and kindness&mdash;but she put no faith in Ray and Chan. She knew
+them of old. Besides, she remembered there was a further
+consideration,&mdash;that of a gold claim.</p>
+<p>Could Ben have told her the truth when he had maintained that
+they would kill him on sight if he did not destroy them first? Was
+it true that he had waged the war in defense of his own rights?
+Weeks and months had passed since she had seen her father's face:
+perhaps her old control of him could no longer be relied upon. If
+indeed their ownership of a rich claim depended upon Ben's death,
+Ray and Chan could not be trusted at all.</p>
+<p>She resolved to proceed with the utmost caution. Abruptly she
+turned out of the beaver marsh, where the moonlight might reveal
+her, and followed close to the edge of the timber, a course that
+could not be visible from beyond the lake. She approached the lake
+at its far neck, then followed back along the margin clear to the
+edge of the woods in which the fire was built.</p>
+<p>In her years in the woods Beatrice had learned to stalk, and the
+knowledge was of value to her now. With never a misstep she took
+down a little game trail toward the camp fire. She was within fifty
+yards of it now&mdash;she could make out three dark figures seated
+in the circle of firelight. Walking softly but upright she pushed
+within ninety feet of the fire.</p>
+<p>Then she waited, in doubt as to her course. She was still too
+far distant to hear more than the murmur of their voices. If she
+could just get near enough to catch their words she could probably
+glean some idea of their attitude toward Ben. She pushed on nearer,
+through the dew-wet brush.</p>
+<p>Impelled by the excitement under which she advanced, her old
+agility of motion had for the moment returned to her; and she crept
+softly as a fawn between the young trees. One misstep, one rustling
+branch or crackling twig might give her away; but she took each
+step with consummate care, gently thrusting the tree branches from
+her path.</p>
+<p>Once a rodent stirred beneath her feet, and she froze&mdash;like
+a hunting wolf&mdash;in her tracks. One of the three men looked up,
+and she saw his face plainly through the low spruce boughs. And for
+a moment she thought that this was a stranger. It was with a
+distinct foreboding of disaster that she saw, on second glance,
+that the man was Ray Brent.</p>
+<p>She had never seen such change in human countenance in the space
+of a few months. She did not pause to analyze it. She only knew
+that his eyes were glittering and fixed; and that she herself was
+deeply, unexplainably appalled. The man cursed once, blasphemously,
+his face dusky and evil in the eerie firelight, but immediately
+turned back to his talk. Beatrice crept closer.</p>
+<p>Now she was near enough to catch an occasional word, but not
+discern their thoughts. It was evident, however, that their
+conversation was of Ben and herself,&mdash;the same topic they had
+discussed nights without end. She caught her own name; once Chan
+used an obscene epithet as he spoke of their enemy.</p>
+<p>Her instincts were true and infallible to-night; and she was
+ever more convinced of their deadly intentions toward Ben. It was
+not wise to announce herself yet. Perhaps she would have to rely
+upon a course other than a direct appeal for aid. Now her keen eyes
+could see the whole camp: the three seated figures of the men,
+their rifles leaning near them, their supplies spread out about the
+fire.</p>
+<p>At one side, quite to the edge of the firelight, she saw a
+kyack&mdash;one of those square boxes that are hung on a pack
+saddle&mdash;which seemed to be heaped with jerked caribou or moose
+flesh. For the time of a breath she could not take her eyes from
+it. It was food&mdash;food in plenty to sustain Ben through his
+illness and the remaining weeks of their exile&mdash;and her eyes
+moistened and her hands trembled at the sight. She had been taught
+the meaning of famine, these last, bitter days. In reality she was
+now in the first stage of starvation, experiencing the first, vague
+hallucinations, the sense of incorporeality, the ever-declining
+strength, the constant yearning that is nothing but the vitals'
+submerged demand for food. The contents of the kyack meant
+<i>life</i> to herself and to Ben,&mdash;deliverance and safety
+when all seemed lost.</p>
+<p>A daughter of the cities far to the south&mdash;even a child of
+poverty&mdash;rarely could have understood the unutterable craving
+that overswept her at the sight of this simple food. It was
+unadorned, unaccompanied by the delicacies that most human beings
+have come to look upon as essentials and to expect with every meal:
+it was only animal flesh dried in the smoke and the sun. It not
+only attracted her physically; but in that moment it possessed real
+objective beauty for her; as it would have possessed for the most
+cultivated esthete that might be standing in her place. This girl
+was down to the most stern realities, and life and death hung in
+the balance.</p>
+<p>She went on her hands and knees, creeping nearer. Still she did
+not make the slightest false motion, creeping with an uncanny
+silence in the under shrubbery. And now the words came plain.</p>
+<p>"But we must be near," Chan was saying. "They can't be more than
+a mile or so from here. We'll find 'em in the morning&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"If he doesn't find us first and shoot up our camp," Ray
+replied. "I wish we'd built our fire further into the woods. Here
+we've looked all day without even finding a track except those
+tracks in the mud."</p>
+<p>"They might be beyond the marsh," Neilson suggested.</p>
+<p>"But Chan went over that way and didn't find a trace," Ray
+objected. "But just the same&mdash;we'll make a real search
+to-morrow. I believe we'll find the devil. And then&mdash;we can
+leave this hellish country and go back in peace&mdash;if we don't
+want to wait for the flood."</p>
+<p>Beatrice's eyes were on his face, wondering what growth of
+wickedness, what degeneracy had so filled his cruel eyes with light
+and stamped his face with evil. This was the man to whom she must
+look for mercy. Ben's life, if she led the three men to the cave,
+would be in his hands. She sensed from his authoritative tone that
+her father's control over him was largely broken. She hovered,
+terrified and motionless, in her covert.</p>
+<p>Ray reached for his rifle, glancing at the sights and drawing
+the lever back far enough to see the brass of its shells. Chan's
+lean face was drawn with a cruel glee.</p>
+<p>"You can't keep your hands off that gun, Ray," he said. "You
+sure are gettin' anxious."</p>
+<p>"I won't use it on him," Ray replied, slowly and carefully.
+"It's too good for him&mdash;except maybe the stock. He didn't lead
+me clear out here just to see him puff out and blow up in a minute
+with a rifle ball through his head. Just the same I want the gun
+near me, all the time."</p>
+<p>The two men looked at him, sardonic-eyed; and both of them
+seemed to understand fully what he meant. They seemed to catch more
+from the slow tones, so full of lust and frenzy that they seemed to
+drop from his lips in an ugly monotone, than they did from the
+words themselves. They took a certain grim amusement in these
+quirks of abnormal depravity that had begun to manifest themselves
+in Ray. The man's fingers were wide spread as he spoke, and his lip
+twitched twice, sharply, when he had finished.</p>
+<p>The words came clear and distinct to the listening girl. She
+tried to take them literally&mdash;that Ray would not shoot Ben!
+<i>"It's too good for him&mdash;except maybe the stock!"</i> Did he
+mean <i>that</i> too! Was there any possible meaning in the world
+other than that he was planning some unearthly, more terrible fate
+for the man she loved! She would not yet yield to the dreadful
+truth, yet even now terror was clutching at her throat, strangling
+her; and the cold drops were beading her brow. Still the dark drama
+of the fireside continued before her eyes.</p>
+<p>Chan suddenly turned to Neilson, evidently imbued with Ray's
+fervor. "What do you think of that, old man?" he asked menacingly.
+Thus Chan, too, had escaped from Neilson's dominance: plainly Ray
+was his idol now. It was also plain that he recognized attributes
+of mercy and decency in his grizzled leader that might interfere
+with his own and his companion's plans. "What's worrying
+me&mdash;whether you're goin' to join in on the sport when we catch
+the weasel!"</p>
+<p>Sport! The word was more terrible to Beatrice than the vilest
+oath he had used to emphasize it. She crouched, shivering. Watching
+intently, she saw Ray look up, too, waiting for the reply; and her
+father, sensing his lost dominance, bowed his head.</p>
+<p>"You could hardly expect me to let him off easy&mdash;seeing
+what he did to my daughter&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"What he done to your daughter ain't all&mdash;I don't care if
+he treated her like a queen of the realm all the time," Ray
+interrupted harshly. "That makes no difference to neither me nor
+Chan. The main thing is&mdash;he brought us out here, away from the
+claim&mdash;and gave us months of the worst hell I ever hope to
+spend. I guess you ain't forgotten what Chan found out in Snowy
+Gulch&mdash;that the claim's recorded&mdash;in old Hiram's name.
+This Darby's got a letter in his pocket from Hiram's brother that
+would stand in any court. We've got to get that first. If Darby was
+an angel I'd mash him under my heel just the same; we've gone too
+far to start crawfishing. Just let me see him tied up in front of
+me&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Beatrice did not linger to hear more. She had her answer: only
+in Ben's continued concealment lay the least hope of his salvation.
+These wolves about the fire meant what they said. But already her
+plans were shaping; and now she saw the light.</p>
+<p>In the kyack of venison lay her own and her lover's safety: it
+contained enough nutritious food to sustain them until the fall
+rains could swell the Yuga and enable them to escape down to the
+Indian encampment. Her mind was swift and keen as never before:
+swiftly she perfected the last detail of her plan. The canoe, due
+to Ben's foresight, was securely hidden in a maze of tall reeds on
+the lake shore: they were certain to overlook it. The cavern,
+however, was almost certain to be discovered in the next day's
+search. They must make their escape to-night.</p>
+<p>Ben, though terribly weakened, would be able to walk a short
+distance with her help. They could slip into the deepest forest,
+concealing themselves in the coverts until the three men had given
+up the search and gone away. She would take their robes and
+blankets to keep them warm; a camp fire would of course reveal
+their hiding place. The work could easily be accomplished in the
+midnight shadows: deliverance, salvation, life itself depended on
+the tide of fate in the next few hours.</p>
+<p>She intended to steal the kyack of dried meat without which Ben
+and herself could not live. She crept back farther into the
+underbrush; then waited, scarcely breathing, while the fire died
+down. Already the three men were preparing to go to their bunks.
+Chan had already lain down; her father was removing his coat and
+boots. Ray, however, still sat in the firelight.</p>
+<p>The moments passed. Would he never rise and go? The fire,
+however, was dying: its circle of ruddy light ever drew inward. The
+kyack was quite in the shadow now, yet she dared not attempt its
+theft until the three men were asleep. She waited, thrilling with
+excitement.</p>
+<p>Chan and Neilson were seemingly asleep, and now Ray was knocking
+the ashes from his pipe. He yawned, stretching wide his arms; then,
+as if held by some intriguing thought, sat almost motionless,
+gazing into the graying coals. Presently Beatrice heard him curse,
+softly, in the shadows.</p>
+<p>He got up, and removing his outer coat, rolled in his blankets.
+The night hours began their mystic march across the face of the
+wilderness.</p>
+<p>Now was the time to act. As far as she could tell, the three men
+were deeply asleep: at least the likelihood would be as great as at
+any time later in the night. The fire was a heap of gray ashes
+except for its red-hot center: the kyack was in gloom. Very softly
+she crept through the thickets, meanwhile encircling the dying
+fire, and came up behind it.</p>
+<p>Now it was almost in reach: now her hands were at its loops. She
+started to lift it in her arms.</p>
+<p>But disaster still dogged her trail. Ray Brent had been too wary
+of attack, to-night, to sink easily into deep slumber. He heard the
+soft movement as Beatrice lifted the heavy canvas bag off the
+ground; and with a startled oath sprang to his feet.</p>
+<p>He leaped like a panther. "Who's there?" he cried.</p>
+<p>Sensing immediate discovery the girl placed all her hope in
+flight. Perhaps yet she could lose her pursuers in the darkness.
+Still trying to hold the kyack of food that meant life to Ben, she
+turned and darted into the shadows.</p>
+<p>Like a wolf Ray sped after her. The moonlight showed her fleeing
+figure in the trees, and shouting aloud he sprang through the
+coverts to intercept her flight. The chase was of short duration
+thereafter. Emburdened by the heavy box she could not watch her
+step; and a protruding root caught cruelly at her ankle. She was
+hurled with stunning force to the ground.</p>
+<p>Desperate and intent, but in realization of impending triumph,
+Ray's strong arms went about her.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XXXIX"></a>
+<h2>XXXIX</h2>
+<p>For the second time in his life Ray Brent felt the sting of
+Beatrice's strong hand against his face. In the desperation of fear
+she had smote him with all her force. His arms withdrew quickly
+from about her; and her wide, disdainful eyes beheld a sinister
+change in his expression. The moonlight was in his eyes,
+silver-white; and they seemed actually to redden with fury, and
+again she saw that queer, ghastly twitching at the corner of his
+lips. The girl's defiance was broken with that one blow. She
+dropped her head, then walked past him into the presence of her
+father.</p>
+<p>Neilson and Chan were on their feet now, and they regarded her
+in the utter silence of amazement. Breathing fast, Ray came behind
+her.</p>
+<p>"Build up the fire, Chan," he said in a strange, grim voice. "We
+want to see what we've caught."</p>
+<p>Obediently Chan kicked the coals from under the ashes, and began
+to heap on broken pieces of wood. The sticks smoked, then a little
+tongue of yellow flame crept about the fuel. But still the
+emburdened silence continued&mdash;the white-faced girl in the ring
+of silent, watching men.</p>
+<p>Slowly the fire's glow crept out to her, revealing&mdash;even
+better than the bright moonlight&mdash;her wide, frightened eyes
+and the dark, speculative faces of the men. Then Ray spoke sharply
+in his place.</p>
+<p>"Well, why don't you question her?" he demanded of Neilson. "I
+suppose you know what she was doing. She was trying to steal food.
+It looks to me like she's gone over to the opposite camp."</p>
+<p>Her father sighed, a peculiar sound that seemed to come from
+above the tree tops, as if fast-flying waterfowl were passing
+overhead. "Is that so, daughter?" he asked simply.</p>
+<p>"I was trying to take some of your food&mdash;to Ben," Beatrice
+replied softly. "He's in need of it."</p>
+<p>"You see, they're on intimate terms," Ray suggested viciously.
+"Ben was in need of food&mdash;so she came here to steal it."</p>
+<p>But Neilson acted as if he had not heard. "Why didn't you speak
+to us&mdash;and tell us you were safe?" he asked. "We've come all
+the way here to find you."</p>
+<p>"Perhaps <i>you</i> did. If you had been here alone, I would
+have told you. But Ray and Chan came all the way here to find Ben.
+I heard what they said&mdash;back there in the brush. They intend
+to kill him when they find him. I&mdash;I didn't want him
+killed."</p>
+<p>Her father stared at her from under his bushy brows. "After
+carrying you from your home&mdash;taking you into danger and
+keeping you a prisoner&mdash;you still want to protect him?"</p>
+<p>The girl nodded. "And I want you to protect him, too," she said.
+"Against these men." Suddenly she moved forward in earnest appeal.
+"Oh, Father&mdash;I want you to save him. He's never touched
+me&mdash;he's treated me with every respect&mdash;done everything
+he could for me. When he was injured he told me to go back&mdash;to
+take what little food there was, and go back&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I can take it, then, that you're out of food?" Ray asked.</p>
+<p>"We're starving&mdash;and Ben's sick. Father, I make this one
+appeal&mdash;if your love for me isn't all gone, you'll grant it. I
+love him. You might as well know that now, as later. I want you to
+save the man your daughter loves."</p>
+<p>Chan cursed in the gloom, his lean face darkened; but Neilson
+made no answer. Ray in his place sharply inhaled; but the sullen
+glow in his eyes snapped into a flame.</p>
+<p>If Beatrice had glanced at Ray, she would have ceased her appeal
+and trusted everything to the doubtful mercy of flight,&mdash;into
+the gloom of the forest. As it was, she did not fully comprehend
+the cruel lust, like flame, that sped through his veins. She would
+have hoped for no mercy if she could have seen the strange, black
+surge of wrath in his face.</p>
+<p>"He has been kind to me&mdash;and he was in the right, not in
+the wrong. I know about the claim-jumping. Father, I want you to
+stand between him and these men&mdash;help him&mdash;and give him
+food. I didn't speak to you because I was afraid for
+him&mdash;afraid you'd kill him or do some other awful thing to
+him&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Slowly her father shook his head. "But I can't save him now. He
+brought this on himself."</p>
+<p>"Remember, he was in the right," the girl pleaded brokenly. "You
+won't&mdash;you couldn't be a partner to murder. That's all it
+would be&mdash;murder&mdash;brutal, terrible, cold-blooded
+murder&mdash;if you kill him without a fight. It couldn't be in
+defense of me&mdash;I tell you he hasn't injured me&mdash;but was
+always kind to me. It would be just to take that letter away from
+him&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"So he has the letter, has he?" Ray interrupted. He smiled
+grimly, and his tone was again flat and strained. "And he's
+sick&mdash;and starving. It isn't for your father to say, Beatrice,
+what's to be done with Ben. There's three of us here, and he's just
+one. Don't go interfering with what doesn't concern you,
+either&mdash;about the claim. You take us where he is, and we'll
+decide what to do with him."</p>
+<p>Her eyes went to his face; and her lips closed tight. Here was
+one thing, on this mortal earth, that she must not tell. Perhaps,
+by the mercy of heaven, they would not find the cave, hidden as it
+was at the edge of the little glade. The forests were boundless;
+perhaps they would miss the place in their search. She
+straightened, scarcely perceptibly.</p>
+<p>"Yes, tell us where he is," her father urged. "That's the first
+thing. We'll find him, anyway, in the morning."</p>
+<p>The girl shook her head. She knew now that even if they promised
+mercy she must not reveal Ben's whereabouts. Their rage and cruelty
+would not be stayed for a spoken promise. The only card she had
+left, her one last, feeble hope of preserving Ben's life, lay in
+her continued silence. Ray's foul-nailed, eager hands could claw
+her lips apart, but he could not make her speak.</p>
+<p>"I won't tell you," she answered at last, more clearly than she
+had spoken since her capture. "You said a few minutes ago I had
+gone over&mdash;to the opposite camp. I am, from now on. He was in
+the right, and he gave up his fight against you long ago. Now I
+want to go."</p>
+<p>Fearing that Neilson might show mercy, Ray leaped in front of
+her. "You don't go yet awhile," he told her grimly. "I've got a few
+minutes' business with you yet. I tell you that we'll find him, if
+we have to search all year. And he'll have twice the chance of
+getting out alive if you tell us where he is."</p>
+<p>She looked into his face, and she knew what that chance was. Her
+eyelids dropped halfway, and she shook her head. "I'd die first,"
+she answered.</p>
+<p>"It never occurred to you, did it, that there's ways of
+<i>making</i> people tell things." He suddenly whirled, with drawn
+lips, to her father. "Neilson, is there any reason for showing any
+further consideration to this wench of yours? She's betrayed
+us&mdash;gone over to the opposite camp&mdash;lived for weeks,
+willing, with Ben. I for one am never going to see her leave this
+camp till she tells us where he is. I'm tired of talking and
+waiting. I'm going to get that paper away from him, and I'm going
+to smash his heart with my heel. We've almost won out&mdash;and I'm
+going to go the rest of the way."</p>
+<p>Neilson straightened, his eyes steely and bright under his
+grizzled brows. Only too well he knew that this was the test.
+Affairs were at their crisis at last. But in this final moment his
+love for his daughter swept back to him in all its unmeasured
+fullness,&mdash;and when all was said and done it was the first,
+the mightiest impulse in his life. Ben had been kind to her, and
+she loved him; and all at once he knew that he could not yield him
+or her to the mercy of this black-hearted man before him.</p>
+<p>He had lived an iniquitous life; he was inured to all except the
+worst forms of wickedness; but for the moment&mdash;in love of his
+daughter&mdash;he stood redeemed. He was on the right side at last.
+His hand drew back, and his face was like iron.</p>
+<p>"Shut that foul mouth!" he cautioned, with a curious, deadly
+evenness of tone. "I haven't surrendered yet to you two wolves. If
+one of you dares to lay a hand on Beatrice, I'll kill him where he
+stands."</p>
+<p>Even as he spoke his thought went to his rifle, leaning against
+a dead log ten feet away. This was the moment of test: the jealousy
+and rivalry and hatred between himself and Ray had reached the
+crisis. And the spirit of murder, terrible past any demon of the
+Pit, came stalking from the savage forest into the ruddy
+firelight.</p>
+<p>Ray leered, his muscles bunching. "And I say to you, you're a
+dirty traitor too," he answered. "She ain't your daughter any more.
+She's Ben Darby's squaw. She's not fit for a white man to touch any
+more, for all her lies. You say one word and you'll get it
+too."</p>
+<p>And at that instant the speeding pace of time seemed to halt,
+showing this accursed scene, so savage and terrible in the eerie
+light of the camp fire, at the edge of the haunted, breathless
+darkness, in vivid and ghastly detail. Neilson leaped forward with
+all his power; and if his blow had gone home, Ray would have been
+shattered beneath it like a tree in the lightning blast. But Ray's
+arms were incredibly swift, and his rifle leaped in his hands.</p>
+<p>The barrel gleamed. The roar reechoed in the silence. Neilson's
+head bowed strangely; and for a moment he stood swaying, a ghastly
+blankness on his face; then pitched forward in the dew-wet
+grass.</p>
+<p>Beatrice's last defense had fallen, seriously wounded; and Ray's
+arm seized her as, screaming, she tried to flee.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XL"></a>
+<h2>XL</h2>
+<p>The shot that wounded Jeffery Neilson carried far through the
+forest aisles, re&euml;choing against the hills, and arresting, for
+one breathless moment, all the business of the wilderness. The
+feeding caribou swung his horns and tried to catch the scent; the
+moose, grubbing for water roots in the lake bottom, lifted his
+grotesque head and stood like a form in black iron. It came clear
+as a voice to the cavern where Ben lay.</p>
+<p>The man started violently in his cot. His entire nervous system
+seemed to react. Then there ensued a curious state in which his
+physical functions seemed to cease,&mdash;his heart motionless in
+his breast, his body tensely rigid, his breath held. There was an
+infinite straining and travail in his mind.</p>
+<p>The truth was that the sound acted much as a powerful stimulant
+to his retarded nervous forces. It was the one thing his resting
+nerve-system needed; it was as if chemicals were in suspension in a
+crucible, and at a slight jar of the glass they made mysterious
+union and expelled a precipitation. Almost instantly he recognized
+the sound that had reached him, with a clear and unmistakable
+recognition such as he had not experienced since the night of the
+accident, as the report of a rifle. His mind gave a great leap and
+remembered its familiar world.</p>
+<p>A rifle&mdash;probably discharged by Beatrice in a hunt after
+big game. It was true that their meat supply was low; he remembered
+now. Yet it was curious that she should be hunting after dark. The
+gloom was deep at the cavern mouth. Besides, he had always kept his
+rifle from her, fearing that she might turn it against him. He
+looked about him, trying to locate the source of the flood of light
+on the cavern floor. It was the moon, and it showed that the girl
+was gone. He started to sit up.</p>
+<p>But his left arm did not react just properly to the command of
+his brain. It impeded him, and its old strength was impaired. For a
+moment more he lay quiet, deep in thought. Of course&mdash;he had
+been injured by the falling tree. He remembered clearly, now. And
+the rifle had been broken.</p>
+<p>The only possible explanation for the shot was that a rifle had
+been fired by some invader in their valley&mdash;in all probability
+Neilson or one of his men. Beatrice's absence would also indicate
+this fact: perhaps she had already joined her father and was on her
+way back to Snowy Gulch with him. In that case, why had he himself
+been spared?</p>
+<p>He looked out of the door of the cavern, trying to get some idea
+of the lateness of the hour. The very quality of the darkness
+indicated that the night was far advanced. Neilson would not be
+hunting game at this hour. Was his own war&mdash;planned long
+ago&mdash;even now being waged in ways beyond his ken?</p>
+<p>His old concern for Beatrice swept through him. With
+considerable difficulty he got to his feet, then holding on to the
+wail, guided himself to the shelf where they ordinarily kept their
+little store of matches. He scratched one of them against the
+wall.</p>
+<p>In the flaring light his eyes made a swift but careful appraisal
+of his surroundings. The girl's cot had not been slept in; and to
+his great amazement he saw that their food supplies were spent.
+Still holding to the wall he walked to the cave mouth.</p>
+<p>Instantly his keen eyes saw the far-off gleam of the camp fire
+on the distant margin of the lake. For all that the hour was late,
+it burned high and bright. He watched it, vaguely conscious of the
+insidious advance of a ghastly fear. Beatrice was his ally
+now&mdash;if these weeks had sent home one fact to him it was
+this&mdash;and her absence might easily indicate that she was
+helpless in the enemy's hands. The thing suggested ugly
+possibilities. Yet he could not aid her. He could scarcely walk;
+even the knife that he wore at his belt was missing, probably
+carried by Beatrice when she gathered roots in the woods.</p>
+<p>But presently all questions as to his course were settled for
+him. His straining ear caught the faintest, almost imperceptible
+vibration in the air&mdash;a soundwave so dim and obscure that it
+seemed impossible that the human mind could interpret it&mdash;but
+Ben recognized it in a flash. In some great trouble and horror, in
+the sullen light of that distant camp fire, Beatrice had screamed
+for aid.</p>
+<p>Only by the grace of the Red Gods had he heard the sound at all.
+Except for the fact that the half-mile intervening was as still as
+death, and that half the way the sound sped over water, he couldn't
+have hoped to perceive it. If the wind had blown elsewhere than
+straight toward him from the enemy camp, or if his marvelous sense
+of hearing had been less acute, the result would have been the
+same; and there could have been no answer from this dark man at the
+cave mouth who stood so tense and still. Finally, by instinct as
+much as by conscious intelligence, he identified the sound, marked
+it as a reality rather than a fancy, and read the tragic need
+behind it. Swiftly he started down the glade toward her.</p>
+<p>Yet in a moment he knew that unless he conserved his strength he
+could not hope to make a fourth of the distance. At the first steps
+he swayed, half staggering. He had paid the price for his weeks of
+illness and his injuries. If he had been in a sick room, under a
+physician's care, he would have believed it impossible to walk
+unsupported across the room. But need is the mother of strength,
+and this was the test. Besides, he had had several days of
+convalescence that had put back into his sinews a measure of his
+mighty strength. Mostly he progressed by holding on to the trees,
+pulling himself forward step by step.</p>
+<p>Likely he would come too late to change the girl's fate. Yet
+even now he knew he must not turn back. If the penalty were death,
+there must be no hesitancy in him; he must not withhold one
+step.</p>
+<p>But it was a losing fight. The hill itself seemed endless; a
+hundred cruel yards of marsh must be traversed before ever he
+reached the nearest point by the lake. The enemy camp from where
+Beatrice had called to him lay on the far side of the lake, a
+distance of a full mile if he followed around the curving shore.
+And black and bitter self-hatred swept like fire through him when
+he realized that he could not possibly keep on his feet for so long
+a way.</p>
+<p>Was this all he had fought for&mdash;surging upward through
+these long, weary weeks out of the shadow of death&mdash;only to
+fall dead on the trail in the moment of Beatrice's need? Instantly
+he knew that nothing in his life, no other desire or dream, had
+ever meant as much to him as this: that he might reach her side in
+time. Even his desire for vengeance, in that twilight madness, like
+Roland's, that had shaped his destiny, had been wavering and feeble
+compared to this. And no moment of his existence had ever been so
+dark, so bereft of the last, dim star of hope that lights men's way
+in the deep night of despair.</p>
+<p>He gave no thought to the fact of his own helplessness against
+three armed men in case he did succeed in reaching their camp. The
+point could not possibly be considered. The imperious instincts
+that forced him on simply could not take it into reckoning. He knew
+only he must reach her side and put in her service all that he
+had.</p>
+<p>He fell again and again as he tried to make headway in the
+marsh. But always he forced himself up and on. Only too plain he
+saw that the time was even now upon him when he could no longer
+keep his feet at all. But still he plunged on, and with tragically
+slow encroachments the shore line drew up to him.</p>
+<p>But he could not go on. The fire itself was hardly a quarter of
+a mile distant, directly across the lake, but to follow the long
+shore was an insuperable mile. Already his leg muscles were failing
+him, refusing to the respond to the impulse of his nerves. Yet it
+might be that if he could make himself heard his enemies would
+leave the girl for a moment, at least&mdash;give her an instant's
+respite&mdash;while they came and dispatched his own life. Whatever
+they were doing to her, there in that ring of firelight, might be
+stayed for a moment, at least.</p>
+<p>But at that instant he remembered the canoe. He had always kept
+it hidden in a little thicket of tall reeds,&mdash;if only the girl
+had not removed it from its place in his weeks of sickness! He
+plunged down into the tall tules. Yes, the boat was still in
+place.</p>
+<p>It took all the strength of his weakened body to push it out
+from the reeds into the water. Then he seized the long pole they
+had sometimes used to propel themselves over the lake. Except for
+his injured arm, the paddle would have been better&mdash;he could
+have made better time and escaped the danger of being stranded in
+deep water&mdash;but he doubted that he could handle it with his
+faltering arm. He pushed off, putting most of the strain on his
+uninjured right arm.</p>
+<p>The canoe was strongly but lightly made, so that it could be
+portaged with greatest possible ease; and his strokes, though
+feeble, propelled it slowly through the water. The great, white
+full moon, beloved of long ago, looked down from above the tall,
+dark heads of the spruce and changed the little water-body into a
+miracle of burnished silver. In its light Ben's face showed pale,
+but with a curious, calm strength.</p>
+<p>The lake seemed untouched by the faint breath of wind that blew
+from the distant shore. The waters lay quiet, and the trout beneath
+saw the black shadow of the canoe as it passed. A cow moose and her
+calf sprang up the bank with a splash, frightened by the poling
+figure in the stern. And on the far shore, clear where the lake had
+its outlet in a small river, even more keen wilderness eyes might
+have beheld the black, moving dot that was the craft. But the
+distance was too far and the wind was wrong for the keen mind
+behind the eyes to make any sort of an interpretation.</p>
+<p>It might have been that Fenris the wolf, running with a female
+and two younger males that he had mastered that long-ago night on
+the ridge, paused in his hunting to watch and wonder. But his wild
+brute thoughts were not under the bondage of memory to-night; his
+savage heart was thrilled and full; and more than likely he did not
+even turn his head.</p>
+<p>Ray and Chan, standing beside their prisoner in their grisly
+camp on the opposite shore, might have beheld Ben's approach if
+weightier matters had not occupied their minds. They had only to
+walk to the edge of the firelight and stare down through a rift in
+the trees to see him. But they stood with the angry glare revealing
+a strange and sinister intentness in their drawn faces and ominous
+speculations in their evil eyes.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XLI"></a>
+<h2>XLI</h2>
+<p>It was a wilderness moon that rose over the spruce
+to-night,&mdash;white as new silver, incredibly large, inscrutably
+mysterious. The winds had whisked away the last pale cloud that
+might have dimmed its glory, and its light poured down with equal
+bounty on peak and hill, forest and yellow marsh. The heavy woods
+partook most deeply of its enchantment: tall, stately trees pale
+and nebulous as if with silver frost, each little stream dancing
+and shimmering in its light, every glade laid with a fairy
+tapestry, every shadow dreadful and black in contrast. The
+wilderness breathed and shivered as if swept with passion.</p>
+<p>The wilderness moon is the moon of desire; and all this great
+space of silence seemed to respond. It seemed to throb, like one
+living entity, as if in longing for something lost long ago&mdash;a
+half-forgotten happiness, a glory and a triumph that were gone
+never to return. No creatures that followed the woods trails were
+dull and flat to-night. They were all swept with mystery, knowing
+vague longings or fierce desires. It was the harvest moon; but here
+it did not light the fields so that men might harvest grain. Rather
+it illumined the hunting trails so that the beasts of prey might
+find relief from the wild lusts and seething ferment that was in
+their veins. But mostly the forest mood was disconsolate, rather
+than savage, to-night. The wild geese on the lake called their
+weird and plaintive cries, their strange complaints that no man
+understands; the loons laughed in insane despair; and the coyotes
+on the ridge wailed out the pain of living and the vague longings
+of their wild hearts.</p>
+<p>In the glory of that moon Fenris the wolf knew the same,
+resistless longings that so many times before had turned him from
+the game trails. There was something here that was unutterably dear
+to him,&mdash;something that drew him, called him like a voice, and
+he could not turn aside. Because he was a beast, he likely did not
+know the force that was drawing him again along the lake shore. Yet
+the souls of the lower creatures no man knows; and perhaps he had
+conscious longings, profoundly intense, for a moment's touch of a
+strong hand on his shoulder,&mdash;one never-to-be-forgotten caress
+from a certain god that had gone to a cave to live. It was true
+that his wild instincts, ever more in dominance these past weeks,
+would likely halt him at the cavern maw, permitting no intimacy
+other than to ascertain that all was well. They were too strong
+ever to brook man's control again. The moon was a moon of desire,
+but only because it was also the moon of memory,&mdash;and perhaps
+memories, stirring and exalting, were sweeping through him.
+Straight as an arrow he turned toward the cave.</p>
+<p>His followers&mdash;the gaunt female and two younger males, the
+structure about which the winter pack would form&mdash;hesitated at
+first. They had no commanding memories of the cavern on the far
+side of the lake. Yet Fenris was their leader; by the deep-lying
+laws of the pack they must follow where he led. They could not
+decoy him into the trails of game. As ever they sped swiftly,
+silently after him.</p>
+<p>In this forest of desires Ben knew but one,&mdash;that he might
+yet be of aid to Beatrice. But he knew in his heart that it was a
+vain hope. He was within a hundred yards of Ray's camp now, but the
+struggle to reach the lake and the poling across its waters had
+brought him seemingly to the absolute limit of his strength, clear
+to the brink of utter exhaustion. Never in his life before had he
+known the full meaning of fatigue,&mdash;fatigue that was like a
+paralysis, blunting the mechanism of the brain, burning like a slow
+fire in his muscles, poisoning the vital fluids of his nerves.
+Stroke after stroke, never ceasing!--The flame was high,
+crackling&mdash;just before him. Through a rift in the trees he
+could see the outline of two men and the slim form of the girl.
+Just a few yards more.</p>
+<p>But of all the desires that the moon invoked in the woods people
+there were none so unredeemed, so wicked and cruel as this that
+slowly wakened in the evil hearts of these two degenerate men,
+Beatrice's captors. She sensed it only vaguely at first. All the
+disasters that had fallen upon her had not taught her to accept
+such a thing as this: surely this would be spared her, at least.
+There is a kindly blind spot in the brain that often will not let
+the ugly truth go home.</p>
+<p>For a strange, still moment Ray's face seemed devoid of all
+expression. It was flat and lifeless as dark clay. Then Beatrice
+felt the insult of his quickening gaze.</p>
+<p>"Put a rope around her wrists, Chan," he said. "We don't want to
+take chances on her getting away."</p>
+<p>He spoke slowly, rather flatly. There was nothing that her
+senses could seize upon&mdash;either in his face or voice to
+justify the swift, strangling, killing horror that came upon her.
+He stood simply gazing, and as she met his gaze her lips parted and
+drew back in a grimace of terror; thus they stood until the blood
+began to leap fast in Chan's veins. She needed no further
+disillusionment. Chan spoke behind her, a startled oath cut off
+short, and she felt him moving swiftly toward her. It was her last
+instant of respite; and her muscle set and drew for a final,
+desperate attempt at self-defense.</p>
+<p>She wore Ben's knife at her belt, and her hand sped toward it.
+But the motion, fast as it was, came too late. Chan saw it; and
+leaping swiftly, his arms went about her and pinned her own arms to
+her sides.</p>
+<p>She tried in vain to fight her way out of his grasp. She
+writhed, screaming; and in the frenzy of her fear she all but
+succeeded in hurling him off. She managed to draw the knife clear
+of the sheath, yet she couldn't raise her arm to strike. Ray was
+aiding his confederate now; and in an instant more she was
+helpless.</p>
+<p>Their drawn faces bent close to hers. She felt their hot hands
+as they drew her wrists in front of her and fastened them with a
+rope. "Not too tight, Chan," Ray advised. "We don't want her to get
+uncomfortable before we're done with her. Don't tie her ankles; she
+can't run through the brush with her arms tied.&mdash;Now give her
+a moment to breathe."</p>
+<p>They stood on each side of her, regarding her with secret,
+growing excitement. Already they had descended too far to know pity
+for this girl. The wide-open eyes, so dark with terror and in
+contrast with the stark paleness of her face, the lips that
+trembled so piteously, the slender, girlish figure so helpless to
+their depraved desires moved them not at all.</p>
+<p>The scene was one of never-to-be-forgotten vividness. The
+tenderness and mercy, most of all the restraint that has become
+manifest in men in these centuries since they have left their
+forest lairs to live in permanent abodes, had no place here. About
+them ringed the primeval forest, ensilvered by the moon; the fire
+crackled with a dread ferocity; and at the edge of the thickets the
+motionless form of Jeffery Neilson lay with face buried in the
+soft, summer grass. All was silent and motionless, except the
+fierce crackling of the fire; except a curious, intermittent,
+upward twitching of the corner of Ray's lips.</p>
+<p>"So you and Ben are bunkies now, are you?" he asked slowly,
+without emphasis.</p>
+<p>But the girl made no reply, only gazing at him with starting
+eyes.</p>
+<p>"A traitor to us, and Ben's squaw!" He turned fiercely to Chan.
+"I guess that gives us right to do what we want to with her. And
+now she can yell if she wants to for her lover to come and save
+her."</p>
+<p>She did not even try to buy their mercy by informing them where
+they might find Ben. Only too well she knew that their dreadful
+intentions could not be turned aside: she would only sacrifice Ben
+without aiding herself. Ray moved toward her, his eyes deeply
+sunken, the pupils abnormally enlarged.</p>
+<p>"You haven't lost all your looks," he told her breathlessly.
+"That mouth is still pretty enough to kiss. And I guess you won't
+slap&mdash;this time&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He drew her toward him, his dark face lowering toward hers. She
+struggled, trying to wrench away from him. Helpless and alone, the
+moment of final horror was at hand. In this last instant her whole
+being leaped again to Ben,&mdash;the man whose strength had been
+her fort throughout all their first weeks in the wilds, but whom
+she had left helpless and sick in the distant cavern. Yet even now
+he would rise and come to her if he knew of her peril. Her voice
+rose shrilly to a scream. "Ben&mdash;help me!"</p>
+<p>And Ray's hands fell from her shoulders as he heard the
+incredible answer from the shore of the lake. The brush rustled and
+cracked: there was a strange sound of a heavy footfall,&mdash;slow,
+unsteady, but approaching them as certain as the speeding stars
+approach their mysterious destinations in the far reaches of the
+sky. Ray straightened, staring; Chan stood as if frozen, his hands
+half-raised, his eyes wide open.</p>
+<p>"I'm coming, Beatrice," some one said in the coverts. Her cries,
+uttered when her father fell, had not gone unheard. In the last
+stages of exhaustion, deathly pale yet with a face of iron, Ben
+came reeling toward them out of the moonlight.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="XLII"></a>
+<h2>XLII</h2>
+<p>Ben walked quietly into the circle of firelight and stood at
+Beatrice's side. But while Ray and Chan gazed at him as if he were
+a spectre from the grave, Beatrice's only impulse was one of
+immeasurable and unspeakable thankfulness. No fate on earth was so
+dreadful but that it would be somewhat alleviated by the fact of
+his presence: just the sight of him, standing beside her, put her
+in some vague way out of Ray's power to harm. Exhausted, reeling,
+he was still the prop of her life and hope.</p>
+<p>"Here I am," he said quietly. "The letter's in my pocket. Do
+what you want with me&mdash;but let Beatrice go."</p>
+<p>His words brought Ray to himself in some degree at least. The
+ridiculous fear of the moment before speedily passed away. Why, the
+man was exhausted&mdash;helpless in their hands&mdash;and the
+letter was in his pocket. It meant <i>triumph</i>&mdash;nothing
+else. All Ray's aims had been attained. With Ben's death the claim,
+a fourth of which had been his motive when he had slain Ezram,
+would pass entirely to him,&mdash;except for such share as he would
+have to give Chan. His star of fortune was in the sky. It was his
+moment of glory,&mdash;long-awaited but enrapturing him at
+last.</p>
+<p>Neilson lay seriously wounded, perhaps dead by now. Whatever his
+injuries, he would not go back with them to share in the gold of
+the claim. The girl, also, was his prey,&mdash;to do with what he
+liked.</p>
+<p>"I see you've come," he answered. "You might as well; we'd have
+found you to-morrow." His voice was no longer flat, but rather
+exultant, boasting. "You thought you could get away&mdash;but we've
+shown you."</p>
+<p>Ben nodded. "You are&mdash;" he strained for the name he had
+heard Beatrice speak so often&mdash;"Ray Brent?" His eyes fell to
+the form of Neilson, wounded beyond the fire. "I see you've been at
+your old job&mdash;killing. It was you who killed Ezra
+Melville."</p>
+<p>Ray smiled, ever so faintly: this was what he loved. "You're
+talking to the right man. Anything you'd like to do about it?"</p>
+<p>Ben's face hardened. "There is nothing I can do, now. You came
+too late. But I would have had something to do if I had my rifle.
+I'm glad it was you, not Beatrice's father. I ask you
+this&mdash;will you accept my proposition. To take Ezram's letter,
+destroy it and me too&mdash;and let the girl go in safety?"</p>
+<p>Beatrice stretched her bound arms and touched his hairy wrist.
+"No, Ben," she told him quietly. "There's no use of trying to make
+such a bargain as that. Men that murder&mdash;and assault
+women,&mdash;won't keep their word."</p>
+<p>"They were about to attack you, were they?" His voice dropped a
+tone; otherwise it seemed the same.</p>
+<p>"Yes&mdash;just as you came."</p>
+<p>He turned once more to Ray, eyeing him with such a look of
+contempt and scorn that it smarted like a whiplash in spite of the
+protecting mantel of his new-found triumph. "Oh, you depraved
+dogs!" he told them quietly and distinctly. "You yellow, mongrel
+cowards!"</p>
+<p>Ray straightened, stung by the words. "And I'll make you wish
+you was dead before you ever said that," he threatened. "I'll tell
+you what you wanted to know a minute ago&mdash;and I tell you no. I
+won't make any deal with you. We'll do what we like to you, and
+we'll do what we like with your dirty squaw, too&mdash;the woman
+you've been living with all these months. We've got you where we
+want you. You're in no fix to make terms. Chan&mdash;put a rope
+around his legs and a gag in his rotten mouth!"</p>
+<p>They moved toward him simultaneously, and Ben summoned the last
+jot of his almost-spent strength to hurl them off. They did not
+need deadly weapons for this wasted form. Yet for the duration of
+one second Ben fought with an incredible ferocity and valor.</p>
+<p>He hurled Chan from his path, and his sound right arm leaped to
+Ray's throat in a death grip. For that one instant his old-time
+strength returned to him,&mdash;as to Samson as his arms went about
+the pillars of the temple. They found him no weakling, in that
+first instant, but a deadly, fighting beast, the "Wolf" Darby of
+the provinces,&mdash;his finger nails sinking ever deeper into the
+flesh of Ray's throat, his body braced against Chan's attack. And
+for all that Beatrice's arms were tied, she leaped like a she-wolf
+to her lover's aid.</p>
+<p>But such an unequal battle could last only an instant. Ray
+focused his attack upon Ben's injured left arm, Chan struck once at
+the girl, hurling her to the ground with a base blow, then lashed
+brutal blows into Ben's face. The burst of strength ebbed as
+quickly as it had come: his legs wilted under him, and he sank
+slowly to the ground.</p>
+<p>Maddened with battle, for a moment more Chan lashed cowardly
+blows into his face; and he left the brutal labor only to help Ray
+affix ropes about his ankles. Then the two conquerors stood erect,
+breathing loudly.</p>
+<p>Seemingly the utter limit of their brutality was
+reached,&mdash;but for the moment only. A strange and foreboding
+silence fell over the camp: only the sound of troubled breathing
+was heard above the lessening crackle of the fire. They did not
+turn at once again to the work of crushing Ben's life out with
+their fists and boots, nor did they restrain Beatrice as she
+crawled over the blood-stained grass to reach her lover's side.</p>
+<p>"Let her go," Ray said to Charley. "She can't help him any."</p>
+<p>It was true. They had put up their last defense. The girl crept
+nearer, lying almost prone beside him, and her soft hands stole
+over his bruised flesh. But no tears came now. She was past the
+kindly mercy of tears. She could only gaze at him, and sometimes
+dry half-sobs clutched at her throat. The man half-opened his eyes,
+smiling.</p>
+<p>Life still remained in his rugged body. Even the cruel test of
+the last hour had not taken that from him. The sturdy heart still
+beat, and the breath still whispered through his lips: there was
+life in plenty to afford such sport as Ray and Chan might have for
+him.</p>
+<p>The last, least quality of redemption&mdash;such magic and
+beauty as might have been wrought by the firelight dancing over the
+moonlit glade&mdash;was quite gone now. The powers of wickedness
+were in the ascendency, and this was only the abode of horror. Yet
+it was all tragically true, not a nightmare from which she would
+soon waken. This was the remote heart of Back There&mdash;a
+primeval land where the demons of lust and death walked
+unrestrained&mdash;and the shadow of the moonlit trees fell dark
+upon her.</p>
+<p>The back logs were burning dully now, and the coals were red,
+and Chan and Ray took seats on a huge, dead spruce to talk over
+their further plans. It was all easy enough. They could linger
+here, living mostly on meat, until the rising waters of the Yuga
+could carry them down to the Indian villages. Their methods and
+procedure in regard to Ben were the only remaining questions.</p>
+<p>For a few minutes they took little notice of the prone figures
+at the far edge of the fading firelight. In their hands they were
+as helpless as Jeffery Neilson, left already by the receding
+radiance to the soft mercy of the shadows. Attention could be given
+them soon enough. Their own triumph was beginning to give way to
+deep fatigue.</p>
+<p>Ben and Beatrice had talked softly at first, accepting their
+fate at last and trying to forget all things but the fact of each
+other's presence. They had kept the faith to-night, they had both
+been true; and perhaps they had conquered, in some degree, the
+horror of death. His right hand held hers close to his lips, and
+only she could understand the message in its soft pressure, and the
+gentle, kindly shadows in his quiet eyes. But presently her gaze
+fastened on some object in the grass beside him.</p>
+<p>He did not understand at first. He knew enough not to attract
+his enemies' attention by trying to turn. The girl relaxed again,
+but her hand throbbed in his, and her eyes shone somberly as if the
+luster of some strange, dark hope.</p>
+<p>"What is it?" he asked whispering.</p>
+<p>"I see a way out&mdash;for us both," she told him. She knew he
+would not misunderstand and dream that she saw an actual avenue to
+life and safety. "Don't give any sign."</p>
+<p>"Then hurry," he urged. "They may be back any instant. What is
+it?"</p>
+<p>"A way to cheat 'em&mdash;to keep them from torturing
+you&mdash;and to save me&mdash;from all the things they'll do to
+me&mdash;when you're dead. Oh, Ben&mdash;you won't fail
+me&mdash;you'll do it for me."</p>
+<p>He smiled, gently and strongly. "Do you think I'd fail you
+now?"</p>
+<p>"Then reach your good arm on the other side&mdash;soft as you
+can. There's a knife lying there&mdash;your own knife&mdash;they
+knocked out of my hand. They'll jump at the first gleam. You know
+what to do&mdash;first me, in the throat&mdash;then yourself."</p>
+<p>His face showed no horror at her words. They were down to the
+most terrible realities; and as she had said, this was the way out!
+The great kindness still dwelt in his eyes&mdash;and she knew he
+would do as she asked.</p>
+<p>One gleam of steal, one swift touch at the throat&mdash;and they
+would never know the unspeakable fate that their depraved captors
+planned for them. <i>It was no less than victory in the last
+instant of despair!</i> It was freedom: although they did not know
+into what Mystery and what Fear the act would dispatch them, it was
+freedom from Ray and Chan, none the less. And Ben welcomed the plan
+as might a prisoner, waiting in the death-cell, welcome a
+reprieve.</p>
+<p>He turned, groping with his hand. There was no use of waiting
+longer. The knife lay just beyond his reach; and softly he moved
+his body through the grass.</p>
+<p>But this gate to mercy was closed before they reached it. A
+sudden flaring of the fire revealed them&mdash;the gleam of the
+blade and Ben's stretching hand&mdash;and Ray left his log in a
+swift, catlike leap.</p>
+<p>If Ben had possessed full use of both hands there still might
+have been time to send home the two crucial blows, or at least to
+dispatch Beatrice out of Ray's power to harm. But his injured arm
+impeded him, and his hand fumbled as he tried to seize the hilt.
+With a sharp oath Ray crushed the blade into the ground with his
+heel; then kicked viciously at the prone body of his enemy.</p>
+<p>And at that first base blow his rage and blood-lust that had
+been gathering was swiftly freed. It was all that was needed to set
+him at the work of torture. For an instant he stood almost
+motionless except for the spasmodic twitching&mdash;now almost
+continuous&mdash;at his lips and for the slow turning of his head
+as he looked about for a weapon with which he could more quickly
+satiate the murder-madness in his veins. The knife appealed to him
+not at all; but his eye fell on a long, heavy club of spruce that
+had been cut for fuel. He bent and his strong hands seized it.</p>
+<p>As he swung it high the girl leaped between&mdash;with a last,
+frantic effort, wholly instinctive&mdash;to shield Ben's body with
+her own. But it was only an instant's reprieve. Chan had followed
+Ben, and sharing Ray's fiendish mood, jerked her aside. Ben raised
+himself up as far as he could at a final impulse to thrust the girl
+out of harm's way.</p>
+<p>Yet it was to be that Ray's murderous blow was never to go home.
+A mighty and terrible ally had come to Ben's aid. He came pouncing
+from the darkness, a gaunt and dreadful avenger whose code of death
+was as remorseless as Ray's own.</p>
+<p>It was Fenris the wolf, and he had found his master at last.
+Missing him at the accustomed place in the cave, he had trailed him
+to the lake margin: a smell on the wind had led him the rest of the
+way. He was not one to announce his coming by an audible footfall
+in the thicket. Like a ghost he had glided almost to the edge of
+the firelight, lingering there&mdash;with a caution learned in
+these last wild weeks of running with his brethren&mdash;until he
+had made up his brute mind in regard to the strangers in the camp.
+But he had waited only until he saw Ray kick the helpless form
+before him,&mdash;that of the god that Fenris, for all the wild had
+claimed him, still worshipped in his inmost heart. With fiendish,
+maniacal fury he had sprung to avenge the blow.</p>
+<p>And his three followers, trained by the pack laws to follow
+where he led, and keyed to the highest pitch by their leader's
+fury, leaped like gray demons of the Pit in his wake.</p>
+<br>
+<p>XLII</p>
+<p>As a young tree breaks and goes down in the gale Ray Brent went
+down before the combined attack of the wolves. What desperate
+struggle he made only seemed to increase their fury and shatter him
+the faster. Utterly futile were all his blows: his frantic,
+piercing screams of fear and agony raised to heaven, but were
+answered with no greater mercy than that he would have shown to Ben
+a moment before.</p>
+<p>Seemingly in an instant he was on his back and the ravening pack
+were about him in a ring. In that lurid firelight their fangs
+gleamed like ivory as they flashed, here and there, over his body
+and throat, and their fierce eyes blazed with pale-blue
+fire,&mdash;the mark and sign of the blood madness of the beasts of
+prey.</p>
+<p>Seemingly in a single instant the life had been torn from him,
+leaving only a strange, huddled, ghastly thing beside the dying
+fire. But the pack leaped from him at once. Fenris had caught sight
+of Chan's figure as he ran for the nearest tree and seemingly with
+one leap he was upon him. He sprang at him from the side; and his
+fangs gleamed once.</p>
+<p>He had struck true, his fangs went home, and the life went out
+of Chan Heminway in a single, neighing scream. He pitched forward,
+shuddered once in the soft grass, and lay still. The pack surged
+around his body, struck at it once or twice, then stood growling as
+if waiting for their leader's command.</p>
+<p>Before ever Ray fell, Ben had taken what measures of
+self-defense he could in case the pack, forgetting its master's
+master, might turn on himself and the girl. He had reached the
+knife hilt and severed the ropes about the girl's wrists. "Stay
+behind me," he cautioned. "Don't move a muscle."</p>
+<p>He knew that any attempt to reach and climb a tree would attract
+the attention of the pack and send them ravening about her. Again
+he knew that her life as well as his own depended on his control of
+the pack leader. He saw Chan go down, seemingly in a single
+instant, and he braced himself against attack. "Down, Fenris!" he
+shouted. "Down&mdash;get down!"</p>
+<p>The great wolf started at the voice, then stood beside the
+fallen, gazing at Ben with fierce, luminous eyes. "Down, down,
+boy," Ben cautioned, in a softer voice. "There, old
+fellow&mdash;down&mdash;down."</p>
+<p>Then Fenris whined in answer, and Ben knew that he was no longer
+to be feared. The three lesser wolves seemed startled, standing in
+a nervous group, yet growling savagely and eyeing him across the
+dying fire. For a moment Fenris's fury had passed to them, but now
+that his rage was dead, all they had left was an inborn fear of
+such a breed as this,&mdash;these tall forms that died so easily in
+their fangs. Fenris trotted slowly toward Ben, but with the true
+instincts of the wild his followers knew that this was no affair of
+fangs and death. He came in love, in a remembered comradeship, just
+as often he had led them to the mouth of the cavern, and they did
+not understand. They slowly backed away into the shadows, fading
+like ghosts.</p>
+<p>Ben's arms, in unspeakable gratitude, went about the shoulders
+of the wolf. Beatrice, sobbing uncontrollably yet swept with that
+infinite thankfulness of the redeemed, crept to his side. Fenris
+whined and shivered in the arms of his god.</p>
+<p>Quietude came at last to that camp beside the lake, in the far,
+hidden heart of Back There. Once more the blood moved with sweet,
+normal tranquillity in the veins, the thrill and stir died in the
+air, and the moonlight was beautiful on the spruce.</p>
+<p>The wolves had gone. Fenris's three brethren had slipped away,
+perhaps wholly mystified and deeply awed by their madness of a
+moment before; and from the ridge top they had called for their
+leader to join them. He had done his work, he had avenged the base
+blow that had seemed to strike at his own wild heart, he had
+received the caress he had craved,&mdash;and there was no law for
+him to stay. The female called enticingly; the wild game was
+running for his pleasure on the trails.</p>
+<p>Ben had watched the struggle in his fierce breast, and
+Beatrice's eyes were soft and wonderfully lustrous in the subdued
+light as she gave the wolf a parting caress. But he could not stay
+with them. The primal laws of his being bade otherwise. His was the
+way of the open trails, the nights of madness and the rapture of
+hunting&mdash;and these were folk of the caves! They were not his
+people, although his love for them burned like fire in his
+heart.</p>
+<p>He could not deny the call of his followers on the ridge. It was
+like a chain, drawing him remorselessly to them. Whining, he had
+sped away into the darkness.</p>
+<p>The fire had been built up, Beatrice had rallied her spent
+strength by full feeding of the rich, dried meat, and had done what
+she could for Neilson's injury. Ben, exhausted, had lain down in
+some of the blankets of his enemy's outfit. Neilson was not,
+however, mortally hurt. The bullet had coursed through the region
+of his shoulder, missing his heart and lungs, and although he was
+all but unconscious, they had every reason to believe that a few
+weeks of rest would see him well again.</p>
+<p>Beatrice bathed the wound, bandaged it the best she could, then
+covered him up warmly and let him go to sleep. And the time came at
+last, long past the midnight hour, that she crept once more to
+Ben's side.</p>
+<p>There was little indeed for them to say. The stress of the night
+had taken from them almost all desire to talk. But Ben took her
+hand in his feebly, and held it against his lips.</p>
+<p>"We're safe now," Beatrice told him, her eye's still bright with
+tears. "We've seen it through, and we're safe."</p>
+<p>Ben nodded happily. It was true: there was nothing further for
+them to fear. With the aid of the rifles of the three fallen, they
+could procure meat in plenty for their remaining time at Back
+There; besides, the store of jerked caribou and moose was enough to
+hold them over. When the rains came again, the three of
+them&mdash;Neilson and Ben and Beatrice&mdash;could glide on down
+to the Indian encampments in the canoe. Thence they could reach the
+white settlements beyond the mountains.</p>
+<p>Her glance into the future went still farther, because she knew
+certain news that as yet Ben had not heard. She had heard from
+Ray's lips that night that Ben's claim had been legally filed; he
+had only to return and take possession. It straightened out the
+future, promised success in the battle of life, gave him an
+interest to hold him in these northern forests. But she would not
+tell him to-night. It could wait for a more quiet hour.</p>
+<p>Presently she saw that he was trying to speak to her,
+whispering; trying to draw her ear down to his lips. She smiled,
+with an infinite tenderness. Dimly though he spoke, she heard him
+every word.</p>
+<p>"I love you," he told her simply. He watched her face, as
+intently as the three Wise Men watched the East, for a sign. And he
+saw it, clear and ineffably wonderful, in the stars that came into
+her eyes.</p>
+<p>"I love you," she answered, with equal simplicity. They lay a
+while in silence, blissful in this wonder each had for the other,
+wholly content just that their hands and lips should touch.</p>
+<p>The same miracle was upon them both; and the girl's thought,
+ranging far, seized upon a deep and moving discovery. "All this
+belongs to us," she told him, indicating with one movement of her
+arm the boundless solitudes about them. "This is our own country,
+isn't it, Ben? We can't ever&mdash;go away."</p>
+<p>It was true: they could never leave the forest for long. They
+were its children, bred in the bone. Their strong thews would waste
+in a gentler land. It was their heritage. They must not go where
+they could not behold the dark line of the forest against the
+sky.</p>
+<p>The fire burned down. The moon wheeled through the sky. The tall
+spruce saw the dawn afar and beckoned.</p>
+<p>THE END.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Sky Line of Spruce, by Edison Marshall
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Sky Line of Spruce, by Edison Marshall
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Sky Line of Spruce
+
+Author: Edison Marshall
+
+Release Date: March 2, 2004 [EBook #11402]
+Last updated: March 20, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SKY LINE OF SPRUCE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Audrey Longhurst and the Online Distributed Proofreading
+Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: He was leaning forward, aware of nothing in the
+world but the forthcoming crisis.
+FRONTISPIECE.]
+
+
+
+
+ THE SKY LINE
+ OF SPRUCE
+
+ By EDISON MARSHALL
+
+
+
+ AUTHOR OF
+
+"The Voice of the Pack," "The Strength of the Pines,"
+"The Snowshoe Trail," "Shepherds of the Wild," etc.
+
+
+
+ 1922
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+PART ONE
+THE WAKENING
+
+PART TWO
+THE WOLF-MAN
+
+PART THREE
+THE TAMING
+
+
+
+
+
+PART ONE
+
+THE WAKENING
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+The convict gang had a pleasant place to work to-day. Their road
+building had taken them some miles from the scattered outskirts of Walla
+Walla, among fields green with growing barley. The air was fresh and
+sweet; the Western meadow larks, newly come, seemed in imminent danger
+of splitting their own throats through the exuberance of their song.
+Even the steel rails of the Northern Pacific, running parallel to the
+stretch of new road, gleamed pleasantly in the spring sun.
+
+The convicts themselves were in a genial mood, easily moved to wide
+grins; and with a single exception they looked much like any other road
+gang at work anywhere in the land. An expert might have recognized
+purely criminal types among them: to a layman they suggested merely the
+lower grades of unskilled labor. Some of the faces were distinctly
+brutal; there was the sullen visage of a powerful negro who, with
+different environment, might have been a Congo prince; but the face of
+"Plug" Spanos, a notorious gunman who was by far the worst character in
+the gang, might have been that of an artless plow-boy in a distant land
+under a warm sun. There remained, however, the "exception." Curiously
+enough, whenever the warden's thought dwelt upon the inmates of his
+prison, classifying them into various groups, there was always one
+wind-tanned, vivid face, one brawny, towering form that seemed to demand
+individual consideration. The man who was listed on the records as Ben
+Kinney was distinctly an individual. He some way failed to classify
+among the groups of his fellows. Because he had been sent out to-day
+with the road gang the two armed guards had an interesting subject of
+conversation.
+
+In the first place he habitually did two men's work. He did not do it
+with any idea of trying to ingratiate himself with his keepers: no
+inmate of the institution at Walla Walla made any such mistake as that.
+He did it purely because he could not tone down his mighty strength and
+energy to stay even with his fellows. To-day Sprigley, the guard in
+first command of the gang, had placed him opposite Judy, the burly
+negro, but the latter was being driven straight toward absolute
+exhaustion. Yet Kinney at least knew how to subdue and direct the
+pouring fountain of his vitality and energy, for the robust blows of his
+pick fell with the regularity of a tireless machine. It was as if a wild
+stallion, off the plains, had been trained to draw the plow. His great
+muscles moved with marvelous precision; but for all the monotony and
+rhythm of his motions he conveyed no image of stolidity and dullness.
+
+He was a great, dark man, his skin darkly brown from exposure; his
+straight hair showed almost coal black in spite of the fact that it had
+but recently been clipped close; his eyebrows were similarly black; and
+black hairs spread down his hands almost to the finger nails and
+cropped up from his chest at his open throat. It was a mighty, deep,
+full chest, the chest of a runner and a fighter, sustained by a strong,
+flat abdomen and by powerful, sturdy legs. Yet physical might and
+development were not all of Ben Kinney. The image conveyed was never one
+of sheer brutality. For all their black hair, the large, brawny hands
+were well-shaped and sensitive; he had a healthy, good-humored mouth
+that could evidently, on occasion, be the seat of a most pleasant,
+boyish smile. He had a straight, good nose, rather high cheek bones, and
+a broad, brown forehead, straight rather than sloping swiftly like that
+of the negro opposite. But none of his features, nor yet his brawny
+form, caught and held the attention as did his vivid, dark-gray eyes.
+They were deeply dark, even against his deeply tanned face, yet now and
+then one caught distinct surface lights, denoting the presence of
+unmeasured animal spirits, and perhaps, too, the surprising health and
+vitality of the engine of his life. They were keen eyes, alert, fiery
+with a zealot's fire: evidently the eyes of a steadfast, headstrong,
+purposeful man. Some complexity of lines about them, hard to trace,
+indicated a recklessness, too; a willingness to risk all that he had for
+his convictions.
+
+"That's the queerest case we ever had here at Walla Walla," Sprigley
+told his fellow guard, as they watched the man's pick swing in the air.
+"Sometimes I wonder whether he ought to be here or not. Look at that
+face--he hasn't any more of a criminal face than I have."
+
+The other guard, Howard, scanned his companion's face with mock care.
+"That ain't sayin' so much for him," he observed. But at once he began
+to evince real interest. "I maintain you can't tell anything from their
+faces," he answered seriously. "There's nothin' in it. The man's a
+crook, isn't he? Wasn't he caught red-handed?"
+
+"Let me tell you about it. I was interested in the case and found out
+all I could concerning it. He apparently showed up in Seattle some time
+during the summer of 1919, a crook of the crooks, as you say. No one
+knows where he came from--and that's queer in itself. You know very well
+that his face and form are going to be remembered and noticed, yet he
+wasn't in any rogue's gallery, in any city. Desperate crook though he
+was, no one had ever heard of him before he showed up in Seattle.
+
+"The crooks down there called him 'Wild' Kinney, and were pretty well
+scared of him. Swanson, one of the lieutenants of the Seattle force,
+whom I know well as I know you, told me that he was a power, sort of a
+king in the underworld from the very first, largely because he was
+afraid of nothing, absolutely desperate, and willing to take any chance.
+He wasn't a hop-head, yet they all looked at him as sort of queer;
+though ready to follow him to the last ditch, yet some way they thought
+him off his head. And Swanson believes that his career of crime started
+_after_ he reached Seattle, not before--that he hadn't grown up to crime
+like most of the men in his gang. He didn't know anything about the
+'profession'--as far as skill went he was a rank amateur, but he made it
+up with daring and cunning. Once or twice he got in a fight down there,
+and they all agree he fought like a mad man, the most terrible fighter
+in the whole district, and it took about a half dozen to stop him."
+
+"You don't have to tell me that. Anybody who can swing a pick like
+that--"
+
+"Now let me tell you how they happened to catch him. Maybe you heard--he
+and Dago Frank were in the act of breaking into the Western-Danish
+Bank. Part of this I'm giving you now came straight from Frank himself.
+He says that they were in the alley, in the act of jimmying a window,
+and all at once Kinney straightened up as if something had hit him and
+let the jimmy fall with a thump to the pavement. Frank said he thought
+that the man had 'gone off his nut,' but it's my private opinion that he
+had been somewhat deranged all the time he was in Seattle, and he just
+came to, more or less, that minute. The man hardly seemed to know what
+he was doing. 'Have you lost your guts, Kinney?' Frank asked him; and
+Kinney stood there, staring like he didn't know he was being spoken to.
+He put his hands to his head, then, like a man with a headache. And the
+next instant a cop came running from the mouth of the alley.
+
+"Kinney was heeled, but he didn't even pull his gun. He still stood with
+his hands to his head. All his pards in the underworld always said he'd
+die before he'd give up, but he let the cop take him like he was a baby.
+Frank got away, but they got him, you remember, three weeks later. After
+some kind of a trial Kinney was sent down here."
+
+Sprigley paused and shifted his gun from his right to his left shoulder.
+"You'll say that's all common enough," he went on. "Now let me tell you
+another queer thing. You know, the chief has started a system here to
+keep track of all the prisoners, with the idea of making them good
+citizens when they get out. He has them all fill out a card. Well, when
+this man Kinney turned in his card, he had written 'Ben' on it, but the
+rest was absolutely blank.
+
+"Mr. Mitchell thought at first that the man couldn't write. It turned
+out, though, that he can write--an intelligent hand, and spell good too.
+Then Mitchell decided he was just sulking. But his second guess was no
+better than his first. I haven't got Mitchell persuaded yet, and maybe
+never will have him persuaded, but I'm confident I know the answer. The
+reason he didn't fill out that card was because he couldn't remember.
+
+"He couldn't remember where or when he was born, or who were his folks,
+or where he had come from, or how he had spent his life. He knew that
+'Ben,' his first name, sounded right to him, but 'Kinney' didn't--the
+reason likely being that Kinney was an alias adopted during his life as
+a criminal. I suppose you've noticed that queer, bewildered look he has
+when any one calls him Kinney. What his real name is he doesn't know. He
+can't even remember that. And the explanation is--complete loss of
+memory.
+
+"You mark my words, Howard--that man hasn't been a criminal always.
+Something got wrong with his head, and he turned crook--you might say
+that the criminal side that all of us has simply took possession of him.
+That night in the alley he came to himself--only his mind was left a
+blank not only in regard to his life as a criminal, but all that had
+gone before."
+
+"Then why don't you do something about it--besides talk? Mitchell says
+you're gettin' so you talk of nothin' else."
+
+"It's not for me to do anything about it. The man was a criminal. The
+State can't go any further than that. I suppose if every man was set
+free who wasn't, in the last analysis, responsible for his crimes, we
+wouldn't have anybody left in the penitentiary. He's in for five
+years--considering what he'll pick up here, it might as well be for
+life. Amnesia--that's what the doctors call it--amnesia following some
+sort of a mental trouble. In the end you'll see that I'm right."
+
+Sprigley was right. To Ben Kinney life was like a single pale light in
+a long, dark street. Complete loss of memory prevented him from looking
+backward. Complete loss of hope kept him from looking ahead.
+
+It had been this way for months now--ever since the night the policeman
+had found him, the "jimmy" dropped from his hands, in the alley. Heaven
+knows what he had done, what madness had been upon him, before that
+time. But as Sprigley had said, that night had marked a change. It was
+true that so far as facts went he was no better off: when he had come to
+himself he had found his mind a blank regarding not only his career of
+crime, but all the years that had gone before. Even his own name eluded
+him. That of Kinney had an alien sound in his ears.
+
+The past had simply ceased to exist for him; and because it is some way
+the key to the future, the latter seemed likewise blank,--a toneless
+gray that did not in the least waken his interest. Indeed the only light
+that flung into the unfathomable darkness of his forgetfulness was that
+which played in his dreams at night. Sometimes these were inordinately
+vivid, quite in contrast to the routine of prison life.
+
+He felt if he could only recall these dreams clearly they would
+interpret for him the mystery of his own life. He wakened, again and
+again, with the consciousness of having dreamed the most stirring,
+amazing dreams, but what they were he couldn't tell. He could only
+remember fragments, such as a picture of rushing waters recurring again
+and again--and sometimes an amazing horizon, a dark line curiously
+notched against a pale green background.
+
+They were not all bad dreams: in reality many of them stirred him and
+moved him happily, and he would waken to find the mighty tides of his
+blood surging fiercely through the avenues of veins. Evidently they
+recalled some happiness that was forgotten. And there was one phase, at
+least, of this work in the road gangs that brought him moving, intense
+delight. It was merely the sight of the bird life, abounding in the
+fields and meadows about the towns.
+
+There had been quite a northern migration lately, these late spring
+days. The lesser songsters were already mating and nesting, and he found
+secret pleasure in their cheery calls and bustling activity. But they
+didn't begin to move him as did the waterfowl, passing in long V-shaped
+flocks. That strange, wild wanderer's greeting that the gray geese
+called down to their lesser brethren in the meadows had a really
+extraordinary effect upon him. It always caught him up and held him,
+stirring some deep, strange part of him that he hardly knew existed.
+Sometimes the weird, wailing sound brought him quite to the edge of a
+profound discovery, but always the flocks sped on and out of hearing
+before he could quite grasp it. When the moon looked down, through the
+barred window of his cell, he sometimes felt the same way. A great,
+white mysterious moon that he had known long ago. It was queer that
+there should be a relationship between the gray geese and the cold,
+white satellite that rode in the sky. Ben Kinney never tried to puzzle
+out what it was; but he always knew it with a knowledge not to be
+denied.
+
+The last of the waterfowl had passed by now, but the northern migration
+was not yet done. The sun still moved north; warm, north-blowing winds
+blew the last of the lowering, wintry clouds back to the Arctic Seas
+whence they had come. And because the road work the convicts were doing
+brought them, this afternoon, in sight of the railroad right-of-way, Ben
+now and then caught sight of other wayfarers moving slowly, but no less
+steadily, toward the north. The open road beckoned northward, these
+full, balmy, late-April days, and various tattered men, mostly vagabonds
+and tramps, passed the gang from time to time on this same, northern
+quest.
+
+Ben thought about them as birds of passage, and the thought amused him.
+And at the sight of a small, stooped figure advancing toward him up the
+railroad right-of-way he paused, leaning on his pick.
+
+Because Ben had paused, for the first time in an hour, his two guards
+looked up to see what had attracted his attention. They saw what seemed
+to them a white-haired old wanderer of sixty years or more; but at first
+they were wholly at a loss to explain Ben's fascinated look of growing
+interest.
+
+It was true that the old man scarcely represented the usual worthless,
+criminal type that took to vagabondage. As he paused to scrutinize the
+convict gang neither insolence nor fear, one of which was certainly to
+be expected, became manifest in his face. They had anticipated certain
+words in greeting, a certain look out of bleary, shifty eyes, but
+neither materialized. True, the old man was following the cinder trail
+northward, but plainly he did not belong to the brotherhood of tramps.
+They saw that he was white-haired and withered, but upright; and that
+undying youth dwelt in his twinkling blue eyes and the complexity of
+little, good-natured lines about his mouth. Poverty, age, the hardships
+of the cinder trail had not conquered him in the least. He was small
+physically, but his skinny arms and legs looked as if they were made of
+high-tension wire. His face was shrewd, but also kindly, and the gray
+stubble on his cheeks and chin did not in the least hide a smile that
+was surprisingly boyish and winning. And when he spoke his cracked
+good-natured voice was perfectly in character, evidently that of a man
+possessing full self-respect and confidence, yet brimming over with easy
+kindliness and humor.
+
+Both guards would have felt instantly, instinctively friendly toward him
+if they had been free to feel at all. Instead they were held and amazed
+by the apparent fact that at the first scrutiny of the man's outline,
+his carriage and his droll, wrinkled face, the prisoner Kinney was moved
+and stirred as if confronted by the risen dead.
+
+The old man himself halted, returning Kinney's stare. The moment had,
+still half concealed, an unmistakable quality of drama. In the contagion
+of suppressed excitement, the other prisoners paused, their tools held
+stiffly in their hands. Kinney's mind seemed to be reaching, groping for
+some astonishing truth that eluded him.
+
+The old man ran, in great strides, toward him. "My God, aren't you Ben
+Darby?" he demanded.
+
+The convict answered him as from a great distance, his voice cool and
+calm with an infinite certainty. "Of course," he said. "Of course I'm
+Darby."
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+For the moment that chance meeting thrilled all the spectators with the
+sense of monumental drama. The convicts stared; Howard, the second
+guard, forgot his vigilance and stared with open mouth. He started
+absurdly, rather guiltily, when the old man whirled toward him.
+
+"What are you doing with Ben Darby in a convict gang?" the old wanderer
+demanded.
+
+"What am I doin'?" Howard's astonishment gave way to righteous
+indignation. "I'm guardin' convicts, that's what I'm a-doin'." He
+composed himself then and shifted his gun from his left to his right
+shoulder. "He's here in this gang because he's a convict. Ask my friend,
+here, if you want to know the details. And who might you be?"
+
+There was no immediate answer to that question. The old man had turned
+his eyes again to the tall, trembling figure of Ben, trying to find
+further proof of his identity. To Ezra Melville there could no longer be
+any shadow of doubt as to the truth: even that he had found the young
+man working in a gang of convicts could not impugn the fact that the
+dark-gray vivid eyes, set in the vivid face under dark, beetling brows,
+were unquestionably those of the boy he had seen grow to manhood's
+years, Ben Darby.
+
+It was true that he had changed. His face was more deeply lined, his
+eyes more bright and nervous; there was a long, dark scar just under the
+short hair at his temple that Melville had never seen before. And the
+finality of despair seemed to settle over the droll features as he
+walked nearer and took Darby's hand.
+
+"Ben, Ben!" he said, evidently struggling with deep emotion. "What are
+you doing here?"
+
+The younger man gave him his hand, but continued to stare at him in
+growing bewilderment. "Five years--for burglary," he answered simply.
+"Guilty, too--I don't know anything more. And I can't remember--who you
+are."
+
+"You don't know me?" Some of Ben's own bewilderment seemed to pass to
+him. "You know Ezra Melville--"
+
+Sprigley, whose beliefs in regard to Ben had been strengthened by the
+little episode, stepped quickly to Melville's side. "He's suffering loss
+of memory," he explained swiftly. "At least, he's either lost his memory
+or he's doing a powerful lot of faking. This is the first time he ever
+recalled his own name."
+
+"I'm not faking," Ben told them quietly. "I honestly don't remember
+you--I feel that I ought to, but I don't. I honestly didn't remember my
+name was Darby until a minute ago--then just as soon as you spoke it, I
+knew the truth. Nothing can surprise me, any more. I suppose you're kin
+of mine--?"
+
+Melville gazed at him in incredulous astonishment, then turned to
+Sprigley. "May I talk to you about this case?" he asked quietly. "If not
+to you, who can I talk to? There are a few points that might help to
+clear up--"
+
+Ordering his men to their work, Melville and Sprigley stood apart, and
+for nearly an hour engaged in the most earnest conversation. The
+afternoon was shadow-flaked and paling when they had finished, and
+before Sprigley led his men back within the gray walls he had arranged
+for Melville to come to the prison after the dinner hour and confer with
+Mitchell, the warden.
+
+Many and important were the developments arising from this latter
+conference. One of the least of them was that Melville's northward
+journey was postponed for some days, and that within a week this same
+white-haired, lean old man, dressed in the garb of the cinder trail, was
+pleading his case to no less a personage than the governor of the State
+of Washington in whom authority for dealing with Ben's case was
+absolutely vested. It came about, from the same cause, that a noted
+alienist, Forest, of Seattle, visited Ben Darby in his cell; and finally
+that the prisoner himself, under the strict guard of Sprigley, was taken
+to the capital at Olympia.
+
+The brief inquisition that followed, changing the entire current of Ben
+Darby's life, occurred in the private office of McNamara, the Governor.
+McNamara himself stood up to greet them when they entered, the guard and
+the convict. Ezra Melville and Forest, the alienist from Seattle, were
+already in session. The latter conducted the examination.
+
+He tried his subject first on some of the most simple tests for sanity.
+It became evident at once, however, that except for his amnesia Ben's
+mind was perfectly sound: he passed all general intelligence tests with
+a high score, he conversed easily, he talked frankly of his symptoms. He
+had perfect understanding of the general sweep of events in the past
+twenty years: his amnesia seemed confined to his own activities and the
+activities of those intimately connected with him. Where he had been,
+what he had done, all the events of his life up to the night of his
+arrest remained, for all his effort to remember them, absolutely in
+darkness.
+
+"You don't remember this man?" Forest asked him quietly, indicating
+Ezra Melville.
+
+Again Ben's eyes studied the droll, gray face. "With the vaguest kind of
+memory. I know I've seen him before--often. I can't tell anything else."
+
+"He's a good friend of your family. He knew your folks. I should say he
+was a _very_ good friend, to take the trouble and time he has, in your
+behalf."
+
+Ben nodded. He did not have to be told that fact. The explanation,
+however, was beyond him.
+
+Forest leaned forward. "You remember the Saskatchewan River?"
+
+Ben straightened, but the dim images in his mind were not clear enough
+for him to answer in the affirmative. "I'm afraid not."
+
+Melville leaned forward in his chair. "Ask him if he remembers winning
+the canoe race at Lodge Pole--or the time he shot the Athabaska Rapids."
+
+Ben turned brightly to him, but slowly shook his head. "I can't remember
+ever hearing of them before."
+
+"I think you would, in time," Forest remarked. "They must have been
+interesting experiences. Now what do these mean to you?--Thunder
+Lake--Abner Darby--Edith Darby--MacLean's College----"
+
+Ben relaxed, focusing his attention on the names. For the instant the
+scene about him, the anxious, interested faces, faded from his
+consciousness. Thunder Lake! Somewhere, some time, Thunder Lake had had
+the most intimate associations with his life. The name stirred him and
+moved him; dim voices whispered in his ears about it, but he couldn't
+quite catch what they said. He groped and reached in vain.
+
+There was no doubt but that an under-consciousness had full knowledge
+of the name and all that it meant. But it simply could not reach that
+knowledge up into his conscious mind.
+
+Abner Darby! It was curious what a flood of tenderness swept through him
+as, whispering, he repeated the name. Some one old and white-haired had
+been named Abner Darby: some one whom he had once worshipped with the
+fervor of boyhood, but who had leaned on his own, strong shoulders in
+latter years. Since his own name was Darby, Abner Darby was, in all
+probability, his father; but his reasoning intelligence, rather than his
+memory, told him so.
+
+The name of Edith Darby conjured up in his mind a childhood playmate,--a
+girl with towzled yellow curls and chubby, confiding little hands....
+But these dim memory-pictures went no further: there were no later
+visions of Edith as a young woman, blossoming with virgin beauty. They
+stopped short, and he had a deep, compelling sense of grief. The child,
+unquestionably a sister, had likely died in early years. The third name
+of the three, MacLean's College, called up no memories whatever.
+
+"I can hardly say that I remember much about them," he responded at
+last. "I think they'll come plainer, though, the more I think about
+them. I just get the barest, vague ideas."
+
+"They'll strengthen in time, I'm sure," Forest told him. "Put them out
+of your mind, for now. Let it be blank." The alienist again leaned
+toward him, his eyes searching. There ensued an instant's pause,
+possessing a certain quality of suspense. Then Forest spoke quickly,
+sharply. "_Wolf_ Darby!"
+
+In response a curious tremor passed over Ben's frame, giving in some
+degree the effect of a violent start. "_Wolf_ Darby," he repeated
+hesitantly. "Why do you call me that?"
+
+"The very fact that you know the name refers to you, not some one else,
+shows that that blunted memory of yours has begun to function in some
+degree. Now think. What do you know about 'Wolf' Darby?"
+
+Ben tried in vain to find an answer. A whole world of meaning lingered
+just beyond the reach of his groping mind; but always it eluded him. It
+was true, however, that the name gave him a certain sense of pleasure
+and pride, as if it had been used in compliment to some of his own
+traits. Far away and long ago, men had called _him_ "Wolf" Darby: he
+felt that perhaps the name had carried far, through many sparsely
+settled districts. But what had been the occasion for it he did not
+know.
+
+He described these dim memory pictures; and Forest's air of satisfaction
+seemed to imply that his own theories in regard to Ben's case were
+receiving justification. He appeared quite a little flushed, deeply
+intent, when he turned to the next feature of the examination. He
+suddenly spoke quietly to old Ezra Melville; and the latter put a small,
+cardboard box into his hands.
+
+"I want you to see what I have here," Forest told Ben. "They were your
+own possessions once--you sent them yourself to Abner Darby, your late
+father--and I want you to see if you remember them."
+
+Ben's eyes fastened on the box; and the others saw a queer drawing of
+the lines of his face, a curious tightening and clasping of his fingers.
+There was little doubt but that his subconsciousness had full cognizance
+of the contents of that box. He was trembling slightly, too--in
+excitement and expectation--and Ezra Melville, suddenly standing erect,
+was trembling too. The moment was charged with the uttermost suspense.
+
+Evidently this was the climax in the examination. Even McNamara, the
+Governor, was breathless with interest in his chair; Forest had the rapt
+look of a scientist in some engrossing experiment. He opened the box,
+taking therefrom a roll of white cotton. This he slowly unrolled,
+revealing two small, ribboned ornaments of gold or bronze.
+
+Ben's starting eyes fastened on them. No doubt he recognized them. A
+look of veritable anguish swept his brown face, and all at once small
+drops of moisture appeared on his brow and through the short hairs at
+his temples. The dark scar at his temple was suddenly brightly red from
+the pounding blood beneath.
+
+"The Victoria Cross, of course," he said slowly, brokenly. "I won it,
+didn't I--the day--that day at Ypres--the day my men were trapped--"
+
+His words faltered then. The wheels of _his_ memory, starting into
+motion, were stilled once more. Again the great darkness dropped over
+him; there were only the medals left in their roll of cotton, and the
+broken fragments of a story--of some wild, stirring event of the war
+just gone--remaining in his mind. Yet to Forest the experiment was an
+unqualified success.
+
+"There's no doubt of it!" he exclaimed. He turned to McNamara, the
+Governor. "His brain is just as sound as yours or mine. With the right
+environment, the right treatment, he'd be on the straight road to
+recovery. In a general way of speaking he has recovered now, largely,
+from the purely temporary trouble that he had before."
+
+McNamara focused an intent gaze first on Ben, then on the alienist. "It
+is, then--as you guessed."
+
+"Absolutely. The night of his arrest marked the end of his trouble; you
+might say that his brain simply snapped back into health and began to
+function normally again, after a period of temporary mania from
+shell-shock. It is true that his memory was left blank, but there
+doesn't seem to be any organic reason for it to be blank--other than
+lack of incentive to remember. Catch me up, if you don't follow me. In
+other words, he has been slowly convalescing since that night: under the
+proper stimuli I have no doubt that everything would come back to him."
+
+"And our friend here--Melville--offers to supply those stimuli."
+
+"Exactly. And it's up to you to say whether he gets a chance."
+
+Thoughtfully the executive drummed his desk with his pencil. Presently a
+smile, markedly boyish and pleasant, broke over his face. More than
+once, in the line of duty imposed by his high office, he had been
+obliged to make decisions contrary to every dictate of mercy. He was all
+the more pleased at this opportunity to do, with a clear conscience, the
+thing that his kindness prompted. He turned slowly in his chair.
+
+"Darby, I suppose you followed what the doctor said?" he asked easily.
+
+"Fairly well, I think."
+
+"I'll review it, if I may. It seems, Ben, that you have been the victim
+of a strange set of unfortunate circumstances. Due to the efforts of an
+old family friend--a most devoted and earnest friend if I may say
+so--we've looked up your record, and now we know more about you than you
+know about yourself. You served in France with Canadian troops and
+there, you will be proud to know, you won among other honors the highest
+honor that the Government of England can award a hero. There you were
+shell-shocked, in the last months of the war.
+
+"You did not return to your home. Shell-shock, Forest tells me, is a
+curious thing, resulting in many forms of mania. Yours led you into
+crime. For some months you lived as a desperate criminal in Seattle. You
+came to yourself in the act of breaking into a bank, only to find that
+your memory of not only your days of crime but all that had gone before
+was left a blank. That night, as you know, marked your arrest.
+
+"Forest has just explained that you are organically sound--that the
+recovery of your memory is just a matter of time and the proper stimuli.
+Now, Ben, it isn't the purpose of this State to punish men when they are
+not responsible for their deeds. Melville tells me that your record, in
+your own home, was the best; your war record alone, I believe, would
+entitle you to the limit of mercy from the State. I don't see how we can
+hold you responsible for deeds done while you were mentally disabled
+from shell-shock.
+
+"All you need for complete recovery, to call everything back in your
+mind, is the proper stimuli. At least that is the opinion of Doctor
+Forest. What those proper stimuli are of course no one knows for
+sure--but Doctor Forest has a theory; and I think he will tell you that
+he will share the credit for it with the same man who has been your
+friend all the way through. They think they know what is best for you.
+The final decision has been put up to me as to whether or not they shall
+be permitted to give it a trial.
+
+"This good friend of yours has offered to try to put it through. He has
+a plan outlined that he'll tell you of later, that will not only be the
+best possible influence toward recalling your memory, but will also give
+you a clean, new start in life. A chance for every success.
+
+"So you needn't return to Walla Walla, Darby. I'm going to parole
+you--under the charge of your benefactor. Melville, from now on it's up
+to you."
+
+The little, withered gray man looked very solemn as he rose. The others
+were stricken instantly solemn too, surprised that the droll smile they
+were so used to seeing had died on the homely, kindly face. Even his
+twinkling eyes were sobered too.
+
+Vaguely amused, yet without scorn, McNamara and Forest got up to shake
+his hand. "I'll look after him," Melville assured them. "Never fear for
+that."
+
+Slight as he was, wasted by the years, his was a figure of unmistakable
+dignity as he thanked them, gravely and earnestly, for their kindness in
+Ben's behalf. Soon after he and his young charge went out together.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+There was a great house-cleaning in the dome of the heavens one
+memorable night that flashed like a jewel from the murky desolation of a
+rainy spring. The little winds came in troops, some from the sea, some
+with loads of balsam from the great forests of the Olympic Peninsula,
+and some, quite tired out, from the stretching sage plains to the east,
+and they swept the sky of clouds as a housekeeper sweeps the ceiling of
+cobwebs. Not a wisp, not one trailing streamer remained.
+
+The Seattle citizenry, for the first time in some weeks, recalled the
+existence of the stars. These emerged in legions and armies, all the way
+from the finest diamond dust to great, white spheres that seemed near
+enough to reach up and touch. Little forgotten stars that had hidden
+away since Heaven knows when in the deepest recesses of the skies came
+out to join in the celebration. Aged men, half blind, beheld so many
+that they thought their sight was returning to them, and youths saw
+whole constellations that they had never beheld before. They continued
+their high revels until a magnificent moon rose in the east, too big and
+too bright to compete with.
+
+It was not just a crescent moon, about to fade away, or even a rain
+moon--one of those standing straight up in the sky so that water can run
+out as out of a dipper. It was almost at its full, large and nearly
+round, and it made the whole city, which is rather like other cities in
+the daylight, seem a place of enchantment. It was so bright that the
+electric signs along Second Avenue were not even counter-attractions.
+
+No living creature who saw it remained wholly unmoved by it. Wary young
+men, crafty and slick as foxes, found themselves proposing to their
+sweethearts before they could catch themselves; and maidens who had
+looked forward to some years yet of independent gaiety found themselves
+accepting. Old tom-cats went wooing; old spinsters got out old letters;
+old husbands thought to return and kiss their wives before venturing
+down to old, moth-eaten clubs. Old dogs, too well-bred to howl, were
+lost and absent-minded with dreams that were older than all the rest of
+these things put together.
+
+But to no one in the city was the influence of the moon more potent than
+to Ben Darby, once known as "Wolf" Darby through certain far-spreading
+districts, and now newly come from the State capital, walking Seattle's
+streets with his ward and benefactor, Ezra Melville. No matter how
+faltering was his memory in other regards, the moon, at least, was an
+old acquaintance. He had known it in the nights when its light had
+probed into his barred cell; but his intimate acquaintance with it had
+begun long, long before that. Not even the names that the alienist,
+Forest, had spoken--the names of places and people close to his own
+heart--stirred his memory like the sight of the mysterious sphere
+rolling through the empty places of the sky. It recalled, clearer than
+any other one thing, the time and place of his early years.
+
+He could not put into words just how it affected him. From first to
+last, even through his days of crime, it had been the one thing
+constant--the unchanging symbol--that in any manner connected his
+present with his shadowed past. It had served to recall in him, more
+than any other one thing, the fact that there was a past to look
+for--the assurance that somewhere, far away, he had been something more
+than a reckless criminal in city slums. The love he had for it was an
+old love, proving to him conclusively that his past life had been
+intimately associated, some way, with moonlight falling in open places.
+Yet the mood that was wakened in him went even farther. It was as if the
+sight of the argent satellite stirred and moved deep-buried instincts
+innate in him, in no way connected with any experience of his immediate
+life. Rather it was as if his love for it were a racial love, reaching
+back beyond his own life: something inborn in him. It was as if he were
+recalling it, not alone from his own past, but from a racial existence a
+thousand-thousand years before his own birth. His memory was strangely
+stifled, but, oh, he remembered the moon! Forest had spoken of stimuli!
+The mere sight of the blue-white beams was the best possible stimulus to
+call him to himself.
+
+Ezra Melville and he walked under it, talking little at first, and
+mostly the old, blue twinkling eyes watched his face. Seemingly with no
+other purpose than to escape the bright glare of the street lights they
+walked northward along the docks, below Queen Anne Hill, passed old Rope
+Walk, through the suburb of Ballard, finally emerging on the Great
+Northern Railroad tracks heading toward Vancouver and the Canadian
+border. For all that Ben's long legs had set a fast pace Melville kept
+cheerfully beside him throughout the long walk, seemingly without trace
+of fatigue.
+
+They paused at last at a crossing, and Ben faced the open fields.
+Evidently, before crime had claimed him, he had been deeply sensitive to
+nature's beauty. Ezra saw him straighten, his dark, vivid face rise; his
+quiet talk died on his lips. Evidently the peaceful scene before him
+went home to him very straight. He was very near thralldom from some
+quality of beauty that dwelt here, some strange, deep appeal that the
+moonlit realm made to his heart.
+
+For the moment Ben had forgotten the old, tried companion at his side.
+Vague memories stirred him, trying to convey him an urgent message. He
+could all but hear: the sight of the meadows, ensilvered under the moon,
+were making many things plain to him which before were shadowed and
+vague. The steel rails gleamed like platinum, the tree tops seemed to
+have white, molten metal poured on them. It was hard to take his eyes
+off those moonlit trees. They got to him, deep inside; thrilling to him,
+stirring. Perhaps in his Lost Land the moon shone on the trees this same
+way.
+
+There were no prison walls around him to-night. The high buildings
+behind him, pressing one upon another, had gone to sustain the feeling
+of imprisonment, but it had quite left him now. There were no cold,
+watchful lights,--only the moon and the stars and an occasional mellow
+gleam from the window of a home. There was scarcely any sound at all;
+not even a stir--as of prisoners tossing and uneasy in their cells. His
+whole body felt rested.
+
+The air was marvelously sweet. Clover was likely in blossom in nearby
+fields. He breathed deep, an unknown delight stealing over him. He stole
+on farther, into the mystery of the night--ravished, tingling and almost
+breathless from an inner and inexplicable excitement. Melville walked
+quietly beside him.
+
+Forest had given over the case: it was Melville's time for experiments
+to-night. All the way out he had watched his patient, sounding him,
+studying his reactions and all that he had beheld had gone to strengthen
+his own convictions. And now, after this moment in the meadows, the old
+man was ready to go on with his plan.
+
+"Let's set down here," he invited casually. Ben started, emerging from
+his revery. The old man's cheery smile had returned, in its full charm,
+to his droll face. "You'll want to know what it's all about--and what I
+have in mind. And I sure think you've done mighty well to hold onto your
+patience this long."
+
+He sat himself on the rail, and Ben quietly took a seat beside him.
+"There are plenty of things I'd like to know," he admitted.
+
+"And plenty of things I ain't goin' to tell you, neither--for the reason
+that Forest advised against it," Ezra went on. "I don't understand
+it--but he says you've got a lot better chance to get your memory
+workin' clear again if things are recalled to you by the aid of
+'stimuli' instead of having any one tell you. I've agreed to supply the
+'stimuli.'
+
+"I don't see any harm in tellin' you that the guesses you've already
+made are right. Your name is Ben Darby--and you used to be known as
+'Wolf' Darby--for reasons that sooner or later you may know. Abner Darby
+was your father. Edith Darby was your sister that ain't no more. You
+went awhile to MacLean's College, in Ontario.
+
+"Now, Ben, I'm going to put a proposition up to you. I'm hoping you'll
+see fit to accept it. And I might as well say right here, that while
+it's the best plan possible to bring you back your memory, and that
+while it offers just the kind of 'stimuli' you're supposed to need,
+neither 'stimuli' nor stimulus or stimulum has got very much to do with
+it. I argued that point mighty strong because I knew it would appeal to
+Forest, and through him, to the governor. I don't see it makes a whale
+of a lot of difference whether you get your memory back or not.
+
+"Maybe you don't foller me. But you know and I know you're all right
+now, remembering clear enough everything that happened since you was
+arrested, and I don't see what difference it makes whether or not you
+remember who your great-aunt was, and the scrapes you got in as a kid.
+You can talk and walk and figger, get by in any comp'ny, and you suit me
+for a buddy just as you are. However, Forest seemed to think it was
+mighty important--and it may be.
+
+"The reason I'm goin' to take you where I'm goin' to take you is for
+your own good. I'm sort of responsible for you, bein' your folks are
+dead. I know you from head to heel, and I think I know what's good for
+you, what you can do and what you can't do and where you succeed and
+where you fail. And I'll say right here you wasn't born to be no gangman
+in a big city like Seattle. You'll find that isn't your line at all."
+
+"I'm willing to take your word for that, Mr. Melville," Ben interposed
+quietly.
+
+"And I might say, now a good time as any, to let up on the '_Mister_.'
+My name is Ezra Melville, and I've been known as 'Ezram' as long as I
+can remember, to my friends. The Darbys in particular called me that,
+and you're a Darby.
+
+"I'll say in the beginning I can't do for you all I'd like to do, simply
+because I haven't the means. The first time you saw me I was walkin'
+ties, and you'll see me walkin' some more of 'em before you're done. I
+know you ain't got any money, and due to the poker habit I ain't got
+much either--in spite of the fact I've done two men's work for something
+over forty years. On this expedition to come we'll have to go on the
+cheaps. No Pullmans, no hotels--sleeping out the hay when we're caught
+out at night. Maybe ridin' the blinds, whenever we can. I'm awful sorry,
+but it jest can't be helped. But I will say--when it comes to work I can
+do my full share, without kickin'."
+
+Ben stared in amazement. It was almost as if the old man were pleading a
+case, rather than giving glorious alms to one to whom hope had seemed
+dead. Ben tried to cut in, to ask questions, but the old man's words
+swept his own away.
+
+"To begin at the beginning, I've got a brother--leastwise I had him a
+few weeks ago--Hiram Melville by name," Ezram went on. "You'd remember
+him well enough. He was a prospector up to a place called Snowy Gulch--a
+town way up in the Caribou Mountains, in Canada. Some weeks ago, herdin'
+cattle in Eastern Oregon, I got a letter from him, and started north,
+runnin' into you on the way up. The letter's right here."
+
+He drew a white envelope from his coat pocket, opening it slowly. "This
+is a real proposition, son," he went on in a sobered voice. "I'm mighty
+glad that I've got something, at least worth lookin' into, to let you in
+on. I only wish it was more."
+
+"Why should you want to let me in on anything?" Ben asked clearly.
+
+The direct question received only a stare of blank amazement from Ezram.
+"Why should I--" he repeated, seemingly surprised out of his life by the
+question. "Shucks, and quit interruptin' me. But I'll say right here
+I've got my own ideas, if you must know. Didn't I hear that while you
+was rampin' around the underworld, you showed yourself a mighty good
+fighter? Well, there's likely to be some fightin' where we're goin', and
+I want some one to do it besides myself. If there ain't fightin', at
+least they'll be worklots of work. Maybe I'm gettin' a little too old
+to do much of it. I want a buddy--some one who will go halfway with me."
+
+"Therefore I suppose you go to the 'pen' to find one," Ben commented,
+wholly unconvinced.
+
+"I'm going to make this proposition good," Ezram went on as if he had
+not heard, "probably a fourth--maybe even a third--to you. And I ain't
+such a fool as I look, neither. I know the chances of comin' out right
+on it are twice as good if somebody young and strong, and who can fight,
+is in on it with me. Listen to this."
+
+Opening the letter, he read laboriously:
+
+ Snowy Gulch, B.C.
+
+ DEAR BROTHER EZRA:--
+
+ I rite this with what I think is my dying hand. It's my will too.
+ I'm at the hotel at Snowy Gulch--and not much more time. You know
+ I've been hunting a claim. Well, I found it--rich a pocket as any
+ body want, worth a quarter million any how and in a district where
+ the Snowy Gulch folks believe there ain't a grain of gold.
+
+ It's yours. Come up and get it quick before some thieves up hear
+ jump it. Lookout for Jeffery Neilson and his gang they seen some of
+ my dust. I'm too sick to go to recorder in Bradleyburg and record
+ claim. Get copy of this letter to carry, put this in some safe
+ place. The only condition is you take good care of Fenris, the pet I
+ raised from a pup. You'll find him and my gun at Steve Morris's.
+
+ I felt myself going and just did get hear. You get supplies horses
+ at Snowy Gulch go up Poor Man Creek through Spruce Pass over to Yuga
+ River. Go down Yuga River past first rapids along still place to
+ first creek you'll know it cause there's an old cabin just below and
+ my canoe landing. Half mile up, in creek bed, is the pocket and new
+ cabin. And don't tell no one in Snowy Gulch who you are and where
+ you going. Go quick brother Ez and put up a stone for me at Snowy
+ Gulch.
+
+ Your brother
+
+ HIRAM MELVILLE.
+
+There was a long pause after Ezram's voice had died away. Ben's eyes
+glowed in the moonlight.
+
+"And you haven't heard--whether your brother is still alive?"
+
+"I got a wire the hotel man sent me. It reached me weeks before the
+letter came, and I guess he must have died soon after he wrote it. I
+suppose you see what he means when he says to carry a copy of this
+letter, instead of the original."
+
+"Of course--because it constitutes his will, your legal claim. Just the
+fact that you are his brother would be claim enough, I should think, but
+since the claim isn't recorded, this simplifies matters for you. You'd
+better make a copy of it and you can leave it in some safe place. And of
+course this claim is what you offered to let me in on."
+
+"That's it. Not much, but all what I got. What I want to know is--if
+it's a go."
+
+"Wait just a minute. You've asked me to go in with you on a scheme that
+looks like a clear quarter of a million, even though I can't give
+anything except my time and my work. You found me in a penitentiary,
+busted and all in--a thief and a gangster. Before we go any further,
+tell me what service I've done you, what obligation you're under to me,
+that gives me a right to accept so much from you?"
+
+It might have been in the moonlight that Ezram's eyes glittered
+perceptibly. "You're in my charge," he grinned. "I guess you ain't got
+any say comin'."
+
+"Wait--wait." Ben sprang to his feet, and caught by his earnestness,
+Ezram got up too. "I sure--I sure appreciate the trust you put in me,"
+Ben went on slowly. "For my own part I'd give everything I've got and
+all I'd hope to ever get to go with you. It's a chance such as I never
+dared believe would come to me again--a chance for big success--a chance
+to go away and get a new start in a country where I feel, instinctively,
+that I'd make good. But that's only the beginning of it."
+
+The dark vivid eyes seemed to glow in the soft light. "Forgive me if I
+talk frank; and if it sounds silly I can't help it," Ben continued.
+"You've never been in prison--with a five-year sentence hanging over
+you--and nobody giving a damn. For some reason I can't guess you've
+already done more for me than I can ever hope to repay. You got me out
+of prison, you wakened hope and self-respect in me when I thought they
+were dead, and you've proved a friend when I'd given up any thought of
+ever knowing human friendship again. I was down and out, Ezram. Anything
+you want me to do I'll do to the last ditch. You know I can fight--you
+know how a man can fight if it's his last chance. I've got some bonus
+money coming to me from the Canadian Government--and I'll put that in
+too, because we'll be needing horses and supplies and things that cost
+money. But I can't take all that from a stranger. You must know how it
+is. A man can't, while he's young and strong, accept charity--"
+
+"Good Lord, it ain't charity!" the old man shouted, drowning him out.
+"I'm gettin' as much pleasure out of it as you." His voice sank again;
+and there was no line of mirth in his face.
+
+"It was long ago, in Montreal," Ezram went on, after a pause. "I knew
+your mother, as a girl. She married a better man, but I told her that
+every wish of hers was law to me. You're her son."
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+Night is always a time of mystery in Snowy Gulch--that little cluster of
+frame shacks lost and far in the northern reaches of the Caribou Range.
+Shadows lie deep, pale lights spring up here and there in windows, with
+gaping, cavernous darkness between; a wet mist is clammy on the face. At
+such times one forgets that here is a town, an enduring outpost of
+civilization, and can remember only the forests that stretch so heavy
+and dark on every side. Indeed the town seems simply swallowed up in
+these forests, immersed in their silence, overspread by their gloom, and
+the red gods themselves walk like sentries in the main street.
+
+The breath that is so fragrant and strange between the fronting rows of
+shacks is simply that of the forest: inept the woodsman who would not
+recognize it at once. The silence is a forest silence, and if the air is
+tense and electric, it is because certain wilderness forces that no
+white man can name but which surely dwell in the darker thickets have
+risen and are in possession.
+
+It is not a time when human beings are at their best and strongest.
+There is an instinctive, haunting feeling which, though not fear, wakens
+a feeling of inadequacy and meekness. Only a few--those who have given
+their love and their lives to the wild places--have any idea of
+sympathetic understanding with it. Among these was Beatrice Neilson, and
+she herself did not fully understand the dreams and longings that swept
+her ever at the fall of the mysterious wilderness night.
+
+The forest had never grown old to her. Its mystery was undying. Born in
+its shadow, her love had gone out to it in her earliest years, and it
+held her just as fast to-day. All her dreams--the natural longings of an
+imaginative girl born to live in an uninhabited portion of the
+earth--were inextricably bound up in it; whatever plans she had for the
+future always included it. Not that she was blind to its more terrible
+qualities: its might and its utter remorselessness that all foresters,
+sooner or later, come to recognize. Her thews were strong, and she loved
+it all the more for the tests that it put to its children.
+
+She was a daughter of the forests, and its mark was on her. To-night the
+same moon that, a thousand miles to the south, was lighting the way for
+Ben and Ezram on their northern journey, shone on her as she hastened
+down the long, shadowed street toward her father's shack, revealing her
+forest parentage for all to see. The quality could be discerned in her
+very carriage--swift and graceful and silent--vaguely suggesting that of
+the wild creatures themselves. But there was no coarseness or ruggedness
+about her face and form such as superficial observation might have
+expected. Physically she was like a deer, strong, straight-limbed,
+graceful, slender rather than buxom, dainty of hands and feet. A perfect
+constitution and healthful surroundings had done all this. And good
+fairies had worked further magic: as she passed beneath the light at the
+door of the rude hotel there was revealed an unquestioned and rather
+startling facial beauty.
+
+It seemed hardly fitting in this stern, rough land--the soft contour and
+delicacy of the girl's features. It had come straight from her mother, a
+woman who, in gold-rush days, had been the acknowledged beauty of the
+province. Nor was it merely the attractive, animal beauty that is so
+often seen in healthy, rural girls. Rather its loveliness was of a
+mysterious, haunting kind that one associates with old legends and far
+distant lands.
+
+Perhaps its particular appeal lay in her eyes. They seemed to be quite
+marvelously deep and clear, so darkly gray that they looked black in
+certain lights, and they were so shadowed and pensive that sometimes
+they gave the image of actual sadness. For all the isolation of her home
+she was no stranger to romance; but the romance that was to be seen,
+like a gentleness, in her face was that of the great, shadowed forest in
+which she dwelt.
+
+Pensive, wistful, enthralled in a dreamy sadness,--what could be nearer
+the tone and pitch of the northern forest itself? There might have been
+also depths of latent passion such as is known to all who live the full,
+strong life of the woods. The lines were soft about her lips and eyes,
+indicating a marked sweetness and tenderness of nature; but these traits
+did not in the least deny her parentage. No one but the woodsman knows
+how gentle, how hospitably tender, the forest may be at times.
+
+She had fine, dark straight brows that served to darken her eyes, dark
+brown hair waving enough to soften every line of her face, a girlish
+throat and a red mouth surprisingly tender and childish. As might have
+been expected her garb was neither rich nor smart, but it was pretty and
+well made and evidently fitted for her life: a loose "middy," blue
+skirt, woolen stockings and rather solid little boots.
+
+As she passed the door of the hotel one of the younger men who had been
+lounging about the stove strode out and accosted her. She half-turned,
+recognized his face in the lamplight, and frankly recoiled.
+
+She had been lost in dreams before, vaguely pensive, for Beatrice had
+been watching the darkness overspread and encompass the dark fringe of
+the spruce forest that enclosed the town. Now, because she recognized
+the man and knew his type--born of the wild places even as herself, but
+a bastard breed--the tender, wistful half-smile sped from her childish
+mouth and her eyes grew alert and widened as if with actual fear. She
+halted, evidently in doubt as to her course.
+
+"Going home?" the man asked. "I'm going up to see your pop, and I'll see
+you there, if you don't mind."
+
+Ray Brent's voice had an undeniable ring of power. It was deeply bass,
+evidently the voice of a passionate, reckless, brutal man. The covetous
+caress of his thick hand upon her arm indicated that he was wholly sure
+of himself in regard to her.
+
+She stared with growing apprehension into his even-featured, not
+unhandsome face. Evidently she found it hard to meet his eyes,--eyes
+wholly lacking in humor and kindliness, but unquestionably vivid and
+compelling under his heavy, dark brows. "I'm going home," she told him
+at last. "I guess, if you're going up to see Pop, you can walk along
+too."
+
+The man fell in beside her, his powerful frame overshadowing hers. It
+was plain at once that the manner of her consent did not in the least
+disturb him. "You're just letting me because I'm going up there anyway,
+eh?" he asked. "I'll walk along further than that with you before I'm
+done."
+
+The girl paused, as if in appeal. "Ray, we've thrashed that out long
+ago," she responded. "I wish you wouldn't keep talking about it. If you
+want to walk with me--"
+
+"All right, but you'll be changing your mind one of these days." Ray's
+voice rang in the silence, indicating utter indifference to the fact
+that many of the loungers on the street were listening to the little
+scene. "I've never seen anything I wanted yet that I didn't get--and I
+want you. Why don't you believe what your pop says about me? He thinks
+Ray Brent is the goods."
+
+"I'm not going to talk about it any more. I've already given you my
+answer--twenty times."
+
+The man talked on, but the girl walked with lifted chin, apparently not
+hearing. They followed the board sidewalk into the shadows, finally
+turning in at a ramshackle, three-room house that was perched on the
+hillside almost at the end of the street at the outer limits of the
+village.
+
+The girl turned to go in, but the man held fast to her arm. "Wait just a
+minute, Bee," he urged. "I've got one thing more to say to you."
+
+The girl looked into his face, now faintly illumined by the full moon
+that was rising, incredibly large and white, above the dark line of the
+spruce tops. For all the regularity of his rather handsome features, his
+was never an attractive face to her, even in first, susceptible
+girlhood; and in the moonlight it suddenly filled her with dread. Ray
+Brent was a dangerous type: imperious willed, slave to his most
+degenerate instincts, reckless, as free from moral restraint as the most
+savage creatures that roamed his native wilds. Now his facial lines
+appeared noticeably deep, dark like scars, and curious little flakes of
+iniquitous fire danced in his sunken eyes.
+
+"Just one minute, Bee," he went on, wholly rapt in his own, devouring
+desires. The dark passions of the man, always just under the skin,
+seemed to be getting out of bounds. "When I want something, I don't know
+how to quit till I get it. It's part of my nature. Your pop knows
+that--and that's why he's made me his pardner in a big deal."
+
+"If my father wants men like you--for his pardners, I can't speak for
+his judgment."
+
+"Wait just a minute. He's told me--and I know he's told you too--that
+I'd suit him all right for a son-in-law. He and I agree on that. And
+this country ain't like the places you read about in your story
+books--it's a man's country. Oh, I know you well enough. It's time you
+got down to brass tacks. If you're going to be a northern woman, you've
+got to be content with the kind of men that grow up here. Up here, the
+best man wins, the hardest, strongest man. That's why I'm going to win
+you."
+
+Because he was secretly attacking her dreams, the dearest part of her
+being, she felt the first surge of rising anger.
+
+"You're not the best man here," she told him, straightening. "If you
+were, I'd move out. You may be the strongest in your body, and certainly
+the hardest, going further to get your own way--but a real man would
+break you in two in a minute. Some one more than a brute to beat horses
+to death and jump claims. I'm going in now. Please take away your hand."
+
+"One thing more. This is the North. We do things in a man's way up
+here--not a story-book way. The strong man gets what he wants--and I
+want you. And I'll get you, too--just like I get this kiss."
+
+He suddenly snatched her toward him. A powerful man; she was wholly
+helpless in his grasp. His arms went about her and he pressed his lips
+to hers--three times. Then he released her, his eyes glowing like red
+coals.
+
+But she was a northern girl, trained to self-defense. As he freed her,
+her strong, slender arm swung out and up--with really startling force.
+Her half-closed hand struck with a sharp, drawing motion across his
+lips, a blow that extinguished his laughter as the wind extinguishes a
+match-blaze.
+
+"You little--devil!"
+
+The tempest of the forest was upon her, and her eyes blazed as she
+hastened around the house.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+Jeffery Neilson and Chan Heminway were already in session when Ray
+Brent, his face flushed and his eyes still angry and red, joined them.
+Neilson was a tall, gaunt man, well past fifty--from his manner
+evidently the leader of the three. He had heavy, grizzled brows and
+rather quiet eyes, a man of deep passions and great resolve. Yet his
+lean face had nothing of the wickedness of Brent's. There had evidently
+been some gentling, redeeming influence in his life, and although it was
+not in the ascendancy, it had softened his smile and the hard lines
+about his lips. Notorious as he was through the northern provinces he
+was infinitely to be preferred to Chan Heminway, who sat at his left
+who, a weaker man than either Ray or Neilson, was simply a tool in the
+latter's hand,--a smashing sledge or a cruel blade as his master wished.
+He was vicious without strength, brutal without self-control. Locks of
+his blond hair, unkempt, dropped over his low forehead into his eyes.
+
+"Where's Beatrice?" Neilson asked at once. "I thought I heard her
+voice."
+
+Ray searched for a reply, and in the silence all three heard the girl's
+tread as she went around the house. "She's going in the back door.
+Likely she didn't want to disturb us."
+
+Ray looked up to find Neilson's eyes firmly fixed upon his face. Try
+hard as he might he couldn't restrain a surge of color in his cheeks.
+"Yes, and what's the rest of it?" Neilson asked.
+
+"Nothing--I know of."
+
+"You've got some white marks on your cheeks--where it ain't red. The kid
+can slap, can't she--"
+
+Ray flushed deeper, but the lines of Neilson's face began to deepen and
+draw. Then his voice broke in a great, hearty chuckle. He had evidently
+tried to restrain it--but it got away from him at last. No man could
+look at him, his twinkling eyes and his joyous face, and doubt but that
+this soft-eyed, strong-handed daughter of his was the joy and pride of
+his life. He had heard the ringing slap through the ramshackle walls of
+the house, and for all that he favored Ray as his daughter's suitor, the
+independence and spirit behind the action had delighted him to the core.
+
+But Ray's sense of humor did not run along these lines. The first danger
+signal of rising anger leaped like a little, hot spark into his eyes.
+Many times before Ray had been obliged to curb his wrath against
+Neilson: to-night he found it more difficult than ever. The time would
+come, he felt, when he would no longer be obliged to submit to Neilson's
+dictation. Sometime the situation would be reversed; he would be leader
+instead of underling, taking the lion's share of the profit of their
+enterprises instead of the left-overs, and when that time came he would
+not be obliged to endure Neilson's jests in silence. Neilson himself, as
+he eyed the stiffening figure, had no realization of Ray's true attitude
+toward him. He thought him a willing helper, a loyal partner, and he
+would not have sat with such content in his chair if he could have
+beheld the smoldering fires of jealousy and ambition in the other's
+breasts The time would come when Ray would assert himself, he
+thought--when Beatrice was safe in his hands.
+
+"It may seem like a joke to you, but it doesn't to me," he answered
+shortly. Nor was he able to keep his anger entirely from his voice.
+"Everything that girl does you think is perfect. Instead of encouraging
+her in her meanness you ought to help me out." His tones harshened, and
+he lost the fine edge of his self-control. "I've stood enough nonsense
+from that little--"
+
+Seemingly, Neilson made no perceptible movement in his chair. What
+change there was showed merely in the lines of his face, and
+particularly in the light that dwelt in the gray, straightforward eyes.
+"Don't finish it," he ordered simply.
+
+For an instant eyes met eyes in bitter hatred--and Chan Heminway began
+to wonder just where he would seek cover in case matters got to a
+shooting stage. But Ray's gaze broke before that of his leader. "I'm not
+going to say anything I shouldn't," he protested sullenly. "But this
+doesn't look like you're helping out my case any. You told me you'd do
+everything you could for me. You even went so far as to say you'd take
+matters in your own hands--"
+
+"And I will, in reason. I'm keeping away the rest of the boys so you can
+have a chance. But if you think I'm going to tie her up to anybody
+against her will, you're barking up the wrong tree. She's my daughter,
+and her happiness happens to be my first object." Then his voice
+changed, good-humored again. "But cool down, boy--wait till you hear
+everything I've got to tell you, and you'll feel better. Of course, you
+know what it's about--"
+
+"I suppose--Hiram Melville's claim."
+
+"That's it. Of course we don't know that he had a claim--but he had a
+pocket full of the most beautiful nuggets you ever want to see. No one
+knows that fact but me--I saw 'em by accident--and I got 'em now. You
+know he's always had an idea that the Yuga country was worth
+prospecting, but we always laughed at him. Of course it is a pocket
+country; but it's my opinion he found a pocket that would make many a
+placer look sick, before he died."
+
+"But he might have got the nuggets somewheres else--"
+
+"Hold your horses. Where would he get 'em? There's something else
+suspicious too. He wrote a letter, the day before he died, and addressed
+it to Ezra Melville, somewhere in Oregon. He must just about got it by
+now--maybe a few days ago. He had the clerk mail it for him, and got him
+to witness it, saying it was his will--and what did that old hound have
+to will except a mine? Next day he wrote another letter somewhere
+too--but I didn't find out who it was to. If I'd had any gumption I'd
+got ahold of 'em both. The point is--I'm convinced it's worth a trip, at
+least."
+
+"I should say it was worth a trip," Ray agreed. "And a fast one, too.
+There might be some competition--"
+
+"There won't be a rush, if that's what you mean. Everybody knows it's a
+pocket country, and the men in this town wouldn't any more get excited
+about the Yuga River--"
+
+"True enough--but that Ezra Melville will be showin' up one of these
+days. We want to be settin' pretty when he comes."
+
+"You've got the idea. It ought to be the easiest job we ever did. It's
+my idea he had his claim all laid out, monuments up and everything, and
+was on his way down to Bradleyburg to record it when he died. He just
+went out before he could make the rest of the trip. All we'll have to do
+is go up there, locate in his cabin, and sit tight."
+
+"Wait just a second." Ray was lost in thought. "There's an old cabin up
+that way somewhere--along that still place--on the river. It was a
+trapping cabin belonging to old Bill Foulks."
+
+"That's true enough--but it likely ain't near his mine. Boys, it's a
+clean, open-and-shut job--with absolutely nothing to interfere. If his
+brother does come up, he'll find us in possession--and nothing to do but
+go back. So to-morrow we'll load up and pack horses and light out."
+
+"Up Poor Man creek, through Spruce Pass--"
+
+"Sure. Then over to the Yuga. Old Hiram was hunting down some kind of a
+scent in the vicinity of that old cabin you speak of, last heard of him.
+And I wouldn't be surprised, on second thought, if it wasn't his base of
+operations."
+
+"All easy enough," Ray agreed. He paused, and a queer, speculative look
+came into his wild-beast's eyes. "But what I don't see--how you can
+figure all this is going to help me out with Beatrice."
+
+Jeffery Neilson turned in his chair. "You can't, eh? You need
+spectacles. Just think a minute--say you had fifty or sixty thousand all
+your own--to spend on a wife and buy her clothes and automobiles. Don't
+you think that would make you more attractive to the feminine eye?"
+
+At first Ray made no apparent answer. He merely sat staring ahead. But
+plainly the words had wakened riot in his imagination. Such a sum meant
+_wealth_, the power his ambitious nature had always craved, idleness and
+the gratification of all his lusts. He was no stranger to greed, this
+degenerate son of the North. "It'd help some," he admitted in a low
+voice. "But what makes you think it would be worth that much?"
+
+"Because old Hiram talked a little, half-delirious, before he died. 'A
+quarter of a million,' he kept saying. 'Right there in sight--a quarter
+of a million.' If he really found that much stowed away in the rocks,
+that's fifty or sixty apiece for you and Chan."
+
+Ray's mind worked swiftly. Sixty thousand apiece--and that left one
+hundred and thirty thousand for their leader's portion. The old rage and
+jealousy that had preyed upon his mind so long swept over him, more
+compelling than ever. "Go on," he urged. "What's the rest of it?"
+
+"The second thing is--we'll need some one to cook, and look after us,
+when we get up there. Who should it be but Beatrice? She wouldn't want
+to stay here; you know how she loves the woods. And if you know anything
+about girls, you know that nothing counts like having 'em alone. There
+wouldn't be any of the other boys up there to trouble you. You'd have a
+clear field."
+
+Ray's dark eyes shone. "It'd help some," he admitted. "That means--hunt
+up an extra horse for her to-morrow."
+
+"No. I don't intend she should come up now. Not till we're settled."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Think a minute, and you'll see why not. You know how she regards this
+business of jumping claims. She's dead against it if any one could
+be--bless her heart!"
+
+"Don't go getting sentimental, Neilson."
+
+"And don't let that mouth of yours get you into trouble, either." Once
+more their eyes locked: once more Ray looked away. "I hope she'll always
+stay that way, too. As I say, she's dead against it, and she's been a
+little suspicious ever since that Jenkins deal. Besides, it wouldn't be
+any pleasure for her until we find a claim and get settled. When she
+comes up we'll be established in a couple of cabins--one for her and me
+and one for you two--and she won't know but that we made the original
+find."
+
+"How will she know just where to find us?"
+
+"We're bound to be somewhere near that old cabin on the Yuga. We'll set
+a date for her to come, and I can meet her there."
+
+It was, Ray was forced to admit, a highly commendable scheme. He sat
+back, contemplating all its phases. "It's slick enough," he agreed. "It
+ought to do the trick."
+
+But if he had known the girl's thoughts, as she sat alone in the back
+part of the house, he wouldn't have felt so confident. She was watching
+the moon over the spruce forest, and she was thinking, with repugnance
+in her heart, of the indignity to which she had been subjected at her
+father's door. Yet the kisses Ray had forced on her were no worse than
+his blasphemy of her dreams. The spirit of romance was abroad
+to-night--in the enchantment of the moon--and she was wistful and
+imaginative as never before. This was just the normal expression of her
+starved girlhood--the same childlike wistfulness with which a Cinderella
+might long for her prince--just as natural and as wholesome and as much
+a part of youth as laughter and happiness.
+
+"I won't believe him, I won't believe him," she told herself. Her
+thought turned to other channels, and her heart spoke its wish.
+"Wherever he is--sometime he'll come to me."
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+At a little town at the end of steel Ben and Ezram ended the first lap
+of their journey. They had had good traveling these past days. Steadily
+they had gone north, through the tilled lands of Northern Washington,
+through the fertile valleys of lower British Columbia, traversing great
+mountain ranges and penetrating gloomy forests, and now had come to the
+bank of a north-flowing river,--a veritable flood and one of the monarch
+rivers of the North. Every hour their companionship had been more close
+and their hopes higher. Every waking moment Ben had been swept with
+thankfulness for the chance that had come to him.
+
+They had worked for their meals and passage--hard, manual toil--but it
+had seemed only play to them both. Sometimes they mended fence,
+sometimes helped at farm labor, and one gala morning, with entire good
+will and cheer, they beat into cleanliness every carpet in a widow's
+cottage. And the sign of the outcast was fading from Ben's flesh.
+
+The change was marked in his face. His eye seemed more clear and
+steadfast, his lips more firm, the lines of his face were not so hard
+and deep. His fellows of the underworld would have scarcely known him
+now,--his lips and chin darkening with beard and this new air of
+self-respect upon him. Perhaps they had forgotten him, but it was no
+less than he had done to them. The prison walls seemed already as if
+they hadn't been true. He loved every minute of the journey, freshness
+instead of filth, freedom instead of confinement, fragrant fields and
+blossoming flowers. Ever the stars and the moon, remembered of old,
+yielded him a peace and happiness beyond his power to tell. And his
+gratitude to Ezram grew apace.
+
+Besides self-confidence and the constant, slow unraveling of his memory
+problems, each day yielded rich gifts: no less than added trust in each
+other. Always they found each other steadfast, utterly to be relied
+upon. Ezram never regretted for a moment his offer to Ben. The young man
+had seemingly developed under his eye and was a real aid to him in all
+the problems of the journey.
+
+As the days passed, the whole tone and key of the land had seemed to
+change. They were full in the mountains now, snow gleaming on the
+heights, forests blue-black on the slopes; and Ben's response was a
+growing excitement that at first he could not analyze. The air was
+sweeter, more bracing, and sometimes he discerned a fleeting, delicate
+odor that drew him up short in his talk and held him entranced. There
+was a sparkle and stir in the air, unknown in the cities he had left;
+and to breathe it deeply thrilled him with an unexplainable happiness.
+
+Some way it was all familiar, all dear to him as if it had once been
+close to his life. The sparkle in the air was not new, only recalled:
+long and long ago he had wakened to find just such a delicate fragrance
+in his nostrils. But the key hadn't come to him yet. His memory pictures
+were ever stronger of outline, clearer in his mind's eye, yet they were
+still too dim for him to interpret them. In these days Ezram watched him
+closely, with a curious, intense interest.
+
+It was no longer pleasant to sleep out in the hay. For the sake of
+warmth alone they were obliged to hire their night's lodging at cheap
+hotels. Spring was full in the land they had left: it was just
+beginning here. The mountains, visible from the village of Saltsville
+where they left the railroad, were still swept with snow.
+
+Ben felt that he would have liked to take a day off at this point and
+venture with his companion into the high, wooded hills that fronted the
+town, but he agreed with Ezram that they could not spare the time. They
+swiftly made preparations for their journey down-river. A canoe was
+bought for a reasonable sum--they were told they had a good chance of
+selling it again when they left the river near Snowy Gulch--and at the
+general store they bought an axe, rudimentary fishing tackle, tobacco,
+blankets, and all manner of simpler provisions, such as flour, rice,
+bacon, coffee, canned milk, and sugar. And for a ridiculously small sum
+which he mysteriously produced from the pocket of his faded jeans Ezram
+bought a second-hand rifle--an ancient gun of large caliber but of
+enduring quality--and a box of shells to match.
+
+"Old Hiram left me a gun, but we'll each need one," Ezram explained.
+"And they tell me there's a chance to pick up game, like as not, goin'
+down the river."
+
+They would have need of good canoe-craft before the journey's end, the
+villagers told them. Ezram had not boasted of any such ability, and at
+first Ben regarded the plan with considerable misgivings. And it was
+with the most profound amazement that, when they pushed off, he saw
+Ezram deliberately seat himself in the bow, leaving the more important
+place to his young companion.
+
+"Good heavens, I'll capsize you in a minute," Ben said. "How do you dare
+risk it----"
+
+"Push off and stop botherin' me," Ezram answered. "There's a paddle--go
+ahead and shoot 'er."
+
+The waters caught the canoe, speeding it downstream; and in
+apprehension of immediate disaster Ben seized the paddle. Swiftly he
+thrust it into the streaming water at his side.
+
+He was not further aware of Ezram's searching gaze. He did not know of
+the old man's delight at the entire incident--first the anxious, hurried
+stroke of the paddle, then the movement of Ben's long fingers as he
+caught a new hold, finally the white flame of exultation that came into
+his face. For himself, Ben instantly knew that this was his own sphere.
+He suddenly found himself an absolute master of his craft: at the touch
+of the paddle controlling it as a master mechanic controls a delicate
+machine.
+
+The white waters were no more to be feared. He found that he knew, as if
+by instinct, every trick of the riverman's trade,--the slow stroke, the
+fast stroke, the best stroke for a long day's sail, the little half-turn
+in his hands that put the blade on edge in the water and gave him the
+finest control. It was all so familiar, so unspeakably dear to him.
+Clear, bright memories hovered close to him, almost within his grasp.
+
+"Do you remember when you shot the Athabaska Rapids?" Ezram had asked.
+It was all clear enough. In that life that was forgotten he had
+evidently lived much in a canoe, knowing every detail of river life.
+Perhaps he had been a master canoeist; at least he felt a strange,
+surging sense of self-confidence and power. He understood, now, why the
+image of rushing waters had come so often into his dreams. Dim pictures
+of river scenes--cataracts white with foam, rapids with thunderous
+voices, perilous eddies, and then, just beyond, glassy waters where the
+shadow of the canoe was unbroken in the blue depths--streamed through
+his mind, but they were not yet bright enough for him to seize and hold.
+
+He enjoyed the first few hours of paddling, but in the long, warm
+afternoon came indolence, and they were both willing to glide with the
+current and watch the ever-changing vista of the shore. For the first
+time since they had come into the real North, Ben found opportunity to
+observe and study the country.
+
+Already they were out of sight of the last vestige of a habitation; and
+the evergreen forests pushed down to the water's edge. From the middle
+of the stream the woods appeared only as a dark wall, but this was
+immeasurably fascinating to Ben. It suggested mystery, adventure; yet
+its deeper appeal, the thing that stirred him and thrilled him to the
+quick, he could neither understand nor analyze.
+
+Sometimes a little clump of trees stood apart, and from their shape he
+identified them as the incomparable spruce, perhaps the most
+distinguished and beautiful of all the evergreens. He marked their great
+height, their slender forms, their dark foliage that ever seemed to be
+silvered with frost; and they seemed to him to answer, to the fullest
+extent, some vague expectation of which he had scarcely been aware.
+
+The wild life of the river filled him with speechless delight. Sometimes
+he saw the waters break and gleam at the leap of a mighty salmon--the
+king fish of the North on his spring rush to the headwaters where he
+would spawn and die--and often the canoe sent flocks of waterfowl into
+flight. Ben dimly felt that on the tree-clad shores larger, more
+glorious living creatures were standing, hiding, watching the canoe
+glide past. The thought thrilled him.
+
+Late afternoon, and they worked closer to the shore. They were watching
+for a place to land. But because the shadows of twilight were already
+falling, the forest itself was hardly more vivid to their eyes. Once it
+seemed to Ben that he saw the underbrush move and waver at the water's
+edge, and his heart leaped; but whatever stirred kept itself concealed.
+And now, in the gray of twilight, Ezram saw the place to land.
+
+It was a small lagoon into which a creek emptied, and beyond was an open
+meadow, found so often and so unexpectedly in the North woods. Swiftly
+Ben turned the canoe into shore.
+
+Ezram climbed out and made fast, and so busy was he with his work that
+he did not glance at Ben, otherwise he might have beheld a phenomenon
+that would have been of keen interest to the alienist, Forest. His young
+charge had suddenly grown quite pale. Ben himself was neither aware of
+this nor of the fact that his heart was hammering wildly in his breast
+and his blood racing, like wild rivers, through his veins: he was only
+thrilled and held by a sense of vast, impending developments. Every
+nerve tingled and thrilled, and why he did not know.
+
+Ezram began to unload; but now, his blue eyes shining, he began a covert
+watch of his young companion. He saw the man from prison suddenly catch
+his breath in inexpressible awe and his eye kindle with a light of
+unknown source. A great question was shaping itself in Ben's mind, but
+as yet he could not find the answer.
+
+All at once Ben knew this place. Here was nothing strange or new: it was
+all as he had known it would be in his inmost heart. All of it spoke to
+him with familiar voice, seemingly to welcome him as a son is welcomed
+after long absence. There was nothing here that had not been known and
+beloved of old. Vivid memories, bright as lightning, swept through him.
+
+He had always known this wholesome, sweet breath that swept into his
+face. It was merely that of the outdoors, the open places that were his
+own haunts. It was wholly fitting and true that the silence should lie
+over the dark spruce that ringed about him, a silence that, in its
+infinite harmony with some queer mood of silence in his own heart, was
+more moving than any voice. All was as he had secretly known: the hushed
+tree aisles, the gray radiance--soft as a hand upon the brow--of the
+afterglow; the all-pervading health and peace of the wilderness. Except
+for an old and trusted companion, he was alone with it all, and that too
+was as it should be. Just he and the forest, his companion and the
+gliding river.
+
+He didn't try to understand, at first, the joy and the wonder that
+thrilled him, nor could he speak aloud the thoughts that came to him.
+Ravished and mystified, he walked softly to the dark, still edge of the
+forest, penetrated it a distance, then sat down to wait.
+
+For the first time in years, it seemed to him, he was at peace. A
+strange sense of self-realization--lost to him in his years of
+exile--climbed like fire through him; and with it the return of a lost
+virility, a supreme vigor tingling each little nerve; a sense of
+strength and power that was almost blinding.
+
+He sat still. He saw the twilight descending, ever heavier, over the
+forest. The sharp edges of the individual trees faded and blended, the
+trunks blurred. He turned one fleeting glance of infinite, inexpressible
+gratitude toward Ezram--the man who had brought him here and who now was
+busily engaged in unpacking the canoe and making camp--then looked back
+to his forests. The wind brought the wood smells,--spruce and moldering
+earth and a thousand more no man could name. The great, watchful,
+brooding spirit of the forest went in to him.
+
+All at once his heart seemed to pause in his breast. He was
+listening,--for what he did not know. His eyes strained into the
+shadows. Brush wavered, a twig cracked with a miniature explosion. And
+then two figures emerged into the beaver meadow opposite him.
+
+They were only creatures of the wild, an old cow moose, black and
+ungainly, and her long-legged, awkward calf. Yet they supplied the
+detail that was missing. They were the one thing needed to complete the
+picture--the crowning touch that revealed this land as it was--the
+virgin wilderness where the creatures of the wild still held full sway.
+
+But it did more. All at once a great clarity seemed to take possession
+of his mind. Here, in these dark forests, were the _stimuli_ of which
+Forest, the alienist, had spoken; and his brain seemed to leap, as in
+one impulse, to the truth. Suddenly he knew the answer to all the
+questions and problems that had troubled him so long.
+
+Many times, in the past years, he had seen logs jammed in the water, a
+veritable labyrinth that defied dissolution. Suddenly, as if by magic,
+the key log would be ejected, and the whole jam would break, shatter
+down in one stupendous crash, settle and dissolve, leaving at last only
+drift logs floating quietly in the river. Thus it was with the confusion
+in his brain. All at once it seemed to dissolve, the tangled skeins
+straightened out, the association areas of his mind stirred full into
+life once more. As he sat there, pale as the twilight sky, the mists of
+amnesia lifted from him. He was cured as if by the touch of a holy man.
+
+No wonder these forests depths were familiar. His boyhood and early
+manhood, clear until the vortex of war had engulfed him, had been spent
+amid just such surroundings, in just such silences, on the banks of
+just such wilderness rivers. The same sky line of dark, heaven-reaching
+spruce had fronted him of old. He sprang up, his eyes blazing. "I
+remember everything," an inaudible voice spoke within him. Then he
+whispered, fervently, to his familiar wilds. "And I have come home."
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+Everything was as it should be, as he and Ezram made the camp. He
+himself cut the boughs for their beds, laid them with his remembered
+skill, spread the blankets, and kept the fire blazing while Ezram
+cooked; afterwards he knew the indescribable peace of a pipe smoke
+beside the glowing coals. He saw the moon come up at last, translating
+the spruce forest into a fairy land.
+
+Of course he had remembered the moon. How many times had he watched for
+its argent gleam on the sky line, the vivid, detailed silhouette of the
+spruce against it; and then its slow-spreading glory through the still,
+dark forests! The spires of the trees grew ensilvered, as always;
+immense nebulous patches lay between the trunks, shadows stole
+mysteriously, phantoms met, lingered, and vanished.
+
+This was his own North! The stir and vigor in the very air told him
+that. This was the land he had dreamed of, under the moon; the primeval
+forests that had tried him, tested him, staked their cruel might against
+him, but yet had blessed him with their infinite beneficence and
+hospitality. It was ever somber, yet its dusky beauty stirred him more
+than any richness he had seen in bright cities. He knew its every mood:
+ecstasy in spring; gentleness in summer; brooding melancholy in the gray
+days of fall; remorseless, savage, but unspeakably beautiful in the
+winter. He felt his old pity for the spring flowers, blossoming so
+hopefully in this gentle season. How soon they would be covered with
+many feet of snow!
+
+"It's all come clear again," he told Ezram. And the two men talked over,
+quietly and happily, old days at Thunder Lake. He remembered now that
+Ezram had always been the most intimate friend of his own family: a spry
+old godfather to himself and young sister, a boon companion to his once
+successful rival, Ben's father. Ben did not wonder, now, at his own
+perplexity when Forest had spoken of "Wolf" Darby. That was his own name
+known throughout hundreds of square miles of forest and in dozens of
+little river hamlets in an Eastern province. Partly the name was in
+token of his skill as a woodsman and frontiersman, partly in recognition
+of certain traits that his fellow woodsmen had seen and wondered at in
+him. It was not an empty nickname, in his case. It was simply that the
+name suited him.
+
+"The boys had reason a-plenty for callin' you that," Ezram told him. "Up
+here, as you know, men don't get no complimentary epithets unless they
+deserve 'em. Some men, Ben, are like weasels. You've seen 'em. You've
+seen human rats, too. As if the souls they carried around with 'em was
+the souls of rats. Of course you remember 'Grizzly' Silverdale? Did you
+ever see any one who in disposition and looks and walk and everything
+reminded you so much of a grizzly bear? I've known men like sheep, and
+men with the faithful souls of dogs. You remember when you got in the
+big fight in the Le Perray bar?"
+
+"I don't think I'll ever forget it again."
+
+"That's the night the name came on you, to stay. You remember how you'd
+drive into one of them, leap away, then tear into another. Like a wolf
+for all the world! You was always hard to get into a fight, but you
+know as well as I do, and I ain't salvin' you when I say it, that you're
+the most terrible, ferocious fighter, forgettin' everything but blood,
+that ever paddled a canoe on the Athabaska. Some men, Ben, seem to have
+the spirit of the wolf right under their skins, a sort of a wild
+instinct that might have come straight down from the stone age, for all
+I know. You happen to be one of 'em, the worst I ever saw. Maybe you
+don't remember, but you took your bull moose before you was thirteen
+years old."
+
+Ben sat dreaming. The Athabaska Rapids was not an empty name to him now.
+He remembered the day he had won the canoe race at Lodge Pole. Other
+exploits occurred to him,--of brutal, savage brawls in river taverns, of
+adventures on the trail, of struggling with wild rivers when his canoe
+capsized, of running the great logs down through white waters. It was
+his world, these far-stretching wildernesses. And he blessed, with all
+the fervency of his heart, the man who had brought him home.
+
+He went to his bed, but sleep did not at once come to him. He lay with
+hushed breathing, listening to the little, secret noises, known so well,
+of the wilderness night. He heard the wild creatures start forth on
+their midnight journeys. Once a lynx mewed at the edge of the forest;
+and he laughed aloud when some large creature--probably a moose--grunted
+and splashed water in the near-by beaver meadow.
+
+Thus ended the first of a brilliant succession of joyous days,
+descending the stream in the daylight hours and camping on the bank at
+night. Every day they plunged deeper into the heart of the wilderness,
+and every hour Ben felt more at home.
+
+It was only play for him,--to meet and shoot successfully the rapids of
+the river. In the long stillnesses he paddled hour upon hour, not only
+to make time but to find an outlet for his surging energy. His old-time
+woodsman's pleasures were recalled again: shooting waterfowl for their
+mess in the still dawns, racing the swimming moose when they ran on him
+in the water. One day, fish hungry, he rigged up the elementary fishing
+tackle that they had brought from Saltsville and tried for a salmon.
+
+To a long, tough rod cut on the river bank he attached thirty feet of
+cheap, white cord, and to the cord he fastened a bright spoon hook--the
+spinner that salmon fishers know. He had no leader, no reel, no
+delicately balanced salmon rod--and Ezram was full of scorn for the
+whole proceeding. And it was certainly true that, by all the rules of
+angling, Ben had no chance whatever to get a bite.
+
+The cord was visible in the clear water, and the spoon itself was
+scarcely more than twenty feet from the rear of the boat. But this
+northern stream was not at all like the famous salmon rivers known to
+sportsmen. In years to come, when the lines of communication are better
+and tourist hotels are established on its banks, the river may then
+begin to conform to the qualifications of a conventional fishing stream,
+and then Ben's crude tackle will be unavailing. But at present the
+salmon were not so particular. As fishermen came but rarely, the fish
+were in countless numbers; and in such a galaxy there were bound to be
+few misguided fish that did not know a sportsman's tackle from a dub's.
+
+The joy of angling, once known, dwells in the body until death, and Ben
+was a born fisherman. The old delight that can never die crept back to
+him the instant he felt the clumsy rod in his hands and the faint throb
+of the line through the delicate mechanism of his nerves. And
+apparently for no other reason than that the river hordes wished to
+welcome him home, almost at once a gigantic bull salmon took his spoon.
+
+Ezram's first knowledge of it was a wild yell that almost startled him
+over the side--the same violent outcry that old anglers still can not
+restrain when the fish takes hold, even after a lifetime of angling.
+When he recovered himself he looked to see Ben kneeling frantically in
+the stern, hanging for dear life to his rod and seemingly in grave
+danger of being pulled overboard.
+
+No man who has felt that first, overpowering jolt of a striking salmon
+can question the rapture of that first moment. The jolt carried through
+all the intricacies of the nerves, jarred the soul within the man, and
+seemingly registered in the germ plasm itself an impression that could
+be recalled, in dreams, ten generations hence. Fortunately the pole
+withstood that first, frantic rush, and then things began to happen in
+earnest.
+
+The great trout seemed to dance on the surface of the water. He tugged,
+he swam in frantic circles, he flopped and darted and sulked and rushed
+and leaped. If he hadn't been securely hooked, and if it had not been
+for a skill earned in a hundred such battles, Ben would not have held
+him a moment.
+
+But the time came at last, after a sublime half-hour, when his steam
+began to die. His rushes were less powerful, and often he hung like a
+dead weight on the line. Slowly Ben worked him in, not daring to believe
+that he was conquering, willing to sell his soul for the privilege of
+seeing the great fish safe in the boat. His eyes protruded, perspiration
+gleamed on his brow, he talked foolishly and incessantly to Ezram, the
+fish, the river-gods, and himself. Ezram, something of an old Isaac
+Walton himself, managed the canoe with unusual dexterity and chuckled in
+the contagion of Ben's delight. And lo--in a moment more the thing was
+done.
+
+"You'd think you never had a rod in your hand before," Ezram commented
+in mock disgust. "Such hollerin' and whoopin' I never heard."
+
+Ben grinned widely. "That's fishing--the sport that keeps a man an
+amateur all his days--with an amateur's delight." His vivid smile
+quivered at his lips and was still. "That's why I love the North; it can
+never, never grow old. You're just as excited at the close as at the
+beginning. Ezram, old man, it's life!"
+
+Ezram nodded. Perhaps, in the moment's fire, Ben had touched at the
+truth. Perhaps _life_, in its fullest sense, is something more than
+being born, breathing air, consuming food, and moving the lips in
+speech. _Life_ is a thing that wilderness creatures know, realized only
+when the blood, leaping red, sweeps away lifeless and palsied tissue and
+builds a more sentient structure in its place; invoked by such forces as
+adventure and danger and battle and triumph. For the past half-hour Ben
+had lived in the fullest sense, and Ezram was a little touched by the
+look of unspeakable gratitude with which his young companion regarded
+him.
+
+But the journey ended at last. They saw the white peak they had been
+told to watch for, and soon after they came to a green bank from which
+the forest had been cut away. Softly, rather regretfully, they pushed up
+and made landing on the banks of a small stream, tributary to the great
+river, that marked the end of the water route.
+
+This stream, Ezram knew, was Poor Man's Creek, the stream of which his
+brother had written and which they must ascend to reach Spruce Pass.
+Only five miles distant, in a quartering direction from the river, was
+Snowy Gulch, the village where they were to secure supplies and, from
+Steve Morris, the late Hiram's gun and his pet, Fenris.
+
+For a time, at least, they had left the utter solitudes of the wild. Men
+had cut away the forest and had built a crude wagon road to Snowy Gulch.
+And before they were fully unpacked they made out the figure of a
+middle-aged frontiersman, his back loaded, advancing up the road toward
+them.
+
+Both men knew something of the ways of the frontier and turned in
+greeting. "Howdy," Ezram began pleasantly.
+
+"Howdy," the stranger replied. "How was goin'?"
+
+"Oh, good enough."
+
+"Come all the way from Saltsville?"
+
+"Yes. Goin' to Snowy Gulch."
+
+"It's only five miles, up this road," the stranger ventured. "I'm goin'
+up Saltsville way myself, but I won't have no river to tow me. I've got
+to do my own paddlin'. Thank the lord I'm only goin' a small part of the
+way."
+
+"You ain't goin' to swim, are you? Where's your boat."
+
+"My pard's got an old craft, and he and I are goin' to pack it out next
+trip." The stranger paused, blinking his eyes. "Say, partners--you don't
+want to sell your boat, do you?"
+
+Ben started to speak, but the doubtful look on Ezram's face checked him.
+"Oh, I don't know," the old man replied, in the discouraging tones of a
+born tradesman. In reality the old Shylock's heart was leaping gayly in
+his breast. This was almost too good to be true: a purchaser for the
+boat in the first hour. "Yet we might," he went on. "We was countin' on
+goin' back in it soon."
+
+"I'd just as leave buy it, if you want to sell it. In this jerked-off
+town there ain't a fit canoe to be had. Our boat is the worst tub you
+ever seen. How much you want for it?"
+
+Ezram stated his figure, and Ben was prone to believe that he had
+adopted a highwayman for a buddy. The amount named was nearly twice that
+which they had paid. And to his vast amazement the stranger accepted the
+offer in his next breath.
+
+"It's worth something to bring it up here, you dub," Ezram informed his
+young partner, when the latter accused him of profiteering.
+
+After the sale was made Ezram and the stranger soon got on the intimate
+terms that almost invariably follow a mutually satisfactory business
+deal, and in the talk that ensued the old man learned a fact of the most
+vital importance to their venture. And it came like a bolt from the
+blue.
+
+"So you don't know any folks in Snowy Gulch, then?" the stranger had
+asked politely. "But you'll get acquainted soon enough--"
+
+"I've got a letter to a feller named Morris," Ezram replied. "And I've
+heard of one or two more men too--Jeffery Neilson was one of 'em--"
+
+"You'll find Morris in town all right," the stranger ventured to assure
+him. "He lives right next to Neilson's. And--say--what do you know about
+this man Neilson?"
+
+"Oh, nothin' at all. Why?"
+
+"If you fellows is prospectin', Jeffery Neilson is a first-class man to
+stay away from--and his understrapers, too--Ray Brent and Chan Heminway.
+But they're out of town right now. They skinned out all in a bunch a
+few weeks ago--and I can't tell you what kind of a scent they got."
+
+Ezram felt cold to the marrow of his bones. He glanced covertly at Ben;
+fortunately his partner was busy among the supplies and was not
+listening to this conversation. Yet likely enough it was a false alarm!
+Doubtless the ugly possibility that occurred to him had no justification
+whatever in fact. Nevertheless, he couldn't restrain the question that
+was at his lips.
+
+"You don't know where they went, do you?" he asked.
+
+"Not exactly. They took up this creek here a ways, through Spruce Pass,
+and over to Yuga River--the country that kind of a crazy old chap named
+Hiram Melville, who died here a few weeks ago, has always prospected."
+
+The stranger marvelled that his old listener should have suddenly gone
+quite pale.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+Ezram had only a moment's further conversation with his new friend. He
+put two or three questions--in a rather curious, hushed voice--and got
+his answer. Yes, it was true that the shortest way to go to the Yuga
+River was to follow up the creek by which he was now standing. It was
+only out of the way to go into Snowy Gulch: they would have to come back
+to this very point. And yes, a pedestrian, carrying a light pack, could
+make much better time than a horseman with pack animals. The horses
+could go no faster than a walk, and the time required to sling packs and
+care for the animals cut down the day's march by half.
+
+These things learned, Ezram strolled over to his young partner. And at
+that moment he revealed the possession of a talent that neither he nor
+any of his friends had ever suspected. The stage had lost an artist of
+no mean ability when Ezra Melville had taken to the cattle business.
+Outwardly, to the last, little lines about his lips and eyes, he was his
+genial, optimistic, droll old self. His eye twinkled, his face beamed in
+the gray stubble, his voice was rollicking with the fun of life the same
+as ever. And like Pagliacci in his masque there was not the slightest
+exterior sign of the fear and despair that chilled his heart.
+
+"What have you and your poor victim been talking about, all this time?"
+Ben asked.
+
+"Oh, just a gab-fest--a tat-i-tat as you'd call it. But you know, Ben,
+I've got a idea all a-sudden." Ben straightened, lighted his pipe, and
+prepared to listen.
+
+"This old boy tells me that we'd save just twelve miles by striking off
+front here, instead of goin' into town. Snowy Gulch is six miles, and we
+have to come back to this very place. What's the use of goin' into town
+at all?"
+
+"Good heavens, Ez? Have you forgotten we've got to get supplies? And
+your brother's gun--and his dog?"
+
+"How do you know he's got a dog?"
+
+"He said a pup, didn't he? But it may be an elephant for all I know. Of
+course, we've got to go on in."
+
+"Yes, I know--one of us has. But, Ben, it seems to me that one of us
+ought to strike off now and figure out the way and sort of get located.
+One of us could take a little food and a couple of blankets and make it
+through in less than a day. Half a day, almost. Then we could have the
+cabin all ready, and everything laid out for to begin work. He could
+blaze any dim spots in the trail and save time for the other feller,
+comin' with the horses."
+
+"Oh, it would be all right," Ben began rather doubtfully. "I don't see
+that much is to be gained by it. But I'll strike off on foot, if you
+want me to."
+
+Ezram's mind was flashing with thoughts like lightning, and his answer
+was ready. "Ben, if you don't mind, I'll do that," he said. "I can get
+along without gazin' at the sky-scrapers of Snowy Gulch, and to tell the
+truth, that twelve miles of extra walkin' don't appeal to me one bit.
+I'd as soon have you tend to all the things in town."
+
+"But you'd get a ride, if you waited--"
+
+"I hate a horse, anyway--"
+
+"You've surely changed a lot since the war."
+
+"I was thrown off not long ago--and have been leery of the dum things
+ever since. I'd walk, sooner than ride, even if I did have a horse. So
+you roll me that big Hudson Bay blanket and give me a couple of day's
+rations. I'll make a pack for my back that I can't feel. Then you strike
+off into town."
+
+Without especial enthusiasm Ben agreed. Ezram gave a great sigh of
+satisfaction. He had put through the deal: Ben's secret thought was that
+Ezram's curiosity--always a pronounced trait with the old--had mastered
+him, and he could not wait longer to explore the mine. Not one glimpse
+of the truth as to Ezram's real reason for desiring to push on alone as
+much as occurred to him.
+
+Ezram was wholly deliberate. He knew what waited him on arrival at his
+brother's claim. Jeffery Neilson and his gang had assembled there, had
+already jumped the claim just as his brother had warned him that they
+would do; and coolly and quietly he had resolved to face them alone.
+They were desperate men, not likely to be driven from the gold by
+threats or persuasion only. But there was no law in his life, no precept
+in his code, whereby he could subject his young partner to the risk.
+
+It was true that the desire to arrive on the scene at the earliest
+possible moment had been a factor in his decision. One of them could
+hurry on, unimpeded by the pack animals, and the other must linger to
+secure their supplies; and there could really be no question, in Ezram's
+mind, which should go and which should stay. He had known perfectly that
+if Ben had realized the true need for haste, he would never have
+submitted so tamely to Ezram's will. The old man knew Wolf Darby. The
+strong dark eyes in the lean, raw-boned face reassured him as to this
+knowledge. Ben would go too, if he knew the truth. Likely he would
+insist on going alone.
+
+Ezram had decided the whole thing in a flash, realizing that a lone
+pedestrian would be practically as effective in dealing with the
+usurpers as two horsemen, impeded by the pack animals. If they didn't
+shoot to kill at first sight of him Ezram would have time in plenty to
+seek refuge in the forest and do a sharpshooter's business that would
+fill his old heart with joy. And there really wasn't any question as to
+which of the two should go. Their partnership was of long duration;
+their comradeship was deep; Ben was young, and Ezram himself was old!
+
+Ezram made his decision entirely casually, and he would have been
+surprised out of his wits if any one had expressed wonder of it. He knew
+no self-pity or sentimentality, only the knowledge that he did not
+desire that his young buddy should be shot full of holes in the first
+moment of play. The only fear that had visited him was that Ben might
+catch on and not let him go. And now he could scarcely restrain his
+triumphant chuckles in Ben's hearing.
+
+He made his pack--a few simple provisions wrapped in his blanket--and a
+knife and camp axe swung on his belt. He took his trusted pipe--because
+he knew well that he could never acquit himself creditably in a fight
+without a few lungfuls of tobacco smoke first--and he also took his
+rifle. "You'll be gettin' my brother's gun when you get to Snowy Gulch,"
+he explained, "and I may see game on the way out. And you keep this copy
+of the letter." He handed Ben the copy he had made of Hiram's will. "I'm
+the worst hand for losin' things you ever seen."
+
+"You're sure you've got the directions straight?"
+
+"Sure.--And I guess that's all."
+
+They said their simple good-bys, shaking hands over a pile of stores.
+"I've only got one decent place to keep things safe," Ezra confided,
+"and that ain't so all-fired decent, either. When I get any papers that
+are extra precious, I always stick 'em down the leg of these high old
+boots, between the sock and the leather. But it's too much work to take
+the boot off now, so you keep the letter."
+
+"I suppose you've got a million-dollar bank note hidden down there now,"
+Ben remarked.
+
+"No, not a cent. Just the same, if ever I get shuffled off all of a
+sudden--rollin' down one of these mountains, say--I want you to look
+there mighty careful. There may be a document or two of
+importance--letter to my old home, and all that."
+
+"I won't forget," Ben promised.
+
+"See that you don't." They shook hands again, lightly and happily. "So
+good-by, son, and--'_take keer of yerself_!'"
+
+The old man turned away, and soon his withered figure vanished into the
+thickets farther up the river. He was following a fairly well-worn moose
+trail, and he went swiftly. Soon he was out of hearing of the sound of
+the great river.
+
+Then the little woods people--marten and ermine and rodent and such
+other small forest creatures that--who can say?--might watch with
+exceeding interest the travelers on the trails, could have thought that
+old Ezram was already fatigued. He sat down beside a tree and drew a
+soiled sheet of paper from his pocket. Searching further he found then
+the stub of a pencil. Then he wrote.
+
+Having written he unlaced his boot on the right foot, folded the paper,
+and thrust it into the bootleg. Then, relacing the shoe, he arose and
+journeyed blithely on.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+On arriving in Snowy Gulch, Ben's first efforts were to inquire in
+regard to horses. Both pack and saddle animals, he learned, were to be
+hired of Sandy McClurg, the owner of the general store and leading
+citizen of the village; and at once he made his way to confer with him.
+
+"Most of my mustangs are rented out," the merchant informed him when
+they met in the rear of the general store, "but if you can get along
+with three, I guess I can fix you up. You can pack two of 'em, and ride
+the third."
+
+"Good enough," Ben agreed. "And after I once get in, I'd like to turn
+back two of them, and maybe all three--to save the hire and the bother
+of taking care of them. I suppose, after the fashion of cayuses, they'll
+leg it right home."
+
+"Just a little faster than a dog. Horses don't much care to grub their
+food out of them spruce forests. They're good plugs, so of course I
+don't want to rent 'em to any one who'll abuse 'em, or take 'em on too
+hard trips. Where are you heading, if the question's fair?"
+
+"Through Spruce Pass and down into the Yuga River."
+
+"Prospecting, eh? There's been quite a movement down that way lately,
+considering it never was anything but a pocket country. By starting
+early you can make it through in a day. And you said your name was--"
+
+"Darby. Ben Darby."
+
+The merchant opened his eyes. "Not the Ben Darby that took all the
+prizes at the meet at Lodge Pole--"
+
+Ben's rugged face lit with the brilliancy of his smile. "The same
+Darby," he admitted.
+
+"Well, well! I hope you'll excuse them remarks about abusing the horses.
+If I had known who you was, 'Wolf' Darby, I'd have known you knew how to
+take care of cayuses. Take 'em for as long as you want, or where you
+want. And when did you say you was going?"
+
+"First thing to-morrow."
+
+"Well, you're pretty likely to have companionship on the road, too.
+There is another party that is going up that way either to-morrow or the
+day after. Pretty lucky for you."
+
+"I'm glad of it, if he isn't a tenderfoot. That must be a pretty thickly
+settled region--where I'm heading."
+
+"On the contrary, there's only three human beings in the whole
+district--and there's a thousand of square miles back of it without even
+one. These three are some men that went up that way prospecting some
+time ago, and this other party will make four." He paused, smiling.
+"Yes, I think you will enjoy this trip to-morrow, after you see who it
+is. I'd enjoy it, and I'm thirty years older than you are."
+
+Ben's thought was elsewhere, and he only half heard. "All right--I'll be
+here before dawn to-morrow and get the horses. And now will you tell
+me--where Steve Morris lives? I've got some business with him."
+
+"Right up the street--clear to the end of the row." McClurg's humor had
+quite engulfed him by now, and he chuckled again. "And if I was you,
+I'd stop in the door just this side--and get acquainted with your fellow
+traveler."
+
+"What's his name?" Ben asked.
+
+"The party is named Neilson."
+
+Unfortunately the name had no mental associations for Ben. It wakened no
+interest or stirred no memories. He had read the letter the copy of
+which he carried but once, and evidently the name of the man Ezram had
+been warned against had made no lasting impression on Ben's mind.
+
+"All right. Maybe I'll look him up."
+
+Ben turned, then made his way up the long, straggly row of unpainted
+shacks that marked the village street. A few moments later he was
+standing in the Morris home, facing the one friend that Hiram Melville
+had possessed on earth.
+
+Ben stated his case simply. He was the partner of Hiram's brother, he
+said, and he had been designated to take care of Fenris and such other
+belongings as Hiram had left. Morris studied his face with the quiet,
+far-seeing eyes of a woodsman.
+
+"You've got means of identification?" he asked.
+
+Ben realized with something of a shock that he had none at all. The
+letter he carried was merely a copy without Hiram's signature; besides,
+he had no desire to reveal its contents. For an instant he was
+considerably embarrassed. But Morris smiled quietly.
+
+"I guess I won't ask you for any," he said. "Hiram didn't leave
+anything, far as I know, except his old gun and his pet. Lord knows, I'd
+let anybody take that pet of his that's fool enough to say he's got any
+claim to him, and you can be sure I ain't going to dispute his claim."
+
+"Fenris, then, is,--something of a problem?"
+
+"The worst I ever had. His old gun is a good enough weapon, but I'm
+willing to trust you with it to get rid of Fenris. If you don't turn out
+to be the right man, I'll dig up for the gun--and feel lucky at that. I
+won't be able to furnish another Fenris, though, and I guess nobody'll
+be sorry. And if I was you--I'd take him out in a nice quiet place and
+shoot him."
+
+He turned, with the intention of securing the gun from an inner room. He
+did not even reach the door. It was as if both of them were struck
+motionless, frozen in odd, fixed attitudes, by a shrill scream for help
+that penetrated like a bullet the thin walls of the house.
+
+Instinctively both of them recognized it, unmistakably, as the piercing
+cry of a woman in great distress and terror. It rose surprisingly high,
+hovered a ghastly instant, and then was almost drowned out and
+obliterated by another sound, such a sound as left Ben only wondering
+and appalled.
+
+The sound was in the range between a growl and a bay, instantly
+identifying itself as the utterance of an animal, rather than a human
+being. And it was savage and ferocious simply beyond power of words to
+tell. Ben's first thought was of some enormous, vicious dog, and yet his
+wood's sense told him that the utterance was not that of a dog. Rather
+it contained that incredible fierceness and savagery that marks the
+killing cries of the creatures of the wild.
+
+He heard it even as he leaped through the door in answer to the scream
+for aid. His muscles gathered with that mysterious power that had always
+sustained him in his moments of crisis. He took the steps in one leap,
+Morris immediately behind him.
+
+"Fenris is loose," he heard the man say. "He'll kill some one----!"
+
+Ben could still hear the savage cries of the animal, seemingly from
+just behind the adjoining house. A girl's terrified voice still called
+for help. And deeply appalled by the sounds, Ben wished that the rifle,
+such a weapon as had been his trust since early boyhood, was ready and
+loaded in his hands.
+
+He raced about the house; and at once the scene, in every vivid detail,
+was revealed to him. Pressed back against the wall of a little woodshed
+that stood behind her house a girl stood at bay,--a dark-eyed girl whose
+beautiful face was drawn and stark-white with horror. She was screaming
+for aid, her fascinated gaze held by a gray-black, houndlike creature
+that crouched, snarling, twenty yards distant.
+
+Evidently the creature was stealing toward her in stealthy advance more
+like a stalking cat than a frenzied hound. Nor was this creature a
+hound, in spite of the similarity of outline. Such fearful, lurid
+surface-lights as all of them saw in its fierce eyes are not
+characteristic of the soft, brown orbs of the dog, ancient friend to
+man, but are ever the mark of the wild beast of the forest. The fangs
+were bared, gleaming in foam, the hair stood erect on the powerful
+shoulders; and instantly Ben recognized its breed. It was a magnificent
+specimen of that huge, gaunt runner of the forests, the Northern wolf.
+Evidently from the black shades of his fur he was partly of the Siberian
+breed of wolves that beforetime have migrated down on the North American
+side of Bering Sea.
+
+A chain was attached to the animal's collar, and this in turn to a stake
+that had been freshly pulled from the ground. This beast was
+Fenris,--the woods creature that old Hiram Melville had raised from
+cubdom.
+
+There could be no doubt as to the reality of the girl's peril. The
+animal was insane with the hunting madness, and he was plainly stalking
+her, just as his fierce mother might have stalked a fawn, across the
+young grass. Already he was almost near enough to leap, and the girl's
+young, strong body could be no defense against the hundred and fifty
+pounds of wire sinew and lightning muscle that constituted the wolf. The
+bared fangs need flash but once for such game as this. And yet, after
+the first, startled glance, Ben Darby felt himself complete master of
+the situation.
+
+No man could tell him why. No fact of his life would have been harder to
+explain, no impulse in all his days had had a more inscrutable origin.
+The realization seemed to spring from some cool, sequestered knowledge
+hidden deep in his spirit. He knew, in one breathless instant, that he
+was the master--and that the girl was safe.
+
+He seemed to know, again, that he had found his ordained sphere. He knew
+this breed,--this savage, blood-mad, fierce-eyed creature that turned,
+snarling, at his approach. He had something in common with the breed,
+knowing their blood-lusts and their mighty moods; and dim, dreamlike
+memory reminded him that he had mastered them in a long war that went
+down to the roots of time. Fenris was only a fellow wilderness creature,
+a pack brother of the dark forests, and he had no further cause for
+fear.
+
+"Fenris!" he ordered sharply. "Come here!" His voice was commanding and
+clear above the animal's snarls.
+
+There followed a curious, long instant of utter silence and infinite
+suspense. The girl's scream died on her lips: the wolf stood tense,
+wholly motionless. Morris, who had drawn his knife and had prepared to
+leap with magnificent daring upon the wolf, turned with widening eyes,
+instinctively aware of impending miracle. Ben's eyes met those of the
+wolf, commanding and unafraid.
+
+"Down, Fenris," Ben said again. "Down!"
+
+Then slowly, steadily, Ben moved toward him. Watching unbelieving,
+Morris saw the fierce eyes begin to lose their fire. The stiff hair on
+the shoulders fell into place, tense muscle relaxed. He saw in wonder
+that the animal was trembling all over.
+
+Ben stood beside him now, his hand reaching. "Down, down," he cautioned
+quietly. Suddenly the wolf crouched, cowering, at his feet.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+Ben straightened to find himself under a wondering scrutiny by both
+Morris and the girl. "Good Lord, Darby!" the former exclaimed. "How did
+you do it--"
+
+Now that the suspense was over, Ben himself stood smiling, quite at
+ease. "Can't say just how. I just felt that I could--I've always been
+able to handle animals. He's tame, anyway."
+
+"Tame, is he? You ought to have had to care for him the last few weeks,
+and you'd think tame. Not once have I dared go in reach of his rope. And
+there he is, crouched at your feet! I was always dreading he'd get
+away--" Morris paused, evidently remembering the girl. "Beatrice, are
+you hurt?"
+
+The girl moved toward them. "No. He didn't touch me. But you came just
+in time--" The girl's voice wavered; and Ben stepped to her side. "I'm
+all right now--"
+
+"But you'd better sit down," Ben advised quietly. "It was enough to
+scare any one to death--"
+
+"Any one--but you--" the girl replied, her voice still unsteady. But she
+paused when she saw the warm color spread over Ben's rugged, brown face.
+And his embarrassment was real. Naturally shy and unassuming, such
+effusive praise as this always disturbed him--just as it would have
+embarrassed any really masculine man alive. Women, more extravagant in
+speech and loving flattery with a higher ardor, would have found it hard
+to believe how really distressed he was; but Morris, an outdoor man to
+the core, understood completely. Besides, Ben knew that the praise was
+not deserved. Excessive bravery had played no part in the scene of a
+moment before. He had been brave just as far as Morris was brave,
+leaping freely in response to a call for help: the same degree of
+bravery that can be counted on in most men, over the face of the earth.
+Bravery does not lie alone in facing danger: there must also be the
+consciousness of danger, the conquest of fear. In this case Ben had felt
+no fear. He knew with a sure, true knowledge that he was master of the
+wolf. He knew the wolf's response to his words before ever he spoke. And
+now all the words in the language could not convey to these others
+whence that knowledge had come.
+
+He vaguely realized that this had always been some way part of his
+destiny,--the imposition of his will over the beasts of the forest. He
+had never tried to puzzle out why, knowing that such trial would be
+unavailing. He had instinctively understood such creatures as these.
+To-day he felt that he knew the wild, fierce heart beating in the lean
+breast as a man might know his brother's heart. The bond between them
+was hidden from his sight, something back of him, beyond him, enfolded
+within a secret self that was mysterious as a dream, and it reached into
+the countless years; yet it was real, an ancient relationship that was
+no less intimate because it could not be named. In turn, the wolf had
+seemed to know that this tall form was a born habitant of the forests,
+even as himself, one that would kill him as unmercifully as he himself
+would kill a fall, and whose dark eyes, swept with fire, and whose cool,
+strong words must never be disobeyed.
+
+"You never seen this wolf before?" Morris asked him, calling him from
+his revery.
+
+"Never."
+
+"Then you must be old Hiram's brother himself, to control him like you
+did. Lord, look at him. Crouching at your feet."
+
+Suddenly Ben reached and took the wolf's head between his hands. Slowly
+he lifted the savage face till their eyes met. The wolf growled, then,
+whimpering, tried to avert its gaze. Then a rough tongue lapped at the
+man's hand.
+
+"There's nothing to be afraid of, now," he told the girl.
+
+"He's right, Beatrice," Morris agreed. "He's tamed him. Even I can see
+that much. And I never saw anything like it, since the day I was born."
+
+It was true: as far as Ben was concerned, the terrible Fenris--named by
+a Swedish trapper, acquaintance of Hiram Melville's, for the dreadful
+wolf of Scandinavian legend--was tamed. He had found a new master; Ben
+had won a servant and friend whose loyalty would never waver as long as
+blood flowed in his veins and breath surged in his lungs. "Lay still,
+now, Fenris," he ordered. "Don't get up till I tell you."
+
+It seems to be true that as a rule the lower animals catch the meaning
+of but few words; usually the tone of the voice and the gesture that
+accompanies it interpret a spoken order in a dog's brain. On this
+occasion, it was as if Fenris had read his master's thought. He lay
+supine, his eyes intent on Ben's rugged face.
+
+And now, for the first time, Ben found himself regarding Beatrice. He
+could scarcely take his eyes from her face. He knew perfectly that he
+was staring rudely, but he was without the power to turn his eyes. Her
+dark eyes fell under his gaze.
+
+The truth was that Ben's life had been singularly untouched by the
+influence of women. Mostly his life had been spent in the unpeopled
+forest, away from women of all kinds; and such creatures as had admired
+him in Seattle's underworld had never got close to him. He had had many
+dreams; but some way it had never been credible to him that he should
+ever know womanhood as a source of comradeship and happiness. Love and
+marriage had always seemed infinitely apart from his wild, adventurous
+life.
+
+In his days in prison he had given up all dream of this happiness; but
+now he could begin to dream again. Everything was changed now that he
+had come home. The girl's regard for him was friendly, even somewhat
+admiring, and the speculations of ripening womanhood were in her eyes.
+He returned her gaze with frankest interest and admiration. His senses
+had been made sharp in his wilderness life; and his respect for her grew
+apace. She was not only innocent and girlish; she had those traits,
+innate, that a strong man loves in women: such worth and depth of
+character as he wishes bequeathed to his children.
+
+Ben drew a long breath. It was good to be home. He had not only found
+his forests, just as he had left them, but now again he was among the
+forest people. This girl was of his own breed, not a stranger; her
+standards were his; she was a woods girl no less than he was a woodsman.
+It is good to be among one's own people, those who can follow through
+and understand. She too knew the urge of unbridled vitality and spirit,
+common to all the woods children; and life's vivid meaning was her
+inheritance, no less than his. Her arms and lips were warm from
+fast-flowing blood, her nerves were vibrant and singing like his own. A
+virgin still, her eyes were tender with the warmheartedness that is such
+a dominant trait of frontier peoples; but what fire, what passion might
+burn in them to-morrow! They were dark, lovely eyes, rather somber now
+in their earnestness, seeming shadowed by the dark shadows of the spruce
+themselves.
+
+No human face had ever given him such an image of beauty as that of this
+dark-eyed forest child before him. Yet she was not piquant, demure, like
+the girls he had met in France; not stylish and sophisticated like those
+of the great cities he had visited since his return. Her garb became
+her: simple, not holding the eye in itself but calling attention to the
+brunette beauty of her throat and face, the warm redness of her childish
+mouth, and the brown, warm color of her arms. She had dark, waving hair,
+lovely to touch, wistful red lips. Because he was the woodsman, now and
+always, he marked with pleasure that there was no indication of
+ill-health or physical weakness about her. Her body was lithe and
+strong, with the grace of the wild creatures.
+
+It would be good to know her, and walk beside her in the tree aisles.
+All manner of delectable possibilities occurred to him. But all at once
+he checked his dreams with an iron will.
+
+There must be no thought of women in his life--for now. He still had his
+way to make. A few hours more would find him plunging deeper into the
+forest, perhaps never to see her again. He felt an all-pervading sense
+of regret.
+
+"There's nothing I can say--to thank you," the girl was murmuring. "I
+never saw anything like it; it was just as if the wolf understood every
+word you said."
+
+"Old Hiram had him pretty well trained, I suspect." The man's eyes fell
+to the shaggy form at his feet. "I'm glad I happened along Miss--"
+
+"Miss Neilson," the girl prompted him. "Beatrice Neilson. I live here."
+
+Neilson! His mind seemed to leap and catch at the name. Just that day he
+had heard it from the lips of the merchant. And this was the house next
+door where dwelt his fellow traveler for the morrow.
+
+"Then it's your father--or brother--who's going to the Yuga--"
+
+"No," the girl answered doubtfully. "My father is already there. I'm
+here alone--"
+
+Then the gray eyes lighted and a smile broke about Ben's lips. Few times
+in his life had he smiled in quite this vivid way.
+
+"Then it's you," he exulted, "who is going to be my fellow traveler
+to-morrow!"
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+Ben found, rather as he had expected, that the girl was not at all
+embarrassed by the knowledge that they were to have a lonely all-day
+ride together. She looked at the matter from a perfectly natural and
+wholesome point of view, and she could see nothing in it amiss or
+improper. The girls of the frontier rarely feel the need of chaperones.
+Their womanhood comes early, and the open places and the
+fresh-life-giving air they breathe give them a healthy confidence in
+their ability to take care of themselves. Beatrice had a pistol, and she
+could shoot it like a man. She loved the solitude of the forest, but she
+also knew it was good to hear the sound of a human voice when journeying
+the lonely trails.
+
+The frontier had also taught her to judge men. Here foregathered many
+types, strong-thewed frontiersmen whose reverence for women surpassed,
+perhaps, that of any other class of men on earth, as well as the most
+villainous renegades, brutish offspring of the wilds, but she knew them
+apart. She realized from the first that this tall woodsman would have
+only kindness and respect for her; and that he was to be trusted even in
+those lonely forest depths beyond Spruce Pass.
+
+Ben knew the wild beasts of the field better than he knew women, so her
+actual reception of the plan was lost to him. He felt that she was not
+displeased: in reality the delight and anticipation she felt were beyond
+any power of hers to tell. She had been tremendously thrilled and
+impressed by his dominance over the wolf. She liked his bright, steady,
+friendly eyes; because she was a woods girl her heart leaped at the
+sight of his upright, powerful body; but most of all she felt that he
+was very near indeed to an ideal come true, a man of terrific strength
+and prowess yet not without those traits that women love best in
+men,--courage and character and gentleness.
+
+"I'm surely glad I'm going to have a companion," he told her. "I won't
+miss Ez--"
+
+But just then remembrance came to him, cutting the word off short. The
+letter he carried in his pocket contained certain advice in regard to
+silence, and perhaps now was a good time to follow it. There was no need
+to tell the people of Snowy Gulch about Ezram and the claim. He
+remembered that he had been warned of the danger of claim jumpers.
+
+For an instant his mind seemed to hover at the edge of a more elusive
+memory; but he could not quite seize upon it. He only knew that it
+concerned the matter in hand, and that it left him vaguely troubled.
+
+"You were saying," the girl prompted him.
+
+"Nothing very important--except how glad I am you are going my way. The
+woods are certainly lonesome by yourself. I suppose you'll be willing to
+make an early start."
+
+"The earlier the better. I've got a long way to go."
+
+They made their plans, and soon they parted to complete preparations for
+the journey. The girl went into her house: Ben took the rifle, and
+followed by the wolf, struck down the main street of the village.
+
+It can be said for Ben that he aroused no little conjecture and interest
+in the minds of the townspeople, striding through the street with the
+savage woods creature following abjectly at his heels. Evidently Ben's
+conquest was complete: the animal obeyed his every command as quickly
+as an intelligent dog. It was noticeable, however, that even the
+hardiest citizens kept an apprehensive eye on the wolf during the course
+of any conversation with Ben.
+
+He bought supplies--flour and salt and a few other essentials--simple
+tools and utensils such as are carried by prospectors, blankets, shells
+for his rifle, and a few, simple, hard-wearing clothes. He went to bed
+dead tired, his funds materially reduced. But before dawn he was up,
+wholly refreshed; and after a hasty breakfast went to pack his horses
+for the trip.
+
+Beatrice came stealing out of the shadows, more than ever suggestive of
+some timid creature of the forest, and the three of them saddled and
+packed the animals. As daylight broke they started out, down the
+shadowed street of the little town.
+
+"The last we'll see of civilization for a long, long time," the girl
+reminded him.
+
+The man thrilled deeply. "And I'm glad of it," he answered. "Nothing
+ahead but the long trail!"
+
+It was a long trail, that which they followed along Poor Man's creek in
+the morning hours. The girl led, by right of having some previous
+acquaintance with the trail. The three pack horses walked in file
+between, heads low, tails whisking; and Ben, with Fenris at his horse's
+hoofs, brought up the rear. Almost at once the spruce forest dropped
+over them, the silence and the gloom that Ben had known of old.
+
+This was not like gliding in a boat down-river. The narrow, winding
+trail offered a chance for the most intimate study of the wilderness.
+From the river the woodsfolk were but an occasional glimpse, the stir of
+a thicket on the bank: here they were living, breathing
+realities,--vivid pictures perfectly framed by the frosty green of the
+spruce.
+
+From the first mile these two riders were the best of companions. They
+talked gaily, their voices carrying to each other with entire ease
+through the still glades. He found her spirited, warm-hearted,
+responding with an eager gladness to every fresh manifestation of the
+wild; and in spite of his gay laughter she read something of the dark
+moodiness and intensity that were his dominant traits. But he was kind,
+too. His attitude toward the Little People met with on the trail--the
+little, scurrying folk--was particularly appealing: like that of a
+strong man toward children. She saw that he was sympathetic,
+instinctively chivalrous; and she got past his barrier of reserve as few
+living beings had ever done before.
+
+She saw at once that he was an expert horseman. Riding a half-broken
+mustang over the winding, brush-grown moose trails of the North is not
+like cantering a thoroughbred along a park avenue, and a certain amount
+of difficulty is the rule rather than the exception; but he controlled
+his animal as no man of her acquaintance had ever done. He rode a bay
+mare that was not, by a long way, the most reliable piece of horseflesh
+McClurg owned, yet she gave him the best she had in her, scrambling with
+a burst of energy on the pitches, leaping the logs, battling the mires,
+and obeying his every wish. The joy of the Northern trails depends
+largely upon the service rendered by the horse between one's knees, and
+Ben knew it to the full.
+
+Before the first two hours were past Beatrice found herself thrilling
+with admiration at Ben's woodcraft. Not only by experience but by
+instinct and character he was wholly fitted for life in the waste
+places. Just as some artists are born with the soul of music, he had
+come to the earth with the Red Gods at his beck and call; the spirit of
+the wild things seemed to move in his being. She didn't wholly
+understand. She only knew that this man, newly come from "The States,"
+riding so straight and talking so gaily behind her, had qualities native
+to the forest that were lacking not only in her, but in such men as her
+father and Ray Brent. Seemingly he had inherited straight from the
+youngest days of the earth those traits by which aboriginal man
+conquered the wild.
+
+The first real manifestation of this truth occurred soon after they
+reached the bank of Poor Man's creek. All at once he had shouted at her
+and told her to stop her horse. She drew up and turned in her saddle,
+questioning.
+
+"There's something stirring in the thicket beside you. Don't you hear
+him?"
+
+Beatrice had sharp ears, but she strained in vain for the sound that,
+forty feet farther distant, Ben heard easily. She shook her head, firmly
+believing his imagination had led him astray. But an instant later a
+coyote--one of those gray skulkers whose waging cries at twilight every
+woodfarer knows--sprang out of his covert and darted away.
+
+Beatrice was amazed. The significance of the incident went further than
+the fact of mere good hearing. The coyote, except when he chooses to
+wail out his wrongs at the fall of night, is one of the forest shadows
+for silence--yet Ben had heard him. It meant nothing less than that
+strange quickening of the senses found in but few--master woodsmen--that
+is the especial trait and property of the beasts themselves.
+
+Now that they climbed toward Spruce Pass their talk died away, and more
+and more they yielded themselves to the hushed mood of the forest. Their
+trail was no longer clearly pronounced. It was a wilderness
+thoroughfare in the true sense,--a winding path made by the feet of the
+great moose journeying from valley to valley.
+
+Wild life became ever more manifest. They saw the grouse, Franklin's
+fowl so well beloved by tenderfeet because of their propensity to sit
+still under fire and give an unsteady marksman a second shot. Fool hens,
+the woodsman called them, and the motley and mark of their weak
+mentality were a red badge near the eye. The fat birds perched on the
+tree limbs over the trail, relying on their mottled plumage, blending
+perfectly with the dull grays and browns of the foliage, to keep them
+out of sight. But such wiles did not deceive Ben. And once, in provision
+for their noon lunch, a fat cock tumbled through the branches at
+Beatrice's pistol shot.
+
+The pine squirrels seemed to be having some sort of a competitive field
+meet, and the tricks they did in the trees above the trail filled the
+two riders with delight. They sped up and down the trunks; they sprang
+from limb to limb; they flicked their tails and turned their heads
+around backward and stood on their haunches, all the time chattering in
+the greatest excitement. Once a porcupine--stupid, inoffensive old Urson
+who carries his fort around on his back--rattled his quills in a near-by
+thicket; and once they caught a glimpse of a mule deer on the hillside.
+This was rather too cold and hard a country, however, to be beloved by
+deer. Mostly they dwelt farther upriver.
+
+All manner of wild creatures, great and small, had left signs on the
+trails. There were tracks of otter and mink, those two river hunters
+whose skins, on ladies' shoulders, are better known than the animals
+themselves. They might be only patches of fur in cities, but they were
+living, breathing personages here. Particularly they were personages to
+the trout. Ben knew perfectly how the silver fish had learned to dart
+with such rapidity in the water. They learned it keeping out of the way
+of the otter and the mink.
+
+They saw the tracks of marten--the mink that has gone into the tree tops
+to live; the doglike imprints of a coyote at which Fenris whimpered and
+scratched in excitement (doubtless wishing to run him down and bite him,
+as is the usual reception to the detested coyote by the more important
+woods creatures) and once the fresh mud showed that an old grizzly--the
+forest monarch, the ancient, savage despot of the woods of which all
+foresters, near and far, speak with deep respect--had passed that way
+but a few minutes before. Foresters both, the two riders had every
+reason to believe that the old gray tyrant was lurking somewhere in the
+thickets beside the trail, half in anger, half in curiosity watching
+them ride past. And of course the tracks of moose, and of their fellows
+of mighty antlers, the caribou, were in profusion.
+
+To all these things Beatrice responded with the joy of a true nature
+lover. Her heart thrilled and her eyes were bright; and every new track
+was a fresh surprise and delight. But Ben was affected more deeply
+still. The response he made had its origin and font in deeply hidden
+centers of his spirit; mysterious realms that no introspection could
+reveal or words lay bare.
+
+He knew nothing of Beatrice's sense of constant surprise. In his own
+heart he had known that all these woodspeople would be waiting for
+him--just as they were--and he would have known far greater amazement to
+have found some of them gone. And instead of sprightly delight he knew
+only an all-pervading sense of comfort, as a man feels upon returning to
+his home country, among the people whom he knows and understands.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+At the very headquarters of Poor Man's Creek, where the stream had
+dwindled to a silver thread between mossy banks, Beatrice and Ben made
+their noon camp. They were full in the heart of the wild, by now, and
+had mounted to those high levels and park lands beloved by the caribou.
+They built a small fire beside the stream and drew water from the deep,
+clear pools that lay between cascade and cascade.
+
+Ben Darby slowly became aware that this was one of the happiest hours
+of his life. He watched, with absorbed delight, the deft, sure motions
+of the girl as she fried the grouse and sliced bread, while Ben
+himself tended to the coffee. Already the two were on the friendliest
+terms, and since they were to be somewhere in the same region, the
+future offered the most pleasing vistas to both of them. When the
+horses were rested and Ben's pipe was out, they ventured on. Following
+a caribou trail, they ascended a majestic range of mountains--a trail
+too steep to ride and which the pack horses accomplished only with
+great difficulty--emerging onto a high plateau of open parks and small
+clumps of the darkest spruce. It was, of course, the most scenic part
+of the journey; and the inclination to talk died speedily from the
+lips.
+
+They rode in silence, watching. Both of them were sure that words, no
+matter how beautiful and eloquent, could be only a sacrilege. The very
+tone of the high ranges is that of silence vast and eternal beyond scope
+of thought, and the only sounds that can fittingly shatter that mighty
+breathlessness are the great, calamitous phenomena of nature,--the
+thunder crashing in the sky and the avalanche on the slope. The forests
+they had just left were deeply silent, but the far hush had been
+alleviated by the soft noises of wild creatures stirring about their
+occupations; perhaps also by the feeling that the thickets were full of
+sound pitched just too high or just too low for human ears to hear; but
+even this relief was absent here. The high peaks stretched before them,
+one after another, until they faded into the horizon,--majestic, aloof,
+utterly and grandly silent.
+
+The snow still lay deep over the plateau, packed to the consistency of
+ice, and the marmots had not yet emerged to welcome the spring with
+their shrill, joyous whistling. From their high place they could see the
+hills spread out below them,--fold after fold as of a great cloak,
+deeply green, seemingly infinite in expanse, broken only by the blue
+glint of the Agnes lakes, like two great twin sapphires hidden in the
+forest. But they couldn't make out a single roof top of Snowy Gulch. The
+forest had already claimed it utterly.
+
+This was the caribou range; wherever they looked they saw the tracks of
+the noble animals in the snow. Later they caught a glimpse of the
+creatures themselves, a small herd of perhaps half a dozen swinging
+along the snow in their indescribable pacing gait. They were in fitting
+surroundings, their color inexpressibly vivid against the snow, and
+Ben's heart warmed and thumped in his breast at the sight.
+
+But the trail descended at last into the great valley of the Yuga. Mile
+after mile, it seemed to them, they went down, leaving the snow, leaving
+the open glades, into the dark, still glens of spruce. At last they
+paused on the river bank.
+
+Ben was somewhat amazed at the size of the stream when it emerged below
+the rapids. It was, at its present high stage, fully one hundred and
+fifty yards across, such a stream as would bear the traffic of commerce
+in any inhabited region. They turned down the moose trail that followed
+its bank.
+
+But it was not to be that this journey should hold only delight for Ben.
+A half-mile down the river he suddenly made a most momentous and
+disturbing discovery.
+
+He had stopped his horse to reread the copy of Hiram Melville's letter,
+intending to verify his course. In the shadow of the tall, dark
+spruce--darkening ever as the light grew less--his eye sped swiftly over
+it. His gaze came to rest upon a familiar name.
+
+"Look out for Jeff Neilson and his gang," the letter read. "They seen
+some of my dust."
+
+Neilson--no wonder Ben had been perplexed when Beatrice had first spoken
+her name. No wonder it had sounded familiar. And the hot beads moistened
+his brow when he conceived of all the dreadful possibilities of that
+coincidence of names.
+
+Yet because he was a woodsman of nature and instinct, blood and birth,
+he retained the most rigid self-control. He made no perceptible start.
+At first he did not glance at Beatrice. Slowly he folded the letter and
+put it back into his pocket.
+
+"I'm going all right," he announced. He urged his horse forward. His
+perfect self-discipline had included his voice: it was deep, but wholly
+casual and unshaken. "And how about you, Miss Neilson?"
+
+He pronounced her name distinctly, giving her every chance to correct
+him in case he had misunderstood her. But there was no hope here. "I'm
+going all right, I know."
+
+"It seems to me we must be heading into about the same country," Ben
+went on. "You see, Miss Neilson, I'm going to make my first permanent
+camp somewhere along this still stretch; I've had inside dope that
+there's big gold possibilities around here."
+
+"It has never been a gold country except for pockets, some of them
+remarkably rich," she told him doubtfully, evidently trying not to
+discourage him. "But my father has come to the conclusion that it's
+really worth prospecting. He's in this same country now."
+
+"I suppose I'll meet him--I'll likely meet him to-night when I take you
+to the cabin on the river. You said his name was--"
+
+"Jeffery Neilson."
+
+For all that he was prepared for it, the name was a straight-out body
+blow to Ben. He had still dared to hope that this girl was of no blood
+kin of the claim-jumper, Jeffery Neilson. The truth was now only too
+plain. By the girl's own word he was operating in Hiram Melville's
+district and unquestionably had already jumped the claim. His daughter
+was joining him now, probably to keep house for him; and for all that
+Ben knew, already possessing guilty knowledge of her father's crime.
+
+It was hard to hold the head erect, after that. Already he had builded
+much on his friendship with this girl, only to find that she was allied
+with the enemy camp. He saw in a flash how unlikely it would be that
+Ezram and himself could drive the usurpers out: the claim-jumper is a
+difficult problem, even when the original discoverer is living and in
+possession, much more so when he is silent in his grave.
+
+Ben had known the breed since boyhood, and he hated them as he hated
+coyotes and pack-rats. They lacked the manhood to brave the unknown in
+pursuit of the golden fleece; they waited until after years of grinding
+labor the strike was made and then pounced down upon the claim like
+vultures on the dead. Ben was glad he had not obeyed his impulse to tell
+the girl of his true reason for coming to the Yuga. He knew now, with
+many foes against him, he could best operate in the dark.
+
+His thought flashed to Ezram. The recovery of the mine had been the old
+man's fondest dream, the last hope of his declining years, and this
+setback would go hard with him. The blow was ever so much more cruel on
+Ezram's account than his own. Ben could picture his downcast face,
+trying yet to smile; his sobered eyes that he would try to keep bright.
+But there would be certain planning, when they met again over their camp
+fire. And there were three of them allied now. Fenris the wolf had come
+into his service.
+
+He glanced back at the gray-black creature that followed at the heels of
+his horse; and now, at twilight's graying, he saw that a significant and
+startling change had come over him. He no longer trotted easily behind
+them. He came stalking, almost as if in the hunt, his ears pointing, his
+neck hairs bristling, and there were the beginnings of curious, lurid
+lightnings in his eyes. There could be but one answer. He had been swept
+away in the current of madness that sweeps the forest at the fall of
+darkness: the age-old intoxication of the wilderness night. The hunting
+hours were at hand. The creatures of claw and fang were coming into
+their own. Fenris was shivering all over with those dark wood's passions
+that not even the wisest naturalist can fully understand.
+
+The air was tingling and electric, just as Ben recalled it a thousand
+nights. Everywhere the hunters were leaving their lairs and starting
+forth; grasses moved and brush-clumps rustled; blood was hot and savage
+eyes were shot with fire. The mink, with unspeakable savagery, took the
+trail of a snow-shoe rabbit beside the river-bed; a lynx with pale,
+green, luminous eyes began his stalk of a tree squirrel, and various of
+Fenris' fellows--pack brothers except for his own relations with
+men--sang a song that was old when the mountains were new as they raced,
+black in silhouette against the paling sky, along a snowy ridge.
+
+Ben felt a quickening of his own senses, not knowing why. _His_ blood,
+too, spurted inordinately fast through his veins, and his flesh seemed
+to creep and tingle. There could be no surer proof of his legitimacy as
+a son of the wilderness. The passions that maddened the first men, near
+to the beasts they hunted in their ancient forests, returned in all
+their fullness. The dusk deepened. The trail dimmed so that the eye had
+to strain to follow it.
+
+Complex and weird were the passions invoked to-night, but not even to
+the gray wolf that is, beyond all other creatures, the embodiment of the
+wilderness spirit, did there come such a madness, such a dark and
+terrible lust, as that which cursed a certain wayfarer beyond the next
+bend in the river. This was not one of the forest people, neither the
+lynx, nor the hunting otter, nor even the venerable grizzly with whom no
+one contests the trail. It was a human being,--a man of youthful body
+and strong, deeply lined, yet savage face.
+
+A close observer would have noticed the faintest tremor and shiver
+throughout his body. His eyes were very bright, vivid even in the dying
+day. He was deeply lost in his own mood, seemingly oblivious to the
+whole world about him. He carried a rifle in his hands.
+
+He was on his way to report to his chief; and just what would be
+forthcoming he did not know. But if too much objection were raised and
+affairs got to a crucial stage, he had nothing to fear. He had learned a
+certain lesson--an avenue to triumph. It was strange that he had never
+hit upon it before.
+
+His blood was scalding hot, and he was swept by exultation. Not for an
+instant had he hesitated, nor Would he ever hesitate again. There was no
+one in the North of greater might than he! No one could bend his will
+from now on. He had found the road to triumph.
+
+Ray Brent had discovered a new power within himself. Perhaps even his
+chief, Jeffery Neilson, must yield before his new-found strength.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+As twilight darkened to the full gloom of the forest night, Ben and
+Beatrice rode to a lonely cabin on the Yuga River,--one that had been
+built by Hiram Melville years past and was just at the mouth of the
+little creek on which, less than a half-mile distant, he had his claim.
+They had seen a lighted window from afar, marking the end of Beatrice's
+hard day's ride.
+
+"Of course you won't try to go on to-night?" she asked Ben. "You'll stay
+at the cabin?"
+
+"There likely won't be room for three," he answered. "But it's a clear
+night. I can make a fire and sleep out."
+
+It was true. The stars were emerging, faint points of light through the
+darkening canopy of the sky; and to the East a silver glint on the
+horizon forecast the rising moon.
+
+They halted at last; and Beatrice saw her father's form, framed in the
+doorway. She hastened into his arms: waiting in the darkness Ben could
+not help but hear his welcome. Many things were doubtful; but there
+could be no doubt of the love that Neilson bore his daughter. The
+amused, half-teasing words with which he received her did not in the
+least disguise it. "The joy and the light of his life," Ben commented to
+himself. The gray old claim-jumper had this to redeem him, at least.
+
+"But why so many horses, Beatrice?" he asked. "You--brought some one
+with you?"
+
+Ben was not so far distant that he failed to discern the instant change
+in Neilson's tone. It had a strained, almost an apprehensive quality
+such as few men had ever heard in his voice before. Plainly all visitors
+in this end of the mountains were regarded with suspicion.
+
+"He's a prospector--Mr. Darby," the girl replied. "Come here, Ben--and
+be introduced." She turned toward her new-found friend; and the latter
+walked near, into the light that streamed over him from the doorway.
+"This is my father, Mr. Darby--Mr. Neilson. Some one told him this was a
+good gold country."
+
+Ben had already decided upon his course of action and had his answer
+ready. He knew perfectly that it would only put Neilson on his guard if
+he stated his true position; and besides, he wanted word of Ezram. "I
+may have a wrong steer, Mr. Neilson," he said, "but a man I met down on
+the river-trail, out of Snowy Gulch, advised me to come here. He said
+that he had some sort of a claim up here that his brother left him, and
+though it was a pocket country, he thought there'd soon be a great rush
+up this way."
+
+"I hardly know who it could have been that you met," Neilson began
+doubtfully. "He didn't tell you his name--"
+
+"Melville. I believe that was it. And if you'll tell me how to find him,
+I'll try to go on to-night. I brought him some of his belongings from
+Snowy Gulch--"
+
+"Melville, eh? I guess I know who you mean now. But no--I don't know of
+any claim unless it's over east, beyond here. Maybe further down the
+river."
+
+Ben made no reply at once; but his mind sped like lightning. Of course
+Neilson was lying about the claim: he knew perfectly that at that moment
+he was occupying one of Hiram Melville's cabins. He was a first-class
+actor, too--his voice indicating scarcely no acquaintance with or
+interest in the name.
+
+"He hasn't come up this way?" Ben asked casually.
+
+"He hasn't come through here that I know of. Of course I'm working at my
+claim--with my partners--and he might have gone through without our
+seeing him. It seems rather unlikely."
+
+Ben was really puzzled now. If Ezram had already made his presence known
+and was camping somewhere in the hills about, there was no reason
+immediately evident why Neilson should deny his presence. Ben found
+himself wondering whether by any chance Ezram had been delayed along the
+trail, perhaps had even lost his way, and had not yet put in an
+appearance.
+
+"He told me, in the few minutes that I talked to him, that his cabin was
+somewhere close to this one--I thought he said up this creek."
+
+"There is a cabin up the creek a way," Neilson admitted, "but it isn't
+the one he meant. It's on my claim, and my two partners are living in
+it. But when he said near to this one, he might have meant ten miles.
+That's the way we Northern men speak of distance."
+
+There was nothing more to say, nothing to do at present. He said his
+farewells to the girl, refused an invitation to pass the night in the
+cabin, and made his way to the green bank of the stream. Four hundred
+yards from the cabin, and perhaps a like number from the cabin of Ray
+and Charley--obscured from both by the thickets--he pitched his camp.
+
+In the cabin he had left Jeffery Neilson catechized his daughter, trying
+to learn all he could concerning Ben. It was true that he carried the
+dead Hiram's rifle, and that the latter's pet wolf followed at his
+heels, but it was wholly probable that the old man, Hiram's brother,
+with whom he had conversed at the river, had designated him to get them.
+He had been courteous and respectful throughout the journey to the Yuga,
+Beatrice said, and he had also saved her from possible death in the
+fangs of the wolf the evening previous. Neilson decided that he would
+take no steps at present but merely wait and watch developments.
+
+Meanwhile Ben had made his fire and unpacked his horses. He confined his
+riding horse with a picket rope; the others he turned loose. Then he
+cooked a simple meal for himself and the gaunt servant at his heels.
+
+When the night had come down in full, and as he sat about the glowing
+coals of his supper fire, he had time to devote serious thought to the
+fate of Ezram. It occurred to him that perhaps the old man had
+discovered, at a distance, the presence of the claim-jumpers; and was
+merely waiting in the thickets for a chance to take action. If such were
+the case, sooner or later they could join their fortunes again. It was
+also easy to imagine that Ezram had lost his way on the journey out.
+
+He stood at the edge of the firelight, gazing out into the darkened
+forest. The wolf crouched beside him: alert, watching his face for any
+command. It was wholly plain that the gaunt woods creature had accepted
+him at once as his master; and that the bond between them, because of
+some secret similarity of spirit, was already far closer than between
+most masters and their pets.
+
+Ben sensed another side of the forest to-night because of his inborn
+love of the waste places not often seen. The thickets were menacing,
+sinister to-night. The spruce crept up to the skyline with darkness and
+mystery: he realized the eternal malevolence that haunts their silent
+fastnesses. They would have tricks in plenty to play on such as would
+lose their way on their dusky trails! Oh, they would have no mercy or
+remorse for any one who was lost, _out there_, to-night! Ben felt a
+heavy burden of dread!
+
+Even now, old Ezram might be wandering, vainly, through the gloomy,
+whispering woods, ever penetrating farther into their merciless
+solitudes. And no homes smoked in the clearings, no camps glowed in the
+immensity of the dark--out there. This was just the beginning of the
+forest; clear into the shadow of the Arctic Circle, where the woodlands
+gave way to the Weary wastes of barrens, there was no break, no tilled
+fields or fisher's villages, only an occasional Indian encampment which
+not even a wolf, running through the night, might find. His supply of
+food would quickly be exhausted, fatigue would break his valiant spirit.
+Ben planned an extensive search for his tracks as soon as the morning
+light permitted him to see.
+
+He missed the old man's comradeship with a deep and fervid longing. They
+had come to count on each other, these past weeks. It wasn't alone
+infinite gratitude that he felt for him now. The thing went too deep to
+tell. Yet there was no use seeking for him to-night.
+
+He turned to the wolf and dropped his hand upon the animal's shoulder.
+Fenris started, then quivered in ecstasy. "I wish I had your nose,
+to-night, old boy," Ben told him. "I'd find that old buddy of mine. I
+wish I had your eyes to see in the dark, and your legs to run. Fenris,
+do you know where he is?"
+
+The wolf turned his wild eyes toward his master's face, as if he were
+trying to understand.
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+Impelled by an urge within himself Ben suddenly knelt beside his lupine
+friend. He could not understand the flood of emotion, the vague sense of
+impending and dramatic events that stirred him to the quick. He only
+knew, with a knowledge akin to inspiration, that in Fenris lay the
+answer to his problem.
+
+The moment was misted over with a quality of unreality. In the east rose
+the moon, shining incredibly on the tree tops, showering down through
+the little rifts in the withholding branches, enchanting the place as by
+the weaving of a dream. The moon madness caught up Ben like a flame,
+enthralling him as never before. He knew that white sphere of old. And
+all at once he realized that here, at his knees, was one who knew it
+too,--with a knowledge as ancient and as infinite as his own. Not for
+nothing had the wolf breed lived their lives beneath it through the long
+roll of the ages. Its rising and its setting had regulated the hunting
+hours of the pack time without end; its beams had lighted the game
+trails where the gray band had bayed after the deer; its light had
+beheld, since the world was young, the rapturous mating of the old pack
+leader and his female. Fenris too knew the moon-madness; but unlike Ben
+he had a means of expression of the wonder and mystery and vague longing
+that thrilled his wild heart. No man who has heard the pack song to the
+moon could doubt this fact. It is a long, melancholy wail, poignant with
+the pain of living, but it tells what man can not.
+
+Ben knew, now, why he was a forester, a woodsman famed even among
+woodsmen. Most of his fellows had been tamed by civilization; they had
+lived beneath roofs instead of the canopy of heaven, and they had almost
+forgotten about the moon. Ben, on the other hand, was a recurrence of an
+earlier type, inheriting little from his immediate ancestors but
+reverting back a thousand centuries to the Cave and the Squatting Place.
+His nature was that of prehistoric man rather than that of the son of
+civilization; and in this lay the explanation for all that had set him
+apart from the great run of men and had made him the master woodsman
+that he was. And because his spirit was of the wildwood, because he also
+knew the magic of the moon, he was able to make this wildwood thing at
+his feet understand and obey his will.
+
+The world of to-day seemed to fade out for him and left only the wolf,
+its fierce eyes on his own. Time swung back, and this might have been a
+scene of forgotten ages,--the wolf, the human hunter, the smoldering
+camp fire, the dark, jagged line of spruce against the sky. It was thus
+at the edge of the ice. Wolf and man--both children of the wild--had
+understood each other then; and they could understand each other now.
+
+"Fenris, old boy," the man whispered. "Can you find him for me, Fenris?
+He's out there somewhere--" the man motioned toward the dark--"and I
+want him. Can you take me to him?"
+
+The wolf trembled all over, struggling to get his meaning. This was no
+creature of subordinate intelligence: the great wolf of the North. He
+had, besides the cunning of the wild hunters, the intelligence that is
+the trait of the whole canine breed. Nor did he depend on his sense of
+hearing alone. He watched his master's face, and more than that, he was
+tuned and keyed to those mysterious vibrations that carry a message from
+brain to brain no less clearly and swift than words themselves,--the
+secret wireless of the wild.
+
+"He's my buddy, old boy, and I want you to find him for me," Ben went
+on, more patiently. He searched his pockets, drawing out at last the
+copy of the letter Ezram had given him that morning, and, because the
+old man had carried it for many days, it could still convey a message to
+the keen nose of the wolf. He put it to the animal's nostrils, then
+pointed away into the darkness.
+
+Fenris followed the motion with his eyes; and presently his long body
+stiffened. Ben watched him, fascinated. Then the wolf sniffed at the
+paper again and trotted away into the night.
+
+In one leap Ben was on his feet, following him. The wolf turned once,
+saw that his master was at his heels, and sped on. They turned up a
+slight draw, toward the hillside.
+
+It became clear at once that Fenris was depending upon his marvelous
+sense of smell. His nose would lower to the ground, and sometimes he
+tacked back and forth, uncertainly. At such times Ben watched him with
+bated breath. But always he caught the scent again.
+
+Once more he paused, sniffing eagerly; then turned, whining. Just as
+clearly as if they had possessed a mutual language Ben understood: the
+animal had caught the clear scent at last. The wolf loped off, and his
+fierce bay rang through the hushed forest.
+
+It was a long-drawn, triumphant note; and the wild creatures paused in
+their mysterious, hushed occupations to listen. It was also significant
+that it made certain deadly inroads in the spirit of Ray Brent, sitting
+in his distant cabin. He marked the direction of the sound, and he
+cursed, half in awe, under his breath. He had always hated the gray
+rangers. They were the uncanny demons of the forest.
+
+Ben followed the running wolf as fast as he could; and in his eagerness
+he had no opportunity for conjecture as to what he would find at the end
+of the pursuit. Yet he did not believe for an instant this was a false
+trail. The wolf's deep, full-ringing bays were ever more urgent and
+excited, filling the forest with their uproar. But quite suddenly the
+silence closed down again, seemingly more deep and mysterious than ever.
+
+Ben's first sensation was one of icy terror that crept to the very
+marrow of his bones. He knew instantly that there was a meaning of
+dreadful portent in the abrupt cessation of the cries. He halted an
+instant, listening, but at first could hear no more than the throb of
+his heart in his breast and the whisper of his own troubled breathing.
+But presently, at a distance of one hundred yards, he distinguished the
+soft whining of the wolf.
+
+Fenris was no longer running! He had halted at the edge of a distant
+thicket. The cold sweat sprang out on Ben's forehead, and he broke into
+a headlong run.
+
+There was no later remembrance of traversing that last hundred yards.
+The hillside seemed to whip under his feet. He paused at last, just at
+the dark margin of an impenetrable thicket. The wolf whined
+disconsolately just beyond the range of his vision.
+
+"Ezram!" he called, a curious throbbing quality in his voice. "Are you
+there, Ez? It's me--Ben."
+
+But the thickets neither rustled nor spoke. The cracked old voice he had
+learned to love did not speak in relief, in that moment of unutterable
+suspense. Indeed, the silence seemed to deepen about him. The spruce
+trees were hushed and impassive as ever; the moon shone and the wind
+breathed softly in his face. Fenris came whimpering toward him.
+
+Together, the man and the wolf, they crept on into the thicket. They
+halted at last before a curious shadow in the silvered covert. Ben knew
+at once he had found his ancient comrade.
+
+He and Ezram had had their last laugh together. He lay very still, the
+moonlight ensilvering his droll, kindly face,--sleeping so deeply that
+no human voice could ever waken him. An ugly rifle wound yawned darkly
+at his temple.
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+The first effect of a great shock is usually a semi-paralysis of the
+entire mental mechanism and is, as a rule, beneficent. The brain seems
+to be enclosed in a great preoccupation, like a wall, and the messages
+of pain and horror brought by the nerves batter against it in vain. The
+senses are dulled, the perceptions blunted, and full realization does
+not come.
+
+For a long time, in which time itself stood still, Ben sat beside the
+dead body of his old counselor and friend as a child might sit among
+flowers. He half leaned forward, his arms limp, his hands resting in his
+lap, a deep wonder and bewilderment in his eyes. Dully he watched the
+moon lifting in the sky and felt the caress of the wind against his
+face, glancing only from time to time at the huddled body before him.
+The wolf whined softly, and sometimes Ben reached his hand to caress the
+furry shoulder.
+
+But slowly his wandering faculties returned to him. He began to
+understand. Ezram was dead--that was it--gone from his life as smoke
+goes in the air. Never to hear him again, or see him, or make plans with
+him, or have high adventures beside him along the lonely trails. Fenris
+had found him in the darkness: here he lay--the old family friend, the
+man who had saved him, redeemed him and given him his chance, his old
+"buddy" who had brought him home. The thing was not credible at first:
+that here, dead as a stone, lay the shell of that life that had been his
+own salvation. He studied intently the gray face, missed its habitual
+smile and for really the first time his gaze rested upon the yawning
+wound in the temple.
+
+He gazed at it in speechless, growing horror, and something like an
+incredible cold descended upon him. The entire hydraulic system of his
+blood seemed to be freezing. His hands were cold, his vitals icy and
+lifeless. There was, however, the beginning of heat somewhere back of
+his eyes. He could feel it but dimly, but it was increasing, slowly,
+like a smoldering coal that eats its way into wood and soon will burst
+into a flame. Slowly he began to grow rigid, his muscles flexing. His
+face underwent a tangible change. The lines deepened, the lips set in a
+hard line, the eyes were like those of a reptile,--cold, passionless,
+unutterably terrible. His face was pale like the paleness of death, but
+it appeared more like hard, white metal than flesh. His mind began to
+work clear again; he began to understand.
+
+Ezram had been shot, murdered by the men who had jumped his claim.
+Beatrice's father, who had talked to him, had probably committed the
+crime: if not he, one of his understrappers at his order. He found
+himself recalling what Jeffery Neilson had said. Oh, the man had been
+sharp! Believing that in the depth of the forest the body would never be
+discovered, he had tried to send Ben farther into the interior in search
+of him.
+
+He arose, wholly self-mastered, and with hard, strong hands made a
+detailed examination of Ezram's wound. He had evidently been shot by a
+rifle of large caliber, probably at close range. Ezram's own gun lay at
+his feet, loaded but not cocked.
+
+"They shot you down in cold blood, old boy, didn't they?" he found
+himself asking. "You didn't have a chance!"
+
+But the gray lips were setting with death, and could not answer. Ben
+had forgotten for the instant; he must keep better hold of himself. The
+time was not ripe to turn himself loose. But he did wish for one more
+word with Ezram, just a few little minutes of planning. They could
+doubtless work out something good together. They could decide what to
+do.
+
+From this point his mind naturally fell to Ezram's parting advice to
+him. "I've only got one decent place to keep things safe, and that ain't
+so all-fired decent," the old man had told him. "I always put 'em down
+my bootleg, between the sock and the leather. If I ever get shuffled
+off, all of a sudden, I want you to look there careful."
+
+Still with the same deathly pallor he crept over the dead leaves to
+Ezram's feet. His hands were perfectly steady as he unlooped the laces,
+one after another, and quietly pulled off the right boot. In the boot
+leg, just as Ezram had promised, Ben found a scrap of white paper.
+
+He spread it on his knee, and unfolded it with care. The moonlight was
+not sufficiently vivid, however, for him to read the penciled scrawl. He
+felt in his pocket for a match.
+
+Because his mind was operating clear and sure, his thoughts flashed at
+once to his enemies in their cabins along the creek. He did not want
+them to know he had found the body. His first instinct was to work in
+the dark, to achieve his ends by stealth and cunning! It was strange
+what capacity for cunning had come upon him. Oh, he would be
+crafty--sharp--sure in every motion.
+
+It was unlikely, however, that the faint glare of a match could carry so
+far. To make sure he walked behind the covert, then turned his back to
+the canyon through which the creek flowed. The match cracked,
+inordinately loud in the silence, and his eyes followed the script.
+Ezram had been faithful to the last:
+
+ To WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
+
+ In case of my death I leave all I die possessed of including my
+ brother Hiram's claim near Yuga River to my pard and buddy, Ben
+ Darby.
+
+ (Signed) EZRA MELVILLE.
+
+The document was as formal as Ezram could make it, with a carefully
+drawn seal, and for all its quaint wording, it was a will to stand in
+any court. But Ezram had not been able to hold his dignity for long. He
+had added a postscript:
+
+ Son, old Hiram made a will, and I guess I can make one too. I just
+ found out about them devils that jumped our claim. I left you back
+ there at the river because I didn't want you taking any dam fool
+ risks till I found out how things lay.
+
+ I just got one thing to ask. If them devils get me--get them. My
+ life ain't worth much but I want you to make them pay for the little
+ it is worth. Never stop till you've done it.
+
+Ben lighted match after match until he had absorbed every word. Then he
+folded the paper and placed it in his pocket; but the action did not in
+the least take his eyes from the words. He could still see them, written
+in fire. They were branded on his spirit.
+
+He stood wholly motionless for a space of almost a minute, as if
+listening. The heat back of his eyes was more intense now. The red coals
+were about to burst into flame. All the blood of his huge body seemed to
+be collecting there, searing his brain.
+
+The moon was no longer white in the sky. It had turned a fiery red. The
+stars were red too,--all of them more red than the Star of War. "I want
+you to make them pay," a voice said clearly in his ears. "Never stop
+till you've done it."
+
+And now Ben was no longer pale. His face was no longer hard and set.
+Rather it was dark--dark as dark earth. His eyes glowed like coals
+beneath his black brows. He was not standing still and lifeless now. He
+was shivering all over with the blackest hate, the most deadly fury.
+
+"Make them pay," he said aloud again, "and never stop till you've done
+it."
+
+A sudden snarl from the lips of the wolf drew his eyes downward. Heaven
+help him; for the moment he had forgotten Fenris! But he must not forget
+him again. They had work to do, the two of them.
+
+Fenris was no longer whining disconsolately. His master's fury had
+passed to him, and Ben looked and saw before him not the docile pet, but
+the savage beast of the wild. The hair was erect on his shoulders, his
+lips were drawn, too; he was crouched as if for battle. The eyes, sunken
+in their sockets, were red and terrible to see. Yet he was still Ben's
+servant. That quality could never pass from him. The eyes of two
+met,--the wolf and the man.
+
+At that instant the little tongue of flame that had been mounting in
+Ben's brain burst into a dreadful conflagration. It was the explosion at
+last, no less terrible because of its silence--because the sound of the
+least, little wind was still discernible in the distant thickets. He
+dropped to his knees before the wolf, seizing its head in a terrific
+grasp. He half jerked it off its feet, till he held it so that its eyes
+burned straight into his.
+
+"Fenris, Fenris!" he breathed. "We've got to make them pay. And we must
+not stop till we're done."
+
+It was more than a command. It had the quality of a vow. And now, as
+they knelt, eyes looking into eyes, it was like a pagan rite in the
+ancient world.
+
+Their separate identities were no longer greatly pronounced. They were
+not man and beast, they were simply the wolves of the forest. The old
+qualities most often associated with manhood--gentleness, forbearance,
+mercy--seemed to pass away from Ben as a light passes into darkness.
+Only the Wolf was left, the dominant Beast--that darker, hidden side of
+himself from which no man can wholly escape and which civilization has
+only smothered, as fresh fuel smothers a flame. Not for nothing had his
+fellows known him as "Wolf" Darby; and now the name was true.
+
+The Beast that dwells under every man's skin, in a greater or less
+degree, was in the full ascendancy at last. The unnamable ferocity that
+marks the death-leap of the wild hunters was in his face. In his eyes
+was cunning,--such craft as marks the pack in its hunting. All over him
+was written that unearthly rage that is alone the property and trait of
+the woods creatures: the fury with which a she-wolf fights for her cubs
+or a rattlesnake avenges the death of its mate. Mercy, remorse,
+compassion there was none.
+
+And the demon gods of the wilderness rejoiced. For uncounted thousands
+of years the tide of battle had flowed against them; and it was long and
+long since they had won such a victory as this. Mostly their men
+children had forsaken their leafy bowers to live in houses. They tilled
+the ground rather than hunt in the forest. The cattle that had once run
+wild in the marshes now fed dully in enclosed pastures; the horses--that
+mighty breed that once mated and fought and died in freedom on the high
+lands--pulled lowly burdens in the cultivated fields. Even some of the
+canine people too--first cousins to the wolves themselves--had sold
+themselves into slavery for a gnawed bone and a chimney corner. But
+to-night the wild had claimed its own again.
+
+Here was one, at least, who had come back into his own. The forest
+seemed to whisper and thrill with rapture.
+
+
+
+
+
+PART TWO
+
+THE WOLF-MAN
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+As a wolf might plan a hunt in the forest, Ben planned his war against
+Neilson and his subordinates. He knew perfectly that he must not attempt
+open warfare. The way of the wolf is the way of cunning and stealth: the
+stalk through the thicket and the ferocious attack upon the
+unsuspecting; and such example must guide Ben in his operations. He
+could not be too careful, too furtive.
+
+His foes were three against one, and they were on their own ground. They
+knew the trails and the lay of the country; and as always, in the
+science of warfare, this was an advantage hardly to be overcome. Ben
+knew that his only hope lay in the finest strategy. First he must make a
+surprise attack, and second, he must utilize all natural advantages.
+
+He was well aware that he could lie in ambush, close to the mine, and
+probably send one man to a speedy death with a rifle bullet. But he did
+not have one enemy; he had three. The survivors of the first shot would
+immediately seek shelter--probably returning shot for shot--and that
+would insert an element of uncertainty into the venture. At the distance
+he would be obliged to shoot, he would possibly only succeed in wounding
+one of his enemies, and he might miss him altogether. Such a plan as
+this was wholly too uncertain for adoption.
+
+There must be no sporting chances in his strategy. The way of the wolf
+is to cover every opening, to prepare for every contingency that his
+brute mind can foresee. He would give and receive no quarter, and the
+ancient fairness and honor must be likewise forgotten. He must take no
+risk with his own life until the last of the three was down. What
+happened thereafter did not greatly concern him. The world could shatter
+to atoms after that for all he would care. He was a son of forest
+solitude; and he had but one dream left in life.
+
+It was not his aim to give his foes the least chance to fight back, the
+slightest hope of battle. He would use any advantage, descend to any
+wile. This was not to be a sportsmen's war, but a grim battle to the
+death, inexorable and merciless.
+
+These things were all fully known to him before ever he left the
+hillside, and like a man asleep, walked down to his camp. The fire had
+burned down to coals--sullen and angry--but he heaped on fuel, and they
+broke into a blaze. Then, Fenris at his side, he squatted on the ground
+beside the dancing flame.
+
+He watched it, fascinated; mostly silent but sometimes muttering and
+whispering half-enunciated words. His red eyes and the black hair,
+matted about his lips and shadowing the backs of his hands, gave him a
+wild, fierce look; and it was as if the primal blood-lust and hatred
+that seared him had literally swept him back into the forgotten
+centuries,--the first, savage human hunter at the edge of the retreating
+glaciers. The scene had not changed: dark spruce and the red glow of
+fire; and there was atavism in his very posture. The first men had
+squatted beside their camp fires this same way, their wolfine pets
+beside them, as they made their battle plans.
+
+The eager flames held Ben's fascinated gaze as a crystal ball might hold
+the eyes of a seer. They seemed to have a message for him if he could
+just grasp it, a course whereby he might achieve success. Oh, they could
+be cruel, relentless--mercilessly eating their way into sensitive flesh.
+They were no respecters of persons, these creeping, leaping tongues. Nor
+must _he_ have any scruples or qualms as to how he gained his ends. He
+too must be merciless, and if necessary, strike down the innocent in
+order to reach the guilty.
+
+As he watched certain knowledge reached him of life and death. The
+conclusion slowly came to him that just blind killing was not enough.
+For all he knew death might bring instant forgetfulness--and thus not
+constitute in itself a satisfactory measure of vengeance. The _fear_ of
+death was a reality and a torment: for all he knew, the thing itself
+might be a change for the better. It might be that, suddenly hurled out
+of this world of three dimensions, his enemies would have no knowledge
+nor carry no memories of the hand that struck them down. There could be
+no satisfaction in this. To murder from ambush might be a measure of
+expedience, but never one of self-gratification. When Ben struck he
+wanted them to know who was their enemy, and for what crime they were
+laid low.
+
+The best way of all, of course, was to strike indirectly at them,
+perhaps through some one they loved. Soon, perhaps, he would see the
+way.
+
+He went to his blankets, but sleep did not come to him. The wolf stood
+on guard. Beatrice Neilson had fallen into happy dreams long since, but
+there was further wakefulness in Hiram Melville's newer cabin, farther
+up-creek. Ray Brent and Chan Heminway still sat over their cups, the
+fiery liquid running riot in their veins, but slumber did not come
+easily to-night. And when Beatrice was asleep, Neilson stole down the
+moonlit moose trail and joined his men.
+
+"I've brought news," he began, when the door had closed out the stars
+and the breath of the night. Chan, his small eyes glazed from strong
+drink, staggered to his feet to offer his chair to his chief. Brent,
+however, was in no mood for servility to-night. He had done man's work
+in the early evening; and his triumph and his new-found sense of power
+had not yet died in his body. Perhaps he had learned the way to all
+success. There was a curious sullen defiance in the blearing gaze over
+his glass.
+
+"What's your news?" Ray's voice harshened, possessing a certain quality
+of grim levity. "I guess old Hiram's brother hasn't come to life again,
+has he?"
+
+It was a significant thing that both Chan and Neilson looked oppressed
+and uneasy at the words. Like all men of low moral status they were
+secretly superstitious, and these boasting words crept unpleasantly
+under their skins. It is never a good thing to taunt the dead! Ray had
+spoken sheerly to frighten and shock them, thus revealing his own
+fearlessness and strength; yet his voice rang louder than he had meant.
+He had no desire for it to carry into the silver mystery of the night.
+
+"The less you say about Hiram's brother the better," Neilson answered
+sternly. "We've thrashed it out once to-night." He straightened as he
+read the insolence, the gathering insubordination in the other's
+contemptuous glance; and his voice lacked its old ring of power when he
+spoke again. "Jumpin' claims is one thing and murder is another."
+
+Ray, spurred on by the false strength of wickedness, drunk with his new
+sense of power, was already feeling the first surge of deadly anger in
+his veins. "I suppose if you had been doin' it, you'd let that old whelp
+take back this claim, worth a quarter million if it's worth a cent. Not
+if I know it. It was the only way--and the safe way too."
+
+"Safe! What if by a thousandth chance some one would blunder on to that
+body you left in the brush? What if some sergeant of mounted police
+would say to his man, 'Go get Ray Brent!' Where would you be then?
+You've always been a murderer at heart, Brent--but some time you'll slip
+up--"
+
+"Only a fool slips up. Don't think I didn't figure on everything. As you
+say, there's not one chance in a thousand any one will ever find him. If
+they do, there wouldn't be any kind of a case. Likely the old man hasn't
+got a friend or relation on earth. I've searched his pockets--there's
+nothing to tell who he is. We'll have our claim recorded soon, and it
+would be easy to make him out the claim-jumper rather than us--"
+
+"Wait just a minute before you say he ain't got any friends, or at least
+acquaintances. That's what I came to see you about to-night." Neilson
+paused, for the sake of suspense. "Beatrice came up to-night, as agreed,
+and she had a prospector with her--and he knew old Hiram's brother."
+
+A short, tense silence followed his words, and Ray stared into his cup.
+It might be that just for an instant the reckless light went out of his
+eyes and left them startled and glazing. Then he got to his feet. "Then
+God Almighty!" he cried. "What you waiting for? Why don't you croak him
+off before this night's over?"
+
+"Wait, you fool, till you've heard everything," Neilson replied.
+"There's no hurry about killing. As I told you, the less work of that
+kind we do, the more chance we've got of dying in our beds. It may be
+reasonable for one prospector to disappear, but some one's going to be
+suspicious if two of 'em do. I think I've already handled the matter."
+
+"I'd handle it, and quick too," Ray protested.
+
+"You'd handle yourself up a gallows, too. He doesn't seem to be a close
+friend of this old man; he just seems to have met up with him at the
+river, and the old man steered him up here. He asked me where the old
+man's claim was, and said he wanted to go over and see him. He was
+taking Hiram's wolf and his gun up to him. I told him I hadn't heard of
+the claim, that it must be farther inside, and I think I put it over. He
+ain't got the least suspicion. What he'll do is hang around here a
+while, I suppose, prospecting--and likely enough soon forget all about
+the old devil. I just came down here to tell you he was here and to
+watch your step."
+
+"Then the first thing up," Chan Heminway suggested, "is to bury the
+stiff."
+
+"Spoke up like a fool!" Ray answered. "Not till this man is dead or out
+of the country. It's well hidden, and don't go prowling anywheres near
+it. If he's the least bit suspicious, or even if he's on the lookout for
+gold, he'd likely enough follow you. But there's one thing we can
+do--and that quick."
+
+"And what's that?"
+
+"Start Chan off to-morrow to the office in Bradleyburg and record this
+claim in our names. We've waited too long already."
+
+"Ray, you're talking like a man now," Neilson agreed. "You and I stay
+here and work away, innocent as can be, on the claim. Chan, put that
+bottle away and get to bed. Take the trail down first thing to-morrow.
+Then we can laugh at all the prospectors that want to come."
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+Soon after the break of dawn Ben put his pick and shovel on his
+shoulder, and leisurely walked up the creek past Ray's cabin. Since Chan
+Heminway had already departed down the long trail to Bradleyburg--a town
+situated nearly forty miles from Snowy Gulch--Ray alone saw him pass;
+and he eyed him with some apprehension. Daylight had brought a more
+vivid consciousness of his last night's crime; and a little of his
+bravado had departed from him. He moved closer to his rifle.
+
+Yet in a moment his suspicions were allayed. Ben was evidently a
+prospector, just as he claimed to be, and was venturing forth to get his
+first "lay of the land." The latter continued up the draw, crossed a
+ridge, halted now and then in the manner of the wild creatures to see if
+he were being followed, and finally by a roundabout route returned to
+the lifeless form of his only friend. The wolf still trotted in silence
+behind him.
+
+The vivid morning light only revealed the crime in more dreadful detail.
+The withered form lay huddled in the stained leaves; and Ben stood a
+long time beside it, in deep and wondering silence, even now scarcely
+able to believe the truth. How strange it was that this old comrade
+could not waken and go on with him again! But in a moment he remembered
+his work.
+
+Slowly, laboriously, with little outward sign of the emotion that rent
+his heart, he dug a shallow grave He knew perfectly that this was a
+serious risk to his cause. Should the murderer return for any purpose,
+to his dead, the grave would of course show that the body had been
+discovered and would put him on his guard against Ben. Nevertheless, the
+latter could not leave these early remains to the doubtful mercy of the
+wilderness: the agents of air and sun, and the wild beasts.
+
+He threw the last clod and stood looking down at the upturned earth.
+"Sleep good, old Ez," he murmured in simple mass for the dead. "I'll do
+what you said."
+
+Then, at the head of the grave, he thrust the barrel of Ezram's rifle
+into the ground, a monument grim as his own thoughts. The last rite was
+completed; he was free to work now. From now on he could devote every
+thought to the work in hand,--the payment of his debts.
+
+By the same roundabout route he circled back to his camp, cooked his
+meager lunch, and in the afternoon ventured forth again. But he was
+prospecting in earnest this time, though the prospects that he sought
+were those of victory to his cause, rather than of gold. He was seeking
+simply a good, general idea of the nature and geography of the country
+so that he might know better how to plan his attack.
+
+His excursion took him at last to the wooded bank of the river. He stood
+a long time, quite motionless, listening to the water voices that only
+the wise can understand. This was really a noble stream. It flowed with
+such grandeur in its silence and solitude; old and gray and austere, it
+was a mighty expression of wilderness power,--resistless, immortal,
+eternally secretive. The waters flowed darkly, icy cold from the melting
+snow; but like a sleeping giant they would be quick to seize upon and
+destroy such as would try to brave their currents, likely never to
+yield them up again. Flowing forever through the uninhabited forest no
+man would ever know the fate of those the river claimed.
+
+He was above the camp when he descended to its banks, but he worked his
+way down through the thickets toward Jeffery Neilson's cabin. The river
+flowed quietly here, a long, still stretch that afforded safe boating.
+Yet the smooth waters did not in the least alleviate Ben's haunting
+sense of their sinister power and peril. The old gray she-wolf is not to
+be trusted in her peaceful moments. His keen ears could distinctly hear
+the roar and rumble of wild waters, just below.
+
+The river was of great depth as well as breadth,--one of the king rivers
+of the land. Ben found himself staring into its depths with a quickening
+pulse. He had a momentary impression that this great stream was his
+ally, a mighty agent that he could bend to his will.
+
+He approached the long, sloping bank on which stood Neilson's cabin; and
+he suddenly drew up short at the sight of a light, staunch canoe on the
+open water. It was a curious fact that he noticed the craft itself
+before ever he glanced at its occupant. A thrill of excitement passed
+over him. He realized that this boat simplified to some degree his own
+problem, in that it afforded him means of traversing this great
+water-body, certainly to be a factor in the forthcoming conflict. The
+boat had evidently been the property of Hiram Melville.
+
+Then he noticed, with a strange, inexplicable leap of his heart, that
+its lone occupant was Beatrice Neilson. His eye kindled at the
+recognition, and the beginnings of a smile flashed to his lips. But at
+once remembrance came to him, crushing his joy as the heel crushes a
+tender flower. The girl was of the enemy camp, the daughter of the
+leader of the triumvirate of murderers. While she herself could have had
+no part in the crime, perhaps she already had guilty knowledge of it,
+and at least she was of her father's hated blood.
+
+He had builded much on his friendship with this girl; but he felt it
+withering, turning black--like buds under frost--in his cold breast.
+There could be no friendly words, except in guile; no easy comradeship
+between them now. They were on opposite sides, hated foes to the last.
+Perhaps she would be one of the innocents that must suffer with the
+guilty; but he felt no remorse. Not even this lovely, tender wood child
+must stand in his way.
+
+Nevertheless, he must not put her on guard. He must simulate friendship.
+He lifted his hat in answer to her gay signal.
+
+She wore a white middy blouse, and her brown, bare forearms flashed
+pleasantly in the spring sun. Her brown hair was disarranged by the wind
+that found a passway down the river, and her eyes shone with the sheer,
+unadorned love of living. Evidently she had just enjoyed a brisk paddle
+through the still stretches of the river. With sure, steady strokes she
+pushed the craft close to the little, board landing where Ben stood. She
+reached up to him, and in an instant was laughing--at nothing in
+particular but the fun of life--at his side.
+
+The man glanced once at Fenris, spoke in command, then turned to the
+girl. "All rested from the ride, I see," he began easily.
+
+Her instincts keyed to the highest pitch, for an instant she thought she
+discerned an unfamiliar tone, hard and hateful, in his voice. But his
+eyes and his lips were smiling; and evidently she was mistaken. "I never
+get tired," she responded. She glanced at the tools in his arms. "I
+suppose you've found a dozen rich lodes already this morning."
+
+"Only one." He smiled, significantly, into her eyes. Because she was a
+forest girl, unused to flattery, the warm color grew in her brown
+cheeks. "And how was paddling? The water looks still enough from here."
+
+"It's not as still as it looks, but it is easy going for a half-mile
+each way. If you aren't an expert boatman, however--I hardly think--I'd
+try it."
+
+"Why not? I'm fair enough with a canoe, of course--but it looks safe as
+a lake."
+
+"But it isn't." She paused. "Listen with those keen ears of yours, Mr.
+Darby. Don't you hear anything?"
+
+Ben did not need particularly keen ears to hear: the far-off sound of
+surging waters reached him with entire clearness. He nodded.
+
+"That's the reason," the girl went on. "If something should happen--and
+you'd get carried around the bend--a little farther than you meant to
+go--you'd understand. And we wouldn't see any more of Mr. Darby around
+these parts."
+
+Her dark eyes, brimming with light and laughter, were on his face, but
+she failed to see him slowly stiffen to hide the sudden, wild leaping of
+his heart. Could it be that he saw the far-off vision of his triumph?
+
+His eyes glowed, and he fought off with difficulty a great preoccupation
+that seemed to be settling over him.
+
+"Tell me about it," he said at last, casually. "I was thinking of making
+a boat and going down on a prospecting trip."
+
+"I'll tell you about it, and then I think you'll change your mind. The
+first cataract is the one just above where we first saw the
+river--coming in; then there's this mile of quiet water. From that
+point on the Yuga flows into a gorge--or rather one gorge after another;
+and sometime they'll likely be almost as famous as some of the great
+gorges of your country. The walls are just about straight up on each
+side, and of course are absolutely impassable. I don't know how many
+miles the first gorge is--but for nearly two hundred miles the river is
+considered impassable for boats. Two hundred and fifty miles or so below
+there is an Indian village--but they never try to go down the river from
+here. A few white men, however, have tried to go down with canoe-loads
+of fur."
+
+"And all drowned?" Ben asked.
+
+"All except one party. Once two men went down when the river was
+high--just as it is now. They were good canoeists, and they made it
+through. No one ever expected they would come out again."
+
+"And after you've once got into the rapids, there's no getting out--or
+landing?"
+
+"Of course not. I suppose there are places where you might get on the
+bank, but the gorge above is impassable."
+
+"You couldn't follow the river down--with horses?"
+
+"Yes, in time. Of course it would be slow going, as there are no trails,
+the brush is heavy, and the country is absolutely unexplored. You see it
+has never been considered a gold country--and of course the Indians
+won't go except where they can go in canoes. Some of the hills must be
+impassable, too. I've heard my father speak about it--how that if any
+criminal--or any one like that--could take down this river in a canoe in
+high water--and get through into that great, virgin, trackless country a
+hundred miles below, it would be almost impossible to get him out.
+Unless the officers could chase him down the same way he went--by
+canoe--it would take literally weeks and months for them to get in, and
+by that time he could be hidden and located and his tracks covered up."
+
+"And with good ambushes, able to hold off and kill a dozen of them, eh?"
+Ben's hands shook, and he locked them behind him. "They call that
+country--what?"
+
+"'Back There.' That's all I've ever heard it called--'Back There.'"
+
+"It's as good a name as any. Of course, the reason they were able to
+make it through in high water was due to the fact that most of the rocks
+and ledges were submerged, and they could slide right over them."
+
+"Of course. Many of our rivers are safer in high water. But you
+seriously don't intend to take such a trip--"
+
+He looked up to find her eyes wide and full upon his. Yet her concern
+for him touched him not at all. She was his enemy: that fact could never
+be forgotten or forgiven.
+
+"I want to hear about it, anyway. I heard in town the river is higher
+than it's been for years--due to the Chinook--"
+
+"It _is_ higher than I've ever seen it. But it's reached its peak and
+has started to fall, and it won't come up again, at least, till fall.
+When the Yuga rises it comes up in a flood, and it falls the same way.
+It's gone down quite a little since this morning; by the day after
+to-morrow no one could hope to get through Devil's Gate--the first
+cataract in the gorge."
+
+"Not even with a canoe? Of course a raft would be broken to pieces."
+
+"Not a canoe, either, in two or three days, if the river falls like it
+usually does. But tell me--you aren't serious--"
+
+"I suppose not. But it gets my imagination--just the same. I suppose a
+man would average better than twenty miles an hour down through that
+gorge, and would come out at _Back There_."
+
+Their talk moved easily to other subjects; yet it seemed to Ben that
+some secondary consciousness held up his end of the conversation. His
+own deeper self was lost in curious and dark conjectures. Her
+description of the river lingered in his thoughts, and he seemed to be
+groping for a great inspiration that was hovering just beyond his
+reach--as plants grope for light in far-off leafy jungles. He felt that
+it would come to him in a moment: he would know the dark relation that
+these facts about the river bore to his war with Neilson. It was as if
+an inner mind, much more subtle and discerning than his normal
+consciousness, had seen great possibilities in them, but as yet had not
+divulged their significance.
+
+"I must be going now," the girl was saying. "Father pretty near goes
+crazy when I stay away too long. You can't imagine how he loves me and
+worries about me--and how fearful he is of me--"
+
+His mind seemed to leap and gather her words. It was true: she was the
+joy and the pride and the hope of the old man's life. All his work, his
+dreams were for her. And now he remembered a fact that she had told him
+on the outward journey: that Ray Brent, the stronger of Neilson's two
+subordinates, loved her too.
+
+"To strike at them indirectly--through some one they love--" such had
+been his greatest wish. To put them at a disadvantage and overcome his
+own--to lead them into his own ambushes. And was it for the Wolf to care
+what guiltless creatures fell before his fangs in the gaining of his
+dreadful ends? Was the gratification of his hate to be turned aside
+through pity for an innocent girl? Mercy and remorse were two things
+that he had put from him. It was the way of the Wolf to pay no attention
+to methods, only to achieve his own fierce desires. He stood lost in
+dark and savage reverie.
+
+"Good-by," the girl was saying. "I'll see you soon--"
+
+He turned toward her, a smile at his lips. His voice held steady when he
+spoke.
+
+"It'll have to be soon, if at all," he replied. "I've got to really get
+to work in a few days. How about a little picnic to-morrow--a grouse
+hunt, say--on the other side of the river? It's going to be a beautiful
+day--"
+
+The girl's eyes shone, and the color rose again in her tanned cheeks.
+"I'd think that would be very nice," she told him.
+
+"Then I'll meet you here--at eight."
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+Alone by the fire Ben had opportunity to balance one thing with another
+and think out the full consequences of his plan. As far as he could
+discern, it stood every test. It meant not only direct and indirect
+vengeance upon Neilson and his followers; but it would also, past all
+doubt, deliver them into his hands. That much was sure. When finally
+they came to grips--if indeed they did not go down to a terrible death
+before ever that time came--he would be prepared for them, with every
+advantage of ground and fortress, able to combat them one by one and
+shatter them from ambush. Best of all, they would know at whose hands,
+and for what crime, they received their retribution.
+
+One by one he checked the chances against him. First of all, he had to
+face the great chance of failure and the consequent loss of his own
+life. But there was even recompense in this. He would not die unavenged.
+The blow that he would thereby deal to his enemies would be terrible
+beyond any reckoning, but he would have no regrets.
+
+There were two outstanding points in his favor, one of them being that
+the river was rapidly falling. By the time a canoe could be built the
+river would be wholly unnavigable. There were no canoes procurable in
+Snowy Gulch, if indeed a lightning trip could be made there and back to
+secure one, before the river fell. The conversation with the
+frontiersman at the river bank brought out this fact. Lastly, a raft
+could not live a moment in the rapids.
+
+Very methodically he began to make his preparations. He untied his
+horse, leaving it free to descend to Snowy Gulch. Then he packed a few
+of his most essential supplies, his gun and shells, such necessary camp
+equipment as robes, matches, soap and towels, cooking and table ware, an
+axe and similar necessaries. In the way of food he laid out flour, rice,
+salt, and sugar, plus a few pounds of tea--nothing else. The entire
+outfit weighed less than two hundred pounds, easily carried in three
+loads upon the back.
+
+In the still hour of midnight, when the forest world was swept in
+mystery, he carried the equipment down to the canoe that Beatrice had
+left the evening before. He loaded the craft with the greatest care,
+balancing it now and then with his hands at the sides, and covering up
+the food supplies with robes and blankets. Then he drew from his pocket
+a sheet of paper--evidently a paper sack that had once held provisions,
+cut open and spread--and wrote carefully, a long time, with a pencil.
+
+He had no envelope to enclose it, no wax to seal it. He did, however,
+carry a stub of a candle--a requisite to most northern men who are
+obliged to build supper fires in wet forest. Folding his letter
+carefully, he sealed it with tallow. Then wrapping one of his blankets
+about him, he prepared to wait for the dawn. Fenris growled and murmured
+in his sleep.
+
+Ben himself had not slept the night before; and moved and stirred by his
+plan of the morrow, slumber did not come easily to him now. He too
+murmured in his sleep and had weird, tragic dreams between sleep and
+wakefulness. But the shadows paled at last. A ribbon of light spread
+along the eastern horizon; the more familiar landmarks emerged--ghosts
+at first, then in vivid outline, the wooded sky line strengthened; the
+nebulous magic of the moon died in the forest. Birds wakened and sang;
+the hunting creatures crept to their lairs; sleeping flowers opened.
+Morning broke on a clear, warm day.
+
+Ben devoured a heavy breakfast--all that he could force himself to
+swallow--then prepared to wait for Beatrice. He knew perfectly that
+explanations would be difficult if Neilson or one of his followers found
+him with the loaded boat. It was not likely, however, that any of his
+enemies--except, of course, Beatrice herself--would venture down that
+way.
+
+Just before eight he saw her come,--first the glint of her white blouse
+in the green of the forest, and then the flash of her brown arms. Her
+voice rang clear and sweet through the hushed depths as she called a
+greeting. A moment later she was beside him.
+
+"Go back and get your heavy coat," he commanded. "I've already been out
+on the water, and it'll freeze you stiff."
+
+He was not overly pleased with himself for speaking thus. He had
+resolved to put mercy from him; and he was taking a serious risk to his
+own cause by the delay of sending her back for her warmer garments. She
+smiled into his eyes, but she came of a breed of women that had learned
+obedience to men, and she immediately turned. But Ben had builded better
+than he thought. His eyes were no longer on her radiant face. They had
+dropped to the pistol, in its holster, that she carried in her hands,
+preparatory to strapping it about her waist. It was disconcerting that
+he had forgotten about her pistol. It was one of those insignificant
+trifles that before now have disrupted the mightiest plans of nations
+and of men. His mind sped like lightning, and he thanked his stars that
+he had seen it in time. This pistol and a small package, the contents
+of which he did not know, were the only equipment she had.
+
+"It's going to be a bright day," the girl said hesitatingly. "I don't
+think I'll need the fur coat--"
+
+"Get it, anyway," Ben advised. "The wind's keen on the river. Leave your
+pistol and your package here--and go up and back at top speed. I'll be
+arranging the canoe--"
+
+She laid down the things, and in a moment the thickets had hidden her.
+Swiftly Ben reached for the gun, and for a few speeding seconds his
+fingers worked at its mechanism. He was busy about the canoe when the
+girl returned.
+
+Evidently Beatrice was in wonderful spirits. The air itself was
+sparkling, the sun--beloved with an ardor too deep for words by all
+northern peoples--was warm and genial in the sky; the spruce forest was
+lush with dew, fragrant with hidden blossoms. It was a Spring
+Day--nothing less. Both of them knew perfectly that miracle was abroad
+in the forest,--flowers opening, buds breaking into blossoms, little
+grass blades stealing, shy as fairies, up through the dead leaves; birds
+fluttering and gossiping and carrying all manner of building materials
+for their nests.
+
+Spring is not just a time of year to the forest folk, and particularly
+to those creatures whose homes are the far spruce forests of the North.
+It is a magic and a mystery, a recreation and a renewed lease on life
+itself. It is hope come again, the joy of living undreamed of except by
+such highly strung, nerve-tingling, wild-blooded creatures as these; and
+in some measure at least it is the escape from Fear. For there is no
+other name than Fear for the great, white, merciless winter that had
+just departed.
+
+High and low, every woods creature knows this dread, this age-old
+apprehension of the deepening snow. Perhaps it had its birth in eons
+past, when the great glaciers brought their curse of gold into the
+temperate regions, locking land and sea under tons of ice. Never the
+frost comes, and the snow deepens on the land, and the rivers and lakes
+are struck silent as if by a cruel magician's magic, but that this old
+fear returns, creeping like poison into the nerves, bowing down the
+heart and chilling the warm wheel of the blood. For the rodents and the
+digging people--even for the mighty grizzly himself--the season means
+nothing but the cold and the darkness of their underground lairs. For
+those that try to brave the winter, the portion is famine and cold; the
+vast, far-spreading silence broken only by the sobbing song of the wolf
+pack, starving and afraid on the distant ridges. Man is the conqueror,
+the Mighty One who can strike the fire, but yet he too knows the creepy,
+haunting dread and deep-lying fear of the northern winter. But that
+dread season was gone now, yielding for a few happy months to a gay
+invader from the South; and the whole forest world rejoiced.
+
+Both Beatrice and Ben could sense the new wakening and revival in the
+still depths about them. The forest was hushed, tremulous, yet vibrant
+and ecstatic with renewed life. The old grizzly bear had left his winter
+lair; and good feeding was putting the fat again on his bones; the old
+cow moose had stolen away into the farther marshes for some mystery and
+miracle of her own. Everywhere young calves of caribou were breathing
+the air for the first time, trying to stand on wobbly legs and pushing
+with greedy noses into overflowing udders. The rich new grass yielded
+milk in plenty for all these wilderness nurslings. Even the she-wolf
+forgot her wicked savagery to nurse and fondle her whelps in the lair;
+even the she-lynx, hunting with renewed fervor through the branches,
+knew of a marvelous secret in a hollow log that she would be torn to
+scraps of fur rather than reveal.
+
+The she-ermine, her white hair falling out, was brooding a litter of
+cutthroats and murderers in a nest of grass and twigs, and each one of
+them was a source of pride and joy to her mother heart. Even the
+wolverine had some wicked-eyed little cubs that, to her, were precious
+beyond rubies; but which would ultimately receive all the oaths in the
+language for stealing bait on the trap lines out from the settlements.
+
+Beatrice, a woods creature herself, knew the stir and thrill of spring;
+but there were also more personal, more deeply hidden reasons why she
+was happy to-day. She was certainly a very girlish-girl in most ways,
+with even more than the usual allowance of romance and sentiment, and
+the idea of an all-day picnic with this stalwart forester went straight
+home to her imagination. She had been tremendously impressed with him
+from the first, and the day's ride out from Snowy Gulch had brought him
+very close to her indeed. And what might not the day bring forth! What
+mystery and wonder might come to pass!
+
+Her dark eyes were lustrous, and the haunting sadness they often held
+was quite gone. Her face was faintly flushed, her red lips wistful,
+every motion eager and happy as a child's. But Ben looked at her
+unmoved.
+
+Coldly his eye leaped over her supple, slender form. He saw with relief
+that she was stoutly clad in middy and skirt of wool, wool stockings,
+and solid little boots. The heavy coat she had brought was not
+particularly noteworthy in these woods, but it would have drawn instant
+admiration from knowing people of a great city. It was not cut with
+particular style, neither was it beautifully lined, but the fabric
+itself was plucked otter,--the dark, well-wearing fur of many lights and
+of matchless luster and beauty.
+
+"For goodness sake, Mr. Darby," the girl cried. "What have you got in
+this boat? Surely that isn't just the lunch--" She pointed to the pile
+of supplies, covered by the blankets, in the center of the craft.
+
+"It looks like we had enough to stay a month, doesn't it?" he laughed.
+"There's blankets there, of course--for table cloths and to make us
+comfortable--and the lunch, and a pillow or two--and some little
+surprises. The rest is just some stores that I'm going to take this
+opportunity to put across the river--to my next camp. Now, Miss
+Neilson--if you'll take the seat in the bow. Fenris is going to ride in
+the middle--"
+
+The girl's eyes fell with some apprehension on the shaggy wolf. "I
+haven't established very friendly relations with Fenris--"
+
+"I'd leave him at home, but he won't stand for it. Besides I'd like to
+teach him how to retrieve grouse. Lie down, old boy." Ben motioned, and
+Fenris sprawled at his feet. "Now come here and pet him, Miss Neilson.
+His fur, at this season, is wonderful--"
+
+Reluctant to show her fear before Ben, the girl drew near. The wolf
+shivered as the soft hand touched his side and moved slowly to his
+fierce head; but he gave no further sign of enmity.
+
+"He understands," Ben explained. "He realizes that I've accepted you,
+and you're all right. Until he's given orders otherwise, he'll treat you
+with the greatest respect."
+
+She was deeply and sincerely pleased. It did not occur to her, in the
+least, little degree, that occasion could possibly arise whereby
+contradictory orders would be given. Ben started to help her into the
+boat.
+
+"You've not forgotten anything?" he asked casually.
+
+"Nothing I can think of."
+
+"Got plenty of extra shells?"
+
+"Part of a box. It's a small caliber automatic, you see, and a box holds
+fifty."
+
+"It is, eh?" Ben's tone indicated deep interest. "May I see 'em a
+minute? I think I had a gun like it once. Not the gun--just the box of
+shells."
+
+She had strapped the weapon around her waist, by now, so she didn't
+attempt to put it in his hands. From her pocket she procured a small box
+of shells, and these she passed to him. He examined them with a great
+show of interest, balancing their weight in the palm of his hand; then
+he carelessly threw the box down among the duffle in front of the stern
+seat. Presently he started to push off.
+
+"You're not taking the other paddle?" the girl asked curiously.
+
+"No. I don't believe in letting young ladies work when I take 'em on an
+outing. You are just to sit in the bow and enjoy yourself. Fenris, sit
+still and don't rock the boat!"
+
+Just one moment more he hesitated. From his pocket he drew a piece of
+paper, carefully folded and sealed with tallow. This he inserted into a
+little crack in the blade of the second paddle--the one that was to be
+left at the landing.
+
+"Just a little note for your father," he explained, "to tell him where
+we are, in case he worries about you."
+
+"That's very considerate of you," the girl answered in a thoughtful
+voice.
+
+She wondered at the curious glowings, lurid as red coals, that came and
+went in his eyes.
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+After the manner of backwoods fathers Jeffery Neilson had offered no
+objections to his daughter's all-day excursion with Ben. The ways of the
+frontier are informal; and besides, he had every confidence in her
+ability to take care of herself. The only unfortunate phase of the
+affair concerned Ray. The latter would look with no favor upon the
+venture; and in all probability a disagreeable half-hour would ensue
+with him if he found it out.
+
+The control of Ray Brent had been an increasingly difficult problem.
+Always sullen and envious, once or twice he had not been far from open
+rebellion. There is a certain dread malady that comes to men at the
+sight of naked gold, and Ray's degenerate type was particularly subject
+to it. Every day the mine had shown itself increasingly rich, and Ray's
+ambition had given way to greed, and his greed to avarice of the most
+dangerous sort. For instance, he had a disquieting way of gathering the
+nuggets into his hands, fondling them with an unholy love. Neilson
+realized perfectly, now, that the younger man would not be content with
+a fourth share or less; and on the other hand he resolutely refused to
+yield any of his own, larger share. Sometime the issue would bring them
+to grips. Ray's dreadful crime of a few days past had given him an added
+insolence and self-assurance that complicated the problem still further.
+The leopard that has once tasted human flesh is not to be trusted again.
+Finally, there remained this matter of Beatrice.
+
+Neilson's love for his daughter forbade that he should force her to
+receive unwelcome attentions. Ray, on the other hand, had always
+insisted that his chief allow him a clear field. He would be infuriated
+when he heard of the trip she was taking with Ben to-day. Neilson
+straightened, resolving to meet the issue with old-time firmness.
+
+When he heard his daughter's voice on the canoe landing, one hundred
+yards below, he was inordinately startled. She had not told him that
+their picnic would take them on to the water. The reason had been, of
+course, that Beatrice knew her father's distrust of the treacherous
+stream and either feared his refusal to her plan or wished to save him
+worry. Even now they were starting. He could hear the first stroke of
+the paddle through the hushed woods.
+
+He turned toward the door, instinctively alarmed; then hesitated. After
+all, he could not tell her to come back. Beatrice would be mortified;
+and besides, there was nothing definite to fear. The river was almost as
+still as a lake for a long stretch immediately in front of the landing;
+even a poor canoeist could cross with ease. It was true that rapids,
+mile after mile of them past counting, lay just below, but surely the
+canoeists would stay at a safe distance above them. And if by any chance
+this young prospector had no skill with a canoe, Beatrice herself was an
+expert.
+
+Yet what, in reality, did he know of Ben Darby? He had liked the man's
+face: whence he came and what was his real business on the Yuga he had
+not the least idea. All at once a baffling apprehension crept like a
+chill through his frame.
+
+He could not laugh it away. It laid hold of him, refusing to be
+dispelled. It was as if an inner voice was warning him, telling him to
+rush down to the river bank and check that canoe ride at all costs. It
+occurred to him, for the moment, that this might be premonition of a
+disastrous accident, yet vaguely he sensed a plot, an obscure design
+that filled him with ghastly terror. Once more the man started for the
+door.
+
+Unaware of his ground, he did not hurry at first. He hardly knew what to
+say, by what excuse he could call Beatrice back to the landing. His
+heart was racing incomprehensibly in his breast, and all at once he
+started to run.
+
+At the first step he fell sprawling, and stark panic was upon him when
+he got to his feet again. And when he reached the landing the canoe was
+already near the opposite shore, heading swiftly downstream.
+
+He saw in one glance that the craft was rather heavily laden, Fenris
+atop the pile of duffle, and that Ben was paddling with a remarkably
+fast, easy stroke. "Come back, Beatrice," he shouted. "You've forgotten
+something."
+
+The girl turned, waving, but Ben's voice drowned out hers. "We'll see
+you later," he called in a gay voice. "We can't come back now."
+
+"Come back!" Neilson called again. "I order you--"
+
+He stared intently, hoping that the man would turn. Already they were
+practically out of hearing; and not even Beatrice was dipping her paddle
+in obedience to his command. Looking more closely, he saw that the man
+only was paddling.
+
+Then his eye fell to the landing on which he stood, instinctively trying
+to locate the second paddle. It lay at his feet. A foolhardy thing to
+do, he thought, a broken paddle, out there above the rapids, would mean
+death and no other thing. Helpless in the current, the canoe could not
+be guided through those fearful gates of peril below. If by a
+thousandth chance it escaped the rocks, it would be carried for
+unnumbered miles into a land unknown, a territory that could be entered
+only by the greatest difficulty--packing day after day over range and
+through thicket with a great train of pack horses--and from which the
+egress, except by the same perilous water route, would be almost
+impossible. But the thought passed as he discerned the white paper that
+had been fastened in the paddle blade.
+
+He bent for it with eager hand. He knew instinctively that it contained
+an all-important and sinister message for him. His eyes leaped over the
+bold writing on the exterior.
+
+"To Ezra Melville's murderers," Ben had written. And with that reading
+Jeffery Neilson knew a terror beyond any experienced in the darkest
+nightmare of his iniquitous life.
+
+It did not occur to him to bring the note, unopened, to Ray Brent. As
+yet he did not fully understand; yet he knew that the issue was one of
+seconds. _Seconds_ must decide everything; his whole world hung in the
+balance. His hand ripped apart the sealed fold, and he held the sheet
+before his eyes.
+
+Possessing only an elementary education Jeffery Neilson was not,
+ordinarily, a fast reader. Usually he sounded out his words only with
+the greatest difficulty. But to-day, one glance at the page conveyed to
+him the truth: from half a dozen words he got a general idea of the
+letter's full, dread meaning. Ben had written:
+
+ TO NEILSON AND HIS GANG:--
+
+ When you get this, Beatrice will be on her way to Back There--either
+ there or on her way to hell.
+
+ Ezra Melville was my pard. A letter leaving his claim to me is in my
+ pocket, and I alone know where Hiram's will is, leaving it to Ezram.
+ Your title will never stand as long as those papers aren't
+ destroyed. If you don't care enough about saving your daughter from
+ me, at least you'll want those letters. Come and get them. I'll be
+ waiting for you.
+
+ BEN DARBY.
+
+As the truth flashed home, Neilson's first thought was of his rifle. He
+was a wilderness man, trained to put his trust in the weapon of steel;
+and if it were only in his hands, there might yet be time to prevent the
+abduction. One well-aimed bullet over the water, shooting with all his
+old-time skill, might yet hurl the avenger to his death in the moment of
+his triumph. Just one keen, long gaze over the sights,--heaven or earth
+could not yield him a vision half so glorious as this! For all his
+terror he knew that he could shoot as he had never shot before, true as
+a light-ray. His remorseless eyes for once could see clear and sure. One
+shot--and then Beatrice could seize the paddle and save herself. And he
+cursed himself, more bitterly than he had ever cursed an enemy, when his
+empty hands showed him that he had left his rifle in his cabin.
+
+His pistol, however, was at his belt, and his hand reached for it. But
+the range was already too far for any hope of accurate pistol fire. His
+hard eyes gazed along the short, black barrel. His steady finger pressed
+back against the trigger.
+
+The first shot fell far short. The pistol was of large caliber but small
+velocity; and a hundred yards was its absolute limit of point-blank
+range. He lifted the gun higher and shot again. Again he shot low. But
+the third bullet fell just a few feet on the near side of the canoe.
+
+He had the range now, and he shot again. It was like a dream, outside
+his consciousness, that Beatrice was screaming with fear and amazement.
+She was already too far to give or receive a message: all hope lay in
+the pistol alone. The fifth shot splashed water beyond the craft.
+
+Once more he fired, but the boat was farther distant now, and the bullet
+went wild. The pistol was empty. Like a moose leaping through a marsh he
+turned back to his cabin for his rifle.
+
+But already he knew that he was lost. Before ever he could climb up the
+hundred yards to the cabin, and back again, the craft would be around
+the bend in the river. Heavy brush would hide it from then on. He
+hastened frantically up the narrow, winding trail.
+
+
+
+XX
+
+Ben was fully aware, as he pushed the canoe from landing, that the
+success of his scheme was not yet guaranteed. Long ago, in the hard
+school of the woods, he had found out life; and one of the things he had
+learned was that nothing on earth is infallible and no man's plans are
+sure. There are always coincidents of which the scheming brain has not
+conceived: the sudden interjection of unexpected circumstances. The
+unforeseen appearance of Beatrice's father on the landing had been a
+case in point.
+
+Most of all he had been afraid that Beatrice herself would leap from the
+canoe and attempt to swim to safety. He had learned in his past
+conversations with her that she had at least an elementary knowledge of
+swimming. Had she not confessed at the same time fear of the water, his
+plan could have never been adopted. The northern girls have few
+opportunities to obtain real proficiency in swimming. Their rivers are
+icy cold, their villages do not afford heated natatoriums. Yet he
+realized that he must quiet her suspicions as long as possible.
+
+"I've got the landing picked out," he told her as they started off.
+"I've been all over the river this morning. It is quite a way
+down--around the bend--but it's perfectly safe. So don't be afraid."
+
+"I'm not afraid--with you. And how fast you paddle!"
+
+It was true: in all her days by rivers she had never seen such perfect
+control of a canoe. He paddled as if without effort, but the streaming
+shore line showed that the boat moved at an astonishing rate. He was a
+master canoeist, and whatever fears she might have had vanished at once.
+
+She talked gayly to him, scarcely aware that they were heading across
+and down the stream.
+
+When her father had appeared on the bank, calling, she had not been in
+the least alarmed. Ben's gay shouts kept her from understanding exactly
+what he was saying. And when the old man had drawn his pistol and fired,
+and the bullet had splashed in the water some twenty yards toward shore,
+her mind had refused to accept the evidence of her senses.
+
+The second shot followed the first, and the third the second, resulting
+in, for her part, only the impotence of bewilderment. Her first thought
+was that her father's fierce temper, long known to her, had engulfed him
+in murderous rage. Trusting Ben wholly, the real truth did not occur to
+her.
+
+She screamed shrilly at the fourth shot; and Ben looked up to find her
+pale as the foam from his flashing paddle. "Turn around and go back,"
+she cried to Ben. "He'll kill you if you don't! Oh, please--turn
+around--"
+
+"And get in range of him so he _can_ kill me?" Ben replied savagely.
+"Can't you see he's shooting at me?"
+
+"Then throw up your hands--it's all some dreadful mistake. Can't you
+hear me--turn and go back."
+
+The fifth and sixth shots were fired by now; and Neilson had gone to his
+cabin for his rifle. Ben smiled grimly into her white face.
+
+"We'd better keep on going to our landing place," he advised. "There's
+no place to land above it--I went all over the shore this morning. That
+will give him time to cool down. I only want to get around this curve
+before he comes with his rifle."
+
+She stared at him aghast, too confused and terrified to make rational
+answer. He was pale, too; but she had a swift feeling that the cold,
+rugged face was in some way exultant, too. The first chill of fear of
+him brushed her like a cold wind.
+
+But they were around the bend by now, and Ben's breath caught as if in a
+triumphant gasp. Already all opportunity for the girl to swim to shore
+was irremediably past. While he could still control the canoe with
+comparative ease, the river was a swift-moving sheet of water that would
+carry any one but the strongest swimmer remorselessly into the rapids
+below. Ben smiled, like a man who has come into a great happiness, and
+rested on his paddle.
+
+"Push into shore," the girl urged. "The home shore--if you can. Then
+I'll go and find him and try to quiet him. He'll kill you if you don't."
+
+A short pause followed the girl's words. The man smiled coldly into her
+eyes.
+
+"He'll kill me, will he?" he repeated.
+
+The response to the simple question was simply unmitigated terror, swift
+and deadly, surging through the girl's frame. It caught and twisted her
+throat muscles like a cruel hand; and her childish eyes widened and
+darkened under his contemptuous gaze.
+
+"What do you mean?" she asked breathlessly. "What--are you going to do?"
+
+"He won't kill me," Ben went on. "I may kill him--and I will if I
+can--but he won't kill me. See--we're going faster all the time."
+
+It was true. Strokes of the paddle were no longer necessary to propel
+the craft at the breakneck pace. It sped like an arrow--straight toward
+the perilous cataracts below.
+
+The girl watched him with transcending horror, and slowly the truth went
+home. The supplies in the boat, her father's desperate attempt to rescue
+her, even at the risk of her own life and the cost of Ben's, this white,
+exultant face before her, more terrible than that of the wolf between,
+the cold reptile eyes so full of some unhallowed emotion,--at last she
+saw their meaning and relation. Was it _death_--was _that_ what this mad
+man in the stern had for her? She remembered what she had told him the
+day before, her description of the cataracts that lay below. She
+struggled to shake off the trance that her terror had cast about her.
+
+"Turn into the shore," she told him, half-whispering. There was no
+pleading in her tone: the hard eyes before her told her only too plainly
+how futile her pleas would be. "You still have time to steer into shore.
+I'll jump overboard if you don't."
+
+He shook his head. "Don't jump overboard, Beatrice," he answered, some
+of the harshness gone from his tones. "It isn't my purpose to kill
+you--and to jump over into this stream only means to die--'for any one
+except the most powerful swimmer. You'd be carried down in an instant."
+
+The girl knew he spoke the truth. Only death dwelt in those cold and
+rushing waters. "What do you mean to do?" she asked.
+
+Her tone was more quiet now, and he waited an instant before he
+answered. The canoe glided faster--ever faster down the stream. Somewhat
+afraid, but still trusting in the imperial mind of his master, the wolf
+raised his head to watch the racing shore line.
+
+"It's just a little debt I owe your father--and his gang," Ben
+explained. "I'll tell you some time, in the days to come. It was a debt
+of blood--"
+
+The girl's dark eyes charged with red fire. "And you, a coward, take
+your payment on a woman. Turn the canoe into the bank."
+
+"The payment won't be taken from you," he explained soberly. "You'll be
+safe enough--even the fate that Neilson fears for you won't happen. I
+hate him too much to take _that_ payment from you. I'd die before I'd
+touch the flesh of his flesh to mine! Do you understand that?"
+
+His fury had blazed up, for the instant, and she saw the deadly zeal of
+a fanatic in his gray eyes. A hatred beyond all naming, a bitterness and
+a rage such as she had never dreamed could blast a human heart was
+written in his brown, rugged face. Her woman's intuition gave her added
+vision, and she glimpsed something of the fire that smoldered and seared
+behind his eyes. They were of one blood, this man in the stern and the
+wolf on the duffle.
+
+"Then why--"
+
+"You're safe with me--the daughter of Jeff Neilson can't ever be
+anything but safe with me--as far as the thing you fear is concerned.
+Don't be afraid for that. I'm simply paying an honest debt, and you're
+the unfortunate agent. Don't you know the things he's fearing now are
+more torment to him than anything I could do to his flesh? If we should
+be killed in these rapids that are coming, it will be fair enough too;
+he'll know what it is to lose the dearest thing on earth he has. For you
+and me it will only be a minute that won't greatly matter. For him it
+will be weeks--months! But that's only a part of it. I hope to bring you
+through. The main thing is--that sooner or later they'll come for
+you--into a country where I'll have every advantage. Where there won't
+be any escape or chance for them. Where I can watch the trails, and
+shatter them--every one--as slow or as fast as I like. Where they'll
+have to hunt for me, week on week and month on month, their fears eating
+into them. That's my game, Beatrice. There will be discomfort for
+you--and some danger--but I'll make it as light as I can. And in another
+moment--"
+
+"You've still got time to turn back," the girl answered him, seemingly
+without feeling. "Glide into shore, and we'll try to catch an
+overhanging limb. It's my last warning."
+
+It was true that a few seconds remained in which they might, with heroic
+effort, save themselves. But these were passing: already they could see
+the gleaming whitecaps of the cataract below.
+
+The roar of the wild waters was in their ears. Ahead they could see
+great rocks, emerging like fangs above the water, sharp-edged and wet
+with spray. The boat was shuddering; the water seemed to covet them, and
+a great force, like the hand of a river god, reached at them from
+beneath as if to crush them in a merciless grasp. A hundred yards
+farther the smooth, swift water fell into a seething, roaring
+cataract--such a manifestation of the mighty powers of nature as checks
+the breath and awes the heart--a death stream in which seemingly the
+canoe would be shattered to pieces in an instant.
+
+Ben shook his head. The girl's white hand flashed to her side, then rose
+sure and steady, holding her pistol. "Turn quick, or I'll fire," she
+said.
+
+He felt that, if such action were in her power, she told the truth. No
+mercy dwelt in her clear gaze. His eye fell to the box of cartridges,
+now fallen safely among the duffle. Presently he smiled into her eyes.
+
+"Your gun is empty, Beatrice," he told her quietly. He heard her sob,
+and he smiled a little, reassuringly. "Never mind--and pray for a good
+voyage," he advised. "We're going through."
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+The craft and its occupants were out of sight by the time Jeffery
+Neilson reached the river bank with his rifle. The flush had swept from
+his bronze skin, leaving it a ghastly yellow, and for once in his life
+no oaths came to his lips. He could only mutter, strangely, from a
+convulsed throat.
+
+Like an insane man he hastened down the river bank, fighting his way
+through the brush. The thickets were dense, ordinarily impenetrable to
+any mortal strength except to that mighty, incalculable power of the
+moose and grizzly; yet they could not restrain him now. The tough
+clothes he wore were nearly torn from his body; his face and hands were
+scratched as if by the claws of a lynx; but he did not pause till he
+reached the bank of the gray river.
+
+Only one more glimpse of the canoe was vouchsafed him, and that glimpse
+came too late. He saw the light barge just as it hovered at the crest of
+the rapids. Even if he could have shot straight at so great a range and
+had killed the man in the stern, no miracle could have saved his
+daughter. She would have been instantly swept to her death against the
+crags.
+
+Some measure of self-control returned to him then, and he made his way
+fast as he could toward the claim. Sensing the older man's distress, Ray
+straightened from his work at the sight of him.
+
+The face before him was drawn and white; but there was no time for
+questions. Hard hands seized his arm.
+
+"Ray, do you know of a canoe anywhere--up or down this river?"
+
+"There's one at the landing. None other I know of."
+
+"Think, man! You don't know where we can get one?"
+
+"No. Old Hiram's canoe was the only one. What's the matter?"
+
+"Do you think there's one chance in a million of getting down through
+those rapids on a raft?"
+
+Ray's eyes opened wide. "A raft!" he echoed. "Man, are you crazy? Even
+at this high water a canoe wouldn't have a chance in ten of making it.
+The river's falling every hour--"
+
+"I know it. Do you suppose there's a canoe in town?"
+
+"No! Of course there isn't--one that you could even dream about shooting
+those rapids in. Besides, by the time we got there and packed it up--it
+would take two days to pack it the best we could do--the river would be
+too far down to tackle the trip at all. And it won't come up again till
+fall--you know that. Tell me what's the matter. Has Beatrice--"
+
+"Beatrice has gone down, that's all."
+
+"Then she's dead--no hope of anything else. Only an expert could hope to
+take her through, and there's nothing to live on Back There. What's the
+use of trying to follow--?"
+
+Neilson straightened, his eyes searching Ray's. "She's got food, I
+suppose. And she's got an expert paddler to take her there."
+
+Ray's face seemed to darken before his eyes. His hands half closed,
+shook in his face, then caught at Neilson's shoulders. "You don't
+mean--she's run away?"
+
+"Don't be a fool. Not run away--abducted. The prospector I told you
+about--Darby--was the old man's partner. He's paying us back. Heaven
+only knows what the girl's fate will be--I don't dare to think of it.
+Ray, I wish to God I had died before I ever saw this day!"
+
+Ray stared blankly. "Then he found out--about the murder?" he gasped.
+
+"Yes. Here's his letter. Take time--and read it. There's no use to try
+to act before we think--how to act. If I could only see a way--"
+
+Ray read the letter carefully, crumpling it at last in savage wrath.
+"It's your fault!" he cried. "Why didn't you save her for me as I've
+always asked you to do; why did you let her go out with him at all? I'll
+bet she wanted to go--"
+
+"I'd rather she had, instead of being taken by force!" The older
+man--aged incredibly in a few little minutes--slowly straightened. "But
+don't storm at me, Ray!" he warned, carefully and quietly. "I've stood a
+lot from you, but to-day I'd kill you for one word!"
+
+They faced each other in black disdain, but Ray knew he spoke the truth.
+There was no toying with this man's wrath to-day.
+
+"And if you'd let me croak this devil like I wanted to, it wouldn't have
+happened either. But there's no use crying about either one. The girl's
+a goner, sure; she's deep in the rapids by now."
+
+"Yes, and it's part of this man's hellish plan to take her clear through
+to Back There. You see, he dares us to come for her--and he'll be
+waiting and ready for us, mark my words. My God, she's probably
+dead--smashed to pieces--already!"
+
+"He says he's got the old man's letter, leaving the claim to him. That
+messes up things even worse."
+
+"I wish I'd never heard of the claim. There's only one thing to do, and
+that's to rush into Snowy Gulch and get a big outfit--all the horses and
+supplies we can find--and go after her by land."
+
+"Yes, and walk right into his trap. Think again, Neilson. It would take
+weeks and months to get in that way. Besides, what would happen to the
+claim while we're gone?"
+
+"You needn't fear for the claim! Of course, I'd expect you to think of
+that first--you who loved Beatrice so dearly!" Neilson's face was white
+with disdain. "It'll be recorded in our names, by then--likely Chan is
+already in Bradleyburg--and Darby himself is the only man on earth we
+have to fear." He paused, putting his faith in desperate craft. "If you
+want to cinch the claim, the first thing to do is go and stamp the life
+out of Darby; otherwise he'll turn up and make us trouble, just as he
+says."
+
+"He can't do much if the claim's recorded in our names!"
+
+"He can make us plenty of trouble. If you want the girl, Ray--don't lose
+a minute. Put your things together as fast as you can. We'll try to get
+some men in Snowy Gulch to come with us--to join in the hunt--and we'll
+hire every pack horse in the country. Get busy, and get busy quick."
+
+Reluctant to leave his gold, yet seeing the truth in Neilson's words,
+Ray hastened to his cabin to get such few supplies as would be needed
+for the day's march into Snowy Gulch. In less than five minutes they
+were on their way--tramping in file down the narrow moose trail.
+
+They crossed the divide, thus reaching the headwaters of Poor Man's
+Creek; then took the trail down toward the settlements. But the two
+claim-jumpers had not yet learned all the day's ill news. Half-way to
+the mouth of the stream they met Chan Heminway on his way back to the
+claim.
+
+At the first sight of him, riding in the rear of a long train of laden
+pack horses, they could hardly believe their eyes. It was not to be
+credited that he had made the trip to Bradleyburg and back in the few
+days he had been absent. Only an aeroplane could have made so fast a
+trip. Could it be that in spite of his definite orders he was returning
+with the duty of recording the claim still unperformed? To Neilson,
+however, the sight of the long pack train brought some measure of
+satisfaction. Here were horses laden with the summer supplies that Chan
+had been told to procure, and they could be utilized in the pursuit of
+Beatrice. Two days at least could be saved.
+
+"What in the devil you coming back for?" Ray shouted, when Chan's
+identity became certain.
+
+Chan rode nearer as if he had not heard. He checked his horse
+deliberately, undoubtedly inwardly excited by the news he had to tell
+and perhaps somewhat triumphant because he was its bearer. "I'm coming
+back because there ain't no use in staying at Snowy Gulch any longer,"
+he answered at last. "I've got the supplies, and I'm packin' up to the
+claim, just as I was told."
+
+"But why didn't you go to Bradleyburg and record the claim?" Ray
+stormed. "Don't you know until that's done we're likely to be chased off
+any minute?"
+
+Chan looked into his partner's angry eyes, and his own lips drew in a
+scowl. "Because there wasn't any use in goin' to Bradleyburg."
+
+Ray was stricken with terror, and his words faltered. "You mean you
+could tend to it in Snowy Gulch--"
+
+"I don't mean nothing of the kind. Shut up a minute, and I'll tell you
+about it. A few days ago Steve Morris got a letter addressed to old
+Hiram Melville--in care of Steve. He opened it and read it, and I heard
+about it soon as I got into town. There ain't no use of our trying to
+record that claim."
+
+"For God's sake, why?"
+
+"Because it's already recorded, that's why. We all felt so sure, and we
+wasn't sure at all. Before old Hiram died he wrote a letter--one of them
+two letters you heard about, Neilson--and which you wished you'd got
+hold of. Who that letter was to was an official in Bradleyburg--an old
+friend of Hiram's--and in it was a description of the claim. This letter
+Morris got was a notice that his claim was all properly filed in
+his--Hiram's--name. Whatever formalities was necessary was cut out
+because the old man had been too sick to make the trip--the recorder got
+special permission from Victoria. To be plain, I didn't file the claim
+because it's already filed, and I didn't want to show myself up as a
+claim-jumper quite as bad as that."
+
+"It's all over town--about the claim?"
+
+"Sure, but there won't be a rush. There's quite a movement over
+Bradleyburg way for one thing; for another, this is a pocket country,
+once and for always."
+
+For some seconds thereafter his partners could make no intelligent
+response. This bitter blow had been anticipated by neither. But Ray was
+a strong man, and his self-control quickly returned to him.
+
+"You see what that means, don't you?" he asked Neilson.
+
+"It means we've lost!"
+
+The eyes before him narrowed and gleamed. "So that's what it means to
+you! Well, I don't look at it just that way. It means to me that we've
+got to take these supplies and these pack horses and start out and find
+Ben Darby--and never stop hunting till we've found him."
+
+"Of course we've got to rescue Beatrice--"
+
+"Rescuing Beatrice isn't all of it now, by a long shot. For the Lord's
+sake, Neilson--use your head a minute. Didn't old Hiram leave a will,
+giving this claim to his brother Ezra? If the claim wasn't recorded that
+will wouldn't mean much--but it is. And hasn't this Ben got a letter
+from Ezra leaving the claim to him? Now do you want to know who owns
+that claim? Ben Darby owns it, and as long as he can kick, that quarter
+of a million in gold can never be ours."
+
+"You mean we've got to find him--and destroy that letter--"
+
+"We've got to; that's all. He wrote us he had it, just to taunt us, and
+we've got to burn that up whether we find the girl or not. But that
+ain't all we've got to destroy--that piece of paper. You see that, don't
+you?"
+
+Neilson breathed heavily. "It's all plain enough."
+
+"I want it to be plain, so next time I want to let daylight through a
+man you won't stand in the way. It ain't just enough to burn up that
+letter. We've got to get the man who owns it, too. If we don't he'd
+still have a good enough case against us--with a good lawyer. Likely
+enough lots of people knew of their partnership, maybe have seen the
+letter--and they'd all be good witnesses in a suit. Our reputation ain't
+so good, after that Jenkins deal, that we'd shine very bright in a suit.
+Even if he couldn't prove his own claim, he could lug out the will old
+Hiram left--he alone knows where it's hid--and then his next nearest
+relatives would come in and get the claim. On the other hand, if we
+smash him, the thing will all quiet down; there'll be no claimants to
+work the mine; and after a few months we can step in and put up our own
+notices. But we've got to do that first--smash him wide-open as soon as
+we can catch up with him. He'll be way out in Back There, and no man
+would ever know what became of him, and there'd be nobody left to oppose
+us any more. But we can't be safe any other way."
+
+Neilson nodded slowly. His subordinate had put the matter clearly; and
+there was truth in his words. In Ben's murder alone lay their safety.
+
+He had always been adverse to bloodshed; but further reluctance meant
+ruin. Ben was one whom he could strike down without mercy or regret. And
+the blow would not be for expediency alone. There would be a personal
+debt to pay after the long months of searching. He could not forget that
+Beatrice was helpless in his hands.
+
+"The thing to do is to turn back with Chan, at once," he said.
+
+"Of course," Ray agreed. "That plan of yours to get help in chasing 'em
+down don't go any more. We don't want any spectators for what's ahead of
+us. Here's grub and horses a-plenty, and we needn't lose any time."
+
+So they turned back toward the Yuga, on their quest of hate.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+Beatrice Neilson was a mountain girl, with the strong thews of Jael, yet
+she hid her face as the canoe shot into the crest of the rapids. It
+seemed incredible to her that the light craft should buffet that wild
+cataract and yet live. She was young and she loved life; and death
+seemed very near.
+
+The scene that her eyes beheld in that last little instant in which the
+boat seemed to hang, shuddering, at the crest of the descent was branded
+indelibly on her memory. She saw Ben's face, set like iron, the muscles
+bunching beneath his flannel sleeves as he set his paddle. He was
+leaning forward, aware of nothing in the world but the forthcoming
+crisis. And in that swift flash of vision she saw not only the steel
+determination and the brutal savagery of the avenger. A little glimpse
+of the truth went home to her, and she beheld something of the
+misdirected idealism of the man, the intensity and steadfastness that
+were the dominant traits of his nature. She could not doubt his belief
+in the reality of his cause. Whether fancied or real the injury, deep
+wells of emotion in his heart had broken their seals and flowed forth.
+
+The wolf crouched on the heap of supplies, fearful to the depths of his
+wild heart of this mighty stream, yet still putting his faith in his
+master in the stern. Beatrice saw his wild, frightened eyes as he gazed
+down into the frightful whirlpools. The banks seemed to whip past.
+
+Then the rushing waters caught the craft and seemed to fling it into
+the air. There was the swift sense of lightning and incredible movement,
+of such incalculable speed as that with which a meteor blazes through
+the sky, and then a mighty surging, struggle; an interminable instant of
+ineffable and stupendous conflict. The bow dipped, split the foam; then
+the raging waters seized the craft again, and with one great impulse
+hurled it through the clouds of spray, down between the narrow portals
+of rocks.
+
+Beatrice came to herself with the realization that she had uttered a
+shrill cry. Part of the impulse behind it was simply terror; but it was
+also the expression of an intensity of sensation never before
+experienced. She could have understood, now, the lure of the rapids to
+experienced canoeists. She forced herself to look into the wild
+cataract.
+
+The boat sped at an unbelievable pace. Ben held his paddle like iron,
+yet with a touch as delicate as that of a great musician upon piano
+keys, and he steered his craft to the last inch. His face was still like
+metal, but the eyes, steely, vivid, and magnetic, had a look of triumph.
+The first of the great tests had been passed.
+
+Sudden confidence in Ben's ability to guide her through to safety began
+to warm the girl's frozen heart. There were no places more dangerous
+than that just past; and he had handled his craft like a master. He was
+a voyageur: as long as his iron control was sustained, as long as his
+nerve was strong and his eye true she had every chance of coming out
+alive. But they had irremediably cast their fortunes upon the river,
+now. They could not turn back. She was in his whole charge, an agent of
+vengeance against her own father and his confederates.
+
+Hot, blinding tears suddenly filled her eyes. Her frantic fear of the
+river had held them back for a time; but they flowed freely enough now
+the first crisis was past. In utter misery and despair her head bowed in
+her hands; and her brown hair, disheveled, dropped down.
+
+Ben gazed at her with a curious mingling of emotions. It had not been
+part of his plan to bring sorrow to this girl. After all, she was not in
+the least responsible for her father's crimes. He had sworn to have no
+regrets, no matter what innocent flesh was despoiled in order that he
+might strike the guilty; yet the sight of that bowed, lovely head went
+home to him very deeply indeed. She was the instrument of his vengeance,
+necessary to his cause, but there was nothing to be gained by afflicting
+her needlessly. At least, he could give her his pity. It would not
+weaken him, dampen his fiery resolution, to give her that.
+
+As he guided his craft he felt growing compassion for her; yet it was a
+personal pity only and brought no regrets that he had acted as he did.
+
+"I wish you wouldn't cry," he said, rather quietly.
+
+Amazed beyond expression at the words, Beatrice looked up. For the
+instant her woe was forgotten in the astounding fact that she had won
+compassion from this cast-iron man in the stern.
+
+"I'll try not to," she told him, her dark eyes ineffably beautiful with
+their luster of tears. "I don't see why I should try--why I should try
+to do anything you ask me to--but yet I will--"
+
+Further words came to him, and he could not restrain them. "You're sort
+of--the goat, Beatrice," he told her soberly. "It was said, long ago,
+that the sins of the father must be visited upon the children; and maybe
+that's the way it is with you. I can't help but feel sorry--that you had
+to undergo this--so that I could reach your father and his men. If you
+had seen old Ezram lying there--the life gone from, his kind, gray old
+face--the man who brought me home and gave me my one chance--maybe you'd
+understand."
+
+They were speechless a long time, Beatrice watching the swift leap of
+the shore line, Ben guiding, with steady hand, the canoe. Neither of
+them could guess at what speed they traveled this first wild half-hour;
+but he knew that the long miles--so heart-breaking with their ridges and
+brush thickets to men and horses--were whipping past them each in a few,
+little breaths. Ever they plunged deeper into the secret, hushed heart
+of the wild--a land unknown to the tread of white men, a region so still
+and changeless that it seemed excluded from the reign and law of, time.
+The spruce grew here, straight and dark and tall, a stalwart army whose
+measureless march no human eyes beheld. Already they had come farther
+than a pack train could travel, through the same region, in weary days.
+
+Already they were at the border of Back There. They had cut the last
+ties with the world of men. There were no trails here, leading slowly
+but immutably to the busy centers of civilization; not a blaze on a tree
+for the eyes of a woodsman riding on some forest venture, not the ashes
+of a dead camp fire or a charred cooking rack, where an Indian had
+broiled his caribou flesh. Except by the slow process of exploration
+with pack horses, traveling a few miles each day, fording unknown rivers
+and encircling impassable ranges, or by waiting patiently until the fall
+rains swelled the river, they might never leave this land they had so
+boldly entered. They could not go out the way they had come--over those
+seething waters--and the river, falling swiftly, would soon be too low
+to permit them to push down to its lower waters where they might find
+Indian encampments.
+
+Nothing was left but the wilderness, ancient and unchanged. The spruce
+forest had a depth and a darkness that even Ben had never seen; the wild
+creatures that they sometimes glimpsed on the bank stared at them wholly
+without knowledge as to what they were, and likely amazed at the
+strength whereby they had braved this seething torrent that swept
+through their sylvan home. Here was a land where the grizzly had not yet
+learned of a might greater than his, where he had not yet surrendered
+his sovereignty to man. Here the moose--mightiest of the antlered
+herd--reached full maturity and old age without ever mistaking the call
+of a birch-bark horn for that of his rutting cow. Young bulls with only
+a fifty-inch spread of horns and ten points on each did not lead the
+herds, as in the more accessible provinces of the North. All things were
+in their proper balance, since the forest had gone unchanged for time
+immemorial; and as the head-hunters had not yet come the bull moose did
+not rank as a full-grown warrior until he wore thirty points and had
+five feet of spread, and he wasn't a patriarch until he could no longer
+walk free between two tree trunks seventy inches apart. Certain of the
+lesser forest people were not in unwonted numbers because that fierce
+little hunter, the marten, had been exterminated by trappers; the otter,
+yet to know the feel of cold iron, fished to his heart's content in
+rivers where an artificial fly had never fallen and the trout swarmed in
+uncounted numbers in the pools.
+
+Darting down the rapids Ben felt the beginnings of an exquisite
+exhilaration. Part of it arose from the very thrill and excitement of
+their headlong pace; but partly it had a deeper, more portentous origin.
+Here was his own country--this Back There. While all the spruce forest
+in which he had lived had been his natural range and district--his own
+kind of land with which he felt close and intimate relations--this was
+even more his home than his own birthplace. By light of a secret
+quality, hard to recognize, he was of it, and it was of him. He felt the
+joy of one who sees the gleam of his own hearth through a distant
+window.
+
+He _knew_ this land; it was as if he had simply been away, through the
+centuries, and had come home. The shadows and the stillness had the
+exact depth and tone that was true and right; the forest fragance was
+undefiled; the dark sky line was like something he had dreamed come
+true. He felt a strange and growing excitement, as if magnificent
+adventure were opening out before him. His gaze fell, with a queer sense
+of understanding, to Fenris.
+
+The wolf had recovered from his fear of the river, by now, and he was
+crouched, alert and still, in his place. His gaze was fast upon the
+shore line; and the green and yellow fires that mark the beast were
+ablaze again in his eyes. Fenris too made instinctive response to those
+breathless forests; and Ben knew that the bond between them was never so
+close as now.
+
+Fenris also knew that here was his own realm, the land in which the
+great Fear had not yet laid its curse. The forest still thronged with
+game, the wood trails would be his own. Here was the motherland, not
+only to him but to his master, too. They were its fierce children: one
+by breed, the other because he answered, to the full, the call of the
+wild from which no man is wholly immune.
+
+Ben could have understood the wolf's growing exultation. The war he was
+about to wage with Neilson. would be on his own ground, in a land that
+enhanced and developed his innate, natural powers, and where he had
+every advantage. The wolf does not run into the heart of busy cities in
+pursuit of his prey. He tries to decoy it into his own fastnesses.
+
+A sudden movement on the part of Beatrice, in the bow of the canoe,
+caught his eye. She had leaned forward and was reaching among the
+supplies. His mind at once leaped to the box of shells for her pistol
+that he had thrown among the duffle, but evidently this was not the
+object of her search. She lifted into her hands a paper parcel, the same
+she had brought from her cabin early that morning.
+
+He tried to analyze the curious mingling of emotions in her face. It was
+neither white with disdain nor dark with wrath; and the tears were gone
+from her eyes. Rather her expression was speculative, pensive. Presently
+her eyes met his.
+
+His heart leaped; why he did not know. "What is, it?" he asked.
+
+"Ben--I called you that yesterday and there's no use going back to last
+names now--I've made an important decision."
+
+"I hope it's a happy one," he ventured.
+
+"It's as happy as it can be, under the circumstances. Ben, I came of a
+line of frontiersmen--the forest people--and if the woods teach one
+thing it is to make the best of any bad situation."
+
+Ben nodded. For all his long training he had not entirely mastered this
+lesson himself, but he knew she spoke true.
+
+"We've found out how hard Fate can hit--if I can make it plain," she
+went on. "We've found out there are certain powers--or devils--or
+something else, and what I don't know--that are always lying in wait for
+people, ready to strike them down. Maybe you would call it Destiny. But
+the Destiny city men know isn't the Destiny we know out here--I don't
+have to tell you that. We see Nature just as she is, without any gay
+clothes, and we know the cruelty behind her smile, and the evil plans
+behind her gentle words."
+
+The man was amazed. Evidently the stress and excitement of the morning
+had brought out the fanciful and poetic side of the girl's nature.
+
+"We don't look for good luck," she told him. "We don't expect to live
+forever. We know what death is, and that it is sure to come, and that
+misfortune comes always--in the snow and the cold and the falling
+tree--and when we have good luck we're glad--we don't take it for
+granted. Living up here, where life is real, we've learned that we have
+to make the best of things in order to be happy at all."
+
+"And you mean--you're going to try to make the best of _this_?" His
+voice throbbed ever so slightly, because he could not hold it even.
+
+"There's nothing else I can do," she replied. "You've taken me here and
+as yet I don't see how I can get away. This doesn't mean I've gone over
+to your side."
+
+He nodded. He understood _that_ very well.
+
+"I'm just admitting that at present I'm in your hands--helpless--and
+many long weeks in before us," she went on. "I'm on my father's side,
+last and always, and I'll strike back at you if the chance comes. Expect
+no mercy from me, in case I ever see my way to strike."
+
+The man's eyes suddenly gleamed. "Don't you know--that you'd have a
+better chance of fighting me--if you didn't put me on guard?"
+
+"I don't think so. I don't believe you'd be fooled that easy.
+Besides--I can't pretend to be a friend--when I'm really an enemy."
+
+For one significant instant the man looked down. This was what he had
+done--pretended friendship when he was a foe. But his was a high cause!
+
+"I'm warning you that I'm against you to the last--and will beat you if
+I see my way," the girl went on. "But at the same time I'm going to make
+the best of a bad situation, and try to get all the comfort I can. I'm
+in your hands at present, and we're foes, but just the same we can talk,
+and try to make each other comfortable so that we can be comfortable
+ourselves, and try not to be any more miserable than we can help. I'm
+not going to cry any more."
+
+As she talked she was slowly unwrapping the little parcel she had
+brought. Presently she held it out to him.
+
+It was just a box of homemade candy--fudge made with sugar and canned
+milk--that she had brought for their day's picnic. But it was a peace
+offering not to be despised. A heavy load lifted from Ben's heart.
+
+He waited his chance, guiding the boat with care, and then reached a
+brown hand. He crushed a piece of the soft, delicious confection between
+his lips. "Thanks, Beatrice," he said. "I'll remember all you've told
+me."
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+It is a peculiar fact that no one is more deeply moved by the great
+works and phenomena of nature than those who live among them. It is the
+visitor from distant cities, or the callow youth with tawdry clothes and
+tawdry thoughts who disturbs the great silences and austerity of
+majestic scenes with half-felt effusive words or cheap impertinences.
+Oddly enough, the awe that the wilderness dweller knows at the sight of
+some great, mysterious canyon or towering peak seems to increase, rather
+than decrease, with familiarity. His native scenes never grow old to
+him. Their beauty and majesty is eternal.
+
+Perhaps the reason lies in the fact that the native woodsman knows
+nature as she really is: living ever close to her he knows her power
+over his life. Perhaps there is a religious side to the matter, too. In
+the solitudes the religious instincts receive an impulse that is
+impossible to those who know only the works of man. The religion that
+this gives is true and deep, and the eye instinctively lifts in
+reverence to the manifestations of divine might.
+
+When the swirling waters carried the canoe down into the gorge of the
+Yuga both Ben and Beatrice were instinctively awed and stilled. Ever the
+walls of the gorge grew more steep, until the sunlight was cut off and
+they rode as if in twilight. The stone of the precipices presented a
+marvellous array of color; and the spruce, almost black in the subdued
+light, stood in startling contrast. Ben saw at once that even were they
+able to land they could not--until they had emerged from the
+gorge--climb to the highlands. A mountain goat, most hardy of all
+mountaineers, could scarcely scale the abrupt wall.
+
+During this time of half-light they saw none of the larger forest
+creatures that at first had gazed at them with such wonder from the
+banks. The reason was simply that they could not descend and ascend the
+steep walls.
+
+Mostly Ben had time only for an occasional glimpse at the colossus above
+him. His work was to guide the craft between the perilous boulders.
+Occasionally the river slackened its wild pace, and at such times he
+stretched his arms and rested his straining eyes.
+
+Both had largely forgotten the danger of the ride. Because she was
+trying bravely to make the best of a tragic situation Beatrice had
+resolved to keep danger from her thoughts. Ben had known from the first
+that danger was an inevitable element in his venture, and he accepted it
+just as he had considered it,--with entire coldness. Yet both of them
+knew, in their secret thoughts, that the balance of life and death was
+so fine that the least minor incident might cast them into darkness. It
+would not have to be a great disaster, a wide departure from the
+commonplace. They were traveling at a terrific rate of speed, and a
+sharp rock too close to the surface would rip the bottom from their
+craft. Any instant might bring the shock and shudder of the end.
+
+There would scarcely be time to be afraid. Both would be hurled into the
+stream; and the wild waters, pounding against the rocks, would close the
+matter swiftly. It awed them and humbled them to realize with what
+dispatch and ease this wilderness power could snuff out their mortal
+lives. There would be no chance to fight back, no element of
+uncertainty in the outcome. Here was a destiny against which the
+strength of man was as thistledown in the wind! The thought was good
+spiritual medicine for Ben, just as it would have been for most other
+men, and his egoism died a swift and natural death.
+
+One crash, one shock, and then the darkness and silence of the end! The
+river would rage on, unsatiated by their few pounds of flesh, storming
+by in noble fury; but no man would know whither they had gone and how
+they had died. The walls of the gorge would not tremble one whit, or
+notice; and the spruce against the sky would not bow their heads to show
+that they had seen.
+
+But the canyon broke at last, and the craft emerged into the sunlight.
+It was good to see the easy slope of the hills again, the spruce
+forests, and the forms of the wild creatures on the river bank, startled
+by their passing. Noon came and passed, and for lunch they ate the last
+of the fudge. And now a significant change was manifest in both of them.
+
+Psychologists are ever astounded at the ability of mortals, men and
+animals, to become adjusted to any set of circumstances. The wax of
+habit sets almost in a day. The truth was, that in a certain measure
+with very definite and restricted limits, both Ben and Beatrice were
+becoming adjusted even to this amazing situation in which they found
+themselves. This did not mean that Beatrice was in the least degree
+reconciled to it. She had simply accepted it with the intention of
+making the best of it. She had been abducted by an enemy of her father
+and was being carried down an unknown and dangerous river; but the
+element of surprise, the life of which is never but a moment, was
+already passing away. Sometimes she caught herself with a distinct
+start, remembering everything with a rage and a bitter load on her
+heart; but the mood would pass quickly.
+
+It is impossible, through any ordinary change of fortune, for a normal
+person to lose his sense of self-identity. As long as that remains
+exterior conditions can make no vital change, or make him feel greatly
+different than he felt before. The change from a peasant to a
+millionaire brings only a moment's surprise, and then readjustment.
+Beatrice was still herself; the man in the stern remained Ben Darby and
+no one else. Very naturally she began to talk to him, and he to answer
+her.
+
+The fact that they were bitter foes, one the victim of the other, did
+not decree they could not have friendly conversation, isolated as they
+were. From time to time Ben pointed out objects of interest on the
+shore; and she found herself remarking, in a casual voice, about them.
+And before the afternoon he had made her laugh, in spite of herself,--a
+gay sound in which fear and distress had little echo.
+
+"We're bound to see a great deal of each other in the next few weeks,"
+he had said; and this fact could not be denied. The sooner both became
+adjusted to it the better. Actual fear of him she had none; she
+remembered only too well the steel in his eyes and the white flame on
+his cheeks as he had assured her of her safety.
+
+In mid-afternoon Ben began to think of making his night's camp. From
+time to time the bank became an upright precipice where not even a tree
+could find foothold; and it had occurred to him, with sudden vividness,
+that he did not wish the darkness to overtake him in such a place. The
+river rocks would make short work of him, in that case. It was better to
+pick out a camp site in plenty of time lest they could not find one at
+the day's end.
+
+In one of the more quiet stretches of water he saw the place--a small
+cove and a green, tree-clad bank, with the gorge rising behind. Handling
+his canoe with greatest care he slanted toward it. A moment later he had
+caught the brush at the water's edge, stepped off into shallow water,
+and was drawing the canoe up onto the bank.
+
+"We're through for the day," he said happily, as he helped Beatrice out
+of the boat. "I'll confess I'm ready to rest."
+
+Beatrice made no answer because her eyes were busy. Coolly and quietly
+she took stock of the situation, trying to get an idea of the
+geographical features of the camp site. She saw in a glance, however,
+that there was no path to freedom up the gorge behind her. The rocks
+were precipitate: besides, she remembered that over a hundred miles of
+impassable wilderness lay between her and her father's cabin. Without
+food and supplies she could not hope to make the journey.
+
+The racing river, however, wakened a curious, inviting train of thought.
+The torrent continued largely unabated for at least one hundred miles
+more, she knew, and the hours that it would be passable in a canoe were
+numbered. The river had fallen steadily all day; driftwood was left on
+the shore; rocks dried swiftly in the sun, cropping out like fangs above
+the foam of the stream. Was there still time to drift on down the Yuga a
+hundred or more miles to the distant Indian encampment? She shut the
+thought from her mind, at present, and turned her attention to the work
+of making camp.
+
+With entire good humor she began to gather such pieces of dead wood as
+she could find for their fire.
+
+"Your prisoner might as well make herself useful," she said.
+
+Ben's face lighted as she had not seen it since their outward journey
+from Snowy Gulch. "Thank God you're taking it that way, Beatrice," he
+told her fervently. "It was a proposition I couldn't help--"
+
+But the girl's eyes flashed, and her lips set in a hard line. "I'm doing
+it to make my own time go faster," she told him softly, rather slowly.
+"I want you to remember that."
+
+But instantly both forgot their words to listen to a familiar clucking
+sound from a near-by shrub. Peering closely they made out the plump,
+genial form of Franklin's grouse,--a bird known far and wide in the
+north for her ample breast and her tender flesh.
+
+"Good Lord, there's supper!" Ben whispered. "Beatrice, get your
+pistol--"
+
+Her eyes smiled as she looked him in the face. "You remember--my pistol
+isn't loaded!"
+
+"Excuse me. I forgot. Give it to me."
+
+She handed him the little gun, and he slipped in the shells he had taken
+from it. Then--for the simple and sensible reason that he didn't want to
+take any chance on the loss of their dinner--he stole within twenty feet
+of the bird. Very carefully he drew down on the plump neck.
+
+"Dinner all safe," he remarked rather gayly, as the grouse came tumbling
+through the branches.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+Quietly Beatrice retrieved the bird and began to remove its feathers.
+Ben built the fire, chopped sturdily at a half-grown spruce until it
+shattered to the earth, and then chopped it into lengths for fuel. When
+the fire was blazing bright, he cut away the green branches and laid
+them, stems overlapping, into a fragrant bed.
+
+"Here's where you sleep to-night, Beatrice," he informed her.
+
+She stopped in her work long enough to try the springy boughs with her
+arms; then she gave him an answering smile. Even a tenderfoot can make
+some sort of a comfortable pallet out of evergreen boughs--ends
+overlapping and plumes bent--but a master woodsman can fashion a
+veritable cradle, soft as silk with never a hard limb to irritate the
+flesh, and yielding as a hair mattress. Such softness, with the
+fragrance of the balsam like a sleeping potion, can not help but bring
+sweet dreams.
+
+Ben had been wholly deliberate in the care with which he had built the
+pallet. He had simply come to the conclusion that she was paying a high
+price for her father's sins; and from now on he intended to make all
+things as easy as he could for her. Moreover, she had been a sportswoman
+of the rarest breed and merited every kindness he could do for her.
+
+He was not half so careful with his own bed, built sixty feet on the
+opposite side of the fire. He threw it together rather hastily. And when
+he walked back to the fire he found an amazing change.
+
+Already Beatrice had established sovereignty over the little patch of
+ground they had chosen for the camp,--and the wilderness had drawn back.
+This spot was no longer mere part of the far-spreading, trackless wilds.
+It had been set off and marked so that the wilderness creatures could no
+longer mistake it for part of their domain. Over the fire she had
+erected a cooking rack; and water was already boiling in a small bucket
+suspended from it. In another container a fragrant mixture was in the
+process of cooking. She had spread one of the blankets on the grass for
+a tablecloth.
+
+As twilight lowered they sat down to their simple meal,--tea, sweetened
+with sugar, and vegetables and meat happily mingled in a stew. It was
+true that the vegetable end was held up by white grains of rice alone,
+but the meat was the white, tender flesh of grouse, permeating the
+entire dish with its tempting flavor. As a whole, the stew was greatly
+satisfying to the inner man.
+
+"I wish I'd brought more tea," Ben complained, as he sipped that most
+delightful of all drinks, the black tea beloved of the northern men.
+
+"You a woodsman, and don't know how to remedy that!" the girl responded.
+"I know of a native substitute that's almost as good as the real
+article."
+
+About the embers of the fire they sat and watched the tremulous wings of
+night close round them. The copse grew breathless. The distant trees
+blended into shadow, the nearer trunks dimmed and finally faded; the
+large, white northern stars emerged in infinite troops and companies,
+peering down through the rifts in the trees. Here about their fire they
+had established the domain of man. For a few short hours they had routed
+the forces of the wilderness; but the foe pressed close upon them. Just
+at the fluctuating ring of firelight he waited, clothed in darkness and
+mystery,--the infinite, brooding spirit of the ancient forest.
+
+They had never known such silence, broken only by the prolonged chord of
+the river, as descended upon them now. It was new and strange to the
+conscious life of Ben, himself, the veritable offspring of the woods;
+although infinitely old and familiar to a still, watching, secret self
+within him. It was as if he had searched forever for this place and had
+just found it, and it answered, to the full, a queer mood of silence in
+his own heart. The wind had died down now. The last wail of a
+coyote--disconsolate on a far-away ridge--had trembled away into
+nothingness; the voices of the Little People who had chirped and rustled
+in the tree aisles during the daylight hours were stilled with a
+breathless, dramatic stillness. Such sound as remained over the
+interminable breadth of that dark forest was only the faint stirrings
+and rustlings of the beasts of prey going to their hunting; and this was
+only a moving tone in the great chord of silence.
+
+To Ben the falling night brought a return of his most terrible moods.
+Beatrice sensed them in his pale, set face and his cold, wolfish eyes.
+The wolf sat beside him, swept by his master's mood, gazing with deadly
+speculations into the darkness. Beatrice saw them as one breed to-night.
+The wild had wholly claimed this repatriated son. The paw of the Beast
+was heavy upon him; the softening influences of civilization seemed
+wholly dispelled. There was little here to remind her that this was the
+twentieth century. The primitive that lies just under the skin in all
+men was in the ascendancy; and there was little indeed to distinguish
+him from the hunter of long ago, a grizzled savage at the edge of the
+ice who chased the mammoth and wild pony, knowing no home but the
+forest and no gentleness unknown to the wolf that ran at his heels....
+The tenderness and sympathy he had had for her earlier that day seemed
+quite gone now. She searched for it in vain in the dark and savage lines
+of his pale face.
+
+Because it has always been that the happiness of women must depend upon
+the mood of men, her own spirits fell. The despair that descended upon
+her brought also resentment and rage; and soon she slipped away quietly
+to her bed. She drew the blankets over her face; but no tears wet her
+cheeks to-night. She was dry-eyed, thoughtful--full of vague plans.
+
+She lay awake a long time, until at last a little, faint ray of hope
+beamed bright and clear. More than a hundred miles farther down the
+Yuga, past the mouth of Grizzly River, not far from the great,
+north-flowing stream of which the Yuga was a tributary, lay an Indian
+village--and if only she could reach it she might enlist the aid of the
+natives and make a safe return, by a long, roundabout route, to her
+father's arms. The plan meant deliverance from Ben and the defeat of all
+his schemes of vengeance,--perhaps the salvation of her father and his
+subordinates.
+
+She realized perfectly the reality of her father's danger. She had read
+the iron resolve in Ben's face. She knew that if she failed to make an
+immediate escape from him, all his dreadful plans were likely to
+succeed: his enemies would follow him into the unexplored mazes of Back
+There to effect her rescue and fall helpless in his trap. What quality
+of mercy he would extend to them then she could readily guess.
+
+Just to get down to the Indian village: this was her whole problem. But
+it was Ben's plan to land and enter the interior somewhere in the vast
+wilderness between, from which escape could not be made until the flood
+waters of fall. The way would remain open but a few hours more, due to
+the simple fact that the waters were steadily falling and the
+river-bottom crags, forming impassable barriers at some points, would be
+exposed. _If she made her escape at all it must be soon._
+
+Yet she could not attempt it at night. She could not see to guide the
+canoe while the darkness lay over the river. Just one further chance
+remained--to depart in the first gray of dawn.
+
+She fell into troubled sleep, but true to her resolution, wakened when
+the first ribbon of light stretched along the eastern horizon. She sat
+up, laying the blankets back with infinite care. This was her chance:
+Ben still lay asleep.
+
+Just to steal down to the water's edge, push off the canoe, and trust
+her life to the doubtful mercy of the river. The morning soon would
+break; if she could avoid the first few crags, she had every chance to
+guide her craft through to deliverance and safety. By no conceivable
+chance could Ben follow her. He would be left in the shadow of the
+gorge, a prisoner without hope or prayer of deliverance. There was no
+crossing the cliffs that lifted so stern and gray just behind. Before he
+could build any kind of a craft with axe and fire, the waters would fall
+to a death level, beyond any hope of carrying him to safety. The tables
+would be turned; he would be left as helpless to follow her as Neilson
+had been to follow him.
+
+The plan meant deliverance for her; but surely it meant _death_ to him.
+Starvation would drive him to the river and destruction, before men
+could ever come the long way to rescue him. But this was not her
+concern. She was a forest girl and he her enemy: he must pay the price
+for his own deeds.
+
+She got to her feet, stalking with absolute silence. She must not waken
+him now. Softly she pressed her unshod foot into the grass. He stirred
+in his sleep; and she paused, scarcely breathing.
+
+She looked toward him. Dimly she could see his face, tranquil in sleep
+and gray in the soft light; and an instantaneous surge of remorse sped
+through her. There was a sweetness, a hint of kindly boyishness in his
+face now, so changed since she had left him beside the glowing coals.
+Yet he was her deadly enemy; and she must not let her woman's heart cost
+her her victory in its moment of fulfillment. She crept on down to the
+water.
+
+She could discern the black shadow of the canoe. One swift surge of her
+shoulders, one leap, the splash of the stern in the water and the swift
+stroke of the paddle, and she would be safe. She stepped nearer.
+
+But at that instant a subdued note of warning froze her in her tracks.
+It was only a small sound, hushed and hardly sharp enough to arouse Ben
+from his sleep; but it was deadly, savage, unutterably sinister. She had
+forgotten that Ben did not wage war alone. For the moment she had given
+no thought to his terrible ally,--a pack brother faithful to the death.
+
+A great, gaunt form raised up from the pile of duffle in the canoe; and
+his fangs showed ivory white in the wan light. It was Fenris, and he
+guarded the canoe. He crouched, ready to spring if she drew near.
+
+The girl sobbed once, then stole back to her blankets.
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+Ben wakened refreshed, at peace with the world as far as he could ever
+be until his ends were attained; and immediately built a roaring fire.
+Beatrice still slept, exhausted from the stress and suspense of her
+attempt to escape. When the leaping flames had dispelled the frost from
+the grass about the fire Ben stepped to her side and touched her
+shoulder.
+
+"It's time to get up and go on," he said. "We have only a few hours more
+of travel."
+
+It was true. The river had fallen appreciably during the night. Not many
+hours remained in which to make their permanent landing. Although the
+river was somewhat less violent from this point on, the lower water line
+would make traveling practically as perilous as on the preceding day.
+
+The girl opened her eyes. "I'd rather hoped--I had dreamed it all," she
+told him miserably.
+
+The words touched him. He looked into her face, moved by the girlishness
+and appeal about the red, wistful mouth and the dark, brimming eyes.
+"It's pretty tough, but I'm afraid it's true," he said, more kindly than
+he had spoken since they had left the landing. "Do you want me to cook
+breakfast and bring it to you here?"
+
+"No, I want to do that part myself. It makes the time pass faster to
+have something to do."
+
+He went to look for fresh meat, and she slipped into her outer garments.
+She found water already hot in a bucket suspended from the cooking rack,
+permitting a simple but refreshing toilet. With Ben's comb she
+straightened out the snarls in her dark tresses, parted them, and
+braided them into two dusky ropes to be worn Indian fashion in front of
+her shoulders. Then she prepared the meal.
+
+It was a problem to tax the ingenuity of any housekeeper,--to prepare an
+appetizing breakfast out of such limited supplies. But in this art,
+particularly, the forest girls are trained. A quantity of rice had been
+left from the stew of the preceding night, and mixing it with flour and
+water and salt, she made a batter. Sooner or later fresh fat could be
+obtained from game to use in frying: to-day she saw no course other than
+to melt a piece of candle. The reverberating roar of the rifle a hundred
+yards down the river bank, however, suggested another alternative.
+
+A moment later Ben appeared--and the breakfast problem was solved. It
+was another of the woods people that his rifle had brought down,--one
+that wore fur rather than feathers and which had just come in from night
+explorations along the river bank. It was a yearling black bear--really
+no larger than a cub--and he had an inch of fat under his furry hide.
+
+The fat he yielded was not greatly different from lard; and the
+pancakes--or fritters, as Ben termed them--were soon frying merrily.
+Served with hot tea they constituted a filling and satisfactory
+breakfast for both travelers.
+
+After breakfast they took to the river, yielding themselves once more to
+the whims of the current. Once more the steep banks whipped past them in
+ever-changing vista; and Ben had to strain at his paddle to guide the
+craft between the perilous crags. The previous day the high waters had
+carried them safely above the boulders of the river bed: to-day some of
+the larger crags all but scraped the bottom of the canoe. It did not
+tend toward peace of mind to know that any instant they might encounter
+a submerged crag that would rip their craft in twain. Ben felt a growing
+eagerness to land.
+
+But within an hour they came out once more upon the open forest. The
+river broadened, sped less swiftly, the bank sloped gradually to the
+distant hills. This was the heart of Back There,--a virgin and primeval
+forest unchanged since the piling-up of the untrodden ranges. The wild
+pace of the craft was checked, and they kept watch for a suitable place
+to land.
+
+There was no need to push on through the seething cataracts that lay
+still farther below. Shortly before the noon hour Ben's quick eye saw a
+break in the heavy brushwood that lined the bank and quickly paddled
+toward it. In a moment it was revealed as the mouth, of a small, clear
+stream, flowing out of a beaver meadow where the grass was rank and
+high. In a moment more he pushed the canoe into the mud of the creek
+bank.
+
+They both got out, rather sober of mien, and she helped him haul the
+canoe out upon the bank. They unloaded it quickly, carrying the supplies
+in easy loads fifty yards up into the edge of the forest, on
+well-drained dry ground.
+
+The entire forest world was hushed and breathless, as if startled by
+this intrusion. Neither of the two travelers felt inclined to speak. And
+the silence was finally broken by the splashing feet of a moose, running
+through a little arm of the marsh that the forest hid from view.
+
+"Is this our permanent camp?" the girl asked at last.
+
+"Surely not," was the reply. "It's too near the river for one
+thing--too easily found. It's too low, too--there'll be mosquitoes in
+plenty in that marsh two months from now. The first thing is--to look
+around and find a better site."
+
+"You want me to come?"
+
+"I'd rather, if you don't mind."
+
+She understood perfectly. He did not intend to give her complete freedom
+until the river fell so low that the rapids farther down would be wholly
+impassable.
+
+"I'll come." Beatrice smiled grimly. "We can have that picnic we
+planned, after all."
+
+They found a moose trail leading into the forest, and leaving the wolf
+on guard over the supplies, they filed swiftly along it in that
+peculiar, shuffling, mile-speeding gait that all foresters learn. At
+once both were aware of a subdued excitement. In the first place, this
+was unknown country and they experienced the incomparable thrill of
+exploration. Besides they were seeking a permanent camp where their
+fortunes would be cast, the drama of their lives be enacted, for weeks
+to come.
+
+Almost at once they began to catch glimpses of wild life,--a squirrel
+romping on a limb; or a long line of grouse, like children in school,
+perched on a fallen log. The trapper had not yet laid his lines in this
+land, and the tracks of the little fur-bearers weaved a marvelous and
+intricate pattern on the moose trail. Once a marten with orange throat
+peered at them from a covert, and once a caribou raced away, too fast
+for a shot.
+
+Mostly the wild things showed little fear or understanding of the two
+humans. The grouse relied on their protective coloration, just as when
+menaced by the beasts of prey. An otter, rarely indeed seen in daylight,
+hovered a moment beside a little stream to consider them; and a coyote,
+greatest of all cowards, lingered in their trail until they were within
+fifty feet of his grey form, then trotted shyly away.
+
+"We won't starve for meat, that's certain," Ben informed her. His voice
+was subdued; he had fallen naturally into the mood of quietness that
+dwells ever in the primeval forest.
+
+Because the trail seemed to be leading them too far from the waterways,
+they took a side trail circling about a wooded hill. Ever Ben studied
+the landmarks, looked carefully down the draws and tried to learn as
+much as possible of the geography of the country; and Beatrice
+understood his purpose with entire clearness. He wished to locate his
+camp so that it would have every natural advantage and insurance against
+surprise attack. He desired that every advantage of warfare be in his
+favor when finally he came to grips with Neilson and his men.
+
+They crossed a low ridge, following down another of the thousand creeks
+that water the northern lands. In a moment it led them to a long, narrow
+lake, blue as a sapphire in its frame of dusky spruce.
+
+For a moment both of them halted on its bank, held by its virgin beauty.
+Lost in the solitudes as it was, perhaps never before gazed upon by the
+eyes of men, still it gave no impression of bleakness and stagnation.
+Rather it was a scene of scintillating life, vivid past all expression.
+Far out of range on the opposite shore a huge bull moose stood like a
+statue in black marble, gazing out over the shimmering expanse. Trout
+leaped, flashing silver, anywhere they might look; and a flock of loon
+shrieked demented cries from its center. The burnished wings of a flock
+of mallard flashed in the air, startled by some creeping hunter.
+
+Slowly, delighted in spite of themselves by the lovely spot, they
+followed along its shore. They climbed the bank; and now Ben began to
+examine his surroundings with great care.
+
+He had suddenly realized that he was in a region wonderfully fitted for
+his permanent camp. The low ridge between the lake and the creek gave a
+clear view of a large part of the surrounding country, affording him
+every chance of seeing his enemies before they saw him. If they came
+along the river--the course they would naturally follow--they would be
+obliged to cross the beaver marsh--a half-mile of open grassland with no
+protecting coverts. Beatrice saw, dismayed, that his gray eyes were
+kindling with unholy fire under his heavy, dark brows.
+
+What if he should see them, deep in the wet grass, filing across the
+open marsh! How many shots would be needed to bring his war to a
+triumphant end? There were no thickets in which they might find shelter:
+hidden himself, they could not return his fire. Before they could break
+and run to cover he could destroy them all!
+
+Should they cross the narrow neck of the marsh, higher up, he would have
+every chance to see them on the lake shore. The site was good from the
+point of health and comfort--high enough to escape the worst of the
+insect pests, close to fresh water, plenty of fuel, and within a few
+hundred yards of a lake that simply swarmed with fish and waterfowl.
+
+Still following a narrow, racing trout stream that flowed into the lake
+they advanced a short distance farther, clear to the base of a rock
+wall. And all at once Beatrice, walking in front, drew up with a gasp.
+
+She stood at the edge of a little glade, perhaps thirty yards across,
+laying at the base of the cliff. The creek flowed through it, the grass
+was green and rich, beloved by the antlered herds that came to graze,
+the tall spruce shaded it on three sides. But it was not these things
+that caught the girl's eye. Just at the edge of a glade a dark hole
+yawned in the face of the cliff.
+
+In an instant more they were beside it, gazing into its depths. It was a
+natural cavern with rock walls and a clean floor of sand--a roomy place,
+and yet a perfect stronghold against either mortal enemies or the powers
+of wind and rain.
+
+"It's home," the man said simply.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+Ben and Beatrice went together back to the canoe, and in two trips they
+carried the supplies to the cave. By instinct a housekeeper, Beatrice
+showed him where to stow the various supplies, what part of the cave was
+to be used for provisions, where their cots would be laid, and where to
+erect the cooking rack. Shadows had fallen over the land before they
+finished the work.
+
+Tired from the hard tramp, yet sustained by a vague excitement neither
+of them could name or trace, they began to prepare for the night. Ben
+cut boughs as before, placing Beatrice's bed within the portals of the
+cave and his own on the grass outside. He cut fuel and made his fire:
+Beatrice prepared the evening meal.
+
+The flesh of the cub-bear they had procured that morning would have to
+serve them to-night; but more delicious meat could be procured
+to-morrow. Ben knew that the white-maned caribou fed in the high park
+lands. Beatrice made biscuits and brewed tea; and they ate the simple
+food in the firelight. Already the darkness was pressing close upon
+them, tremulous, vaguely sinister, inscrutably mysterious.
+
+They had talked gayly at first; but they grew silent as the fire burned
+down to coals. A great preoccupation seemed to hold them both. When one
+spoke the other started, and word did not immediately come in answer.
+Beatrice's despair was not nearly so dominating to-night; and Ben
+harbored a secret excitement that was almost happiness.
+
+Its source and origin Ben could not trace. Perhaps it was just relief
+that the perilous journey was over. The strain of his hours at the
+paddle had been severe; but now they were safe upon the sustaining
+earth. Yet this fact alone could hardly have given him such a sense of
+security,--an inner comfort new to his adventurous life.
+
+The forest was oppressive to-night, tremulous with the passions of the
+Young World; yet he did not respond to it as before. The excitement that
+sparkled in the red wine of his veins was not of the chase and death,
+and he had difficulty in linking it up with the thoughts of his
+forthcoming vengeance. Rather it was a mood that sprang from their
+surroundings here, their shelter at the mouth of the cave. He felt
+deeply at peace.
+
+The fire blazed warmly at the cavern maw; the wolf stood tense and
+still, by means of the secret wireless of the wild fully aware of the
+tragic drama, the curtain of which was the dark just fallen; yet Ben's
+wild, bitter thoughts of the preceding night did not come readily back
+to him. There was a quality here--in the firelight and the haven of the
+cave--that soothed him and comforted him. The powers of the wild were
+helpless against him now. The wind might hurl down the dead trees, but
+the rock of the cavern Wall would stand against them. Even the dreaded
+avalanche could roar and thunder on the steep above in vain.
+
+There was no peril in the hushed, breathless forest for him to-night.
+This was his stronghold, and none could assail it. And it was a
+significant fact that his sense of intimate relationship with the wolf,
+Fenris, Was someway lessened. Fenris was a creature of the open forest,
+sleeping where he chose on the trail; but his master had found a cavern
+home. There was a strange and bridgeless chasm between such breeds as
+roamed abroad and those that slept, night after night, in the shelter of
+the same walls.
+
+He watched the girl's face, ruddy in the firelight, and it was
+increasingly hard to remember that she was of the enemy camp,--the
+daughter of his arch foe. To-night she was just a comrade, a habitat of
+his own cave.
+
+For the first time since he had found Ezram's body--so huddled and
+impotent in the dead leaves--he remembered the solace of tobacco. He
+hunted through his pockets, found his pipe and a single tin of the weed,
+and began to inhale the fragrant, peace-giving smoke. When he raised his
+eyes again he found the girl studying him with intent gaze.
+
+She looked away, embarrassed, and he spoke to put her at ease. "You are
+perfectly comfortable, Beatrice?" he asked gently.
+
+"As good as I could expect--considering everything. I'm awfully relieved
+that we're off the water."
+
+"Of course." He paused, looking away into the tremulous shadows. "Is
+that all? Don't you feel something else, too--a kind of satisfaction?"
+
+The coals threw their lurid glow on her lovely, deeply tanned face.
+"It's for you to feel satisfaction, not me. You couldn't expect me to
+feel very satisfied--taken from my home--as a hostage--in a feud with my
+father. But I think I know what you mean. You mean--the comfort of the
+fire, and a place to stay."
+
+"That's it. Of course."
+
+"I feel it--but every human being does who has a fire when this big,
+northern night comes down and takes charge of things. It's just an
+instinct, I suppose, a comfort and a feeling of safety--and likely only
+the wild beasts are exempt from it." Her voice changed and softened, as
+her girlish fancy reached ever farther. "I suppose the first men that
+you were telling me about on the way out, the hairy men of long ago,
+felt the same way when the cold drove them to their caves for the first
+time. A great comfort in the protecting walls and the fire."
+
+"It's an interesting thought--that perhaps the love of home sprang from
+that hour."
+
+"Quite possibly. Perhaps it came only when they had to fight for their
+homes--against beasts, and such other hairy men as tried to take their
+homes away from them. Perhaps, after all, that's one of the great
+differences between men and beasts. Men have a place to live in and a
+place to fight for--and the fire is the symbol of it all. And the beasts
+run in the forest and make a new lair every day."
+
+Thoughts of the stone age were wholly fitting in this stone-age forest,
+and Ben's fancy caught on fire quickly. "And perhaps, when the hairy men
+came to the caves to live, they forgot their wild passions they knew on
+the open trails--their blood-lust and their wars among themselves--and
+began to be men instead of beasts." Ben's voice had dropped to an even,
+low murmur. "Perhaps they got gentle, and the Brute died in their
+bodies."
+
+"Yes. Perhaps then they began to be tamed."
+
+The silence dropped about them, settling slowly; and all except the
+largest heap of red coals burned down to gray ashes. The darkness
+pressed ever nearer. The girl stretched her slender, brown arms.
+
+"I'm sleepy," she said. "I'm going in."
+
+He got up, with good manners; and he smiled, quietly and gently, into
+her sober, wistful face. "Sleep good," he prayed. "You've got solid
+walls around you to-night--and some one on guard, too. Good night."
+
+A like good wish was on her lips, but she pressed it back. She had
+almost forgotten, for the moment, that this man was her abductor and her
+father's enemy. She ventured into the darkness of the cave.
+
+Scratching a match Ben followed her, so that she could see her way. For
+the instant the fireside was deserted. And then both of them grew
+breathless and alert as the brush cracked and rustled just beyond the
+glowing coals.
+
+Some huge wilderness creature was venturing toward them, at the edge of
+the little glade.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+The match flared out in Ben's fingers, and the only light that was left
+was the pale moonlight, like a cobweb on the floor of the glade, and the
+faint glow from the dying fire. About the glade ranged the tall spruce,
+Watching breathlessly; and for a termless second or two a profound and
+portentous silence descended on the camp. No leaf rustled, not a tree
+limb cracked. The creature that had pushed through the thickets to the
+edge of the glade was evidently standing motionless, deciding on his
+course.
+
+Only the wild things seem to know what complete absence of motion means.
+To stand like a form in rock, not a muscle quivering or a hair stirring,
+is never a feat for ragged, over stretched human nerves; and it requires
+a perfect muscle control that is generally only known to the beasts of
+the forest. Only a few times in a lifetime in human beings are the
+little, outward motions actually suspended; perhaps under the paralysis
+of great terror or, with painstaking effort, before a photographer's
+camera. But with the beasts it is an everyday accomplishment necessary
+to their survival. The fawn that can not stand absolutely motionless,
+his dappled skin blending perfectly with the background of shrubbery
+shot with sunlight, comes to an end quickly in the fangs of some great
+beast of prey. The panther that can not lurk, not a muscle quivering, in
+his ambush beside the deer trail, never knows full feeding. The creature
+on the opposite side of the glade seemed as bereft of motion as the
+spruce trees in the moonlight, or the cliff above the cave.
+
+"What is it?" Beatrice whispered. The man's eyes strained into the
+gloom.
+
+"I don't know. It may be just a moose, or maybe a caribou. But it may
+be--"
+
+He tiptoed to the door of the cave, and his eye fell to the crouching
+form of Fenris. The creature outside was neither moose nor caribou. The
+great wolf of the North does not stand at bay to the antlered people. He
+was poised to spring, his fangs bared and his fierce eyes hot with fire,
+but he was not hunting. Whatever moved in the darkness without, the wolf
+had no desire to go forth and attack. Perhaps he would fight to the
+death to protect the occupants of the cave; but surely an ancient and
+devastating fear had hold of him. Evidently he recognized the intruder
+as an ancestral enemy that held sovereignty over the forest.
+
+At that instant Ben leaped through the cavern maw to reach his gun.
+There was nothing to be gained by waiting further. This was a savage and
+an uninhabited land; and the great beasts of prey that ranged the forest
+had not yet learned the restraint born of the fear of man. And he knew
+one breathless instant of panic when his eye failed to locate the weapon
+in the faint light of the fire.
+
+Holding hard, he tried to remember where he had left it. The form across
+the glade was no longer motionless. Straining, Ben saw the soft roll of
+a great shadow, almost imperceptible in the gloom--advancing slowly
+toward him. Then the faint glow of the fire caught and reflected in the
+creature's eyes.
+
+They suddenly glowed out in the half-darkness, two rather small circles
+of dark red, close together and just alike. This night visitor was not
+moose or caribou, or was it one of the lesser hunters, lynx or
+wolverine, or a panther wandered far from his accustomed haunts. The
+twin circles were too far above the ground. And whatever it was, no
+doubt remained but that the creature was steadily stalking him across
+the soft grass.
+
+At that instant Ben's muscles snapped into action. Only a second
+remained in which to make his defense--the creature had paused, setting
+his muscles for a death-dealing charge. "Go back into the cave--as far
+as you can," he said swiftly to Beatrice. His own eyes, squinted and
+straining for the last iota of vision in that darkened scene, made a
+last, frantic search for his rifle. Suddenly he saw the gleam of its
+barrel as it rested against the wall of the cliff, fifteen feet distant.
+
+At once he knew that his only course was to spring for it in the instant
+that remained, and trust to its mighty shocking power to stop the charge
+that would in a moment ensue. Yet it seemed to tear the life fiber of
+the man to do it. His inmost instincts, urgent and loud in his ear, told
+him to remain on guard, not to leave that cavern maw for an instant but
+to protect with his own body the precious life that it sheltered. His
+mind worked with that incredible speed that is usually manifest in a
+crisis; and he knew that the creature might charge into the cavern
+entrance in the second that he left it. Yet only in the rifle lay the
+least chance or hope for either of them.
+
+"At him, Fenris!" he shouted. The wolf leaped forward like a thrown
+spear,--almost too fast for the eye to follow. He was deathly afraid,
+with full knowledge of the power of the enemy he went to combat, but his
+fears were impotent to restrain him at the first sound of that masterful
+voice. These were the words he had waited for. He could never disobey
+such words as these--from the lips of his god. And Ben's mind had worked
+true; he knew that the wolf could likely hold the creature at bay until
+he could seize his rifle.
+
+In an instant it was in his hands, and he had sprung back to his post in
+front of the cavern maw. And presently he remembered, heartsick, that
+the weapon was not loaded.
+
+For his own safety he had kept it empty on the outward journey, partly
+to prevent accident, partly to be sure that his prisoner could not turn
+it against him. But he had shells in the pocket of his jacket. His hand
+groped, but his reaching fingers found but one shell, dropping it
+swiftly into the gun. And now he knew that no time remained to seek
+another. The beast in the darkness had launched into the charge.
+
+Thereafter there was only a great confusion, event piled upon event with
+incredible rapidity, and a whole lifetime of stress and fear lived in a
+single instant. The creature's first lunge carried him into the brighter
+moonlight; and at once Ben recognized its breed. No woodsman could
+mistake the high, rocking shoulders, the burly form, the wicked ears
+laid back against the flat, massive head, the fangs gleaming white, the
+long, hooked claws slashing through the turf as he ran. It was a
+terrible thing to see and stand against, in the half-darkness. The
+shadows accentuated the towering outline; and forgotten terrors,
+lurking, since the world was young, in the labyrinth of the germ plasm
+wakened and spread like icy streams through the mortal body and seemed
+to threaten to extinguish the warm flame of the very soul.
+
+The grizzly bawled as he came, an explosive, incredible storm of sound.
+Few indeed are the wilderness creatures that can charge in silence:
+muscular exertion can not alone relieve their gathered flood of madness
+and fury. And at once Ben sensed the impulse behind the attack. He and
+the girl had made their home in the grizzly's cave--perhaps the lair
+wherein he had hibernated through the winter and which he still slept in
+from time to time--and he had come to drive them out. Only death could
+pay for such insolence as this,--to make a night's lair in the den of
+his sovereignty, the grizzly.
+
+It is not the accustomed thing for a grizzly to make an unprovoked
+attack. He has done it many times, in the history of the west, but
+usually he is glad enough to turn aside, only launching into his
+terrible death-charge when a mortal wound obliterates his fear of man,
+leaving only his fear of death. But this grizzly, native to these
+uninhabited wilds, had no fear of man to forget. He did not know what
+man was, and he had not learned the death that dwells in the shining
+weapon he carries in his arms. No trappers mushed through his snows of
+spring; no woodsman rode his winding trails. True, from the first
+instant that the human smell had reached him on the wind he had been
+disturbed and discomfited; yet it was not grizzly nature to yield his
+den without a fight. The sight of the wolf--known to him of old--only
+wakened an added rage in his fierce heart.
+
+The wolf met him at his first leap, springing with noble courage at his
+grizzled throat; and the bear paused in his charge to strike him away.
+He lashed out with his great forepaw; and if that blow had gone straight
+home the ribs of the wolf would have been smashed flat on his heart and
+lungs. The tough trunk of a young spruce would have been broken as
+quickly under that terrible, blasting full-stroke of a grizzly. The
+largest grizzly weighs but a thousand pounds, but that weight is simple
+fiber and iron muscle, of a might incredible to any one but the woodsmen
+who know this mountain king in his native haunts. But Fenris whipped
+aside, and the paw missed him.
+
+Immediately the wolf sprang in again, with a courage scarcely compatible
+with lupine characteristics, ready to wage this unequal battle to the
+death. But his brave fight was tragically hopeless. For all that his
+hundred and fifty pounds were, every ounce, lightning muscle and vibrant
+sinew, it was as if a gopher had waged war with a lynx. Yet by the law
+of his wild heart he could not turn and flee. His master--his stalwart
+god whose words thrilled him to the uttermost depths--had given his
+orders, and he must obey them to the end.
+
+The second blow missed him also, but the third caught a small shrub that
+grew twenty feet beyond the dying fire. The shrub snapped off under the
+blow, and its branchy end smote the wolf across the head and neck. As if
+struck by a tornado he was hurled into the air, and curtailed and
+indirect though the blow was, he sprawled down stunned and insensible in
+the grass. The bear paused one instant; then lunged forth again.
+
+But the breath in which the wolf had stayed the charge had given Ben his
+chance. With a swift motion of his arm he had projected the single rifle
+shell into the chamber of the weapon. The stock snapped to his shoulder;
+and his keen, glittering eyes sought the sights.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII
+
+Few wilderness adventures offer a more stern test to human nerves than
+the frightful rush of a maddened grizzly. It typifies all that is primal
+and savage in the wild: the insane rage that can find relief only in the
+cruel rending of flesh; the thundering power that no mere mortal
+strength can withstand. But Ben was a woodsman. He had been tried in the
+fire. He knew that not only his life, but that of the girl in the cavern
+depended upon this one shot; and it was wholly characteristic of Wolf
+Darby that his eye held true and his arm was steady as a vice of iron.
+
+He was aware that he must wait until the bear was almost upon him, in
+order to be sure to send the bullet home to a vital place. This alone
+was a test requiring no small measure of self-control. The instinct was
+to fire at once. In the moonlight it was difficult to see his sights:
+his only chance was to enlarge his target to the last, outer limit of
+safety. He aimed for the great throat, below the slavering jaw.
+
+His finger pressed back steadily against the trigger. The slightest
+flinching, the smallest motion might yet throw off his aim. The rifle
+spoke with a roar.
+
+But this wilderness battle was not yet done. The ball went straight
+home, down through the throat, mushrooming and plowing on into the neck,
+inflicting a wound that was bound to be mortal within a few seconds. The
+bear recoiled; but the mighty engine of its life was not yet destroyed.
+Its incalculable fonts of vitality had not yet run down.
+
+The grizzly bounded forward again. The ball had evidently missed the
+vertebrae and spinal column. His crashing, thunderous roar of pain
+smothered instantly the reechoing report of the rifle and stifled the
+instinctive cry that had come to Ben's lips. He was a forester; and he
+had known of old what havoc a mortally wounded bear can wreak in a few
+seconds of life. In that strange, vivid instant Ben knew that his own
+and the girl's life still hung in the balance, with the beam inclining
+toward death.
+
+The grizzly was in his death-agony, nothing more; yet in that final
+convulsion he could rip into shreds the powerful form that opposed him.
+Ben knew, with a cold, sure knowledge, that if he failed to slay the
+beast, it would naturally crawl into its lair for its last breath. As
+this dreadful thought flashed home he dropped the empty rifle and seized
+the axe that leaned against a log of spruce beside the fire.
+
+There was no time at all to search out another shell and load his rifle.
+If the shock of the heavy bullet had not slackened the bear's pace he
+would not even have had time to seize the axe. Finally, if the bear had
+not been all but dead, in his last, threshing agony, Ben's mortal
+strength could not have sent home one blow. As it was they found
+themselves facing each other over the embers of the fire, well-matched
+contestants whose stake was life and whose penalty was death. The
+grizzly turned his head, caught sight of Ben, identified him as the
+agent of his agony, and lurched forward.
+
+Just in time Ben sprang aside, out of the reach of those terrible
+forearms; and his axe swung mightly in the air. Its blade gleamed and
+descended--a blow that might have easily broken the bear's back if it
+had gone true but which now seemed only to infuriate him the more. The
+bear reared up, reeled, and lashed down; and dying though he was, he
+struck with incredible power. One slashing stroke of that vast forepaw,
+one slow closing of those cruel fangs upon skull or breast, and life
+would have gone out like a light. But Ben leaped aside again, and again
+swung down his axe.
+
+These were but the first blows of a terrific battle that carried like a
+storm through the still reaches of the forest. Far in the distant tree
+aisles the woods people paused in their night's occupation to listen,
+stirred and terrified by the throb and thrill in the air; the grazing
+caribou lifted his growing horns and snorted in terror; the beasts of
+prey paused in the chase, growling uneasily, gazing with fierce,
+luminous eyes in the direction of the battle.
+
+It is beyond the ken of man whether or not, in their wild hearts, these
+forest folk sensed what was taking place,--that their gray monarch, the
+sovereign grizzly, was at the death-fight with some dreadful invader
+from the South. They heard the bear's fierce bawls, unimitatable by any
+other voice as he lashed down blow after blow; and they heard the thud
+and crunch of the axe against his body. Had this monarch of the trails
+found his master at last?
+
+Gazing out through the aperture of the cave Beatrice beheld the whole
+picture: the ring of spruce trees, the glade so strange and ensilvered
+in the moonlight, and these two fighting beasts, magnificent in fury
+over the embers of the dying fire. And Ben's powers increased, rather
+than lessened. Ever he swung his terrible axe with greater power.
+
+He fought like the wolf that was his blood brother,--lunging, striking
+down, recoiling out of harm's way, and springing forward to strike
+again. This man was Wolf Darby, a forester known in many provinces for
+his woods prowess, but even those who had seen his most spectacular
+feats, in past days, had not appreciated the real extent of his powers.
+There was a fury and a might in his blows that was hard to associate
+with the world of human beings,--such ferociousness and wolf-like
+savagery, welling strength and prowess of battle that mostly men have
+forgotten in their centuries of civilization, but which still mark the
+death-fight between beasts.
+
+Ben had always recalled the earlier types of man--his great-thewed
+ancestors, wild hunters in the forests of ancient Germany--but never so
+much as to-night. He was in his natural surroundings--at the mouth of
+his cave in which the Woman watched and exulted in his blows, enclosed
+by the primeval forest and beside the ashes of his fire. There could be
+nothing strange or unreal about this scene to Beatrice. It was more true
+than any soft vista of a far-away city could possibly be. It was life
+itself,--man battling for his home and his woman against the raw forces
+of the wild.
+
+All superficialities and superfluities were gone, and only the basic
+stuff of life remained,--the cave, the fire, the man who fought the
+beast in the light of the ancient moon. At that moment Ben was no more
+of the twentieth century than he was of the first, or of the first more
+than of some dark, unnumbered century of the world's young days. He was
+simply the male of his species, the man-child of all time, forgetting
+for the moment all the little lessons civilization had taught, and
+fighting his fight in the basic way for the basic things.
+
+This was no new war which Ben and the grizzly fought in the pale light
+of the moon. It had begun when the race began, and it would continue,
+in varied fields, until men perished from the earth. Ben fought for
+_life_--not only his own but the girl's--that old, beloved privilege to
+breathe the air and see and know and be. He represented, by a strange
+symbolism, the whole race that has always fought in merciless and
+never-ending battle with the cruel and oppressive powers of nature. In
+the grizzly were typified all those ancient enemies that have always
+opposed, with claw and fang, this stalwart, self-knowing breed that has
+risen among the primates: he symbolized not only the Beast of the
+forest, but the merciless elements, storm and flood and cold and all the
+legions of death. And had they but known their ultimate fate if this
+intruder survived the battle and brought his fellows into this, their
+last stronghold, the watching forest creatures would have prayed to see
+the grizzly strike him to the earth.
+
+Ben knew, too, that he was fighting for his home; and this also lent him
+strength. _Home_! His shelter from the storm and the cold, the thing
+that marked him a man instead of a beast. The grizzly had come to drive
+him forth; and they had met beside the ashes of his fire.
+
+The old exhilaration and rapture of battle flashed through him as he
+swung his axe, sending home blow after blow. Sometimes he cried out,
+involuntarily, in his fury and hatred; and as the bear weakened he waged
+the fight at closer quarters. His muscles made marvelous response,
+flinging him out of danger in the instant of necessity and giving
+terrific power to his blows.
+
+He danced about the shaggy, bleeding form of the bear, swinging his axe,
+howling in his rage, and escaping the smashing blows of the bear with
+miraculous agility,--a weird and savage picture in the moonlight. But
+at last the grizzly lunged too far. Ben sprang aside, just in time, and
+he saw his chance as the great, reeling form sprawled past. He aimed a
+terrific blow just at the base of the skull.
+
+The silence descended quickly thereafter. The blow had gone straight
+home, and the last flicker of waning life fled from the titanic form. He
+went down sprawling; Ben stood waiting to see if another blow was
+needed. Then the axe fell from his hands.
+
+For a moment he stood as if dazed. It was hard to remember all that
+occurred in the countless life times he had lived since the grizzly had
+stolen out of the spruce forest. But soon he remembered Fenris and
+walked unsteadily to his side.
+
+The wolf, however, was already recovering from the blow. He had been
+merely stunned; seemingly no bones were broken. Once more Ben turned to
+the mouth of the cavern.
+
+Sobbing and white as the moonlight itself Beatrice met him in the
+doorway. She too had been uninjured; his arm had saved her from the
+rending fangs. She was closer to him now, filling a bigger part of his
+life. He didn't know just why. He had fought for her; and some way--they
+were more to each other.
+
+And this was his cavern,--his stronghold of rock where he might lay his
+head, his haven and his hearth, and the symbol of his dominance over the
+beasts of the field. He had fought for this, too. And he suddenly knew a
+great and inner peace and a love for the sheltering walls that would
+dwell forever in the warp and woof of his being.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART THREE
+
+THE TAMING
+
+
+
+
+XXIX
+
+Ben rose at daybreak, wonderfully refreshed by the night's sleep, and
+built the fire at the cavern mouth. Beatrice was still asleep, and he
+was careful not to waken her. The days would be long and monotonous for
+her, he knew, and the more time she could spend in sleep the better.
+
+He did, however, steal to the opening of the cavern and peer into her
+face. The soft, morning light fell gently upon it, bringing out its
+springtime freshness and the elusive shades of gold in her hair. She
+looked more a child than a woman, some one to shelter and comfort rather
+than to harry as a foe. "Poor little girl," he murmured under his
+breath. "I'm going to make it as easy for you as I can."
+
+He meant what he said. He could do that much, at least--extend to her
+every courtesy and comfort that was in his power, and place his own
+great strength at her service.
+
+His first work was to remove the skin of last night's invader,--the huge
+grizzly that lay dead just outside the cavern opening. They would have
+use for this warm, furry hide before their adventure was done. It would
+supplement their supply of blankets; and if necessary it could be cut
+and sewed with threads of sinew into clothes. Because the animal had
+but recently emerged from hibernation his fur, except for a few rubbed
+places, was long and rich,--a beautiful, tawny-gray that shimmered like
+cloth-of-gold in the light.
+
+It taxed his strength to the utmost to roll over the huge body and skin
+it. When the heavy skin was removed he laid it out, intending to stretch
+it as soon as he could build a rack. He cut off some of the fat; then
+quartering the huge body, he dragged it away into the thickets.
+
+The hour was already past ten; but Beatrice--worn out by the stress of
+the night before--did not waken until she heard the crack of her pistol.
+She lay a while, resting, watching through the cavern opening Ben's
+efforts to prepare breakfast. A young grouse had fallen before the
+pistol, and her companion was busy preparing it for the skillet.
+
+The girl watched with some pleasure his rather awkward efforts to go
+about his work in silence,--evidently still believing her asleep. She
+laughed secretly at his distress as he tripped clumsily over a piece of
+firewood; then watched him with real interest as he mixed batter for
+griddle cakes and fried the white breast of the grouse in bear fat.
+Filling one of the two tin plates he stole into the cavern.
+
+Falling into his mood the girl pretended to be asleep. She couldn't have
+understood why her pulse quickened as he knelt beside her, looking so
+earnestly and soberly into her face. Then she felt the touch of his
+fingers on her shoulder.
+
+"Wake up, Beatrice," he commanded, with pretended gruffness. "It's after
+ten, and you've got to cook my breakfast."
+
+She stirred, pretending difficulty in opening her eyes.
+
+"Get right up," he commanded again. "D'ye think I'm going to wait all
+morning?"
+
+She opened her eyes to find him regarding her with boyish glee. Then--as
+a surprise--he proffered the filled plate, meanwhile raising his arm in
+feigned fear of a blow.
+
+She laughed; then began upon her breakfast with genuine relish. Then he
+brought her hot water and the meager toilet articles; and left the cave
+to prepare his own breakfast.
+
+"I'm going on a little hunt," he said, when this rite was over. "We
+can't depend on grouse and bear forever. I hate to ask you to go--"
+
+His tone was hopeful; and she could not doubt but that the lonely spirit
+of these solitudes had hold of him. They were two human beings in a vast
+and uninhabited wilderness, and although they were foes, they felt the
+primitive need of each other's companionship. "I don't mind going," she
+told him. "I'd rather, than stay in the cave."
+
+"It's a fine morning. And what's your favorite meat--moose or caribou?"
+
+"Caribou--although I like both."
+
+He might have expected this answer. There are few meats in this
+imperfect earth to compare in flavor with that of the great, woodland
+caribou, monarch of the high park-lands.
+
+"That means we do some climbing, instead of watching in the beaver
+meadows. I'm ready--any time."
+
+They took the game trail up the ridge, venturing at once into the heavy
+spruce; but curiously enough, the mysterious hush, the dusky shadows did
+not appall Beatrice greatly to-day. The miles sped swiftly under her
+feet. Always there were creatures to notice or laugh at,--a squirrel
+performing on a branch, a squawking Canada Jay surprised and utterly
+baffled by their tall forms, a porcupine hunched into a spiny ball and
+pretending a ferociousness that deceived not even such hairbrained folk
+as the chipmunks in the tree roots, or those queens of stupidity, the
+fool hens on the branch. In the way of more serious things sometimes
+they paused to gaze down on some particularly beautiful glen--watered,
+perhaps, by a gleaming stream--or a long, dark valley steeped deeply in
+the ancient mysticism of the trackless wilds.
+
+He helped her over the steeps, waited for her at bad crossings; and
+meanwhile his thoughts found easy expression in words. He had to stop
+and remind himself that she was his foe. Beatrice herself attempted no
+such remembrance; she was simply carrying out her resolve to make the
+best of a deplorable situation.
+
+She could see, however, that he kept close watch of her. He intended to
+give her no opportunity to strike back at him. He carried his rifle
+unloaded, so that if she were able, in an unguarded moment, to wrest it
+from him she could not turn it against him. But there was no joy for her
+in noticing these small precautions. They only reminded her of her
+imprisonment; and she wisely resolved to ignore them.
+
+They climbed to the ridge top, following it on to the plateau where
+patches of snow still gleamed white and the spruce grew in dark clumps,
+leaving open, lovely parks between. Here they encountered their first
+caribou.
+
+This animal, however, was not to their liking in the way of meat for the
+table. A turn in the trail suddenly revealed him at the edge of the
+glade, his white mane gleaming and his graceful form aquiver with that
+unquenchable vitality that seems to be the particular property of
+northern wild animals; but Ben let him go his way. He was an old bull,
+the monarch of his herd; he had ranged and mated and fought his rivals
+for nearly a score of years in the wild heart of Back There,--and his
+flesh would be mostly sinew.
+
+Ten minutes later, however, the girl touched his arm. She pointed to a
+far glade, fully three hundred yards across the canyon. Her quick eyes
+made out a tawny form against the thicket.
+
+It was a young caribou--a yearling buck--and his flesh would be tender
+as a spring fowl.
+
+"It's just what we want, but there's not much chance of getting him at
+that range," he said.
+
+"Try, anyway. You've got a long-range rifle. If you can hold true, he's
+yours."
+
+This was one thing that Ben was skilled at,--holding true. He raised the
+weapon to his shoulder, drawing down finely on that little speck of
+brown across the gulch. Few times in his life had he been more anxious
+to make a successful shot. Yet he would never have admitted the true
+explanation: that he simply desired to make good in the girl's eyes.
+
+He held his breath and pressed the trigger back.
+
+Beatrice could not restrain a low, happy cry of triumph. She had
+forgotten all things, for the moment, but her joy at his success. And
+truly, Ben had made a remarkable shot. Most hunters who boast of
+long-range hits do not step off the distance shot; fifty yards is called
+a hundred, a hundred and fifty yards three hundred; and to kill true at
+this range is not the accustomed thing on the trails of sport. The
+bullet had gone true as a light-shaft, striking the animal through the
+shoulders, and he had never stirred out of his tracks. With that joy of
+conquest known to all owners of rod and gun--related darkly to the
+blood-lust of the beasts--they raced across the gully toward the
+fallen.
+
+Ben quartered the animal, and again he saw fit to save the hide. It is
+the best material of all for the parka, the long, full winter garment of
+the North.
+
+Ben carried the meat in four trips back to the camp. By the time this
+work was done, and one of the quarters was drying over a fire of
+quivering aspen chips, the day was done. Again they saw the twilight
+shadows grow, and the first sable cloak of night was drawn over the
+shoulders of the forest. Beatrice prepared a wonderful roast of caribou
+for their evening meal; and thereafter they sat a short time at the
+mouth of the cavern, looking quietly into the red coals of the dying
+fire. Again Ben knew the beneficence and peace of the sheltering walls
+of home. Again he felt a sweet security,--a taming, gentling influence
+through the innermost fiber of his being.
+
+But Fenris the wolf gazed only into the darkened woods, and the hair
+stood stiff at his shoulders, and his eyes glowed and shone with the
+ancient hunting madness induced by the rising moon.
+
+
+
+
+XXX
+
+June passed away in the wilds of Back There, leaving warmer, longer
+days, a more potent sun, and a greener, fresher loveliness to the land.
+The spring calves no longer tottered on wabbly legs, but could follow
+their swift mothers over the most steep and difficult trails. Fledglings
+learned to fly, the wolf cubs had their first lessons in hunting on the
+ridges. The wild Yuga had fallen to such an extent that navigation--down
+to the Indian villages on the lower waters--was wholly impossible.
+
+The days passed quickly for Ben and Beatrice. They found plenty of work
+and even of play to pass the time. Partly to fill her lonely moments,
+but more because it was an instinct with her, Beatrice took an
+ever-increasing interest in her cave home. She kept it clean and cooked
+the meals, performing her tasks with goodwill, even at times a gaiety
+that was as incomprehensible to herself as to Ben.
+
+Their diet was not so simple now. Of course their flour and sugar and
+rice, and the meat that they took in the chase furnished the body of
+their meals, and without these things they could not live; but Beatrice
+was a woods child, and she knew how to find manna in the wilderness.
+Almost every morning she ventured out into the still, dew-wet forest,
+and nearly always she came in with some dainty for their table. She
+gathered watercress in the still pools and she knew a dozen ways to
+serve it. Sometimes she made a dressing out of animal oil, beaten to a
+cream; and it was better than lettuce salad. Other tender plant tops
+were used as a garnish and as greens, and many and varied were the
+edible roots that supplied their increasing desire for fresh vegetables.
+
+Sometimes she found wocus in the marsh--the plant formerly in such
+demand by the Indians--and by patient experiment she learned how to
+prepare it for the table. Washing the plant carefully she would pound it
+into paste that could be used as the base for a nutty and delicious
+bread. Other roots were baked in ashes or served fried in animal fat,
+and once or twice she found patches of wild strawberries, ripening on
+the slopes.
+
+This was living! They plucked the sweet, juicy berries from the vines;
+they served as dessert and were also used in the fashioning of delicious
+puddings with rice and sugar. Several times she found certain treasures
+laid by for winter use by the squirrels or the digging people--and
+perfectly preserved nuts and acorns, The latter, parched over coals,
+became one of the staples of their diet.
+
+She gathered leaves of the red weed and dried them for tea. She searched
+out the nests of the grouse and robbed them of their eggs; and always
+high celebration in the cave followed such a find as this. Fried eggs,
+boiled eggs, poached eggs tickled their palates for mornings to come.
+And she traced down, one memorable day when their sugar was all but
+gone, a tree that the wild bees had stored with honey.
+
+In the way of meat they had not only caribou, but the tender veal of
+moose and all manner of northern small game. Ben did not, however, spend
+rifle cartridges in reckless shooting. When at last his enemies came
+filing down through the beaver meadow he had no desire to be left with a
+half-empty gun. He had never fired this more powerful weapon since he
+had felled their first caribou. The moose calves and all the small game
+were taken with Beatrice's pistol.
+
+Sometimes he took ptarmigan--those whistling, sprightly grouse of the
+high steeps--and Beatrice served uncounted numbers of them, like the
+famous blackbirds, baked in a pie. Fried ptarmigan was a dish never to
+forget; roast ptarmigan had a distinctive flavor all its own, and the
+memory of ptarmigan fricassee often called Ben home to the cavern an
+hour before the established mealtime. Indeed, they partook of all the
+northern species of that full-bosomed clan, the upland game birds;
+little, brown quail, willow grouse, fool hens, and the incomparable blue
+grouse, half of the breast of which was a meal. It was true that their
+little store of pistol cartridges was all but gone, but worlds of big
+game remained to fall back upon.
+
+Ben never ceased regretting that he had not brought a single fishhook
+and a piece of line. He had long since carried the canoe from the river
+bank and hid it in the tall reeds of the lake shore, not only for
+pleasure's sake, but to preserve it for the autumn floods when they
+might want to float on down to the Indian villages; and surely it would
+have afforded the finest sport in the way of trolling for lake trout.
+But with utter callousness he made his pistol serve as a hook and line.
+Often he would crawl down, cautiously as a stalking wolf, to the edge of
+a trout pool, then fire mercilessly at a great, spotted beauty below.
+The bullet itself did not penetrate the water, but the shock carried
+through and the fish usually turned a white belly to the surface. A fat
+brook or lake trout, dipped in flour and fried to a chestnut brown, was
+a delight that never grew old.
+
+At every fresh find Beatrice would come triumphant into Ben's presence;
+and at such times they scarcely conducted themselves like enemies. An
+unguessed boyishness and charm had come to Ben in these ripe, full
+summer days: the hard lines softened in his face and mostly the hard
+shine left his eyes. Beatrice found herself curiously eager to please
+him, taking the utmost care and pains with every dish she prepared for
+the table; and it was true that he made the most joyful, exultant
+response to her efforts. The searing heat back of his eyes was quite
+gone, now. Even the scarlet fluid of his veins seemed to flow more
+quietly, with less fire, with less madness. A gentling influence had
+come to bear upon him; a great kindness, a new forbearance had
+brightened his outlook toward all the world. A great redemption was even
+now hovering close to him,--some unspeakable and ultimate blessing that
+he could not name.
+
+Their days were not without pleasure. Often they ventured far into the
+heavy forest, and always fresh delight and thrilling adventure awaited
+them. Ever they learned more of the wild things that were their only
+neighbors,--creatures all the way down the scale from the lordly moose,
+proud of his growing antlers and monarch of the marshes, to the small
+pika, squeaking on the slide-rock of the high peaks. They knew and loved
+them all; they found ever-increasing enjoyment in the study of their shy
+ways and furtive occupations; they observed with delight the droll
+awkwardness of the moose calves, the impertinence and saucy speech of
+the jays, the humor of the black bear and the surly arrogance of the
+grizzly. They knew that superlative cunning of his wickedness, the
+wolverine; the stealth of the red fox; the ferociousness of the ermine
+whose brown skin, soon to be white, suggested only something silken and
+soft and tender instead of a fiendish cutthroat, terror of the Little
+People; the skulking cowardice of the coyote; and the incredible
+savagery and agility of the fisher,--that middle-sized hunter that
+catches and kills everything he can master except fish. They climbed
+high hills and descended into still, mysterious valleys; they paddled
+long, dreamy twilight hours on the lake; they traversed marshes where
+the moose wallowed; and they walked through ancient forests where the
+decayed vegetation was a mossy pulp under their feet. Sometimes they
+forgot the poignancy of their strange lives, romping sometimes,
+gossiping like jays in the tree-limbs, and sometimes, forgetting enmity,
+they told each other their secret beliefs and philosophies. They had
+picnics in the woods; and long, comfortable evenings before their
+dancing fire. But there was one enduring joy that always surpassed all
+the rest, a happiness that seemed to have its origin in the silent
+places of their hearts. It was just the return, after a fatiguing day in
+forest and marsh, to the sheltering walls of the cave.
+
+With his axe and hunting knife Ben prepared a complete set of furniture
+for their little abode. His first Work was a surpassing-marvelous
+dining-room suite of a table and two chairs. Then he put up shelves for
+their rapidly dwindling supplies of provisions and cut chunks of spruce
+log, with a bit of bark remaining, for fireside seats. And for more than
+a week, Beatrice was forbidden to enter a certain covert just beyond the
+glade lest she should prematurely discover an even greater wonder that
+Ben, in off hours, was preparing for a surprise.
+
+From time to time she heard him busily at work, the ring of his axe and
+his gay whistling as he whittled bolts of wood; but other than that it
+concerned the grizzly skin she had not the least idea of his task. But
+the work was completed at last, and then came two days of rather
+significant silence,--quite incomprehensible to the girl. She was at a
+loss why Ben did not reveal his treasure.
+
+But one morning she missed the familiar sounds of his fire-building,
+usually his first work on wakening. The very fact of their absence
+startled her wide-awake, while otherwise she would have perhaps slept
+late into the morning. Ben had seemingly vanished into the heavy timber
+across the glade.
+
+Presently she heard him muttering and grunting as he moved some heavy
+object to the door of the cave. Boyishly, he could not wait for the
+usual late hour when she wakened. He made a wholly unnecessary amount of
+noise as he built the fire. Then he thrust his lean head into the cavern
+opening.
+
+"I hope I haven't waked you up?" he said.
+
+The girl smiled secretly. "I wanted to wake up, anyway--to-day."
+
+"I wish you'd get up and come and look at something ugly I've got just
+outside the door."
+
+She hurried into her outer garments, and in a moment appeared. It was
+ugly, certainly, the object that he had fashioned with such tireless
+toil: not fitted at all for a stylish city home; yet the girl, for one
+short instant, stopped breathing. It was a hammock, suspended on a stout
+frame, to take the place of her tree-bough bed on the cave floor. He had
+used the grizzly skin, hanging it with unbreakable sinew, and fashioning
+it in such a manner that folds of the hide could be turned over her on
+cold nights. For a moment she gazed, very earnestly, into the rugged,
+homely, raw-boned face of her companion.
+
+Beatrice was deeply and inexplicably sobered, yet a curious happiness
+took swift possession of her heart. Reading the gratitude in her eyes,
+Ben's lips broke into a radiant smile.
+
+"I guess you've forgotten what day it is," he said.
+
+"Of course. I hardly know the month."
+
+"I've notched each day, you know. And maybe you've forgotten--on the
+ride out from Snowy Gulch--we talked of birthdays. To-day is yours."
+
+She stared at him in genuine astonishment. She had not dreamed that this
+little confidence, given in a careless moment of long weeks before, had
+lingered in the man's memory. She had supposed that the fury and
+savagery of his war with her father and the latter's followers had
+effaced all such things as this.
+
+And it was true that had this birthday come a few weeks before, on the
+river journey and previous to their occupation of the cave, Ben would
+have let it pass unnoticed. The smoldering fire in his brain would have
+seared to ashes any such kindly thought as this. But when the wild
+hunter leaves his leafy lair and goes to dwell, a man rather than a
+beast, in a permanent abode, he has thought for other subjects than his
+tribal wars and the blood-lust of his hates. The hearth, and the care
+and friendship of the girl had tamed Ben to this degree, at least.
+
+But wonders were not done. The look in the girl's eyes suddenly melted,
+as the warm sun melts ice, some of the frozen bitterness of his spirit.
+"It's your birthday--and I hope you have many of 'em," he went on. "No
+more like this--but all of 'em happy,--as you deserve."
+
+He walked toward her, and her eyes could not leave his. He bent soberly,
+and brushed her lips with his own.
+
+There were always worlds to talk about in the warm gleam of their fire.
+When the day's work was done, and the hush of early night gathered the
+land to its arms, they would sit on their fireside seats and settle all
+problems, now and hereafter, to the perfect satisfaction of them both.
+
+From Ben, Beatrice gained a certain strength of outlook as well as depth
+of insight, but she gave him in return more than she received. He felt
+that her influence, in his early years, would have worked wonders for
+him. She straightened out his moral problems for him, taught him lessons
+in simple faith; and her own childish sweetness and absolute purity
+showed his whole world in a new light.
+
+Sometimes they talked of religion and ethics, sometimes of science and
+economics, and particularly they talked of what was nearest to
+them,--the mysteries and works of nature. She had been a close observer
+of the forest. She had received some glimpse of its secret laws that
+were, when all was said and done, the basic laws of life. But for all
+her love of science she was not a mere biologist. She had a full and
+devout faith in Law and Judgment beyond any earthly sphere.
+
+"No one can live in this boundless wilderness and not believe," she told
+him earnestly, her dark eyes brimming with her fervor. "Perhaps I can't
+tell you why--maybe it's just a feeling of need, of insufficiency of
+self. Besides, God is close, like He was to the Israelites when they
+were in the wilderness; but you will remember that He never came close
+again.--This forest is so big and so awful, He knows he must stay close
+to keep you from dying of fear.--God may not be a reality to the people
+of the cities, where they see only buildings and streets, but Ben, He is
+to me. You can't forget Him up here. He stands on every mountain, just
+as the sons of Aaron saw Him."
+
+He found, to his surprise, that she was not ill-read, particularly in
+the old-time classics. But her environment had also influenced her
+choice of reading. She loved the old legends in the minor,--far-off and
+plaintive things that reflected the mood of the dusky forest in which
+she lived.
+
+One night, when the moon was in the sky, he told her of his war record,
+of the shell-shock and the strange, criminal mania that followed it; and
+then of his swift recovery. With an over-powering need of
+self-justification he told her of his further adventures with Ezram, of
+the old man's murder and the theft of the claim. She heard him out,
+listening attentively; but in loyalty to her father she did not let
+herself believe him entirely. The answer she gave him was the same as
+she had always given at his every reference to his side of the case.
+
+"If you were in the right, you'd take me back and let the law take its
+course," she told him. "You'd not be out here laying an ambush for them,
+to kill them when they try to rescue me."
+
+He could never make her understand how, by the intricacies of law, it
+would be a rare chance that he would be able to fasten the crime on the
+murderers: that he had taken the only sure way open to make them pay for
+Ezram's death. He told her of the old man's, final request; how that his
+war with her father and his men was a debt that, by secret, inscrutable
+laws of his being, could never be written off or disavowed. But he could
+never fully find words to uphold his position. The thing went back to
+his instincts, traced at last to the remorseless spirit of the wolf that
+was his heritage.
+
+Yet these hours of talk were immensely good for him. While they never
+met on common grounds, the girl's true outlook and nobility of character
+were ever more manifest to him; and were not without a gentling, healing
+influence upon him. He could not blind himself to them. And sometimes
+when he sat alone by his dying fire, as the dark menaced him, and the
+girl that was his charge slept within the portals of stone, he had the
+unescapable feeling that the very structure of his life was falling and
+shattering down; but even now he could see, an enchanted vista in the
+distance, a mightier, more glorious tower, builded and shaped by this
+woman's hand.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+While Beatrice was at her household tasks--cooking the meals, cleaning
+the cave, washing and repairing their clothes--Ben never forgot his more
+serious work. Certain hours every day he spent in exploration, seeking
+out the passes over the hills, examining every possible means of
+entrance and egress into his valley, getting the lay of the land and
+picking out the points from which he would make his attack. Already he
+knew every winding game trail and every detail of the landscape for five
+miles or more around. His ultimate vengeance seemed just as sure as the
+night following the day.
+
+Ever he listened for the first sound of the pack train in the forest;
+and even in his hours of pleasure his eyes ever roamed over the sweep of
+valley and marsh below. He was prepared for his enemies now. One or
+five, they couldn't escape him. He had provided for every contingency
+and had seemingly perfected his plan to the last detail.
+
+He had not the slightest fear that his eagerness would cost him his aim
+when finally his eye looked along the sights at the forms of his
+enemies, helpless in the marsh. He was wholly cold about the matter now.
+The lust and turmoil in his veins, remembered like a ghastly dream from
+that first night, returned but feebly now, if at all. This change, this
+restraint had been increasingly manifest since his occupation of the
+cave, and it had marked, at the same time, a growing barrier between
+himself and Fenris. But he could not deny but that such a development
+was wholly to have been expected. Fenris was a child of the open forest
+aisles, never of the fireside and the hearth. It was not that the wolf
+had ceased to give him his dint of faithful service, or that he loved
+him any the less. But each of them had other interests,--one his home
+and hearth; the other the ever-haunting, enticing call of the wildwood.
+Lately Fenris had taken to wandering into the forest at night, going and
+coming like a ghost; and once his throat and jowls had been stained with
+dark blood.
+
+"It's getting too tame for you here, old boy, isn't it?" Ben said to him
+one hushed, breathless night. "But wait just a little while more. It
+won't be tame then."
+
+It was true: the hunting party, if they had started at once, must be
+nearing their death valley by now. Except for the absolute worst of
+traveling conditions they would have already come. Ben felt a growing
+impatience: a desire to do his work and get it over. His pulse no longer
+quickened and leaped at the thought of vengeance; and the wolflike
+pleasure in simple killing could no longer be his. It would merely be
+the soldier's work--a dreadful obligation to perform speedily and to
+forget. Even the memory of the huddled form of his savior and friend, so
+silent and impotent in the dead leaves, did not stir him into madness
+now.
+
+Yet he never thought of disavowing his vengeance. It was still the main
+purpose of his life. He had no theme but that: when that work was done
+he could conceive of nothing further of interest on earth, nothing else
+worth living for. Not for an instant had he relented: except for that
+one kiss, on the occasion of her birthday, he had never broken his
+promise in regard to his relations with Beatrice. His first trait was
+steadfastness, a trait that, curiously enough, is inherent in all living
+creatures who are by blood close to the wild wolf, from the German
+police dog to the savage husky of the North. But he was certainly and
+deeply changed in these weeks in the cave. He no longer hated these
+three murderous enemies of his. The power to hate had simply died in his
+body. He regarded their destruction rather as a duty he owed old Ezram,
+an obligation that he would die sooner than forego.
+
+The hushed, dark, primal forest had a different appeal for him now. He
+loved it still, with the reverence and adoration of the forester he was,
+but no longer with that love a servant bears his master. He had
+distinctly escaped from its dominance. The passion and mounting fire
+that it wakened at the fall of darkness could no longer take possession
+of him, as strong drink possesses the brain, bending his will, making of
+him simply a tool and a pawn to gratify its cruel desires and to achieve
+its mysterious ends. He had been, in spirit, a brother of the wolf,
+before: a runner in the packs. Such had been the outgrowth of innate
+traits; part of his strange destiny. Now, after these weeks in the cave,
+he was a man. It was hard for him to explain even to himself. It was as
+if in the escape from his own black passions, he had also escaped the
+curious tyranny of the wild; not further subject to its cruel moods and
+whims, but rather one of a Dominant Breed, a being who could lift his
+head in defiance to the storm, obey his own will, go his own way. This
+was no little change. Perhaps, when all is said and done, it marks the
+difference between man and the lesser mammals, the thing that has
+evolved a certain species of the primates--simply woods creatures that
+trembled at the storm and cowered in the night--into the rulers and
+monarchs of the earth.
+
+Ben had come out from the darkened forest trails where he made his lairs
+and had gone into a cave to live! He had found a permanent abode--a
+lasting, shelter from the cold and the storm. It suggested a curious
+allegory to him. Some time in the long-forgotten past, probably when the
+later glaciers brought their promise of cold, all his race left their
+leafy bowers and found cave homes in the cliffs. Before that time they
+were merely woods children, blind puppets of nature, sleeping where
+exhaustion found them; wandering without aim in the tree aisles; mating
+when they met the female of their species on the trails and venturing on
+again; knowing the ghastly, haunting fear of the night and the blind
+terror of the storm and elements: merely higher beasts in a world of
+beasts. But they came to the caves. They established permanent abodes.
+They began to be men.
+
+All that now stands as civilization, all the conquest of the earth and
+sea and air began from that moment. It was the Great Epoch,--and Ben had
+illustrated it in his own life. The change had been infinitely slow, but
+certain as the movement of the planets in their spheres. Behind the
+sheltering walls they got away from fear,--that cruel bondage in which
+Nature holds all her wild creatures, the burden that makes them her
+slaves. Never to shudder with horror when the darkness fell in silence
+and mystery; never to have the heart freeze with terror when the thunder
+roared in the sky and the wind raged in the trees. The cave dwellers
+began to come into their own. Sheltered behind stone walls they could
+defy the elements that had enslaved them so long. This freedom gained
+they learned to strike the fire; they took one woman to keep the cave,
+instead of mating indiscriminately in the forest, thus marking the
+beginning of family life. Love instead of deathless hatred, gentleness
+rather than cruelty, peace in the place of passion, mercy and tolerance
+and self-control: all these mighty bulwarks of man's dominance grew into
+strength behind the sheltering walls of home.
+
+Thus in these few little weeks Ben Darby--a beast of the forest in his
+unbridled passions--had in some measure imaged the life history of the
+race. He had lived again the momentous regeneration. The protecting
+walls, the hearth, particularly Beatrice's wholesome and healing
+influence, had tamed him. He was still a forester, bred in the
+bone--loving these forest depths with an ardor too deep for words--but
+the mark of the beast was gone from his flesh.
+
+He could still deal justice to Ezram's murderers and thus keep faith
+with his dead partner; but the primal passions could no longer dominate
+him. His pet, however, remained the wolf. The sheltering cavern walls
+were never for him. He loved Ben with an undying devotion, yet a barrier
+was rising between them. They could not go the same paths forever.
+
+Matters reached a crisis between Fenris and himself one still, warm
+night in late July. The two were sitting side by side at the cavern maw,
+watching the slow enchantment of the forest under the spell of the
+rising moon; Beatrice had already gone to her hammock. As the last
+little blaze died in the fire, and it crackled at ever longer intervals,
+Ben suddenly made a moving discovery. The fringe of forest about him,
+usually so dreamlike and still, was simply breathing and throbbing with
+life.
+
+Ben dropped his hand to the wolf's shoulders. "The little folks are
+calling on us to-night," he said quietly.
+
+In all probability he spoke the truth. It was not an uncommon thing for
+the creatures of the wood--usually the lesser people such as rodents and
+the small hunters--to crowd close to the edge of the glade and try to
+puzzle out this ruddy mystery in its center. Unused to men they could
+never understand. Sometimes the lynx halted in his hunt to investigate,
+sometimes an old black bear--kindly, benevolent good-humored old
+bachelor that every naturalist loves--grunted and pondered at the edge
+of shadow, and sometimes even such lordly creatures as moose and caribou
+paused in their night journeys to see what was taking place.
+
+Curiously, the wolf started violently at Ben's touch. The man suddenly
+regarded him with a gaze of deepest interest. The hair was erect on the
+powerful neck, the eyes swam in pale, blue fire, and he was staring away
+into the mysterious shadows.
+
+"What do you see, old-timer?" Ben asked. "I wish I could see too."
+
+He brought his senses to the finest focus, trying hard to understand. He
+was aware only of the strained silence at first. Then here and there,
+about the dimmining circle of firelight, he heard the soft rustle of
+little feet, the subdued crack of a twig or the scratch of a dead leaf.
+The forest smells--of which there is no category in heaven or
+earth--reached him with incredible clarity. These were faint, vaguely
+exciting smells, some of them the exquisite fragrances of summer
+flowers, others beyond his ken. And presently two small, bright circles
+appeared in a distant covert, glowed once, and then went out.
+
+By peering closely, with unwinking eyes, he began to see other
+twin-circles of green and yellow light. Yet they were furtive little
+radiances--vanishing swiftly--and they were nothing of which to be
+afraid.
+
+"They _are_ out to-night," he murmured. "No wonder you're excited,
+Fenris. What is it--some celebration in the forest?"
+
+There was no possible explanation. Foresters know that on certain nights
+the wilderness seems simply to teem with life--scratchings and rustlings
+in every covert--and on other nights it is still and lifeless as a
+desert. The wild folk were abroad to-night and were simply paying
+casual, curious visits to Ben's fire.
+
+Once more Ben glanced at the wolf. The animal no longer crouched. Rather
+he was standing rigid, his head half-turned and lifted, gazing away
+toward a distant ridge behind the lake. A wilderness message had reached
+him, clear as a voice.
+
+But presently Ben understood. Throbbing through the night he heard a
+weird, far-carrying call--a long-drawn note, broken by half-sobs--the
+mysterious, plaintive utterance of the wild itself. Yet it was not an
+inanimate voice. He recognized it at once as the howl of a wolf, one of
+Fenris' wild brethren.
+
+The creature at his feet started as if from a blow. Then he stood
+motionless, listening, and the cry came the second time. He took two
+leaps into the darkness.
+
+Deeply moved, Ben watched him. The wolf halted, then stole back to his
+master's side. He licked the man's hand with his warm tongue, whining
+softly.
+
+"What is it, boy?" Ben asked. "What do you want me to do?"
+
+The wolf whined louder, his eyes luminous with ineffable appeal. Once
+more he leaped into the shadows, pausing as if to see if Ben would
+follow him.
+
+The man shook his head, rather soberly. A curious, excited light was in
+his eyes. "I can't go, old boy," he said. "This is my place--here.
+Fenris, I can't leave the cave."
+
+For a moment they looked eyes into eyes--in the glory of that moon as
+strange a picture as the wood gods ever beheld. Once more the wolf call
+sounded. Fenris whimpered softly.
+
+"Go ahead if you like," Ben told him. "God knows it's your destiny."
+
+The wolf seemed to understand. With a glad bark he sped away and almost
+instantly vanished into the gloom.
+
+But Fenris had not broken all ties with the cave. The chain was too
+strong for that, the hold on his wild heart too firm. If there is one
+trait, far and near in the wilds, that distinguishes the woods children,
+it is their inability to forget. Fenris had joined his fellows, to be
+sure; but he still kept watch over the cave.
+
+The strongest wolf in the little band, the nucleus about which the
+winter pack would form, he largely confined their hunting range to the
+district immediately about the cave. It held him like a chain of iron.
+Although the woods trails beguiled him with every strong appeal, the
+sight of his master was a beloved thing to him still, and scarcely a
+night went by but that he paused to sniff at the cavern maw, seeing that
+all was well. At such times his followers would linger, trembling and
+silent, in the farther shadows. Because they had never known the love of
+man they utterly failed to understand. But in an instant Fenris would
+come back to them, the wild urge in his heart seemingly appeased by the
+mere assurance of Ben's presence and safety.
+
+Ben himself was never aware of these midnight visits. The feet of the
+wolves were like falling feathers on the grass; and if sometimes,
+through the cavern maw, he half-wakened to catch the gleam of their
+wild eyes, he attributed it merely to the presence of skulking coyotes,
+curious concerning the dying coals of the fire.
+
+
+
+
+XXXII
+
+Beatrice had kept only an approximate track of the days; yet she knew
+that an attempt to rescue her must be almost at hand. Even traveling but
+half a dozen miles a day, and counting out a reasonable time for
+exploration and delays, her father's party must be close upon them. And
+the thought of the forthcoming battle between her abductor and her
+rescuers filled every waking moment with dread.
+
+She could not escape the thought of it. It lingered, hovering like a
+shadow, over all her gayest moments; it haunted her more sober hours,
+and it brought evil dreams at night. Her one hope was that her father
+had given her up for lost and had not attempted her rescue.
+
+She realized perfectly the perfection of Ben's plans. She knew that he
+had provided for every contingency; and besides, he had every natural
+advantage in his favor. The end was inevitable: his victory and the
+destruction of his foes. There would be little mercy for these three in
+the hands of this iron man from the eastern provinces. If they were to
+be saved it must be soon, not a week from now, nor when another moon had
+waned. If Ben was to be checkmated there were not many hours to waste.
+
+She had had no opportunity to escape, at first. Ben knew that she could
+not make her way over the hundreds of miles of howling wilderness
+without food supplies, and always the wolf had been on guard. He was
+like a were-wolf, a demon, anticipating her every move, knowing her
+secret thoughts. But the wolf had gone now to join his fellows. She was
+not aware of his almost nightly return. Perhaps the fact of his absence
+gave her an opportunity, her one chance to save her father from Ben's
+ambush.
+
+Conditions for escape were more favorable than at any time since their
+departure from the canoe landing, that late spring day of long ago. The
+wolf was gone; Ben's guard of her was ever more lax. The season was
+verdant: she could supplement what supplies she took from the cave with
+roots and berries, and the warm nights would enable her to carry a
+minimum of blankets. She knew that she could never hope to succeed in
+the venture except by traveling light and fast. On the other hand she
+would need all of Ben's remaining supplies to bring her through: in a
+few more days the stores would be so low that she could not attempt the
+trip. Human beings cannot survive, in the forests of the north, on roots
+and berries alone. Tissue-building flour and sustaining meat are
+necessary to climb the ridges and battle the thicket.
+
+How could she obtain these things? For all his seeming carelessness Ben
+kept a fairly close watch on her actions, and he would discover her
+flight within a few hours. Stronger than she, and knowing every trail
+and pass for miles around he could overtake her with ease. He gave her
+no opportunity to seize his rifle, load it and turn it against him, thus
+making her escape by force.
+
+The fact that she would leave him without food mattered not one way or
+another. He would still have his rifle, and his small stock of rifle
+cartridges would procure sufficient big game to sustain him for weeks
+and months to come. After all, the whole issue depended on the
+rifle,--the symbol of force. It would be his instrument of vengeance
+when his chance came. If she could only take this weapon from him she
+need not fear the coming of her rescuers. In that case Ben would be
+helpless against them.
+
+Unfortunately, the gun rarely left his hands. If indeed she should
+attempt to seize it he would wrest it away from her before she could
+destroy or injure it. But it was a hopeful fact that the rifle was
+useless without its shells!
+
+To procure these, however, presented an unsolvable problem. Any way she
+turned she found a barrier Ben kept them in his shell belt, and he wore
+the belt about his waist, waking or sleeping. Only to procure it, run
+like a deer and hurl it into the rapids of the Yuga,--and her problem
+would be absolutely solved. Ben would be obliged to leave the cave home
+at once and return with her to the Yuga cabins, utilizing the few stores
+they had left for the journey--simply because to stay, unarmed, would
+mean to die of starvation. Indeed the few remaining supplies would not
+more than last them through now, traveling early and late, so if the
+venture were to be attempted at all it must be at once. On the other
+hand his rifle and shells would enable the two of them to remain in the
+cavern indefinitely on a diet of meat alone.
+
+As she worked about the cavern she brooded over the plan; but at first
+she could conceive of no possible way to procure the shells. If the
+chance came, however, she wanted to be ready. She planned all other
+details of the venture; the shortest route to the nearest rapids of the
+river where she might dispose of the deadly cylinders of brass. It
+became necessary, also, to consider the lesser weapon for the plain
+reason that it might defeat her in the moment of her success.
+
+Ben kept the weapon in his cartridge belt, but the extra pistol shells
+were among the supplies. They could easily be procured. It would also be
+necessary to induce him to fire away the few shells that he carried in
+the pistol magazine; but this would likely be easy enough to do. He put
+little reliance on the weapon, trusting rather to his rifle both for the
+impending war and the procurance of big game; and he would not harbor
+the pistol shells as long as he had his rifle.
+
+But the days were passing! Any attempt at deliverance must be made
+before the food stores were further depleted. They could not make the
+march without food. Days and nights overtook her with her triumph as far
+distant as ever. The moment of opportunity she had watched for, in which
+she might seize the cartridge belt and destroy it, had never come to
+pass. The plans she had made while the night lay soft and mysterious in
+the solitudes had all come to nothing. He had never, as she had hoped,
+removed his belt and forgotten to replace it, nor had his slumber ever
+been so deep that she could steal it from him.
+
+His own triumph surely was almost at hand. Surely his pursuers had
+almost overtaken him. The stores had already fallen far below the margin
+of safety for the long journey home. The thought was with her, and she
+was desperate one long, warm afternoon as she searched for roots and
+berries in the forest. Edible plants were ever more hard to find, these
+past days; but what there were she gathered almost automatically,
+herself lost in a deep preoccupation. And all at once her hand reached
+toward a little vine of black berries, each with a green tuft at the
+end, not unlike gooseberries in southern gardens.
+
+As if by instinct, hardly aware of the motion, she withdrew her hand.
+She knew this vine. She was enough of a forester never to mistake it.
+It was the deadly nightshade, and a handful of the berries spelt death.
+She started to look elsewhere.
+
+But presently she paused, arrested by an idea so engrossing and yet so
+terrible that her heart seemed to pause in her breast. Had any rules
+been laid down for her to follow in her war with Ben? Was she to
+consider methods at such a time as this? Was she not a woods girl,--a
+woman, not a child, trained and tutored in the savage code of the wild
+that knows no ethics other than might, whether might of arm or craft, of
+brain or fell singleness of purpose? Should she consider ethics now?
+
+Her father's life was in imminent danger. Another day might find him
+stretched lifeless before her. Ben had not hesitated to use every weapon
+in his power; she should not hesitate now. Ben had made his war; she
+would wage it by his own code.
+
+For a moment she stood almost without outward motion, intrigued by the
+possibilities of this little handful of berries. She shuddered once,
+nervously, but there was no further impulse of remorse. Perhaps she
+trembled slightly; and her eyes were simply depthless shadows under her
+brows.
+
+They were so little, seemingly so inoffensive: these dark berries in the
+shadows of the covert. They were scarcely to be noticed twice. But not
+even the savage grizzly was of such might; storms or seas were not so
+deadly. There they were, inconspicuous among their sister plants,
+waiting for her hand.
+
+It was right that they should be black in color. Their blackness was as
+of a black night without a star shining through,--a black cloud with
+never a rainbow to promise hope. She could not turn her eyes away! How
+black they were among the green leaves--lightless as death itself.
+
+A handful of them meant death: her father had warned her about them long
+ago. But half a handful--perhaps a dozen of the sable berries in the
+palm of her hand--what did _they_ mean? Just a sickness wherein one
+could no longer guard a prisoner. They were a powerful alkaloid, she
+knew; and a dozen of them would likely mean hours and hours of deep,
+dreamless sleep,--a sleep in which one could take no reckoning of hands
+fumbling at a cartridge belt! Half a handful would, in all probability,
+fail to strike the life from such a powerful frame as Ben's, but would
+certainly act upon him like a powerful opiate and leave him helpless in
+her hands.
+
+Eagerly her fingers plucked the black berries.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII
+
+In one of the tin cups Beatrice pressed the juice from the nightshade,
+obtaining perhaps a tablespoonful of black liquor. To this she added
+considerable sugar, barely tasting the mixture on the end of her finger.
+The balance was inclining toward the success of her plan. The sugar
+mostly killed the pungent taste of the berries.
+
+Then she concealed the cup in a cluster of vines, ready for the moment
+of need. Her next act was to procure from among the supplies the little
+cardboard box containing half a dozen or so of her pistol shells. The
+way of safety was to destroy these first. The effect of the poison might
+be of only a few minutes' duration, and every motion might count. Under
+any conditions, they would be out of the way. She was careful, with a
+superlative cunning, to take the box as well as its contents. She
+foresaw that in all likelihood Ben would seek the shells as soon as he
+fired the few that remained in his pistol magazine; and an empty
+container might put him upon his guard. On the other hand, if he could
+not find the box at all, he could easily be led to believe that it had
+been simply misplaced among the other supplies.
+
+She scattered the shells in the heavy brush where not even the bright,
+searching eyes of the Canada jay might ever find them. Then she hastened
+up the ridge to meet Ben on his way to the cave.
+
+She waited a few minutes, then spying his stalwart form at the edge of
+the beaver meadow, she tripped down to meet him. He was not in the least
+suspicious of this little act of friendship. It was quite the customary
+thing, lately, for her thus to watch for his coming; and his brown face
+always lighted with pleasure at the first glimpse of her graceful form
+framed by the spruce. She too had always taken pleasure in these little
+meetings and in the gay talk they had as they sped down toward the
+cavern; but her delight was singularly absent to-day. She tried to
+restrain the wild racing of her heart.
+
+She knew she must act her part. Her plan was to put him off his guard,
+to hide her treachery with pretended friendship. To meet him here--far
+distant from the poison cup hidden in the vines--would give her time to
+master her leaping heart and to strengthen her self-control.
+
+Yet she had hardly expected him to greet her in just this way,--with
+such a light in his eyes and such obvious delight in his smile. He had a
+rather boyish, friendly smile, this foe of hers whom she was about to
+despatch into the very shadow of death. She dispelled quickly a small,
+faltering voice of remorse. This was no time for remorse, for gentleness
+and mercy. She hurried to his side.
+
+"You're flushed from hurrying down that hill," he told her gayly.
+"Beatrice, you're getting prettier every day."
+
+"It's the simple life that's doing it, Ben! No late hours, no
+indigestible food--"
+
+"Speaking of food--I'm famished. I hope you've got something nice for
+lunch--and I know you have."
+
+She _had_ been careful with to-day's lunch; but it had merely been part
+of her plot to put him off his guard. "Caribou tenderloin--almost the
+last of him--wocus bread and strawberries," she assured him. "Does that
+suit your highness?"
+
+He made a great feint of being overwhelmed by the news. "Then let's
+hurry. Take my arm and we'll fly."
+
+She seized the strong forearm, thrilled in spite of herself by the
+muscles of steel she felt through the sleeves. He fell into his fastest
+walking stride,--long steps that sped the yards under them. They emerged
+from the marsh and started to climb the ridge.
+
+At a small hollow beside the creek bed her fingers suddenly tightened on
+his arm. A thrill that was more of wonder than of joy coursed through
+her; and her dark eyes began to glitter with excitement. The wilderness
+was her ally to-day. She suddenly saw her chance--in a manner that could
+not possibly waken his suspicions of her intentions--of disposing of the
+remainder of his pistol cartridges.
+
+On a log thirty feet distant sat an old grouse with half a dozen of her
+brood, all of them perched in a row and relying on their protective
+coloring to save them from sight. They were Franklin's grouse--and they
+had appeared as if in answer to Beatrice's secret wish.
+
+These birds were common enough in their valley, and not a day passed
+without seeing from five to fifty of them, yet the sight went straight
+home to Beatrice's superstitions. "Get them with your pistol," she
+whispered. "I want them all--for a big grouse pie to-night."
+
+"But our pistol shells are getting low," Ben objected. "I've hardly got
+enough shells in the gun to get 'em all--"
+
+"No matter. You have to use them some time. There's a few more in the
+cave, I think. We'll have to rely on big game from now on, anyway. Don't
+miss one."
+
+Ben drew his pistol, then walked up within twenty feet. He drew slowly
+down, knocking the old bird from her perch with a bullet through the
+neck.
+
+"Good work," Beatrice exulted. "Now for the chicks."
+
+Ben took the bird on the extreme right, and again the bullet sped true.
+The remainder of the flock had become uneasy now; and at the next shot
+all except one flew into the branches of the surrounding trees. This
+shot was equally successful, and with the fourth he knocked the
+remaining bird from the log.
+
+Each of the four birds he had downed with a shot either through the head
+or the neck; and such shooting would have been marvelous indeed in the
+eyes of the tenderfoot. But both these two foresters knew that there was
+nothing exceptional about it. Pistol shooting is simply a matter of a
+sure eye and steady nerves, combined with a greater or less period of
+practice. Few were the trappers or woodsmen north of fifty-three that
+could not have done as much.
+
+Ben turned his attention to the fowl on the lower tree limbs, hitting
+once but missing the second time. To correct this unpardonable
+proceeding, he knocked with his seventh a fat cock, his spurs just
+starting, from almost the top of a young spruce.
+
+"Here's one more," Beatrice urged him. "I'll need every one for the
+pie."
+
+But the gun was empty. The firing pin snapped harmlessly against the
+breach. They gathered the grouse and sped on down to the cavern.
+
+Her heart seemingly leaped into her throat at every beat; but with
+steady hands and smiling face she went about the preparation of the
+meal. She fried the venison and baked the wocus bread, and with more
+than usual spirit and gaiety set the dishes at Ben's place at the
+table. "Draw up your chair," she told him. "I'll have the tea in a
+minute."
+
+Ben peered with sudden interest into her face. "What's troubling you,
+Bee?" he asked gently. "You're pale as a ghost."
+
+"I'm not feeling overly well." Her eyes dropped before his gaze. "I'm
+not hungry--at all. But it's nothing to worry about--"
+
+She saw by his eyes that he _was_ worrying; yet it was evident that he
+had not the slightest suspicion of the real cause of the sudden pallor
+in her cheeks. She saw his face cloud and his eyes darken; and again she
+heard that faint, small voice of remorse--whispering deep in her heart's
+heart. He was always so considerate of her, this jailer of hers. His
+concern was always so real and deep. Yet in a moment more the kindly
+sympathy would be gone from his face. He would be lying very still--and
+his face would be even more pale than hers.
+
+Listlessly she walked to the door of the cave, procuring a handful of
+dried red-root leaves that she used for tea. Through the cavern opening
+he saw her drop them into the bucket that served as their teapot.
+
+Then she came back for the oiled, cloth bag that contained the last of
+their sugar. This was always one of her little kindnesses,--to sweeten
+his tea for him before she brought it to him. He began to eat his steak.
+
+In one glance the girl saw that he was wholly unsuspecting. He trusted
+her; in their weeks together he had lost all fear of treachery from her.
+There he was, exulting over the frugal lunch she had prepared, with no
+inkling of the deadly peril that even now was upon him. She wished he
+did not trust her so completely; it would be easier for her if he was
+just a little wary, a little more on guard.
+
+She felt cold all over. She could hardly keep from shivering. But this
+was the moment of trial; the thing would be done in a moment more. She
+mustn't give way yet to the growing weakness in her muscles. She walked
+to the vine where she had left the potion.
+
+How much of it there was--it seemed to have doubled in quantity since
+she had left it. A handful of the black berries meant death--certain as
+the sunrise--but what did half a handful mean? The question came to her
+again. How did she know that half a handful did not mean death too,--not
+just hours of slumber, but relentless and irremediable death! Would that
+be the end of her day's work--to see this tall, friendly warden of hers
+lying dead before her gaze, the laughter gone from his lips and the
+light faded from his eyes? She would be free then to strip the shell
+belt from his waist. He would never waken to prevent her. She could
+escape too--back to her father's home--and leave him in the cave.
+
+All that he had told her concerning his war with her father recurred to
+her in one vivid flash. Could it have been that he had told the
+truth--that her father and his followers had been the attackers in the
+beginning? She had never believed him fully; but could it be that he was
+in the right? His claim had been invaded, he said, and his one friend
+murdered in cold blood. Was this not cause enough, by the code of the
+North, for a war of reprisal?
+
+But even as these thoughts came to her, she had walked boldly to the
+fire and emptied the contents of the cup into the boiling water in the
+teapot. Ben would have only had to look up to see her do it. Yet still
+he did not suspect.
+
+She waited an instant, steadying herself for the ordeal to come. Then
+she took the pot off the fire and poured the hot contents into the cup
+that had just held the potion. She had been careful not to put enough
+water into the pot to weaken the drink. The cup brimmed; but none was
+left. She brought it steaming to Ben's side.
+
+No kindly root tripped her feet as she entered, no merciful unsteadiness
+caused her to drop this cup of death and spill its contents.
+
+"Thanks, Beatrice." Ben looked up, smiling. "I'm a brute to let you fix
+my tea when you are feeling so bad. But I sure am grateful, if that
+helps any--"
+
+His voice sounded far away, like a voice in a nightmare. "It's pretty
+strong, I'm afraid," she told him. "The leaves weren't very good, and I
+boiled them too long. I'm afraid you'll find it bitter."
+
+"I'll drink it, if it's bitter as gall," he assured her, "after your
+kindness to fix it."
+
+His hand reached and seized the handle of the cup. Even now--_now_--he
+was raising it to his lips. In an instant more he would be pouring it
+down his throat, too considerate of her to admit its unwholesome taste,
+drinking it down though it tasted the potion of death that it was! The
+hair seemed to start on her head.
+
+Then she seemed to writhe as in a convulsion. Her voice rose in a
+piercing scream. "Ben--_Ben_--_don't drink it_!" she cried. "God have
+mercy on my soul!"
+
+But with that utterance a strength surpassing that of sinew and muscle
+returned to her. She reached and knocked the cup from his hand; and its
+black contents, like dark blood, stained the sandy floor of the cavern.
+
+Ben's first thought was curiously not of his own narrow escape, but was
+rather in concern for Beatrice. Whether or not he had actually
+swallowed any of the liquor in the cup he did not know; nor did he give
+the matter a thought. He was aware of only the terror-stricken girl
+before him, her face deathly white and her eyes starting and wide. He
+leaped to his feet.
+
+Fearing that she was about to faint he steadied her with his hand. The
+echo of her scream died in the cavern, the cup rolled on the floor and
+came to a standstill against the wall; but still she made no sound, only
+gazing as if entranced. But slowly, as he steadied her, the blessed
+tears stole into her eyes and rolled down her white cheeks; and once
+more breath surged into her lungs.
+
+"Never mind, Beatrice," the man was saying, his deep, rough voice gentle
+as a woman's. "Don't cry--please don't cry--just forget all about it.
+Let's go over to your hammock and rest awhile."
+
+With a strong arm he guided her to her cot, and smiling kindly, pushed
+her down into it. "Just take it easy," he advised. "And forget all about
+it. You'll be all right in a minute."
+
+"But you don't understand--you don't know--what I tried to do--"
+
+"No matter. Tell me after a while, if you want to. Don't tell me at all
+if you'd rather not. I'm going back to my lunch." He laughed, trying to
+bring her to herself. "I wouldn't miss that caribou steak for
+anything--even though I can't have my tea. Just lay down a while, and
+rest."
+
+His rugged face lighted as he smiled, kindly and tolerantly, and then he
+turned to go. But her solemn voice arrested him.
+
+"Wait, Ben. I want you to know--now--so you won't trust me again--or
+give me another chance. The cup--was poisoned."
+
+But the friendly light did not yet wane in his eyes. "I didn't think it
+was anything very good--the way you knocked it out of my hand. We'll
+just pretend it was very bad tea--and let it go at that."
+
+"No. It was nightshade--it might have killed you." She spoke in a flat,
+lifeless voice. "I didn't want it to kill you--I just wanted to give you
+enough to put you to sleep--so I could take your rifle shells and throw
+them away--but I was willing to let you drink it, even if it _did_ kill
+you."
+
+The man looked at her, in infinite compassion, then came and sat beside
+her in the hammock. Rather quietly he took one of her hands and gazed at
+it, without seeing it, a long time. Then he pressed it to his lips.
+
+For a breath he held it close to his cheek, his eyes lightless and far
+away, and she gazed at him in amazement.
+
+"You'd kiss my hand--after what I did--?"
+
+"After what you _didn't_ do," he corrected. "Please, Beatrice--don't
+blame yourself. Some way--I understand things better--than I used to.
+Even if you had killed me--I don't see why it wouldn't have been your
+right. I've held you here by force. Yet you didn't let me drink the
+stuff. You knocked it out of my hand."
+
+And now, for the first time, an inordinate amazement came into his face.
+He looked at her intently, yet with no unfriendliness, no passion.
+Rather it was with overwhelming wonder.
+
+"_You knocked it out of my hands_!" he repeated, more loudly. "Oh,
+Beatrice--it's my turn to beg forgiveness now! When I was at your mercy,
+and the cup at my lips--you spared me. Why did you do it, Beatrice?"
+
+He gazed at her with growing ardor. She shook her head. She simply did
+not know the reason.
+
+"It's not your place to feel penitent," he told her, with infinite
+sincerity. "If you had let me take it, you'd have just served me
+right--you'd have just paid me back in my own coin. It was fair
+enough--to use every advantage you had. Good Lord, have you forgotten
+that I am holding you here by force? But instead--you saved me, when you
+might have killed me--and won the fight. All you've done is to show
+yourself the finer clay--that's what you've done. God knows I suppose
+the woman is always finer clay than the man--yet it comes with a jolt,
+just the same. It's not for you to be down-hearted--Heaven knows the
+strength you've shown is above any I ever had, or ever will have. You've
+shown how to feel mercy--I could never show anything but hate, and
+revenge. You've shown me a bigger and stronger code than mine. And
+there's nothing--nothing I can say."
+
+The tone changed once more to the personal and solicitous. "But it's
+been a big strain on you--I can see that. I believe I'd lie here and
+rest awhile if I were you. I'll eat my dinner--and the fire's about out
+too. That's the girl--Beatrice."
+
+Gently he picked her up, seemingly with no physical effort and laid her
+in her hammock. "Then--you'll forgive me?" she asked brokenly.
+
+"Good Heavens, I wish there was something to forgive--so we'd be a
+little more even. But you've accomplished something, Beatrice--and I
+don't know what it is yet--I only know you've changed me--and softened
+me--as I never dreamed any one in the world could. Now go to sleep."
+
+He turned from her, but the food on the table no longer tempted him. For
+a full hour he stood before the ashes of the fire, deeply and
+inextricably bewildered with himself, with life, and with all these
+thoughts and hopes and regrets that thronged him. He was like ashes now
+himself; the fires of his life seemed burned out. The thought recalled
+him to the need of cutting fuel for the night's fire.
+
+He might be able to quiet the growing turmoil in his brain when the
+still shadows of the spruce closed around him. He seized his axe, then
+peered into the cave. Beatrice, worn out by the stress of the hour
+before and immensely comforted by Ben's words, was already deeply
+asleep. His rifle leaned against the wall of the cavern, and he put it
+in the hollow of his arm. It was not that he feared Beatrice would
+attempt to procure it. The act was mostly habit, combined with the fact
+that their supply of meat was all but exhausted and he did not wish to
+miss any opportunity for big game.
+
+The forest was particularly gloomy to-day. Its shadows lay deep. And
+this was not merely the result of his own darkened outlook: glancing up,
+he saw that clouds were gathering in the sky. They would need fuel in
+plenty to keep the fire bright to-night. Evidently rain was
+impending,--one of those cold, steady downpours that are disliked so
+cordially by the folk of the upper Selkirks.
+
+He went a full two hundred yards before he found a tree to his liking.
+It was a tough spruce of medium height and just at the edge of the
+stream. He laid his rifle down, leaning it against a fallen log; then
+began his work.
+
+It was an awkward place to stand; but he gave no thought to it. His mind
+dwelt steadily on the events in the cavern of the hour before; the
+girl's remorse in the instant that she had him at her mercy and the
+example it set for him. The blade bit into the wood with slow
+encroachments. Perhaps the expenditure of brute energy in swinging the
+axe would relieve his pent-up feelings.
+
+He was not watching his work. His blows struck true from habit. Now the
+tree was half-severed: it was time to cut on the opposite side. Suddenly
+his axe crashed into yielding, rotten wood.
+
+Instantly the powers of the wilderness took their long-awaited toll. Ben
+had been unwary, too absorbed by his swirling thoughts to mark the
+ambush of death that had been prepared for him. Ever to keep watch, ever
+to be on guard: such is the first law of the wild; and Ben had
+disregarded it. Half of the tree had been rotten, changing the direction
+of its fall and crashing it down before its time.
+
+Ben leaped for his life, instinctively aiming for the shelter of the log
+against which he had inclined his rifle; but the blow came too soon. He
+was aware only of the rush of air as he leaped, an instant's hovering at
+the crest of a depthless chasm, then the sense of a mighty, resistless
+blow hurling him into infinity.
+
+Ben's rifle, catching the full might of the blow, was broken like a
+match. Ben himself was crushed to earth as beneath a meteor, the branchy
+trunk shattering down upon his stalwart form like the jaws of a great
+trap. He uttered one short, half-strangled cry.
+
+Then the darkness, shot with varied and multiple lights, dropped over
+him. The noise of the falling tree died away; the forest-dwellers
+returned to their varied activities. The rain clouds deepened and spread
+above his motionless form.
+
+
+
+XXXIV
+
+Beatrice's dreams were troubled after Ben's departure into the forest.
+She tossed and murmured, secretly aware that all was not well with her.
+Yet in the moments that she half-wakened she ascribed the vague warning
+to nervousness only, falling immediately to sleep again. Wakefulness
+came vividly to her only with the beginnings of twilight.
+
+She opened her eyes; the cavern was deep with shadow. She lay resting a
+short time, adjusting her eyes to the soft light. In an instant all the
+dramatic events of the day were recalled to her: the tin cup that had
+held the poison still lay against the wall, and the liquor still stained
+the sandy floor, or was it only a patch of deeper shadow?
+
+She wondered why Ben did not come into the cave. Was he embittered
+against her, after all; had he spoken as he did just from kindness, to
+save her remorse? She listened for the familiar sounds of his fuel
+cutting, or his other work about the camp. Wherever he was, he made no
+sound at all.
+
+She sat up then, staring out through the cavern maw. For an instant she
+experienced a deep sense of bewilderment at the pressing gloom, so
+mysterious and unbroken over the face of the land. But soon she
+understood what was missing. The fire was out.
+
+The fact went home to her with an inexplicable shock. She had become so
+accustomed to seeing the bright, cheerful blaze at the cavern mouth that
+its absence was like a little tragedy in itself. Always it had been the
+last vista of her closing eyes as she dropped off to sleep--the soft,
+warm glow of the coals--and the sight always comforted her. She could
+scarcely remember the morning that it wasn't crackling cheerily when she
+wakened. Ben had always been so considerate of her in this
+regard--removing the chill of the cave with its radiating heat to make
+it comfortable for her to dress. Not even coals were left now--only
+ashes, gray as death.
+
+She got up, then walked to the cavern maw. For a moment she stood
+peering into the gloom, one hand resting against the portals of stone.
+The twilight was already deep. It was the supper hour and past; dark
+night was almost at hand. There could be no further doubt of Ben's
+absence. He was not at the little creek getting water, nor did she hear
+the ring of his axe in the forest. She wondered if he had gone out on
+one of his scouting expeditions and had not yet returned. Of course this
+was the true explanation; she had no real cause to worry.
+
+Likely enough he had little desire to return to the cavern now. She
+could picture him following at his tireless pace one of the winding
+woods trails, lost in contemplation, his vivid eyes clouded with
+thought.
+
+She looked up for the sight of the familiar stars that might guide him
+home. They were all hidden to-night. Not a gleam of light softened the
+stark gloom of the spruce. As she watched the first drops of rain fell
+softly on the grass.
+
+The drops came in ever-increasing frequency, cold as ice on her hand.
+She heard them rustling in the spruce boughs; and far in the forest she
+discerned the first whine of the wakening wind. The sound of the rain
+was no longer soft. It swelled and grew, and all at once the wind caught
+it and swept it into her face. And now the whole forest moaned and
+soughed under the sweep of the wind.
+
+There is no sound quite like the beat of a hard rain on dense forest. It
+has no startling discords, but rather a regular cadence as if the wood
+gods were playing melodies in the minor on giant instruments,--melodies
+remembered from the first, unhappy days of the earth and on instruments
+such as men have never seen. But this was never a melody to fill the
+heart with joy. It touches deep chords of sorrow in the most secret
+realms of the spirit. The rain song grew and fell as the gusts of the
+wind swept it, and the rock walls of the cliff swam in clouds of spray.
+
+The storm could not help but bring Ben to camp, she thought. At least
+she did not fear that he would lose his way: he knew every trail and
+ridge for miles around the cave. Even such pressing, baleful darkness as
+this could not bewilder him. She went back to her cot to wait his
+coming.
+
+The minutes seemed interminable. Time had never moved so slowly before.
+She tried to lie still, to relax; then to direct her thought in other
+channels; but all of these meandering streams flowed back into the main
+current which was Ben. Yet it was folly to worry about him; any moment
+she would hear his step at the edge of the forest. But the night was so
+dark, and the storm so wild. A half-hour dragged its interminable length
+away.
+
+Her uneasiness was swiftly developing into panic. Just to-day she was
+willing to risk his life for her freedom: it was certainly folly now to
+goad herself to despair by dwelling on his mysterious absence. It might
+speed the passing minutes if she got up and found some work to do about
+the cave; but she simply had no heart for it. Once she sat up, only to
+lie down again.
+
+The moments dragged by. Surely he would have had time to reach camp by
+now. The storm neither increased nor decreased; only played its mournful
+melodies in the forest. The song of the rain was despairing,--low
+mournful notes rising to a sharp crescendo as the fiercer gusts swept it
+into the tree tops. The limbs murmured unhappily as they smote together;
+and a tall tree, swaying in the wind, creaked with a maddening
+regularity. She was never so lonely before, so darkly miserable.
+
+"I want him to come," her voice suddenly spoke aloud. It rang strangely
+in the gloomy cave. "I want him to come back to me."
+
+She felt no impulse for the words. They seemed to speak themselves.
+Presently she sat erect, her heart leaping with inexpressible relief, at
+the sound of a heavy tread at the edge of the glade.
+
+The steps came nearer, and then paused. She sprang to her feet and went
+to the mouth of the cave. A silence that lived between the beating rain
+and the complaining wind settled down about her. Her eyes could not
+pierce the darkness.
+
+"Is that you, Ben?" she called.
+
+She strained into the silence for his reply. The cold drops splashed
+into her face.
+
+"Ben?" she called again. "Is that you?"
+
+Then something leaped with an explosive sound, and running feet splashed
+in the wet grass in flight. The little spruce trees at the edge of the
+glade whipped and rustled as a heavy body crashed through. The steps had
+been only those of some forest beast--a caribou, perhaps, or a
+moose--come to mock her despair.
+
+She remembered that Ben had been wishing for just such a visitation
+these past few days; of course in the daylight hours when he could see
+to shoot. Their meat supply was almost gone.
+
+She did not go to her cot again. She stood peering into the gloom. All
+further effort to repel her fears came to nothing. The storm was already
+of two hours' duration, and Ben would have certainly returned to the
+cave unless disaster had befallen him. Was he lost somewhere in the
+intertwining trails, seeking shelter in a heavy thicket until the dawn
+should show him his way? There were so many pitfalls for the
+unsuspecting in these trackless wilds.
+
+Yet she could be of no aid to him. The dark woods stretched
+interminably; she would not even know which way to start. It would just
+mean to be lost herself, should she attempt to seek him. The trails that
+wound through the glades and over the ridges had no end.
+
+"Ben!" she called again. Then with increasing volume. "Ben!"
+
+But no echo returned. The darkness swallowed the sound at once.
+
+The night was chill: she longed for the comfort of the fire. The actual
+labor of building it might take her mind from her fears for a while at
+least; and its warm glow might dispel the growing cold of fear and
+loneliness in her breast. Besides, it might be a beacon light for Ben.
+She turned at once to the pile of kindling Ben had prepared.
+
+But before she could build a really satisfactory fire, one that would
+endure the rain, she must cut fuel from some of the logs Ben had hewn
+down and dragged to the cave. She lighted a short piece of pitchy wood,
+intending to locate the heavy camp axe. Then, putting on her heavy
+coat--the same garment of lustrous fur which Ben had sent her back for
+the day of her abduction--she ventured into the storm.
+
+The rain splashed in vain at her torch. The pitch burned with a fierce
+flame. But her eyes sought in vain for the axe.
+
+This was a strange thing: Ben always left it leaning against one of the
+chunks of spruce. Presently she halted, startled, gazing into the black
+depths of the forest.
+
+Ben had taken it; he had plainly gone forth after fuel. Trees stood all
+about the little glade: he couldn't have gone far. The inference was
+obvious: whatever disaster had befallen him must have occurred within a
+few hundred yards of the cave.
+
+Holding her torch high she went to the edge of the glade and again
+called into the gloom. There was no repression in her voice now. She
+called as loudly as she could. She started to push on into the fringe of
+timber.
+
+But at once she paused, holding hard on her self-control. It was folly
+to make a blind search. To penetrate the dark mystery of the forest with
+only this little light--already flickering out--would probably result in
+becoming lost herself. Such a course would not help Ben's cause.
+Evidently he was lying within a few hundred feet of her,
+unconscious--perhaps dead--or he would have replied to her call.
+
+Dead! The thought sped an icy current throughout the hydraulic system of
+her veins.
+
+She was a mountain girl, and she made no further false motions. She
+turned at once to the cave, and piling up her kindling, built a fire
+just at the mouth of the cave. It was protected here in some degree from
+the rain, and the wind was right to carry the smoke away. This fire
+would serve to keep her direction and lead her back to the cavern.
+
+Once more she ventured into the storm, and gathering all the cut fuel
+she could find, piled it on her fire. The two spruce chunks that Ben had
+cut for their fireside seats were placed as back logs. Then she hunted
+for pine knots taken from the scrub pines that grew in scattering clumps
+among the spruce, and which were laden with pitch.
+
+One of these knots she put in the iron pan they used for frying, then
+lighted it. Then she pushed into the timber.
+
+Holding her light high she began to encircle the glade clear to the
+barrier of the cliffs. To the eyes of the wild creatures this might have
+been a never-to-be-forgotten picture: the slight form of the girl, her
+face blanched and her eyes wide and dark in the flaring light, her
+grotesque torch and its weird shadows, and then rain sweeping down
+between. She reached the cliff, then started back, making a wider
+circle.
+
+Adding fresh fuel to the torch, she peered into every covert and
+examined with minute care any human-shaped shadow in that eerie world of
+shadows; but the long half-circle brought her back to the cliff wall
+without results. She was already wet to the skin, and her pine knots
+were nearly spent. Ever the load of dread was heavier at her heart. In
+the hour or more she had searched--she had no way of estimating
+time--she had already gone farther than Ben usually went for his fuel.
+
+As yet no tears came; only the raindrops lay on her face and curled her
+dark hair in ringlets. But she must not give up yet. It was hard to hold
+her shoulders straight; but she must make the long circle once more.
+
+With courage and strength such as she had not dreamed she possessed,
+she launched forward again. But fatigue was breaking her now. The tree
+roots tripped her faltering feet, the branches clutched at her as she
+passed. It was hard to tell what territory she had searched, or how far
+she had gone. But when she was halfway around, she suddenly halted,
+motionless as an image, at the edge of the stream.
+
+The flickering light revealed a tree, freshly cut, its, naked stump
+gleaming and its tall form lying prone. Yet beneath it the shadows were
+of strange, unearthly shape, and something showed stark white through
+the green foliage. Great branches stretched over it, like bars over a
+prison window.
+
+Just one curious deep sob wracked her whole body. The life-heat, the
+mystery that is being, seemed to steal away from her. Her strength
+wilted; and for an instant she could only stand and gaze with fixed,
+unbelieving eyes. But almost at once the unquenchable fires of her
+spirit blazed up anew. She saw her task, and with a faith and
+steadfastness conformable more to the sun and the earth than to human
+frailty, her muscles made instant and incredible response.
+
+Instantly she was beside the form of her comrade and enemy, struggling
+with the cruel limbs that pinned him to the earth.
+
+
+
+
+XXXV
+
+Beatrice knew one thing and one alone: that she must not give way to the
+devastating terror in her heart. There was mighty work to do, and she
+must keep strong. Her only wish was to kneel beside him, to lift the
+bleeding head into her arms and let the storm and the darkness smother
+her existence; but her stern woods training came to her aid. She began
+the stupendous task of freeing him from the imprisoning tree limbs.
+
+The pine knots flickered feebly; and by their light she looked about for
+Ben's axe. Her eyes rested on the broken gun first: then she saw the
+blade, shining in the rain, protruding from beneath a broken bough. She
+drew it out and swung it down.
+
+Some of the lesser limbs she broke off, with a strength in her hands she
+did not dream she possessed. The larger ones were cut away with blows
+incredibly strong and accurate. How and by what might she did not know,
+but almost at once the man's body was free except for the tree trunk
+that wedged him against a dead log toward which he had leaped for
+shelter.
+
+She seemed powerless to move it. Her shoulders surged against it in
+vain. A desperate frenzy seized her, but she fought it remorselessly
+down. Her self-discipline must not break yet. Seeing that she could not
+move the tree itself, she thrust with all her power against the dead log
+beside which Ben lay. In a moment she had rolled it aside.
+
+Then for the first time she went to her knees beside the prone form.
+Ben was free of the imprisoning limbs, but was his soul already free of
+the stalwart body broken among the broken boughs? She had to know this
+first; further effort was unavailing until she knew this. Her hand stole
+over his face.
+
+She found no reassuring warmth. It was wet with the rain, cold to the
+touch. His hair was wet too, and matted from some dreadful wound in the
+scalp. Very softly she felt along the skull for some dreadful fracture
+that might have caused instant death; but the descending trunk had
+missed his head, at least. Very gently she shook him by the shoulders.
+
+Her stern self-control gave way a little now. The strain had been too
+much for human nerves to bear. She gathered him into her arms, still
+without sobbing, but the hot tears dropped on to his face.
+
+"Speak to me, Ben," she said quietly. The wind caught her words and
+whisked them away; and the rain played its unhappy music in the tree
+foliage; but Ben made no answer. "Speak to me," she repeated, her tone
+lifting. "My man, my baby--tell me you're not dead!"
+
+Dead! Was that it--struck to the earth like the caribou that fell before
+his rifle? And in that weird, dark instant a light far more bright than
+that the flickering pine knots cast so dim and strange over the scene
+beamed forth from the altar flame of her own soul. It was only the light
+of knowledge, not of hope, but it transfigured her none the less.
+
+All at once she knew why she had hurled the poisoned cup from his hand,
+even though her father's life might be the price of her weakness. She
+understood, now, why these long weeks had been a delight rather than a
+torment; why her fears for him had gone so straight to her heart. She
+pressed his battered head tight against her breast.
+
+"My love, my love," she crooned in his ear, pressing her warm cheek
+close to his. "I do love you, I do, I do," she told him confidingly, as
+if this message would call him back to life. Her lips sought his, trying
+to give them warmth, and her voice was low and broken when she spoke
+again. "Can't you hear me, Ben--won't you try to come back to me? If
+you're dead I'll die too--"
+
+But the man did not open his eyes. Would not even this appeal arouse him
+from this deep, strange sleep in which he lay? He had always been so
+watchful of her--since that first day--so zealous for her safety. She
+held him closer, her lips trembling against his.
+
+But she must get herself in hand again! Perhaps life had not yet
+completely flickered out; and she could nurse it back. She dropped her
+ear to his breast, listening.
+
+Yes, she felt the faint stirring of his heart. It was so feeble, the
+throbs were so far apart, yet they meant life,--life that might flush
+his cheeks again, and might yet bring him back to her, into her arms. He
+was breathing, too; breaths so faint that she hardly dared to believe in
+their reality. And presently she realized that his one hope of life lay
+in getting back to the fire.
+
+For long hours he had been lying in the cold rain; a few more minutes
+would likely extinguish the spark of life that remained in his breast.
+Her hand stole over his powerful frame, in an effort to get some idea of
+the nature of his wounds.
+
+One of his arms was broken; its position indicated that. Some of his
+ribs were crushed too--what internal injuries he had that might end him
+before the morning she did not know. But she could not take time to
+build a sledge and cut away the brush. She worked her shoulder under his
+body.
+
+Wrenching with all her fine, young strength she lifted him upon her
+shoulder; then, kneeling in the vines, she struggled for breath. Then
+thrusting with her arm she got on her feet.
+
+His weight was over fifty pounds greater than her own; but her woods
+training, the hard work she had always done, had fitted her for just
+such a test as this. She started with her burden toward the cave.
+
+She had long known how to carry an injured man, suspending him over her
+shoulder, head pointed behind her, her arms clasping his thigh. With her
+free arm she seized the tree branches to sustain her. She had no light
+now; she was guided only by the faint glow of the fire at the cavern
+mouth.
+
+After a hundred feet the load seemed unbearable. Except for the fact
+that she soon got on the well-worn moose trail that followed the creek,
+she could scarcely have progressed a hundred feet farther. As it was,
+she was taxed to the utmost: every ounce of her reserve strength would
+be needed before the end.
+
+At the end of a hundred yards she stopped to rest, leaning against a
+tree and still holding the beloved weight upon her shoulder. If she laid
+it down she knew she could not lift it again. But soon she plunged on,
+down toward the beacon light.
+
+Except for her love for him, and that miraculous strength that love has
+always given to women, she could not have gone on that last, cruel
+hundred yards. But slowly, steadily, the circle of light grew brighter,
+larger, nearer; ever less dense were the thickets of evergreen between.
+Now she was almost to the glade; now she felt the wet grass at her
+ankles. She lunged on and laid her burden on her bed.
+
+Then she relaxed at his feet, breathing in sobbing gasps. Except for the
+crackle of the fire and the beat of the rain, there was no sound in the
+cave but this,--those anguished sobs from her wracked lungs.
+
+But far distant though Ben was and deep as he slept--just outside the
+dark portals of death itself--those sounds went down to him. He heard
+them dimly at first, like a far-distant voice in a dream, but as the
+moments passed he began to recognize their nature and their source. Sobs
+of exhaustion and distress--from the girl that was in his charge. He lay
+a long time, trying to understand.
+
+On her knees beside him Beatrice saw the first flutter of his eyelids.
+In awe, rather than rapture, her arms crept around him, and she kissed
+his rain-wet brow. His eyes opened, looking wonderingly into hers.
+
+She saw the first light of recognition, then a half-smile, gentle as a
+girl's, as he realized his own injuries. Of course Ben Darby would smile
+in such a moment as this; his instincts, true and manly, were always to
+try to cheer her. Presently he spoke in the silence.
+
+"The tree got me, didn't it?" he asked.
+
+"Don't try to talk," she cautioned. "Yes--the tree fell on you. But
+you're not going to die. You're going to live, live--"
+
+He shook his head, the half-smile flickering at his lips. "Let me talk,
+Beatrice," he said, with just a whisper of his old determination. "It's
+important--and I don't think--I have much time."
+
+Her eyes widened in horror. "You don't mean--"
+
+"I'm going back in a minute--I can't hardly keep awake," he said. His
+voice, though feeble, was preternaturally clear. She heard every kind
+accent, every gentle tone even above the crackle of the fire without and
+the beat of the rain. "I think it's the limit," he went on. "I believe
+the tree got me--clear inside--but you must listen to everything I say."
+
+She nodded. In that eerie moment of suspense she knew she must hear what
+he had to tell her.
+
+"Don't wait to see what happens to me," he went on. "I'll either go out
+or I'll live--you really can't help me any. Where's the rifle?"
+
+"The rifle was broken--when the tree fell."
+
+"I knew it would be. I saw it coming." He rested, waiting for further
+breath. "Beatrice--please, please don't stay here, trying to save me."
+
+"Do you think I would go?" she cried.
+
+"You must. The food--is about gone. Just enough to last one person
+through to the Yuga cabins--with berries, roots. Take the pistol.
+There's six shots or so--in the box. Make every one tell. Take the dead
+grouse too. The rifle's broken and we can't get meat. It's
+just--death--if you wait. You can just make it through now."
+
+"And leave you here to die, as long as there's a chance to save you?"
+the girl answered. "You couldn't get up to get water--or build a fire--"
+
+He listened patiently, but shook his head at the end. "No, Bee--please
+don't make me talk any more. It's just death for both of us if you stay.
+The food is gone--the rifle broken. Your father's gang'll be here sooner
+or later--and they'd smash me, anyway. I could hardly fight 'em off with
+those few pistol shells--but by God I'd like to try--"
+
+He struggled for breath, and she thought he had slipped back into
+unconsciousness. But in a moment the faltering current of his speech
+began again.
+
+"Take the pistol--and go," he told her. "You showed me to-day how to
+give up--and I don't want to kill--your father--any more. I renounce it
+all! Ezram--forgive me--old Ez that lay dead in the leaves." He smiled
+at the girl again. "So don't mind leaving me. Life work's all
+spent--given over. Please, Beatrice--you'd just kill yourself without
+aiding me. Wait till the sun comes up--then follow up the river--"
+
+Unconsciousness welled high above him, and the lids dropped over his
+eyes. The gloom still pressed about the cavern, yet a sun no less
+effulgent than that of which he had spoken had risen for Ben. It was his
+moment of renunciation, glorious past any moment of his life. He had
+renounced his last, little fighting chance that the girl might live. And
+Ezram, watching high and afar, and with infinite serenity knowing at
+last the true balance of all things one with another, gave him his full
+forgiveness.
+
+The girl began to strip the wet clothes from his injured body.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVI
+
+The trail was long and steep into Back There for Jeffery Neilson and his
+men. Day after day they traveled with their train of pack horses,
+pushing deeper into the wilds, fording mighty rivers, traversing silent
+and majestic mountain ranges, climbing slopes so steep that the packs
+had to be lightened to half before the gasping animals could reach the
+crest. They could go only at a snail's pace,--even in the best day's
+travel only ten miles, and often a single mile was a hard, exhausting
+day's work.
+
+Of course there was no kind of a trail for them to follow. As far as
+possible they followed the winding pathways of big game--as long as
+these led them in their general direction--but often they were obliged
+to cut their way through the underbrush. Time after time they
+encountered impassable cliffs or rivers from which they were obliged to
+turn back and seek new routes; they found marshes that they could not
+penetrate; ranges they could not climb; wastes of slide rock where they
+could make headway only at a creeping pace and with hourly risk of their
+lives.
+
+They had counted on slow travel, but the weeks grew into the months
+before they even neared the obscure heart of Back There where they
+thought Ben and Beatrice might be hidden. The way was hard as they had
+never dreamed. Every day, it seemed to them, brought its fresh tragedy:
+a long back-trailing to avoid some impassable place, a fatiguing
+digression, perhaps several hours of grinding work with the axe in order
+to cut a trail. Sometimes the harness broke, requiring long stops on
+the trail to repair it, the packs slipped continually from the hard
+going; and they found it increasingly difficult to secure horse feed for
+the animals.
+
+Even Indian ponies cannot keep fat on such grass as grows in the deep
+shade of the spruce. They need the rich growths of the open park lands
+to stiffen them for the grinding toil; and even with good feeding,
+foresters know that pack animals must not be kept on the trail for too
+many days in succession. Jeffery Neilson and his men disregarded both
+these facts, with the result that the animals lost flesh and strength,
+cutting down the speed of their advance. Oaths and shouts were
+unavailing now: only cruel blows could drive them forward at all.
+
+They seemed to sense a great hopelessness in their undertaking. Usually
+well-trained pack horses will follow their leader without question, walk
+almost in his tracks, and the rider in front only has to show the way.
+After the first few days of grinding toil, the morale of the entire
+outfit began to break. The horses broke away into thickets on each side;
+and time after time, one hour upon another, the horsemen had to round
+them up again. When they came to the great rivers--wild tributaries of
+the Yuga--they had to follow up the streams for days in search of a
+place to ford. Then they were obliged to carry the packs across in small
+loads, making trip after trip with the utmost patience and toil. The
+horses, broken in spirit, took the wild waters just as they climbed the
+steep slopes, with little care whether they lived or died.
+
+The days passed, June and July. Ever they moved at a slower pace. One of
+the horses, giving up on a steep pitch and frenzied by Ray's cruel,
+lashing blows, fell off the edge of the trail and shot down like a
+plummet two hundred feet into the canyon below--and thereupon it became
+necessary not only to spend the rest of the day in retrieving and
+repairing the supplies that had fallen with him, but also to heap bigger
+loads on the backs of the remaining horses. And always they were faced
+by the cruel possibility that this whole, mighty labor was in
+vain,--that Ben and Beatrice might have gone to their deaths in the
+rapids, weeks before.
+
+The food stores brought for the journey were rapidly depleted. The
+result was that they had to depend more and more upon a diet of meat.
+Men can hold up fairly well on meat alone, particularly if it has a fair
+amount of fat, but the effort of hunting and drying the flesh into jerky
+served to cut down their speed.
+
+The constant delays, the grinding, blasting toil of the day's march, and
+particularly the ever-recurring crises of ford and steep, made serious
+inroads on the morale of the three men. Just the work of urging on the
+exhausted horses drained their nervous energy in a frightful stream: the
+uncertainty of their quest, the danger, the scarcity of any food but
+meat, and most of all the burning hatred in their hearts for the man who
+had forced the expedition upon them combined to torment them; even now,
+Ben Darby had received no little measure of vengeance.
+
+No experience of their individual lives had ever presented such a daily
+ordeal of physical distress; none had ever been so devastating to hope
+and spirit. There was not one moment of pleasure, one instant of relief
+from the day's beginning to its end. At night they went to sleep on
+hastily made beds, cursing at all things in heaven and earth; they
+blasphemed with growing savagery all that men hold holy and true; and
+degeneracy grew upon them very swiftly. They quarreled over their
+tasks, and they hated each other with a hatred only second to that they
+bore Darby himself. All three had always been reckless, wicked, brutal
+men; but now, particularly in the case of Ray and Chan, the ordeal
+brought out and augmented the latent abnormalities that made them
+criminals in the beginning, developing those odd quirks in human minds
+that make toward perversion and the most fiendish crime.
+
+Jeffery Neilson had almost forgotten the issue of the claim by now. He
+had told the truth, those weary weeks before, when he had wished he had
+never seen it. His only thought was of his daughter, the captive of a
+relentless, merciless man in these far wilds. Never the moon rose or the
+sun declined but that he was sick with haunting fear for her. Had she
+gone down to her death in the rapids? This was Neilson's fondest wish:
+the enfolding oblivion of wild waters would be infinitely better than
+the fate Ben had hinted at in his letter. Yet he dared not turn back.
+She might yet live, held prisoner in some far-off cave.
+
+At first all three agreed on this point: that they must not turn back
+until either Ben was crushed under their heels or they had made sure of
+his death. Ray had not forgotten that Ben alone stood between him and
+the wealth and power he had always craved. He dreamed, at first, that
+the deadly hardships of the journey could be atoned for by years of
+luxury and ease. His mind was also haunted with dark conjectures as to
+the fate of Beatrice, but jealousy, rather than concern for her, was the
+moving impulse.
+
+Neilson knew his young partner now. He saw clearly at last that Ray was
+not and had never been a faithful confederate, but indeed a malicious
+and bitter enemy, only waiting his chance to overthrow his leader. They
+were still partners in their effort to rescue the girl and slay her
+abductor; otherwise they were at swords' points. And there would be
+something more than plain, swift slaying, now. If Neilson could read
+aright, the actual, physical change that had been wrought in Ray's face
+foretold no ordinary end for Ben. His features were curiously drawn; and
+his eyes had a fixed, magnetic, evil light. Occasionally in his darker
+hours Neilson foresaw even more sinister possibilities in this change in
+Ray: the abnormal intensity manifest in every look and word, the weird,
+evil preoccupation that seemed ever upon him. There was not only the
+fate of Ben to consider, but that of Beatrice too, out in these desolate
+forests. But surely Ray's degenerate impulses could be mastered. Neilson
+need not fear this, at least.
+
+Chan Heminway, also, had developed marvelously in the journey. He also
+was more assertive, less the underling he had been. He had developed a
+brutality that, though it contained nothing of the exquisite fineness of
+cruelty of which Ray's diseased thought might conceive, was nevertheless
+the full expression of his depraved nature. He no longer cowered in fear
+of Neilson. Rather he looked to Ray as his leader, took him as his
+example, tried to imitate him, and at last really began to share in his
+mood. In cruelty to the horses he was particularly adept; but he was
+also given to strange, savage bursts of insane fury.
+
+"We must be close on them now," Neilson said one morning when they had
+left the main gorge of the Yuga far behind them. "If they're not dead
+we're bound to find trace of 'em in a few days."
+
+The hope seemed well-founded. It is impossible for even most of the wild
+creatures--furtive as twilight shadows--to journey through wood spaces
+without leaving trace of their goings and comings: much less clumsy
+human beings. Ultimately the searchers would find their tracks in the
+soft earth, the ashes of a camp fire, or a charred cooking rack.
+
+"And when we get 'em, we can wait and live on meat until the river goes
+up in fall--then float on down to the Indian villages in their canoe,"
+Chan answered. "It will carry four of us, all right."
+
+Ray, Chan, Neilson and Neilson's daughter--these made four. What
+remained of Ben when Ray was through could be left, silent upon some
+hushed hillside, to the mercy of the wild creatures and the elements.
+
+Surely they were in the enemy-country now; and now a fresh fear began to
+oppress them. They might expect an attack from their implacable foe at
+any moment. It did not make for ease of mind to know that any brush
+clump might be their enemy's ambush; that any instant a concealed rifle
+might speak death to them in the silence. Ben would have every advantage
+of fortress and ambush. They had not thought greatly of this matter at
+first; but now the fear increased with the passing days. Even Neilson
+was not wholly exempt from it. It seemed a hideous, deadly thing,
+incompatible with life and hope, that they should be plunging deeper,
+farther into helplessness and peril.
+
+If mental distress and physical discomfort can constitute vengeance Ben
+was already avenged. Now that they were in the hill-lands, out from the
+gorge and into a region of yellow beaver meadows lying between gently
+sloping hills, their apprehension turned to veritable terror. A blind
+man could see how small was their fighting chance against a hidden foe
+who had prepared for their coming. The skin twitched and crept when a
+twig cracked about their camp at night, and a cold like death crept
+over the frame when the thickets crashed under a leaping moose.
+
+Ray found himself regretting, for the first time, that murderous crime
+of his of months before. Even riches might not pay for these days of
+dread and nights of terror: the recovery of the girl from Ben's arms
+could not begin to recompense. Indeed, the girl's memory was
+increasingly hard to call up. The mind was kept busy elsewhere.
+
+"We're walking right into a death trap," he told Neilson one morning.
+"If he is here, what chance have we got; he'd have weeks to explore the
+country and lay an ambush for us. Besides, I believe he's dead. I don't
+believe a human being could have got down this far, alive."
+
+Chan too had found himself inclining toward this latter belief; without
+Ray's energy and ambition he had less to keep him fronted to the chase.
+Neilson, however, was not yet ready to turn back. He too feared Ben's
+attack, but already in the twilight of advancing years, he did not
+regard physical danger in the same light as these two younger men.
+Besides, he was made of different stuff. The safety of his daughter was
+the one remaining impulse in his life.
+
+And more and more, in the chill August nights, the talk about the camp
+fire took this trend: the folly of pushing on. It was better to turn
+back and wait his chances to strike again, Ray argued, than to walk
+bald-faced into death. Sometime Ben must return to the claim: a chance
+might come to lay him low. Besides, ever it seemed more probable that
+the river had claimed him.
+
+One rainy, disagreeable morning, as they camped beside the river near
+the mouth of a small creek, affairs reached their crisis. They had
+caught and saddled the horses; Ray was pulling tight the last hitch.
+Chan stood beside him, speaking in an undertone. When he had finished
+Ray cursed explosively in the silence.
+
+Neilson turned. He seemed to sense impending developments. "What now?"
+he asked.
+
+"I'm not going on, that's what it is," Ray replied. "Neilson, it's two
+against one--if you want to go on you can--but Ray and I are going back.
+That devil's dead. Beatrice is, too--sure as hell. If they ain't dead,
+he'll get us. I was a fool ever to start out. And that's final."
+
+"You're going back, eh--scared out!" Neilson commented coldly.
+
+"I'm going back--and don't say too much about being scared out, either."
+
+"And you too, Chan? You're against me, too?"
+
+Chan cursed. "I'd gone a week ago if it'd been me. We knew the way
+home, at least."
+
+The old man looked a long time into the river depths. Only too well he
+realized that their decision was final. But there was no answer, in the
+swirling depths, to the question that wracked his heart: whether or not
+in these spruce-clad hills his daughter still lived. It could only
+murmur and roar, without shaping words that human ears could grasp,
+never relieving the dreadful uncertainty that would be his life's curse
+from henceforth. He sighed, and the lines across his brow were dark and
+deep.
+
+"Then turn the horses around, you cowards," he answered. "I can't go on
+alone."
+
+For once neither Ray nor Chan had outward resentment for the epithet.
+Secretly they realized that old Neilson was to the wall at last, and
+like a grizzly at bay, it was safer not to molest him. Chan went down
+to the edge of the creek to water his saddle horse.
+
+But presently they heard him curse, in inordinate and startled
+amazement, as he gazed at some imprint in the mud of the shore. They saw
+the color sweep from his face. In an instant his two companions were
+beside him.
+
+Clear and unmistakable in the mud they saw the stale imprint of Ben's
+canoe as they had landed, and the tracks of both the man and the girl as
+they had turned into the forest.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVII
+
+The dawn that crept so gray and mysterious over the frosty green of
+spruce brought no hope to Beatrice, sitting beside the unconscious form
+of Ben in the cave fronting the glade. Rather it only brought the tragic
+truth home more clearly. Her love for him had manifested itself too late
+to give happiness to either of them: even now his life seemed to be
+stealing from her, into the valley of the shadow.
+
+She had watched beside him the whole night; and now she beheld a
+sinister change in his condition. He was still unconscious, but he no
+longer drew his breath at long intervals, softly and quietly. He was
+breathing in short, troubled gasps, and an ominous red glow was in his
+cheeks. She touched his brow, only to find it burning with fever.
+
+The fact was not hard to understand. The downpour of cold rain in which
+he had lain, wounded, for so many hours had drawn the life heat out of
+him, and some organic malady had combined with his bodily injuries to
+strike out his life. Her predicament was one of absolute helplessness.
+She was hundreds of miles--weary weeks of march--from medical attention,
+and she could neither leave him nor carry him. The wilderness forces,
+resenting the intrusion into their secret depths, had seemingly taken
+full vengeance at last. They had seemingly closed all gates to life and
+safety. They had set the trap with care; and the cruel jaws had sprung.
+
+She sat dry-eyed, incoherent prayers at her trembling lips. Mostly she
+did not touch the man, only sat at his bedside in the crude chair Ben
+had fashioned for her while the minutes rolled into hours and the hours
+sped the night away,--in tireless vigil, watching with lightless eyes.
+Once she bent and touched her lips to his.
+
+They were not cold now. They were warm with fever. But in the strange
+twilight-world of unconsciousness he could neither know of nor respond
+to her kiss. She patted down his covering and sometimes held his hard
+hands warm between hers, as if she could thus keep death from seizing
+them and leading him away. But her courage did not break again.
+
+The wan light showed her his drawn face; and just for an instant her
+arms pressed about it. "I won't give up, Ben," she promised. "I'll keep
+on fighting--to the last minute. And maybe I can pull you through."
+
+Beatrice meant exactly what she said: to the last minute. That did not
+mean to the gray hour when, by all dictate of common sense, further
+fight is useless. She meant that she would battle tirelessly as long as
+one pale spark glowed in his spirit, as long as his breath could cloud a
+glass. The best thing for her now, however, was rest. She was exhausted
+by the strain of the night; and she must save herself for the crisis
+that was sure to come. Ben was sleeping easily now; the instant when his
+life hung in the balance still impended.
+
+She built up the fire, put on water to heat, covered the man with added
+blankets, then lay down on Ben's cot. Soon she drifted into uneasy
+slumber, waking at intervals to serve her patient.
+
+The hours dragged by, the night sloped down to the forest; and the dawn
+followed the night. Ben's life still flickered, like a flame in the
+wind, in the twilight land between life and death.
+
+Yet little could she do for him these first few days, except, in her
+simple faith, to pray. Never an hour passed but that prayers were at her
+lips, childlike, direct, entreating prayers from her woman's heart. Of
+all her offices these were first: she had no doubt but that they counted
+most. She sat by his bedside, kept him covered with the warmest robes,
+hewed wood for the fire; but as yet he had never fully emerged from his
+unconsciousness. Would he slip away in the night without ever wakening?
+
+But in the morning of the fourth day he opened his eyes vividly,
+muttered, and fell immediately to sleep. He woke again at evening; and
+his moving lips conveyed a message. In response she brought him steaming
+grouse broth, administering it a spoonful at a time until he fell to
+sleep again.
+
+In the days that followed he was conscious to the degree that he could
+drink broth, yet never recognizing Beatrice nor seeming to know where he
+was. His fever still lingered, raging; yet in these days she began to
+notice a slow improvement in his condition. The healing agents of his
+body were hard at work; and doubt was removed that he had received
+mortal internal injuries. She had set his broken arm the best she could,
+holding the bones in place with splints; but in all likelihood it would
+have to be broken and set again when he reached the settlements. She
+began to notice the first cessation of his fever; although weeks of
+sickness yet remained, she believed that the crisis was past. Yet in
+spite of these hopeful signs, she was face to face with the most tragic
+situation of all. Their food was almost gone.
+
+It would be long weeks before Ben could hope for sufficient strength to
+start the journey down to the settlements, even if the way were open. As
+it was their only chance lay in the fall rains that would flood the
+Yuga and enable them to journey down to the native villages in their
+canoe. These rains would not fall till October. For all that she had
+hoarded their supplies to the last morsel, eating barely enough herself
+to sustain life in her body, the dread spectre of starvation waited just
+without the cave. She had realized perfectly that Ben could not hope to
+throw off the malady without nutritious food and she had not stinted
+with him; and now, just when she had begun to hope for his recovery, she
+shook the last precious cup of flour from the sack.
+
+The rice and sugar were gone, long since. The honey she had hoarded to
+give Ben--knowing its warming, nutritive value--not tasting a drop
+herself. Of all their stores only a few pieces of jerked caribou
+remained; she had used the rest to make rich broth for Ben, and there
+was no way under heaven whereby they might procure more.
+
+The rifle was broken. The last of the pistol shots was fired the day she
+had prepared the poisoned cup for Ben.
+
+Yet she still waged the fight, struggling with high courage and tireless
+resolution against the frightful odds that opposed her. Her faith was as
+of that nameless daughter of the Gileadite; and she could not yield. Not
+ambition, not hatred--not even such fire of fury as had been wakened in
+Wolf Darby's heart that first frenzied night on the hillside--could have
+been the impulse for such fortitude and sacrifice as hers. It was not
+one of these base passions--known in the full category to her rescuers
+who were even now bearing down upon her valley--that kept the steel in
+her thews and the steadfastness in her heart. She loved this man; her
+love for him was as wholesome and as steadfast as her own self; and the
+law of that love was to give him all she had.
+
+There were few witnesses to this infinite giving of hers. Ben himself
+still lingered in a strange stupor, remembering nothing, knowing neither
+the girl nor himself. Perhaps the wild things saw her desperate efforts
+to find food in the wilderness,--the long hours of weary searching for a
+handful of berries that gave such little nourishment to his weakened
+body, or for a few acorns stored for winter by bird or rodent. Sometimes
+a great-antlered moose--an easy trophy if the rifle had been
+unbroken--saw her searching for wocus like a lost thing in the tenacious
+mud of the marshes; and almost nightly a silent wolf, pausing in his
+hunting, gazed uneasily through the cavern maw. But mostly her long
+hours of service in the cave, the chill nights that she sat beside Ben's
+cot, the dreary mornings when she cooked her own scanty breakfast and
+took her uneasy rest, the endless labor of fire-mending so that the cave
+could be kept at an even heat went unobserved by mortal eyes. The
+healing forces of his body called for warmth and nourishment; but for
+all the might of her efforts she waged a losing fight.
+
+What little wocus she was able to find she made into bread for Ben; yet
+it was never enough to satisfy his body's craving. The only meat she had
+herself was the vapid flesh that had been previously boiled for Ben's
+broth; and now only a few pieces of the jerked meat remained. She
+herself tried to live on such plants as the wilderness yielded, and she
+soon began to notice the tragic loss of her own strength. Her eyes were
+hollow, preternaturally large; she experienced a strange, floating
+sensation, as if spirit and flesh were disassociated.
+
+Still Ben lingered in his mysterious stupor, unaware of what went on
+about him; but his fever was almost gone by now, and the first
+beginnings of strength returned to his thews. His mind had begun to
+grope vaguely for the key that would open the doors of his memory and
+remind him again of some great, half-forgotten task that still
+confronted him, some duty unperformed. Yet he could not quite seize it.
+The girl who worked about his cot was without his bourne of knowledge;
+her voice reached him as if from an infinite distance, and her words
+penetrated only to the outer edges of his consciousness. It was not
+strictly, however, a return of his amnesia. It was simply an outgrowth
+of delirium caused by his sickness and injuries, to be wholly dispelled
+as soon as he was wholly well.
+
+But now the real hour of crisis was at hand,--not from his illness, but
+from the depletion of their food supplies. Beatrice had spent a hard
+afternoon in the forest in search of roots and berries, and as she crept
+homeward, exhausted and almost empty-handed, the full, tragic truth was
+suddenly laid bare. Her own strength had waned. Without the miracle of a
+fresh food supply she could hardly keep on her feet another day. Plainly
+and simply, the wolf was at the door. His cruel fangs menaced not only
+her, but this stalwart man for whose life she had fought so hard.
+
+The fear of the obliterating darkness known to all the woods people
+pressed close upon her and appalled her. She loved life simply and
+primitively; and it was an unspeakable thing to lose at the end of such
+a battle. Out so far, surrounded by such endless, desolate wastes of
+gloomy forest, the Shadow was cold, inhospitable; and she was afraid to
+face it alone. If Ben would only waken and sustain her drooping spirit
+with his own! She was lonely and afraid, in the shadow of the inert
+spruce, under the gray sky.
+
+She could hardly summon strength for the evening's work of cutting fuel.
+The blade would not drive with its old force into the wood. The blaze
+itself burned dully; and she could not make it leap and crackle with its
+old cheer. And further misfortune was in store for her when she crept
+into the cave to prepare Ben's supper.
+
+A pack rat--one of those detested rodents known so well to all northern
+peoples--had carried off in her absence two of the three remaining
+sticks of jerked caribou. For a moment she gazed in unbelieving and
+speechless horror, then made a frenzied search in the darkened corners
+of the cabin.
+
+This was no little tragedy: the two sticks of condensed and concentrated
+protein might have kept Ben alive for a few days more. It was disaster,
+merciless and sweeping. And the brave heart of the girl seemed to break
+under the blow.
+
+The hot, bitter tears leaped forth; but she suppressed the bitter,
+hopeless sobs that clutched at her throat. She must not let Ben know of
+this catastrophe. Likely in his stupor he would not understand; yet she
+must not take the chance. She must nourish the spark of hope in his
+breast to the last hour. She walked to the mouth of the cave; and Famine
+itself stood close, waiting in the shadows. She gazed out into the
+gathering gloom.
+
+The tears blinded her eyes at first. Slowly the dark profile of the
+spruce against the gray sky penetrated to her consciousness: the somber
+beauty of the wilderness sky line that haunts the woodsman's dreams.
+With it came full realization of the might and the malevolency of these
+shadowed wilds she had battled so long. They had got her down at last;
+they had crushed her and beaten her, and had held up to scorn her
+sacrifice and her mortal strength. She knew the wild wood now: its
+savage power, its remorselessness, and yet, woods girl that she was, she
+could not forget its dark and moving beauty.
+
+The forest was silent to-night. Not a twig cracked or a branch rustled.
+It was hushed, breathless, darkly sinister. All at once her eyes peered
+and strained into the dusk.
+
+Far across the valley, beyond the beaver marsh and on the farther shore
+of the lake she saw a little glimmer of light through the rift in the
+trees. She dared not believe in its reality at first. Perhaps it was a
+trick of her imagination only, a hallucination born of her starvation,
+child of her heartfelt prayer. She looked away, then peered again. But,
+yes--a tiny gleam of yellow light twinkled through the gloom! It was
+real, _it was true_! A gleam of hope in the darkness of despair.
+
+Her rescuers had come. There could be no other explanation. She hastened
+into the cave, drew the blankets higher about Ben's shoulders, then
+crept out into the dusk. Half running, she hastened toward their distant
+camp fire.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVIII
+
+Beatrice's first impulse was to run at a breakneck pace down the ridge
+and about the lake into her father's camp, beseeching instant aid to the
+starving man in the cave. She wished that she had a firearm with which
+to signal to them and bring them at once to the cavern. And it was not
+until she had descended the ridge and stood at the edge of the beaver
+meadow that her delirious joy began to give way to serious, thought.
+
+She was brought to a halt first by the sight of the horses that had
+wandered about the long loop of the lake and were feeding in the rich
+grass of the meadow. The full moon rising in the east had cast a
+nebulous glow over the whole countryside by now; and she could make a
+hasty estimation of their numbers. It was evident at once that her
+father had not made the expedition alone. The large outfit implied a
+party of at least three,--indicating that Ray Brent and Chan Heminway
+had accompanied him.
+
+She had only fear and disdain for these two younger men; but surely they
+would not refuse aid to Ben. Yet perhaps it was best to proceed with
+some caution. These were her lover's enemies; if for no other reason
+than their rage at her own abduction they might be difficult to control.
+Her father, in all probability, would willingly show mercy to the
+helpless man in the cavern--particularly after she told him of Ben's
+consideration and kindness--but she put no faith in Ray and Chan. She
+knew them of old. Besides, she remembered there was a further
+consideration,--that of a gold claim.
+
+Could Ben have told her the truth when he had maintained that they would
+kill him on sight if he did not destroy them first? Was it true that he
+had waged the war in defense of his own rights? Weeks and months had
+passed since she had seen her father's face: perhaps her old control of
+him could no longer be relied upon. If indeed their ownership of a rich
+claim depended upon Ben's death, Ray and Chan could not be trusted at
+all.
+
+She resolved to proceed with the utmost caution. Abruptly she turned out
+of the beaver marsh, where the moonlight might reveal her, and followed
+close to the edge of the timber, a course that could not be visible from
+beyond the lake. She approached the lake at its far neck, then followed
+back along the margin clear to the edge of the woods in which the fire
+was built.
+
+In her years in the woods Beatrice had learned to stalk, and the
+knowledge was of value to her now. With never a misstep she took down a
+little game trail toward the camp fire. She was within fifty yards of it
+now--she could make out three dark figures seated in the circle of
+firelight. Walking softly but upright she pushed within ninety feet of
+the fire.
+
+Then she waited, in doubt as to her course. She was still too far
+distant to hear more than the murmur of their voices. If she could just
+get near enough to catch their words she could probably glean some idea
+of their attitude toward Ben. She pushed on nearer, through the dew-wet
+brush.
+
+Impelled by the excitement under which she advanced, her old agility of
+motion had for the moment returned to her; and she crept softly as a
+fawn between the young trees. One misstep, one rustling branch or
+crackling twig might give her away; but she took each step with
+consummate care, gently thrusting the tree branches from her path.
+
+Once a rodent stirred beneath her feet, and she froze--like a hunting
+wolf--in her tracks. One of the three men looked up, and she saw his
+face plainly through the low spruce boughs. And for a moment she thought
+that this was a stranger. It was with a distinct foreboding of disaster
+that she saw, on second glance, that the man was Ray Brent.
+
+She had never seen such change in human countenance in the space of a
+few months. She did not pause to analyze it. She only knew that his eyes
+were glittering and fixed; and that she herself was deeply,
+unexplainably appalled. The man cursed once, blasphemously, his face
+dusky and evil in the eerie firelight, but immediately turned back to
+his talk. Beatrice crept closer.
+
+Now she was near enough to catch an occasional word, but not discern
+their thoughts. It was evident, however, that their conversation was of
+Ben and herself,--the same topic they had discussed nights without end.
+She caught her own name; once Chan used an obscene epithet as he spoke
+of their enemy.
+
+Her instincts were true and infallible to-night; and she was ever more
+convinced of their deadly intentions toward Ben. It was not wise to
+announce herself yet. Perhaps she would have to rely upon a course other
+than a direct appeal for aid. Now her keen eyes could see the whole
+camp: the three seated figures of the men, their rifles leaning near
+them, their supplies spread out about the fire.
+
+At one side, quite to the edge of the firelight, she saw a kyack--one of
+those square boxes that are hung on a pack saddle--which seemed to be
+heaped with jerked caribou or moose flesh. For the time of a breath she
+could not take her eyes from it. It was food--food in plenty to sustain
+Ben through his illness and the remaining weeks of their exile--and her
+eyes moistened and her hands trembled at the sight. She had been taught
+the meaning of famine, these last, bitter days. In reality she was now
+in the first stage of starvation, experiencing the first, vague
+hallucinations, the sense of incorporeality, the ever-declining
+strength, the constant yearning that is nothing but the vitals'
+submerged demand for food. The contents of the kyack meant _life_ to
+herself and to Ben,--deliverance and safety when all seemed lost.
+
+A daughter of the cities far to the south--even a child of
+poverty--rarely could have understood the unutterable craving that
+overswept her at the sight of this simple food. It was unadorned,
+unaccompanied by the delicacies that most human beings have come to look
+upon as essentials and to expect with every meal: it was only animal
+flesh dried in the smoke and the sun. It not only attracted her
+physically; but in that moment it possessed real objective beauty for
+her; as it would have possessed for the most cultivated esthete that
+might be standing in her place. This girl was down to the most stern
+realities, and life and death hung in the balance.
+
+She went on her hands and knees, creeping nearer. Still she did not make
+the slightest false motion, creeping with an uncanny silence in the
+under shrubbery. And now the words came plain.
+
+"But we must be near," Chan was saying. "They can't be more than a mile
+or so from here. We'll find 'em in the morning--"
+
+"If he doesn't find us first and shoot up our camp," Ray replied. "I
+wish we'd built our fire further into the woods. Here we've looked all
+day without even finding a track except those tracks in the mud."
+
+"They might be beyond the marsh," Neilson suggested.
+
+"But Chan went over that way and didn't find a trace," Ray objected.
+"But just the same--we'll make a real search to-morrow. I believe we'll
+find the devil. And then--we can leave this hellish country and go back
+in peace--if we don't want to wait for the flood."
+
+Beatrice's eyes were on his face, wondering what growth of wickedness,
+what degeneracy had so filled his cruel eyes with light and stamped his
+face with evil. This was the man to whom she must look for mercy. Ben's
+life, if she led the three men to the cave, would be in his hands. She
+sensed from his authoritative tone that her father's control over him
+was largely broken. She hovered, terrified and motionless, in her
+covert.
+
+Ray reached for his rifle, glancing at the sights and drawing the lever
+back far enough to see the brass of its shells. Chan's lean face was
+drawn with a cruel glee.
+
+"You can't keep your hands off that gun, Ray," he said. "You sure are
+gettin' anxious."
+
+"I won't use it on him," Ray replied, slowly and carefully. "It's too
+good for him--except maybe the stock. He didn't lead me clear out here
+just to see him puff out and blow up in a minute with a rifle ball
+through his head. Just the same I want the gun near me, all the time."
+
+The two men looked at him, sardonic-eyed; and both of them seemed to
+understand fully what he meant. They seemed to catch more from the slow
+tones, so full of lust and frenzy that they seemed to drop from his
+lips in an ugly monotone, than they did from the words themselves. They
+took a certain grim amusement in these quirks of abnormal depravity that
+had begun to manifest themselves in Ray. The man's fingers were wide
+spread as he spoke, and his lip twitched twice, sharply, when he had
+finished.
+
+The words came clear and distinct to the listening girl. She tried to
+take them literally--that Ray would not shoot Ben! _"It's too good for
+him--except maybe the stock!"_ Did he mean _that_ too! Was there any
+possible meaning in the world other than that he was planning some
+unearthly, more terrible fate for the man she loved! She would not yet
+yield to the dreadful truth, yet even now terror was clutching at her
+throat, strangling her; and the cold drops were beading her brow. Still
+the dark drama of the fireside continued before her eyes.
+
+Chan suddenly turned to Neilson, evidently imbued with Ray's fervor.
+"What do you think of that, old man?" he asked menacingly. Thus Chan,
+too, had escaped from Neilson's dominance: plainly Ray was his idol now.
+It was also plain that he recognized attributes of mercy and decency in
+his grizzled leader that might interfere with his own and his
+companion's plans. "What's worrying me--whether you're goin' to join in
+on the sport when we catch the weasel!"
+
+Sport! The word was more terrible to Beatrice than the vilest oath he
+had used to emphasize it. She crouched, shivering. Watching intently,
+she saw Ray look up, too, waiting for the reply; and her father, sensing
+his lost dominance, bowed his head.
+
+"You could hardly expect me to let him off easy--seeing what he did to
+my daughter--"
+
+"What he done to your daughter ain't all--I don't care if he treated her
+like a queen of the realm all the time," Ray interrupted harshly. "That
+makes no difference to neither me nor Chan. The main thing is--he
+brought us out here, away from the claim--and gave us months of the
+worst hell I ever hope to spend. I guess you ain't forgotten what Chan
+found out in Snowy Gulch--that the claim's recorded--in old Hiram's
+name. This Darby's got a letter in his pocket from Hiram's brother that
+would stand in any court. We've got to get that first. If Darby was an
+angel I'd mash him under my heel just the same; we've gone too far to
+start crawfishing. Just let me see him tied up in front of me--"
+
+Beatrice did not linger to hear more. She had her answer: only in Ben's
+continued concealment lay the least hope of his salvation. These wolves
+about the fire meant what they said. But already her plans were shaping;
+and now she saw the light.
+
+In the kyack of venison lay her own and her lover's safety: it contained
+enough nutritious food to sustain them until the fall rains could swell
+the Yuga and enable them to escape down to the Indian encampment. Her
+mind was swift and keen as never before: swiftly she perfected the last
+detail of her plan. The canoe, due to Ben's foresight, was securely
+hidden in a maze of tall reeds on the lake shore: they were certain to
+overlook it. The cavern, however, was almost certain to be discovered in
+the next day's search. They must make their escape to-night.
+
+Ben, though terribly weakened, would be able to walk a short distance
+with her help. They could slip into the deepest forest, concealing
+themselves in the coverts until the three men had given up the search
+and gone away. She would take their robes and blankets to keep them
+warm; a camp fire would of course reveal their hiding place. The work
+could easily be accomplished in the midnight shadows: deliverance,
+salvation, life itself depended on the tide of fate in the next few
+hours.
+
+She intended to steal the kyack of dried meat without which Ben and
+herself could not live. She crept back farther into the underbrush; then
+waited, scarcely breathing, while the fire died down. Already the three
+men were preparing to go to their bunks. Chan had already lain down; her
+father was removing his coat and boots. Ray, however, still sat in the
+firelight.
+
+The moments passed. Would he never rise and go? The fire, however, was
+dying: its circle of ruddy light ever drew inward. The kyack was quite
+in the shadow now, yet she dared not attempt its theft until the three
+men were asleep. She waited, thrilling with excitement.
+
+Chan and Neilson were seemingly asleep, and now Ray was knocking the
+ashes from his pipe. He yawned, stretching wide his arms; then, as if
+held by some intriguing thought, sat almost motionless, gazing into the
+graying coals. Presently Beatrice heard him curse, softly, in the
+shadows.
+
+He got up, and removing his outer coat, rolled in his blankets. The
+night hours began their mystic march across the face of the wilderness.
+
+Now was the time to act. As far as she could tell, the three men were
+deeply asleep: at least the likelihood would be as great as at any time
+later in the night. The fire was a heap of gray ashes except for its
+red-hot center: the kyack was in gloom. Very softly she crept through
+the thickets, meanwhile encircling the dying fire, and came up behind
+it.
+
+Now it was almost in reach: now her hands were at its loops. She started
+to lift it in her arms.
+
+But disaster still dogged her trail. Ray Brent had been too wary of
+attack, to-night, to sink easily into deep slumber. He heard the soft
+movement as Beatrice lifted the heavy canvas bag off the ground; and
+with a startled oath sprang to his feet.
+
+He leaped like a panther. "Who's there?" he cried.
+
+Sensing immediate discovery the girl placed all her hope in flight.
+Perhaps yet she could lose her pursuers in the darkness. Still trying to
+hold the kyack of food that meant life to Ben, she turned and darted
+into the shadows.
+
+Like a wolf Ray sped after her. The moonlight showed her fleeing figure
+in the trees, and shouting aloud he sprang through the coverts to
+intercept her flight. The chase was of short duration thereafter.
+Emburdened by the heavy box she could not watch her step; and a
+protruding root caught cruelly at her ankle. She was hurled with
+stunning force to the ground.
+
+Desperate and intent, but in realization of impending triumph, Ray's
+strong arms went about her.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIX
+
+For the second time in his life Ray Brent felt the sting of Beatrice's
+strong hand against his face. In the desperation of fear she had smote
+him with all her force. His arms withdrew quickly from about her; and
+her wide, disdainful eyes beheld a sinister change in his expression.
+The moonlight was in his eyes, silver-white; and they seemed actually to
+redden with fury, and again she saw that queer, ghastly twitching at the
+corner of his lips. The girl's defiance was broken with that one blow.
+She dropped her head, then walked past him into the presence of her
+father.
+
+Neilson and Chan were on their feet now, and they regarded her in the
+utter silence of amazement. Breathing fast, Ray came behind her.
+
+"Build up the fire, Chan," he said in a strange, grim voice. "We want to
+see what we've caught."
+
+Obediently Chan kicked the coals from under the ashes, and began to heap
+on broken pieces of wood. The sticks smoked, then a little tongue of
+yellow flame crept about the fuel. But still the emburdened silence
+continued--the white-faced girl in the ring of silent, watching men.
+
+Slowly the fire's glow crept out to her, revealing--even better than the
+bright moonlight--her wide, frightened eyes and the dark, speculative
+faces of the men. Then Ray spoke sharply in his place.
+
+"Well, why don't you question her?" he demanded of Neilson. "I suppose
+you know what she was doing. She was trying to steal food. It looks to
+me like she's gone over to the opposite camp."
+
+Her father sighed, a peculiar sound that seemed to come from above the
+tree tops, as if fast-flying waterfowl were passing overhead. "Is that
+so, daughter?" he asked simply.
+
+"I was trying to take some of your food--to Ben," Beatrice replied
+softly. "He's in need of it."
+
+"You see, they're on intimate terms," Ray suggested viciously. "Ben was
+in need of food--so she came here to steal it."
+
+But Neilson acted as if he had not heard. "Why didn't you speak to
+us--and tell us you were safe?" he asked. "We've come all the way here
+to find you."
+
+"Perhaps _you_ did. If you had been here alone, I would have told you.
+But Ray and Chan came all the way here to find Ben. I heard what they
+said--back there in the brush. They intend to kill him when they find
+him. I--I didn't want him killed."
+
+Her father stared at her from under his bushy brows. "After carrying you
+from your home--taking you into danger and keeping you a prisoner--you
+still want to protect him?"
+
+The girl nodded. "And I want you to protect him, too," she said.
+"Against these men." Suddenly she moved forward in earnest appeal. "Oh,
+Father--I want you to save him. He's never touched me--he's treated me
+with every respect--done everything he could for me. When he was injured
+he told me to go back--to take what little food there was, and go
+back--"
+
+"I can take it, then, that you're out of food?" Ray asked.
+
+"We're starving--and Ben's sick. Father, I make this one appeal--if your
+love for me isn't all gone, you'll grant it. I love him. You might as
+well know that now, as later. I want you to save the man your daughter
+loves."
+
+Chan cursed in the gloom, his lean face darkened; but Neilson made no
+answer. Ray in his place sharply inhaled; but the sullen glow in his
+eyes snapped into a flame.
+
+If Beatrice had glanced at Ray, she would have ceased her appeal and
+trusted everything to the doubtful mercy of flight,--into the gloom of
+the forest. As it was, she did not fully comprehend the cruel lust, like
+flame, that sped through his veins. She would have hoped for no mercy if
+she could have seen the strange, black surge of wrath in his face.
+
+"He has been kind to me--and he was in the right, not in the wrong. I
+know about the claim-jumping. Father, I want you to stand between him
+and these men--help him--and give him food. I didn't speak to you
+because I was afraid for him--afraid you'd kill him or do some other
+awful thing to him--"
+
+Slowly her father shook his head. "But I can't save him now. He brought
+this on himself."
+
+"Remember, he was in the right," the girl pleaded brokenly. "You
+won't--you couldn't be a partner to murder. That's all it would
+be--murder--brutal, terrible, cold-blooded murder--if you kill him
+without a fight. It couldn't be in defense of me--I tell you he hasn't
+injured me--but was always kind to me. It would be just to take that
+letter away from him--"
+
+"So he has the letter, has he?" Ray interrupted. He smiled grimly, and
+his tone was again flat and strained. "And he's sick--and starving. It
+isn't for your father to say, Beatrice, what's to be done with Ben.
+There's three of us here, and he's just one. Don't go interfering with
+what doesn't concern you, either--about the claim. You take us where he
+is, and we'll decide what to do with him."
+
+Her eyes went to his face; and her lips closed tight. Here was one
+thing, on this mortal earth, that she must not tell. Perhaps, by the
+mercy of heaven, they would not find the cave, hidden as it was at the
+edge of the little glade. The forests were boundless; perhaps they would
+miss the place in their search. She straightened, scarcely perceptibly.
+
+"Yes, tell us where he is," her father urged. "That's the first thing.
+We'll find him, anyway, in the morning."
+
+The girl shook her head. She knew now that even if they promised mercy
+she must not reveal Ben's whereabouts. Their rage and cruelty would not
+be stayed for a spoken promise. The only card she had left, her one
+last, feeble hope of preserving Ben's life, lay in her continued
+silence. Ray's foul-nailed, eager hands could claw her lips apart, but
+he could not make her speak.
+
+"I won't tell you," she answered at last, more clearly than she had
+spoken since her capture. "You said a few minutes ago I had gone
+over--to the opposite camp. I am, from now on. He was in the right, and
+he gave up his fight against you long ago. Now I want to go."
+
+Fearing that Neilson might show mercy, Ray leaped in front of her. "You
+don't go yet awhile," he told her grimly. "I've got a few minutes'
+business with you yet. I tell you that we'll find him, if we have to
+search all year. And he'll have twice the chance of getting out alive if
+you tell us where he is."
+
+She looked into his face, and she knew what that chance was. Her eyelids
+dropped halfway, and she shook her head. "I'd die first," she answered.
+
+"It never occurred to you, did it, that there's ways of _making_ people
+tell things." He suddenly whirled, with drawn lips, to her father.
+"Neilson, is there any reason for showing any further consideration to
+this wench of yours? She's betrayed us--gone over to the opposite
+camp--lived for weeks, willing, with Ben. I for one am never going to
+see her leave this camp till she tells us where he is. I'm tired of
+talking and waiting. I'm going to get that paper away from him, and I'm
+going to smash his heart with my heel. We've almost won out--and I'm
+going to go the rest of the way."
+
+Neilson straightened, his eyes steely and bright under his grizzled
+brows. Only too well he knew that this was the test. Affairs were at
+their crisis at last. But in this final moment his love for his daughter
+swept back to him in all its unmeasured fullness,--and when all was said
+and done it was the first, the mightiest impulse in his life. Ben had
+been kind to her, and she loved him; and all at once he knew that he
+could not yield him or her to the mercy of this black-hearted man before
+him.
+
+He had lived an iniquitous life; he was inured to all except the worst
+forms of wickedness; but for the moment--in love of his daughter--he
+stood redeemed. He was on the right side at last. His hand drew back,
+and his face was like iron.
+
+"Shut that foul mouth!" he cautioned, with a curious, deadly evenness of
+tone. "I haven't surrendered yet to you two wolves. If one of you dares
+to lay a hand on Beatrice, I'll kill him where he stands."
+
+Even as he spoke his thought went to his rifle, leaning against a dead
+log ten feet away. This was the moment of test: the jealousy and rivalry
+and hatred between himself and Ray had reached the crisis. And the
+spirit of murder, terrible past any demon of the Pit, came stalking from
+the savage forest into the ruddy firelight.
+
+Ray leered, his muscles bunching. "And I say to you, you're a dirty
+traitor too," he answered. "She ain't your daughter any more. She's Ben
+Darby's squaw. She's not fit for a white man to touch any more, for all
+her lies. You say one word and you'll get it too."
+
+And at that instant the speeding pace of time seemed to halt, showing
+this accursed scene, so savage and terrible in the eerie light of the
+camp fire, at the edge of the haunted, breathless darkness, in vivid and
+ghastly detail. Neilson leaped forward with all his power; and if his
+blow had gone home, Ray would have been shattered beneath it like a tree
+in the lightning blast. But Ray's arms were incredibly swift, and his
+rifle leaped in his hands.
+
+The barrel gleamed. The roar reechoed in the silence. Neilson's head
+bowed strangely; and for a moment he stood swaying, a ghastly blankness
+on his face; then pitched forward in the dew-wet grass.
+
+Beatrice's last defense had fallen, seriously wounded; and Ray's arm
+seized her as, screaming, she tried to flee.
+
+
+
+
+XL
+
+The shot that wounded Jeffery Neilson carried far through the forest
+aisles, reechoing against the hills, and arresting, for one breathless
+moment, all the business of the wilderness. The feeding caribou swung
+his horns and tried to catch the scent; the moose, grubbing for water
+roots in the lake bottom, lifted his grotesque head and stood like a
+form in black iron. It came clear as a voice to the cavern where Ben
+lay.
+
+The man started violently in his cot. His entire nervous system seemed
+to react. Then there ensued a curious state in which his physical
+functions seemed to cease,--his heart motionless in his breast, his body
+tensely rigid, his breath held. There was an infinite straining and
+travail in his mind.
+
+The truth was that the sound acted much as a powerful stimulant to his
+retarded nervous forces. It was the one thing his resting nerve-system
+needed; it was as if chemicals were in suspension in a crucible, and at
+a slight jar of the glass they made mysterious union and expelled a
+precipitation. Almost instantly he recognized the sound that had reached
+him, with a clear and unmistakable recognition such as he had not
+experienced since the night of the accident, as the report of a rifle.
+His mind gave a great leap and remembered its familiar world.
+
+A rifle--probably discharged by Beatrice in a hunt after big game. It
+was true that their meat supply was low; he remembered now. Yet it was
+curious that she should be hunting after dark. The gloom was deep at
+the cavern mouth. Besides, he had always kept his rifle from her,
+fearing that she might turn it against him. He looked about him, trying
+to locate the source of the flood of light on the cavern floor. It was
+the moon, and it showed that the girl was gone. He started to sit up.
+
+But his left arm did not react just properly to the command of his
+brain. It impeded him, and its old strength was impaired. For a moment
+more he lay quiet, deep in thought. Of course--he had been injured by
+the falling tree. He remembered clearly, now. And the rifle had been
+broken.
+
+The only possible explanation for the shot was that a rifle had been
+fired by some invader in their valley--in all probability Neilson or one
+of his men. Beatrice's absence would also indicate this fact: perhaps
+she had already joined her father and was on her way back to Snowy Gulch
+with him. In that case, why had he himself been spared?
+
+He looked out of the door of the cavern, trying to get some idea of the
+lateness of the hour. The very quality of the darkness indicated that
+the night was far advanced. Neilson would not be hunting game at this
+hour. Was his own war--planned long ago--even now being waged in ways
+beyond his ken?
+
+His old concern for Beatrice swept through him. With considerable
+difficulty he got to his feet, then holding on to the wail, guided
+himself to the shelf where they ordinarily kept their little store of
+matches. He scratched one of them against the wall.
+
+In the flaring light his eyes made a swift but careful appraisal of his
+surroundings. The girl's cot had not been slept in; and to his great
+amazement he saw that their food supplies were spent. Still holding to
+the wall he walked to the cave mouth.
+
+Instantly his keen eyes saw the far-off gleam of the camp fire on the
+distant margin of the lake. For all that the hour was late, it burned
+high and bright. He watched it, vaguely conscious of the insidious
+advance of a ghastly fear. Beatrice was his ally now--if these weeks had
+sent home one fact to him it was this--and her absence might easily
+indicate that she was helpless in the enemy's hands. The thing suggested
+ugly possibilities. Yet he could not aid her. He could scarcely walk;
+even the knife that he wore at his belt was missing, probably carried by
+Beatrice when she gathered roots in the woods.
+
+But presently all questions as to his course were settled for him. His
+straining ear caught the faintest, almost imperceptible vibration in the
+air--a soundwave so dim and obscure that it seemed impossible that the
+human mind could interpret it--but Ben recognized it in a flash. In some
+great trouble and horror, in the sullen light of that distant camp fire,
+Beatrice had screamed for aid.
+
+Only by the grace of the Red Gods had he heard the sound at all. Except
+for the fact that the half-mile intervening was as still as death, and
+that half the way the sound sped over water, he couldn't have hoped to
+perceive it. If the wind had blown elsewhere than straight toward him
+from the enemy camp, or if his marvelous sense of hearing had been less
+acute, the result would have been the same; and there could have been no
+answer from this dark man at the cave mouth who stood so tense and
+still. Finally, by instinct as much as by conscious intelligence, he
+identified the sound, marked it as a reality rather than a fancy, and
+read the tragic need behind it. Swiftly he started down the glade toward
+her.
+
+Yet in a moment he knew that unless he conserved his strength he could
+not hope to make a fourth of the distance. At the first steps he swayed,
+half staggering. He had paid the price for his weeks of illness and his
+injuries. If he had been in a sick room, under a physician's care, he
+would have believed it impossible to walk unsupported across the room.
+But need is the mother of strength, and this was the test. Besides, he
+had had several days of convalescence that had put back into his sinews
+a measure of his mighty strength. Mostly he progressed by holding on to
+the trees, pulling himself forward step by step.
+
+Likely he would come too late to change the girl's fate. Yet even now he
+knew he must not turn back. If the penalty were death, there must be no
+hesitancy in him; he must not withhold one step.
+
+But it was a losing fight. The hill itself seemed endless; a hundred
+cruel yards of marsh must be traversed before ever he reached the
+nearest point by the lake. The enemy camp from where Beatrice had called
+to him lay on the far side of the lake, a distance of a full mile if he
+followed around the curving shore. And black and bitter self-hatred
+swept like fire through him when he realized that he could not possibly
+keep on his feet for so long a way.
+
+Was this all he had fought for--surging upward through these long, weary
+weeks out of the shadow of death--only to fall dead on the trail in the
+moment of Beatrice's need? Instantly he knew that nothing in his life,
+no other desire or dream, had ever meant as much to him as this: that he
+might reach her side in time. Even his desire for vengeance, in that
+twilight madness, like Roland's, that had shaped his destiny, had been
+wavering and feeble compared to this. And no moment of his existence had
+ever been so dark, so bereft of the last, dim star of hope that lights
+men's way in the deep night of despair.
+
+He gave no thought to the fact of his own helplessness against three
+armed men in case he did succeed in reaching their camp. The point could
+not possibly be considered. The imperious instincts that forced him on
+simply could not take it into reckoning. He knew only he must reach her
+side and put in her service all that he had.
+
+He fell again and again as he tried to make headway in the marsh. But
+always he forced himself up and on. Only too plain he saw that the time
+was even now upon him when he could no longer keep his feet at all. But
+still he plunged on, and with tragically slow encroachments the shore
+line drew up to him.
+
+But he could not go on. The fire itself was hardly a quarter of a mile
+distant, directly across the lake, but to follow the long shore was an
+insuperable mile. Already his leg muscles were failing him, refusing to
+the respond to the impulse of his nerves. Yet it might be that if he
+could make himself heard his enemies would leave the girl for a moment,
+at least--give her an instant's respite--while they came and dispatched
+his own life. Whatever they were doing to her, there in that ring of
+firelight, might be stayed for a moment, at least.
+
+But at that instant he remembered the canoe. He had always kept it
+hidden in a little thicket of tall reeds,--if only the girl had not
+removed it from its place in his weeks of sickness! He plunged down into
+the tall tules. Yes, the boat was still in place.
+
+It took all the strength of his weakened body to push it out from the
+reeds into the water. Then he seized the long pole they had sometimes
+used to propel themselves over the lake. Except for his injured arm,
+the paddle would have been better--he could have made better time and
+escaped the danger of being stranded in deep water--but he doubted that
+he could handle it with his faltering arm. He pushed off, putting most
+of the strain on his uninjured right arm.
+
+The canoe was strongly but lightly made, so that it could be portaged
+with greatest possible ease; and his strokes, though feeble, propelled
+it slowly through the water. The great, white full moon, beloved of long
+ago, looked down from above the tall, dark heads of the spruce and
+changed the little water-body into a miracle of burnished silver. In its
+light Ben's face showed pale, but with a curious, calm strength.
+
+The lake seemed untouched by the faint breath of wind that blew from the
+distant shore. The waters lay quiet, and the trout beneath saw the black
+shadow of the canoe as it passed. A cow moose and her calf sprang up the
+bank with a splash, frightened by the poling figure in the stern. And on
+the far shore, clear where the lake had its outlet in a small river,
+even more keen wilderness eyes might have beheld the black, moving dot
+that was the craft. But the distance was too far and the wind was wrong
+for the keen mind behind the eyes to make any sort of an interpretation.
+
+It might have been that Fenris the wolf, running with a female and two
+younger males that he had mastered that long-ago night on the ridge,
+paused in his hunting to watch and wonder. But his wild brute thoughts
+were not under the bondage of memory to-night; his savage heart was
+thrilled and full; and more than likely he did not even turn his head.
+
+Ray and Chan, standing beside their prisoner in their grisly camp on the
+opposite shore, might have beheld Ben's approach if weightier matters
+had not occupied their minds. They had only to walk to the edge of the
+firelight and stare down through a rift in the trees to see him. But
+they stood with the angry glare revealing a strange and sinister
+intentness in their drawn faces and ominous speculations in their evil
+eyes.
+
+
+
+
+XLI
+
+It was a wilderness moon that rose over the spruce to-night,--white as
+new silver, incredibly large, inscrutably mysterious. The winds had
+whisked away the last pale cloud that might have dimmed its glory, and
+its light poured down with equal bounty on peak and hill, forest and
+yellow marsh. The heavy woods partook most deeply of its enchantment:
+tall, stately trees pale and nebulous as if with silver frost, each
+little stream dancing and shimmering in its light, every glade laid with
+a fairy tapestry, every shadow dreadful and black in contrast. The
+wilderness breathed and shivered as if swept with passion.
+
+The wilderness moon is the moon of desire; and all this great space of
+silence seemed to respond. It seemed to throb, like one living entity,
+as if in longing for something lost long ago--a half-forgotten
+happiness, a glory and a triumph that were gone never to return. No
+creatures that followed the woods trails were dull and flat to-night.
+They were all swept with mystery, knowing vague longings or fierce
+desires. It was the harvest moon; but here it did not light the fields
+so that men might harvest grain. Rather it illumined the hunting trails
+so that the beasts of prey might find relief from the wild lusts and
+seething ferment that was in their veins. But mostly the forest mood was
+disconsolate, rather than savage, to-night. The wild geese on the lake
+called their weird and plaintive cries, their strange complaints that no
+man understands; the loons laughed in insane despair; and the coyotes
+on the ridge wailed out the pain of living and the vague longings of
+their wild hearts.
+
+In the glory of that moon Fenris the wolf knew the same, resistless
+longings that so many times before had turned him from the game trails.
+There was something here that was unutterably dear to him,--something
+that drew him, called him like a voice, and he could not turn aside.
+Because he was a beast, he likely did not know the force that was
+drawing him again along the lake shore. Yet the souls of the lower
+creatures no man knows; and perhaps he had conscious longings,
+profoundly intense, for a moment's touch of a strong hand on his
+shoulder,--one never-to-be-forgotten caress from a certain god that had
+gone to a cave to live. It was true that his wild instincts, ever more
+in dominance these past weeks, would likely halt him at the cavern maw,
+permitting no intimacy other than to ascertain that all was well. They
+were too strong ever to brook man's control again. The moon was a moon
+of desire, but only because it was also the moon of memory,--and perhaps
+memories, stirring and exalting, were sweeping through him. Straight as
+an arrow he turned toward the cave.
+
+His followers--the gaunt female and two younger males, the structure
+about which the winter pack would form--hesitated at first. They had no
+commanding memories of the cavern on the far side of the lake. Yet
+Fenris was their leader; by the deep-lying laws of the pack they must
+follow where he led. They could not decoy him into the trails of game.
+As ever they sped swiftly, silently after him.
+
+In this forest of desires Ben knew but one,--that he might yet be of aid
+to Beatrice. But he knew in his heart that it was a vain hope. He was
+within a hundred yards of Ray's camp now, but the struggle to reach the
+lake and the poling across its waters had brought him seemingly to the
+absolute limit of his strength, clear to the brink of utter exhaustion.
+Never in his life before had he known the full meaning of
+fatigue,--fatigue that was like a paralysis, blunting the mechanism of
+the brain, burning like a slow fire in his muscles, poisoning the vital
+fluids of his nerves. Stroke after stroke, never ceasing!--The flame was
+high, crackling--just before him. Through a rift in the trees he could
+see the outline of two men and the slim form of the girl. Just a few
+yards more.
+
+But of all the desires that the moon invoked in the woods people there
+were none so unredeemed, so wicked and cruel as this that slowly wakened
+in the evil hearts of these two degenerate men, Beatrice's captors. She
+sensed it only vaguely at first. All the disasters that had fallen upon
+her had not taught her to accept such a thing as this: surely this would
+be spared her, at least. There is a kindly blind spot in the brain that
+often will not let the ugly truth go home.
+
+For a strange, still moment Ray's face seemed devoid of all expression.
+It was flat and lifeless as dark clay. Then Beatrice felt the insult of
+his quickening gaze.
+
+"Put a rope around her wrists, Chan," he said. "We don't want to take
+chances on her getting away."
+
+He spoke slowly, rather flatly. There was nothing that her senses could
+seize upon--either in his face or voice to justify the swift,
+strangling, killing horror that came upon her. He stood simply gazing,
+and as she met his gaze her lips parted and drew back in a grimace of
+terror; thus they stood until the blood began to leap fast in Chan's
+veins. She needed no further disillusionment. Chan spoke behind her, a
+startled oath cut off short, and she felt him moving swiftly toward her.
+It was her last instant of respite; and her muscle set and drew for a
+final, desperate attempt at self-defense.
+
+She wore Ben's knife at her belt, and her hand sped toward it. But the
+motion, fast as it was, came too late. Chan saw it; and leaping swiftly,
+his arms went about her and pinned her own arms to her sides.
+
+She tried in vain to fight her way out of his grasp. She writhed,
+screaming; and in the frenzy of her fear she all but succeeded in
+hurling him off. She managed to draw the knife clear of the sheath, yet
+she couldn't raise her arm to strike. Ray was aiding his confederate
+now; and in an instant more she was helpless.
+
+Their drawn faces bent close to hers. She felt their hot hands as they
+drew her wrists in front of her and fastened them with a rope. "Not too
+tight, Chan," Ray advised. "We don't want her to get uncomfortable
+before we're done with her. Don't tie her ankles; she can't run through
+the brush with her arms tied.--Now give her a moment to breathe."
+
+They stood on each side of her, regarding her with secret, growing
+excitement. Already they had descended too far to know pity for this
+girl. The wide-open eyes, so dark with terror and in contrast with the
+stark paleness of her face, the lips that trembled so piteously, the
+slender, girlish figure so helpless to their depraved desires moved them
+not at all.
+
+The scene was one of never-to-be-forgotten vividness. The tenderness and
+mercy, most of all the restraint that has become manifest in men in
+these centuries since they have left their forest lairs to live in
+permanent abodes, had no place here. About them ringed the primeval
+forest, ensilvered by the moon; the fire crackled with a dread ferocity;
+and at the edge of the thickets the motionless form of Jeffery Neilson
+lay with face buried in the soft, summer grass. All was silent and
+motionless, except the fierce crackling of the fire; except a curious,
+intermittent, upward twitching of the corner of Ray's lips.
+
+"So you and Ben are bunkies now, are you?" he asked slowly, without
+emphasis.
+
+But the girl made no reply, only gazing at him with starting eyes.
+
+"A traitor to us, and Ben's squaw!" He turned fiercely to Chan. "I guess
+that gives us right to do what we want to with her. And now she can yell
+if she wants to for her lover to come and save her."
+
+She did not even try to buy their mercy by informing them where they
+might find Ben. Only too well she knew that their dreadful intentions
+could not be turned aside: she would only sacrifice Ben without aiding
+herself. Ray moved toward her, his eyes deeply sunken, the pupils
+abnormally enlarged.
+
+"You haven't lost all your looks," he told her breathlessly. "That mouth
+is still pretty enough to kiss. And I guess you won't slap--this time--"
+
+He drew her toward him, his dark face lowering toward hers. She
+struggled, trying to wrench away from him. Helpless and alone, the
+moment of final horror was at hand. In this last instant her whole being
+leaped again to Ben,--the man whose strength had been her fort
+throughout all their first weeks in the wilds, but whom she had left
+helpless and sick in the distant cavern. Yet even now he would rise and
+come to her if he knew of her peril. Her voice rose shrilly to a scream.
+"Ben--help me!"
+
+And Ray's hands fell from her shoulders as he heard the incredible
+answer from the shore of the lake. The brush rustled and cracked: there
+was a strange sound of a heavy footfall,--slow, unsteady, but
+approaching them as certain as the speeding stars approach their
+mysterious destinations in the far reaches of the sky. Ray
+straightened, staring; Chan stood as if frozen, his hands half-raised,
+his eyes wide open.
+
+"I'm coming, Beatrice," some one said in the coverts. Her cries, uttered
+when her father fell, had not gone unheard. In the last stages of
+exhaustion, deathly pale yet with a face of iron, Ben came reeling
+toward them out of the moonlight.
+
+
+
+
+XLII
+
+Ben walked quietly into the circle of firelight and stood at Beatrice's
+side. But while Ray and Chan gazed at him as if he were a spectre from
+the grave, Beatrice's only impulse was one of immeasurable and
+unspeakable thankfulness. No fate on earth was so dreadful but that it
+would be somewhat alleviated by the fact of his presence: just the sight
+of him, standing beside her, put her in some vague way out of Ray's
+power to harm. Exhausted, reeling, he was still the prop of her life and
+hope.
+
+"Here I am," he said quietly. "The letter's in my pocket. Do what you
+want with me--but let Beatrice go."
+
+His words brought Ray to himself in some degree at least. The ridiculous
+fear of the moment before speedily passed away. Why, the man was
+exhausted--helpless in their hands--and the letter was in his pocket. It
+meant _triumph_--nothing else. All Ray's aims had been attained. With
+Ben's death the claim, a fourth of which had been his motive when he had
+slain Ezram, would pass entirely to him,--except for such share as he
+would have to give Chan. His star of fortune was in the sky. It was his
+moment of glory,--long-awaited but enrapturing him at last.
+
+Neilson lay seriously wounded, perhaps dead by now. Whatever his
+injuries, he would not go back with them to share in the gold of the
+claim. The girl, also, was his prey,--to do with what he liked.
+
+"I see you've come," he answered. "You might as well; we'd have found
+you to-morrow." His voice was no longer flat, but rather exultant,
+boasting. "You thought you could get away--but we've shown you."
+
+Ben nodded. "You are--" he strained for the name he had heard Beatrice
+speak so often--"Ray Brent?" His eyes fell to the form of Neilson,
+wounded beyond the fire. "I see you've been at your old job--killing. It
+was you who killed Ezra Melville."
+
+Ray smiled, ever so faintly: this was what he loved. "You're talking to
+the right man. Anything you'd like to do about it?"
+
+Ben's face hardened. "There is nothing I can do, now. You came too late.
+But I would have had something to do if I had my rifle. I'm glad it was
+you, not Beatrice's father. I ask you this--will you accept my
+proposition. To take Ezram's letter, destroy it and me too--and let the
+girl go in safety?"
+
+Beatrice stretched her bound arms and touched his hairy wrist. "No,
+Ben," she told him quietly. "There's no use of trying to make such a
+bargain as that. Men that murder--and assault women,--won't keep their
+word."
+
+"They were about to attack you, were they?" His voice dropped a tone;
+otherwise it seemed the same.
+
+"Yes--just as you came."
+
+He turned once more to Ray, eyeing him with such a look of contempt and
+scorn that it smarted like a whiplash in spite of the protecting mantel
+of his new-found triumph. "Oh, you depraved dogs!" he told them quietly
+and distinctly. "You yellow, mongrel cowards!"
+
+Ray straightened, stung by the words. "And I'll make you wish you was
+dead before you ever said that," he threatened. "I'll tell you what you
+wanted to know a minute ago--and I tell you no. I won't make any deal
+with you. We'll do what we like to you, and we'll do what we like with
+your dirty squaw, too--the woman you've been living with all these
+months. We've got you where we want you. You're in no fix to make terms.
+Chan--put a rope around his legs and a gag in his rotten mouth!"
+
+They moved toward him simultaneously, and Ben summoned the last jot of
+his almost-spent strength to hurl them off. They did not need deadly
+weapons for this wasted form. Yet for the duration of one second Ben
+fought with an incredible ferocity and valor.
+
+He hurled Chan from his path, and his sound right arm leaped to Ray's
+throat in a death grip. For that one instant his old-time strength
+returned to him,--as to Samson as his arms went about the pillars of the
+temple. They found him no weakling, in that first instant, but a deadly,
+fighting beast, the "Wolf" Darby of the provinces,--his finger nails
+sinking ever deeper into the flesh of Ray's throat, his body braced
+against Chan's attack. And for all that Beatrice's arms were tied, she
+leaped like a she-wolf to her lover's aid.
+
+But such an unequal battle could last only an instant. Ray focused his
+attack upon Ben's injured left arm, Chan struck once at the girl,
+hurling her to the ground with a base blow, then lashed brutal blows
+into Ben's face. The burst of strength ebbed as quickly as it had come:
+his legs wilted under him, and he sank slowly to the ground.
+
+Maddened with battle, for a moment more Chan lashed cowardly blows into
+his face; and he left the brutal labor only to help Ray affix ropes
+about his ankles. Then the two conquerors stood erect, breathing loudly.
+
+Seemingly the utter limit of their brutality was reached,--but for the
+moment only. A strange and foreboding silence fell over the camp: only
+the sound of troubled breathing was heard above the lessening crackle of
+the fire. They did not turn at once again to the work of crushing Ben's
+life out with their fists and boots, nor did they restrain Beatrice as
+she crawled over the blood-stained grass to reach her lover's side.
+
+"Let her go," Ray said to Charley. "She can't help him any."
+
+It was true. They had put up their last defense. The girl crept nearer,
+lying almost prone beside him, and her soft hands stole over his bruised
+flesh. But no tears came now. She was past the kindly mercy of tears.
+She could only gaze at him, and sometimes dry half-sobs clutched at her
+throat. The man half-opened his eyes, smiling.
+
+Life still remained in his rugged body. Even the cruel test of the last
+hour had not taken that from him. The sturdy heart still beat, and the
+breath still whispered through his lips: there was life in plenty to
+afford such sport as Ray and Chan might have for him.
+
+The last, least quality of redemption--such magic and beauty as might
+have been wrought by the firelight dancing over the moonlit glade--was
+quite gone now. The powers of wickedness were in the ascendency, and
+this was only the abode of horror. Yet it was all tragically true, not a
+nightmare from which she would soon waken. This was the remote heart of
+Back There--a primeval land where the demons of lust and death walked
+unrestrained--and the shadow of the moonlit trees fell dark upon her.
+
+The back logs were burning dully now, and the coals were red, and Chan
+and Ray took seats on a huge, dead spruce to talk over their further
+plans. It was all easy enough. They could linger here, living mostly on
+meat, until the rising waters of the Yuga could carry them down to the
+Indian villages. Their methods and procedure in regard to Ben were the
+only remaining questions.
+
+For a few minutes they took little notice of the prone figures at the
+far edge of the fading firelight. In their hands they were as helpless
+as Jeffery Neilson, left already by the receding radiance to the soft
+mercy of the shadows. Attention could be given them soon enough. Their
+own triumph was beginning to give way to deep fatigue.
+
+Ben and Beatrice had talked softly at first, accepting their fate at
+last and trying to forget all things but the fact of each other's
+presence. They had kept the faith to-night, they had both been true; and
+perhaps they had conquered, in some degree, the horror of death. His
+right hand held hers close to his lips, and only she could understand
+the message in its soft pressure, and the gentle, kindly shadows in his
+quiet eyes. But presently her gaze fastened on some object in the grass
+beside him.
+
+He did not understand at first. He knew enough not to attract his
+enemies' attention by trying to turn. The girl relaxed again, but her
+hand throbbed in his, and her eyes shone somberly as if the luster of
+some strange, dark hope.
+
+"What is it?" he asked whispering.
+
+"I see a way out--for us both," she told him. She knew he would not
+misunderstand and dream that she saw an actual avenue to life and
+safety. "Don't give any sign."
+
+"Then hurry," he urged. "They may be back any instant. What is it?"
+
+"A way to cheat 'em--to keep them from torturing you--and to save
+me--from all the things they'll do to me--when you're dead. Oh,
+Ben--you won't fail me--you'll do it for me."
+
+He smiled, gently and strongly. "Do you think I'd fail you now?"
+
+"Then reach your good arm on the other side--soft as you can. There's a
+knife lying there--your own knife--they knocked out of my hand. They'll
+jump at the first gleam. You know what to do--first me, in the
+throat--then yourself."
+
+His face showed no horror at her words. They were down to the most
+terrible realities; and as she had said, this was the way out! The great
+kindness still dwelt in his eyes--and she knew he would do as she asked.
+
+One gleam of steal, one swift touch at the throat--and they would never
+know the unspeakable fate that their depraved captors planned for them.
+_It was no less than victory in the last instant of despair!_ It was
+freedom: although they did not know into what Mystery and what Fear the
+act would dispatch them, it was freedom from Ray and Chan, none the
+less. And Ben welcomed the plan as might a prisoner, waiting in the
+death-cell, welcome a reprieve.
+
+He turned, groping with his hand. There was no use of waiting longer.
+The knife lay just beyond his reach; and softly he moved his body
+through the grass.
+
+But this gate to mercy was closed before they reached it. A sudden
+flaring of the fire revealed them--the gleam of the blade and Ben's
+stretching hand--and Ray left his log in a swift, catlike leap.
+
+If Ben had possessed full use of both hands there still might have been
+time to send home the two crucial blows, or at least to dispatch
+Beatrice out of Ray's power to harm. But his injured arm impeded him,
+and his hand fumbled as he tried to seize the hilt. With a sharp oath
+Ray crushed the blade into the ground with his heel; then kicked
+viciously at the prone body of his enemy.
+
+And at that first base blow his rage and blood-lust that had been
+gathering was swiftly freed. It was all that was needed to set him at
+the work of torture. For an instant he stood almost motionless except
+for the spasmodic twitching--now almost continuous--at his lips and for
+the slow turning of his head as he looked about for a weapon with which
+he could more quickly satiate the murder-madness in his veins. The knife
+appealed to him not at all; but his eye fell on a long, heavy club of
+spruce that had been cut for fuel. He bent and his strong hands seized
+it.
+
+As he swung it high the girl leaped between--with a last, frantic
+effort, wholly instinctive--to shield Ben's body with her own. But it
+was only an instant's reprieve. Chan had followed Ben, and sharing Ray's
+fiendish mood, jerked her aside. Ben raised himself up as far as he
+could at a final impulse to thrust the girl out of harm's way.
+
+Yet it was to be that Ray's murderous blow was never to go home. A
+mighty and terrible ally had come to Ben's aid. He came pouncing from
+the darkness, a gaunt and dreadful avenger whose code of death was as
+remorseless as Ray's own.
+
+It was Fenris the wolf, and he had found his master at last. Missing him
+at the accustomed place in the cave, he had trailed him to the lake
+margin: a smell on the wind had led him the rest of the way. He was not
+one to announce his coming by an audible footfall in the thicket. Like a
+ghost he had glided almost to the edge of the firelight, lingering
+there--with a caution learned in these last wild weeks of running with
+his brethren--until he had made up his brute mind in regard to the
+strangers in the camp. But he had waited only until he saw Ray kick the
+helpless form before him,--that of the god that Fenris, for all the wild
+had claimed him, still worshipped in his inmost heart. With fiendish,
+maniacal fury he had sprung to avenge the blow.
+
+And his three followers, trained by the pack laws to follow where he
+led, and keyed to the highest pitch by their leader's fury, leaped like
+gray demons of the Pit in his wake.
+
+
+
+XLII
+
+As a young tree breaks and goes down in the gale Ray Brent went down
+before the combined attack of the wolves. What desperate struggle he
+made only seemed to increase their fury and shatter him the faster.
+Utterly futile were all his blows: his frantic, piercing screams of fear
+and agony raised to heaven, but were answered with no greater mercy than
+that he would have shown to Ben a moment before.
+
+Seemingly in an instant he was on his back and the ravening pack were
+about him in a ring. In that lurid firelight their fangs gleamed like
+ivory as they flashed, here and there, over his body and throat, and
+their fierce eyes blazed with pale-blue fire,--the mark and sign of the
+blood madness of the beasts of prey.
+
+Seemingly in a single instant the life had been torn from him, leaving
+only a strange, huddled, ghastly thing beside the dying fire. But the
+pack leaped from him at once. Fenris had caught sight of Chan's figure
+as he ran for the nearest tree and seemingly with one leap he was upon
+him. He sprang at him from the side; and his fangs gleamed once.
+
+He had struck true, his fangs went home, and the life went out of Chan
+Heminway in a single, neighing scream. He pitched forward, shuddered
+once in the soft grass, and lay still. The pack surged around his body,
+struck at it once or twice, then stood growling as if waiting for their
+leader's command.
+
+Before ever Ray fell, Ben had taken what measures of self-defense he
+could in case the pack, forgetting its master's master, might turn on
+himself and the girl. He had reached the knife hilt and severed the
+ropes about the girl's wrists. "Stay behind me," he cautioned. "Don't
+move a muscle."
+
+He knew that any attempt to reach and climb a tree would attract the
+attention of the pack and send them ravening about her. Again he knew
+that her life as well as his own depended on his control of the pack
+leader. He saw Chan go down, seemingly in a single instant, and he
+braced himself against attack. "Down, Fenris!" he shouted. "Down--get
+down!"
+
+The great wolf started at the voice, then stood beside the fallen,
+gazing at Ben with fierce, luminous eyes. "Down, down, boy," Ben
+cautioned, in a softer voice. "There, old fellow--down--down."
+
+Then Fenris whined in answer, and Ben knew that he was no longer to be
+feared. The three lesser wolves seemed startled, standing in a nervous
+group, yet growling savagely and eyeing him across the dying fire. For a
+moment Fenris's fury had passed to them, but now that his rage was dead,
+all they had left was an inborn fear of such a breed as this,--these
+tall forms that died so easily in their fangs. Fenris trotted slowly
+toward Ben, but with the true instincts of the wild his followers knew
+that this was no affair of fangs and death. He came in love, in a
+remembered comradeship, just as often he had led them to the mouth of
+the cavern, and they did not understand. They slowly backed away into
+the shadows, fading like ghosts.
+
+Ben's arms, in unspeakable gratitude, went about the shoulders of the
+wolf. Beatrice, sobbing uncontrollably yet swept with that infinite
+thankfulness of the redeemed, crept to his side. Fenris whined and
+shivered in the arms of his god.
+
+Quietude came at last to that camp beside the lake, in the far, hidden
+heart of Back There. Once more the blood moved with sweet, normal
+tranquillity in the veins, the thrill and stir died in the air, and the
+moonlight was beautiful on the spruce.
+
+The wolves had gone. Fenris's three brethren had slipped away, perhaps
+wholly mystified and deeply awed by their madness of a moment before;
+and from the ridge top they had called for their leader to join them. He
+had done his work, he had avenged the base blow that had seemed to
+strike at his own wild heart, he had received the caress he had
+craved,--and there was no law for him to stay. The female called
+enticingly; the wild game was running for his pleasure on the trails.
+
+Ben had watched the struggle in his fierce breast, and Beatrice's eyes
+were soft and wonderfully lustrous in the subdued light as she gave the
+wolf a parting caress. But he could not stay with them. The primal laws
+of his being bade otherwise. His was the way of the open trails, the
+nights of madness and the rapture of hunting--and these were folk of the
+caves! They were not his people, although his love for them burned like
+fire in his heart.
+
+He could not deny the call of his followers on the ridge. It was like a
+chain, drawing him remorselessly to them. Whining, he had sped away into
+the darkness.
+
+The fire had been built up, Beatrice had rallied her spent strength by
+full feeding of the rich, dried meat, and had done what she could for
+Neilson's injury. Ben, exhausted, had lain down in some of the blankets
+of his enemy's outfit. Neilson was not, however, mortally hurt. The
+bullet had coursed through the region of his shoulder, missing his heart
+and lungs, and although he was all but unconscious, they had every
+reason to believe that a few weeks of rest would see him well again.
+
+Beatrice bathed the wound, bandaged it the best she could, then covered
+him up warmly and let him go to sleep. And the time came at last, long
+past the midnight hour, that she crept once more to Ben's side.
+
+There was little indeed for them to say. The stress of the night had
+taken from them almost all desire to talk. But Ben took her hand in his
+feebly, and held it against his lips.
+
+"We're safe now," Beatrice told him, her eye's still bright with tears.
+"We've seen it through, and we're safe."
+
+Ben nodded happily. It was true: there was nothing further for them to
+fear. With the aid of the rifles of the three fallen, they could procure
+meat in plenty for their remaining time at Back There; besides, the
+store of jerked caribou and moose was enough to hold them over. When the
+rains came again, the three of them--Neilson and Ben and Beatrice--could
+glide on down to the Indian encampments in the canoe. Thence they could
+reach the white settlements beyond the mountains.
+
+Her glance into the future went still farther, because she knew certain
+news that as yet Ben had not heard. She had heard from Ray's lips that
+night that Ben's claim had been legally filed; he had only to return and
+take possession. It straightened out the future, promised success in the
+battle of life, gave him an interest to hold him in these northern
+forests. But she would not tell him to-night. It could wait for a more
+quiet hour.
+
+Presently she saw that he was trying to speak to her, whispering; trying
+to draw her ear down to his lips. She smiled, with an infinite
+tenderness. Dimly though he spoke, she heard him every word.
+
+"I love you," he told her simply. He watched her face, as intently as
+the three Wise Men watched the East, for a sign. And he saw it, clear
+and ineffably wonderful, in the stars that came into her eyes.
+
+"I love you," she answered, with equal simplicity. They lay a while in
+silence, blissful in this wonder each had for the other, wholly content
+just that their hands and lips should touch.
+
+The same miracle was upon them both; and the girl's thought, ranging
+far, seized upon a deep and moving discovery. "All this belongs to us,"
+she told him, indicating with one movement of her arm the boundless
+solitudes about them. "This is our own country, isn't it, Ben? We can't
+ever--go away."
+
+It was true: they could never leave the forest for long. They were its
+children, bred in the bone. Their strong thews would waste in a gentler
+land. It was their heritage. They must not go where they could not
+behold the dark line of the forest against the sky.
+
+The fire burned down. The moon wheeled through the sky. The tall spruce
+saw the dawn afar and beckoned.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Sky Line of Spruce, by Edison Marshall
+
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