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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Man in the Twilight, by Ridgwell Cullum
+
+
+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 Man in the Twilight
+
+Author: Ridgwell Cullum
+
+Release Date: January 22, 2005 [eBook #14756]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MAN IN THE TWILIGHT***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Wallace McLean, Josephine Paolucci, Joshua Hutchinson,
+and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+THE MAN IN THE TWILIGHT
+
+by
+
+RIDGWELL CULLUM
+
+G.P. Putnam's Sons
+New York and London
+The Knickerbocker Press
+
+1922
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BY RIDGWELL CULLUM
+
+ THE DEVIL'S KEG
+ THE HOUND FROM THE NORTH
+ THE BROODING WILD
+ THE NIGHT RIDERS
+ THE WATCHERS OF THE PLAINS
+ THE COMPACT
+ THE TRAIL OF THE AXE
+ THE ONE WAY TRAIL
+ THE SHERIFF OF DYKE HOLE
+ TWINS OF SUFFERING CREEK
+ THE GOLDEN WOMAN
+ THE WAY OF THE STRONG
+ THE LAW BREAKERS
+ THE SON OF HIS FATHER
+ THE MEN WHO WROUGHT
+ THE PURCHASE PRICE
+ THE TRIUMPH OF JOHN KARS
+ THE LAW OF THE GUN
+ THE HEART OF UNAGA
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO MY NEPHEW
+GEOFFREY FREDERICK BURGHARD
+THIS BOOK IS AFFECTIONATELY
+DEDICATED
+
+
+
+
+THE AUTHOR TO THE READER
+
+
+The story of the Sachigo wood-pulp mills, told in this book, is entirely
+a work of imagination. But as I have had to draw very largely on my
+knowledge of the wood-pulp trade of Eastern Canada, and the conditions
+under which it is carried on, I desire it to be clearly understood that
+this story contains no portraiture of any person or persons, living or
+dead, and contains no representation of any business organisation
+connected with the trade.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+PART ONE
+
+ I.--THE CRISIS
+ II.--THE MAN WITH THE MAIL
+ III.--IDEPSKI
+ IV.--THE "YELLOW STREAK"
+ V.--NANCY MCDONALD
+ VI.--NATHANIEL HELLBEAM
+
+
+PART TWO
+
+EIGHT YEARS LATER
+
+ I.--BULL STERNFORD
+ II.--FATHER ADAM
+ III.--BULL LEARNS CONDITIONS
+ IV.--DRAWING THE NET
+ V.--THE PROGRESS OF NANCY
+ VI.--THE LONELY FIGURE
+ VII.--THE SKANDINAVIA MOVES
+ VIII.--AN AFFAIR OF OUTPOSTS
+ IX.--ON THE OPEN SEA
+ X.--IN QUEBEC
+ XI.--DRAWN SWORDS
+ XII.--AT THE CHATEAU
+ XIII.--DEEPENING WATERS
+ XIV.--THE PLANNING OF CAMPAIGN
+ XV.--THE SAILING OF THE _Empress_
+ XVI.--ON BOARD THE _Empress_
+ XVII.--THE LONELY FIGURE AGAIN
+ XVIII.--BULL STERNFORD'S VISION OF SUCCESS
+ XIX.--THE HOLD-UP
+ XX.--ON THE HOME TRAIL
+ XXI.--THE MAN IN THE TWILIGHT
+ XXII.--DAWN
+ XXIII.--NANCY
+ XXIV.--THE COMING OF SPRING
+ XXV.--NANCY'S DECISION
+ XXVI.--THE MESSAGE
+ XXVII.--LOST IN THE TWILIGHT
+
+
+
+
+THE MAN IN THE TWILIGHT
+
+PART I
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE CRISIS
+
+
+They sat squarely gazing into each other's eyes. Bat Marker had only one
+mood to express. It was a mood that suggested determination to fight to
+a finish, to fight with the last ounce of strength, the last gasp of
+breath. He was sitting at the desk, opposite his friend and employer,
+Leslie Standing, and his small grey eyes were shining coldly under his
+shaggy, black brows. His broad shoulders were squared aggressively.
+
+There was far less display in the eyes of Leslie Standing. They were
+wide with a deep pre-occupation. But then Standing was of very different
+type. His pale face, his longish black hair, brushed straight back from
+an abnormally high forehead, suggested the face of a student, even a
+priest. Harker was something of the roused bull-dog, strong, rugged,
+furious; a product of earth's rough places.
+
+"Give us that last bit again."
+
+Bat's tone matched his attitude. It was abrupt, forceful, and he thrust
+out a hand pointing at the letter from which the other had been reading.
+
+Standing's eyes lit with a shadow of a smile as he turned again to the
+letter.
+
+ "There's just one thing more. It's less pleasant, so I've kept
+ it till the last. Hellbeam is in Quebec. So is his agent--the
+ man Idepski. My informant tells me he saw the latter leaving the
+ steam-packet office. It suggests things are on the move your way
+ again. However, my man is keeping tab. I'll get warning through
+ at the first sign of danger."
+
+Standing looked up. His half smile had gone. There was doubt in his
+eyes, and the hand grasping the letter was not quite steady. But when he
+spoke his tone was a flat denial of the physical sign that Bat had been
+quick to observe.
+
+"Charlie Nisson's as keen as a needle," Standing said. "His whisper's a
+sight more than another fellow's shout."
+
+Bat regarded the letter. He watched the other lay it aside on a pile of
+papers. He was thinking, thinking hard. And his thought was mostly of
+the man whose shaking hand betrayed him. Suddenly an explosive movement
+brought his clenched fist down on the table with a thud.
+
+"Hell!" he cried, in a fury of impatience. "What's the use? The danger
+sign's hoisted. I know it. You know it. Nisson knows it. Well? Say,
+Hellbeam's been in Quebec a score of times since--since--. That don't
+worry a thing. No. He's got big finance in the Skandinavia bunch in
+Quebec. We know all about that. It's Idepski. Idepski ain't visiting the
+packet office for his health. He ain't figgerin' on a joy trip up the
+Labrador coast. No. That's the signal, sure. Idepski at the packet
+office. Their darn mud-scow mostly runs here, to Sachigo, and there
+ain't a thing along the way to interest Idepski--but Sachigo. We'll be
+getting word from Charlie Nisson in some hurry."
+
+"Yes, we'll get it in a hurry."
+
+Standing nodded. He was transparently perturbed. Bat watched him
+closely. Then, in a moment, his mind was made up.
+
+"See right here, Les," he cried, in a tone he vainly endeavoured to
+restrain. "I've figgered right along this thing would need to happen
+sometime. You can't beat a feller like Hellbeam all the time and leave
+him without a kick. It don't need me to tell you that. But I want to get
+a square eye on the whole darn game. Maybe you don't get all you did to
+that guy when you cleaned him out of ten million dollars on Wall Street
+seven years ago.
+
+"Say, you were a mathematical professor at a Scottish University before
+you reckoned to buck the game on Wall Street, weren't you?" he went on,
+more moderately. He forced a grin into eyes that were scarcely
+accustomed. "One of those guys who mostly make two and two into four,
+and by no sort of imagination can cypher 'em into five. I know. You
+figgered out that Persian Oil gamble to suit yourself, and forgot to
+figger that Hellbeam was at the other end of it. No. The other feller
+don't cut any ice with you while you're playing around with figgers.
+It's only afterwards you find that figgers ain't the whole game, and
+wrostling ten million dollars out of one of the biggest railroad kings
+and bank presidents in America has something to it liable to hand you
+nightmare. Well, you got that nightmare. So did I. You've had it for
+most the whole of the last seven years. But it ain't a nightmare now.
+It's dead real, which is only a way of sayin' Hellbeam's set his dogs on
+a hot trail, and we're the poor darn gophers huntin' our holes right up
+here on the Labrador coast.
+
+"Oh, yes. I know what you'd say. You've said it all before. Hellbeam
+hasn't a kick comin'. You were both operators on Wall Street. You were
+both playing the financial game as all the world knows it. You beat him
+on a straight financial fight. It was just a matter of the figgers which
+it's your job to play around with.
+
+"Now I'm just going to say the thing that's in my mind," he went on, his
+tone changing again to something clumsily persuasive. "You can take it
+easy from me. You see, you picked me up when I was down and out. You
+passed me a hand when there wasn't a hope left me but a stretch of
+penitentiary. I fought that darn lumber-jack to a finish, which is
+mostly my way in things. And it was plumb bad luck that he went out by
+accident. Well, it don't matter. It was you who got me clear away when
+they'd got the penitentiary gates wide open waiting for me, and it's a
+thing I can't never forget. I'm out for you all the time, and I want you
+to know it when I'm telling you the things in my mind. Hellbeam's got a
+mighty big kick coming. It's the biggest kick any feller of his sort can
+have. He's the money power of Sweden. He's one of the big money powers
+of the States. He lives for money and the power it hands him. Well? This
+is how I figger. Just how you played him up I can't say. But it's his
+job to juggle around with figgers same as it's yours, and if you beat
+him out of ten million dollars you must have played a slicker hand than
+him. All of which says you must have got more to windward of the law
+than him--and he knows it. Why, it's easy. The feller who has the money
+power to hold the crown jewels of Sweden from falling into the hands of
+yahoo politicians out to grab the things they haven't the brains to come
+by honestly, is mostly powerful enough to buy up the justice he needs,
+or any other old thing. Hellbeam means to get his hands on you. He's
+going to get you across the darn American border. And when he's got you
+there he's going to send you down, by hook or crook, to the worst hell
+an American penitentiary can show you. It's seven years since you hurt
+him. But that ain't a circumstance. If it takes him seventy-seven he'll
+never quit your trail."
+
+Bat paused, and, for a moment, turned from the wide black eyes he had
+held seemingly fascinated while he was talking. It almost seemed that
+the emotions stirring in his broad bosom were too overpowering for him,
+and he needed respite from their pressure. But he came again. He was
+bound to. It was his nature to drive to the end at whatever cost to
+himself.
+
+"I'm handing you this stuff, Les, because I got to," he went on. "It
+ain't because I'm liking it. No, sir. And if you've the horse sense I
+reckon you have, you'll locate my object easy. Those words of Nisson's
+have told us plain we got to fight. We got to fight like hell. And the
+time's right now. Oh, yes, we're going to fight. You an' me, just the
+same as we've fought a heap of times before. There ain't a feller I know
+who's got more fight in him than you--when you feel that way.
+But--well, say, you just need a boost to make you feel like it. You
+ain't like me who wants to fight most all the time. No. Well--I'm going
+to hand you that boost."
+
+"How?"
+
+Standing's unruffled interrogation was in sharp contrast with the
+other's earnestness. There was a calm tolerance in it. The tolerance of
+a temperament given to philosophy rather than passion. Perhaps it was a
+mask. Perhaps it was real. Whatever it was, Bat's next words sent the
+hot fire of a man's soul leaping into his eyes.
+
+"When your boy's born, what then?"
+
+"Ah!"
+
+Bat's fists clenched at the sound of the other's ejaculation. It was the
+nervous clenching at a sound that threatened danger. Swift as a shot he
+followed up his challenge.
+
+"Your pore gal's down there in Quebec hopin' and prayin' to hand you
+that boy child you reckon Providence is going to send you. Well, when he
+gets along, and Hellbeam's around--and--"
+
+Bat broke off. Standing had risen from his chair. He had moved swiftly,
+his lean figure propelled towards the window by long, nervous strides.
+His voice came back to the man at the table, while his eyes gazed down
+upon the waters of Farewell Cove, over the widespread roofs of the great
+groundwood mill, the building of which was the result of his seven
+years' sojourn on the Labrador coast.
+
+"You've handed it me, Bat," he said, in a quick, nervous way. "I'll
+fight. I know. You guess I'm scared at Nisson's news. Maybe I am, I
+don't know. I'm not a man of iron guts. Maybe I never shall be. It's
+hell to me to feel a shadow dogging my every step. Yes, you're right.
+It's been a nightmare, and now--why, now it's real. But get your mind at
+rest. I'm going to fight Hellbeam all I know. And with the thought of
+Nancy, and the boy she's going to give me, I don't need a thing else.
+No."
+
+"That's how I figgered."
+
+Bat's delight softened his hard eyes for the moment, and his attitude
+relaxed as Standing went on.
+
+"You reckon I've no imagination," he said. "You reckon I'm just a
+calculating machine that can juggle figures better than any other
+machine." He shook his dark head. "I guess you don't do me full justice.
+When I quit the university on the other side it was because I had built
+myself up a big dream. I crossed to the United States with my
+imagination full of the things I hoped to do. It was the chance I looked
+for. And I found it in Hellbeam, and the Persian Oils it was his hobby
+to manipulate. I jumped in and grabbed it with both hands. And, as you
+say, I beat him at his own game. But that was only part of my dream. The
+next part you also know, though you choose to think it was only as a
+refuge from Hellbeam that I came here to Sachigo. I admit circumstances
+have modified my original dream, but then I dreamed my first dream as a
+man unmarried. Now I have added to it in the thought of the son my
+wife's going to present me with. After beating Hellbeam and making the
+fortune I desired, I didn't flee here to the coast of Labrador as a mere
+refuge from the man you tell me I robbed. No. This place served its
+purpose that way, it's true. But it was the place I selected long since
+for the fulfilment of the second part of my dream.
+
+"Bat--Bat, old friend. It isn't I who lack imagination. It's you, with
+your bull-dog, fighting nature. Years ago, way back there in my rooms at
+the university, I took up a study that interested me mightily. It was
+when the European war was on, and was doing its best to unship the
+brains of half the world. I took it up to relieve myself of the strain
+of things. And it inspired me with a desire to achieve something that
+looked well-nigh impossible. I was watching the Swedes, the
+Skandinavians generally, and I saw them getting fat and rich by holding
+the rest of the world to ransom for paper and wood pulp--the stuff we
+call here groundwood. It was then that my dream was born. Oh, yes, it's
+changed a bit since then. But not so much. All I learned at that time
+told me there was only one country in the world that was due to hold the
+world's paper industry, and that country was yours--Canada. The
+illimitable forests of the country are one of the most amazing features
+of it. The water power--yes, and even the climate. But I saw all
+Skandinavia's advantage. Hitherto they've had a complete monopoly.
+Geographically they were in the thick of the world. The whole darn thing
+was in their lap. But they have a weakness which you could never find in
+this country. Their forests are being eaten into. Their lumber is
+receding farther and farther from their mills. Their labour is
+difficult. Well, I set to work with a map and those figures which you
+guess are my strong point. I played around with all the information of
+Quebec and Labrador I could get hold of. Then, after worrying around
+awhile, I realised that, with only eighteen hundred sea miles dividing
+Britain from Labrador, given the cheapness of power, sufficiently
+extensive plant and forest limits and adequate shipping, I could put
+groundwood on the European market in favourable competition with
+Skandinavia. By this means I could build up an industry which means the
+wealth of Canada for the Canadians, and establish the paper industry of
+the world within the heart of our British Empire. So it was Farewell
+Cove and Sachigo on the coast of Labrador for me. And the locality had
+nothing to do with the man who guesses I robbed him."
+
+It was Bat who was held silent now. He nodded his head at the narrow
+back that remained turned on him.
+
+"Well, since then," Standing went on, "seven years have passed.
+Circumstances have forced modifications on my plans. Hellbeam is the
+circumstance. You say we are the gophers hunting our holes. Maybe you're
+right. Anyway Hellbeam's shadow is haunting me. It's haunting me in that
+I know--_I_ feel--that the fulfilment of this dream is not for me. Why?"
+
+He turned abruptly from the window. His pale face was even paler under
+the excitement burning in his dark eyes. He thrust out a hand, a
+delicate, long-fingered hand pointing at his friend and faithful
+servant.
+
+"Say, you reckon I've no imagination. Listen. I see the time coming when
+all you say of Hellbeam's purpose will be fulfilled, and my dream
+shattered and tumbling about my head. If Hellbeam succeeds, can I let
+this thing happen? Can I sacrifice this great purpose in such a personal
+disaster? No. My hope is in my little wife, that dear woman who's given
+herself to me with the full knowledge of the threat hanging over my
+future. She and I have dreamed a fresh dream. And she's even now
+fulfilling her part of that dream. Yes, you're right. I'm going to fight
+for our dream with every ounce that's in me. I know my failings. I'm at
+heart a coward. But I'm out to fight though the gates of hell are agape
+waiting for me. And when I'm beaten, and Hellbeam's satisfied his kick,
+my boy, my little son, will step into my shoes and carry on the work
+till it's complete. Oh, yes, I say 'my son.' Nancy will see to it that
+she gives me a son. And, by God, how I will fight for him!"
+
+Bat was silent before the tide of his friend's passion. He listened to
+the strange mixture of clear thinking and unreasoning faith with a
+feeling of something like awe of a man whom he had long since given up
+attempting to fathom. He was a rough lumberman, a mill-boss, who, by
+sheer force, had raised himself from the dregs of a lumber camp to a
+position where his skill and capacity had full play. And in his utter
+lack of education it was impossible that he should be able to fathom a
+nature so complex, so far removed from his sphere of culture.
+
+His devotion to the ex-university professor was based on a splendid
+gratitude such as only the native generosity of his temper could bestow.
+The man had once served him in his extremity. Even to this day he never
+quite realised how the thing had come about, and Leslie Standing refused
+to talk of it. All he knew was that as mill-boss of an obscure mill, far
+in the interior of Quebec, away down south of Sachigo, he had fought one
+of those sudden battles with a lumber-jack which seem to spring up
+without any apparent reason. And in the desperateness of it, in the
+fierce height to which his battling temper had arisen, he had killed his
+man. Even so, these things were sufficiently common for little notice of
+the matter to have been taken. But it so happened that the dead man was
+the hero of the workers of the mill, and Bat Harker was their well-hated
+boss. Forthwith, in their numbers, the workers at once determined that
+Bat should pay the penalty. They seized and imprisoned him, while they
+sent down country to get him duly tried and condemned. It was then the
+miracle happened.
+
+It happened in the night, with the appearance of a lean, tall man, with
+a high forehead, and smooth black hair, and the clothes of civilisation
+to which Bat Harker was little enough accustomed. He entered his prison
+room seemingly without question. He told Bat that if he cared to get
+away he had the means awaiting him outside. And the prisoner who had
+visions of hanging, or at best, a long term of imprisonment, snatched at
+the helping hand held out. And Leslie Standing had brought him in safety
+straight to Farewell Cove, where together, with the vast capital which
+the former had wrung from the Swedish financier, Nathaniel Hellbeam,
+they had undertaken the creation of the great mill of Sachigo.
+
+Bat, in his wonder at the apparent ease of his rescue, had sought
+information. But little enough had been forthcoming. Leslie Standing had
+only smiled in his pensive fashion.
+
+"Money," he had said calmly. "Just money. It can do most things."
+
+That was all. And thenceforward the subject had been taboo. Even after
+seven years of intimate relations, Bat was still mystified on the
+subject, he was still guessing.
+
+Now, as he listened to his friend's expressions of faith, so strangely
+jumbled with calculated purpose, he sat at the table groping helplessly.
+Suppose--suppose that faith were to be shattered. What then? His mind
+was concerned, deeply concerned. And he dared not put his fears into
+words.
+
+Standing came back to his chair.
+
+"Here, we've talked these things enough," he said. "You've got my word.
+Just don't worry a thing. If Hellbeam's dogs get around, well--we're
+here first. All I want is news of Nancy. And that'll be along any old
+time now. When I get that--."
+
+The door of the office was thrust open, and an olive-hued face appeared.
+It was the clerk who worked in direct contact with the owner of the
+Sachigo mill. He was one-third nigger, another French Canadian, and the
+rest of him was Indian. It was a combination that appealed to the man
+who employed him.
+
+"They've 'phoned it through from the wireless at the headland, Boss,"
+the man said without preamble, pushing a sheet of paper into Leslie
+Standing's hand.
+
+He had gone as swiftly and silently as he came, and the door was closed
+softly behind him.
+
+Standing was gazing across at Bat. He had not even glanced at the
+message.
+
+"I'd like to bet," he cried, his eyes alight with a smiling excitement.
+Then he shook his head. "No. I wouldn't bet on it. It's too sacred.
+Nancy--my Nancy--."
+
+He broke off, and glanced down at the paper. In a moment the smile fell
+from his eyes. When he looked up it was to flash a keen glance at the
+rugged face beyond the desk.
+
+"Here, listen," he cried, with a sharp intake of breath.
+
+"Watch _Lizzie_ for U.G.P. Signed--Nisson."
+
+Bat nodded.
+
+"U.G.P. That's Union Great Peninsular Railroad. That's Hellbeam's. It
+means--."
+
+"It means Hellbeam's men are aboard. The packet _Lizzie_ is due at our
+quay in less than an hour."
+
+Standing tore the message into small fragments and dropped them into the
+wastepaper basket beside him. Only was his emotion displayed in the
+deliberate care with which he reduced the paper to the smallest possible
+fragments.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE MAN WITH THE MAIL
+
+
+The calm waters of Farewell Cove lay a-shimmer under the slanting rays
+of the sun. A wealth of racing white cloud filled the dome of the summer
+sky, speeding under the pressure of a strong top wind. Even the harsh
+world of Labrador was smiling under the beneficence of the brief summer
+season.
+
+Leslie Standing stood for a moment before passing down the winding
+woodland trail on his way to the water-front below. The view of it all
+was irresistible to him in his present mood, and he feasted his eyes
+hungrily while the resolve he had taken yielded an inflexible hardening.
+
+Bat Harker was less affected by the things spread out before him. He was
+concerned only for the mood of the man beside him. So he waited with
+such patience as his hasty nature could summon.
+
+"It's all good, Bat, old friend," Standing said, after a moment's silent
+contemplation. "It's too good to lose. It's too good for us to stand for
+interference from--Nathaniel Hellbeam."
+
+Bat grunted some sort of acquiescence. He was gazing steadily out over
+the spruce belt which covered the lower slopes of the hillside. His keen
+deep-set eyes were on the shipping lying out in the cove, watching the
+fussy approach of the bluff packet boat.
+
+It was a scene of amazing natural splendour which the works of man had
+no power to destroy. Farewell Cove was a perfect natural harbour,
+deep-set amidst surrounding, lofty, forest-clad hills. It was wide and
+deep, a veritable sea-lake, backing inland some fifteen miles behind the
+wide headland gateway to the East, which guarded its entrance from the
+storming Atlantic. Its shores were of virgin forest, peopled with the
+delicate-hued spruce, and all the many other varieties of soft, white,
+long-fibred timber demanded in the manufacture of the groundwood pulp
+needed for the world's paper industry.
+
+Far as the eye could see, in every direction, it was the same; forest
+and hill. And, in the heart of it all, the great watercourse of the
+Beaver River debouched upon the cove which linked it with the ocean
+beyond. It was a world of forest, seeming of limitless extent.
+
+But the feast that had inspired Leslie Standing's words was less the
+banquet which Nature had spread than the things which expressed the
+labours he and his companion had expended during the past seven years.
+He was concerned for the endless forests. He appreciated the great
+waterfall to the west, where the Beaver River fell off the highlands of
+the interior and precipitated itself into the cove below. These were the
+two things in Nature he had demanded to make his work possible. For the
+rest, the rugged immensity of scenery, the mighty contours of the aged
+land about him, the vastness of the harsh primordial world, so
+inhospitable, so forbidding under the fierce climate which Nature had
+imposed, made no appeal. It served, and so it was sufficient. The lights
+and shades under the summer sunlight were full of splendour. No artist
+eye could have gazed upon it all and missed its appeal. But these men
+lived amidst it the year round, and they had learned something of the
+fear which the ruthless northland inspires. To them the beauty of the
+open season was a mockery, a sham, the cruel trap of a heartless
+mistress.
+
+It was on the wide southern foreshore, just below where the falls of the
+Beaver River thundered into the chasm which the centuries of its flood
+had hewn in the granite rock, that Standing had founded his great mill.
+It lay there, in full view from the hillside, amidst a tangle of stoutly
+made roads, where seven years ago not even a game track had existed. He
+had set it up beside his water-power, and had given it the name which
+belonged to the ruined trading post he had found on the southern
+headland of the cove when first he had explored the region. Sachigo. A
+native, Labrador word which meant "Storm." The trading post had since
+been re-built into a modern wireless station, and so had become no
+longer the landmark it once had been. But Standing's whim had demanded
+the necessity for preserving the name, if only for the sake of its
+meaning.
+
+In seven years the translation of the wilderness had been well-nigh
+complete. Its vast desolation remained. That could never change under
+human effort. It was one of the oldest regions of the earth's land,
+driven and beaten and desolated under a climate beyond words in its
+merciless severity. But now the place was peopled. Now human dwellings
+dotted the forest foreshore of the cove. And the latter were the homes
+of the workers who had come at the mill-owner's call to share in his
+great adventure.
+
+Then there was shipping in the cove. A fleet of merchant shipping
+awaiting cargoes. There was a built inner harbour, with quays, and
+warehouses. There were travelling cranes, and every appliance for the
+loading of the great freighters with all possible dispatch. There were
+light railways running in every direction. There were sheltering "booms"
+in the river mouth crammed with logs, and dealt with by an army of river
+men equipped with their amazing peavys with which they thrust, and
+rolled, and shepherded the vast mass of hewn timber towards the
+slaughterhouse of saws. Then, immediately surrounding the mill, there
+was a veritable town of storehouses and offices and machine shops of
+every description. There were power-houses, there were buildings in the
+process of construction, and the laid foundations of others projected.
+It was a world of active human purpose lost in the heart of an immense
+solitude which it was nevertheless powerless to disturb.
+
+"Yes, it's all too good to have things happen, Bat," Standing went on
+presently. "Hark at the roar of the falls. What is it? Five hundred
+thousand horsepower of water, summer and winter. Listen to the drone of
+the grinders." He shook his head. "It's a great song, boy, and they
+never get tired of singing it. There's only thirty-six of 'em at
+present. Thirty-six. We'll have a hundred and thirty-six some day. Look
+down there at the booms." He stood pointing, a tall, lean figure on the
+hillside. "Tens of thousands of logs, and hundreds of men. We'll
+multiply those again and again--one day. It's fine. The freighters lying
+at anchor awaiting their cargoes. Some day we'll have our own ships--a
+big fleet of 'em. See the smoke pennants floating from our smoke stacks.
+They're the triumphant pennants of successful industry, eh? We can't
+have too many such flags flying. One day we'll have trolley cars running
+along the shores of the cove to bring the workers in to the mill. It'll
+be like a veritable Atlantic City. Oh, it's a great big dream. There's
+nothing amiss. No."
+
+"Only the _Lizzie_ getting in."
+
+Bat was without apparent appreciation. He was thinking only of the
+message they had received, and the threat it contained.
+
+Standing glanced round at the sturdy figure beside him. A half smile lit
+his sallow features. Then he turned again and sought out the tubby
+vessel approaching the wharf below. But it was only for a moment. Some
+subtle thought impelled him, and he glanced back at the house on the
+hillside he had just left, the house he had erected for the woman whose
+devotion had taught him the real meaning of life.
+
+It was a long, low, rambling, gabled building. It was an extensive
+timber-built home with a wide verandah and those many vanities and
+conceits of building that would never have been permitted had it been
+intended for bachelordom. He remembered how Nancy and he had designed it
+together. He remembered the delight with which they had looked forward
+to its completion, and ultimately their boundless joy in the task of
+its furnishing. He remembered how Nancy had insisted that it should
+contain not only their home, but his own private office, from which he
+could control the great work he had set his hand to. It had been her
+ardent desire to be always near him, always there to support him under
+the burden of his immense labours. And remembering these things a fierce
+desire leapt within him, and he turned again to the man at his side.
+
+"Yes, she's getting in, Bat," he said. "But I just wanted to get a peek
+at things. Well, I've seen all I want, old friend. Now I'm ready. Fight?
+Oh, yes, I'm ready to fight. Come on." And he laughed as he hurried down
+the woodland trail to the water-side.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The two men had reached the quay-side, which was lined with bales of
+wood-pulp stacked ready for shipment. Farther down its length the cranes
+were rattling their chains, swinging their burdens out over the holds of
+the vessel taking in its moist cargo. The stevedores were vociferously
+busy, working against time. For, in the brief open season, time was the
+very essence of the success demanded for the mills. The noise, the babel
+of it all was usually the choicest music to Standing and his manager.
+
+But just now they were less heeding. Their eyes were turned upon the
+small steamer plugging its deliberate way over the water towards them.
+It was a small, heavily-built tub of a vessel calculated to survive the
+worst Atlantic storms.
+
+Bat's face was without any expression of undue emotion. But the hard
+lines about his clean-shaven mouth were sharply set. Standing was asurge
+with an excitement that fired his dark eyes. His wide-brimmed hat was
+thrust back from his forehead, and he stood with his hands thrust deeply
+in the pockets of his moleskin trousers. His nervous fingers were
+playing with loose coins and keys which they found irresistible.
+
+The _Lizzie_ came steadily on.
+
+"We'll know the whole game in minutes now."
+
+Standing could keep silent no longer. Bat nodded.
+
+"Yep."
+
+Orders from the bridge of the packet boat rang out over the water. Then
+Standing went on.
+
+"I want to find Idepski aboard," he said. He was scarcely addressing his
+companion. "It would be good to get Master Walter here, fifty-three
+degrees north." A short, hard laugh punctuated his words. Then he turned
+abruptly. "Who's running No. 10 camp?"
+
+Just for an instant Bat withdrew his gaze from the approaching vessel.
+He flashed a keen look of enquiry into the eyes of the questioner.
+
+"Ole Porson," he said.
+
+"I thought so. He's a good boy. He'll do."
+
+Standing nodded. The cold significance of his tone was not lost on his
+companion. Maybe Bat understood the thing that was passing in the
+other's mind. At any rate he turned again to the broad-beamed tub
+steaming so busily towards them.
+
+"I see old Hardy on the bridge," Standing went on a moment later. Then
+he added: "Fancy navigating the Labrador coast for forty years. No, I
+couldn't do it. I wouldn't have the--guts."
+
+Bat still remained silent. He understood. The other was talking because
+it was impossible for him to refrain.
+
+"They're standing ready to make fast," Standing said sharply. He drew a
+quick breath. Then his manner changed and his words came pensively.
+"Say, it's a queer life--a hell of a life. The sea folk, I mean. It's
+about the worst on earth. Think of it, cooped within those timbers that
+are never easy till they lie at anchor in the shelter of a harbour. I'd
+just hate it. Their life? What is it? It's not life at all. Hard work,
+hard food, hard times, and hard drinking--when they're ashore--most of
+them. I think I can understand. They surely need something to drown the
+memory of the threat they're always living under. No, they don't live.
+They exist. Here, let's stand clear. They're coming right in."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The bustle of landing was in full swing. Even with so small a craft as
+the _Lizzie_ there was commotion. Orders flew from lip to lip. Creaking
+cables strained at unyielding bollards. Gangways clattered out from
+deck, and ran down on to the quay with a crash. Hatches were flung open
+and the steam winches rattled incessantly.
+
+Standing and Harker were looking on from a vantage point well clear of
+the work of unloading. The captain of the vessel, "Old Man" Hardy, was
+with them. The seaman was beaming with that satisfaction which belongs
+to the master when his vessel is safely in port.
+
+"Oh, I guess it ain't been too bad a trip," he was saying. "Takin' the
+'ins' with the 'outs,' I'd say it was a fairish passage, which is mostly
+as it should be, seein' it's my last voyage in the old barge. Y'see, you
+folks are kind of robbing me of this blessed old kettle," he explained,
+with a grin that lit up the whole of his mahogany features. "Y'see we're
+loaded well-nigh rail under with stuff for your mill, which don't leave
+a dog's chance for the other folks along the coast. The Company guesses
+they got to put on a two thousand tonner. The _Myra_. I haven't a kick
+comin'. She's all a seaboat. Still, I'm kind of sorry, don't you know.
+I've known the _Lizzie_ since she came off the stocks, which is mostly
+forty years, and we're mighty good friends, which ain't allus the way.
+I'd say, too, I'm getting old for a change. Still--."
+
+Standing shook his head.
+
+"What do they say? 'Hardy' by name, 'Hardy' by nature. The toughest and
+best sailorman on the Labrador coast! Well, I'm sorry you don't feel
+good about it. But," he added with a smile, "it means a good deal to us
+getting a bigger packet."
+
+Captain Hardy nodded.
+
+"Thankee kindly. It's good to know folks reckon a fellow something more
+than just part of a kettle of scrap like this old packet. But I'd have
+been glad to finish my job with her. Still, times don't stand around
+even in Labrador." He finished up with something in the nature of a
+sigh.
+
+The work going forward was full of interest. But it was not the work
+that held Standing, or the watchful eyes of Bat Harker. Their sole
+interest was in the personality of the crew and the five passengers,
+mostly "drummers," from the great business houses of Quebec and
+Montreal, who were struggling to land their trunks of samples and get
+them off to the offices of the mill so as to complete their trade before
+the _Lizzie_ put to sea again. Not one of these escaped their
+observation.
+
+"You seem to keep much the same crew right along, Hardy," Standing said
+pleasantly. "I suppose they like shipping with a good skipper. I seem to
+recognise most of their faces."
+
+"Oh, yes. They're mostly the same boys," Hardy agreed, obviously
+appreciating the compliment. "But I guess I lost four boys this trip.
+They skipped half an hour before putting to sea. It happens that way now
+and then, if they're only soused enough when they get aboard. They're a
+crazy lot with rye under their belts. I just had to replace 'em with
+some dockside loafers, or lie alongside another day."
+
+Standing nodded. A man was moving down the gangway bearing a large,
+grey, official-looking sack on his shoulders. He was a slight, dark man
+with a curiously foreign cast about his features.
+
+"The mail?" he enquired. And a curious sharpness flavoured his demand.
+Then he added, with studied indifference. "One of your--dockside
+loafers?"
+
+Captain Hardy laughed. He continued to laugh as he watched the
+unhandiness of the man staggering down the gangway under his burden.
+
+"Yep. The mail," he said. "And I'd hate to set that feller to work on a
+seaman's job. He's about as unhandy as a doped Chinaman. I'd say Masters
+is playing safe keeping him from messing up the running gear while we're
+discharging. Say, get a look at it."
+
+A great laugh accompanied the old man's words as the foreign-looking
+creature tripped on the gangway, and only saved himself from a bad fall
+by precipitating his burden upon the quay. There was no responsive
+laughter in Standing. And Bat Harker's features remained rigidly
+unsmiling. Standing turned sharply.
+
+"Maybe you can spare that boy to run those mails up to my office," he
+said. "It's a good healthy pull up the hill for him, and my folks are
+full to the neck with things. I'd be glad."
+
+"Sure he can." Captain Hardy was only too delighted to be able to oblige
+so important a customer of his company. He promptly shouted at the
+landing officer.
+
+"Ho, you! Masters! Just let that darn Dago tote them mails right up to
+Mr. Standing's office. He ain't no sort of use out of hell down
+here--anyway."
+
+The mate's reply came back with an appreciative grin.
+
+"Ay, sir," he cried, and forthwith hurled the order at the mail carrier
+with a plentiful accompaniment of appropriate adjectives.
+
+"Thanks," Standing turned away. His smiling luminous eyes were shining.
+"I'll get right along up, Captain. There's liable to be things need
+seeing to in that mail before you pull out. You'd best come along, too,
+Bat," he added pointedly.
+
+Standing hurried away. A sudden fierce passion was surging through his
+veins. Nisson was right. He knew it--now. And in a fever of impatience
+he was yearning to come to grips with those who would rob him of the
+hopes in which his whole being was bound up.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+IDEPSKI
+
+
+The two men reached the office on the hillside minutes before the mail
+carrier. They took the hill direct, passing hurriedly through the aisles
+of scented woods which shadowed its face. The other, the stranger, was
+left with no alternative but the roadway, zigzagging at an easier
+incline.
+
+Standing passed into the house. His confidential man of many races
+looked up from his work. The quick, black eyes were questioning. He was
+perhaps startled at the swift return of the man whom he regarded above
+all others.
+
+Standing spoke coldly, emphatically.
+
+"There's a man coming along up. He's a sailorman, and he's dressed in
+dirty dungaree, and he's carrying a sack of mail. Now see and get this
+clearly, Loale. It's important. It's so important I can't stand for any
+sort of mistake. When he comes you've got to send him right into my room
+with the mail-bag. I want him to take it in _himself_. You get that?"
+
+The half-breed's eyes blinked. It was rather the curious attitude of an
+attentive dog. But that was always his way when the master of the
+Sachigo Mill spoke to him.
+
+Pete Loale was quite an unusual creature. He looked unkempt and unclean,
+with his yellow, pock-marked skin, and his clothes that would have
+disgraced a second-hand dealer's stores of waste. But for all his lack
+in these directions there was that in the man which was more than worth
+while. Out of his black eyes looked a world of intelligence. There was
+also a resource and initiative in him that Standing fully appreciated.
+
+"Sure I get that," he said simply. Then he repeated in the manner of a
+child determined to make no mistake. "He's to take that mail-bag right
+into your office--_himself_."
+
+"That's it. Don't knock on my door. Don't let him think there's a soul
+inside that room. Just boost him right in. You get that?"
+
+The half-breed nodded.
+
+"I'll just say: 'Here you! Just push that darn truck right inside that
+room, an' don't worry me with it, I'm busy.' That how?" The man hunched
+his slim shoulders into a shrug.
+
+"See you do it--just that way," Standing said. Then he turned to Bat.
+"We'll get inside," he went on. "He'll be right along."
+
+They passed into the office. The door closed behind them and Standing
+moved over to his seat at the crowded desk.
+
+"Wal?"
+
+Bat was still standing. He failed to grasp his friend's purpose. His wit
+was unequal to the rapid process of the other's swiftly calculating
+mind.
+
+Standing littered his writing-pad with papers. He picked up a pen and
+jabbed it in the inkwell. Then he flung it aside and adopted a
+fountain-pen which he drew from his waistcoat pocket. His eyes lit with
+a half-smile as he finally raised them to the rugged face before him.
+
+"You sit right over there by that window, Bat," he said easily. "If you
+get a look out of it you'll be amazed at the number of things to
+interest you." He nodded as Bat moved away with a grin and took the
+chair indicated. "That's it. Just sit around, and you won't see or even
+hear the fellow with the mail fall in through the door. And maybe,
+sitting there, you'll want to smoke your foul old pipe. Sort of pipe of
+peaceful meditation. Yes, I'd smoke that pipe, old friend, but you can
+cut out the peaceful meditation. You need to be ready to act quick when
+I pass the word. It's going to be easy. So easy I almost feel sorry
+for--Idepski."
+
+"It _is_--Idepski?" Bat filled and lit his pipe.
+
+"It surely is. No other. And--I'm glad. Now we'll quit talk, old friend.
+Just smoke, and look out of that window, and--think like hell."
+
+Bat's understanding of his friend was well founded. The extreme nervous
+tension in Standing was obvious. It was in the wide, dark eyes. It was
+in the constant shifting of the feet which the table revealed. For the
+time, at least, the cowardice Standing claimed for himself was entirely
+swamped. He was stirred by the headlong excitement of battle in a manner
+that left Bat more than satisfied.
+
+Once Bat turned from his contemplation of the piled-up country beyond
+the valley. It was at the sound of Standing's fiercely scratching pen.
+And his quick gaze took in the luxury of the setting for the little
+drama he felt was about to be enacted.
+
+It was a wide, pleasant room, built wholly of red pine, and polished as
+only red pine will polish. There was a thick oriental carpet on the
+floor, and all the mahogany furniture was upholstered in red morocco.
+There were a few carefully selected pictures upon the walls, hung with
+an eye to the light upon each. But it was not an extravagant room. It
+suggested the homeland of Scotland, from which the owner of it all
+hailed. The Canadian atmosphere only found expression in the great steel
+stove which stood in one corner, and the splendid timber of which the
+walls of the room were built.
+
+But Bat's eyes swiftly returned to their allotted task, and his reeking
+pipe did its duty with hearty goodwill. There was the sound of strident
+voices in the outer room, and the rattle of the door handle turning with
+a wrench.
+
+The door swung open. The next moment there was the sound of a sack
+pitched upon the soft pile of the carpet. And through the open doorway
+the harsh voice of Loale pursued the intruder in sharp protest.
+
+"Say, do you think you're stowing cargo in your darn, crazy old barge?"
+he cried. "If you fancy throwing things around you best get out an' do
+it. Guess you ain't used to a gent's office, you darn sailorman--"
+
+But the door was closed with a slam and the rest of the protest was cut
+off. Bat swung about in his chair to discover a picture not easily to be
+forgotten.
+
+Standing had left his desk. He was there with his back against the
+closed door, and his lean figure towered over the shorter sailorman in
+dungaree, who stood gazing up at him questioningly. The sight appealed
+to the grim humour of the manager. He wanted to laugh. But he refrained,
+though his eyes lit responsively as he watched the smile of irony that
+gleamed in the mill-owner's eyes.
+
+"Well, well." Standing's tone lost none of the aggravation of his smile.
+"Say, I'd never have recognised you, Idepski, if it hadn't been that I
+was warned you'd shipped on the _Lizzie_." He laughed outright. "I can't
+help it. You wouldn't blame me laughing if you could see yourself. Last
+time I had the pleasure of encountering you was in Detroit. That's years
+ago. How many? Nearly seven. It seems to me I remember a bright-looking
+'sleuth,' neat, clean, spruce, with a crease to his pant-legs like a
+razor edge, a fellow more concerned for his bath than his religion. Say,
+where did you raise all that junk? From old man Hardy's slop-chest?
+Hellbeam makes you work for your money when you're driven to wallowing
+in a muck-hole like the _Lizzie_. It isn't worth it. You see, you've run
+into the worst failure you've made in years. But I only wish you could
+see the sorry sort of sailorman you look."
+
+Standing's right hand was behind him, and Bat heard the key turn in the
+lock of the door. He waited. But the trapped agent never opened his
+lips.
+
+Idepski had seen Standing and the other down at the quay-side. He had
+left them there when he started up the hill. Yet--A bitter fury was
+driving him. He realised the trap that had been laid. He realised
+something of the deadly purpose lying behind it. So he remained silent
+under the scourge that was intended to hurt.
+
+For all the filthy dungarees tucked into the clumsy legs of high leather
+sea boots, the dirty-coloured handkerchief knotted about his neck, the
+curious napless cloth cap with its peak pulled down over one eye, that
+curious cap which seems to be worn by no one else in the world but
+seafaring men, it was easy enough for Bat to visualise the dapper
+picture, that other picture of Walter Idepski that Standing had
+described. The man possessed a well-knit, sinuous figure which his
+dungarees could not disguise. His alert eyes were good-looking. And,
+cleaned of the black, stubbly growth of beard and whisker, an amazing
+transformation in his looks would surely have been achieved. But Bat's
+interest was less with these things than with the possible reaction the
+man might contemplate.
+
+For the moment, however, the situation was entirely dominated by
+Standing, who displayed no sign of relaxing his hold upon it. He flung
+out a pointing hand, and Bat saw it was grasping the door key.
+
+"You'd best take that chair, Idepski," he ordered. "You've opened war on
+me, but there's no need to keep you standing for it. You'll take that
+seat against my writing table. But first, Bat, here, is going to relieve
+you of the useless weapons I see you've got on you. Get those, Bat!
+There's a gun and a sheath knife, and they're clumsily showing their
+shape under his dungarees."
+
+It was the word the mill-manager had awaited. He was on his feet in an
+instant. Idepski stirred to action. He turned to meet him.
+
+"Keep your darn hands off!" he cried fiercely. "By--"
+
+His hand had flown to his hip. But he was given no time. Bat was on him
+like an avalanche, an avalanche of furious purpose. The fighting spirit
+in him yearned, and in a moment his victim was caught up in a crushing
+embrace. There was a short, fierce struggle. But Idepski was no match
+for the super lumber-jack.
+
+While Bat held on, the tenacious hands of Standing tore the weapons he
+had discovered from their hiding places. Then in a moment Idepski found
+himself sprawling in the chair he had been invited to take.
+
+Standing's appreciation was evident as he watched the man draw a gold
+cigarette case from the breast pocket of his overalls as though nothing
+had occurred. It was an act of studied coolness that did not for a
+moment deceive, but it pleased. However, his next effrontery pleased the
+mill-owner still more.
+
+"Say, boys," Idepski observed quietly, as he opened the case and
+extracted a cigarette. "I guess I'm kind o' glad you left me this. But I
+don't figger you're out for loot, anyway." Then he glanced up at the man
+watching him so interestedly. "Maybe you'll oblige me with a light," he
+demanded, and cocked up the cigarette he had thrust between his lips
+with an exaggerated impertinence.
+
+The action was quite irresistible and Standing nodded.
+
+"Sure," he said smilingly, and picked up the matchbox lying on his
+table.
+
+He struck a match and held it while the other obtained the required
+light. Then he passed round the desk to the seat he had originally
+occupied.
+
+Idepski leant back in his chair, and luxuriated in a deep inhalation of
+smoke. Bat watched him from his place at the window. Standing placed the
+revolver and sheath knife he had taken possession of in a drawer in the
+desk, and closed it carefully.
+
+"Well, what's the play?" Idepski addressed himself solely to Standing.
+"I guess you've said a deal calculated to rile, and your pardner's done
+more," he went on. "Still--anyway we're mostly men and not school-kids.
+What's the play?"
+
+Standing, too, was leaning back in his chair.
+
+"It's easy," he said, after a moment's thoughtful regard. Suddenly he
+drew his chair up to the table, and, leaning forward, folded his arms
+upon the littered blotting pad in front of him. "It's seven years since
+Hellbeam--blazed the war trail," he said deliberately. "I know he's
+persistent. He's angry. And he's the sort of man who doesn't cool down
+easily. But it's taken him seven years to locate me here. And during all
+that time I've been looking on, watching his every move." He shook his
+head. "He's badly served, for all his wealth. He was badly served from
+the start. You should never have let me beat you in that first race
+across the border. I got away with every cent of the stuff, and--you
+shouldn't have let me. You certainly were at fault. However, it doesn't
+matter."
+
+Idepski removed his cigarette from his lips and dropped the ash of it in
+the waste basket.
+
+"No. It doesn't matter, because I'll get you--in the end," he retorted
+coldly.
+
+"Perhaps."
+
+Standing shrugged. But there was no indifference in his eyes. The acid
+sharpness of Idepski's retort had driven straight home. If the agent
+failed to detect it, the watchful eyes of Bat missed nothing. To him the
+danger signal lay in the curious flicker of his friend's eyelids. The
+sight impelled him. He jumped in and took up the challenge in the blunt
+fashion he best understood.
+
+"Guess you've got nightmare, boy," he said, with a sneering laugh. "I
+ain't much at figgers, but it seems to me if it's taken you seven years
+to locate us here, it's going to take you seventy-seven gettin' Standing
+back across that border. Work it out."
+
+Idepski had no intention of being drawn. He replied without turning.
+
+"You think that?" he said easily. "Say, don't worry a thing; I'm
+satisfied. Just as sure as the sun'll rise to-morrow, Hellbeam'll get
+Leslie Martin, or Standing as he chooses to call himself now, just where
+he needs him. And if I know Hellbeam that'll be in the worst
+penitentiary the United States can produce. Guess you're going to wish
+you hadn't, Mister--Standing."
+
+Perhaps Idepski knew his man, and understood the weakness of which Bat
+was so painfully aware. Perhaps he was just fencing, or even putting up
+a bluff in view of his own position. Whatever his purpose the effect of
+his added threat was instant.
+
+Standing's luminous eyes hardened. The muscles of his jaws gripped. He
+sat up, and his whole attitude expressed again that fighting mood in
+which Bat rejoiced.
+
+"That's all right," he said sharply. "That's just talk. You've come a
+hell of a long way with those boys of yours down at the _Lizzie_ to
+worry out some body-snatching. That's all right. I don't just see how
+you've figgered to do it. But that's your affair. The point is, I'm
+going to do the body-snatching instead of you. And it's quite clear to
+me how I intend doing it. You're going a trip--right off. And it's a
+trip from which you won't get a chance of getting back to Quebec under
+this time next year. You see, winter's closing down in a month, and
+Labrador and Northern Quebec aren't wholesome territory for any man to
+set out to beat the trail in winter, especially with folks around
+anxious to stop him. You reckon I'm to pass a while in a States
+penitentiary. Well, meanwhile you're going to try what this country can
+show you in the way of a--prison ground. And you're going to try it for
+at least a year. You'll be treated white. But you'll need to work for
+your grub like other folks, and if you don't feel like working you won't
+eat. We're fifty-three degrees north here, and our ways are the tough
+ways of the tough country we live in. There's no sort of mercy in this
+country. Bat, here, is going to see you on your trip, and, if you take
+my advice, you won't rile Bat. He's got it in him, and in his hands, to
+make things darn unpleasant for you. You've a goodish nerve, and maybe
+you've goodish sense. You'll need 'em both for the next twelve months.
+After that it's up to you. But if you try kicking between now and then,
+why--God help you."
+
+Standing beckoned Bat from his seat at the window. He held up the door
+key.
+
+"You best take this," he said. "No. 10. And he starts out right away. He
+needs to be well on the road before the _Lizzie_ puts to sea."
+
+Bat took the key. He moved away and unlocked the door, and remained
+beside it grimly regarding the man who had listened without comment to
+the sentence passed on him, without the smallest display of emotion.
+Idepski was smoking his second cigarette.
+
+"No. 10. I s'pose that's one of your lumber camps." Idepski looked up
+from his contemplation of the cigarette. His dark eyes were levelled at
+the man across the writing table. "A tough place, eh? or you wouldn't be
+sending me there." He laughed in a fashion that left his eyes coldly
+enquiring.
+
+Standing inclined his head. He was without mercy, without pity.
+
+"It's a tough camp in a tough country," he said deliberately. "It's a
+camp where you'll get just as good a time as you choose to earn. The boy
+who runs it learnt his job in the forests of Quebec, and you'll likely
+understand what that means. Well, you're going right off now. But
+there's this I want to tell you before I see the last of you--for a
+year. I know you, Idepski. I know you for all you are, and all you're
+ever likely to be. You're an unscrupulous blackmailer and crook. You're
+a parasite battening yourself on the weakness of human nature, taking
+your toll from whichever side of a dispute will pay you best. You're
+taking Hellbeam's money in the dispute between him and me, and you'll go
+on taking it till you pull off the play he's asking, or get broken in
+the work of it. That's all right as far as I'm concerned. You've nerve,
+you've courage, or you wouldn't be the crook you are. I guess you'll go
+on because I've no intention of competing with Hellbeam for your
+services. But I want you to understand clearly you've jumped into a
+mighty big fight. This is a country where a fight can go on without the
+prying eyes of the laws of civilisation peeking into things. And by that
+I take it you'll understand I reckon to make war to the knife. You came
+here prepared to use force. That's all right. We shan't hesitate to use
+force on our side. And we're going to use it to the limit. If peace is
+only to be gained at the cost of your life you're going to pay that
+cost--if it suits me. That's all I've to say at the moment. For the
+present, for a year, you'll be safely muzzled. You see, I don't need to
+worry with those boys you brought with you. You best go along with Bat
+now. He'll fix things ready for your trip."
+
+The dismissal was complete, and Bat was prompt to accept his cue. He
+moved towards the man smoking at the table, much in the fashion of a
+warder advancing to take possession of his prisoner after sentence of
+the court.
+
+It was at that moment that the cold mask of indifference fell from the
+agent. Hardy as he was, the contemplation of his momentary failure,
+which was about to cost him twelve months of hardship in one of the
+roughest lumber camps in Labrador, robbed him of something of that nerve
+which was his chief asset. He glanced for the first time at the burly
+figure of Bat. He contemplated the rugged features of the man whose
+battling instinct was his strongest characteristic. He read the purpose
+in the grim set of the square jaws, and in the unyielding light of the
+grey eyes peering out from under shaggy brows. And that which he read
+reduced him to a feeling of impotence. He flung a look of fury and hate
+at the man behind the desk.
+
+"Maybe that's all you've to say," he cried, his jaws snapping viciously
+over his words, his eyes fiercely alight. "You think you've won when
+you've only gained a moment's respite. You can't win. You don't know.
+Oh, yes. I guess you can send me along out of the way. You can do just
+all you reckon. And if it suits you, you can shoot me up or any other
+old thing. You forget Hellbeam. You tell me I'm a crook and a
+blackmailer, you give me credit for nerve and courage. That's all right.
+You think these things, and I don't have to worry. But you've robbed
+Hellbeam. You've robbed him like any common 'hold-up'--of millions. It's
+not for you to talk of crooks and blackmailers. The laws of the States
+are going to find you the crook, and Hellbeam'll see they don't err for
+leniency. Hellbeam'll get you as sure as God. You've got months to think
+it over, and when you've done I reckon you won't fancy shouting. Well,
+I'm ready for this joy spot you call No. 10. I'm not going to kick. I've
+sense enough to know when the drop's on me. But you'll see me again. Oh,
+yes, you'll see me again because you're not going to shoot me up. For
+all your talk you haven't the nerve. You'll see me again, and when you
+do--well, don't forget Hellbeam's at the other end of this business.
+Guess I'm ready."
+
+The man stood up. And as he stood his eyes looked squarely into those of
+Bat.
+
+"Get on with it," he cried, and flung the remains of his lighted
+cigarette on the pile of the carpet, and trod it viciously underfoot
+with his heavy sea boot.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Standing was alone. He was alone with the thoughts his encounter with
+Idepski had inspired. Judging by the expression of his reflective eyes
+they were scarcely those of a man confident of victory. Had Bat been
+there to witness, the task he was at that moment engaged upon would
+surely have been robbed of half its satisfaction.
+
+But Bat had gone. And with him had gone the man who was to learn the
+rigours of a Labrador winter under conditions of hardship he had not yet
+realised. Meanwhile Standing was free to think as his emotions guided
+him, with no watchful eyes to observe.
+
+"You'll see me again, and when you do--well, don't forget Hellbeam's at
+the other end of this business."
+
+The words haunted. The threat of them appealed to an imagination that
+was a-riot.
+
+After a time Standing stirred restlessly. He sat up and brushed the
+litter of paper aside. Then he leant back in his chair and his fine eyes
+were lit with an agony of doubt and disquiet. The poisonous seed of the
+agent's retort had fallen upon fruitful soil.
+
+But after awhile the tension seemed to relax, and his gaze wandered from
+the grey daylight beyond the window and was suddenly caught and held by
+the mail bag, still lying where the man had flung it. It was like the
+swift passing of a summer storm. The man's whole expression underwent a
+complete transformation. The mail! The mail from Quebec--unopened!
+
+He sprang to his feet. For the moment Idepski, Hellbeam, everything was
+forgotten. His thought had bridged the miles between Farewell Cove and
+the ancient city of the early French, Nancy! That woman--that devoted
+wife who was striving with all the power of a frail body to serve him.
+There would be a letter in that mail from Nisson, telling him--Yes.
+There might even be a letter from Nancy herself.
+
+The sack was in his hands. He had broken the seals. He shook out the
+contents upon the floor. A packet of less than half a hundred letters,
+and the rest was an assortment of parcels of all shapes and sizes. It
+was the letter packet that interested him, and he untied the string that
+held it.
+
+A swift search produced the expected. Standing looked for the
+handwriting of Charles Nisson, the shrewd, obscure lawyer in the country
+town of Abercrombie. He had never yet failed him. He would not be likely
+to. A bulky letter remained in his hand. The others lay scattered
+broadcast upon the desk.
+
+For some moments he held the letter unopened. The lean fingers felt the
+bulk of the envelope, while feverish eyes surveyed, and read over and
+over the address in the familiar small, cramped handwriting. The impulse
+of the moment was to tear open the letter forthwith, to snatch at the
+tidings he felt it to contain. But something deterred. Something left
+him doubting, hesitating. It was what Bat had called his "yellow
+streak." Suppose--suppose--But with all his might he thrust his fears
+aside. He tore off the outer cover and unfolded the closely written
+pages.
+
+Long, silent moments passed, broken only by the shuffling of the sheets
+of the letter as he turned them. Not once did he look up from his
+reading. Right through to the end, the dreadful, bitter end, he read the
+hideous news his loyal friend had to impart. Twice, during the reading,
+the sharp intake of breath, that almost whistled in the silence of the
+room, told of an emotion he had no power to repress, and at the finish
+of it all the mechanically re-folded page's fell from shaking, nerveless
+fingers upon the littered desk.
+
+His eyes remained lowered gazing at the fallen letter. His hands
+remained poised where the letter had fallen from them. His face had lost
+its healthful hue. It was grey, and drawn, and the lips that parted as
+he muttered had completely blanched.
+
+"Dead!" he whispered without consciousness of articulation. "Dead!
+Nancy! My boy! Both! Oh, God!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE "YELLOW STREAK"
+
+
+The grey, evening light was significant of the passing season. A chilly
+breeze whipped about the faces of the men at the fringe of the woods.
+They were resting after a long tramp of inspection through the virgin
+forests. It was on a ledge, high up on the hillside of the northern
+shore of the cove, where the ground dropped away in front of them
+several hundreds of feet to the waters below. Behind them was a backing
+of standing timber which sheltered them from the full force of the
+biting wind.
+
+It was nearly a week since Bat Harker had returned from his mission to
+No. 10 Camp. He had returned full of satisfaction at the completion of
+his task, and comforted by the knowledge that the horizon of the mill
+had been cleared of threatening clouds for at least the period of a
+year. Then he encountered the ricochet of the blow which Fate had dealt
+his friend and employer.
+
+It had been within half an hour of his return, while yet the stains and
+dust of his journey remained upon him, while yet he was yearning for
+that rest for his body to which it was entitled.
+
+Bat had concluded the report of his journey, and the two men were
+closeted together in the office on the hillside. The lumberman had had
+no suspicion of the thing that had happened in his absence, and Standing
+had given no indication. Standing seemed unchanged. There had been the
+customary smile of welcome in his eyes. There had been the cordial
+handshake of friendship. Maybe Standing had talked less, and the
+searching questions usual in him had not been forthcoming. Maybe there
+was a curiously tired, strained look in his eyes. But that was all.
+
+At the conclusion of his report Bat had bent eagerly forward over the
+desk which stood between them. His hard eyes were smiling. His whole
+manner was that of a man anticipating something pleasant.
+
+"Say, Les," he cried, "guess you've maybe some news for me, too. It's
+more than a month since--and you were expecting--Things all right?"
+
+Standing reached towards the drawer beside him, and as he did so there
+was a sound. It was a curious, inarticulate sound that Bat interpreted
+into a laugh. The other opened the drawer and drew out the folded pages
+of a letter. These he passed across the table, and his eyes were without
+a shadow of the laugh which Bat thought he had heard.
+
+"Best read it," he said. "Take your time. I'll just finish these figures
+I'm working on."
+
+It was the curious, cold tone that stirred Bat to his first misgiving.
+
+He took the letter. There were pages of it. He set them in order and
+commenced to read. And meanwhile Standing remained apparently engrossed
+in his figures.
+
+He read the letter through. He read it slowly, carefully. Then, like
+the other had done, the man to whom it was addressed, he read it a
+second time. And as he read every vestige of his previous satisfaction
+passed from him. A cold constriction seemed to fasten upon his strong
+heart. And a terrible realisation of the tragedy of it all took
+possession of him. At the end of his second reading he handed the letter
+back to its owner without comment of any sort, without a word, but with
+a hand that, for once in his life, was unsteady.
+
+"That was in the mail Idepski brought," Standing said, as he returned
+the letter to its place, and shut and locked the drawer.
+
+"You remember?" he went on, pointing. "He flung it down there. Just by
+the door. Yes, it was just there, because I stood against the door, and
+was only just clear of it."
+
+He paused and his hand remained pointing at the spot where the mail bag
+had lain. It was as if the spot held him fascinated. Then his arm
+lowered slowly, and his hand came to rest on the edge of the table,
+gripping it with unnecessary force.
+
+"Seems queer," he went on, after a while. Then he shook his head. "Think
+of it. Nancy--my Nancy. Dead! She died giving birth to my boy. And
+he--he was stillborn. Why? I--I can't seem to realize it. I--don't--" He
+paused, and a strained, hunted look grew in his eyes. "No. It's easy.
+It's just Fate. That's it. There's no escape."
+
+He drew a deep breath and one lean hand smoothed back his shining black
+hair. Then his eyes came back to the face of the man opposite, and the
+agony in them was beyond words. After a moment their terrible expression
+became lost as he bent over his work. "I'm glad you're back, Bat," he
+said, without looking up.
+
+"There's a hell of a lot of orders to get out. We're running close up
+to winter."
+
+The lumberman understood. At a single blow this man's every hope had
+been smashed and ground under the heel of an iron fate. The wife, the
+woman he had worshipped, had given her life to serve him, and with her
+had gone the man-child, about whom had been woven the entire network of
+a father's hopes and desires.
+
+A week had passed since Bat had witnessed the voiceless agony of his
+friend. A week of endless labour and unspoken fears. He knew Standing as
+it is given to few to know the heart of another. His sympathy was real.
+It was of that quality which made him desire above all things to render
+the heartbroken man real physical and moral help. But no opening had
+been given him, and he feared to probe the wound that had been
+inflicted. During those first seven days Standing seemed to be obsessed
+with a desire to work, to work all day and every night, as though he
+dared not pause lest his disaster should overwhelm him.
+
+Now it was Sunday. Night and day the work had gone on. No less than ten
+freighters had been loaded and dispatched since Bat's return, and only
+that morning two vessels had cast off, laden to the water-line, and
+passed down on the tide for the mouth of the cove. At the finish of the
+midday meal Standing had announced his intentions for the afternoon.
+
+"We need to get a look into the lumber on the north side, Bat," he said.
+"You'd best come along with me. How do you think?"
+
+And Bat had agreed on the instant.
+
+"Sure," he said. "There's a heap to be done that way if we're to start
+layin' the penstocks down on that side next year."
+
+So they had spent the hours before dusk in a prolonged tramp through
+the forests of the Northern shore. And never for one moment was their
+talk and apparent interest allowed to drift from the wealth of
+long-fibred timber they were inspecting.
+
+But somehow to Bat the whole thing was unreal. It meant nothing. It
+could mean nothing. He felt like a man walking towards a precipice he
+could not avoid. He felt disaster, added disaster, was in the air and
+was closing in upon them. He knew in his heart that this long, weary
+inspection, all the stuff they talked, all the future plans they were
+making for the mill was the merest excuse. And he wondered when Standing
+would abandon it and reveal his actual purpose. The man, he knew, was
+consumed by a voiceless grief. His soul was tortured beyond endurance.
+And there was that "yellow streak," which Bat so feared. When, when
+would it reveal itself? How?
+
+Now, at last, as they rested on the ledge overlooking the mill and the
+waters of the cove, he felt the moment of its revelation had arrived. He
+was propped against the stump of a storm-thrown tamarack. Standing was
+stretched prone upon the fallen trunk itself. Neither had spoken for
+some minutes. But the trend of thought was apparent in each. Bat's
+deep-set, troubled eyes were regarding the life and movement going on
+down at the mill, whose future was the greatest concern of his life.
+Standing, too, was gazing out over the waters. But his darkly brooding
+eyes were on the splendid house he had set up on the opposite hillside.
+It was the home about which his every earthly hope had centred. And even
+now, in his despair, it remained a magnet for his hopeless gaze.
+
+Winter was already in the bite of the air and in the absence of the
+legions of flies and mosquitoes as well as in the chilly grey of the
+lapping waters below them. It was doubtless, too, searching the heart of
+these men whose faces gave no indication of the sunlight of summer
+shining within.
+
+"Bat!"
+
+The lumberman turned sharply. He spat out a stream of tobacco juice and
+waited.
+
+"Bat, old friend, it's no use." Standing had swung himself into a
+sitting posture. He was leaning forward on the tree-trunk with his
+forearms folded across his knees. "We've done a lot of talk, and we've
+searched these forests good. And it's all no use. None at all. There's
+going to be no penstocks set up this side of the water next year--as far
+as I'm concerned. I've done. Finished. Plumb finished. I'm quitting.
+Quitting it all."
+
+The lumberman ejected a masticated chew and took a fresh one.
+
+"You see, old friend, I'll go crazy if I stop around," Standing went on.
+"I've been hit a pretty desperate punch, and I haven't the guts to stand
+up to it. When it came I set my teeth. I wanted to keep sane. I reminded
+myself of all I owed to the folks working for us. I thought of you. And
+I tried to bolster myself with the schemes we had for beating the
+Skandinavians out of this country's pulp-wood trade. Yes, I tried. God,
+how I tried! But my guts are weak, and I know what lies ahead. For
+nearly six weeks I've been working things out, and for a week I've been
+wondering how I should tell you. I brought you here to tell you.
+
+"I want you to understand it good," he went on, after the briefest
+pause. "I can't stand to live on in the house that Nancy and I built up.
+Every room is haunted by her. By her happy laugh, and by memories of the
+hours we sat and talked of the boy-child we'd both set our hearts on. I
+just can't do it without going stark, staring, raving mad. I can't."
+
+"That's how I figgered. I've watched it in you, Les. Tell me the rest."
+
+Bat chewed steadily. It was a safety-valve for his feelings.
+
+"The rest?" Standing turned to gaze out at the house across the water.
+"If it weren't for you, Bat, I'd close right down. I'd leave everything
+standing and--get out," he went on slowly. "The whole thing's a
+nightmare. Look at it. Look around. The forests of soft wood. The
+township we've set up. The harnessed water power. That--that house of
+mine. It's all nightmare, and I don't want it. I'm afraid. I'm scared to
+death of it."
+
+Bat moved away from the stump he had been propped against. He passed
+across to the edge of the ledge and stood gazing down on the scenes
+below.
+
+"You needn't worry for me," he said. "It don't matter a cuss where or
+how I hustle my dry hash. I was born that way. Fix things the way you
+feel. Cut me right out."
+
+The man's generosity was a simple expression of his rugged nature. His
+love of that great work below him, in the creation of which he had taken
+so great a part, was nothing to him at that moment. He was concerned
+only for the man, who had held out a succouring hand, and led him, in
+his darkest moments, to safety and prosperity.
+
+Standing shook his head at the broad back squared against the grey,
+wintry sky.
+
+"I didn't mean it that way, old friend," he said.
+
+Bat swung around. His grey eyes were wide. His face seemed to have
+softened out of its usual harsh cast.
+
+"But I do, Les," he cried. "You don't need to figger a thing about me.
+You're hurt, boy. You're hurt mighty sore. Cut me right out of your
+figgers, and do the things that's goin' to heal that sore. If there's a
+thing I can do to help you, why, I guess I'd be glad to know it."
+
+For a few moments Standing remained silent. Perhaps he was pondering
+upon what he had to say. Perhaps he was simply gaining time to suppress
+the emotions which the selflessness of the other had inspired.
+
+"Here," he cried at last, "I best tell you the whole story that's in my
+mind. I told you I've been figuring it out. Well, it's figured to the
+last decimal. You think you know me. Maybe you do. Maybe you know only
+part of the things I know about myself. If you knew them all I'd hate to
+think of the contempt you'd have to hand me. You see, Bat, I'm a coward,
+a terrible moral coward. Oh, I'm not scared of any man living when it
+comes to a fight. But my mind's full of ghosts and nightmares ready to
+jump at me with every doubt, every new effort where I can't figure the
+end. Years ago, when I was a youngster, I yearned for fortune. And I
+realised that I had it in me to get it quick by means of that crazy
+talent for figures you reckon is so wonderful. I got the chance and
+jumped, for it. But every step I took left me scared to the verge of
+craziness. When I hit up against Hellbeam I got a desire to beat him
+that was irresistible, and I jumped into the fight with my heart in my
+mouth. It was easy--so easy. Hellbeam was a babe in my hands. I could
+play with him as a spider plays with its victim, and when, like a
+spider, I'd bound him with my figures, hand and foot, I was free to suck
+his blood till I was satiated. I did all that, and then my nightmare
+descended upon me again. You know how I fled with Hellbeam's hounds on
+my heels. I was terrified at the enormity of the thing I'd done. I could
+have stood my ground and beaten him--and them. But moral cowardice
+overwhelmed me and drove me to these outlands. God, what I suffered! And
+after all I haven't the certainty that I deserved it."
+
+Bat came back to his stump and stood against it while Standing passed a
+weary hand across his forehead.
+
+"The happenings since then you know as well as I do. I don't need to
+talk of them. I mean, how I met and married Nancy, when she was widow of
+that no-account McDonald feller, the editor of _The Abercrombie
+Herald!_"
+
+Bat nodded.
+
+"Yes, sure, I know, Les. When you married Nancy an' made her
+thirteen-year-old daughter--your daughter."
+
+"Yes. I'd almost forgotten. Yes, there's her girl, Nancy. She's still at
+school. Well, anyway, you know, these things, all of 'em. But what you
+don't know is that you--you Bat, old friend, are solely responsible for
+all the work that's being done here. You, old friend, are responsible
+that I've enjoyed seven years of something approaching peace of mind.
+You, you with your bulldog fighting spirit, you with your hell-may-care
+manner of shouldering responsibility, and facing every threat, have been
+the staunch pillar on which I have always leant. Without you I'd have
+gone under years ago, a victim of my own mental ghosts. No, no, Bat," he
+went on quickly, as the lumberman shook his head in sharp denial, "it's
+useless. I know. Leaning on you I've built up around me the reality of
+that original dream, with the other things I've now lost, and with every
+ounce in me I've worked for its fulfilment.
+
+"Well, what's the logic of it all?" he continued, after a moment's
+pause. "Yes, it is the logic of it. You may argue that for seven years
+I've been doing a big work and there's no reason, in spite of what's
+happened, that I should now abandon it all. But there is. And in your
+strong old heart you'll know the thing I say is true--if cowardly.
+During seven years, or part of them, I've known a happiness that's
+compensated for every terror I've endured. Nancy's been my guardian
+angel, and the boy, that was to be born, was the beacon light of my
+life. My poor little wife has gone, and that beacon light, the son we
+yearned for, has been snuffed right out. And in the shadows left I see
+only the groping hand of Hellbeam reaching out towards me. In the end
+that hand will get me, and crush the remains of my miserable life out. I
+know. Just as sure as God, Hellbeam's going to get me."
+
+The sweat of terror stood on the man's high forehead, and he wiped it
+away.
+
+Bat flung a clenched fist down upon the tree stump.
+
+"You're wrong, Les. You're plumb wrong. If it means murder I swear
+before God Hellbeam'll never lay hands on you. Hellbeam? Gee! Let him
+set his nose north of 'fifty' and I'll promise him a welcome so hot
+that'll leave hell like a glacier. As for his darn agents? Why, say, I
+want to feel sorry for 'em 'fore they start. Idepski's hating himself
+right--"
+
+"I know," cried Standing impatiently. "I know it all. Everything you've
+said you mean, but--it won't save me. But we can leave all that. There's
+the other things. Why should I go on living here, working, slaving,
+haunted by the terror of Hellbeam? With my boy, my wife, to fight for it
+was worth all the agony. But without them--why? Why in the name of
+sanity should I go on? To beat the Skandinavians out of Canada's trade,
+and claim it all for a country that doesn't care a curse? To build up a
+great name that in the end must be dragged in the mire of public
+estimation? Not on your life, Bat. No, no. I'm going to cut adrift. I'm
+going to quit. I'm going to lose myself in these forests, and live the
+remaining years of my life free to run to earth at the first shot of the
+hunter's gun. It's all that's left me--as I see it."
+
+"And all this?" Bat said, reaching out one great hand in the direction
+of the Cove. "An' that school gal 'way down at Abercrombie, learning her
+knitting, an' letters, an' crying her dandy eyes out for the mother who
+had to leave her there when she passed over to you? Say, Les, you best
+go on. Jest go right on an' I'll say my piece after."
+
+Standing sat up. A deep earnestness was in the dark eyes that looked
+fearlessly into Bat's. He took the other at his word and went on. He had
+nothing to conceal.
+
+"The mill? Why, I want to pass it over to your care, Bat," he said,
+permitting one swift regretful glance in the direction of the grey
+waters below them. Then he spoke almost feverishly. "Here's the
+proposition. I'm going to hand you full powers--through Charles Nisson.
+You'll run this thing on the lines laid down. If you fancy carrying on
+the original proposition of extension, well and good. If not, just carry
+on and leave the rest for--later. You'll be manager for me through
+Nisson. I shan't remove one cent of capital. I don't want Hellbeam's
+money beyond the barest grub stake. It'll remain under Nisson's
+guardianship for your use in running this mill. You'll simply satisfy
+Nisson. For the rest I shan't interfere. You're drawing a big salary
+now. Well, seeing I go out of the work, that salary will be doubled.
+That's for the immediate. Then there's the future. I've a notion. Maybe
+it's a crazy notion. But it's mine and I mean to test it. Here. We
+reckon to build up this enterprise for one great, big purpose. It was my
+dream to break the Skandinavian ring governing the groundwood trade of
+this country. It was work that appealed to my imagination. I wanted to
+build this great thing and pass it on to my boy. It seemed to me fine.
+Worth while. It was a man's work, and it seemed to me a life well spent.
+I had the guts then--with your support, and the support the thought of
+my son gave me. I haven't the guts now. The notion fired you, too. It
+fired you, and it'll grieve you desperately to see it abandoned. It
+shan't be abandoned. Once in the woods of this queer country I found a
+man--such a man as is rarely found. He was a man into whose hands I
+could put my life. And I guess there's no greater trust one man can have
+in another. He was a man of immense capacity. A man of intellect for all
+he had no schooling but the schooling of Quebec's rough woods. That man
+was you, Bat. I'd like to say to you: 'Here's the property. You know the
+scheme. Go on. Carry it through.' But I can't. I can't because one man
+can't do it. Well, the woods gave me one man, and they're going to give
+me another to take the place of the weak-gutted creature who intends to
+'rat.' I'm going to find you a partner, a man with brain and force like
+yourself. A man of iron guts. And when I've found him I'm going to send
+him on to you. And if you approve him he shall be full partner with you
+in this concern the day that sees the Canadian Groundwood Trust
+completed, and the breaking of the Skandinavian ring. Do you follow it
+all? You and this man will be equal partners in the mill, and every
+available cent of its capital--the capital I made Hellbeam provide.
+It'll be yours and his, solely and alone. I--I shall pass right out of
+it. Hellbeam has no score against you. He has no penitentiary preparing
+for you. You are not concerned with him. Whatever he may have in store
+for me he can do nothing to you, and the money I beat him out of will
+have passed beyond his reach."
+
+"And this man you figger to locate? You reckon to take a chance on your
+judgment?"
+
+Bat's challenge came on the instant.
+
+"On mine, and--yours." Standing's eyes were full of a keen confidence.
+And Bat realised something of the sanity lying behind a seemingly mad
+proposition. "He'll own nothing until he and you have completed the work
+as we see it. To own his share in the thing he must prove his capacity.
+He'll be held by the tightest and strongest contract Charles Nisson can
+draw up."
+
+Bat spat out his chew. He replaced it with a pipe, and prepared to flake
+off its filling from a plug of tobacco. Standing watched him with the
+anxious eyes of a prisoner awaiting sentence. With the cutting of the
+first flakes of tobacco, Bat looked up.
+
+"And this little gal-child, with the same name as the mother who just
+meant the whole of everything life could hand you? This kiddie with her
+mother's blood running in innocent veins? She's your Nancy's daughter
+and I guess your marriage made her yours."
+
+"She's another man's child."
+
+Standing's retort was instant. And the tone of it cut like a knife.
+
+Bat regarded him keenly. His knife had ceased from its work on the plug.
+
+"That's so," he said after a while. Then his gaze drifted in the
+direction of the house across the water, and the expression in the grey
+depths of his eyes became lost to the man who could not forget that the
+remaining child of his wife was the offspring of another man. "It seems
+queer," he went on reflectively. "That woman, your Nancy, was about the
+best loved wife, a fellow could think of. She was all sorts of a woman
+to you. Guess she was mostly the sun, moon, an' stars of your life. Yet
+her kiddie, a pore, lonesome kiddie, was toted right off to school so
+she couldn't butt in on you. You've never seen her, have you? And she
+was blood of the woman that set you nigh crazy. Only her father was
+another feller. No, Les." He shook his head, and went on filling his
+pipe. "No, Les, this mill and all about it can go hang if that pore,
+lone kiddie is wiped out of your reckoning. Maybe I'm queer about
+things. Maybe I'm no account anyway when it comes to the things of life
+mostly belonging to Sunday School. But I'd as lief go back to the woods
+I came from, as handle a proposition for you that don't figger that
+little gal in it. You best take that as all I've to say. There's a heap
+more I could say. But it don't matter. You're feelin' bad. Things have
+hit you bad. And you reckon they're going to hit you worse. Maybe you're
+right. Maybe you're wrong. Anyway these things are for you, though I'd
+be mighty thankful to help you. You want to go out of it all. You want
+to follow up some queer notion you got. You reckon it's going to give
+you peace. I hope so. I do sure. The thing you've said goes with me
+without shouting one way or the other. It grieves me bad. But that's no
+account anyway. But there's that gal standing between us, and she's
+going to stand right there till you've finished the things you're maybe
+going to say."
+
+For a moment the men looked into each other's eyes. It was a tense
+moment of sudden crisis between them.
+
+"Well?"
+
+Bat's unyielding interrogation came sharply. Standing nodded.
+
+"I hadn't thought, Bat," he said. Then he drew a deep breath. "I surely
+hadn't, but I guess you're right. She's my stepdaughter. And I've a
+right to do the thing you say. Yes. It's queer when I think of it," he
+went on musingly. "When I married her mother the girl didn't seem to
+come into our reckoning. She was at school, and I never even saw her.
+Then her mother wanted her left there, anyway till her schooling was
+through. Everything was paid. I saw to that. But--yes, I guess you're
+right. It's up to me, and I'll fix it."
+
+"The mill?"
+
+"She shall have equal share when the time comes."
+
+"When the whole work's put through?"
+
+"Yes. And meanwhile she'll be amply provided for." Standing spread out
+his hands deprecatingly. "You see, we did things in a hurry, Bat. There
+was always Hellbeam. And my Nancy understood that. I wonder--"
+
+Bat smoked on thoughtfully, and presently the other roused himself from
+the pre-occupation into which he had fallen.
+
+"Does that satisfy?" he demanded.
+
+Bat nodded.
+
+"I'll do the darnedest I know, Les," he said in his sturdy fashion. "Fix
+that pore gal right. Hand her the share she's a right to--when the time
+comes along. Do that an' I'll not rest till the Skandinavians are left
+hollerin'. That kid's your daughter, for all she ain't flesh and blood
+of yours, an' you ain't ever see her. And anyway she's flesh of your
+Nancy, which seems to me hands her even a bigger claim."
+
+He moved away from his leaning post and his back was turned to hide that
+which looked out of his eyes.
+
+"I'm grieved," he went on, in his simple fashion, "I'm so grieved about
+things I can't tell you, Les. I always guessed to drive this thing
+through with you. I always reckoned to make good to you for that thing
+you did by me. Well, there's no use in talkin'. You reckon this notion
+of yours'll make you feel better, it's goin' to hand you--peace. That
+goes with me. Oh, yes, all the time, seein' you feel that way. But--say,
+we best get right home--or I'll cry like a darn-fool kid."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+NANCY MCDONALD
+
+
+Charles Nisson was standing at the window. His eyes were deeply
+reflective as he watched the gently falling snow outside. He was a
+sturdy creature in his well-cut, well-cared-for black suit. For all he
+was past middle life there was little about him to emphasise the fact
+unless it were his trim, well-brushed snow-white hair, and the light
+covering of whisker and beard of a similar hue. He looked to be full of
+strength of purpose and physical energy.
+
+His back was turned on the pleasant dining-room of his home in
+Abercrombie, a remote town in Ontario, where he and his wife had only
+just finished breakfast. Sarah Nisson was sitting beside the anthracite
+stove which radiated its pleasant warmth against the bitter chill of
+winter reigning outside. She was still consuming the pages of her bulky
+mail.
+
+A clock chimed the hour, and the wife looked up from her letter. She
+turned a face that was still pretty for all her fifty odd years, in the
+direction of the man at the window.
+
+"Ten o'clock, Charles," she reminded him. Then her enquiring look melted
+into a gentle smile. "The office has less attraction with the snow
+falling."
+
+"It has less attraction to-day, anyway," the lawyer responded without
+turning. A short laugh punctuated his prompt reply.
+
+"You mean the Nancy McDonald business?"
+
+Sarah Nisson laid her mail aside.
+
+"Yes." The lawyer sighed and turned from his contemplation of the snow.
+He moved across to the stove. "I'm a bit of a coward, Sally," he went
+on, holding out his hands to the warmth. "The lives of other people are
+nearly as interesting as they are exasperating. They seem just as
+foolishly ordered as we believe our own to be well and truly ordered. I
+don't know who it was said 'all men are fools,' or liars, or something,
+but I guess he was right. Yes, we're all fools. I really don't know how
+we manage to get through a day, let alone a lifetime, without absolute
+disaster. We spend most of our time abusing Providence for the result of
+our own shortcomings, when really we ought to be mighty polite and
+thankful to the blind good fortune that lets us dodge the results of our
+follies."
+
+"All of which I suppose has to do with the way Leslie Martin, or Leslie
+Standing, as he calls himself now, is acting."
+
+"Well, most of it."
+
+The man's eyes had become seriously reflective again.
+
+Sarah Nisson nodded her pretty head. She leant her ample proportions
+towards the stove and emulated her husband's attitude, warming her plump
+hands. Her brown eyes were twinkling, and her broad, unlined brow was
+calmly serene. Her iron-grey hair was as carefully dressed as though she
+were still in the twenties, moreover it was utterly untouched by any of
+the shams so beloved of the modern woman of advancing years.
+
+"The death of his poor wife almost seems to have unhinged him," she
+said, with a troubled pucker of her brows. "But--but I don't wonder, I
+really don't. She was the sweetest girl. Poor soul. And that bonny wee
+boy. But there, I can't bear to think of it all. You mustn't blame him
+too much, Charles. I guess you don't in your heart. It's just as his
+attorney you feel mad about things. It's best to remember you were his
+friend first, and only his adviser, and man of business, after. The
+whole thing makes me feel I want to cry. And that poor girl coming to
+see you to-day. The other Nancy, I mean. I don't think I'd feel so bad
+about things if it wasn't for her. You know, I like Leslie. And I was as
+fond of his wife as I just could be, for all she made a fool of herself
+when she married that hateful James McDonald, who was no better than a
+revolutionary. Thank goodness he died and got out before he could do any
+harm. But I do think Leslie and poor Nancy were selfish about her
+child. I don't believe it was so much him as Nancy. From the moment
+Leslie came on the scene it was she who kept the poor child at college.
+She never even let him see her. And she's such a bonny girl, too. Do you
+know, I believe Nancy's death, and even the death of the baby boy,
+wouldn't have meant half so much to Leslie if he'd had Nancy's own girl
+with him. She'd have got herself right into his heart with her bonny
+ways, and her hazel eyes that look like great, big smiling flowers. Then
+her hair. She's a lovely, lovely child. I wish she was mine. I'd like to
+have her right here always. Couldn't you fix it that way?"
+
+The man shook his head.
+
+"I'd like to--but--"
+
+"But what?"
+
+"You see there's a whole lot to think about," the lawyer went on
+seriously. "Why, I don't even know how to get through my interview with
+her to-day without lying to her like a politician. Now just get a look
+at the position. Here's a girl, a beautiful, high-spirited girl of
+sixteen, straight out from college, at the beginning of life, with her,
+head full of 'whys,' and 'wherefores.' Sixteen's well-nigh grown up
+these days, mind you. Her mother's dead, and curiously the fact didn't
+seem to break her up as you'd have expected it to. Why?" The man
+shrugged. "It's not because she lacks feeling. Oh, no. Maybe it's
+because of the strength of those feelings. Remember her mother married
+Leslie when the child was thirteen. A good understanding age. She was
+never allowed to see her father. No. She was packed off to school and
+kept there--"
+
+"Yes, I know," Sarah broke in, with impatient warmth. "And just at the
+time a girl most needs she never even saw her mother for over three
+years. God doesn't give us women our babies to treat them as if they
+weren't our own flesh and blood. Young Nancy was left to those maiden
+dames at college, who don't know more about a child than is laid down by
+highbrow officials in the text books they need to study to qualify for
+their posts. They haven't a notion beyond stuffing her poor wee head
+with the sort of view of life set down in fool history books. They say
+she's clever and bright. Well, that's all they care about. When they've
+done with her they'll have knocked all the girl out of her, and turned
+her adrift on the world behind a pair of disfiguring spectacles, with
+her beautiful hair all scratched back off her pretty face, and maybe
+'bobbed,' and they'll fill her grips with pamphlets and literature
+enough to stock a patent med'cine factory, instead of the lawn, and
+lace, and silk a girl should think about, and leave her with as much
+chance of getting happily married as a queen mummy of the Egyptians.
+It's a shame, just a real shame. Why, if that poor, lonesome child came
+right along to me, I'd--"
+
+"Teach her all the bright tricks of hunting down a husband and--hooking
+him." The lawyer shook his head and smiled. "You know, Sally, you're
+almost an outrage on the subject of marriage. Sometimes I wonder the
+sort of tricks I was up against when I--"
+
+A plump warning finger and smiling threat interrupted the laughing
+charge.
+
+"You were due at the office long ago, Charles," his wife admonished. "If
+you aren't careful I'll have to pack you off right away."
+
+"That's all right, Sally," the man demurred. "I won't go further with
+that. I'll get back to the things I was saying before you interrupted."
+His pale blue eyes became serious again. "Do you think Nancy didn't
+understand why she was packed off to school--and kept there? Of course
+she did. She knew she wasn't wanted. She knew she was in the way. She
+must not be permitted to intrude on this stepfather, or her mother's
+new life. It was all a bit heartless, and if I know anything of the
+child, she understands it that way. I felt that when she came to see her
+mother, and went to her funeral. Now then, Nancy's coming to see me
+to-day. Remember she's sixteen. She's got to learn from me the
+settlement Leslie's made on her. She's got to learn further that she
+isn't likely to ever see her stepfather. She knows I'm his business man.
+She knows I'm his friend. Well, when she's financially independent, do
+you think she'll feel like rushing into our arms, here, for a home,
+feeling the way I believe she does about her parent? It's going to be
+difficult, and--damned unpleasant. And for all I'm ready to help Leslie
+anyway I know, I'd rather see anybody on his behalf than that kiddie,
+with her wide, honest, angry eyes and red hair. I'm not going to press
+our home on her, Sally, because, sooner or later, if she accepted it,
+which I don't believe she would, she'd have to learn things of Leslie,
+and--well, the affairs you know about. That must not be. She's not going
+to learn these things from us. I'm going to do the best I know for the
+child, and when it comes to the matter of a home she must choose for
+herself. There's always her mother's folk, or even James McDonald's
+folk--"
+
+"God forbid! No. Oh, no." The woman's instant denial was horrified. "Not
+the McDonald lot. They're all revolutionaries. All of them. It's--it's
+unthinkable. It certainly is."
+
+The man moved away.
+
+"That's so," he agreed. "Well, anyway, I'll do the best I know for the
+child, Sally. You can trust me."
+
+The woman's anxiety abated, and she rose from her chair.
+
+"I know that, Charles," she said. "But the McDonalds! They're--"
+
+"Sure they are." The man laughed. "Well, good-bye, my dear. I'll tell
+you all about it when I've fixed things. Thank goodness it's quit
+snowing and the sun's shining again. I wish I felt as good as it looks
+outside here."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Charles Nisson had become a lawyer without any marked inclination or
+enthusiasm for his profession. It had been simply a matter of following
+the father before him. It would have been much the same if his father
+had been a farmer, or a politician, or anything else. The son was
+patient, temperate, and of no great ambition. But he was also keenly
+intelligent. Without impulse, or striking originality, but with a
+tremendous capacity for hard work, he was bound to be moderately
+successful in any career. In his father's profession his temperament was
+particularly suited, and in spite of lacking enthusiasm he had become
+unquestionably a better lawyer than the country attorney he had
+succeeded.
+
+Just now his mind was filled with unease. The matter of his forthcoming
+interview with a child of sixteen years had only small place in the
+affairs which disturbed him. His real concern was for his friend, Leslie
+Standing, and the disaster, which, in a seemingly overwhelming rush had
+befallen at far-off Sachigo. Again his trouble had no relation to these
+things as they affected his own worldly affairs. It was of the man
+himself he was thinking.
+
+He knew it all now. He had painfully learned the complete story of
+disaster. And, to his sturdy mind, it was a deplorable example of almost
+unbelievable human weakness.
+
+Standing had conveyed his final determination to abandon his Labrador
+enterprise in the correspondence which had passed between them during
+the three months which had elapsed since the funeral of his wife and
+stillborn child. And during that time their friendship had been sorely
+tested. There had been times when the lawyer's native patience had been
+unequal to the strain. There had been times when his temper had leapt
+from under the bonds which so strongly held it. But for all the ordeals
+of that prolonged correspondence, for all he deplored the pitiful
+weakness in the other, his friendship remained, and he finally accepted
+his instructions. But the whole thing left him very troubled.
+
+As the hour of noon approached, his trouble showed no sign of abatement.
+It was the reverse. There were moments, as he sat in the generously
+upholstered chair before his desk, in the comfortable down-town office
+which overlooked Abercrombie's principal thoroughfare, that he felt like
+abandoning all responsibility in the chaos of his friend's affairs. But
+this was only the result of irritation, and had no relation to his
+intentions. He knew well enough that everything in his power would be
+done for the man who never so surely needed his help as now.
+
+He refreshed his memory with the details of the deed of settlement for
+the abandoned stepdaughter. Then, as the hands of the clock approached
+the hour of his appointment, he sat back yielding his whole
+concentration upon those many problems confronting him.
+
+What, he asked himself, was going to become of Standing now that he had
+cut himself adrift from that anchorage which had held him safe for the
+past seven years? He strove to follow the driving of the man's curiously
+haunted mind. He had declared his intention of going away. Where?
+Definite information had been withheld. He was going to devote himself
+to some purpose he claimed to have always lain at the back of his mind.
+What was that purpose? Again there had been no information forthcoming.
+Was it good, or--bad? The man who was endeavouring to solve the riddle
+of it all dared not trust himself to a decision. He felt that his
+friend's unstable soul might drive him in almost any direction after the
+shock it had sustained.
+
+No. Speculation was useless. The crude facts were like a brick wall he
+had to face. Standing's wealth and the great mill at Sachigo were left
+to his administration with the trusting confidence of a child. The
+responsibility for the neglected stepdaughter had similarly been flung
+upon his shoulders. And, satisfied with this manner of disposing of his
+worldly concerns, Standing intended to fare forth, shorn of any
+possession but a bare pittance for his daily needs, to lose himself, and
+all the shadows of a haunted mind, in the dim, remote interior of the
+unexplored forests of Northern Quebec. The whole thing was
+mad--utterly--
+
+The muffled electric bell on his table drubbed out its summons. One
+swift glance at the clock and the lawyer yielded to professional
+instinct. He became absorbed in the papers neatly spread out on his
+table as a bespectacled clerk thrust open the door.
+
+"Miss McDonald to see you," he announced, in the modulated tone which
+was part of his professional make-up.
+
+The lawyer rose at once. He moved toward the door with a smiling
+welcome. The sex and personality of his visitor demanded this departure
+from his custom.
+
+Nancy McDonald stood just inside the doorway through which the clerk had
+departed. She was tall, beautifully tall, for all she was only sixteen.
+In her simple college girl's overcoat, with its muffling of fur about
+the neck, it was impossible to detect the graces of the youthful figure
+concealed. Her carriage was upright, and her bearing full of that
+confidence which is so earnestly taught in the schools of the newer
+countries.
+
+But these things passed unnoticed by the white-haired lawyer. He was
+smiling into the radiant face under the low-pressed fur cap. It was the
+wide, hazel eyes, so deeply fringed with a wealth of curling, dark
+lashes, that inspired his smiling interest. It was the level brows, so
+delicately pencilled, and dark as were the eyelashes. It was the perfect
+nose, and lips, and chin, and the chiselled beauty of oval cheeks, all
+in such classic harmony with the girl's wealth of vivid hair.
+
+Nancy returned his gaze without the shadow of a smile. She had come at
+this man's call from the coldly correct halls of Marypoint College,
+which was also the soulless home she had been condemned to for the three
+or four most impressionable years of her life. And she knew the purpose
+of the summons.
+
+There was a deep abiding resentment in her heart. It was not against
+this man or his wife. From these two she had received only kindness and
+affection. It was directed against the stepfather whom she believed to
+be the cause of the banishment she had had to endure. Furthermore, she
+could never forget that her banishment was only terminated that she
+might gaze at last upon the dead features of her dearly loved mother
+before the cold earth hid them from view forever.
+
+The lawyer understood. He had understood from her reply to his letter
+summoning her. There was no need for the confirmation he read now in her
+unsmiling eyes.
+
+"You sent for me?" she said.
+
+Nancy's voice was deep and rich for all her youth. Then with a display
+of some slight confusion, she suddenly realised the welcoming hand
+outheld. She took it hurriedly, and the brief hand clasp completely
+broke down the barrier she had deliberately set up.
+
+"Oh, it's a shame, Uncle Charles," she cried, almost tearfully.
+"It's--it's a shame. I know. I'm just a kid--a fool kid who hasn't a
+notion, or a feeling, or--or anything. I'm to be treated that way. When
+he says 'listen,' why, I've just got to listen. And when he says 'obey,'
+I've got to obey, because the law says he's my stepfather. He's robbed
+me of my mother. Oh, it's cruel. Now he's going to rob me of everything
+else I s'pose. Who is he? What is he that he has the power to--to make
+me a sort of slave to his wishes? I've never seen him. I hate him, and
+he hates me, and yet--oh--I'm kind of sorry," she said, in swift
+contrition at the sight of the old man's evident distress. "I--I--didn't
+think. I--oh, I know it's not your fault, uncle. It's just nothing to do
+with you. You've always been so kind and good to me--you and Aunt Sally.
+You've got to send for me and tell me the things he says, because--"
+
+"Because I'm his 'hired man.' But also because I'm his friend."
+
+The lawyer spoke kindly, but very firmly. He knew the impulsive nature
+of this passionate child. He knew her unusual mentality. He realised,
+none better, that he was dealing with a strong woman's mind in a girl of
+childhood's years. He knew that Nancy had inherited largely from her
+father, that headstrong, headlong creature whose mentality had driven
+him to every length in a wild endeavour to upset civilisation that he
+might witness the birth of a millennium in the ashes of a world
+saturated with the blood of countless, helpless creatures. So he checked
+the impulsive flow of the child's protest. He held out his hands.
+
+"You'd best let me take your coat, my dear," he said, with a smile the
+girl found it impossible to resist. "Maybe you'd like to remove your
+overshoes, too. There's a big talk to make, and I want to get things
+fixed so you can come right along up home and take food with us before
+you go back to Marypoint."
+
+The child capitulated. But she needed no assistance. Her coat was
+removed in a moment and flung across a chair, and she stood before him,
+the slim, slightly angular schoolgirl she really was.
+
+"Guess I'll keep my rubbers on," she said. Then she added with a laugh
+which a moment before must have been impossible. "That way I'll feel I
+can run away when I want to. What next?"
+
+"Why, just sit right here."
+
+The lawyer drew up a chair and set it beside his desk. His movements
+were swift now. He had no desire to lose the girl's change of mood.
+
+And Nancy submitted. She took the chair set for her while the man she
+loved to call "Uncle Charlie" passed round to his. He gave her no time
+for further reflection, but plunged into his talk at once.
+
+"Now, my dear," he said earnestly, "you came here feeling pretty bad
+about things, and maybe I don't blame you. But there isn't the sort of
+thing waiting on you you're guessing. Before we get to the real business
+I just want to tell you the things in my mind. Of course, as you say,
+you're a 'kid' yet--a school-kid, eh? That's all right. But I know you
+can get a grip of things that many much older girls could never hope to.
+That's why I want to tell you the things I'm going to. Now you've worked
+it out in your mind that your stepfather is just a heartless, selfish
+creature who has no sort of use for you, and just wants to forget your
+existence. He married your mother, but had no idea of taking on her
+burdens--that's you. It isn't so. It wasn't so. I know, because this man
+is my friend, and I know all there is to know about him. The whole thing
+has been deplorable. You've been the victim of circumstances that I may
+not explain even to you. But I promise you this, your stepfather is not
+the man to have desired to cut you out of your mother's life."
+
+"Who did then? Mother?"
+
+The girl's beautiful face flushed under her stirring emotions. The man
+shook his head.
+
+"Circumstances. Yes, those circumstances I told you of. Those
+circumstances I can't explain." Charles Nisson picked up a typescript
+and held it out to the child.
+
+"I want you to take this. It's not the deed, but a true copy. I want you
+to read it over and think about it, and when you get back to Marypoint,
+and feel like talking to those teachers you trust there, you can tell
+them what it contains, and hear what they have to say about it, and see
+if they won't think better of your stepfather than you do. You needn't
+read it now," as the girl turned the pages and glanced down the
+confusion of legal phraseology. "I'm going to tell you what it contains
+in plain words. But I want you to have it, and read it, and think over
+it, because I want you to try and get a real understanding of the man
+whose signature is set to the original deed."
+
+"Yes," he went on, meditatively, and in a tone of real regret. "I'd be
+pretty glad to have you think better of him. I think just now he needs
+the kind thought of anyone who belongs to him. He's in pretty bad
+trouble--someways."
+
+The girl looked up. A curious anxiety was shining in her eyes.
+
+"Trouble?" she demanded. "You mean he's done wrong? What d'you mean?
+What sort of--trouble?"
+
+The man shook his head.
+
+"No. It's not that. It's--your mother. You know, Nancy, he loved your
+mother in a way that leaves a good man broken to pieces when he loses
+the object of his love. Every good thought he ever had was bound up in
+your mother. And your mother was his strong support, and literally his
+guiding star. You've lost your mother. You know how you felt. Well, I
+can't tell you, but think, try and think what it would be if you'd lost
+just every hope in life, too--the same as he has."
+
+"I'd--I'd want to die," the girl cried impulsively.
+
+"Yes. So would anyone. So does he. Just as far as the world's concerned
+he's dead now. You'll never see him, or hear from him. Nor will anyone
+else--except me. He'll never come into your life after this. He'll never
+claim his legal guardianship of you, beyond that document. To you he's
+dead, leaving you heir to what is contained in that deed. He's just a
+poor devil of a man hunted and haunted through the rest of his existence
+by the memory of a love that was more than life to him. Try and think
+better of him, Nancy, my dear. He's got enough to bear. I think he
+deserves far better than he's ever likely to get handed to him. I tell
+you solemnly, my dear, whatever sins he may have committed, and most of
+us have committed plenty," he added, with a gentle smile, "he's done you
+no real hurt. And now he's only doing that good by you I would expect
+from him."
+
+Nancy sighed deeply, and it needed no words of hers to tell the man of
+law how well he had fought his friend's battle. A deep wave of childish
+pity had swept away the last of a resentment which had seemed so bitter,
+so implacable. It was the generous heart of the child, shorn, for the
+moment, of its inheritance from her father. Her even brows had puckered,
+and the man knew that tears, real tears of sympathy, were not far off.
+
+"Tell me," she said, in a low voice. "Tell me some more."
+
+But the man shook his head. "I can't tell you more," he said gently.
+"Where your stepfather is, or where he will be to-morrow, I may not tell
+you. Even when your mother was alive you were not permitted to know
+these things. That was due to the 'circumstances' I told you of. It just
+remains for me to tell you the contents of that document. They're as
+generous as only your stepfather knows how to make them. He's appointed
+me your trustee. And he's settled on you a life annuity of $10,000.
+There are a few simple conditions. You will remain at college till your
+education is complete, and, until you are twenty-one I shall have
+control of your income. That is," he explained, "I shall see that you
+don't handle it recklessly. During that time, subject to my approval,
+you can make your home with whom you like. After you've passed your
+twenty-first birthday you are as free as air to go or come, to live
+where you choose, and how you choose. And your income will be
+forthcoming from this office--every quarter. Do you understand all that,
+my dear? It's so very simple. Your stepfather has gone to the limit to
+show you how well he desires for you, and how free of his authority he
+wants you to be. There is another generous act of his that will be made
+clear to you when the time comes. But that is for the future--not now.
+His last word to me," he went on, picking up a letter, "when he sent me
+the deed duly signed, was: 'Tell this little girl when you hand her
+these things, it isn't my wish to trouble her with an authority which
+can have little enough appeal for her. Tell her that her mother was my
+whole world, and it is my earnest desire that her daughter should have
+all the good and comfort this world can bestow. If ever she needs
+further help she can have it without question, and that she only has to
+appeal to my friend and adviser, Charles Nisson, for anything she
+requires.'"
+
+The man laid the letter aside and looked up.
+
+"That's the last paragraph of the last communication I had from him. And
+they're not the words of a monstrous tyrant who is utterly heartless,
+eh?"
+
+The girl made no answer. Her emotion was too strong for her. Two great
+tears rolled slowly down her beautiful cheeks.
+
+The lawyer rose from his chair. He came round the desk and laid a gentle
+hand on the heaving shoulder, while Nancy strove to wipe her tears away
+with a wholly inadequate handkerchief.
+
+"That's right, my dear," he said very gently. "Wipe them away. There's
+no need to cry. Leslie's done all a man in his peculiar position can do
+for you. You've got the whole wide world before you, and everything you
+can need for comfort--thanks to him. Now let's forget about it all. Just
+take that paper back to school with you. And maybe you'll write, or come
+and let me know what you think about it. If you feel like making your
+home with us, why, that way you'll just complete our happiness. If you
+feel like going to your mother's sister, Anna Scholes, I shan't refuse
+you. Anyway, think about it all. That's my big talk and it's finished.
+Just get your overcoat on, and we'll get right along home to food."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+NATHANIEL HELLBEAM
+
+
+The room was furnished with extreme modern luxury. The man standing over
+against the window with his broad back turned, somehow looked to be in
+perfect keeping with the setting his personal tastes had inspired. He
+was broad, squat, fat. His head and neck were set low upon his
+shoulders, and the hair oil was obvious on the longish dark hair which
+seemed to grow low down under his shirt collar.
+
+The other man, seated in one of the many easy chairs, was in strong
+contrast. His was the familiar face of the agent, Idepski, dark, keen,
+watchful. He was smoking the cigarette to which he had helped himself
+from the gold box standing near him on the ornate desk.
+
+"You seem to have made a bad mess of things."
+
+Nathaniel Hellbeam turned from the window and came back to his desk with
+quick, short, energetic strides.
+
+He presented a picture of inflamed wrath. His fleshy, square face was
+flushed and almost purple. His small eyes were hot with anger. They
+snapped as he launched his harshly spoken verdict. His whole manner
+bristled with merciless intolerance.
+
+He was enormously fat, and breathed heavily through clean shaven lips
+that protruded sensually. His age was doubtful, but suggested something
+under middle life. It was the gross bulk of the man that made it almost
+impossible to estimate closely. The only real youth about him was his
+dark, well oiled hair which possessed not a sign of greying in it.
+
+He flung himself into the wide chair which gaped to receive him, and
+glared at the dark face of his visitor.
+
+"What in the hell do I pay you for?" he cried brutally, lapsing, in his
+anger, into that gutteral Teutonic accent which it was his life's object
+to avoid. "A wild cat's scheme it was I tell you from the first. You go
+to this Sachigo with your men. You think to get this 'sharp' asleep, or
+what? You find him wide awake waiting for you to arrive. What then? He
+jumps quick. So quick you can't think. You a prisoner are. You go where
+he sends you. You live like a swine in the woods. You are made to work
+for your food. And a year is gone. A year! Serve you darn right. Oh,
+yes. Bah! You quit. You understand? I pay you no more. You are a fool, a
+blundering fool. I wash my hands with you."
+
+Idepski sat still, patient, as once before he had sat under the whip
+lash of a man's tongue. And he continued smoking till the great banker's
+last word was spoken.
+
+Then he stirred, and removed his cigarette from his thin lips.
+
+"That's all right, Mr. Hellbeam," he said coldly. "It seems like you've
+a right to all you've said. It seems, I said. But the 'fool' talk." He
+shook his head. "My best enemies don't reckon me that--generally. The
+game I'm playing has room enough for things that look like blunders. I
+allow that. It doesn't matter. You see, I know more of this feller
+Martin maybe than you do. I guess he's a mighty big coward, except when
+he's got the drop on a feller. I've given him the scare of a lifetime,
+and I've unshipped him from his safe anchorage on that darn Labrador
+coast. Do you know what's happened? I'll tell you. He's quit Sachigo.
+From what I can learn he's sold out his mill to that uncouth hoodlum,
+Harker, who was sort of his partner, and quit. Where? I don't know yet.
+Why has he quit? Why, because he knows we've located his hiding, and
+will get him if he remains. You reckon I've mussed things up." He shook
+his head. "He was well-nigh safe up there on Labrador--and I knew it. We
+had to get him out of it. Well, I've got him out. He's bolted like a
+gopher, and it's up to me to locate him. I shall locate him. I'm glad
+he's quit that hellish country. I've had a year of it, and it's put the
+fear of God into me. You needn't worry. I'm quite ready to quit your
+pay. But I'm going on with this thing, sure. You see, I owe him quite a
+piece for myself--now. I've been through the hell he intended me to go
+through when he sent me along up to be held prisoner by that skunk, Ole
+Porson. I'm going to pay him for that--good. I don't want your pay--now.
+One day I'll hand that feller over to you--and when you've doped him
+plenty--you'll have paid me." He rose leisurely from his comfortable
+chair. "May I take another of your good cigarettes?" he went on, with a
+half smile in his cold eyes. "You see, I won't get another, seeing I'm
+quitting you."
+
+He deliberately helped himself without waiting for permission, while his
+eyes dwelt on the gold box containing them.
+
+But the financier's mood had changed. The keen mind was busy behind his
+narrow eyes. Perhaps Idepski understood the man. Perhaps the coolness of
+the agent appealed to the implacable nature of the Swede. Whatever it
+was the hot eyes had cooled, and the fleshy cheeks had returned to
+their normal pasty hue. He raised a hand pointing.
+
+"Sit down and smoke all you need," he said, in the sharp, autocratic
+fashion that was his habit. "We aren't through yet." Then, for a few
+moments, he regarded the slim figure as it lay back once more in the
+armchair. "Say," he began, abruptly, "you reckon to go on for--yourself?
+Yes? You're a good hater."
+
+He went on as the other inclined his head.
+
+"I like a good hater. Yes. Well, just cut out all I said. We'll go on. I
+guess you'll need to blunder some before we get this swine. You're bound
+to. But I want him. I want him bad. If it's good for you to go on for
+yourself, that's good for me. There's a lifetime ahead yet, and I don't
+care so I see him down--right down where I need him. Maybe I won't get
+the money, but we'll get him, and that'll do. Yes, cut out what I said,
+and go ahead. Tell me about it."
+
+Idepski displayed neither enthusiasm nor added interest. He accepted the
+position with seeming indifference. Hellbeam to him was just an
+employer. A means to those ends which he had in view. If Hellbeam turned
+him down it would mean a setback, but not a disaster, and Idepski
+appraised setbacks at their simple value, without exaggeration. Besides,
+he knew that this Swede, powerful, wealthy as he was, could not afford
+to do without him in this matter. His intolerant, hectic temper mattered
+nothing at all. He paid for the privilege of its display, and he paid
+well. So--
+
+"There's nothing much to tell," the agent returned, with a shrug. "I'm
+going to get him--that's all. See here, Mr. Hellbeam," he went on after
+a pause, with a sudden change to keen energy, "you're a mighty big power
+in the financial world, and to be that I guess you've had to be some
+judge of the other feller. That's so. You most generally know when he's
+beat before you begin. And when he squeals it don't come as a surprise.
+Well, that's how it is with me, only it's a bigger thing to me because
+it sometimes happens to mean the difference between life and death. Say,
+when you put up your bluff at a feller, and watch him square in the
+eyes, and you see 'em flicker and shift, do you reckon you've lit on the
+'yellow streak,' that lies somewhere in most folk? I guess so. Well,
+that's how I know my man. I've seen it in this bum, Leslie Standing as
+he calls himself now. And when I saw it I knew he was beat, for all he'd
+the drop on me. Since then my notion's proved itself. He's lit out. He's
+cut from his gopher hole at Sachigo. An' when a gopher gets away from
+his hole, the man with the gun has him dead set. But say, that muss up
+you reckon I made doesn't look that way when you know the things it's
+taught me. While I was way up at that penitentiary camp on the Beaver
+River I kept all my ears and eyes wide, and I learned most of the things
+a feller's liable to learn in this world when he acts that way. I
+learned something of the notions lying back of this feller's work up
+there. Say, he hadn't finished with you when he took that ten millions
+out of you." An ironical smile lit the man's dark eyes as he thrust home
+his retaliation for the financier's insults. "Not by a lot," he went on,
+with a smiling display of teeth that conveyed nothing pleasant. "They've
+a slogan up there that means a whole heap, and it comes from him, and
+runs through the whole work going on, right down to the Chink camp
+cooks. Guess that mill is only beginning. It's the ground work of a
+mighty big notion. And the notion is to drive the Skandinavians out of
+Canada's pulp trade, and very particularly the Swedes, as represented by
+the interests of Nathaniel Hellbeam. Guess you sit right here in New
+York, but up there they've got you measured up to the last pant's
+button."
+
+"They that think?"
+
+The financier's bloated cheeks purpled as he put his clumsy
+interrogation.
+
+"Oh, yes. This feller Standing reckons he's made a big start, and there
+are mighty big plans out. When he and that clownish partner of his,
+Harker, are through, Sachigo'll be the biggest proposition in the way of
+groundwood pulp in the world. They've forests such as you in Skandinavia
+dream about when your digestion's feeling good. They've a water power
+that leaves Niagara a summer trickle. They've got it all with a sea
+journey of less than eighteen hundred miles to Europe. But there's more
+than that. When Sachigo's complete it's to be the parent company of a
+mighty combine that's going to take in all the mills of Canada outside
+Nathaniel Hellbeam's group. And then--then, sir, the squeeze'll start
+right in. And it isn't going to stop till the sponge--that's Nathaniel
+Hellbeam--is wrung dry."
+
+"You heard all this--when you were held prisoner and working like a
+swine in Martin's forests?"
+
+The smile in Hellbeam's eyes was no less ironical than the agent's.
+
+"When I was working like a swine."
+
+"These lumber-jacks. They knew all that in Standing's mind is?"
+
+"No. But I learned it all."
+
+"How?"
+
+The demand was instant, and a surge of force lay behind it.
+
+"Because some I saw. Some I picked up from general talk. And the rest I
+pieced together because it's my job to think hard when the game's
+against me. But it don't matter. You know that the things I've told you
+are right. It's news to you, but you know it's right, because you're
+thinking hard, and the game's against--you."
+
+"Yes."
+
+The financier's admission was the act of a man who has no hesitation in
+looking facts in the face and acknowledging them. Idepski's deductions
+were irrefutable, because the Swede was a shrewd business man with a
+full appreciation of the man who had lightened his finances by ten
+million dollars.
+
+For some moments the fleshy face was turned towards the window which
+yielded the hum of busy traffic many stories below them. His narrow eyes
+were earnestly reflective, but there was no concern in them. To the
+waiting man he was simply measuring the threat against him, and probing
+its possibilities for mischief.
+
+"Yet this fellow. He on the run is--Yes?"
+
+The eyes were smiling as they came back again to Idepski's face. The
+agent nodded, flinging his cigarette end into the porcelain cuspidore
+beside the desk.
+
+"Which makes me all the more sure of the game," he said confidently.
+"He's rattled. He's so scared to death for himself, and for his purpose,
+he's getting out. It's as clear as daylight to me. He feels he's plumb
+against it if he stops around. He knows we've located him. He knows what
+he's done to me. He knows all he wants to know of you. Well, he reckons
+there's no sort of chance for him at Sachigo. And if he stops there's no
+sort of chance for this purpose of his. He reckons to call off the
+hounds on his own trail, while the feller Harker carries on the good
+work of squeezing the Swedes. That's how I see it. And I guess I'm
+right. Remember I had a year of hell up there to think in, and when I
+finally got clear away I had two months' solitary chasing of those woods
+to think in, and then, when I made the coast, I had the trip down with
+the folks on the boat to listen to. He's scared for his life, and of
+anything you hope to hand him. But he's more scared for the purpose that
+made him set up that mill at Sachigo."
+
+Hellbeam leant back in his chair. His great paunch protruded invitingly
+and he clasped his hands over it.
+
+"Maybe you're right," he said, with an air intended to conciliate.
+"Anyway you've picked up some pieces and set them together so they make
+a fancy shape. But--it isn't good. No. Here, I think, too. I see
+another, way from you. Without this fellow Sachigo is--nothing. See? I
+care nothing because of this Harker. No. The other--that's different.
+Yes. He the brain has. All this piece you make. He is capable of it. But
+he is on the run. Good. I still sleep well while he runs. Sachigo? Bah!
+It is nothing without Leslie Martin. Now, go you. Hunt this man. Maybe
+your year of the woods will help you," he said, with biting emphasis.
+"You know the woods? Well, don't quit his trail. Get him. Get him
+alive."
+
+"Oh, I shall get him. Your urging ain't needed. I'll get him as you
+say--alive. And he knows it."
+
+Idepski's cold eyes hardened with a frigid hatred as he spoke. He had
+only been paid for the work hitherto. Now he was implacable.
+
+"But it's Sachigo I mean to watch," he went on, after a brief pause. "I
+mean to play in that direction. It's the home burrow where you lay your
+traps once your quarry's on the run."
+
+Hellbeam nodded.
+
+"That's good sense."
+
+"Sure it is," retorted the agent. "I'm glad you see it that way," he
+added with a smile under which the financier grew restive once more.
+
+"Yes. Well, see you get him. Money? It doesn't matter. Get him! Get
+him!" he reiterated fiercely. "You understand me? It doesn't matter how
+you get him. I can deal with the rest."
+
+Suddenly he raised a clenched fist, fat, and strong, and white, and
+extended his thumb. He turned it downwards and pressed its extremity on
+the gold mounted blotting pad before him with a force that bent the
+knuckle backwards. "Get him so I can crush him--like that," he cried.
+"Get him alive. I want him alive. See?"
+
+"I see. I'll get him--sure. You needn't worry a thing."
+
+And as Walter Idepski rose to take his departure, for all his nerve, he
+felt glad that the passion of this Swede's hate was not directed against
+him.
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+EIGHT YEARS LATER
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+BULL STERNFORD
+
+
+A great gathering thronged the heart of the clearing. There were men of
+every shade of colour, men of well-nigh every type. They stood about in
+a wide circle, whose regularity remained definite even under the
+stirring of fierce excitement. They had gathered for a fight, a great
+fight between two creatures, full human in shape and splendid manhood,
+but bestial in the method of the battle demanded. It was a battle with
+muscles of iron, and hearts that knew no mercy, and body and mind tuned
+only to endure and conquer. It was a battle that belonged to the savage
+out-world, acknowledging only the vicious laws of "rough and tough."
+
+The rough creatures stood voiceless and well-nigh breathless. The
+combatants were well matched and redoubtable, even in a community whose
+only deity was physical might and courage and the skill of the wielded
+axe. The lust of it all was burning fiercely in every heart.
+
+The sun poured out its flood of summer upon a world of virgin forest.
+The sky was without blemish. A dome of perfect azure roofed in the
+length and breadth of Nature's kingdom. Nevertheless the fairness of the
+summer day, with its ravishing accompaniment of soft, mystery sounds
+from an unseen world and the lavish beauty of shadowed woods were fit
+setting for the pulsing of savage emotions. It was far out in the lost
+world of Northern Quebec. It was far, far beyond the widest-flung
+frontiers of civilisation. It was out there where man soon learns to
+forget his birthright, and readily yields to the animal in him.
+
+It was a scene of mighty slaughter amongst the giants of the forest.
+Hundreds sprawled in the path of man's gleaming axe. Giants they were,
+hoary with age, and gnarled with the sinews built up by Nature to resist
+her fiercest storms. They lay there, in every direction, reaching up
+with tattered arms outstretched, as though appealing for the light, the
+warmth, and the sweetness of life they would know no more.
+
+Amidst this carnage a great camp was growing up. There were huts
+completed. There were huts only in the skeleton. They were dotted about
+in a fashion apparently without order or purpose. Yet long before the
+falling of the first snow, order would reign everywhere and man's
+purpose would be achieved.
+
+The bunkhouses, the stores, the offices, the stables, they must all be
+ready before the coming of the "freeze-up." Summer is the time of
+preparation. Winter is the season when the lumber-jack's work must go
+forward without cessation or break of any sort. Not even the excuse of
+sickness can be accepted. There is no excuse. The lumber-jack must work,
+or sink to the dregs of a life that has already created in him a spirit
+of indifference to the laws of God and man. So the life of the forest is
+hard and fierce, and the battle of it all is long.
+
+But the men who seek it are more than equal to the task. They are of all
+sorts, and all races. They drift to the forest from all ranks of life by
+reason of the spirit driving them. They come from the universities of
+the world. They come straight from the gates of the penitentiary. They
+come from the land, the sea, the office. They come from all countries,
+and they come for every reason. The call of the forest is deep with
+significance. Its appeal is profound. Its life is free, and shadowed,
+and afar.
+
+For long moments the clinch of the fighting men remained unbroken. They
+lay there upon the ground locked in a deadly embrace. A spasmodic jolt,
+a violent, muscular heave. The result was changed position, while the
+clinch remained unrelaxed. There were movements of gripping hands. There
+were changes of position in the intertwined legs clad in their hard cord
+trousers. The heavily-booted feet stirred and stirred again in response
+to the impulse of the searching brains of the fighters, and every slight
+movement had deep meaning for the onlookers.
+
+Yet none of these movements revealed the inspiration of passion. They
+were calculated and full of purpose. It was devilish purpose driving
+towards the objects of the fight. The stirring fingers yearned to reach
+the eyes of the adversary to blind him, and leave his organs of vision
+gouged from their sockets. The bared, strong teeth were only awaiting
+that dire chance to close upon the enemy's flesh, whether ear, or nose,
+or throat. Then the knee and foot. They were striving under ardent will
+for that inhuman maiming which would leave the victim crippled for life.
+
+Each movement of the fighters was estimated by the onlookers at its due
+worth. They understood it all, the skill, the chance of it. Not one of
+them but had fought just such a battle in his time, and not a few
+carried the scars of it, and would continue to carry the scars of it for
+the rest of their days.
+
+The moments of quiescence yielded to a spasmodic violence. There was a
+wild rolling, and the unlocking of mighty, clinging legs. One
+dishevelled head was raised threateningly. It remained poised for a
+fraction of time over the upturned face of the man lying in a position
+of disadvantage. Then it lunged downwards. And as it descended, a sound
+like the clipping of teeth came back to the taut strung senses of the
+onlookers. A sigh escaped from a hundred throats.
+
+"Bull missed it that time."
+
+Abe Kristin whispered his comment. The two men beside him had nothing to
+add at the moment. Their eyes were intent for the next development.
+
+Suddenly the fair-haired giant who had missed his attack seemed to
+disengage himself from the under man's desperate hold. It was impossible
+to ascertain the means he employed. But he clearly released himself and
+one hammer fist swung up. It crashed sickeningly down on the upturned
+face, and a whistling breath escaped the emotional Abe.
+
+"Gee! He's takin' a chance! That ain't the play in a 'rough and tough,'"
+he muttered.
+
+"Nope. You're right, Abe," Luke Gats agreed without turning. "He's
+crazy. Gee! It's a chance. But he's maybe rattled. Bull's been fightin'
+over an hour."
+
+"Here get it!" Tug Burke was pointing with a cant-hook in his
+excitement. "Get it quick. See? He's--"
+
+The man's excitement found reflection in the whole concourse of
+onlookers. There was a furious movement in the human body crushed on the
+ground beneath the man they called Bull. Its knees came up under his
+adversary's body with a terrific jolt. The purpose of maiming was
+obvious.
+
+"Gee! I'm glad."
+
+Tug's relief found an echo in the sigh that escaped his companions. The
+intended victim had promptly swung his body clear and the threatened
+injury was averted. But his retaliation was instant. His great open hand
+spread over the man's face, smothering it; and it seemed the sought-for
+goal had been reached.
+
+"Gouge! Gouge!"
+
+The cry roared in hoarse, excited tones from every direction. Unanimity
+displayed the general feeling. The man whose face had been smothered was
+Arden Laval, the camp boss, the man they hated as only forest-men can
+hate. The other was a giant youngster, not long a member of the camp,
+the usual object for victimisation by such a man as the French Canadian
+boss.
+
+The demand remained unsatisfied. The fingers remained spread out over
+the man's eyes, but the foul act was never perpetrated. The younger
+man's efforts were directed towards a deeper, more significant purpose,
+and perhaps less cruel. He could have blinded in a twinkling. But he
+refrained. Instead, he pressed up mightily with a fore-arm crooked under
+the back of the man's neck, his smothering hand pressed down with all
+his enormous strength.
+
+"The darn fool! Why in hell don't he--?"
+
+Abe was interrupted by the excited voice of the man with the cant-hook.
+
+"God A'mighty!" Tug cried. "Do you get it? Gouge? It ain't good enough
+fer Master Bull. He's playin' bigger. He's playin' fer dollars while we
+was reck'nin' cents. Look! It'll crack sure! His gorl-darn neck! He
+means--!"
+
+"To kill!"
+
+Luke Gat's jubilation was dreadful to witness. His hard, be-whiskered
+features were alight with fiendish joy. This youngster had gone beyond
+all expectations. No less than the life of the greatest bully in the
+lumber world would satisfy him.
+
+"Say, the nerve! He'll break the life out o' the skunk," he exulted.
+"The kid means crackin' his neck, sure as God!"
+
+"Ken he do it?" Tug had thrust forward.
+
+"Laval ain't the feller he was," mused Abe. "He shouldn't a let the boy
+get that holt. It's goin' back. It certainly is."
+
+The men stood hushed before the terrible significance of what they
+beheld. In the abstract, a life-and-death struggle meant little enough
+to them. Witnessing it, however, violently stirred their deepest
+emotions. They hated the camp boss, the libertine, drunkard, bully,
+Arden Laval, who only held his position by reason of his fighting
+powers. They would be infinitely pleased to witness his end. All the
+more sure was their delight that it should come at the hands of this
+pleasant-voiced young giant, who had come amongst them out of the very
+lap of civilisation. Later on they would laugh at the thought of the
+redoubtable Laval in the hands of this "kid," as they considered him.
+But for the moment they were held enthralled by the excitement of it
+all.
+
+The moments prolonged. The thrusting hand, and the crushing arm were
+forcing, forcing slowly, in their terrible strangle hold. The face of
+the camp boss was hidden from the spectators under the smothering hand.
+But the perilous angle at which his dark head was thrust back was there
+for all to see. His struggles, in that merciless hold, were becoming
+less violent. There was despair in their impotence.
+
+The man called Bull was fighting with no less desperation. His youthful,
+resilient muscles were extended to the last ounce of their power, and an
+active, steely-tempered brain lay behind his every effort. The memory of
+months of brutal injustice and bullying, the bitterness of which had
+galled beyond endurance, supported this last mighty effort. Yes, for all
+he was bred in the gentle life of civilisation, for all ruthless cruelty
+had no place in his normal temper, his one desire now was to kill, to
+slay this brute-man who had made his life unendurable.
+
+It was an awful moment. It was terrible even to these hardy men of the
+forests. The spectacle of a slow, deliberate killing was incomparable
+with the blood feuds to which they were used. There were those whose
+nerves prompted them to shout for haste. There were some even who
+welcomed the prolonged agony of the victim. But none shouted, none
+spoke or stirred. Furthermore, not one pair of shining eyes revealed the
+quality of mercy. Bull's right was his own. If he demanded death it was
+his due. Certainly it was the due of the bully, Laval.
+
+On the far side of the circle a sudden commotion broke up the tense
+expectancy of the onlookers. Every eye responded, and the unanimity of
+the change of interest suggested the desire for relief. The commotion
+continued. There was some sort of struggle going on. Then, in a moment,
+it ceased. A tall, lean, dark-clad figure leapt into the arena and flung
+itself upon the combatants.
+
+The circle had re-formed. Again were eyes fastened upon the point of
+fascination which had held them so long. But now a buzz of talk hummed
+on the summer air.
+
+"What in hell!" demanded Luke, in the bitterness of disappointment.
+
+"Here, I'm--"
+
+Tug Burke made a move to break into the arena. But the powerful hand of
+Abe was fastened about one of his arms in a grip of iron.
+
+"Say, quit, kid!" he cried hoarsely.
+
+The man's harsh tones were stirred out of their usual quiet.
+
+"Stop right here," he went on. "There's just one feller on this earth
+has a right to butt in when Death's flappin' his wings around. That's
+Father Adam. Maybe you're feeling sick to think Laval's going to get
+clear with his life. Maybe I am. Father Adam ain't buttin' in ordinary.
+He's savin' that hothead kid the blood of a killin' on his hands. Guess
+I'm glad."
+
+The next moments were abounding with amazing incident. It seemed as
+though a flying, priestly figure had been absorbed in the life-and-death
+struggle. He seemed to become part of it. Then, with kaleidoscopic
+suddenness, the men lay apart, and the death strangle hold of Bull
+Sternford was broken. And the magic of it all lay in the fact that the
+stranger was standing over the prone combatants, his dark, bearded face,
+and wide, shining black eyes turned upon the living fury gazing up out
+of the eyes of the man who had been robbed of his prey.
+
+"There's going to be no killing, Bull." Father Adam spoke quietly,
+deliberately, but with cold decision.
+
+There was no yielding in his pale, ascetic features. One hand slipped
+quickly into a pocket of his short, black, semi-clerical coat, as he
+allowed his eyes to glance down at the still prostrate camp boss.
+
+"And you, Laval," he cried, with more urgency, "get out quick. Get right
+out to your shanty and stop there. Later I'll come along and fix up your
+hurts."
+
+Young Bull Sternford leapt to his feet. His youthful figure towered. His
+handsome blue eyes were ablaze with almost demoniac fury. His purpose
+was obvious. A voiceless passion surged as he started to rush again upon
+his victim.
+
+But the priestly figure, with purpose no less, instantly barred the way.
+
+"Quit," he cried sharply. "What I say, goes."
+
+Bull halted. He halted within a yard of the automatic pistol whose
+muzzle was covering him. He stood for a second staring stupidly. And
+something of his madness seemed to pass out of his eyes. Then, in a
+moment, his voice rang out harshly.
+
+"Get away. Let me get at him. Oh, God, I'll smash him! I'll--!"
+
+"You'll quit right now!" Father Adam still barred the way with the
+threatening gun. He raised the muzzle the least shade. "There's this gun
+says you're not going to have murder on your hands, boy; and there's a
+man behind it knows how to make it stop your mad attempt. That's
+better," he went on, as, even in his fury the younger man drew back in
+face of the threat. "Say, you've done enough, boy. You've done all you
+need. He's deserved everything he's got, the same as most of us deserve
+the bad times we get. You've licked him like the good man you are.
+You've licked him without any filthy maiming, or unnecessary cruelty.
+Now leave him his life. He'll never trouble you again. Let it go at
+that."
+
+The calm of the man, the gentleness of his tones were irresistible. The
+fury of the youth died hard, but it so lessened in face of the simple
+exhortation that it had passed below the point where insanity rules.
+
+Suddenly a great, bleeding hand was raised to his mane of fair hair, and
+he smoothed it back off his forehead helplessly.
+
+"Why? Why?" he demanded. Then spasmodically: "Why should--he--get away
+with it? He's handed me a dog's life He's--"
+
+He broke off. His emotions were overwhelming.
+
+Father Adam's dark eyes never wavered. They squarely held their grip on
+the stormy light shining in the other's. Laval had not stirred. He still
+lay sprawled on the ground. Quite abruptly the hand gripping the
+automatic pistol was thrust into the pocket of the black coat. When it
+was removed it was empty. The man took a quick step towards the
+half-dazed Bull.
+
+"Come along, boy," he said persuasively, taking him by the arm. "Come
+right over to my shanty," he went on. "You'll feel better in a while.
+You'll feel better all ways, and glad you--didn't." Then he paused,
+holding the man's unresisting arm. He looked down at Laval who displayed
+belated signs of movement. "Get up, Laval," he ordered, returning to a
+coldness that displayed his inner feeling. "Get up, and--get out. Get
+away right now, and thank God your neck's still whole."
+
+He waited for the obedience he demanded, and waiting he realised by the
+quiescence of the man beside him that all danger had passed.
+
+Laval staggered to his feet. He stood up, a giant in the prime of early
+manhood, but bowed under the weight of physical hurt, and the knowledge
+of his first defeat. He stood for a moment as though uncertain. Then he
+moved slowly towards the crowding onlookers, finally passing through
+them on his way to his quarters pursued by a hundred contemptuous,
+unpitying glances, while busy tongues expressed regret at his escape. It
+was the scowl of the wolf pack in its merciless regard for a fallen
+leader.
+
+Very different was the general attitude when Father Adam led the victor
+away. Hard faces were a-grin. The tongues that cursed the defeated camp
+boss hurled jubilant laudations at the unresponsive youth, who towered
+even amongst these great creatures. But for the presence of Father Adam,
+who seemed to exercise a miraculous restraining influence, these
+lumber-jacks would have crowded in and forcibly borne their champion to
+the suttler's store for those copious libations, which, in their
+estimate, was the only fitting conclusion to the scene they had
+witnessed. As it was they made way. They stood aside in spontaneous and
+real respect, and the two men passed on in silence leaving the crowd to
+disperse to its labours.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+FATHER ADAM
+
+
+The hush of the forest was profound. For all the proximity of the busy
+lumber camp its calm was unbroken.
+
+It was a break in the endless canopy of foliage, a narrow rift in the
+dark breadth of the shadowed woods.
+
+It was one of those infinitesimal veins through which flows the
+life-blood of the forest.
+
+A tiny streamlet trickled its way over a bed of decayed vegetation often
+meandering through a dense growth of wiry reeds in a channel set well
+below the general level. Banks of attenuated grass and rank foliage
+lined its course, and the welcome sunlight poured down upon its water in
+sharp contrast with the twilight of the forest.
+
+Clear of the crowding trees a rough shanty stood out in the sunlight. It
+was a crazy affair constructed of logs laterally laid and held in place
+by uprights, with walls that looked to be just able to hold together
+while suffering under the constant threat of collapse. The place was
+roofed with a thatch of reeds taken from the adjacent stream-bed, and
+its doorway was protected by a sheet of tattered sacking. There was also
+a window covered with cotton, and a length of iron stove-pipe protruding
+through the thatch of the roof seemed to threaten the whole place with
+fire at its first use.
+
+Inside there was no attempt to better the impression. There was no
+furnishing. A spread of blankets on a waterproof sheet laid on a bed of
+reeds formed the bed of its owner, with a canvas kit-bag stuffed with
+his limited wardrobe serving as a pillow. There were several upturned
+boxes to be used as seats, and a larger box served the purpose of a
+table and supported a tiny oil lamp. There was not even the usual wood
+stove connected up to the protruding stove-pipe. A smouldering fire was
+burning between two large sandstone blocks, which, in turn, supported a
+cooking pot. An uncultured Indian of the forests would have demanded
+greater comfort for his resting moments.
+
+But Father Adam had no concern for comfort of body. He needed his
+blankets and his fire solely to support life against the bitterness of
+the night air. For the rest the barest, hardest food kept the fire of
+life burning in his lean body.
+
+Squatting on his upturned box he gazed out upon the sunlit stream below
+him. His dark eyes were full of a pensive calm. His body was inclining
+forward, supported by arms folded across his knees. An unlit pipe thrust
+in the corner of his mouth was the one touch that defeated the efforts
+of his flowing hair and dark beard to suggest a youthful hermit
+meditating in the doorway of his retreat.
+
+Bull Sternford was seated on another box at the opposite side of the
+doorway. He, too, had a pipe thrust between his strong jaws. But he was
+smoking. Beyond the dressings applied to a few abrasions he bore no
+signs of his recent battle. But there still burned a curiously fierce
+light in his handsome blue eyes.
+
+"You shouldn't have butted in, Father," he said, in a tone which
+betrayed the emotion under which he was still labouring. "You just
+shouldn't." Then with a movement of irritation: "Oh, I'm not a feller
+yearning for homicide. No. It's not that. You know Arden Laval," he went
+on, his brows depressing. "Of course you do. You must know him a whole
+heap better than I do. Well? Say, I guess that feller hasn't a right to
+walk this earth. He boasts the boys he's smashed the life clean out of.
+He's killed more fool lumber-jacks than you could count on the fingers
+of two hands. He wanted my scalp to hang on his belt. That man's a
+murderer before God. But he's beyond the recall of law up here. And he
+stops around on the fringe looking for the poor fool suckers who don't
+know better than to get within his reach. Gee, it was tough! I'd a holt
+on him I wouldn't get in a thousand years, and I'd nearly got the life
+out of him. I'd stood for all his dirt weeks on end. He made his set at
+me because I'm green and college-bred. But he called me a
+'son-of-a-bitch!' Think of it! Oh, I can't rest with that hitting my
+brain. It's no use. I'll have to break him. God, I'll break him yet. And
+I'll see you aren't around when I do it."
+
+The man's voice had risen almost to a shout. His bandaged hands clenched
+into fists like limbs of mutton. He held them out at the man opposite,
+and in his agony of rage, it gave the impression he was threatening.
+
+Father Adam stirred. He reached down into the box under him and picked
+up a pannikin. Then he produced a flask from an inner pocket. He
+unscrewed the top and poured out some of its contents. He held it out to
+the other.
+
+"Drink it," he said quietly.
+
+The blue eyes searched the dark face before them. In a moment excitement
+had begun to pass.
+
+"What is it?" Bull demanded roughly.
+
+"It's brandy, and there's dope in it."
+
+"Dope?"
+
+"Yes. Bromide. You'll feel better after you've swallowed it. You see I
+want to make a big talk with you. That's why I brought you here. That's
+why I stopped you killing that feller--that, and other reasons. But I
+can't talk with you acting like--like I'd guess Arden Laval would act.
+Drink that right up. And you needn't be scared of it. It'll just do you
+the good you need."
+
+Father Adam watched while the other took the pannikin. He watched him
+raise it, and sniff suspiciously at its contents. And a shadowy smile
+lit his dark eyes.
+
+"It's as I said," he prompted. Then he added: "I'm not a--Cæsar."
+
+The youth glanced across at him, and for the first time since his battle
+a smile broke through the angry gleam of his eyes. He put the pannikin
+to his lips and gulped down the contents.
+
+Father Adam drew a deep sigh. It was curious how this act of obedience
+and faith affected him. The weight of his responsibility seemed suddenly
+to have become enormous.
+
+It was always the same. This man accepted him as did every other
+lumber-jack throughout the forests of Quebec. He was a father whose
+patient affection for his lawless children was never failing, a man of
+healing, with something of the gentleness of a woman. An adviser and
+spiritual guide who never worried them, and yet contrived, perhaps all
+unknown to themselves, to leave them better men for their knowledge of
+him. He came, and he departed. Whence he came and whither he went no one
+enquired, no one seemed to know. He just moved through the twilight
+forests like a ghostly, beneficent shadow, supreme in his command of
+their rugged hearts.
+
+Bull set the pannikin on the ground beside him. His smile had deepened.
+
+"You needn't to tell me that, Father," he said, almost humbly. "There
+isn't a feller back there in the camp," he added with a jerk of his
+head, "that would have hesitated like me when you handed him your dope.
+Thanks. Say, that darn stuff's made me feel easier."
+
+"Good."
+
+The missionary removed his empty pipe, and Bull hastily dragged his
+pouch from a pocket in his buckskin shirt. He held it out.
+
+"Help yourself," he invited. And the other took it. For a moment Bull
+looked on at the thoughtful manner in which Father Adam filled his pipe.
+Then a curiosity he could no longer restrain prompted him.
+
+"This big talk," he said. "What's it about?"
+
+The missionary's preoccupation vanished. His eyes lit and he passed back
+the pouch.
+
+"Thanks, boy," he said in his amiable way. "Guess I'll need to smoke,
+too--you see our talk needs some hard thinking. Pass me a stick from
+that fire."
+
+Bull did as he was bid. And the missionary's eyes were on the fair head
+of the man as he leant down over the smouldering embers stewing his own
+meagre midday meal.
+
+Bull Sternford was a creature of vast stature and muscular bulk. It was
+no wonder that the redoubtable Laval had run up against defeat. The camp
+boss had lived for twenty years the hard life of the forests. His body
+was no less great than this man's. His experience in physical battle was
+well-nigh unlimited. But so, too, was his debauchery.
+
+Bull Sternford was younger. He was clean and fresh from one of the
+finest colleges of the world. He was an athlete by training and nature.
+Then, too, his mentality was of that amazing fighting quality which
+stirs youth to go out and seek the world rather than vegetate in the
+nursery of childhood. It was all there written in his keen, blue eyes,
+in the set of his jaws of even white teeth. It was all there in the
+muscular set of his great neck, and in the poise of his handsome head,
+and in the upright carriage of his breadth of shoulder. Even his walk
+was a thing to mark him out from his fellows. It was bold, perhaps even
+there was a suggestion of arrogance in it. But it was only the result of
+the military straightness of his body.
+
+Little wonder, then, a man of Arden Laval's brutal nature should mark
+him down as desired victim. This man was "green." He was educated. He
+possessed a spirit worth breaking. Later he would learn. Later he would
+become a force in the calling of the woods. Now he would be easy.
+
+The brute had sought every opportunity to bait and goad the man to his
+undoing. For months he had "camped on his trail," and Bull had endured.
+Then came that moment of the filthy epithet, and Bull's spirit broke
+through the bonds of will that held it. The insult had been hurled at
+the moment and at the spot where the battle had been fought. Bull had
+flung himself forthwith at the throat of the French Canadian almost
+before the last syllable of the insult had passed the man's lips. And
+the end of nearly a two hours' battle had been the downfall of the
+bully, with the name of Bull Sternford hailed as a fighting man in his
+place.
+
+The firebrand was passed to the waiting missionary. He sucked in the
+pleasant fumes of a lumberman's tobacco. Then the stick was flung back
+to its place in the fire.
+
+Father Adam nursed one long leg, which he flung across the other, while
+his wide, intelligent eyes gazed squarely into the eyes of the man
+opposite.
+
+"Tell me," he said. "What brought you into the life of the woods? What
+left you quitting the things I can see civilisation handed you? This is
+the life of the wastrel, the fallen, the man who knows no better. It's
+not for men starting out in possession of all those things--you have."
+
+Bull sat for a moment without replying. Father Adam's "dope" had done
+its work. His passionate moments had vanished like an ugly dream. His
+turbulent spirit had attained peace. Suddenly he looked up with a frank
+laugh.
+
+"Now, why in hell should I tell you?"
+
+It was an irresistible challenge. The missionary nodded his approval.
+
+"Yes. Why--in hell--should you?"
+
+He, too, laughed. And his laugh miraculously lit up his ascetic
+features.
+
+Instantly Bull flung out one bandaged hand in a sweeping gesture.
+
+"Why shouldn't I--anyway?" he cried, with the abandon of a man
+impatient of all subterfuge. "Guess I ought to turn right around and ask
+who the devil you are to look into my affairs? Who are you to assume the
+right of inquisitor?" He shook his head. "But I'm not going to. Now I'm
+sane again I know just how much you did for me. I meant killing Laval.
+Oh, yes, there wasn't a thing going to break my hold until he was
+dead--dead. You got me in time to save me from wrecking my whole life.
+And you got in at--the risk of your own. If I'd killed him all the
+things and purposes I've worried with since I left college would have
+been just so much junk; and I'd have drifted into the life of a bum
+lumber-jack without any sort of notion beyond rye whiskey, and the camp
+women, and a well swung axe. You saved me from that. You saved me from
+myself. Well, you're real welcome to ask me any old thing, and I'll hand
+you all the truth there is in me. I'm an 'illegitimate.' I'm one of the
+world's friendless. I'm a product of a wealthy man's licence and
+unscruple. I'm an outcast amongst the world's honest born. But it's no
+matter. I'm not on the squeal. Those who're responsible for my being did
+their best to hand me the things a man most needs. Mind, and body, and
+will. Further, they gave me all that education, books, and college can
+hand a feller. More than that, my father, who seems to have had more
+honesty than you'd expect, handed me a settlement of a hundred thousand
+dollars the day I became twenty-one. I never knew him, and I never knew
+my mother. The circumstances of my birth were simply told me on my
+twenty-first birthday. I know no more. And I care nothing to hunt out
+those spectres that don't figger to hand a feller much comfort. The rest
+is easy. I hope I'm a feller of some guts--"
+
+Father Adam nodded, and his eyes lit.
+
+"Sure," was all he commented.
+
+"Anyway, I feel like it," Bull laughed. "When I learned all these
+things I started right in to think. I thought like hell. I said to
+myself something like this: 'There's nothing to hold me where I am.
+There's no one around to care a curse. There's that feeling right inside
+the pit of my stomach makes me feel I want to make good. I want to build
+up around me all that my birth has refused me. A name, a life circle, a
+power, a--anyway, get right out and do things! Well, what was I going to
+do? It needed thinking. Then I hit the notion."
+
+He laughed again. He was gazing in at himself and laughing at the
+conceits he knew were real, and strong, and vital.
+
+"Say." He nodded at the prospect through the doorway. "There it is. This
+country's beginning. We don't know half it means to the world yet. Well,
+I hadn't enough capital to play with, so I resolved right away to start
+in and learn a trade from its first step to its topmost rung, and to
+earn my keep right through. Meanwhile my capital's lying invested
+against the time I open out. I'm going to jump right into the groundwood
+pulp business when the time comes. And out of that I mean to build a
+name that folks won't easily forget. Well, I guess you won't find much
+that's interesting in all this. It don't sound anything particularly
+bright or new. But for what it is it's my notion, and--I'm going to put
+it through. That's why I'm here. I'm learning my job from the bottom."
+
+The decision and force of the man were remarkable. The conciseness of
+his story, and his indifference to the tragedy of his birth, indicated a
+level mind under powerful control. And Father Adam knew he had made no
+mistake.
+
+"It's the best story I've heard in years," he replied, a whimsical smile
+lighting his dark eyes.
+
+"Is it?"
+
+Bull's smile was no less whimsical.
+
+"Yes. You've guts of iron, boy. And I've been looking years for just
+such a man."
+
+"That sounds--tough," Bull laughed, but he was interested. "What's the
+job you want him for? Are you yearning to hand out a killing? Is it a
+trip--a trip to some waste space of God's earth that 'ud freeze up a
+normal heart? Do you want a feller to beat the laws of God and man? Guts
+of iron! It certainly sounds tough, and I'm not sure you've found the
+feller you're needing."
+
+"I am."
+
+Father Adam was no longer smiling. The gravity of his expression gave
+emphasis to his words.
+
+Bull was impressed. His laugh died out.
+
+"I don't know I'm yearning," he said deliberately. "Anyway I don't quit
+the track I've marked out. That way there's nothing doing. It's a crank
+with me; I can't quit a notion."
+
+"You don't have to."
+
+"No?"
+
+They were regarding each other steadily.
+
+"Here, it's not my way to beat around," the missionary exclaimed
+suddenly. "When you find the thing you need you've got to act quick and
+straight. Just listen a while, while I make a talk. Ask all you need as
+I go along. And when I've done I'd thank you for a straight answer and
+quick. An answer that'll hold you, and bind you the way your own notions
+do."
+
+"That's talk."
+
+Bull nodded appreciatively. The missionary let his gaze wander to the
+pleasant sunlight through the doorway, where the flies and mosquitoes
+were basking.
+
+"There was a fellow who started up a groundwood mill 'way out on the
+Labrador coast. He was bright enough, and a mighty rich man. And he'd
+got a notion--a big notion. Well, I know him. I know him intimately. I
+don't know if he's a friend to me or not. Sometimes I think he isn't.
+Anyway, that doesn't matter to you. The thing that does matter is, he
+set out to do something big. His notions were always big. Maybe too big.
+This notion was no less than to drive the Skandinavians out of the
+groundwood trade of this country. He figured his great mill was to be
+the nucleus of an all-Canadian and British combination, embracing the
+entire groundwood industry of this country. It was to be Canadian trade
+for Canada with the British Empire."
+
+Bull emitted a low whistle.
+
+"An elegant slogan," he commented.
+
+He shifted his position. In his interest his pipe had gone out, and he
+leant forward on his upturned box.
+
+"Yes," Father Adam went on. "And, like your notion, it was something not
+easily shifted from his mind. It was planned and figured to the last
+detail. It was so planned it could not fail. So he thought. So all
+concerned thought. You see, he had ten million dollars capital of his
+own; and he was something of a genius at figures and finance--his people
+reckoned. He was a man of some purpose, and enthusiasm, and--something
+else."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+Bull's alert brain was prompt to seize upon the reservation. But denial
+was instant.
+
+"No. It wasn't drink, or women, or any foolishness of that sort," the
+missionary said. "The whole edifice of his purpose came tumbling about
+his ears from a totally unexpected cause. Something happened. Something
+happened to the man himself. It was disaster--personal disaster. And
+when it came a queer sort of weakness tripped him, a weakness he had
+always hitherto had strength to keep under, to stifle. His courage
+failed him, and the bottom of his purpose fell out like--that."
+
+Father Adam clipped his fingers in the air and his regretful eyes
+conveyed the rest. Then, after a moment, he smiled.
+
+"He'd no--iron guts," he said, with a sigh. "He had no stomach for
+battle in face of this--this disaster that hit him."
+
+"It has no relation to his--undertaking?"
+
+"None whatever. I know the whole thing. We were 'intimates.' I know his
+whole life story. It was a disaster to shake any man."
+
+The missionary sighed profoundly.
+
+"Yes, I knew him intimately," he went on. "I deplored his weakness. I
+censured it. Perhaps I went far beyond any right of mine to condemn. I
+don't know. I argued with him. I did all I could to support him. You
+see, I appreciated the splendid notion of the thing he contemplated.
+More than that, I knew it could be carried out."
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"It was useless. This taint--this yellow streak--was part of the man. He
+could no more help it than you could help fighting to the death."
+
+"Queer."
+
+A sort of pitying contempt shone in the younger man's eyes.
+
+"Queer?" Father Adam nodded. "It was--crazy."
+
+"It surely was."
+
+The missionary turned back to the prospect beyond the doorway. But it
+was only for a moment. He turned again and went on with added urgency.
+
+"But the scheme wasn't wholly to be abandoned. It was--say, here was the
+crazy proposition he put up. You see I was his most intimate friend. He
+said: 'The forests are wide. They're peopled with men of our craft.
+There must be a hundred and more men capable of doing this thing. Of
+putting it through. Well, the forests must provide the man, or the idea
+must die.' He said: 'We must find a man!' He said: 'You--you whose
+mission it is to roam the length and breadth of these forests--you may
+find such a man. If you do--when you do--if it's years hence--send him
+along here, and there's ten million dollars waiting for him, and all
+this great mill, and these timber limits inexhaustible waiting for him
+to go right ahead. It doesn't matter a thing who he is, or what he is,
+or where he comes from, so long as he gets this idea--sticks to it
+faithfully--and puts it through. I want nothing out of it for myself.
+And the day he succeeds in the great idea all that would have been mine
+shall be his.'"
+
+As Father Adam finished, he looked into the earnest, wonder-filled eyes
+of the other.
+
+"Well?" he demanded.
+
+Bull cleared his throat.
+
+"The mill? Where is it?" He demanded.
+
+"Sachigo. Farewell Cove."
+
+"Sachigo! Why it's--"
+
+"The greatest groundwood mill in the world."
+
+There was a note of pride and triumph in the missionary's tone. But it
+passed unheeded. Bull was struggling with recollection.
+
+"This man? Wasn't it Leslie Standing who built it? Didn't it break him
+or something? That's the story going round. There was something--"
+
+Father Adam shook his head.
+
+"There's ten million dollars says it didn't. Ten millions you can handle
+yourself."
+
+"Gee!"
+
+Bull drew a sharp breath. Strong, forceful as he was the figure was
+overwhelming.
+
+"This--all this you're saying--offering? It's all real, true?" Bull
+demanded at last.
+
+"All of it."
+
+"You want me to go and take possession of Sachigo, and ten--Say, where's
+the catch?"
+
+"There's no 'catch'--anywhere."
+
+The denial was cold. It was almost in the tone of affronted dignity. The
+missionary had thrust his hand in a pocket. Now he produced a large,
+sealed envelope. Bull's eyes watched the movement, but bewilderment was
+still apparent in them. Suddenly he raised a bandaged hand, and smoothed
+back his hair.
+
+Father Adam held out the sealed letter. It was addressed to "Bat
+Harker," at Sachigo Mill.
+
+"Here," he said quietly. "You're the man with iron guts Leslie Standing
+wants for his purpose. Take this. Go right off to Sachigo and take
+charge of the greatest enterprise in the world's paper industry. You're
+looking to make good. It's your set purpose to make good in the
+groundwood industry. Opportunities don't come twice in a lifetime. If
+you've the iron courage I believe, you'll grab this chance. You'll grab
+it right away. Will you? Can you do it? Have you the nerve?"
+
+There was a taunt in the challenge. It was calculated. There was
+something else. The missionary's dark eyes were almost pleading.
+
+Bull seized the letter. He almost snatched it.
+
+"Will I do it? Can I do it? Have I the nerve?" he cried, in a tone of
+fierce exulting. "If there's a feller crazy enough to hand me ten
+million dollars and trust me with a job--if it was as big as a war
+between nations--I'd never squeal. Can I? Will I? Sure I will. And
+time'll answer the other for you. Iron guts, eh! I tell you in this
+thing they're chilled steel."
+
+"Good!"
+
+Father Adam was smiling. A great relief, a great happiness stirred his
+pulses as he stood up and moved over to the miserable fire with its
+burden of stewing food.
+
+"Now we'll eat," he said. And he stooped down and stirred the contents
+of the pot.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+BULL LEARNS CONDITIONS
+
+
+The _Myra_ ploughed her leisurely way up the cove. There was dignity in
+the steadiness with which she glided through the still waters. The
+cockleshell of the Atlantic billows had become a thing of pride in the
+shelter of Farewell Cove. Her predecessor, the _Lizzie_, had never risen
+above her humble station.
+
+Her decks were wide and clean. Her smoke-stack had something purposeful
+in its proportions. The bridge was set high and possessed a spacious
+chart house. She had an air of importance not usual to the humble
+coasting packet.
+
+"Old man" Hardy was at his post now. One of his officers occupied the
+starboard side of the bridge, while he and another looked out over the
+port bow.
+
+"It's a deep water channel," the skipper said, with all a sailor's
+appreciation. "That's the merricle that makes this place. It'ud take a
+ten-thousand tonner with fathoms to spare right away up to the mooring
+berth. Guess Nature meant Sachigo for a real port, but got mussed fixing
+the climate."
+
+Bull Sternford was leaning over the rail. For all summer was at its
+height the thick pea-jacket he was wearing was welcome enough. His keen
+eyes were searching, and no detail of the prospect escaped them. He was
+filled with something akin to amazement.
+
+"It compares with the big harbours of the world," he replied. "And I'd
+say it's not without advantages many of the finest of 'em lack. Those
+headlands we passed away back. Why, the Atlantic couldn't blow a storm
+big enough to more than ripple the surface here inside." He laughed.
+"What a place to fortify. Think of this in war time, eh?"
+
+The grizzled skipper grinned responsively.
+
+"It's all you reckon," he said. "But she needs humouring. You need to
+get this place in winter when ice and snow make it tough. This cove
+freezes right around its shores. You'd maybe lay off days to get inside,
+only to find yourself snow or fog bound for weeks on end. We make it
+because we have to with mails. But you can't run cargo bottoms in
+winter. It's a coasting master's job in snow time. It's a life study.
+You can get in, and you can get out--if you've nerve. If you're short
+that way you'll pile up sure as hell."
+
+He turned away to the chart room, and a moment later the engine-room
+telegraph chimed his orders to those below.
+
+Bull was left with his busy thoughts.
+
+It was a remarkable scene. The forest slopes came right down almost to
+the water's edge on either hand. They came down from heights that rose
+mountainously. And there, all along the foreshore were dotted
+timber-built habitations sufficient to shelter hundreds of workers.
+Their quality was staunch and picturesque, and pointed much of the
+climate rigour they were called upon to endure. But they only formed a
+background to, perhaps, the most wonderful sight of all. A road and
+trolley car line skirted each foreshore, and the mind behind the
+searching eyes was filled with admiration for the skill and enterprise
+that had transplanted one of civilisation's most advanced products here
+on the desperate coast of Labrador. Many of the forest whispers of
+Sachigo had been incredible. But this left the onlooker ready to believe
+anything of it.
+
+The mill, and the township surrounding it, were already within view, a
+wide-scattered world of buildings, occupying all the lower levels of the
+territory on both sides of the mouth of the Beaver River before it rose
+to the heights from which its water power fell.
+
+Bull was amazed. And as he gazed, his wonder and admiration were
+intensified a hundredfold by his self-interest. This place was to be in
+his control, possibly his possession if he made good. He thrust back the
+fur cap pressed low on his forehead.
+
+His thought leapt back on the instant to the man who had sent him down
+to this Sachigo. Father Adam, with his thin, ascetic features, his long,
+dark hair and beard, his tall, spare figure. His patient kindliness and
+sympathy, and yet with the will and force behind it which could fling
+the muzzle of a gun into a man's face and force obedience. He had sent
+him. Why? Because--oh, it was all absurd, unreal. And yet here he was on
+the steamer; and there ahead lay the wonders of Sachigo. Well, time
+would prove the craziness of it all.
+
+"Makes you wonder, eh?" The coasting skipper was at his side again. "You
+know these folks needed big nerve to set up this enterprise. It keeps me
+guessing at the limits where man has to quit. I've spent my life on this
+darn coast, an' never guessed to see the day when trolley cars 'ud run
+on Labrador, and the working folk 'ud sit around in their dandy houses,
+with electric light making things comfortable for them, and electric
+heat takin' the place of the cordwood stove it seemed to me folk never
+could do without. Can you beat it? No. You can't. Nor anyone else."
+
+"Who is it? A corporation?" Bull asked, knowing full well the answer. He
+wanted to hear, he wanted to learn all that this man could tell him.
+
+Hardy shook his head.
+
+"Standing," he said. "That was the guy's name who started it all up.
+But," he added thoughtfully, "I never rightly knew which feller it was.
+If it was Standing, or that tough hoboe feller who calls himself Bat
+Harker. They never talk a heap. But since Leslie Standing passed out o'
+things eight years back--the time I was first handed command of this
+kettle--the mill's jumped out of all notion. Those trolleys," he pointed
+at the foreshore of the cove: "They started in to haul the 'hands' to
+their work only two years back. I'd say it's Bat Harker. But he looks
+more like a longshore tough than a--genius."
+
+He shrugged expressively. Then he shook his head.
+
+"No," he went on. "I don't know a thing but what any guy can learn who
+comes along up this coast. I've thought a heap. An', like you, I've ast
+questions all the time. But you don't learn a thing of this enterprise
+but the things you see. Bat Harker don't ever talk." He laughed in quiet
+enjoyment. "He's most like a clam mussed up in a cement bar'l. There
+don't seem any clear reason either. The only thing queer to me was
+Standing's 'get out.' There was talk then when that happened along. But
+it was jest talk. Canteen talk. Something sort of happened. No one
+seemed rightly to know. They guessed Bat was a tough guy who'd boosted
+him out--some way. Then I heard his wife had quit and he was all broke
+up. Then they said he'd made losses of millions on stock market gambles.
+But the yarns don't fit. You see, the mill's gone right ahead. The
+capital's there, sure. They've just built and built. There's more than
+twice the 'hands' there was eight years back. And get a look at the
+'bottoms' loading at the wharves. No. Say, when I came aboard the _Myra_
+and they scrapped the _Lizzie_, I never guessed to get a full cargo.
+Well, I can load right down to the water line for this place alone all
+the time. No. Sachigo's a mighty big fixture in the trade of this coast.
+It's a swell proposition for us sea folk. It keeps our propellers moving
+all the time. They're bright folk, sure."
+
+The old seaman laughed and moved off again to his telegraphs. The
+business of running in to the quayside was beginning in earnest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The hawsers creaked and strained at the bollards. The vessel yawed. Then
+she settled at her berth. The engine-room telegraph chimed its final
+order, and the vessel's busy heart came to rest. Instantly activity
+reigned upon the deck, and the discharge of cargo was in full swing.
+
+Bull Sternford was one of the first to pass down the gangway. Clad in
+the pleasant tweeds of civilisation, part hidden under a close-buttoned
+pea-jacket, he bulked enormously. His more than six feet of height was
+lost against his massive breadth of shoulder. Then, too, his keen face
+under a beaver cap, and his shapely head with its mane of hair, were
+things to deny his body that attention it might otherwise have
+attracted.
+
+For all that, at least one pair of critical eyes lost no detail of his
+personality. Bat Harker was unobtrusively standing amongst the piled
+bales of groundwood that stacked the wharf from end to end. There was
+nothing about him to single him out from those who stood on the quay.
+The rough clothing of his original calling was very dear to him, and he
+clung to it tenaciously. He seemed to have aged not one whit in the
+added eight years. His iron-grey hair was just as thick and colourful as
+before. There was no added line in his hard face. His girth was no less
+and no more. And his eyes, penetrating, steady, had the same spirit
+shining in them.
+
+He had laboured something desperately in the past eight years. With the
+passing of Leslie Standing from the life of Sachigo he had realized a
+terrible loss. His loss had more than embarrassed him. There was even a
+moment when it shook his purpose. But with him Sachigo was a religion,
+and his faith saved him. For a while, in both letter and spirit, he
+obeyed his orders, and Sachigo stood still. Then his philosophy carried
+the day. It was his dictum that no one could stand still on Labrador
+without freezing to death. He saw the application of it to his beloved
+mill. It must be "forward" or decay. So he scrapped his original orders,
+and drove with all his force.
+
+Bull stared about him for the fascination of his journey up the cove was
+still on him. His pre-occupation left him watching the hurried, orderly
+movement going on about him.
+
+"That all your baggage?"
+
+The demand was harsh, and Bull swung round with a start. He was gazing
+down into the upturned face of Bat Harker, who was pointing at the suit
+case he was carrying.
+
+"Guess I've a trunk back there in the hold somewhere," Bull replied
+indifferently, taking his interrogator for a quayside porter.
+
+"That's all right. I'll have one of the boys tote it up. Best come right
+along. It's quite a piece up to the office. You've a letter for me?"
+
+"I've a letter for Mr. Bat Harker."
+
+The doubt in Bull's tone set a genuine grin in the other's eyes.
+
+"Sure. That's me. Bat Harker. Maybe you don't guess I look it. Don't
+worry. Just pass it over."
+
+Bull groped in an inner pocket, surprise affording him some amusement.
+His interest in Sachigo had abruptly focussed itself on this man.
+
+"I'm kind of sorry," he said. "I surely took you for some sort
+of--porter."
+
+Bat laughed outright, and glanced down at his work-stained clothing.
+
+"Wal, that ain't new," he said. Then his eyes resumed their keen regard.
+"We don't need to wait around though. The skitters are mighty thick down
+here. Sachigo's gettin' a special breed I kind o' hate. That letter,
+an'--we'll get along."
+
+Bull drew out Father Adam's letter and waited while the other tore it
+open. Bat glanced at the contents and jumped to the signature. Then he
+thrust out a gnarled and powerful hand.
+
+"Shake," he cried. And there could be no doubting his good will. "Glad
+to have you around, Mr. Bull Sternford."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bull Sternford was seated in the luxurious chair that had once known
+Leslie Standing. His pea-jacket was removed and his cap was gone. The
+room was warm, and the sun beyond the window was radiant. Beyond the
+desk Bat was seated, where his wandering gaze could drift to the one
+object of which it never tired. He was at the window which looked out
+upon the mill below.
+
+He was reading Father Adam's letter. Sternford was silently regarding
+his squat figure. He was waiting and wondering, speculating as to the
+hard-faced, uncultured creature who had built up all the amazing details
+that made up an industrial city in a territory that was outlawed by
+Nature.
+
+Bat thrust the letter away and looked up.
+
+"Father Adam didn't write that letter for you? He just handed it out to
+you to bring along?"
+
+"That's how," Bull nodded.
+
+"Sure." Bat's tone became reflective. "He must have wrote that letter
+years, and held it against the time he located you. He's queer."
+
+Bull laughed.
+
+"Maybe he is," he said, "I don't know about that. But he's one hell of a
+good man," he went on warmly. "Do you know him? But of course you do.
+Say, he's just father and mother to every darn lumber-jack that haunts
+the forests of Quebec, and it don't worry him if his children are
+hellhound or honest. There's that to him sets me just crazy. I'd like to
+see his thin, tired face, always smiling." He stirred. And the warmth
+died abruptly out of his manner. "Say, you knew me--at the wharf?"
+
+"Sure. I knew you before you came along. We've a wireless out on the
+headland."
+
+"I see. Father Adam warned you I was coming. He told you--"
+
+"The whole darn yarn. Sure."
+
+Bull laughed grimly.
+
+"That he guessed to shoot me to small meat if I didn't do as he said?"
+
+"If you didn't cut out homicide from your notions of--sport."
+
+"Yes. It was tough," Bull regretted. "But I'm glad--now."
+
+"Yep. Guess any straight sort of feller would feel that way--after."
+
+The lumberman's regret was unnoticed by the other.
+
+Suddenly Bull leant forward in his chair. A smile, half whimsical, half
+incredulous, lit his eyes. He thrust his elbows on the desk and
+supported his face in his hands.
+
+"It just beats hell!" he cried. "It certainly does. Oh, I'm awake all
+right. Sure, I am. One time I wasn't sure. Two months back I was lying
+around a lousy summer camp getting ready to take a hand in the winter
+cut for the Skandinavia Corporation. I was within two seconds of
+breaking a man's life--the rotten camp boss. And now? Why, now I'm
+sitting around in dandy tweeds in the boss chair of a swell office, with
+a crazy notion back of my head I'm here to beat the game with the
+greatest groundwood mill in the world, and ten million dollars capital
+behind me. Maybe there's folks wouldn't guess I'm awake, but I allow I
+am. But the whole thing sets me thinking of the fairy stories I used to
+read when I was a kid, and never could see the horse sense in wasting
+time over."
+
+Bat helped himself to a chew from a fragment of plug tobacco.
+
+"Here, listen," Bull went on, after the briefest pause. "It's my 'show
+down.' I don't understand a thing. I'm mostly a kid from college with a
+yearning for fight. So far I've learned some of the things the forest
+can teach the feller who wants to learn. They're the rough things. And I
+like rough things. I've some grip on groundwood. And the making of
+groundwood's the main object of my life. That, and the notion of licking
+hell out of the other feller. That's me, and those are the things made
+Father Adam send me along down to Sachigo. Well, it's up to you." He
+spread out his hands, "Where do I stand? How do I stand? And why in the
+name of all that's crazy am I sitting in this boss chair--right now?"
+
+Bat swung one trunk-like leg across the other. His movement suggested an
+easing of mind and a measure of enjoyment. He pointed at the window and
+nodded in its direction.
+
+"Quite a place," he said, in a tone and with a pride that had no
+relation to the other's demands. "Makes you feel man ain't the bum sort
+of inseck in the scheme of things some highbrows ain't happy not tellin'
+you. There's folks who guess it's Nature the proposition that matters.
+It's her does it all, an' keeps on doin' it all the time. But Nature's
+most like one mighty foolish, extravagant female. That sort o' woman who
+don't care but to please the notion of the moment. And when that's done,
+goes right on to please the next. Wal, anyway I guess she's got her uses
+if it's only to hand chances to the guy that's lookin' on. Take a look
+right down there below," he went on. "That's the truck the guy lookin'
+on has sweppen up in Nature's trail. It's taken most of fifteen years
+collectin' it. We've had to push that broom hard. And now I guess you're
+going to boost your weight behind it too. There's other things to
+collect, and that's what we want from you. You got nerve. You got big
+muscle, and education, too. Well, you'll handle the biggest sweeper of
+us all. Does it scare you?"
+
+"Not a thing." Bull was smiling confidently.
+
+Bat chuckled. His eyes were sparkling as he ruthlessly masticated his
+tobacco. This man pleased him mightily.
+
+"That's all right," he said. Then he went on after a silent moment while
+he gazed thoughtfully out of the window. "It's right here," he
+exclaimed. "Here's a mill, a swell mill that don't lack for a thing to
+make it well-nigh perfect. I'll tell you about it. Its capacity. Its
+present limit is six thousand tons dry weight groundwood pulp to the
+week. That's runnin' full. There's a hundred and twenty grinders feeding
+a hundred and eighty sheetin' machines. And they're figgered to use up
+fifty-five thousand horse power of the five hundred thousand we got
+harnessed on this great little old river that falls off the highlands.
+That power is ours winter an' summer. It don't matter a shuck the
+'freeze up.' It's there for us all the darn time. Then we've forest
+limits to hand us the cordage for that output that could give us three
+times what we're needing for a thousand years. Labour? We got it
+plenty. And later, by closing in our system of foresting, I figger to
+cut out present costs on a sight bigger output. The plans for all that
+are fixed in my head. Then we come to the market for our stuff, an' I
+guess that's the syrup in the pie. The world's market's waitin' on us.
+It's ours before we start. Why? Our power don't cost us one cent a unit.
+We're able to hand our folks a standard of living through the nature of
+things that leaves wages easy. The river's wide, and full, and it's _our
+own_. Then our sea passage to Europe's just eighteen hundred miles
+instead of three thousand. An' these things mean our costs leave us
+cutting right under other folks, and Skandinavia beat. There it is," he
+cried, with a wide gesture of his knotted hands. "It's pie!"
+
+Something of the lumberman's enthusiasm found reflection in Sternford's
+eyes.
+
+"But Nature's handed us a lemon in the basket of oranges," Bat went on,
+with a shake of his head. "It's that woman in her again. Y'see, she
+gives us just four months in the year to get our stuff out. Oh, she
+don't freeze the cove right up. No. That's the tough of it. The
+channel's mostly open. But storm, and fog, and ice, beats the
+ocean-going skipper's power to navigate it with any sort o' safety. The
+headlands are desperate narrow, and--well, there it is. We've four
+months in the year to get our stuff out. It's a sum. Figger it yourself.
+Set us goin' full. Six thousand tons in the week. What is it? Three
+hundred thousand in the year. How many trips at ten thousand tons? Or
+put the average tonnage lower. Say eight thousand. Forty trips. Four
+months. A vessel making two trips on an average turn round. We need a
+fleet of twenty 'bottoms,' to do it in the time. And they'll need to be
+our own. You can't help yourself to the world's market, and fix prices,
+and all the while fight for shipping in the open market. See?"
+
+"Sure--I see."
+
+Bat nodded approval.
+
+"When we get that the rest can go through. Meanwhile there's sixty
+grinders idle, which leaves us workin' half capacity. As it stands it's
+a dandy enterprise. We're making a swell balance sheet. But profit ain't
+the whole purpose. There's the rest."
+
+The super lumber-jack turned again to the window with that fascination
+that was almost pathetic.
+
+"And the rest?"
+
+Bull Sternford urged the other sharply, and Bat turned at once.
+
+"Canada's groundwood for the Canadian, inside the Empire," he shot at
+him.
+
+The other nodded.
+
+"The world's market for the country that can and should supply it," he
+replied.
+
+"The smashing of the darn Skandinavian ring," cried Bat, his deep-set
+eyes alight.
+
+"And drive them--back over the sea."
+
+Bat suddenly leant across the table.
+
+"That's it, boy," he cried. "That's it! Hellbeam and all his gang. The
+Skandinavia Corporation. Smash 'em! Drive 'em to Hell! It ain't profit.
+It's the trade. The A'mighty made Canada an' built the Canadian. He set
+him right here to help himself to the things He gave him. It's being
+filched by these foreigners--his birthright. They're fat on it. Did we
+fight the world war for that? Not by a darn sight. We fought to hold a
+place on the map for ourselves. And that's a proposition we've all got
+to get our back teeth into."
+
+"It sure is."
+
+The mill manager sat back in his chair and chewed vigorously.
+
+"That's it," he said. "How?" he went on. "Combination. Finance--and the
+interest of the little, great old country across the water. It's all
+planned and laid out by the feller that started up this proposition.
+It's scheduled for you. Guess you'll find the last word of it writ out
+in the locked book in this desk. It's clear and straight for the feller
+with the nerve. That's you. Wal?"
+
+Bat was watching--searching. He was looking for that flicker of an
+eyelid he had learned to dread in the past. But he failed to discover
+it. The wide, clear eyes of the younger man returned his regard
+unwaveringly. The uncultured lumberman had stirred a responsive
+enthusiasm, and somehow the project no longer seemed the crazy thing it
+had once appeared to Bull Sternford.
+
+"Guess my back teeth have got it," he said, with a smile. "You needn't
+worry I'll let go."
+
+Bat drew a deep breath. He stood up and spat his mangled chew into the
+cuspidore.
+
+"I'm glad. I'm real glad," he cried. "I'm a heap more glad you told me
+those words without askin' the other things you need to know. But you
+got to know 'em right away. Say, the day that fixes up the things we
+been talkin' sees you with me and another masters of this mill an' all
+it means. And while you're playin' your hand there's one big fat salary
+for you to draw. This house and office is yours, an' me an' the mill's
+ready to do all we know all the time, just the way you need it. Down in
+Abercrombie there's the attorney, Charles Nisson, who's got the outfit
+of papers that you're goin' to sign. And when you seen him, why you'll
+get busy. Shake, boy," he cried, thrusting out one knotted hand. "Father
+Adam sent you, and I don't guess he's made any mistake."
+
+Bull had risen, and his height left him towering over the man across the
+table.
+
+"Now for the mill," he cried, as their hands fell apart. "The _Myra_
+sails sundown to-morrow and I need to get a swift look around before
+then. Say, you folk have kind of taken me on a chance--well, that's all
+right. I'm glad."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+DRAWING THE NET
+
+
+Nathaniel Hellbeam was contemplating the spiral of smoke rising from his
+long cigar. He was dreaming pleasantly. He was dreaming of those
+successful manipulations of finance it was his purpose to achieve. He
+had lunched, so his dream was of the things which most appealed.
+
+In the midst of his reflections the drub of the muffled telephone beat
+its insistent tattoo. His dream vanished, and his senses became alert.
+He leant forward in his chair and picked up the receiver.
+
+"Yes," he said shortly. And it sounded more like the Teutonic, "Ja!"
+
+Putting up the receiver again he leant his clumsy body back in his
+chair. His small eyes no longer contained their dreaming light. They
+were turned expectantly upon the polished mahogany door.
+
+The door swung silently open.
+
+"Mr. Idepski!" The announcement was made in a carefully modulated tone.
+
+The agent passed into the great man's presence, slim, dark, confident.
+Then the door closed without a sound.
+
+"Well?"
+
+There was no cordiality in the greeting. That was not Hellbeam's way
+with a paid agent.
+
+Idepski walked across to the chair always waiting to receive a visitor
+and sat down.
+
+"May I sit?" he inquired coolly, after the operation had been
+performed.
+
+Hellbeam nodded.
+
+"Well?" he repeated.
+
+The agent laid his hat on the ornate desk, and removed his gloves with
+care and deliberation.
+
+"I'm just back from Sachigo," he said.
+
+"Hah!"
+
+The financier settled himself more comfortably in his chair, and
+returned his cigar to his gross mouth.
+
+"Tell me," he demanded.
+
+"Easy. Things are moving our way."
+
+The dark eyes glanced over the table for the gold cigarette box that
+always stood there.
+
+"Help yourself," the banker ordered rather than invited.
+
+Idepski needed no second bidding.
+
+"You got all my code messages?" he asked. "Good," as the Swede nodded.
+"Then you know the position of the mill. Say, that feller Harker needs a
+sort of apology from me--also from you. The mill's a wonder. And he's
+the guy that's fixed it that way. You haven't a thing in Skandinavia
+comparable. I'd say you haven't a feller on your side capable of
+touching the fringe of that tough's genius for organisation. It's him.
+Not Martin--I mean Standing."
+
+"And Standing?"
+
+But Idepski was not to be deflected from his purpose.
+
+"That's all right," he said easily. "I'm coming to him presently. I gave
+you, at times, the whole length and breadth, and size, and capacity of
+the Sachigo of to-day. You got all that stuff. But I've saved up the
+plum. There's a new man come into it. His name's Sternford--Bull
+Sternford. Guess it's him I need to tell you about before I pass on to
+the other. It's taken me a while to locate all I needed. And I guess I
+had luck or I wouldn't have got it all yet."
+
+For once the man's smile reached his eyes.
+
+"What's his position--in Sachigo?" Hellbeam demanded.
+
+"Right on top of the business side of it."
+
+"A financial man?"
+
+The banker's interest was obviously stirred. But Idepski shook his dark
+head.
+
+"That's the queer of it," he said. "He's a youngster straight out of the
+forest with no sort of record except as a pretty tough fighting
+proposition. Here, let me hand it to you in my own way, and I'll answer
+any sort of question after. I got men chasing up the forest camps. You
+know that. Well, I get their reports right here in this city at my
+office. They're read carefully, and anything that looks good is coded,
+and sent on to me wherever I am. Well, right after I located this
+feller, Sternford, coming into Sachigo, I got word of some stuff
+reported from one of your own camps way out north-west of Lake St. Anac.
+Guess it's about the farthest north in that direction, and it's cut off
+from any other camp by a hundred miles. On the face of it the stuff
+didn't seem to need more than a single thought. It was to say my man was
+quitting the camp. He'd sifted it right through, but there wasn't a
+'jack' in the camp with any sort of story worth wasting paper on. There
+wasn't a trace of our man that way, and he proposed drawing another
+cover. At the end of his report was one of those notes these boys never
+seem able to resist mixing up with their official work. It told me of
+one of those scraps that happened in the camps, and he seemed mighty
+struck by it. It was between the camp boss, Arden Laval, and a kid
+called Sternford. Say, when I read that name I jumped. I felt like
+handing my feller promotion right away. Well, his story was good anyway.
+It seems this camp boss is about the biggest bluff in the scrap way
+known to that country. The kid licked him. They fought nearly two hours,
+'rough and tough.' And the kid would have killed his man, but for the
+interference of a missionary feller called Father Adam. He broke 'em
+loose with a gun, and when he got 'em loose he took the kid right away
+so he shouldn't hand out the homicide he reckoned to. This report was
+more than two months old when I got it. Anyway I got it after a feller
+called Bull Sternford, a queer name by the way, had jumped in on the
+Sachigo proposition."
+
+The agent flung away his cigarette and helped himself afresh.
+
+"Well," he went on, smiling, "I guess it didn't take me thinking five
+seconds. I set the wires humming asking a description of this fighting
+kid. I got it. It was my man. The feller at Sachigo. Well?"
+
+Idepski's smiling interrogation was full of satisfaction.
+
+"Go on." The watchful eyes of the financier seemed to have narrowed.
+
+"Now, by what chance does this feller, Bull Sternford, come straight
+from one hell of a scrap in a far-off camp belonging to Skandinavia to
+run the business end of Sachigo? What happened after that fool
+missionary got him away? And--"
+
+Idepski broke off, pondering. He flicked his cigarette ash without
+regard for the carpet.
+
+Hellbeam stirred in his chair impatiently. His lips seemed to become
+more prominent. His small eyes seemed to become smaller.
+
+"You ask that, yes? You?" he snorted. "A child may answer that thing.
+You think? Oh, yes, you think." The hand supporting his cigar made a
+gesture that implied everything disparaging. "Our man--this Martin--has
+gone out of Sachigo because--of you? I tell you, no! Does a man give up
+the money, the big plan he makes, at the sight of an--agent? He took you
+in his hand and sent you to the swine life of the forest where he could
+have crushed you like that." He gripped the empty air. "Then he
+goes--where? You say he fears and quits. What does he fear? You?" The
+man shook his head till his cheeks were shaken by the violence of his
+movement. "He goes somewhere. But he does not quit. That is clear. Oh,
+yes. The mill goes on. It grows and prospers. The man Harker remains.
+Where comes the money for Sachigo to grow? Trade? Yes, some. But not
+all. I know these things. The mill goes on--the same as with Martin
+there. So Martin does not quit. He--just goes. Then who sets this Bull
+Sternford in the mill? Why? He says, 'This man can do the things I
+need.' Well? Say quick to your man, 'Do not leave this camp of
+Skandinavia.' Martin is there, or near by. He must know this Father
+Adam, too. He must be in touch with him. Maybe he watches the
+Skandinavia work. Maybe he plays his game so. Maybe he goes from Sachigo
+for that reason. Yes?"
+
+The financier's undisguised contempt left the agent apparently
+undisturbed.
+
+"That's the simple horse sense of it," Idepski retorted promptly. "I get
+all that. But you're wrong when you say, Martin's playing any other game
+than lying low because of one hell of a scare. I know him. You think you
+know him because you can't get away from judging a man from your end.
+However, that don't matter a shuck. I've told that man of mine to stop
+around. Don't worry. I told him that right away. I told him to watch
+this missionary." He shook his head. "Nothing doing. The missionary has
+quit. As I said, I'm right back from Sachigo. I didn't come back just to
+hand you this stuff. I'm on my way up to this camp of yours. We've been
+hunting this guy eight years--blind. Now there's a streak of daylight.
+I'm going for that streak myself. Anyway, it's liable to be pleasanter
+work than lumbering in the booms at Sachigo, and wondering when that
+feller Bat Harker, was going to locate me through a lumber-jack's
+outfit. And while I'm up there I mean to learn all I can of this Father
+Adam. I don't look for much that way. He's just a missioner that every
+feller in the forest's got a good word for, and anyway, it don't seem to
+me the feller who jumped in on you, and touched your bank roll is the
+sort to pass his time handlin' out tracts to the bums of the forest. I
+came in on my way to pass you these things. I go north again to-night.
+I'll be away quite a while, and, shut off up there, you'll not be likely
+to get word easy. But you'll hear things when I've got anything to hand
+you."
+
+A sardonic light crept into Hellbeam's eyes as he listened to the final
+assurance.
+
+"So," he ejaculated with a nod.
+
+The agent rose to go.
+
+"Meanwhile," he said, leaning over the desk, "it might be well for you
+to get a grip on the fact that Sachigo's going right on. It's the
+greatest groundwood proposition in the world. I know enough of Harker to
+realise his capacity to make it do just what he needs. And as for that
+other--this Sternford kid--why, I gather he's a pretty live wire that's
+set there for a reason. The slogan up there's much what it was, only the
+words are changed."
+
+Hellbeam sucked his cigar and removed it from his lips.
+
+"Changed? How?" he demanded, without suspicion.
+
+"It was 'Canadian trade for the Canadians,'" Idepski said, his dark eyes
+snapping maliciously. "It's more personal since the fighting kid came
+along. It reminds me of the German slogans of the war. It's 'To hell
+with the Swedes, we'll drive 'em _into_ the sea.'"
+
+The financier nodded. His armour was impenetrable.
+
+"The Germans said much," he said.
+
+"That's all right, these folks aren't Germans," came the prompt retort,
+as Idepski picked up his hat and gloves.
+
+"No." Hellbeam remained seated. It was not his way to speed a departing
+visitor. "I'm glad. Oh, yes." He smiled into the other's face, and his
+meaning was obvious. "You go to this camp. You find this missionary.
+That's work for you. The other--" his eyes dropped to the papers on the
+desk before him--"this mill, this Sachigo is for me. It is much nearer
+to the sea than the Skandinavia. Oh, yes."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE PROGRESS OF NANCY
+
+
+The girl reached out a hand in response to the ring of the telephone. It
+was slim and white; and her finger nails displayed that care which
+suggests a healthy regard for the niceties of a woman's life.
+
+"Hullo! Yes?"
+
+She remained silently intent upon the rapidly spoken message coming down
+to her over the wire. Her deep, hazel eyes were soberly regarding the
+blotting pad, upon which an idle pencil was describing a number of
+meaningless diagrams.
+
+"Yes," she replied, after a while. "Oh, yes. All reports are in. I've
+gone through them all, and my summary is being prepared now. They're a
+pretty bad story. Yes. What's that? How? Oh, yes. Some of the camps are
+in pretty bad shape, I'd say. Output's fallen badly. Output! Yes. All
+sorts of reasons and--" she laughed, "--to me, none quite satisfactory.
+I think I've my finger on the real trouble, and fancy I've seen all this
+coming quite a while back. Very well. I'll be right up. Yes, I'll bring
+my rough notes if the summary isn't ready."
+
+Nancy McDonald thrust the receiver back in its place and sat for a
+moment gazing at it. She knew she had committed herself. She had
+intended to. She knew that she had reached one of the important
+milestones in her career. In her youth, in the springtime energy
+abounding in her, she meant to pit her opinion against the considered
+policy of those who formed the management of the great Skandinavia
+Corporation she served. She understood her temerity. A surge of nervous
+anticipation thrilled her. But she was resolved. Her ambition was great,
+and her youthful courage was no less.
+
+The brazen clack of typewriters beyond the glass partitions of her
+little private office left her unaffected. It was incessant. She would
+have missed it had it not been there. She would have lost that sense of
+rush which the tuneless chorus of modern commercialism inspired. And, to
+a woman of her temperament, that would have been a very real loss.
+
+The great offices of the Skandinavia Corporation, in the heart of the
+city of Quebec, with their machine-like precision of life, their
+soulless method, their passionless progress towards the purpose of their
+organisation, meant the open road towards the fulfilment of her desires
+for independence and achievement.
+
+All the promise of her earlier youth had been abundantly fulfilled.
+Tall, gracious of figure, her beauty had a charm and dignity which owed
+almost as much to mentality as it did to physical form. Yet, for all she
+had already passed her twenty-fourth birthday, she was amazingly
+innocent of those things which are counted as the governing factors of a
+woman's life. Certainly she knew and loved the Titian hue of her wealth
+of hair; her mirror was constantly telling her of the hazel depths of
+her wide, intelligent eyes, with their fringes of dark, curling, Celtic
+lashes. Then the almost classic moulding of her features. She could not
+escape realising these things. But they meant no more to her than the
+fact that her nose was not awry, and her lips were not misshapen, and
+her even, white teeth were perfectly competent for their proper
+function.
+
+She was a happy blending of soul and mentality. Heredity seemed to have
+done its best for her. The Gaelic fire and the brilliance and
+irresponsibility of her misguided father seemed to have been balanced
+and tempered by the gentle woman soul of her mother. And through the
+eyes of both she gazed out upon the world, inspired and supported by a
+tireless nervous energy.
+
+Since the memorable day of her interview with her appointed trustee,
+Charles Nisson, her development had been rapid. The events which had
+suddenly been flung into her life at the interview seemed to have
+unloosed a hundred latent, unguessed emotions in her child heart, and
+translated her at once into a thinking, high-spirited woman.
+
+She honestly strove to banish bitterness against the man who had
+deprived her of that mother love which had been her childhood's
+treasure, but always a shadow of it remained to colour her thought, and
+influence her impulse. She had studied the deed of settlement as she had
+promised. She had studied it coldly, dispassionately. She had looked
+upon it as a mere document aimed to benefit her, without regard for her
+feelings for the man who had made it. She had thought over it at night
+when passion was less to be controlled. She had consulted those she had
+been bidden to consult, and had listened to, and had weighed their
+kindly advice. And when all was done she took her own decision as she
+was bound to do. It was a decision that had no relation to reason, only
+to passionate impulse.
+
+She would not accept the things the deed offered her. She would not
+accept this reparation so coldly held out. She would not live a
+leisured, vegetable life, with no greater ambition than to marry and
+bear children. The simple prospect of marriage and motherhood could
+never satisfy in itself. That would be a happy incident, but not the
+whole, and acceptance of that deed would surely have robbed her of the
+rest.
+
+There were times when she felt the disabilities of her sex. She knew she
+was deprived of the physical strength which the battle of life seemed to
+demand. But to her the world was wide, and big, and, in her girl's
+imagination, teeming with appealing adventure. The world alone could not
+satisfy her.
+
+Once her decision was taken all the kindly efforts of her mentors at
+Marypoint were rallied in her support. They had advised out of their
+wisdom, but acted from their hearts. And the day on which the principal
+of the college notified her that the Skandinavia Corporation of Quebec
+had signified its willingness to absorb her into its service as typist
+and stenographer, at one hundred dollars per month, was the happiest she
+had known since her well-loved mother had been taken out of her life.
+
+Now, after three years of unwearying effort, there was still no shadow
+to mar her happiness, or temper her enthusiasm. On the contrary, there
+was much to stimulate both. In that brief period she had succeeded
+almost beyond her dreams. Was she not already the trusted, confidential
+secretary to the ruling power in the great offices of the Skandinavia
+Corporation? Had she not been taken out of the ranks of the many capable
+stenographers, and been given a private office, a doubled salary, and
+work to do which left her wide scope for the play of those gifts with
+which she was so liberally endowed? Yes. All these things had been
+showered upon her in three years. She was a figure of authority in the
+great establishment. And furthermore, the man she served--this man,
+Elas Peterman--had hinted, and even definitely talked of, further rapid
+promotion.
+
+She had worked hard for it all. Oh, yes. She had worked morning, noon,
+and night. When other girls had been content to study fashions and
+styles, and chatter "beaus" and husbands, she had given herself up to
+the study of the wood-pulp trade, and the world's market of the material
+she was interested in. She had saturated herself with the whole scheme,
+and purpose, and methods of her employers, till, as Peterman himself had
+once told her in admiration at her grasp of the business, she knew as
+much of the trade as he did himself. And even after that her mirror,
+that oracle of a woman's life, failed to yield her the real truth it is
+always ready to tell to its devotees.
+
+The pre-occupation suddenly passed out of the girl's eyes. She stirred.
+Then she stood up and collected a number of papers into a small leather
+attaché case. A moment later she pressed the bell push on the desk.
+
+Her summons was promptly answered by a slim figured girl, with fair
+hair, and "jumpered" in the latest style.
+
+"I shall be away a while. See to the 'phone, Miss Webster," Nancy said,
+in a tone of quiet but definite authority. "I shall be with Mr.
+Peterman. Don't ring me unless it's something important. That summary.
+Is it ready?"
+
+"It's being checked right now."
+
+"Well, speed them up. You can send it up directly it's through. Mr.
+Peterman is needing it."
+
+Nancy passed out of the room. Her discipline was strict. Sometimes it
+approached severity. But she understood its necessity for obtaining
+results. Her orders would be carried out.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Elas Peterman set the 'phone back in its place. His dark eyes were
+smiling. They were shining, too, in a curious, not altogether wholesome
+fashion. He had just finished talking to Nancy McDonald, and he was
+thinking of the vision of red hair, of the serious hazel eyes gazing out
+of their setting of fair, almost transparent complexion.
+
+He took up his pen to continue the letter he had been writing. But he
+added no word. The girl he had been speaking with still occupied his
+thoughts to the exclusion of all else.
+
+He was a good-looking man, clean cut and youthful. His profile was
+finely chiselled. But his Teutonic origin was clearly marked. It was in
+the straight square back of his head. It was in the prominent, heavily,
+rounded chin, and the squareness of his lower jaw. Furthermore, the
+high, mathematical forehead was quite unmistakable. There was power,
+force, in the personality of the man. But there was something else. It
+lay in his mouth, in his eyes. The former was gross, and definite
+sensuality looked out of the latter.
+
+As the door opened to admit Nancy his pen promptly descended on his
+paper. But he did not write. He looked up with a smile.
+
+"Come right in, my dear," he said cordially, with the patronising
+familiarity of a man conscious of his power. "Just sit right down while
+I finish this letter." Then he added gratuitously, "It's a rude letter
+to a feller I've no use for; and I don't guess to rob myself of the
+pleasure of passing it plenty to him--in my own handwriting."
+
+Nancy smiled as she took the chair beside the desk which was usually
+assigned to her in her intercourse with her chief.
+
+"I wish I felt that way writing a bad letter," she said. "But I don't.
+It just makes me madder with folks, and I go right on thinking things,
+and--and--it worries."
+
+Elas Peterman shook his head.
+
+"Guess you'll get over that, my dear," he said easily. "Sure you will.
+You're just a dandy-minded kid, learning the things of life. You feel
+good most all the time. That's how it is. You want to laff and see
+things happy all around you. Later you'll get so you see the other
+feller mostly thinks of himself, and don't care a hoot for the folks
+sitting around. Then you'll feel different; and you'll tell folks you
+don't like the things you feel about them."
+
+He went on writing, smiling at his own cynicism.
+
+Nancy leant back in her chair. His words left her unaffected. She was
+used to him. But, for a moment, she contemplated the dark head,
+supported on his hand, without any warmth of regard.
+
+After awhile she glanced away, her gaze wandering over the luxurious
+furnishings of the room. And it occurred to her to wonder how much, if
+any, of the excellent taste of the decorations owed inception to the man
+at the desk. No. Not much. The cheque-book and the decorator's artist
+must have been responsible. This grossly Teutonic creature with his
+cynical, commercial mind, was something of an anachronism, and could
+never have inspired the perfect harmony of the palatial offices of his
+Corporation. It was rather a pity. He had been exceedingly good to her.
+She would have liked to think that he was the genius of the whole
+structure of the Skandinavia, even to the decorations of the office. But
+it was impossible.
+
+The man blotted and folded his letter. He enclosed and sealed it. He
+even addressed it himself.
+
+"I'm kind of sorry I had to break in on you while you were fixing those
+reports," he said, in his friendliest fashion. "But, you see, I'm just
+through with the Board, and we took a bunch of decisions that need
+handling right away. Tell me," he went on, an ironical light creeping
+into his smiling eyes, "you reckon you've set your finger on the real
+trouble with our dropping output. I want to know about it because the
+Board and I can't be sure we've located it right."
+
+The sarcasm hurt. It was not intended to. Elas Peterman had no desire in
+the world to hurt this girl. A cleverer man would have avoided it. But
+this man had no refinement of thought or feeling. Cynicism and sarcasm
+were his substitutes for a humour he did not possess.
+
+Nancy's cheeks flushed hotly. But she stifled her feelings. She was
+confident of herself, and despite the manner of the challenge, she knew
+the moment of her great opportunity had come.
+
+With a quick movement she crossed her knees and leant forward. She
+smiled in response.
+
+"Yet, it's easy," she said boldly, with bland retaliation. "The reports
+are not good. And the trouble stands out clear as daylight. I guess a
+big scale contour map is the key to it. We've 'hand-weeded' the
+Shagaunty Valley. It's picked bare to the bone. The folks have cleared
+the forests right away to the higher slopes of the river. We're moving
+farther and farther away from the river highway. Well, that's all right
+in its way. Ordinarily that would just mean our light railways are
+extending farther, and a few cents more are added to our transport
+costs. Owing to our concentration of organisation that wouldn't signify.
+No. It's Nature, it's the forest itself turning us down. And the map,
+and the reports show that. The camps are right out on the plateau
+surrounding the valley, which is unprotected from winter storms. The
+close, luxurious growth of the valley we have been accustomed to is
+gone. The standing cordage of lumber is no less, only in bulk, girth.
+The trees are mostly less than half the girth. The result? Why, they
+have to work farther out. Each camp cuts over four times the area.
+Instead of a proportion of, say, two trees in five, it's about one in,
+say, ten. It looks like a simple sum. I should say we've lumbered that
+valley at least one season too long."
+
+The man's smile had passed. There was no longer derision in his keen
+eyes. He had invited this girl's talk for the sake of hearing it. Now he
+was caught in admiration of her clear perception.
+
+"Do the reports bear out those facts?"
+
+His question was sharp, and Nancy realised she had done well.
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"No. They do just the thing you'd expect them to do," she said. "They
+make every sort of excuse that couldn't possibly account for the drop.
+And avoid the real cause which their writers are perfectly aware of."
+She shrugged her pretty shoulders. "You wouldn't expect it otherwise.
+You want to remember those reports are written by bosses who're more
+interested in their own comfort than in the affairs of the Skandinavia."
+
+"How?"
+
+Again the girl's expressive shrug.
+
+"To quit the Shagaunty and break new ground means the break up of those
+amenities and comforts they've accumulated in years. It means work, real
+hard work, and discomfort for at least two seasons. You see, we need to
+get into the skin of these folk. They can keep the booms full from these
+forests, and the kick only comes when the grinders get to work. Output
+falls automatically with the girth of the lumber sent down. It's a close
+calculation; but on the year it means a lot. I learned that from Mr.
+Osbert, at the mills on the Shagaunty. Well, so long as the booms are
+kept full, the camp bosses are satisfied. There's a limit below which
+the girth of logs may not go. They watch that limit, and are careful not
+to go below it. Well, our big output has been made up always, not by
+the minimum logs, but the maximum to which we have been hitherto
+accustomed. These boys know all about that; but they're satisfied with
+such bulk as doesn't fall below the minimum. And when asked, suggest
+fire, storm and sickness, anything rather than the real cause which
+drops our output. They'll not willingly face the discomfort and added
+work of opening a new territory. There's just one decision needed."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+The girl laughed. It was a low, pleasant, happy laugh. She felt glad.
+Her chief was serious. He was in deadly earnest, and it represented her
+revenge for his sarcasm.
+
+"We've five other rivers running down to the lake. The Shagaunty isn't
+even the largest. Well, these boys will have to be shaken out of their
+dream. We ought to quit the Shagaunty right away and make a break for
+fresh 'limits.' It's simple."
+
+The man had no responsive smile. He shook his head.
+
+"That's what it isn't, my dear," he said.
+
+For the time the girl's beauty, her personality were quite forgotten.
+Peterman was absorbed.
+
+"It means the complete dislocation of our forest organisation," he went
+on. "Here, I'll tell you something. We've done a very great thing in the
+past. And it's been easy. Years ago we decided by concentration of all
+our forest work on a limited area we could cut costs to the lowest. That
+way we could jump in on the market cheaper than all the rest. Our forest
+limits were the finest in Canada. We had standing stuff practically
+inexhaustible, and of a size almost unheard of. What was the result?
+Why, one by one we've absorbed competitors at our own price till the
+Skandinavia stands head and shoulders above the world's groundwood
+industry. That's all right. That's fine," he went on, after a pause.
+"But like most easy trails, you're liable to keep on 'em longer than is
+good for you. We haven't had to worry a thing up to now. You see, we'd
+stifled competition, and we'd paid a steady thirty per cent dividend.
+Which left our Board in an unholy state of dope. I've tried to wake 'em.
+Oh, yes. I tried when that guy started up his outfit on Labrador. The
+Sachigo outfit. Then he seemed to fade away, and I couldn't rouse 'em
+again." He shook his head--"Nothing doing. Well, for something like
+fifteen years those guys of Sachigo have been doing and working; and
+now, to-day, they've jumped into the market with both feet. I haven't
+the full measure of things yet. But the play's a big thing. They're out
+for the game we've been playing. Say, they're combining every old mill
+we've left over. All the derelicts and moth-bounds. Their hands are out
+grabbing all over the country. Well, that wouldn't scare me worth a
+cent, only they've never let up in fifteen years, and there's talk about
+big British finance getting behind 'em."
+
+The man broke off. His serious eyes remained steadily regarding the
+girl's interested face.
+
+"You reckon this change is easy," he went on again. "I guess it would be
+easy if these folk hadn't jumped into the market. That makes all the
+difference. While we're changing they're busy. Their stuff's coming down
+in thousands of tons. And it's _better_ groundwood than ours. If we
+change over we're going to leave the market short and these folk will
+get big contracts. You're right. We've been working the Shagaunty too
+long. But it's been by three or four seasons. Not one. The time's
+coming, if it hasn't already come, when we've got to fight these folks
+and smash 'em; or get right out of business."
+
+Something of the girl's joy had passed in face of the man's statement.
+
+"There's been talk of these Sachigo folk in the trade," she said
+thoughtfully, "but I didn't know it was as big as you say. Of course--"
+
+"Sure you didn't. You haven't had to handle our stuff on the market."
+The man laughed. And something of his seriousness passed. "But you're a
+bright kid. And the Skandinavia's looking for bright kids all the time.
+It needs 'em to counter a doped Board. It's taken you five minutes to
+locate a trouble the Board's taken years to realise. And you've been
+talking one of the bunch of decisions we've taken. I mean quitting the
+Shagaunty. We didn't have your argument, but we had the 'drop.' So the
+decision was taken. We've got to move like hell. Sachigo has our
+measure, and it's going to be a big fight. How'd you fancy a trip up
+country? I mean up the Shagaunty?"
+
+There was a change in the man's voice and manner as he put his demand.
+He was leaning forward in his chair. A hot light had suddenly leapt into
+his eyes, which left them shining unwholesomely. Nancy was startled at
+his words. And his attitude shocked her not a little out of her
+self-satisfaction.
+
+"I don't know--. How do you mean?" she demanded awkwardly.
+
+The man realised her astonishment and laughed. Then he reached out, and
+his hand patted the rounded shoulder nearest him. It was a touch that
+lingered unnecessarily, and the girl stirred restlessly under it.
+
+"Why, it's the chance of a life--for you," he said boisterously. "You'll
+go right up through the camps. You'll take your notions with you and
+investigate. I'll hand you a written commission, and the folk'll lay
+their 'hands' down for you to see. When you've seen it all you'll get
+right back here, and I'll set you before the Board to tell your story. I
+don't need to tell a bright girl like you what that means to you. You'll
+get one dandy summer trip, and I'll lose one dandy secretary. But I'm
+not kicking. No. You see, Nancy, I'm out to help you all you need.
+Well?"
+
+It was crude, clumsy. It was all so blatantly vulgar. It was not the
+thing he said. It was the manner of it and all that which was lying
+unspoken behind.
+
+For the first time Nancy experienced a curious uncertainty in dealing
+with him. But here was real opportunity. She had dreamed of such. And
+she must take it. The touch of the man's hand upon her shoulder had
+disturbed her. But she smiled her gratitude at him.
+
+"It's too good," she exclaimed, with apparent impulse. "It's just too
+good of you. Will I go? Why, yes. Surely. And I'll make good for you. I
+believe it's the best thing. Someone to go who'll bring back a dead
+right story. I'd be real glad."
+
+"That's bully!" The man beamed as he leant back in his chair more than
+satisfied with himself. "But I don't fancy losing my dandy secretary,"
+he went on. "No, sir. I'm going to hate this summer bad. I surely am.
+Still, there's next winter. Winter's not too bad with us. And a feller
+needs consolation in winter. There's theatres, and ice parties, and
+dances, and things. And I guess when the Board's fixed a big jump up for
+you, you'll feel like getting around some. Well, I'm mostly vacant. A
+feller can't live all the time at home with his wife and kids. I guess I
+could show you Quebec at night better than most--"
+
+The telephone saved Nancy the rest of the man's rendering of his account
+and she breathed deeply her relief. But the interruption was by no means
+welcome to the man. And his irritation was promptly displayed by the
+vindictive "Well?" he flung at the unyielding receiver.
+
+"Oh! What's that? Who? Hellbeam? Oh. Sure. Yes. Send him right up. Don't
+keep him waiting. Right up now. Yes."
+
+He thrust up the instrument and sat back in his chair.
+
+"Curse the man!"
+
+Nancy had risen from her chair at the mention of Hellbeam's name. She
+was glad enough of the excuse. She understood Hellbeam was the great
+outstanding figure in the concern of the Skandinavia. His was the one
+personality that dwarfed everybody. He was the moving power of the whole
+concern.
+
+"You'll let me know later?" she said. "I mean, just when I'm to start
+out. I'm ready when you like. I'll just go and see why those reports
+have not been sent up."
+
+"Oh, don't worry with the reports. You've told me the things that
+matter."
+
+The man's irritation was as swift as it was violent. But it passed as
+quickly as it came. He laughed.
+
+"That's all right, my dear. Be off now. I'll let you know about things
+this afternoon."
+
+Nancy gladly accepted her dismissal. She wanted to think. She wanted to
+get things into their proper focus. As she closed the door behind her
+her beautiful eyes had no joy in them. She had realised two things as a
+result of her interview. The opportunity she had looked forward to had
+materialised, and she had seized it with both hands. But the goodness of
+Elas Peterman to herself possessed none of that disinterested kindliness
+she had hitherto believed. Furthermore, there was dawning upon her that
+which her mirror should have told her long ago. She was beginning to
+understand that her work, her capacity, her application, counted far
+less in the favour of her chief than did those things with which nature
+had equipped her. She was shocked out of her youthful dream. And it left
+her so troubled, that, had she not been passing down the carpeted
+corridor of the Skandinavia offices, she would have burst into a flood
+of tears.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was a different Elas Peterman who confronted the squat figure of
+Nathaniel Hellbeam. The master in the younger man was completely
+submerged. He possessed all the Teutonic capacity for self-abnegation in
+the presence of the power it is necessary to woo. There was only one
+master when the great financier was present. Elas Peterman knew that his
+part was to listen and obey with just that humility which he would have
+demanded had the position been reversed.
+
+Another type than Hellbeam's would have despised the attitude. But the
+financier had no scruple. Nature had denied him qualities for inspiring
+affectionate regard, or even respect. But she had bestowed on him a lust
+for power, and a great vanity, and these he satisfied to the uttermost.
+
+The financier drove straight to the object of his visit.
+
+"I come for an important purpose," he said, in his guttural fashion.
+"There must be a special Board assemble. Skandinavia will buy the mill
+on Labrador. The Sachigo mill. I come on the night train, which is the
+worst thing I can think to do, to say this thing. If we do not buy this
+mill, then--" He broke off with an expressive gesture.
+
+Elas nodded. He was startled, but his powers of dissimulation were
+profound.
+
+"I understand," he said. "They have been approached?"
+
+Hellbeam stirred his bulk in the chair Nancy had so recently occupied.
+It was a movement of irritation.
+
+"That is for you. You represent Skandinavia. I--I say this thing. I the
+money find."
+
+The face of Peterman was a study. His eyes were serious, his manner
+calmly considering. Amazement was struggling with a desire to laugh
+outright in the face of this grossly insolent money power.
+
+"Nothing could suit us better, sir," he said, deferentially. "They've
+been handing us more trouble than I fancy talking about. And they look
+like handing us still more. These people have grown slowly, but very
+deliberately. There's something very like genius in their management.
+And seemingly they possess unlimited capital or credit. I guess I know
+something of their contemplated manoeuvres. They're assembling all the
+free mills outside our ring. I see a great big scrap coming. May I ask
+the price you're considering?"
+
+Hellbeam produced a gold cigar case. A greater man would have been
+content with a certain modesty of appointment. His case was comparable
+in vulgarity with the size of his cigars. He thrust the pierced end of
+the cigar between his gross lips and spoke with the huge thing lolling.
+
+"It does not matter. I say buy."
+
+The tone, the snapping of the man's eyes forbade further probing in this
+direction. He lit his cigar.
+
+"It will need careful handling," ventured Peterman.
+
+Hellbeam snorted.
+
+"It careful handling always needs. Eh?"
+
+"Surely. I was thinking."
+
+"So. You will think. Then you will act. You will communicate forthwith.
+See? You listen. I buy this Sachigo, yes. The price matters nothing.
+There is a reason. This fight. It is not that. Who is the head? I would
+know. I fancy this man to meet. He is what you call--bright. So."
+
+Elas shook his head--
+
+"There are two men in it we recognise. A man named Harker and another
+called Sternford--Bull Sternford. We know little of either. You see,
+it's kind of far away. Anyway, between them they're pretty--bright. I
+don't think they built the mill. I'm sure that's so. It was a man called
+Standing. But he seems to have gone out of active management. I might
+start by writing them and feel the way."
+
+"Ach no!" Hellbeam shook his head in violent protest. "You write--no.
+You have your confidential man, yes? You send him. I give you the
+outline of terms. I give you alternative terms. Big terms. He will go.
+He will talk. He will hear. Then we will later come to terms. All men
+will sell--on terms. Your man. Where is he? I must see him. Then the
+Board. It meets. I will address it. I show them how this thing will
+serve."
+
+"That's all right, sir," Elas was smiling. "You couldn't offer the Board
+a more welcome proposition than the purchase of Sachigo just now. We're
+changing our forest organisation right now, and that means temporary
+delays and drop in output. Sachigo's our worry while we're doing it. But
+with your permission I won't send a man up there. I think," he added
+deliberately, "I'd like to send a--woman."
+
+Hellbeam's face was a study. His little eyes opened to their widest
+extent. His heavy lips parted, and he snatched his cigar into the safety
+of his white fingers.
+
+"A--woman--for this thing? You crazy are!"
+
+There was no restraint or pretence of restraint. The other's smile was
+more confident than might have been expected before such an intolerant
+outburst.
+
+"Guess a woman has her limitations, sir. Maybe this one hasn't a wide
+experience. But she's clever. She's loyal to us, and she's got that
+which counts a whole heap when it comes to getting a man on her side.
+You reckon to buy Sachigo. If you send a man to deal he'll get short
+shrift. If there's anyone to put through this deal for Skandinavia it's
+the woman I'm thinking of. And she'll put it through because she's the
+woman she is, and not because of any talents. Your pardon, sir, if I
+speak frankly. But from all I know of Sachigo, if you--perhaps the king
+of financiers on this continent--went to these folk and offered them
+double what their enterprise is worth, I guess they'd chase you out of
+Labrador so quick you wouldn't have time to think the blasphemy suitable
+to the occasion."
+
+Peterman's explanation caught the humour of his countryman. The bulk of
+the visitor shook under a suppressed laugh.
+
+"Well," he retorted, "I do not go. This woman. A good-looker, eh? She is
+pleasant--to men? Where is she? Who is she?"
+
+"She's my secretary, sir." Elas jumped at the change of his visitor's
+humour. "She's not much more than a kid. But she's quite a 'looker,'
+I'll send for her, if you'll permit me. She's getting some reports for
+me. I'll ask her to bring them up. You can see her then, sir, and, if
+you'll forgive me, I won't present her to you. If I do she'll guess
+something, and it's best she knows nothing of this contemplated deal--as
+regards you."
+
+For a moment the banker made no reply. He sat, an adipose mass,
+breathing heavily, and sucking at his cigar. Then quite suddenly, he
+nodded.
+
+"Send for her," he said sharply.
+
+Elas reached the telephone and rang down.
+
+"Hello! That you? Oh, will you step up a moment, Miss McDonald? Yes. Are
+they ready? Good. That's just what I want. Please. All of them."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nancy knocked at the door and stepped into the room. She was carrying a
+large typescript of many pages. It represented many days and evenings of
+concentrated labour. It had been a labour not so much of love as of
+ambition. It was an exhaustive summary of the position of the
+Skandinavia's forestry in the Shagaunty Valley.
+
+She missed the squat figure in the chair she usually occupied. She saw
+nothing of the stare of the narrow eyes concentrated upon her. She saw
+only the tall figure of Peterman, standing waiting for her beyond his
+desk in such a position that, to reach him, she must pass herself in
+review before the devouring gaze of the great banker.
+
+She walked briskly towards him, her short skirt yielding the seductive
+rustle of the silk beneath it. Her movements were beyond words in grace.
+Her tall figure, so beautifully proportioned, and so daintily rounded,
+displayed the becoming coat-frock she usually wore in business to
+absolute perfection.
+
+The banker's searching eyes realised all this to the last detail. He
+realised much more. For his was the regard that sought beneath the
+surface of things. It was that regard which every wholesome, good woman
+resents. But ultimately it was the girl's face and hair that held him.
+The rare beauty of the latter's colour sent a surge of appreciation
+running through his sensual veins. And the perfect beauty, and delicate
+charm of her pretty features, stirred him no less. Only her eyes, those
+pretty, confident, intelligent, hazel depths he missed. But he waited.
+
+"These are the papers, Mr. Peterman."
+
+Nancy held out the typescript to the waiting man whose eyes had none of
+the smiling welcome they would have had in Hellbeam's absence.
+
+"Thank you." Elas glanced down at the neatly bound script.
+
+"It's all complete?"
+
+"Oh, yes. It's the whole story. It's in tabloid form. You will be able
+to take the whole close in half an hour."
+
+A rough clearing of the throat interrupted her, and Nancy discovered the
+banker beside the desk. In something of a hurry she promptly turned to
+depart. But Elas claimed her.
+
+"Will you come to me after lunch?" he said pleasantly.
+
+"I want to go into the details of that trip I explained to you. You must
+get away as soon as possible."
+
+"Directly after lunch?"
+
+"Yes. Say three o'clock."
+
+"Very well."
+
+The girl again turned to go, but the banker anticipated her. As she
+reached the door he stood beside it, and opened it for her to pass out.
+He was holding something in his hand. It was an exquisitely formed gold
+fountain-pen.
+
+"This yours is, I think," he said heavily, while his eyes searched those
+depths of hazel he had missed before.
+
+The girl smiled as she gazed at the beautiful pen. She shook her head.
+
+"No," she said. "I never possessed anything so beautiful in my life."
+
+"But you drop it as you come, I think, yes?" The man's eyes were
+levelled at her devouringly. Quick as thought he turned to Elas watching
+the scene. "Is it yours? I see it on the carpet, yes?"
+
+The manager was prompt to take his cue.
+
+"It's not mine," he said. "It must be yours, Miss McDonald. If it isn't
+I guess you'd best have it till we find its owner."
+
+The girl smiled from one to the other.
+
+"Thanks ever so much," she said, with frank pleasure. "I'll keep it till
+we find the owner. It's a lovely thing."
+
+She took the glittering pen from the fleshy fingers holding it. And just
+for an instant her hand encountered the banker's. It was only for an
+instant, however. A moment later the door was closed carefully behind
+her by the man who had thought Elas crazy to employ a woman.
+
+"Well?"
+
+Elas Peterman was seated behind his desk again. His challenging smile
+was directed at the heavily breathing figure of the banker who had
+hurried back to his chair.
+
+The great man laughed. It was a curious, unpleasant laugh. His heavy
+cheeks were flushed, and his eyes glittered curiously.
+
+"You're a judge, Elas, my boy," he exclaimed, with clumsy geniality.
+"Oh, yes. But you are a young man. There is power in that young woman's
+eyes." He laughed again. "Oh, no, I think of the young woman. It not her
+capability is. See you look to your place in Skandinavia. Let her go.
+She may not buy this Sachigo as I think to buy it. She will buy the men
+we would drive from our path."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE LONELY FIGURE
+
+
+The girl was leaning against the storm-ripped bole of a fallen tree. The
+great figure of her companion was silhouetted against the brilliant
+sky-line. He was contemplating the distance at the brink of a sheer-cut
+ravine, which dropped away at his feet to giddying depths.
+
+Nancy gazed out beyond him. For the moment he held no interest for her.
+She only had eyes for the splendid picture of Nature. They were on high
+ground, a great shoulder lifted them clear above their surroundings. Far
+as the eye could see was a lustreless green world of unbroken forest. It
+seemed to have neither beginning nor end. To the girl's imagination
+there could be no break in it until the eternal snows of the Arctic were
+reached.
+
+The breadth of it all was a little overwhelming. Nancy was gazing upon
+just one portion of the Skandinavia's untouched forest limits, and
+somehow it left her with a feeling of protest.
+
+She pointed with one gauntleted hand, stirred to an impulse she could
+not deny.
+
+"It's too beautiful," she said. "It isn't fair: it's not right. To think
+it's all ours, and we have the right to destroy it."
+
+The man turned. He gazed back at this unusual vision of a beautiful,
+well-gowned woman in the heart of the forests. He grinned ironically,
+this great, rough-bearded creature, in hard cord clothing, and with his
+well-worn fur cap pressed low over his lank hair that reached well-nigh
+to his shoulders.
+
+"Why not?" he demanded roughly. "Oh, yes. It's Skandinavia's, every mile
+of it. An' I guess there's hundreds an' hundreds of 'em. Ain't that what
+Canada's forests are for? To feed us the stuff we're needin'? But you
+don't need to worry any. We ain't cuttin' that stuff for years. Guess
+the waterways out there are mostly a mean outfit that wouldn't raft a
+bunch of lucifers. We need to wait permanent railroad for haulage."
+
+Nancy accepted the statement without reply. It was impossible to stir a
+man like Arden Laval to any sort of sympathy. He was hardened, crude,
+first, last and all the time. He was big and brutal. His limbs were like
+to the trees his men were accustomed to fell, and his hands reminded her
+of the hind limbs of the mutton. She felt he had a mind that matched his
+physical development.
+
+Nancy McDonald was nearing the end of her third month of forest travel.
+The Shagaunty valley lay behind her, desolated by the fierce axe of the
+men who lived by their slaughter. She had seen it all. She had studied
+the re-afforestation which followed on the heels of the axemen. And the
+seeming puerility of this effort to salve the wounds inflicted upon
+Nature had filled her with pitying contempt.
+
+She knew the whole process of the forest industry by heart now. It
+fascinated her. Oh, yes. It was picturesque, it was real, vital. The
+men on the river driving down to the booms had stirred her greatest
+admiration. These supermen with their muscles of iron, with the hearts
+of lions, and the tongues and habits of beasts of the forest. But they
+were men, wonderful men for all their savage crudity. So, too, with the
+transporters and freighters handling sixty-foot logs as though dealing
+with matchwood. But above all, and before all, the axemen made their
+appeal.
+
+There was nothing comparable with the rough skill of these creatures.
+She had watched the flash and swing of the axe, with its edge like the
+finest razor. She had seen the standing muscles like whipcord writhing
+under sunburnt flesh as they served the lethal weapon. She had noted
+every blow, how it was calculated to a hair's-breadth, and fell without
+waste of one single ounce of power. And then the amazing result. The
+fallen tree stretched out on the exact spot and in the exact direction
+ready for the hauliers to bear straight away to the final transport
+station.
+
+The summer days had been filled with vital interest. And at night, weary
+in body, Nancy still had time, lying in the amply, if crudely blanketed
+bed provided for her in some lumber-built shanty, to contemplate the
+lives of this strangely assorted race. She knew the pay of the forest
+men, from the haulier to the princely axeman and river-jack. She had
+seen their food, and their dwelling accommodation. She had heard such
+details as were possible of telling of their recreations, and had
+guessed the rest. And for all her admiration of their manhood she
+pitied, in her woman's way, and felt shame for the slavery of it all.
+
+Oh, yes. She had no illusions. She was not weakly sentimental. She
+looked at it all with wide-open eyes. It was a well-paid animal life. It
+was a life of eating well, of sleeping well, of gambling, and drinking,
+and licence. But it was a life of such labour that only perfect
+physical creatures could face.
+
+She felt that these folks were wage slaves in the crudest meaning of the
+words. There was nothing for them beyond their daily life, which was
+wholly animal. Of spirituality there was none. Of future there was none.
+Their leisure was given over to their pastimes, while ahead the future
+lay always threatening. Stiffening muscles, disease, age. The king of
+them all in his youth, in age would be abandoned and driven forth, weary
+in body, aching in limbs, a derelict in the ranks of the world's labour.
+
+She was gravely impressed by the things she saw, by the men she met.
+
+Her summer had been an education which had stirred feelings and
+sympathies almost unguessed. It was the father, she could scarcely
+remember, making himself known to her. For all the ambitions firing her,
+the long, fascinating days in the forests of the Shagaunty had taught
+her of the existence of an "underdog," who, in himself, was the
+foundation upon which the personal ambition of the more fortunate was
+achieved. Without him to support the whole edifice of civilisation must
+crash to the ground, and life would go back again to the bosom of that
+Nature from which it sprang.
+
+Her realisation inspired her with an added desire. It was a desire
+coming straight from an honest, unsophisticated heart. She registered a
+vow that whithersoever her ambitions might lead her, she would always
+remember the "underdog," and work for his betterment and greater
+happiness.
+
+"So you can only cut the stuff here within reach of our light haulage
+system?" Nancy demanded at last. "The rest's gone. The real big stuff, I
+mean, down below in the valley. We're just driven to the plateau where
+the cut looks to me more like one in twenty than any better?"
+
+Arden Laval left his position at the brink of the ravine. He came back
+to the girl in her modish costume that seemed so out of place beside the
+rough clothing that Covered his body.
+
+"Why, I guess that's so," he said. "Still, it's a deal better than one
+in twenty." He laughed. "Sure. If it wasn't the darn booms 'ud need to
+go hungry."
+
+The man's French temperament left him more than appreciative of the
+beauty he beheld. But he was wondering. He was searching his shrewd mind
+for the real explanation of Nancy's presence in these forests. To him it
+was amazing that the Skandinavia should send this girl, this
+good-looker, on a journey through their forests alone. He would
+willingly have asked the question. But he remembered her written
+commission, signed by Elas Peterman. So he was left with no alternative
+but to yield the utmost respect.
+
+"Y'see, mam," he went on easily. "I guess I could talk quite a piece on
+this thing, but maybe you won't fancy my dope. Skandinavia's been badly
+spoilt by the cut in the Shagaunty Valley. You've seen it all. Guess
+you've come right through. Well, that being so, you'll understand the
+Shagaunty cut's been far above average. Now we're down to average.
+That's all. That's how the Skandinavia's been spoilt."
+
+He thrust his cap back from his forehead. It was a movement of
+irritation. Then he produced a plug of tobacco from his hip-pocket, and
+bit off a chew.
+
+"I've been twenty odd years lumbering," he went on a moment later. "I've
+lumbered most every forest in Ontario and Quebec. There ain't more'n one
+bunch of plums like the Shagaunty. Mostly the forest's full of the sort
+of stuff we're handling here. These forests are average and I'd like to
+say to the Skandinavia, 'you've got to figger results on the average.'
+We're cutting down to the minimum because we've got to, to feed the
+booms right. Well, that's goin' on if I know my job. There's patch
+stuff better. I daresay there's new ground on our limits liable to hand
+us Shagaunty stuff. But that's just as I say, patch stuff, an' not
+average. If they want Shagaunty quality right through let 'em get out
+and get limits up on Labrador. I reckon there's a hundred years cutting
+up there that 'ud leave Shagaunty a bunch of weed grass. They say the
+folks out on the coast are worried to death there's so much stuff, an'
+so big, an' good, an' soft, an' long-fibred. The jacks out that way are
+up to the neck in a hell of a good time, sure. I get it they've time to
+sleep half the year, it's so easy. Well, it ain't that way here. We've
+no time singing hymns around this lay-out. It's hell, here, keeping the
+darn booms fed. Speakin' for my outfit I'd say they're a pretty bright
+lot of boys. What a feller can do they can do, I guess. But there are
+times I get mighty sick chasing to get even the minimum. An' it's all
+the time kick. The Skandinavia seems to have got a grouch about now you
+couldn't beat with a tank of rye whisky. You've seen it all as far as I
+can show you, mam, and I'd be glad to know if you're satisfied I've done
+the things you want. If I have, and you feel good about it, I'd be
+thankful if you'd report the way we're workin' this camp. And if you've
+a spare moment to talk other things, you might say that the boys of my
+camp are mighty hard put to get the stuff, and they're as tough a gang
+of jacks as ever heard tell of the dog's life of the forest."
+
+The man spoke with the fluency of real protest. He somehow felt he was
+on his defence in the presence of this woman representative of his
+employers. This girl was not there enduring the discomforts of the
+forests for amusement. She came with authority, and she seemed to
+possess great understanding. Arden Laval knew his own value. His record
+was one of long service with his company. Furthermore, his outfit was
+trusted with the pioneering work of the forest where judgment and
+enterprise, and great experience were needed. He felt it was the moment
+to talk, and to talk straight to this woman with the red hair who had
+invaded his domain. So he gave full rope to his feelings.
+
+It was some moments before the girl replied, and the man waited
+expectantly. He was studying the far-off gaze of the pretty hazel eyes,
+and wondering at the thought moving behind them. At length Nancy
+withdrew her gaze from the forest.
+
+"I shall certainly report the things I've seen," she said with a smile
+that found prompt response in the man's dark eyes. "You've certainly
+done your best to show me, and tell me, the exact position. I shall make
+a point of reporting all that. Yes, I've seen it all, thank you very
+much."
+
+Then her smile suddenly vanished. The shrewd gaze of commercial interest
+replaced it.
+
+"But these Labrador folk?" she demanded. "Is that stuff just--hearsay?"
+
+The man shook his head. He was feeling easier.
+
+"It's God's truth, mam." He spat out a stream of tobacco juice. "I know
+them forests. Say," his eyes had lost their smile, "I don't guess I
+figger to know the business side of things, I don't calculate to know if
+the folks on Labrador work with, or against the Skandinavia. But I do
+know that if they're up against us they've got us plumb beat before we
+start. They got the sort of lumber the jacks dream about when they got
+their bellies full on a Saturday night, and they're going to wake up to
+find it Sunday mornin'. I'm just a lumberman, and if I hadn't fifteen
+years' record with the Skandinavia, and wasn't pouching two hundred and
+fifty bucks, and what I can make besides, a month, why, it 'ud be me for
+the coast where you can jamb the rivers in a three months' cut, and
+souse rye the rest of the year till the bugs look as big as mountains.
+Guess it's the summer rose garden of the lumber-jack, for all it's under
+snow eight months in the year, when you can't tell your guts from an
+iceflow, and the skitters, in summer, mostly reach the size of a
+gasoline tank. It's a dog's life, mam, lumberin' anywhere. But they're
+lap-dogs out that way."
+
+The man's words brought the return of the girl's smile. "Yes, I spose
+it's--tough," she observed thoughtfully. Then quite suddenly she spread
+out her hands. "Oh, yes," she exclaimed, with a sudden vehemence, "it's
+worse than tough. It's hopeless. Utterly hopeless. I've seen it. I've
+watched it. I had to. I couldn't escape it. It's so desperately patent.
+But it's not the life as these folk live it. It's the future I'm
+thinking of. It's middle life and old age. These boys. They're
+wonders--now. How long does it last, and then--what happens? I'm here on
+business, hard business. But I guess this thing's got hold of me so I
+can't sometimes sleep at nights. Tell me about them."
+
+Arden Laval, one of the hardest specimens of the lumber boss, turned
+away. His understanding of women was built up out of intimacy with the
+poor creatures who peopled the camps he knew. This girl's burst of
+feeling only stirred him to a cynical humour.
+
+"Mam," he said, with a grin that was almost hateful, "if I was to start
+in to hand you the life history of a lumber-jack you'd feel like
+throwing up your kind heart, and any other old thing you hadn't use for
+in your stummick. But I guess I can say right here, a lumber-jack's a
+most disgustin' sort of vermin who hasn't more right than a louse to
+figger in your reckonin'. I guess he was born wrong, and he'll mostly
+die as he was born. And meanwhile he's lived a life that's mostly dirt,
+and no account anyway. There's a few things we ask of a lumber-jack, and
+if he fulfils 'em right he can go right on living. When he can't fulfil
+'em, why, it's up to him to hit the trail for the pay box, an' get out.
+Guess you feel good when you see a boy swingin' an axe, or handlin' a
+peavy. Sure. That sort of thing don't come your way often. Neither does
+it come your way to see the rest. He's mostly a sink of filth in mind
+and body, and if he ain't all that at the start he gets it quick. He's a
+waster of God's pure air, and is mostly in his right surroundings when
+the forest does its best to hide him up from the eyes of the rest of the
+world. Guess he's the best man I know--dead."
+
+For all his grin Arden Laval was in deadly earnest. Nancy stared at the
+broad back he had turned on her with his final word. And her indignation
+surged.
+
+"I don't believe it," she cried. "I can't believe it. You're just
+talking out of years of experience of a life you've probably learned to
+hate. Man, if that's your opinion of your fellows, then it's you who
+ought never to leave the forest you claim does its best to hide up folk
+from the eyes of the rest of the world. You're a camp boss. You're our
+head man in these forests. You're trusted, and we know your skill. Well,
+it seems to me you've a duty that goes further than just feeding the
+booms right. You've a moral duty towards these men you condemn. You can
+help them. It should surely be your pride to lift them out of the
+desperate mire you claim they are floundering in. I'll not believe you
+mean it all."
+
+The man turned away as a black-clothed figure emerged from the trees,
+and came to a stand at the brink of the ravine some hundred and more
+yards to the east of them. Nancy, too, beheld the lonely figure and she,
+too, became interested in its movements.
+
+The lumber boss laughed shortly, roughly, and raised an arm, pointing as
+he turned a grinning face to the girl.
+
+"See him, there?" he cried. "Say, mam, with all respect, I'd say to you,
+if you're feeling the way you talk, and look to get the sort of stuff
+you'd maybe fancy hearing, that's the guy you need to open out to. As
+you say, I'm the head camp-boss on the Skandinavia's limits. I've had
+nigh twenty years an' more experience of the lumber-jack. An' I'm
+tellin' you the things any camp-boss speakin' truth'll tell you. That's
+all, I don't hate the boys. I don't pity 'em. But I don't love 'em.
+They're just part of a machine to cut lumber, and it don't matter a hoot
+in hell to me what they are, or who they are, or what becomes of 'em. I
+ain't shepherdin' souls like that guy. It ain't in me, anyway. I just
+got to make good so that some day I ken quit these cursed forests and
+live easy the way I'd fancy. When that time comes maybe I'll change.
+Maybe I'll feel like that guy standin' doping over that spread of forest
+scene. I don't know. And just now I don't care--a curse."
+
+But Nancy was no longer listening. The lonely, black-coated figure Laval
+had pointed out absorbed all her interest. His allusion to the man's
+calling had created in her an irresistible desire.
+
+"Who is he? That man?" she demanded abruptly.
+
+Laval laughed.
+
+"Why, Father Adam," he replied. There was a curious softening in his
+harsh voice, which brought the girl's eyes swiftly back to him.
+
+"Father Adam? A priest?" she questioned.
+
+Laval shook his head. He had turned again, regarding the stranger. His
+face was hidden from the searching eyes of the girl.
+
+"I just can't rightly say," he demurred. "Maybe he is, an' maybe he
+ain't. But," he added reflectively "he's just one hell of a good man.
+Makes me laff sometimes. Sometimes it makes me want to cry like a kid
+when I think of the things he's up against. He's out for the boys. He's
+out to hand 'em dope to make 'em better. Oh, it ain't Sunday School
+dope. No. He's the kind o' missioner who does things. He don't tell 'em
+they're a bum lot o' toughs who oughter to be in penitentiary. But he
+makes 'em feel that way--the way he acts. He's just a lone creature,
+sort of livin' in twilight, who comes along, an' we don't know when he's
+comin'. He passes out like a shadow in the forests, an' we don't see him
+again till he fancies. He's after the boys the whole darn time. It don't
+matter if they're sick in body or mind. He helps 'em the way he knows.
+An', mam, they just love him to death. There's just one man in these
+forests I wouldn't dare blaspheme, if I felt like it--which I don't. No,
+mam, my life wouldn't be worth a two seconds buy if I blasphemed--Father
+Adam. He's one of God's good men, an' I'd be mighty thankful to be like
+him--some. Gee, and I owe him a piece myself."
+
+"How?"
+
+Nancy's interest was consuming.
+
+"Why, only he jumped in once when I was being scrapped to death. He
+jumped right in, when he looked like gettin' killed for it. And," he
+laughed cynically, "he gave me a few more years of the dog's life of the
+forest."
+
+The girl moved away from her support.
+
+"I want to thank you, Mr. Laval, for the trouble you've taken, and the
+time you've given up to me." The hazel eyes were smiling up into the
+man's hard face. "I don't agree with some of the things you've just been
+telling me; I should hate to, anyway. I don't even believe you feel the
+way you say about your men. Still, that's no account in the matters I
+came about. The things I've got to say when I get back are all to your
+credit. I'm going over now to talk to--Father Adam. And you needn't come
+along with me. You see, you've fired my curiosity. Yes, I want to hear
+the stuff I fancy about the--boys. So I'll go and talk to your--shepherd
+of souls. Good-bye."
+
+Nancy's eyes were bright and smiling as she gazed up into the lean,
+ascetic face of the man in the black, semi-clerical coat. His garments
+were worn and almost threadbare. At close quarters she realised an even
+deeper interest in the man whose presence had wrought such a magical
+change in the harsh tones of the camp-boss. He was in the heyday of
+middle life, surely. His hair was long and black. His beard was of a
+similar hue, and it covered his mouth and chin in a long, but patchy
+mass. His eyes were keen but gentle. They, too, were very dark, and the
+whole cast of his pale face was curiously reminiscent.
+
+"I just had to come along over, sir," she said. "I was with Mr. Laval,
+and he told me of the work--the great work you do in these camps. Maybe
+you'll forgive me intruding. But you see, I've come from our
+headquarters on business, and the folk of these camps interest me. I
+kind of feel the life the boys live around these forests is a pretty
+mean life. There's nothing much to it but work. And it seems to me that
+those employing them ought to be made to realise they've a greater
+responsibility than just handing them out a wage for work done. So when
+I saw you come out of the forest and stand here, and Mr. Laval told me
+about you, I made up my mind right away to come along and--speak to you.
+My name's McDonald--Nancy McDonald."
+
+It was all a little hasty, a little timidly spoken. The dark eyes
+thoughtfully regarding the wonder of red hair under the close fitting
+hat were disconcerting, for all there was cordiality in their depths.
+
+At Nancy's mention of her name, Father Adam instantly averted his gaze,
+and dropped the hand which he had taken possession of in greeting. It
+was almost as if the pronouncement had caused him to start. But the
+change, the movement, were unobserved by the girl.
+
+"And you are--Father Adam?" she asked.
+
+The man's gaze came quickly back.
+
+"That's how I'm known. It--was kind of you to come along over."
+
+In a moment all the girl's timidity was gone. If the man had been
+startled when she had announced her name, he displayed perfect ease now.
+
+"Do you know," Nancy went on, with a happy laugh, "I almost got mad with
+Laval for his cynicism at the expense of the poor boys who work under
+his orders. But I think I understand him. He's a product of a life that
+moulds in pretty harsh form. He doesn't mean half he says."
+
+"I'd say few of us do--when we let our feelings go." Father Adam smiled
+back into the eyes which seemed to hold him fascinated. "You see,
+Laval's much what we all are. He's got a tough job to put through, and
+he does his utmost. He's a big man, a brave man, a--yes, perhaps--a
+harsh man. But he couldn't do his job as he's paid to do it if he
+weren't all those things." He shook his head. "No, I guess we can't play
+with fire long without getting a heap of scars." He shrugged. "But after
+all I suppose it's just--life. We've got to eat, and we want to live. We
+don't need to judge too harshly."
+
+"No. That's how I feel about the boys--he so condemned."
+
+The girl turned away gazing pensively over the forest. Father Adam was
+free to regard her without restraint. With her turning the whole
+expression of his eyes had changed. Incredulous amazement had replaced
+his smiling ease.
+
+"Would you care to come along through the woods to my shanty, Miss
+McDonald?" he said, almost diffidently, at last. "Maybe I've a cup of
+coffee there. And I'd say coffee's the most welcome thing on earth in
+these forests. It's a pretty humble shanty but, if you feel like
+talking things, why, I guess we can sit around there awhile."
+
+The girl snatched at the invitation.
+
+"I was just hoping you'd say something that way," she laughed readily.
+"I'd give worlds for a cup of coffee, and I guess the folks in the
+forests of Quebec know more about coffee in half a second than we city
+folk know in a year. Which way?"
+
+"It's only a few yards. You'd best follow me."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The girl stood amazed. She was even horrified. She was gazing in through
+the opening of the merest shelter, a shelter built of green boughs with
+roof and sides of interlaced foliage. True it was densely interlaced,
+but no sort of distorted imagination could have translated the result
+into anything but a shelter. Habitation was out of the question. She
+stared at the primitive, less than aboriginal home, of the priestly man.
+She stared round her at the undergrowth upon which were spread his brown
+coarse blankets airing. She looked down at the smouldering fire between
+two granite stones upon which a tin of coffee was simmering and emitting
+its pleasant aroma upon the woodland air. It was too crude, too utterly
+lacking in comfort and even the bare necessites of existence.
+
+The man emerged from the interior bearing two enamelled tin cups. He
+realised the amazement with which Nancy was regarding his home, and
+shook his head with a pleasant laugh as he indicated two upturned boxes
+beside the fire.
+
+"You'd best sit, and I'll tell you about it," he said. "It's not exactly
+a swell hotel, is it? But it's sufficient."
+
+The girl silently took her seat on one of the boxes. Father Adam took
+the other. Then he poured out two cups of coffee, and passed a tin of
+preserved milk across to the girl. There was a spoon in it. After that
+he produced a small tin of sugar and offered that.
+
+"You see, it's all I need," he said, in simple explanation. "When the
+rain comes I mostly get wet, except at nights when I get under my rubber
+sheet. But, anyway, there's plenty of sun to dry me. Oh, winter's
+different. I cut out a dug-out then, and burrow like the rest of the
+forest creatures. But, you see, this thing suits me well. I'm never long
+in one place. I've been here two weeks, and I pull out to-morrow."
+
+"You pull out? Where to?"
+
+"Why, I just pass on to some other camp. The boys are pretty widely
+scattered in these forests. You'd never guess the distances I sometimes
+make. Even Labrador. But it doesn't much matter. I've a good smattering
+of physic, and the boys are always getting hurt one way and another. I'd
+hate to feel I couldn't go to them wherever they are. Maybe if I built a
+better house I'd not want to leave it. It would be hard getting on the
+move. You see, I get their call any old time. Maybe it comes along on
+the forest breezes," he said whimsically. "Then I have to be quick to
+locate it, and read it right."
+
+The girl had helped herself to milk and sugar, and sipped the steaming
+coffee. But she was listening with all her ears and thinking feverishly.
+This strange creature, with his deprecating manner, and smiling, sane
+eyes, filled her with a sense of shame at his utter selflessness.
+
+She nodded.
+
+"You mean they--always want help?"
+
+"Sure. Same as we all do."
+
+Father Adam sipped his coffee appreciatively.
+
+"But tell me," he said. "It's kind of new the Skandinavia sending a
+woman along up here. It's your first trip?"
+
+Nancy set her cup down.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"They're a great firm," Father Adam went on, reflectively. "I mean
+the--extent of their operations."
+
+Nancy smiled.
+
+"I like the distinction. Yes, they're big. You don't like
+their--methods?"
+
+It was the man's turn for a smiling retort.
+
+"Their methods?" he shook his head. "I don't know, I guess they pay
+well. And their boys are no worse treated than in other camps. They
+employ thousands. And that's all to the good."
+
+"But you don't like them," Nancy persisted. "I can hear it in your
+voice. It's in your smile. Few people like the Skandinavia," she added
+regretfully.
+
+"Do you?"
+
+Like a shot the challenge came, and Nancy found herself replying almost
+before she was aware of it.
+
+"Yes. Why shouldn't I? They've been good to me. More than good, when
+those who had a right to be completely deserted me. No. I mustn't say
+just that," she hurried on in some contrition. "They provided for me,
+but cut me out of their lives. Maybe you won't understand what that
+means to a girl. It meant so much to me that I wouldn't accept their
+charity. I wouldn't accept a thing. I'd make my own way with the small
+powers Providence handed me. So I went to the Skandinavia who have only
+shown me the best of kindness. Well, I'm frankly out for the Skandinavia
+and all their schemes and methods in consequence. It's not for me to
+look into the things that make folks hate them. That's theirs. My
+loyalty and gratitude are all for them for the thing they've done for
+me. Isn't that right?"
+
+"Surely," the man concurred. "But your coffee. It's getting cold," he
+added.
+
+Nancy hastily picked up her cup.
+
+"Why am I telling you all this?" she laughed. "We were going to talk of
+the--boys."
+
+"We surely were." Father Adam laughed responsively. "But personal
+interest I guess doesn't figure to be denied for long. We sort of get
+the notion we can shut it out. But we can't. We try to guess there's
+other things. Things more important. Things that matter a whole lot
+more." He shook his head. "It's no use. There aren't. I guess it doesn't
+matter where we look. Self's pushing out at every angle, and won't be
+denied. It would be hypocrisy to deny it, wouldn't it? It's the biggest
+thing in life. It's the whole thing."
+
+"And it's such a pity," Nancy agreed slyly. "Just think," she went on,
+"I've got a hundred notions for the good of the world. These boys for
+instance. I'd like to make their lives what they ought to be. Full of
+comfort and security and--and everything to make it worth while. Instead
+of that my first and whole concern is to make good for Nancy McDonald.
+To do all those things for her. It's dreadful when you think of it,
+isn't it?" She sighed. "I want to do good to the--the 'underdog,' and
+all the time I'm planning for myself. I want to fight all the time for
+those who hold opportunity out to me. It doesn't really matter to me why
+the Skandinavia is disliked. They give me opportunity. I reckon they've
+been good to me. So I'm their slave to fight for them, and work for
+them, whatever their methods. Yes. It's too bad," she laughed frankly.
+"I can't deny it. I'd like to, but--I can't."
+
+"No."
+
+Father Adam set down his empty cup, and sat with his arms resting on his
+parted knees. His hands were clasped.
+
+"You remind me of someone," he said, in his simple disarming fashion.
+"Queerly enough it's a man. A strong, hard, kindly, good-natured man. I
+found him without a thought but to make good. And I knew he would make
+good. Then it came my way to show him how. I offered him a notion. The
+notion was fine. Oh, yes--though I say it. It was the sort of thing if
+it were carried to success would hand the fellow working it down to
+posterity as one of his country's benefactors. The notion appealed to
+him. It stirred something in him, and set fire to his enthusiasm. He
+jumped for it. Why? Was it the thought of doing a great act for his
+country? Was it for that something that was all good stirring in him?
+No. I guess it was because he was a strong, physical, and spiritual, and
+mental force concentrated on big things, primarily inspired by Self.
+Personal achievement. It seems to me the good man always does what's
+real and worth while in the way of helping himself."
+
+"Yes. I think I understand." The girl nodded. "And this strong physical,
+and spiritual, and mental force? Have I heard of him? Is he known? Has
+he achieved?"
+
+"He's carrying on. Oh, yes." Father Adam paused. Then he went on
+quickly. "You don't know him yet. But I think you will. He's out on the
+coast of Labrador. He's driving his great purpose with all his force
+through the agency of a groundwood mill that would fill your Skandinavia
+folk with envy and alarm if they saw it. He's master of forests such as
+would break your heart when compared with these of your Skandinavia. His
+name's Sternford. Bull Sternford, of Sachigo."
+
+At the mention of Sachigo, Nancy's eyes widened. Then she laughed. It
+was a laugh of real amusement.
+
+"Why, that's queer. It's--I'm going right on there from here. I'm going
+to meet this very man, Sternford. They tell me I've just time to get
+there and pull out again for home before winter freezes them up solid.
+So he is this great man, with this great--notion. Tell me, what is he
+like?"
+
+"Oh, he's a big, strong man, as ready to laugh as to fight."
+
+Father Adam smiled, and stooped over the fire to push the attenuated
+sticks of it together.
+
+"May I ask why you're going to Sachigo?" he asked, without looking up.
+
+Just for a moment Nancy hesitated. Then she laughed happily.
+
+"I don't see why you shouldn't," she cried. "There's no secret.
+Skandinavia intends to buy him, or crush him."
+
+The man sat up.
+
+"And you--a girl--are the emissary?"
+
+Incredulity robbed the man of the even calmness of' his manner.
+
+"Yes. Why not?"
+
+The challenge in the girls's eyes was unmistakable.
+
+"You won't buy him," Father Adam said quietly. "And you certainly won't
+crush him."
+
+"Because I'm a girl?"
+
+"Oh, no. I was thinking of the Skandinavia." The man shook his head. "If
+I'm a judge of men, the crushing will be done from the other end of the
+line."
+
+"This man will crush Skandinavia?"
+
+The idea that Skandinavia could be crushed was quite unthinkable to
+Nancy. It was the great monopoly of the country. It was--but she felt
+that this lonely creature could have no real understanding of the power
+of her people.
+
+"Surely," he returned quietly. "But that," he added, with a return of
+his pleasant smile, "is just the notion of one man. I should say it's no
+real account. Yes, you go there. You see this man. The battle of your
+people with him matters little. It will be good for you to see him.
+It--may help you. Who can tell? He's a white man, and a fighter. He's
+honest and clean. It's--in the meeting of kindred spirits that the
+great events of life are brought about. It should be good for you both."
+
+"I wonder?" Nancy rose from her chair.
+
+The man rose also.
+
+"I think so," he said, very decidedly.
+
+The girl laughed.
+
+"I hope so. But--" She held out her hand. "Thank you, Father," she said.
+"I'll never be able to think of the things I'm set on achieving without
+remembering our talk--and the man I met in the forest. I wish--but
+what's the use? I've got to make good. I must. I must go on, and--do the
+thing I see. Good-bye."
+
+Father Adam was holding the small gauntleted hand, and he seemed loth to
+release it. His eyes were very gentle, very earnest.
+
+"Don't worry to remember, child. Don't ever think about--this time. It
+won't help you. You've set your goal. Make it. You will do the good
+things you fancy to do, though maybe not the way you think them. It
+seems to me that 'good' mostly has its own way all the time. You can't
+drive it. And the best of it is I don't think there's a human creature
+so bad in this world, but that in some way God's work has been furthered
+through his life. Good-bye."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For some moments the lonely figure stood gazing down the woodland
+aisles. The deep, shining light of a great hope was in his eyes. A
+wonderful tender smile had dispersed the shadows of his ascetic face. At
+length, as the girl's figure became completely swallowed up in the
+twilight of it all, he turned away and passed into the foliage shelter
+which was his home.
+
+He was squatting on his box, and the small canvas bag containing his
+belongings was open beside him. Its contents were strewn about. He was
+writing a long letter. There was several pages of it. When he had
+finished he read it over carefully. Then he carefully folded it and
+placed it in an envelope, and addressed it. It was addressed:
+
+ MR. BULL STERNFORD,
+ Sachigo, Farewell Cove,
+ Labrador.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE SKANDINAVIA MOVES
+
+
+Bat gazed up at the wooded ridge. They were standing in the marshy
+bottom of a natural hollow amidst a sparse scattering of pine and
+attenuated spruce. Beyond the ridge lay the waters of the cove. And to
+the left the broad waters of the river mouth flowed by. It was a
+desolate, damp spot, but its significance to the two men studying it was
+profound.
+
+Skert Lawton, the chief engineer of Sachigo, tall, loose-limbed,
+raw-boned, watched his superior with somewhat mournful, unsmiling eyes.
+There was something of deadly earnest in his regard, something anxious.
+But that was always his way. Bat had once said of him: "Skert Lawton's
+one hell of a good boy. But I won't get no comfort in the grave if I
+ain't ever see him grin." There was not the smallest sign of a smile in
+him now.
+
+"It's one big notion," Bat said, at last. Then he added doubtfully. "It
+comes mighty nigh being too big."
+
+Lawton emitted a curious sound like a snort. It was mainly, however, an
+ejaculation of violent impatience. Bat turned with a twinkling grin,
+surveying the queer figure. His engineer was always a source of the
+profoundest interest for him. Just now, in his hard, rough clothing, he
+might have been a lumber-jack, or casual labourer. Anything, in fact,
+rather than the college-bred, brilliant engineer he really was.
+
+Bat's doubt had been carefully calculated. He knew his man. And just now
+as he awaited the explosion he looked for, his thoughts went back to a
+scene he had once had with a half drunken machine-minder whom he had had
+to pay off. The man had epitomised the chief engineer's qualities and
+character, as those who encountered his authority understood them, in a
+few lurid, illuminating phrases. "You know," he had said, "that guy
+ain't a man. No, sir. He's the mush-fed image of a penitentiary boss. I
+guess he'd set the grease box of a driving shaft hot with a look. His
+temper 'ud burn holes in sheet iron. As for work--work? Holy Mackinaw!
+I've worked hired man to a French Canuk mossback which don't leave a
+feller the playtime of a nigger slave, but that hell-hired Scotch
+machine boss sets me yearnin' for that mossback's wage like a bull-pup
+chasin' offal. I tell you right here if that guy don't quit his notions
+there'll be murder done. Bloody murder! An' it's a God's sure thing when
+that happens he'll freeze to death in hell. It don't rile me a thing to
+be told the things he guesses my mother was. Maybe that's a matter of
+opinion, and, anyway, she's mixin' with a crop of angels who don't
+figger to have no truck with Scotch machine bosses. I guess a sight of
+his flea-bitten features 'ud set 'em seein' things so they wouldn't
+rec'nise their harps from frypans, and they'd moult feathers till you
+wouldn't know it from a snowfall on Labrador. But when he mixes his
+notions of my ma with 'lazy'! Lazy! Lazy! Gee! Why, if I signed in a
+half hour late from that bum suttler's canteen, I guess it was only the
+time it took me digestin' two quarts of the gut-wash they hand out there
+in the hope you won't know it from beer. No, sir, 'lazy son-of-a-bitch'
+from that guy is the talk no decent citizen with a bunch of guts is
+goin' to stand for."
+
+Skert Lawton was known for a red-hot "burner," a "nigger driver." No
+doubt he was all this in addition to his brilliant attainments as an
+engineer. But the methods he applied to others he applied to himself.
+And the whole of him, brain and body, was for the enterprise they were
+all engaged in. Bat had intended to goad the demon of obstinate energy
+which possessed the man, and he succeeded.
+
+Skert flung out his hand in a comprehensive gesture.
+
+"Hell!" he cried. "That's no sort of talk anyway. I've been weeks on
+this thing. And I've got it to the last fraction. Big notion? Of course
+it is. Aren't we mostly concerned with big notions? Here, what are you
+asking? An inland boom with capacity for anything over a million cords.
+Well? It's damn ridiculous talking the size of the notion. This hollow
+is fixed right. Its bed is ten feet below the bed of the river. It's
+surrounded with a natural ridge on all sides a hundred and fifty feet
+high. There's a quarter mile below the hollow and the river bank, and
+the new mill extensions are just to the east of this ridge. It's
+well-nigh child's play. Nature's fixed it that way. Two cuttings, and a
+race-way on the river. We flood this. Feed it full of lumber in the
+summer with surplus from the cut and you've got that reserve for winter,
+so you can keep every darn machine grinding its guts out. What's the use
+talking? Big notion? Of course it is. We're out for big notions all the
+time. That's the whole proposition. Well?"
+
+Bat grinned at the heated disgust in the man's tone.
+
+"Sounds like eatin' pie," he retorted aggravatingly. "The cost? The
+labour? Time? You got those things?"
+
+"It's right up at your office now." Skert's eyes widened in surprise at
+such a question. "It's not my way to play around."
+
+"No." Bat's eyes refused seriousness.
+
+"Oh, psha! This is no sort of time chewing these details. It's figgered
+to the last second, the last man, the last cent. I brought you to see
+things. Well, you've seen things. And if you're satisfied we'll quit
+right away. I've no spare play time."
+
+There was no pretence of patience in Skert Lawton. He had looked for
+appreciation and only found doubt. He moved off.
+
+Bat had done the thing intended. He had no intention of hurting the man.
+He understood the driving power of the mood he had stirred.
+
+They moved off together.
+
+"That's all right, Skert," he said kindly. "You've done one big thing.
+An' it's the thing Bull and I want--"
+
+"Then why in hell didn't you say it instead of talking--notions?"
+
+For all the sharpness of his retort, Skert was mollified. Bat shook his
+head and a shrewd light twinkled in his eyes.
+
+"You're a pretty bright boy, Skert," he said. "But you're brightest when
+you're riled."
+
+They had gained the river bank where booms lined the shore, and scores
+of men were rafting. They had left the water-logged hollow behind them,
+and debouched on the busy world of the mill. Ahead lay the new
+extensions where the saws were shrieking the song of their labours upon
+the feed for the rumbling grinders. It was a township of buildings of
+all sizes crowding about the great central machine house.
+
+They crossed the light footbridge over the "cut in" from the river, and
+moved along down the main highway of the northern shore.
+
+Both were pre-occupied. The engineer was listening to the note of his
+beloved machinery. Bat was concerned with any and every movement going
+on within the range of his vision. They walked briskly, the lean
+engineer setting a pace that kept the other stumping hurriedly beside
+him.
+
+Abreast of the mill they approached a new-looking, long, low building.
+It was single storied and lumber built, with a succession of many
+windows down its length. The hour was noon. And men were hurrying
+towards its entrance from every direction.
+
+Bat watched interestedly.
+
+"They seem mighty keen for their new playground," he said at last, with
+a quick nod in the direction of the recreation house.
+
+The engineer came out of his dream. His mournful eyes turned in the
+direction indicated and devoured the scene. Then he glanced down at the
+squat figure stumping beside him.
+
+"Guess that's so. But not the way you figgered when you got that fool
+notion of handing 'em a playhouse," he said roughly. "If you pass a hog
+a feather bed, it's a sure thing he'll work out the best way to muss it
+quick."
+
+"How? I don't get you?"
+
+There was no humour in Bat's eyes now.
+
+"They call it a 'Chapel'," Skert said dryly. "They've surely got
+preachers, but they don't talk religion. Maybe that's sort of new to
+you, here. It isn't across the water where I come from. Guess you think
+those boys are racing out to get a game of checkers, or billiards, or
+cards, or some other fool play you reckoned to hand 'em to make 'em feel
+good." He shook his head. "They're not. They've turned their 'Chapel'
+into a sort of parliament. Every dinner hour there's a feller, different
+fellers most all the time, gets up and hands 'em out an address. It's
+short, but red hot. The afternoon shift in the mill is given up to
+brightening up their fool brains on it. And when evening comes along,
+and they've their bellies full of supper and beer, they get along to the
+'Chapel' and they debate the address, handing out opinions and notions
+just as bellies guide 'em."
+
+"And the addresses. What are they mostly? On the work? The trade they're
+working at?"
+
+A world of pity looked out of Skert's eyes as he surveyed the man he
+believed to be the greatest organiser the mill industry had ever seen.
+He shook his head.
+
+"Work? Not on your life! Socialism, Communism--Revolution!"
+
+Bat spat out a stream of tobacco juice. He was startled.
+
+"But I ain't heard tell of any sort of unrest gettin' busy. We're payin'
+big money. It's bigger than the market. They got--"
+
+"Best talk to Sternford when you get back up there to your office. He's
+got the boys sized right up to the last hair of their stupid heads. But
+I'll hand you something I've reckoned to hand you a while back, only I
+wanted to be sure. There's nothing of this truck about the 'hands' of
+the old mill. It's the new hands you've been collecting from the
+forests. We've grown by two thousand hands in the past year or so. And
+they're so darn mixed I wouldn't fancy trying to sort 'em. They come
+from all parts. The world's been talking revolution since ever these
+buzzy-headed Muscovites reckoned to start in grabbing the world's goods
+for themselves. Well, it's a hell of a long piece here to Labrador, but
+it's found its way, and the mutton-brained fools who're supposed to play
+around that shanty you handed 'em are recreating themselves talking
+about it in there. Here, come right over to that window. It's open."
+
+Perhaps Skert was enjoying himself. Certainly his mournful eyes were
+less mournful as he led his chief over to the open window. Bat had had
+his innings with him. He was planning the game and hitting hard in his
+turn.
+
+"The enemy of the world, of more particularly the worker is
+the--CAPITALIST!"
+
+The words were hurled from the platform of the recreation room at the
+heads of the listening throng below and reached the open window just as
+Lawton and his chief came up to it. There was applause following this
+profound announcement, and Skert turned on his companion.
+
+"Well?" he demanded, in a tone of biting triumph.
+
+They had reached the window at the psychological moment. Nothing could
+have suited his purpose better.
+
+Bat turned away abruptly. It was as if some fierce emotion made it
+impossible for him to remain another second. His heavy brows depressed,
+and his deep-set eyes narrowed to gimlet holes. Skert pursued him. Once
+clear of the window, and beyond earshot, Bat flung his reply with all
+the passionate force of his fighting nature.
+
+"The lousy swine!" he cried. "I'll close that place sure as--hell."
+
+Skert shook his head as they walked on.
+
+"No, you won't," he said. "Guess you aren't crazy. You'll talk this over
+with Sternford. And when you've talked it some, you'll keep that place
+running, and let them talk. It's best that way. But I've got tab of most
+of the speakers, and I've located where they come from. Most of them
+have sometime worked for the Skandinavia. Maybe that's the reason of
+their talk. Maybe even Skandinavia's glad they're talking that way here
+on Labrador. I don't know. But--well, I'll have to quit you here.
+They're setting up the two big new machines, and it don't do leaving
+them long. So long. Anything else you need to know about that recreation
+room, why, I guess I can hand it to you."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bull Sternford laid the telegram aside while a shadowy smile hovered
+about his firm lips. Then he settled himself back in his chair, and gave
+himself up to the thoughtful contemplation of the brilliant sunlight,
+and the perfect, steely azure of the sky beyond the window opposite him.
+
+The change in the man was almost magical. The hot-headed, determined,
+fighting lumber-jack whom Father Adam had rescued from furious homicide
+had hidden himself under something deeper than the veneer which the
+modest suit of conventional life provides. It was the subtle change that
+comes from within which had transformed him. It was in his eyes. In the
+set of his jaws. It was in the man's whole poise. His resources of
+spiritual power; his mental force; his virility of personality. All
+these things were concentrated. They were no longer sprawling, groping,
+seeking the great purpose of his life as they had been in the lumber
+camp of the Skandinavia.
+
+A feeling akin to triumph filled the man's heart as he gazed out upon
+the pleasant light of Labrador's late summer day. In something like
+twelve months he had thrust leagues along the road he meant to travel.
+And his progress had been of a whirlwind nature. It had been work,
+desperate, strenuous work. It had been the double labour of intensive
+study combined with the necessary progress in the schemes laid down for
+the future of Sachigo. It had only been possible to a man of his amazing
+faculties, combined with the fact that Bat Harker and the mournful Skert
+Lawton had left him free from the clogging detail of the mill
+organisation and routine.
+
+In twelve months he had crystallised the dreams and projects of his
+predecessor in the chair he was now occupying. In twelve months he had
+built up the shell of the great combination of groundwood and paper
+mills which was to have such far-reaching effect upon the paper trade
+of the world. And now, ahead of him was spread out the sea of finance
+upon which he must next embark. He felt that already giant's work had
+been done. But his yearning could never be satisfied by a mere measure
+of completion. He must embrace it all, complete it all.
+
+Already he seemed to have lived with bankers and financial specialists,
+but he felt it was only the beginning of that which he had yet to do. He
+was unappalled. He was more than confident. He had discovered unguessed
+faculties for finance in himself. He had surprised himself as well as
+those others with whom he had come in contact. They had discovered in
+him all that which Father Adam had been so prompt to realise. They had
+found in him a young, untrained mind, untrained in their own calling,
+whose natural aptitude was amazing, and whose courage and confidence
+were beyond words. But greatest of all was the perception he displayed.
+They realised he never required the telling of more than half the story.
+Intuition and inspiration completed it for him without the labour of
+their words. The result of those twelve months was there for all to see.
+The lumberman had been translated into a hard, fighting, business man.
+
+The train of the man's thought was broken by the unceremonious entry of
+Bat Harker. Bull turned. One swift glance into the grizzled face warned
+him his associate's mood was by no means easy. He, like everyone who
+came into contact with Bat, had learned to appreciate the volcanic fires
+burning under the lumberman's exterior.
+
+Bull promptly fended any storm that might possibly be brewing. He held
+up his telegram and his eyes were smiling.
+
+"The Skandinavia's on the move," he cried. And Bat recognised the battle
+note in the tone.
+
+"How?"
+
+Bull flung the message across the desk.
+
+"The Skandinavia's representative is arriving on the _Myra_," he said.
+Then he added, "Elas Peterman says so."
+
+"What for?"
+
+Bat had picked up the message and stood reading it.
+
+The other searched amongst his papers.
+
+"I kind of forgot putting you wise before," he said. "There were two
+letters came along a week back. One was from Elas Peterman, of the
+Skandinavia folk, and the other from Father Adam. That message was
+'phoned on from the headland. The letters didn't just concern a deal, so
+I set 'em aside. This message is different."
+
+For the moment the affairs down at the recreation room were forgotten,
+and Bat contented himself with the interest of the moment.
+
+"How?" he demanded again in his sharp way.
+
+Bull laughed.
+
+"Here," he cried, holding out the letters he had found. "I best pass you
+these. That's from Peterman. There's not much written, but a deal lies
+under the writing. You'll see he asks permission for a representative of
+the Skandinavia to wait on us. I wirelessed back, 'I'd just love to
+death meeting him.' By the same mail came Father Adam's yarn. An' I
+guess that's where the soup thickens. He says some woman's coming along
+from the Skandinavia folk. He guesses they're going to put up some
+proposition that looks like butting in on the plans laid out for
+Sachigo. But that don't seem to worry him a thing. I guess his letter
+wasn't written to hand us warning. He seems concerned for the woman.
+You'll see. He asks me to treat her gently. Firmly, yes. But also,
+'very, very gently.' He says, 'you see, she's a woman'."
+
+Bull waited while the other perused both letters. Then, as Bat looked up
+questioningly, he went on:
+
+"That telegram got here half an hour back," he said. Then he shrugged.
+"The woman's on the _Myra_, and the vessel's been sighted off the
+headland. She'll be along in two hours."
+
+"And what're you doin' about it?"
+
+Bat's eyes were searching. Perhaps Father Adam's letter had told him
+something it had failed to tell the other.
+
+"I'll see her right away," Bull laughed. "If she feels like stopping
+around and getting a sight of the things we're doin' she's welcome. She
+can put up at the visitor's house. It 'ud do me good for her to pass the
+news on to the folk she comes from."
+
+But Bat's manner had none of the light confidence of the other. Bitter
+hatred of the Skandinavia was deeply ingrained in him. He shook his
+head.
+
+"Keep 'em guessin'," he said. "It'll worry 'em--that way."
+
+Then he passed the letters back, and dropped into the chair that was
+always his.
+
+"But this woman," he went on, in obvious puzzlement. "It's--it's kind of
+new, I guess. Then there's Father Adam's message. That don't hand us
+much."
+
+Bull's lightness passed.
+
+"No," he said, "that message is queer. He knows about it. Yet he hasn't
+given her name or said a thing. Say--I like that phrase though. What is
+it? He says, 'treat her very, very gently--you see, she's a woman.'
+That's Father Adam right thro'--sure. But--well it's a pity he don't say
+more."
+
+Bat nodded.
+
+"You'll go along down an' meet her?"
+
+"No." Bull shook his head decidedly. "You will."
+
+Bat's eyes twinkled with a better humour than they had hitherto
+displayed.
+
+"Why--me?"
+
+"She comes from the Skandinavia. Guess Skandinavia would fancy me
+meeting their representative at the quay--quite a lot."
+
+The argument met with Bat's entire approval. He pulled out a silver
+timepiece and consulted it.
+
+"That's all right," he said, "I'll quit you in ha'f an hour. Say--I'm
+kind of guessin' there's other representatives of the Skandinavia
+around. I didn't guess ther' was much to Sachigo that I wasn't wise to.
+But that boy, Skert Lawton, showed me a play I hadn't a notion about.
+It's that darn play shanty I set up for the boys. I feel that mad about
+it I got a notion closing it right down. It worried me startin' it. It
+worries me more now. You see, I guess it's come of me lappin' up the
+ha'f-baked notions you find wrote in the news-sheets. Folks seem to be
+guessin' the worker needs somethin' more than his wage. They guess he's
+gotten some sort of queer soul needin' things he can't pay for. I allow
+I hadn't seen it that way myself. It mostly seemed to me a hell of a
+good wage and a full belly was mostly the need of a lumber-jack, and a
+dead sure thing all he deserved. But I fell for the news-sheet dope, an'
+set up that cursed recreation shanty. Now we're goin' to git trouble."
+
+"How?"
+
+Bull's ejaculation was sharp.
+
+"They hold meetings there. They dope out Capital and Labour stuff there,
+instead of pushing games at each other. Guess they got the bug of
+politics an' are scratching themselves bad. It ain't the old Labrador
+guys, Skert says. It's mostly new hands passin' their stuff on. Skert
+reckons we got a whole heap of the Skandinavia 'throw-outs,' around here
+now. That don't say Skandinavia's workin' monkey tricks. Though they
+might be. You see, this sort of dope's been talked most everywhere,
+except on Labrador, years now. I guess we need to go through the bunch
+with a louse comb. But maybe the mischief's done. I'm dead crazy to
+shut that darn place down."
+
+"Don't!" Bull was emphatic. "Shut it down and you'll make it a thousand
+times worse. No, sir. Let 'em shout. Let 'em blow off any old steam they
+need. Just sit tight. If it's the usual hot air there's nothing much
+coming of it up here on Labrador. There's this to remember. We're a
+thousand miles of hell's own winter, and a pretty tough sea, from the
+politicians who spend their lives befooling a crowd of unthinking
+muttons. Pay 'em well, and feed 'em well, and they've the horse sense to
+know there ain't no electric stoves out in the Labrador forests in
+winter. That way we don't need to worry. If it's the Skandinavia tricks
+it's different. They'll play the game to the finish. It don't signify a
+curse if you close down the recreation shanty or not. We've got to meet
+it as a competition, and fight it the way we'd fight any other."
+
+Bat's eyes snapped.
+
+"That's the kind of dope Skert Lawton's handed me," he protested.
+
+"And Skert's a wise guy," came the prompt retort.
+
+Quite suddenly Bat flung out his gnarled hands.
+
+"Hell!" he cried violently. "Have we got to sit around like mush-men,
+while the rats are chawin' our vitals. Fifteen or sixteen year I've
+handled this lay-out without a growl I couldn't kick plumb out o' the
+feller who made it. Now--now, because of a fool play I made, I've got to
+set the kid gloves on my hands, sayin' 'thank you,' while the boys git
+up and plug me between the eyes. No, sir. It ain't my way. It's me for
+the shot gun in the stern of the gopher all the time. It's me to mush up
+the features of any hoboe who don't know better than to grin when I'm
+throwin' the hot air. I can't stand for the politics of labour where I
+hand out the wage. A man's a man to me, not one darn slobber of policy.
+I'm goin' to jump in on that talk. And when I'm thro'--"
+
+"You'll get all the trouble in the world plumb on your neck." Bull's
+fine eyes were alight with humour. He revelled in the fighting spirit of
+the older man. "Here, Bat," he cried, "I'm a fool kid beside you. I
+don't begin to know my job when I think of you. But I'm up sides with
+all the politics games. Politics are ideals, notions. They haven't real
+horse sense within a mile. They're just the fool thoughts of folk who
+haven't better to do than sit around and think, and talk, an' see how
+they can make other folk conform to the things they think. That's all
+right. It's human nature in its biggest conceit, or it's another way of
+helping themselves without pushing a shovel. It don't matter which it
+is. But what I want to impress on you is, it's the biggest thing in
+life. It's the whole thing in life. Get a notion and think it hard
+enough, and talk it hard enough, and you'll hypnotise a hundred brains
+bigger than your own, and sweep the crowd with you. You'll even
+hypnotise yourself into believing the truth of a thing your better sense
+knows isn't true, never was true, an' couldn't be true anyway. And when
+you're fixed that way you'll die for your notion. Oh, a politician ain't
+yearning for any old grave. He wouldn't get an audience there.
+Politicians 'ud hate to die worse than a condemned man. But that's the
+queer of it; he'd die rather than give up a notion he's built up. He'd
+hate to death to push a blue pencil through it and--try again. All of
+which means, bar the doors of this recreation room parliament, and
+you'll start up a hundred such parliaments, and worse, throughout your
+enterprise here on Labrador, and you'll finish by wrecking the whole
+blessed concern."
+
+If Bull looked for yielding he was disappointed. But he appreciated the
+twinkle that had crept into the lumberman's stern eyes. The answer he
+received was a curiously expressive grunt as the man took out his
+timepiece and consulted it. When he saw him rise abruptly from his
+chair, Bull felt that if his talk had not had the effect he desired it
+had not been wholly wasted.
+
+"Guess I'll git goin'," Bat said shortly. Then he glanced out of the
+window, where he could plainly see the stream of the _Myra's_ smoke as
+she came down the cove. "I'll bring your lady friend right up. Maybe
+she'll fancy the dope, which I 'low you can hand out good an' plenty."
+
+With this parting shot he hurried from the room, and Bull fancied he
+detected the sound of a chuckle as the man departed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+AN AFFAIR OF OUTPOSTS
+
+
+The business of making fast the vessel had no interest for Nancy
+McDonald. The thing that was about her, the thing that had leapt at her
+out of the haze hanging over the waters of Farewell Cove, as the _Myra_
+steamed to her haven, pre-occupied her to the exclusion of everything
+else. Her feelings were something of those of the explorer suddenly
+coming upon a new, unguessed world.
+
+"Old Man" Hardy was at her side, waiting for the adjustment of the
+gangway. He was quietly observing her with a sense of enjoyment at the
+obvious surprise and interest she displayed. Besides, her beauty charmed
+him for all his years. And then had she not been entrusted to his
+especial care by those people who held powerful influence in all
+concerning the coastal trade upon which he was engaged?
+
+Sachigo was not only a mill. It was a--city. This was the sum of Nancy's
+astonishing discovery. And the picture of it held her fascinated. She
+commented little, she had questioned little of the old skipper at her
+elbow. The thing she saw was too overwhelming. Besides, reticence was
+impressed upon her by the nature of her visit.
+
+"It's a mighty elegant place," the seaman said at last.
+
+The girl nodded. Then she smiled.
+
+"I've seen trolley cars on the seashore. I've seen electric standards
+for lighting. What am I to see next on--Labrador?" she asked.
+
+Captain Hardy laughed.
+
+"You've to see the folks who've done it all," he replied. "And--there's
+one of 'em."
+
+He indicated the squat figure of Bat Harker leaning against some bales
+piled on the quay. Nancy turned in that direction.
+
+She discovered the rough-clad, almost uncouth figure of Bat. She noted
+his moving jaws as he chewed vigorously. She saw that a short stubble of
+beard was growing on a normally clean-shaven face, and that the man's
+clothing might have been the clothing of any labourer. But the iron cast
+of his face left her with sudden qualms. It was so hard. To her
+imagination it suggested complete failure for her mission.
+
+"Is he the--owner? Is he--Mr. Sternford?" Her questions came in a hushed
+tone that was almost awed.
+
+"No. That's Bat--Bat Harker. He's mill-boss."
+
+"I see." There was relief in Nancy's tone. But it passed as the seaman
+continued.
+
+"Maybe he's waiting for you though. Are they wise you're coming along?
+You don't see Bat around this quay without he's lookin' for some folk to
+come along on the _Myra_."
+
+The gangway clattered out on to the quay, and the man moved toward it.
+
+"We best get ashore," he said. "You see, mam, my orders are to pass you
+over to the folks waiting for you. That'll be--Bat. He'll pass you on
+to Sternford. I take it you'll sleep aboard to-night. Your stateroom's
+booked that way. We sail to-morrow sundown, which will give you plenty
+time looking around if you fancy that way. I allow Sachigo's worth it.
+One day it'll be a big city, if I'm a judge. Will you step this way?"
+
+The seaman's deference was obvious. But Nancy remained oblivious to it.
+To her it was just kindliness, and she was more than grateful. But his
+final remark about Sachigo left her pathetically disquieted. For the
+first time in her life she doubted the all-powerful position of the
+people to whom she had sold her services.
+
+"Yes, thanks," she returned, smiling to disguise her feelings. Then she
+added, "I'm glad we don't sail till to-morrow evening. You see, I
+couldn't leave--this, without a big look around."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The ship-master had hurried away.
+
+Bat's deep-set eyes were steadily regarding the beautiful face before
+him. He was gazing into the hazel depths of Nancy's eyes without a sign.
+He had noted everything as the girl had come down the gangway. The
+height, the graceful carriage in the long plucked-beaver coat which
+terminated just above the trim ankles in their silken, almost
+transparent, hose. Not even at Captain Hardy's pronouncement of her name
+had he yielded a sign. And yet--
+
+"Miss--Nancy McDonald?"
+
+Bat's tone had lost its usual roughness. His mind had leapt back over
+many years to a time when he had been concerned for that name in a way
+that had stirred him to great warmth. He smiled. It was a baffling,
+somewhat derisive smile.
+
+"You're the lady representing the--Skandinavia?" he added.
+
+"Why, yes," Nancy cried, "and I feel I want to thank you for the
+privilege of obtaining even an outside view of your wonderful, wonderful
+place here."
+
+Bat raked thoughtfully at the stubble on his chin.
+
+"If you feel that way, Miss, it'll hand me pleasure to show you and tell
+you about things," he said. "You come right out of what the folks around
+here like to call the enemy camp, but it don't matter a little bit. Not
+a little bit. The whole of Sachigo's standin' wide open for you to walk
+through." Then he dashed his hand across his face to clear the voracious
+mosquitoes. "But if we stop around here mor'n ha'f another minute, the
+memory you'll mostly carry away with you from Labrador'll be
+skitters--an' nothing much else. Will you come right along up to Mr.
+Sternford's office? It's quite a piece up the hill, which helps to keep
+it clear of skitters an' things?"
+
+Nancy laughed. Her early impression of the super-lumberjack had passed.
+The man's smile was beyond words in its kindliness. His deep, twinkling
+eyes were full of appeal.
+
+"Why, surely," she assented. "If you'll show me the way I'll be glad.
+The flies and things are certainly thick, and as I intend leaving
+Sachigo with happy memories, well--"
+
+"Come right along. I'm here for just that purpose."
+
+As they made their way up the woodland trail they talked together with
+an easy intimacy. Nancy was young. She was full of the joy of life, full
+of real enthusiasm. And this rough creature with his ready smile
+appealed to her. His frank, open way was something so far removed from
+that which prevailed under the Skandinavia's rule.
+
+For Bat, the walk up from the quayside was one of the many milestones in
+his chequered life. He talked readily. He listened, too. But under it
+all his thought was busy. The mystery of Father Adam's letter was no
+longer a mystery. He understood. But he was also puzzled. How had this
+thing come about? How had Father Adam learned of this visit? How had
+this girl become representative of the Skandinavia? A hundred questions
+flashed through his mind, for none of which he could find a satisfactory
+answer. But he smiled to himself as he thought of that last line in
+Father Adam's letter. "Treat her gently--firmly, yes--but very gently.
+You see, she's a--woman."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was a moment likely to live with both in the years to come. For Nancy
+it was at least the final stage of her apprenticeship, the passing of
+the portal beyond which opened out the world she so completely desired
+to take her place in. Did it not mean the moment of shouldering the
+great burden of responsibility she had so steadfastly trained herself to
+bear? For Bull Sternford it had no such meaning. His powers had long
+since been tested. As a meeting with the representative of a rival
+enterprise it was merely an incident in the life to which he had become
+completely accustomed. Its significance lay in quite another direction.
+
+Bat had taken his departure. He had witnessed the meeting of Nancy with
+this protégé Father Adam had sent him from the dark world of the
+forests. And his witness of it had been with twinkling eyes, and the
+happy sense of an amusement he had never looked to discover in the
+presence of a representative of the Skandinavia. In an unexpressed
+fashion he realised he was gazing upon something in the nature of a
+stage play.
+
+He had found Bull transformed. The office suit was gone. The man's hair
+was carefully brushed. He even suspected the liberal use of soap and
+water. And then, too, the heavy, rough boots had given place to shining
+patent leather. The youth and human nature of it pleased him. So he had
+departed to the workshops below with a voiceless chuckle, and a greater
+appreciation of the inevitability of the things of life.
+
+Apart from Nancy's appreciation of that meeting, the woman in her sought
+to appraise the man she beheld. Her impression was far deeper than she
+knew. The height and muscular girth she beheld left her with a feeling
+that she was gazing upon one of the pictures her school-girl mind had
+created for the great men of Greek and Roman history. The clean-shaven,
+clear-cut face, with its fine eyes and broad brow, its purposeful mouth;
+these were details that had to be there, and were there. And somehow, as
+she realised them, and the sense of the man's power and personality
+forced itself upon her, her original confidence still further lessened,
+and she wondered not a little anxiously as to the outcome of this
+interview she had sought.
+
+As for the man, his eyes had calmly smiled his spoken greeting. His
+handshake had been conventionally firm. But behind the mask of it all
+was one great surge of feeling. The vision of a beautiful, fur-coated
+figure, with the peeping lure of pretty ankles, the warm cap pressed low
+on the girl's head as though endeavouring to hide up the radiant framing
+of the sweetest, most beautiful face he felt he had ever seen, dealt all
+his preconceived purpose for the interview one final, smashing blow.
+
+"I'm real glad to welcome you to Sachigo," he had begun. Then in a
+moment, the conventional gave place to the man in him. "But say," he
+added with a pleasant laugh, "we've a big piece of talk to make. You
+best let me help you remove that coat. The stove we always need to keep
+going here on Labrador makes this shanty hot as--very hot."
+
+The manner of it sent convention, caution, business pose, scattering to
+the winds. The girl laughed and yielded.
+
+"Why, thanks," she said readily. "I'm glad you reckon we're to make a
+big talk. You see," she added slyly, "I've been looking out of the
+window, and there's quite a drop below. Up to now I felt my fur
+might--be useful."
+
+Bull laughed as he laid the coat aside. He had drawn up a comfortable
+lounging chair which Nancy was prompt to accept. For himself he stood at
+the window.
+
+"Why, yes." He smiled. "I'd say it's a wise general who looks to his
+retreat before the encounter. I'd sort of half forgotten you come from
+the--Skandinavia."
+
+"But I hadn't."
+
+"No."
+
+They both laughed. Nancy leant back in her chair. Her pose was all
+unconscious. She had toiled hard to keep pace with the sturdy gait of
+Bat in the ascent from the quay. Now she was glad of the ease the chair
+afforded.
+
+"Why did you say that?" Nancy asked a moment later.
+
+Bull spread out his great hands.
+
+"The Skandinavia don't usually let folks forget they're behind them."
+
+"Now that's just too bad. It--it isn't generous," the girl said half
+seriously.
+
+"Isn't it?"
+
+Bull left the window and took the chair that was usually Bat's. He set
+it so that he could feast his eyes on the beauty he found so
+irresistible.
+
+"You see," he went on, "I've got a right to say that all the same. It's
+not the--the challenge of a--what'll I say--competitor? I once had the
+honour of drawing a few bucks a month on the paysheets of the
+Skandinavia. And folks reckoned, and I guess I was amongst 'em, that
+Skandinavia said to its people: 'Make good or--beat it.' That being so
+it makes it a sure thing they're not liable to leave you forgetting
+who's behind you."
+
+His smile had gone. He was simply serious. This man had worked for her
+people, and Nancy felt he was entitled to his opinion.
+
+"That's going to make my talk harder," she said. "I'm sorry. But there,"
+she went on. "It doesn't really matter, does it? Anyway I want to tell
+you right away of the craze the sight of your splendid Sachigo has
+started buzzing in my head. Say, Mr. Sternford, it beats anything I ever
+dreamed, and I want to say that there's no one in the Skandinavia, from
+Mr. Peterman downwards, has the littlest notion of it. It's not a mill.
+It's a world of real, civilised enterprise. And it's set here where
+you'd look for the roughest of forest life. I just had no idea."
+
+It was all said spontaneously. And the pleasure it gave was obvious in
+the man's eyes. He nodded.
+
+"Yes," he said. "The construction of this mill, here on Labrador, isn't
+short of genius by a yard. And the genius of it lies where you won't
+guess."
+
+Nancy's pretty eyes were mildly searching.
+
+"You're the head of Sachigo," she suggested.
+
+Bull's eyes lit.
+
+"Sure," he cried, "an' I'm mighty proud that's so. But I'm not the
+genius of this great mill. No. That grizzled, tough old lumberman who
+toted you along up from the quayside is the brain of this organisation.
+He's a--wonder. There's times I want to laff when I think of it. There's
+times I'm most ready to cry. You see, you don't know that great feller.
+I'm just beginning to guess I do. He's a heart as big as a house, and
+the manner to scare a 'hold-up.' He's the grit of a reg'ment of soldiers
+and the mutton softness of a kid girl. He's the brain of a Solomon, and
+the illiteracy of a one day school kid. He's all those things, and he's
+the biggest proposition in men I've ever heard tell about. It's kind of
+tough. Don't you feel that way? He'll suck a pint of tobacco juice in
+the day, and blaspheme till your ears get on edge. And while your folks
+are guessing he'll put through a proposition that 'ud leave ha'f the
+world gasping."
+
+Nancy stirred. This man's whole-hearted appreciation of another was
+something rather fine in her simple philosophy. The last thing she had
+contemplated in approaching the head of a rival enterprise was such talk
+as this. But somehow it seemed to fit the man. Somehow as she noted the
+squarely gazing eyes, and the power in every line of his features, she
+realised that whatever lines he chose to talk on, nothing could change
+the decision lying behind it all. She liked him all the better for that,
+and found herself drawing comparison between him and Elas Peterman to
+the latter's detriment.
+
+"I like that," she cried impulsively. Then the colour rose in her cheeks
+at the thought of her temerity. "I guess he's all you say. Maybe some
+day I'll hear his side of things. I'd like to. You see--I felt I'd known
+him years when he brought me in here. Maybe you won't understand what
+that implies."
+
+"I think I do."
+
+Bull stood up from his chair and passed round his desk.
+
+"Here, say, Miss McDonald," he went on, in his keen fashion. "You come
+from Skandinavia. And I guess you come on a pretty stiff proposition.
+It's going to be difficult for you to hand it me. Maybe you're young in
+the game. Well, it doesn't matter a thing. Now we're going to start
+right in talking that proposition, and I'm going to help you. But before
+that starts I just want to say this. You, I guess, are going right back
+on the _Myra_ and she sails to-morrow, sundown. That means you'll stay a
+night in Sachigo--"
+
+"I'm stopping on the vessel. It's all fixed."
+
+Bull sat down at his desk.
+
+"I'm kind of glad," he said, with a shade of relief. "It isn't that you
+aren't welcome to all the old hospitality Sachigo can hand you. You're
+just more than welcome. But Bat hasn't built his swell hotel yet," he
+laughed. "And as for us here, why, we 'batch' it. There isn't a thing in
+skirts around this place, only a Chink cook, a half-breed secretary, and
+a clerk or two, and a bum sort of decrepit lumber-jack who does my
+chores. So you see I'm--kind of relieved. Anyway you sleeping on the
+_Myra_ makes it easy. Now there's a mighty big conceit to me, and it's
+all for this mill in our country's wilderness. And I just can't let you
+quit to-morrow night without showing you all it means. You've simply got
+to see the thing that's going to make the whole world's groundwood trade
+holler before we're through. You're my prisoner until you've seen the
+things I'm going to show you. Is it anyway agreeable?"
+
+Nancy smiled delightedly.
+
+"You couldn't drive me out of Sachigo till I've peeked into all your
+secrets down there," she said.
+
+Bull leant forward with his arms outspread across the desk.
+
+"Great!" he cried. "And," he added, "you shall see them all. The things
+I can't show you Bat will. And if I'm a judge that old rascal'll be
+tickled to death handing his dope out to you. But--let's get to
+business."
+
+Nancy sat up. In a moment all ease was banished. She knew the great
+moment had come when she must prove herself to those who had entrusted
+her with her mission.
+
+"Yes," she said, almost hurriedly. "I don't know the word Mr. Peterman
+sent you. And anyway it doesn't matter. I must put things my way. You
+are a great enterprise here. We are a great enterprise. It looks to us a
+pretty tough clash is bound to come between us in the near future,
+and--there should be no necessity for it. There's room--plenty of
+room--for both of us in our trade--"
+
+She paused. The keen eyes of Bull were closely observing. He realised
+her attitude. Her words and tone were almost mechanical, as though she
+had schooled herself and rehearsed her lesson. And her voice was not
+quite steady. He jumped in with the swift impulse of a man whose rivalry
+could not withstand that sign of a beautiful girl's distress.
+
+"Here," he cried, with that command so natural to him. "Just don't say
+another word. Let me talk. I guess I can tell you the things it's up to
+you to hand me. It'll save you a deal, and it'll hand me a chance to
+blow off the hot air that's mostly my way. This is the position.
+Peterman's wise to the things doing right here. The Skandinavia's up
+against years of cutting on the Shagaunty. The Shagaunty's played right
+out. You folks have got to open new stuff. It's my job to know all this.
+Very well. As I said, Peterman's at last got wise to us. He knows we
+look like flooding the market, and jumping right in on him. So--you're a
+mighty wealthy corporation--he figures to recognise us, and embrace
+us--with a business arrangement. That so?"
+
+"Yes. A business arrangement."
+
+The girl's relief was almost pathetic. Bull smiled.
+
+"That's so. A business arrangement. Should I entertain one, eh? That's
+the question you're right here to ask. And you want to take back my
+answer." He paused. "Well, you're going to take back my answer. And I
+kind of feel it's the answer you'll like taking back. Say, Miss
+McDonald, I'm only a youngster, myself, but I guess I know what it means
+to set out on a work hoping and yearning to make good. Will it make good
+for you to go back to Elas Peterman and say the feller at Sachigo is
+coming right along down by the _Myra_ to-morrow, and would be pleased to
+death to talk this proposition right out in the offices of the
+Skandinavia? Will it?"
+
+Nancy's eyes lit. Their hazel depths were wells of thankfulness.
+
+"Why, surely," she said. "You mean you're going to sail to-morrow?"
+
+Bull laughed and his laugh was infectious. The girl was smiling her
+delight.
+
+"That's so. I need to cross the Atlantic. I wasn't going till the
+_Myra's_ next trip. I'll go to-morrow an' stop over in Quebec to see
+your people. It just means hurrying my choreman packing my stuff while I
+show you around to-morrow. That kind of fixes things, and if you'll hand
+me that pleasure I'd just love to show you around some this afternoon.
+There's a heap to see, and I don't fancy you missing any of it." He
+passed round the desk, and picked up the girl's coat and held it out
+invitingly. "Will you come right along?"
+
+There was no denying him. Nancy looked up into his smiling eyes. She
+felt there was a lot she wanted to say, ought to say, on the business
+matter in hand. But it was impossible. And in her heart she was
+thankful.
+
+"Why, I'd just love to," she said, and stood up from her chair.
+
+Very tenderly, very carefully the man's hands helped her into her coat.
+And somehow Nancy was very glad the hands were big, and strong,
+and--yes--clumsy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+ON THE OPEN SEA
+
+
+The _Myra_ laboured heavily. With every rise and fall of her high bows a
+whipping spray lashed the faces of those on deck. The bitter
+north-easterly gale churned the ocean into a white fury, and the sky was
+a-race with leaden masses of cloud. There was no break anywhere. Sky and
+sea alike were fiercely threatening, and the wind howled through the
+vessel's top gear.
+
+Bull Sternford had been sharing the storm with the sturdy skipper on
+the bridge. He had been listening to the old man's talk of fierce
+experience on the coast of Labrador. It had all been interesting to the
+landsman in view of the present storm, but at last he could no longer
+endure the exposure of the shelterless bridge.
+
+"It's me for the deck and a sheltered corner," he finally declared,
+preparing to pass down the iron "companion."
+
+And the Captain grinned.
+
+"I don't blame you," he bellowed in the shriek of the gale. "But I guess
+I'd as lief have it this way. It's better than a flat sea an' fog, which
+is mostly the alternative this time o' year. The Atlantic don't offer
+much choice about now. She's like a shrew woman. Her smile ain't ever
+easy. An' when you get it you've most always got to pay good. She can
+blow herself sick with this homeward bound breeze for all I care."
+
+"That's all right," Bull shouted back at him. "Guess you've lost your
+sense of the ease of things working this coast so long. It 'ud be me for
+the flat sea and fog all the time. I like my chances taken standing
+square on two feet. So long."
+
+He passed below, beating his hands for warmth. And as he went he glanced
+back at the sturdy, oil-skinned figure clinging to the rail of the
+bridge. The man's far-off gaze was fixed on the storm-swept sky, reading
+every sign with the intimate knowledge of long years of experience. It
+was a reassuring figure that must have put heart into the veriest
+weakling. But Bull Sternford needed no such support. In matters of life
+and death he was without emotion.
+
+He scrambled his way to the leeward side of the engines where a certain
+warmth and shelter was to be had, and where a number of hardly tested
+deck chairs were securely lashed. It was the resting place of those few
+beset passengers who could endure no longer the indifferent, odorous
+accommodation of the _Myra's_ saloon. Only one chair was occupied. For
+the rest the deck was completely deserted.
+
+Bull's first glance at the solitary passenger was sufficient. The gleam
+of red hair under the fur cap told him all he wanted to know, and he
+groped his way along the slippery deck, and deposited his bulk safely
+into the chair beside Nancy McDonald.
+
+"Say," he cried, with a cheerful grin, as he struggled with his rug,
+"this sort of thing's just about calculated to leave a feller feeling
+sympathy with the boy who hasn't more sense than to spend his time
+trying to climb outside more Rye whisky than he was built to hold. It
+makes you wonder at the fool thing that lies back of it all. I mean the
+fuss going on out yonder."
+
+Nancy smiled round from amidst her furs.
+
+"It does seem like useless mischief," she agreed readily. Then she
+laughed outright. "But to see you crawling along the deck just now,
+grabbing any old thing for support, and often missing it, was a sight to
+leave one wondering how much dignity owes to personality, and how much
+to environment. Guess environment's an easy win."
+
+"Did I look so darn foolish?"
+
+Bull's eyes were smiling, and Nancy laughed again.
+
+"Just about as foolish as that fellow with the Rye whisky you were
+talking about."
+
+The man settled himself comfortably.
+
+"That's tough. And I guess I was doing my best, too. Say," he went on
+with a laugh, "just look at those flapping sea-gulls, or whatever they
+are out there. Makes you wonder to see 'em racing along over this fool
+waste of water. Look at 'em fighting, struggling, and using up a whole
+heap of good energy to keep level with this old tub. You know they've
+only to turn away westward to find land and shelter where they could
+build nests and make things mighty comfortable for themselves. I don't
+get it. You know it seems to me Nature got in a bad muss handing out
+ordinary sense. I'd say She never heard of a card index. Maybe Her
+bookkeeper was a drunken guy who didn't know a ledger from a scrap book.
+Now if She'd engaged you an' me to keep tab of things for Her, we'd have
+done a deal better. Those poor blamed sea-gulls, or whatever they are,
+would have been squatting around on elegant beds of moulted feathers,
+laid out on steam-heat radiators, feeding on oyster cocktails and
+things, and handing out the instructive dope of a highbrow politician
+working up a press reputation, and learning their kids the decent habits
+of folk who're yearning to keep out of penitentiary as long as the
+police'll let 'em. No. It's no use. Nature got busy. Look at the result.
+Those fool birds'll follow us till they're tired, in the hope that some
+guy'll dump the contents of the _Myra's_ swill barrel their way. Then
+they'll have one disgusting orgy on the things other folks don't fancy,
+and start right in to fly again to ease their digestions. It's a crazy
+game anyway. And it leaves me with a mighty big slump in Nature's
+stock."
+
+Nancy listened delightedly to the man's pleasant fooling.
+
+"It's worse than that," she cried, falling in with his humour. "Look at
+some of them taking a rest, swimming about in that terribly cold water.
+Ugh! No, if we'd fixed their sense we'd have made it so they'd have had
+enough to get on dry land, like any other reasonable folk yearning for a
+rest."
+
+The man studied the girl's pretty profile, and a great sense of regret
+stirred him that the Skandinavia had been able to buy her services. What
+a perfect creature to have been supported by in the work he was engaged
+on.
+
+"That sounds good," he said. "Reasonable folks!" He shook his head.
+"Nature again. Guess we're all reasonable till we're found out. No. Even
+the greatest men and women on earth are fools at heart, you know."
+
+The girl sat up as the vessel lurched more heavily and flung their
+chairs forward, straining dangerously.
+
+"How?" she questioned, glancing down anxiously at the moorings of her
+chair.
+
+"They're safe--so far," Bull reassured her. Then he leant back again,
+and produced and lit a cigar. "Guess I'll smoke," he said. "Maybe
+that'll help me tell you--'how.'"
+
+The girl watched him light his cigar and her eyes were full of laughter.
+
+"It's a real pity women can't sit themselves behind a cigar," she said
+at last, with a pretence of regret. "It's the wisest looking thing a man
+does. A cigarette kind of makes him seem pleasantly undependable. A pipe
+makes you feel he's full of just everyday notions. But a cigar! My! It
+sort of dazzles me when I see a man with a big cigar. I feel like a
+lowgrade earthworm, don't you know. Say," she cried, with an
+indescribable gesture of her gloved hands, "he handles that cigar, he
+sort of fondles it. He cocks it. He depresses it. He rolls it across his
+lips to the opposite corner of his mouth, and finally blows a thin,
+thoughtful stream of smoke gently between his pursed lips. And that
+stream is immeasurable in its suggestion of wise thought and keen
+calculation. I'd say a man's cigar is his best disguise."
+
+Bull nodded.
+
+"That's fine," he cried. "But you've forgotten the other feller. The man
+who 'chews.'"
+
+Nancy laughed happily.
+
+"Easy," she cried promptly. "When he of the bulged cheek gets around
+just watch your defences. He's mostly tough. He's on the jump, and
+hasn't much fancy for the decencies of life. The harder he chews the
+more he's figgering up his adversary. And when he spits, get your
+weapons ready. When the chewing man succeeds in life I guess he's
+dangerous. And it's because his force and character have generally
+lifted him from the bottom of things."
+
+Bull shook his head in mock despair.
+
+Nancy settled herself back in her chair.
+
+"That's fixed it. Guess you'll need to tell _me_ 'how.'"
+
+"No, sir," she cried. "You can't go back. 'The greatest men and women in
+the world are fools at heart.' That's what you said."
+
+"Yes. I seem to remember."
+
+The man stirred and sat up. He folded the rug more closely about his
+feet. Then he turned with a whimsical smile in his eyes.
+
+"Well?" he cried. "And isn't it so? What do we work, and fight, and hate
+for? What do we spend our lives worrying to beat the other feller for?
+Why do we set our noses into other folks' affairs and worry them to
+death to think, and act, and feel the way we do? And all the while it
+don't matter a thing. Of course we're fools. We'll hand over when the
+time comes, and the old world'll roll on, and it's not been shifted a
+hair's-breadth for our having lived, in spite of the obituaries the
+news-sheets hand out like a Sunday School mam at prize time. Say, here,
+it's no use fooling ourselves. Life's one great big thing that don't
+take shape by reason of our acts. What's the civilisation we love to pat
+ourselves on the back for? I'll tell you. It's just a thing we've
+invented, like--wireless telegraphy, or soap, or steam-heat; and it
+hands us a cloak to cover up the evil that man and woman'll never quit
+doing. Before we made civilisation a feller got up on to his hind legs
+and hit the other feller over the head with a club; and if he was hungry
+he used him as a lunch. Now we don't do that. We break him for his
+dollars and leave him and his poor wife and kids hungry, while we buy a
+lunch with the stuff we beat out of him. Why do we work? For one of two
+elegant notions. It's either to fill ourselves up with the things we've
+dreamt about when appetite was sharp set, and hate to death when we get,
+or it's to satisfy a conceit that leaves us hoping and believing the
+rest of the world'll hand us an epitaph like it handed no other feller
+since ever it got to be a habit burying up the garbage death produces.
+Why do we fight and hate? Because we're poor darn fools that don't know
+better, and don't know the easy thing life would be without those
+things. And as for settin' our noses into the affairs of other folk,
+that's mostly disease. But it isn't all. No, sir. There's more to it
+than that," he laughed. "If it was just disease it wouldn't matter a
+lot, but it isn't. There isn't a fool man or woman born into this world
+that doesn't reckon he or she can put right the fool notions and acts of
+other fools. And when the other feller persuades them the game's not the
+one-sided racket they guessed it was, then they get mad, and start
+groping and scheming how to boost their notions on to a world that's
+spent a whole heap of time fixing things, mostly foolish, to its own
+mighty good satisfaction. I say right here we're fools if we aren't
+crooks, which is the exception. There's a dandy world around us full of
+sun to warm us and food to eat, and birds to sing to us, and flowers and
+things to make us feel good. If we needed more I guess Providence would
+have handed it out. But it didn't. And so we got busy with our own
+notions till we've turned God's elegant creation into a home for crazes
+and cranks. I could almost fancy the Archangels hovering around, like
+those silly sea-gulls, with a bunch of straight-jackets to wrap about us
+when we jump the limit they figger we've a right to. Fools, yes? Why, I
+guess so--sure."
+
+Nancy breathed a deep sigh.
+
+"My, but that's a big say."
+
+Then she broke into a laugh which found prompt response in the other. It
+was cut short, however. A sea thundered against the staunch side of the
+vessel and left her staggering. The girl's eyes became seriously
+anxious. The straining chairs held, and presently the deck swung up to a
+comparative level.
+
+"I had visions of the--"
+
+"Scuppers?" Bull laughed. "Yes. That sea's one of the elegant things
+Providence handed out for our happiness."
+
+Nancy nodded.
+
+"So man built things like the _Myra_, which, of course, was--foolish?"
+
+"An' set out sailing around in a winter storm off Labrador, instead of
+basking in a pleasant tropical sun, which hasn't any--sense."
+
+Bull chuckled.
+
+"All because two mighty fine enterprises reckoned they'd common
+interests which were jeopardised by rivalry, which was also--foolishly?"
+
+Bull's cigar ash tumbled into his lap.
+
+"But not ha'f so foolish as the notion that a girl has to suffer the
+worries and dangers of one hell of a trip on the worst sea that God ever
+made to try and square the things between them."
+
+Nancy shook her head.
+
+"I can't grant that," she cried quickly.
+
+"No?"
+
+"I mean--oh, psha! Don't you see, or does your cynical philosophy blind
+you? We're fools, maybe. The things Providence sends us aren't the
+things we've got a notion for. Maybe we know better than Providence, and
+can't find happiness in the things it's handed us. What then? As you
+say, we start right in chasing happiness in the way we fancy. It seems
+to me the only real happiness in life is in doing. Ease, wealth, love,
+all the things folk talk and write about are just dreams of happiness
+that aren't real. Work, achievement, even if it's wrong-headed--that's
+life; that's happiness. That's why I'd say there's nothing foolish in a
+girl putting up with dangers and discomforts to bring two enterprises to
+an understanding, calculated to promote a greater achievement for both.
+It's my little notion of snatching a bunch of happiness for myself."
+
+There was no laughter in Nancy's eyes now. They were quite serious. Her
+words were alive with vehemence. Bull was watching her intently,
+probing, in his searching way, the depths which her hazel eyes hinted
+at. The things she said pleased him. Her tone thrilled him. He wanted
+more.
+
+"I wonder," he said, as he rolled the cigar across his lips in the way
+Nancy had laughingly pointed. "You reckon it's handed you
+happiness--this thing?"
+
+The girl was stirred.
+
+"Surely," she cried. "Later, when things get fixed up between the
+Skandinavia and Sachigo, I'll get a focus of my little share in the
+business of it--the achievement. Then I'll get warm all through with a
+glow of happiness because I--helped it along."
+
+Bull nodded as he watched the rising colour in the perfect cheeks. The
+girl was very, very beautiful.
+
+"Yes, I suppose you will," he said. Then he went on provocatively. "But
+do you guess it's always so? I mean that always happens? Isn't it to do
+with temperament? Now, take the forest-jacks. Do you guess they feel
+happiness in a tree dropped right? Do you guess there's happiness for
+the poor fool who don't know better than to spend his days in a forest
+risking his life boosting logs on the river jamb? Do you guess there's
+any sort of old joy for the feller turned adrift, when he's getting old
+in the tooth, and there's no room for him on the pay roll of the camp,
+in the thought that he _was_ the best axeman the forest ever bred? It
+seems like a crazy sort of happiness that way. Happiness in
+achievement's great while the achieving's going on. But at the finish
+we get right back to Nature. And when that time comes Nature doesn't do
+much to help us out."
+
+Nancy sat up.
+
+"What are you doing? That great Sachigo!" she demanded challengingly.
+"You're building, building one magnificent enterprise. Is there
+happiness in it for you?"
+
+"Sure," Bull admitted frankly. "Oh, yes. But I've no illusions," he
+said. "I don't go back on the things I said. Nature as she dopes out
+life couldn't hand me a hundredth part of the happiness I get that way.
+But when I'm through, like that lumber-jack who's struck off the pay
+roll, how's it going to be with me? A trained mind without the bodily
+ability to thrust on in the game of life. It'll be hell--just hell. The
+one hope is to die in harness. Like the forest-jack who drowns under the
+logs on the river, or who gets up against the other feller's knife in a
+drunken scrap. That way lies happiness. The rest is a sort of passing
+dream with the years of old age for regret."
+
+The girl spread out her hands.
+
+"I can't believe you feel that way," she cried, with something very like
+distress. "Oh, if I had your power, your ability. Why, I'd say there's
+no end to the things you could achieve, not only now, but right through,
+right through that time when you're old in body, but still strong in
+brain. A limited goal for achievement isn't the notion in my foolish
+head. Why, if I'd only the strength to knit socks for the folks who need
+them, there'd still be happiness and to spare. But let's keep to our own
+ground. The forest-jack. I guess you're one big man who employs
+thousands. What of those boys when they're struck off the--pay roll. Is
+there nothing to be achieved that way--nothing to last you to your last
+living moment? Think of their needs. Think of the happiness you could
+hand yourself in handing them comfort and happiness when
+they're--through. It's a thing I've promised myself, if luck ever hands
+me the chance. You've got the pity of their lives. Your words tell that.
+Well?"
+
+The man had forgotten the storm. He had forgotten everything but the
+charm of the girl's hot enthusiasm. And the picture of superlative
+beauty she made in her animation.
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"It's a bully notion," he demurred, "but it's not for me. No. You see,
+I'm just a tough sort of man who's big for a scrap. I haven't patience
+or sympathy for the feller who don't feel the same. You've seen the
+forest boys?"
+
+"I've been through the Shagaunty."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+Bull Sternford's ejaculation was sharp. The problem of Father Adam's
+letter was partially solved.
+
+"Well, I guess you're a woman," he went on. "And I'd like to say right
+here a woman's sympathy is just about the best thing on this old earth.
+That's why I'd like to cry like a kid when I see it going out to the
+things that haven't any sort of excuse for getting it. It's good to hear
+you talk for those boys. It isn't they deserve it, but--as I said,
+you're a woman. Talk it all you fancy, but leave it at talk. Don't let
+it get a holt. Don't waste one moment of your hard earned happiness on
+'em. I was a forest-jack. I know 'em. I know it--the life. And if you
+knew the thing I know you wouldn't harden all up as you listen to the
+things I'm saying:--"
+
+"But--"
+
+Bull flung his cigar away with vicious force.
+
+"Let me say this thing out," he went on. "There's a man in the forest I
+know, every jack knows. He's a feller who sort of lives in the twilight.
+You see, he sort of comes and goes; and no one knows a thing about him,
+except he haunts the forests like a shadow. Well, he's settin' the
+notion you feel into practice--in a way. He's out for the boys. To help
+'em, physically, spiritually, the whole time. They love him. We all love
+him to death. Well, ask him how far he gets. Maybe he'd tell you, and I
+guess his story 'ud break the heart of a stone image. He'll tell
+you--and he speaks the truth--there isn't a thing to be done but heal
+'em, and feed 'em, and just help 'em how you can. The rest's a dream.
+You see, these jacks come from nowhere particular. They take to the
+forests because it's far off; and it's dark, and covers most things up.
+And they go nowhere particular, except it's to the hell waiting on most
+of us if we don't live life the way that's intended for us. No. Quit
+worrying for the forest-jack. Maybe life's going to hand you all sorts
+of queer feelings as you go along. And the good heart that sees
+suffering and injustice is going to ache mighty bad. The forest wasn't
+built for daylight, and the folks living there don't fancy it. And there
+isn't a broom big enough in the world to clean up the muck you'll find
+there."
+
+"You're talking of Father Adam?"
+
+Nancy's interest had redoubled. It had instantly centred itself on the
+man she had met in the Shagaunty forests. The lumber-jacks were
+forgotten.
+
+"Yes." Bull nodded. "Do you know him?" There was eagerness in his
+question.
+
+"I met him on the Shagaunty."
+
+The man had produced a fresh cigar. But the renewed heavy rolling of the
+vessel delayed its lighting. Nancy gazed out to sea in some concern.
+
+"It's getting worse," she said.
+
+Bull struck a match and covered it with both hands.
+
+"It seems that way," he replied indifferently. Then after a moment he
+looked up. His cigar was alight. "He's a great fellow--Father Adam," he
+said reflectively.
+
+"He's just--splendid."
+
+The girl's enthusiasm told Bull something of the thing he wanted to
+know.
+
+"Yes," he said. "He's the best man I know. The world doesn't mean a
+thing to him. Why he's there I don't know, and I guess it's not my
+business anyway. But if God's mercy's to be handed to any human creature
+it seems to me it won't come amiss--Say!"
+
+He broke off, startled. He sat up with a jump. A great gust of wind
+broke down upon the vessel. It came with a shriek that rose in a fierce
+crescendo. His startled eyes were riveted upon a new development in the
+sky. An inky cloud bank was sweeping down upon them out of the
+north-east, and the wind seemed to roar its way out of its very heart.
+
+The vessel heeled over. Again the wind tore at the creaking gear. It was
+a moment of breathless suspense for those seated helplessly looking on.
+Then something crashed. A vast sea beat on the quarter and deluged the
+decks, and the chairs were torn from their moorings.
+
+Bull Sternford was sprawling in the race of water. Nancy, too, was
+hurled floundering in the scuppers. They were flung and beaten, crashing
+about in the swirling sea that swept over the vessel's submerged rail.
+
+Bull struggled furiously. Every muscle was straining with the effort of
+it. A fierce anxiety was in his eyes as he fought his way foot by foot
+towards the saloon companion. The handicap was terrible. There was
+practically no foothold, for the vessel was riding at an angle of
+something like forty-five degrees. Then, too, he had but one hand with
+which to help himself along. The other was supporting the dead-weight of
+the body of the unconscious girl.
+
+At last, breathless and nearly beaten, he reached his goal and clutched
+desperately at the door-casing of the companion. He staggered within.
+And as he did so relief found expression in one fierce exclamation.
+
+"Hell!" he cried. And clambered down, bearing his unconscious burden
+into the safety of the vessel's interior.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+IN QUEBEC
+
+
+It was the final stage of her journey. Nancy was on her way up from the
+docks, where she had left the staunch _Myra_ discharging her cargo.
+
+It was that triumphant return to which she had always looked forward,
+for which she had hoped and prayed. Her work was completed. It had been
+crowned with greater success than she had dared to believe possible. Yet
+her triumph somehow found her unelated, even a shade depressed.
+
+A belated sense of humour battled with her mood. There were moments when
+she wanted to laugh at herself. There were others when she had no such
+desire. So she sat gazing out of the limousine window, as though all her
+interest were in the drab houses lining the way, and the heavy-coated
+pedestrians moving along the sidewalks of the narrow streets through
+which they were passing.
+
+It was winter all right, for all no snow had as yet fallen, and the girl
+felt glad that it was so. It suited her mood.
+
+Once or twice she took a sidelong glance at the man seated beside her;
+but Bull Sternford's mood was no less reticent than her own. Once she
+encountered the glance of his eyes, and it was just as the vehicle
+bumped heavily over the badly paved road.
+
+"We can do better in the way of roads up at Sachigo," he said with a
+belated smile.
+
+"You surely can," Nancy admitted readily. "The roads down here in the
+old town are terrible. This old city of ours could fill pages of
+history. It's got beauties, too, you couldn't find anywhere else in the
+world. But it seems to need most of the things a city needs to make it
+the place we folk reckon it is."
+
+She went on at random.
+
+"Do you always keep an automobile in Quebec?" she asked.
+
+Bull shook his head.
+
+"Hired," he said.
+
+"I see."
+
+Bull's eyes twinkled.
+
+"Yes," he went on, "when I make this old city it's with the purpose of
+driving twenty-four hours work into twelve. An automobile helps that
+way."
+
+"And you're wasting all this time driving me up to my apartments?" Nancy
+smiled. "I'm more indebted than I guessed."
+
+The man's denial was instant.
+
+"No," he said. "Your apartments are about two blocks from the Château.
+But tell me, when'll you be through making your report to Peterman?"
+
+Nancy's depression passed. She was caught again in the interest of
+everything.
+
+"Why, to-day--surely," she said. "You see, I want to get word to you
+right away."
+
+Bull nodded.
+
+"That's fine," he said. "It's not my way leaving things lying around
+either. I'll be on the jump to get through before sailing time to that
+little old country across the water. But tell me. That report. After
+it's in you'll have made all the good you reckon to? And then you,
+personally, cut right out of this thing?"
+
+His manner gave no indication of the thing in his mind.
+
+"Oh, yes," Nancy replied happily. "You see, I've bearded you--only
+you've no beard--in your fierce den up in Sachigo. And I've--and you've
+come right down here to Quebec with me to discuss with my people the
+thing they want to discuss with you. They didn't think I--they didn't
+hope that. Maybe I've done better than they expected. Why, when I hand
+the news to Mr. Peterman he'll--he'll--oh, I'm just dying to see his
+face when I tell him."
+
+"You--haven't wired him already?"
+
+"No. The news was too good to send by wire."
+
+For a moment the man contemplated the simple radiant creature beside
+him. She was so transparently happy. And the sight of her happiness
+satisfied him.
+
+"It'll--astonish him, eh?"
+
+"Astonish him?" Nancy laughed. "That doesn't say a thing. I shouldn't
+wonder if he refused to believe me."
+
+"And you'll get--promotion? Promotion--in Skandinavia?"
+
+The girl's eyes sobered on the instant.
+
+"Surely. Why not?"
+
+"Yes. Why not?"
+
+Just for a moment Nancy hesitated. Then her challenge came incisively.
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+But the man smilingly shook his head.
+
+"You want promotion under Peterman--in the Skandinavia?"
+
+Nancy's eyes widened.
+
+"Why shouldn't I? The Skandinavia's everything to me. It ought to be
+everything. Isn't that so? Now, I wonder what you mean?" she went on,
+after the briefest pause. "Are you talking that way just because you are
+a rival concern?" She shook her head. "That's no affair of mine. But
+wait while I tell you. Try and think yourself a young girl without folks
+that count, with a pretty tough world laid out in front of her, and with
+a healthy desire to dress, and eat the same as any other girl of her
+age. She's given a chance in life to make good, to gather round her all
+those things she needs, by--the Skandinavia. Well, how would you feel?
+Wouldn't you want that--promotion? Yes. I want it. I want it with all my
+heart. The Skandinavia gave me my first start. They've been very, very
+good to me. I've big room in my heart for them. Their work's my work all
+the time. I've nothing but gratitude for Mr. Peterman."
+
+"Yes." Bull's smile had passed. He was thinking of Nancy's feeling of
+gratitude towards the Swede--Peterman.
+
+He turned away, and the grey wintry daylight beyond the window seemed to
+absorb him. He was possessed by a mad desire to fling prudence to the
+winds and then and there point out the wrong he felt she was committing
+against the country that had bred her in spending her life in the
+service of these foreigners. But he knew he must refrain. It was not the
+moment. And somehow he felt she was not the girl to listen patiently to
+such ethics as he preached when their force was directed against those
+who claimed her whole loyalty and gratitude.
+
+To Nancy it seemed as though some shadow had arisen between them. She
+was a little troubled at the thing she had said. But somehow she had no
+desire to withdraw a single word of it.
+
+The car had passed out of the old part of the city. And Nancy realised
+it was ascending the great hill where the Château Hotel looked out over
+the old citadel and the wide waters of the busy St. Lawrence river. In a
+few minutes the happy companionship of the past few days would be only a
+memory.
+
+It was only a little way to her apartments now. Such a very little way.
+Yes. The porter would be there. He would take her trunks and baggage,
+and then her door would close behind her, and--She remembered that
+moment at which she had awakened to consciousness in this man's strong
+arms in the poor little saloon of the storm-beaten _Myra_. She
+remembered the embracing strength of them, and the way she had thrilled
+under their pressure. It had been all very wonderful.
+
+"Say!"
+
+Bull Sternford had turned back from the window. He was smiling again.
+
+"Yes?" The girl was all eager attention.
+
+"I was wondering," Bull went on. "Maybe you'll' fancy hearing how things
+are fixed after I see Peterman?"
+
+"I'll be ever so glad. There's the 'phone. You can get me most any time
+after business hours. I don't go out much. I--"
+
+Nancy broke off to glance out of the window. The automobile had slowed.
+
+"Why, we're at my place," she cried. And the man fancied he detected
+disappointment in her tone.
+
+The car stopped before the apartment house, and Bull hurled himself at
+the litter of the girl's belongings strewn about their feet. A few
+moments later they were standing together on the sidewalk surrounded by
+the baggage.
+
+Bull gazed up at the building.
+
+"You live here?" he asked at random.
+
+Nancy nodded.
+
+"Yes. It isn't much. But some day, maybe, I'll be able to afford a swell
+apartment with--"
+
+"Sure you will," Bull agreed, as they passed up the steps to the
+entrance doors. "But meanwhile I mostly need your 'phone number of
+this," he added with a laugh.
+
+The baggage was left to the porter's care, and they stood together in
+the hallway. Bull's youthful stature was overshadowing for all Nancy
+was tall. Somehow the girl was glad of it. She liked his height, and the
+breadth of his great shoulders, and the power of limbs his tweed suit
+was powerless to disguise.
+
+She moved across to the porter's office and wrote down her 'phone number
+while the man looked on. But he only had eyes for the girl herself. At
+that moment her telephone number was the last thing he desired to think
+about.
+
+She stood up and offered him the paper.
+
+"You won't forget it that way," she said, with a smile.
+
+"No."
+
+Bull glanced down at it. Then he looked again into the smiling eyes.
+
+"Thanks," he said. "I'll ring up." Then he held out a hand. "So long."
+
+He was gone. The glass door had swung to behind him. Nancy watched him
+pass into the waiting automobile, and responded to his final wave of the
+hand. Then she turned to the porter, and her smile had completely
+vanished.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nathaniel Hellbeam stood up. He had been seated at Elas Peterman's desk
+studying the papers which his managing director had set out for his
+perusal. His gross body hung over the table for a moment as he reached
+towards his hat. He took his gloves from inside it and commenced to put
+them on.
+
+"The _Myra_? You say she is in?" he asked in his guttural fashion. "This
+girl? This girl who is to buy up this--this Sachigo man," he laughed.
+"Is she arrived?"
+
+The man's eyes were alight with unpleasant derision. Peterman gave no
+heed. The man's arrogance was all too familiar to him.
+
+"I've not heard--yet," he said. "She should be."
+
+"You not have heard--yet?" The challenge was superlatively offensive.
+"You a beautiful secretary have. You lose her for weeks--months. Yet you
+do not know of her return--yet? Sho! You are not the man for this
+beautiful secretary. She for me is--yes? Hah!"
+
+Peterman smiled as was his duty.
+
+"I shall be glad to get her back," he said quietly. "But I haven't heard
+from her at all. And--well, she's not the sort of woman to bombard with
+telegrams. She's out on a difficult job and I felt it best to leave her
+to it. I shall hear when she's ready, I guess she'll be right along in
+to tell me personally. Maybe--"
+
+He broke off and picked up the telephone whose buzzer was rattling
+impatiently on the desk.
+
+"Hullo!" he said softly. "Oh, yes. Oh, how are you? So glad you've got
+back. What sort of passage did--oh, bad, eh? Well, well; I'm sorry. Oh,
+you're a good sailor. That's fine. Right away? You'll be over right
+away? Wouldn't you like to rest awhile? All right, I see. Yes, surely
+I'll be glad. I just thought--oh, not at all. You see, if you were a man
+I wouldn't be concerned at all. Yes, come right along whenever you
+choose. Eh? Successful? You have been? Why, that's just fine. Well, I'm
+dying to hear your news. Splendid. I shall be here. G'bye."
+
+Peterman set the 'phone down. His smiling eyes challenged those of the
+man who a moment before had derided him.
+
+"Well?"
+
+Hellbeam's impatience was without scruple at any time.
+
+"She's got back all right, and she's succeeded far better than you
+hoped. Better than she hoped herself. But--no better than I expected."
+
+The other's eyes snapped under the quiet satisfaction of the man's
+reply.
+
+"Ah, she has. Does she say--yes?"
+
+Elas shook his dark head.
+
+"No. She's coming right over to tell me the whole story."
+
+"Now?"
+
+"In a while."
+
+Elas Peterman knew his position to the last fraction when dealing with
+Nathaniel Hellbeam. He knew it was for him to obey, almost without
+question. But somehow, for the moment, his Teutonic self-abnegation had
+become obscured. He was yielding nothing in the matter of this woman to
+anyone. Not even to Nathaniel Hellbeam whom he regarded almost as the
+master of his destiny.
+
+Perhaps the gross nature of the financier possessed a certain sympathy.
+Perhaps even there was a lurking sense of honour in him, where a woman,
+whom he regarded as another man's property, was concerned. Again it may
+simply have been that he understood the other's reticence, and it suited
+him for the moment to restrain his grosser inclinations. He laughed. And
+it was not an hilarious effort.
+
+"Oh, yes," he said. "You will see her first. That is as it should be.
+Later, we both will talk with her. Well--good luck my friend."
+
+Hellbeam thrust his hat on his great head and strutted his way across to
+the door.
+
+"These people must be bought. Or--" he said, pausing before passing
+out--
+
+"Smashed!"
+
+Hellbeam nodded.
+
+"It suits me better to--buy."
+
+"Yes. You want to come into touch with--the owner."
+
+"Yes."
+
+The gross figure disappeared through the doorway.
+
+Peterman did not return to his desk. He crossed to the window and stood
+gazing out of it. His hands were thrust deep into his pockets. And his
+fingers moved nervously, rattling the contents of them. He was a goodly
+specimen of manhood. He was tall, and squarely erect, and carried
+himself with that military bearing which seems to belong to all the
+races of Teutonic origin. It was only in the study of the man's face
+that exception could be taken. Just now there was none to observe and he
+was free from all restraint.
+
+His dark eyes were smiling, for his thoughts were streaming along the
+channel that most appealed. He was thinking of the beauty of the girl
+who was about to return to him, and it seemed to him a pity she was so
+simply honest, so very young in the world as he understood it. Then her
+ambition. It was--but he was rather glad of her ambition. Ambition might
+prove his best friend in the end. In his philosophy an ambitious woman
+could have no scruple. Anyway it seemed to him that ambition pitted
+against scruple was an easy winner. He could play on that, and he felt
+he knew how to play on it, and was in a position to do so. She had come
+back to him successful. He wondered how successful.
+
+He moved from the window and passed over to the desk, where he picked up
+his 'phone and asked for a number.
+
+"Hullo! Oh, that Bennetts? Oh, yes. This is Peterman--Elas Peterman
+speaking. Did you send that fruit, and the flowers I ordered to the
+address I gave you? Yes? Oh, you did? They were there before eleven
+o'clock. Good. Thanks--"
+
+He set the 'phone down and turned away. But in a moment he was recalled.
+It was a message from downstairs. Nancy McDonald wished to see him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Peterman was leaning back in his chair. Nancy was occupying the chair
+beside the desk which had not known her for several months.
+
+It was a moment of stirring emotions. For the girl it was that moment to
+which she had so long looked forward. To her it seemed she was about to
+vindicate this man's confidence in her, and offer him an adequate return
+such as her gratitude desired to make. And deep down in her heart, where
+the flame of ambition steadily burned, she felt she had earned the
+promised reward, all of it.
+
+The man was concerned with none of these things. He was not even
+concerned for the girl's completed mission. It was Nancy herself. It was
+the charming face with its halo of red hair, and the delightful figure
+so rounded, so full of warmth and charm, which concerned him.
+
+He had no scruple as he feasted his eyes upon her. He did nothing to
+disguise his admiration, and Nancy, full of her news and the thrilling
+joy of her success, saw nothing of that which a less absorbed woman, a
+more experienced woman, must unfailingly have observed.
+
+"You've a big story for me," Peterman said, with a light laugh. "Have
+you completed an option on--Sachigo? You look well. You're looking fine.
+Travelling in Labrador seems to have done you good."
+
+Nancy's smiling eyes were alight with delight.
+
+"Oh, yes," she said. "It's done me good. But then I've had a success I
+didn't reckon on. Maybe it's made all the difference. It was a real
+tough journey. I'm not sure you'd have seen me back at all if it hadn't
+been for Mr. Sternford."
+
+"How?"
+
+The man's smiling eyes had changed. Their dark depths were full of sharp
+enquiry. Nancy read only anxiety.
+
+"Why, we were sitting on deck, and it was storming. It was just
+terrible. We lurched heavily and shipped a great sea. Our chairs were
+flung into the scuppers by the rush of water, and I--why, I guess I was
+beaten unconscious and drowning when he got hold of me. He just fought
+his way to safety. I didn't know about it till I was safe down in the
+saloon. I woke up then, and he was carrying me--"
+
+"Sternford?"
+
+The change in the man's eyes had deepened. Then his smile came back to
+them. But that, too, was different. It was curiously fixed and hard.
+
+"You've gone a bit too fast for me," he said. "I don't get things right.
+Sternford, the man running Sachigo was with you on the _Myra_? He's
+here--in Quebec?"
+
+It was Nancy's great moment.
+
+"Yes," she said, with a restraint that failed to disguise her feelings.
+"He's come down to discuss a business arrangement between the
+Skandinavia and his enterprise. That's what you wanted--isn't it?"
+
+The man leant forward in his chair. He set his elbows on the desk and
+supported his chin in both hands. His smile was still there, and his
+eyes were steadily regarding her. But they expressed none of the
+surprise and delight Nancy looked for. They were smiling as he literally
+forced them to smile.
+
+"You brought him down with you--to meet us?" he asked slowly.
+
+The girl nodded.
+
+"You did your work so well that he entertained the notion sufficiently
+to come along down--with you?"
+
+"I--I--he's come down for that purpose."
+
+The man's eyes were searching.
+
+"Where is he?"
+
+"At the Chateau. He's waiting to hear from you for an appointment."
+
+Peterman flung himself back in his chair with a great laugh. Nancy
+missed the mirthless tone of it.
+
+"Say, my dear," he cried at last. "How did you do it? How in--You're
+just as bright and smart as I reckoned. You've done one big thing and I
+guess you've earned all the Skandinavia can hand you. But--"
+
+He broke off, and his gaze drifted away from the face with its vivid
+halo. The wintry daylight beyond the window claimed him, and Nancy
+waited.
+
+"How did you persuade him to ship down on the _Myra_ with you?" he
+asked, after a moment's thought.
+
+"I didn't persuade him. He volunteered."
+
+"Volunteered?"
+
+"Yes. He was coming down on her next trip. You see, he's making England
+right away. He guessed he'd come along down with me instead. He seemed
+keen set to discuss this thing with you."
+
+"I see. Keen set, eh? Keen set to talk with me?"
+
+The man shook his head. It was not denial. It was the questioning of
+something left unspoken.
+
+The girl became anxious. Somehow a sense of disappointment was stirring.
+
+"Is there anything wrong?" she asked at last, as the man remained
+silent.
+
+Peterman shook his head again.
+
+"Not a thing, my dear," he said. "No. You've done everything. You
+couldn't have done more if--if you'd been the most experienced woman
+schemer in big business. You went up to prepare the ground for our
+business. Well, you prepared it in a way I'd never have guessed. You've
+brought this hard business head, Bull Sternford, right down out of his
+fortress to meet us on our business proposition. Guess only you could
+have done that." He laughed. "And this man saved your life, eh? And he
+carried you in his arms to--safety. Say he was lucky. That's something
+any man would be crazy to do. Well, well, I--"
+
+He rose from his chair and passed round to the window where he stood
+with back turned. Nancy's gaze followed him. For all his praise she was
+disturbed.
+
+The man at the window saw nothing of that upon which he gazed. His eyes
+were unsmiling now that the girl could no longer observe them. They were
+the eyes of a man of unbridled jealous fury. They were burning with an
+insensate hatred for the man who had hitherto been only a stranger rival
+in business.
+
+Oh, he understood. Was it likely that this Bull Sternford was going to
+yield for a business proposition in this fashion at the request of a
+formidable rival? Was he going to change all his plans at the bidding of
+the Skandinavia, and seize the first boat to come and tell them he was
+prepared to fall for any plans they might design to beat him? Not
+likely. No. It was the girl he had fallen for. He had changed his plans
+for her, and for his nerve he had reaped a harvest such as he, Peterman,
+had never reaped. He had held this beautiful creature in his arms, this
+innocent, red-haired child, whom he, Peterman, had marked down for his
+own. For how long? And she was all unconscious. Oh, it was maddening,
+infuriating. And--
+
+Suddenly he came back to the desk. Nancy was relieved as she beheld the
+familiar smiling kindness in his eyes.
+
+"Well, my dear. I can't tell you how delighted I am to get you back," he
+said, pausing at her side. "My work's not been by any means satisfactory
+with you away. There's just no one suits me in this house like you. But
+the thing I'm most glad about is your success. That's been wonderful. I
+felt you would make good, but I didn't know how good. Now I'm going to
+ring this fellow up and fix things to see him. Meanwhile you get your
+big report of the camps ready for the Board. Then, when you're ready,
+I'm going to let them see you, and hear it all from you first hand, and
+I'm going to get them to give you the head of the forestry department
+right here. It'll be a mighty jump, but--well--"
+
+Nancy was on her feet and her eyes were shining a gratitude which words
+could never express. Impulsively she held out a hand in ardent thanks.
+
+"Why, say--" she began.
+
+The man had seized the delicate tapering fingers and held them warmly in
+the palms of both of his.
+
+"Now just don't say a thing," he said. "I know. I know just how you
+feel, and the things you want to say. But don't. You've earned the best,
+and I'm going to see you get it. I'm going to lose a smart secretary,
+but I don't care if I make one good little friend. Now, Nancy, what
+about to-night? I think we ought to celebrate your triumphant return
+with a little dinner up at the Chateau. What say? Will you--honour me?
+Eight o'clock. Thank goodness we're not a dry country yet, and it's
+still possible to enjoy our successful moments properly. Will you?"
+
+Nancy longed to withdraw the hand the man still held. It was curious.
+Every word he said expressed just those things and tributes which her
+girlish vanity had desired. There was not a word in all of it to give
+offence. But for the second time she experienced a sense of trouble
+which her woman's instinct prompted, and a feeling akin to panic
+stirred. But she resisted it, as she knew she must, and her mind was
+quite made up.
+
+"You're--very kind," she said, with all the earnestness she could
+summon, and with a gentleness that was intended to disarm. "But I'm so
+very--very tired. You don't know what it was like on the _Myra_. We were
+battered and beaten almost to death. I feel as if I needed sleep for a
+week."
+
+The man released her hand lingeringly. His disappointment was intense,
+but he smiled.
+
+"Why, sure," he said, "if you feel that way. I hadn't thought."
+
+Then he turned abruptly back to his desk. "That's all right. Guess
+we'll leave it. You go right home and get your rest."
+
+For a moment Nancy hesitated. She was fearful of giving offence. She
+felt the man's disappointment in his tone, and in the manner of his
+turning away. But she dared not yield to his request. Suddenly she
+remembered, and all hesitation passed.
+
+"I--I just want to thank you for your kind thought sending me those
+flowers and fruit," she exclaimed. "I wanted to thank you before, but I
+was too excited with my news. I--"
+
+The man cut her short.
+
+"That's all right, my dear," he said. Then he nodded and deliberately
+turned to his work. "I'm glad. Now--just run right along home
+and--rest."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+DRAWN SWORDS
+
+
+The palatial halls and public rooms of the hotel were crowded.
+Everywhere was the hum of voices, which penetrated even to the intended
+quiet of the writing rooms. Every now and then the monotony of it all
+was broken by the high-pitched, youthful voices of the messenger boys
+seeking out their victims.
+
+Bull Sternford was at work. Within an hour of his arrival he was plunged
+in the affairs connected with the great business organisation he
+projected. The earlier date of his visit to Quebec had necessitated
+considerable changes in plans already prepared. He had entailed for
+himself endless added work for the pleasure of the companionship of a
+beautiful girl on the journey down the coast, and begrudged no detail of
+it. Just now he was writing to a number of important people, bankers and
+financial men, re-arranging appointments to suit his change of plans.
+
+There was something tremendously purposeful in the poise of the man's
+body as he sat at one of the many writing tables scattered about the
+smoking lounge. There were few passers-by who did not glance a second
+time in his direction with that curiosity which is unfailing in human
+nature at sight of an unusual specimen of their kind.
+
+Twice a name was called by a uniformed boy in that unintelligible
+fashion which seems to be the habit of his species. The boy hovered
+round. Then he came up behind the chair on which Bull was seated and
+hurled his final challenge.
+
+"Sternford, sir?" he asked curtly.
+
+His victim turned.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Wanted on the 'phone, sir."
+
+The boy was gone on the run. He had hunted his quarry down. There were
+still fresh victories to be achieved.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bull was at the 'phone, and his eyes were smiling at an insurance
+advertisement set up for the edification and interest of those whose use
+of the instrument prevented their escape.
+
+"Yes. Oh, yes. Got in this morning. What's that? Oh, pretty rough. Yes.
+It's a bad sea most all the time. Why, that's good of you, Mr.
+Peterman." His smile broadened. "Yes. You sent an excellent ambassador.
+A charming girl. Well, there's no time like the present. Yes. I've
+lunched. I'm just through with my mail. Four o'clock would suit me
+admirably. Why sure I'd like to. All right. G'bye."
+
+He stood for a moment after replacing the receiver. Then, becoming aware
+of another wanting to use the instrument, he moved away.
+
+Returning to the smoking lounge he finished off his correspondence and
+took possession of one of the couches and lit a cigar.
+
+For a time the hang-over of business pre-occupied him. But it was not
+for long. His whole thought swiftly became absorbed in Nancy McDonald,
+with her wonderful halo of vivid hair. It had been the same during the
+whole of his journey down from Sachigo, in fact, from the moment he had
+first set eyes on her when she entered his office on that memorable day
+of her visit. She pre-occupied all his leisure.
+
+He had thought deeply on the meaning of her visit to him, and his
+thought had had little to do with the mission she had come upon. Swift
+decision had dealt with that. No, it was the girl herself who claimed
+him.
+
+He understood the sheer design of the Skandinavia in sending so perfect
+a creature to him. That was easy. It only helped to prove their
+desire--their urgent desire--to free themselves from the threat of his
+competition. But he wondered at their selection.
+
+Somehow he felt that the Skandinavia should have chosen, if their choice
+fell upon a woman, a clever, brilliant, unscrupulous creature who knew
+her every asset, and was capable of playing every one of them in the
+game of commercial warfare. Instead of that they had sent Nancy, with
+her sweetly beautiful face and perfect hair, to be their unthinking
+tool. He realised her simplicity, her splendid loyalty to those she
+served. He knew she was without design or subterfuge. She was just the
+most beautiful, desirable creature he had ever beheld in his life.
+
+He told himself it was all wrong. This wonderful child should never have
+been sent on such a journey, on such an errand. She was fit only for the
+shelter of a happy home life, protection from every roughness, every
+taint with which the sordid world of commerce could besmirch her. His
+chivalry was stirred to its depths, and the wrong of it all, as he saw
+it, only the more surely deepened his purpose for his dealings with an
+unscrupulous rival who could commit so egregious an outrage.
+
+Bull Sternford's existence, until now had always been a joyous
+heart-whole striving which had no more in it than the calmly conceived
+ideals of a heart undisturbed by sexual emotions. Now--now that had been
+completely changed. Perhaps he was not yet wholly aware of the thing
+that had come to him. He saw a woman, a perfect creature who had come to
+him out of the forest world in which his whole life was bound up, and a
+passionate excitement had taken possession of him. There could be no
+denial of that. But so far the full measure of his feelings had not
+revealed itself. All he wanted was to think of nothing and nobody just
+now, but this girl who had stirred him so deeply. So he stretched
+himself out on the well-sprung couch and yielded to the delight of it
+all.
+
+But the hour he had been free to dispose of thus was swiftly used up
+with his pleasant dreaming. And it was with a feeling of real irritation
+that he finally flung away his cigar and bestirred himself. His
+irritation did not last long, however, and his consolation was found in
+the fact that Elas Peterman was awaiting him, and Elas Peterman was the
+man who had so outrageously offended against his ideas of chivalry.
+
+He stood up and brushed the fallen cigar ash from his clothing. His one
+desire now was to get through with the business once and for all, to do
+the thing that should leave Nancy McDonald with the reward of her
+labours. Yes, he wanted to do that. Afterwards--well, he must leave the
+"afterwards" to itself.
+
+He hurried away in search of his heavy winter overcoat.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Elas Peterman looked up as the door opened to admit his visitor. His
+first impression startled him not a little.
+
+It was the first time he had encountered the man from Sachigo.
+
+Bull moved into the room with that large ease which big men so often
+display. And he paused and frankly gripped the carefully manicured hand
+Peterman held out to him.
+
+"I'm real glad to meet you, Mr. Peterman," he said quietly. Then he
+dropped into the chair set for him, while his eyes responded unsmilingly
+to the measuring gaze of the other.
+
+"It's queer we've never met before," Bull said, leaning back in his
+chair.
+
+Peterman laughed. He pushed a large box of cigars close to the visitor's
+hand.
+
+"It's mostly that way with the high command in--war," he said easily.
+"The opposing generals don't meet except at the--peace table. Those are
+Bolivars. Try one?"
+
+Bull helped himself with a laugh that was about as real as the other's.
+
+"The pipe of--peace, eh?" he said.
+
+"That's how I hope," Peterman replied.
+
+Bull nodded as he lit his cigar.
+
+"Most of us hope for peace, and do our best to aggravate war. That so?"
+
+"It's damn fool human nature."
+
+Peterman sat back in his chair, and laughed a little boisterously. Then
+he turned to the window while Bull silently consulted the white ash of
+his cigar.
+
+"You're projecting a big thing in pulp," the Swede said a moment later.
+"You figger to split the Canadian pulp trade into two opposing camps.
+The Skandinavia and the Labrador enterprises. It means one great, big
+prolonged battle in which one or the other is to be beaten. Guess it's
+liable to be a battle in which the public'll get temporary benefit,
+while we--who fight it--look like losing all along the line. It seems a
+pity, eh?"
+
+"War's a tough proposition, anyway," Bull replied slowly. "Its only
+excuse is it's Nature's way of wiping out the fool mistakes and crimes
+human nature spends most of its time committing. If two sets of
+criminals set out to grab, it's odds they'll do hurt to each other, and
+end by leaving the world easier when they're completely despoiled."
+
+Peterman laughed.
+
+"Sure," he said. "And these fool criminals? Is there need for them to
+fall out?"
+
+"None."
+
+"That's how we of the Skandinavia feel. That's the notion always in my
+mind. Say--"
+
+"Yep?"
+
+Bull's eyes were squarely gazing. Their clear depths looked straight
+into the dark eyes of the man at the desk. Their regard was intense. It
+was almost disconcerting.
+
+"What's the proposition?" he went on. And his firm lips closed over the
+last word and contrived to transform the simple question into a definite
+challenge.
+
+Peterman stirred uneasily. At that moment he beheld more clearly than
+ever the picture of this man with his great arms about the body of the
+woman he coveted, and feeling lent sharpness to his tone.
+
+"What's the price you set on your enterprise up at Labrador?" he said.
+
+Bull removed his cigar. He emitted a pensive stream of smoke. His eyes
+were again pre-occupied with the white ash, so firm and clean on its
+tip. Then quite suddenly he looked up.
+
+"If you'll tell me the price you set on the whole of the Skandinavia,
+I'll talk."
+
+"What d'you mean?"
+
+The Swede had less command of his feelings than the other. He had never
+learnt the methods of the forest as Bull had learned them.
+
+"Why, I can't set a price on Sachigo till I know the price you set on
+the Skandinavia," Bull's eyes were smiling. "You see I should need to
+double it for--Sachigo."
+
+The man from Labrador had driven home to the quick, and the Teutonic
+vanity of the Swede was instantly aflame. Peterman had committed the one
+offence which the younger man could not forgive. He had dared, in his
+vanity, to believe that the situation between them was a question of
+price.
+
+"I didn't invite you here to sell you--the Skandinavia," Peterman
+blustered, giving way to anger he could not restrain.
+
+"No. And I didn't accept your invitation for the purpose of
+selling--Sachigo. If there's any buying and selling going on you'd best
+understand quite clearly I am the buyer."
+
+There was a dangerous light in Bull's eyes levelled so steadily on the
+angry face of the Swede.
+
+"Then--it's war?"
+
+Bull shrugged at the challenge.
+
+"I'm quite indifferent," he said coldly.
+
+There was a moment of tense silence. Then the Swede smiled.
+
+"You're ready then to let the fool public benefit at your expense?"
+
+"No." A smile of real humor flashed in Bull's eyes. "At yours."
+
+"You mean--you think to--smash us?"
+
+"Just as sure as the sun'll rise to-morrow. Just as sure as Providence
+set up forest and water powers on Labrador such as you've never dreamed
+of since you forgot your boyhood. Just as sure as your Shagaunty's
+played out and you need to start in on fresh limits you aren't sure of
+yet. Just as sure as they're going to cost you a heap more than when you
+were busy treating the fortune that Shagaunty handed you like the worst
+fool-head spendthrift who ever broke a bank at the gambling tables."
+
+Bull rose abruptly from his chair.
+
+"I'm obliged for this interview, Mr. Peterman," he went on. "It's suited
+me. That's why I came along down in a hurry. You're fortunate in that
+lady representative. Her tact and persuasion left me feeling you had a
+real proposition that was worth considering. I guess she'll go a long
+way for you, and if there's any live person can help your ship along,
+she's that live person. But you can't buy me, and you can't smash me. I
+mean that. You see, I know your position. It's my job to know the
+position of any possible competitor, and naturally I know yours. Your
+Shagaunty's run dry, and, well, I don't need to tell you all that means
+to you." He dropped the stump of his cigar into an ash tray. "That's a
+good cigar," he went on with a derisive smile. "Thanks. Good-bye."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bull was at the telephone again. He was again smiling at the insurance
+advertisement. But now his smile was of a different quality. It was full
+of delighted anticipation.
+
+"Oh, yes," he was saying. "I spent quite a pleasant ha'f hour with him.
+I enjoyed it immensely. Yes. He seems to be the man to run an enterprise
+like yours. He certainly has both initiative and confidence. A little
+hasty in judgment, I think. But--yes, I'd like to tell you all about it.
+What are you doing this evening? Oh, resting. I suppose you eat while
+resting. Yes. It's necessary, isn't it? Anyway I find it so. Eh? Oh,
+yes. You see, I've a big frame to support. Will you help me to support
+it this evening? I mean dinner here? Will you? Oh, that's fine. I'd love
+to tell you about it all. Fine. Right. Eight o'clock then. I'll go and
+arrange it all now. It shall be a very special dinner, I promise you.
+Good-bye."
+
+He put up the receiver and turned away. His smile remained, and it had
+no relation to anything but his delight that Nancy McDonald had
+consented to dine with him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+AT THE CHATEAU
+
+Nancy was standing before the mirror which occupied the whole length of
+the door of the dress-closet with which her modest bedroom had been
+provided by a thoughtful architect.
+
+She was studying the results of her preparations. She was to dine with
+Bull Sternford, the man who had caught and held her interest for all she
+knew that they belonged to camps that were sternly opposed to each
+other. She wanted to look her best, whatever that best might be, and she
+was haunted by a fear that her best could never rank in its due place
+amongst the superlatives.
+
+However, she had arrayed herself in her newest and smartest party frock.
+She had spent hours, she believed, on her unruly masses of hair, and
+furthermore, she had assiduously applied herself to obliterating the
+weather stain which the fierce journey from Labrador had inflicted upon
+the beautiful oval of her cheeks. Now, at last, the final touches had
+been given, and she was critically surveying the result.
+
+The longer she studied her reflection the deeper grew the discontent in
+her pretty, hazel eyes. It was the same old reflection, she told
+herself. It was a bit tricked out; a bit less real. It was a tiresome
+thing which gave her no satisfaction at all. There was the red hair that
+looked so very red. There were the eyes, which, at times, she was
+convinced were really green. There was the stupid nose that always
+seemed to her to occupy too much of her face. And as for her cheeks, the
+wind and sea had left them looking more healthy, but--She sighed and
+hurriedly turned away. She felt that mirrors were an invention
+calculated to upset the conceit of any girl.
+
+She moved quickly round the little room. Her gloves, her wrap. She
+picked them up. The gloves she was painfully aware had already been
+cleaned twice, and her cloak had no greater merits than the
+modest-priced frock which had strained her limited bank roll. Then she
+consulted the clock on her bureau, and, picked up her scent-spray. This
+was the last, the final touch she could not resist.
+
+In the midst of using it she set it down with a feeling of sudden panic.
+
+She had remembered. She stood staring down at the dressing table with a
+light of trouble in her eyes. The whole incident had been forgotten till
+that moment. She remembered she had refused to dine with Elas Peterman
+that night on a plea of weariness, and without a thought had
+unhesitatingly accepted the invitation of the man whom the Skandinavia
+had marked down for its victim.
+
+For some seconds the enormity of the thing she had done overwhelmed her.
+Then a belated humour came to her rescue and a shadowy smile drove the
+trouble from her eyes.
+
+Suppose--but no. Her chief would be dining at home, as was his habit.
+Then, anyway, there could be no harm. She was concerned in this thing.
+She had a right. She even told herself it was imperative she should know
+what had transpired at the interview she had brought about. Besides, was
+there not the possibility of certain rougnnesses occurring between the
+two men which it might be within her power to smooth down? That was
+surely so. She had no right to miss any opportunity of furthering the
+ends of her own people.
+
+Then she laughed outright. Oh, it was excuse. She knew. She was looking
+forward to the evening. Of course she was. Then, just as suddenly all
+desire to laugh expired. Why? Why was she looking forward to dining with
+Bull Sternford?
+
+Bull! What a quaint name. She had thought of it before. She had thought
+of it at the time when the lonely missionary of the forest had told her
+of him.
+
+Swiftly her thought passed on to her meeting with the man himself. She
+remembered her nervousness when she had first looked into his big,
+wholesome face, with its clear, searching eyes. Yes, she had realised
+then the truth of Father Adam's description. He would as soon fight as
+laugh. There could be no doubt of it.
+
+And then those days on the _Myra_. She recalled their talk of the
+sea-gulls, and of the men of the forests, and she remembered the almost
+brutal contempt for them he had so downrightly expressed. Then the
+moment of disaster to herself. It was he who had saved her, he who had
+fought for her, although he had been in little better case himself.
+
+What was it they had told her? He must be bought or smashed. She
+wondered if they realised the man they were dealing with. She wondered
+what they would have felt and thought if they had listened to the
+confident assurance of Father Adam. If they had listened to Bull
+Sternford himself, and learned to know him as she had already learned to
+know him. The Skandinavia was powerful, but was it powerful enough to
+deal as they desired with this man who was as ready to fight as to
+laugh?
+
+She shook her head. And it was a negative movement she was unaware of.
+Well, anyway, the game had begun, and she was in it. Her duty was clear
+enough. And meanwhile she would miss no opportunity to pull her whole
+weight for her side, even when she knew that was not the whole thought
+in her mind.
+
+But somehow there were things she regretted when she remembered the
+fight ahead. She regretted the moment when this man had saved her from
+almost certain death against the iron stanchions and sides of the
+_Myra_. She regretted his fine eyes, and he had fine eyes which looked
+so squarely out of their setting. Then, too, he had been so kindly
+concerned that she should achieve the mission upon which she had
+embarked. It would have been so easy and even exacting had he been a man
+of less generous impulse. A man whom she could have thoroughly disliked.
+But he was the reverse of all those things which make it a joy to hurt.
+He was--
+
+She pulled herself up and seized the pretty beaded vanity bag lying
+ready to her hand. Then the telephone rang.
+
+It was the cab which the porter had ordered, and she hastily switched
+off the lights.
+
+On the way down in the elevator her train of thought persisted. And long
+before she reached the Chateau, a feeling that she was playing something
+of the part of Delilah took hold of her and depressed her.
+
+But she was determined. Whatever happened her service and loyalty was in
+support of her early benefactors, and no act of hers should betray them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The scene was pleasantly seductive. There was no doubt or anxiety in
+Nancy McDonald's mind now. How should there be? She was young. She was
+beautiful. The man with whom she was dining was remarkable amongst the
+well-dressed throng that filled the great dining-room. Then the dinner
+had been carefully considered.
+
+But it was the delightful surroundings, the little excitement of it all
+that left the girl's thought care-free. The shaded table lights. The
+wonderful flowers. The dark panelling of the great room constructed and
+designed in imitation of an old French Chateau. Then the throng of
+beautifully gowned women, and the men who purposed an evening of
+enjoyment. The soft music of the distant string band and--oh, it was all
+dashed with a touch of Babylonic splendour with due regard for the
+decorum required by modern civilisation, and Nancy was sufficiently
+young and unused to delight in every moment of it.
+
+The first excitement of it all had spent itself, and laughing comment
+had given place to those things with which the girl was most concerned.
+
+"Folks can't accuse us of dilatoriness," she said. "Let's see. Why, we
+made land this morning after every sort of a bad passage, battered and
+worn, and in less than how many hours?--eight?--nine?--" she laughed.
+"Why, I guess a sewing bee wouldn't have got through their preliminary
+talk in that time."
+
+"No." Bull too was in the mood for laughter. "A sewing bee's mighty well
+named. There's a big buzz mostly all the time, and the tally of work
+only needs to be figgered when the season closes. We've settled up the
+future of two enterprises liable to cut big ice in this country's
+history in record time."
+
+"You've settled with Mr. Peterman?"
+
+"Roughly."
+
+The man's eyes were shining with a smile of keen enjoyment.
+
+Nancy experienced a thrill of added excitement as she disposed of her
+last oyster.
+
+"I haven't a right to butt in asking too many questions," she suggested.
+
+Bull tasted his wine and thoughtfully set his glass down. Then he looked
+across at the eager face alight with every question woman's curiosity
+and interest could inspire. He smiled into it. And somehow his smile was
+very, very gentle.
+
+"That's pretty well why we're here now though," he said. "You can just
+ask all you fancy to know, and I'll tell you. But maybe I can save you
+worry by telling you first."
+
+"Why, yes," Nancy said eagerly. "You see, I'm only a secretary. I'm not
+one of the heads of the Skandinavia. I sort of feel this is high policy
+which doesn't really concern me. You're sure you feel like telling me?
+Was Mr. Peterman--friendly?"
+
+"As amiable as a tame--shark."
+
+"That's pretty fierce."
+
+Bull shook his head.
+
+"It's just a way of putting it. Y'see even a tame shark don't get over a
+lifetime habit of swallowing most things that come his way. Peterman
+figures to swallow me--whole."
+
+Nancy's eyes widened. But the man's tone had been undisturbed. There was
+a contented smile in his eyes, and an atmosphere of unruffled confidence
+about him that was rather inspiring. The girl felt its influence.
+
+"You mean he figures to have you join up with the Skandinavia?"
+
+Bull shook his head as the waiter set the next course on the table.
+
+"No. He guesses the Skandinavia can buy me."
+
+"I--see."
+
+Nancy waited. She remembered this man was as ready to fight as to laugh.
+Somehow she scented the battle in him now, for all the ease in his
+manner.
+
+"I told him it couldn't. I pointed out if there was any buying to be
+done I figgered to do it."
+
+"You mean you would buy up--the Skandinavia?"
+
+Bull's smile deepened. The girl's incredulity amused him. He understood.
+To her the Skandinavia Corporation was the beginning and end of all
+things. In her eyes it was the last word in power and influence and
+wealth. She knew nothing beyond--the Skandinavia. A man in her place
+would have received prompt and biting retort. But she was a girl, and
+Bull was young, and strong, and at the beginning of a great manhood. He
+shook his head.
+
+"Well, not just that," he said. "But say, let's get it right. How'd a
+woman feel if she'd an elegant baby child, thoroughbred from the crown
+of his dandy bald head to the pretty pink soles of his feet? Just a
+small bit of her, of her own creation. Then along comes some big, swell
+woman, who's only been able to raise a no account, sickly kid, an' wants
+to buy up the first mother's bit of sheer love. Wouldn't she hear the
+sort of things a woman of that sort ought to? Wouldn't she get hell
+raised with her?"
+
+"But the Skandinavia's no--sickly kid."
+
+The girl's eyes were challenging. There was warmth, too, in her retort.
+His words had stirred her as he intended them to stir her.
+
+"You think that?" he said. "You think that they have the right to demand
+my--child? You approve? That was your desire when you came to me--that
+they should buy me up?"
+
+Bull's smile still remained. There was no shadow of change in it. But
+his questions came in headlong succession.
+
+Just for an instant a feeling of helplessness surged through the girl's
+heart. Then it passed, leaving her quite firm and decided. She looked
+squarely into the smiling eyes, and hers were unsmiling but earnestly
+honest.
+
+"My approval isn't of any concern. I knew that was the Skandinavia's
+purpose when I came to you."
+
+"And you called it a business arrangement?"
+
+"No. You did."
+
+The man broke into a laugh. It was a laugh of sheer amusement.
+
+"That's so," he said. "You were going to hand me the story of your
+mission, and I--and I butted in and told it to you--myself."
+
+The girl nodded.
+
+"You were very good to me," she said. "You saw I was going to flounder,
+and you took pity on me."
+
+Bull's denial was prompt.
+
+"I just short-circuited things. That's all," he said. Then he laughed
+again. "And I'm going to do it again right now. Here, I want you to hear
+things the way they seem to me. You think the Skandinavia's no sickly
+kid. Well, I tell you it is. Anyway, in this thing. Peterman wants to
+buy me. Why? Don't you know? I think you do. The Skandinavia's got a
+mighty bad scare right now. The Shagaunty's played out. And I'm jumping
+the market. For the practical purposes of the moment the Skandinavia's
+mighty sick. So Peterman and his friends reckon to buy me. You're wise
+to it all?"
+
+Bull's eyes were levelled squarely at the girl's. There was a challenge
+in them. But there was no roughness. It was his purpose to arrive at the
+full measure of the girl's feelings and attitude, so far as this effort
+on the part of his rivals was concerned.
+
+Nancy was swift to understand. In an ordinary way her reply would have
+been prompt. There would have been no hesitation. But, somehow, there
+was reluctance in her now. She made no attempt to analyse her feelings.
+All she knew was that this man had a great appeal for her. He was so
+big, he was so strongly direct and fearless. Then, too, his manner was
+so very gentle, and his expressive eyes so kindly smiling, while all
+the while she felt the fierce resentment against her people going on
+behind them.
+
+After a moment decision came to her rescue. She was of the opposing
+camp. She could not, and would not, pretend. It was clear that war lay
+ahead, and her position must be that of an honest enemy.
+
+"Yes," she said simply. "I think I know all there is to know about the
+position."
+
+She hesitated again. Then she went on in a fashion that displayed the
+effort her words were costing.
+
+"We're out to buy you or break you, and I shall play the part they
+assign me in the game. Oh, I've nothing to hide. I've no excuse to make.
+You will fight your battle, and we shall fight ours. Maybe we shall
+learn to hate each other in the course of it. I don't know. Yet there's
+nothing personal in the fight. That's the queer thing in commercial
+warfare, isn't it? I'd be glad for our two concerns to run right along
+side by side. But they can't. They just can't. And, as I understand, one
+or the other's got to go right to the wall before we're through. Can't
+all this be saved? Must all this sort of--bloodshed--go on? We're two
+great enterprises, and, combined, we'd be just that much greater.
+Together we'd rule the whole world's markets and dictate our own terms.
+And then, and then--"
+
+"We'd be doing the thing I'm out to stop--if it costs me all I have or
+am in this world."
+
+For a moment the man's eyes forgot to smile, and Nancy was permitted to
+gaze on the great, absorbing purpose his manner had hitherto held
+concealed. She was startled at the passionate denial, and robbed of all
+desire to reply.
+
+"Here!" Bull set his elbows on the table and supported his chin on his
+hands. "Get this. Get it good, and all the time. I wouldn't work with
+the Skandinavia for all the dollars this country's presses could print.
+I'm not going to hand you the reason. Some day, maybe when your folks
+have smashed me, or I've smashed them, I'll tell you about it. But I
+tell you this now, there's no sort of business arrangement I ever
+figgered to enter into with Elas Peterman, and there's no sort of thing
+in God's world ever could, or would, induce me to come to any terms of
+his."
+
+Then his manner changed again, and his passionate moment became lost in
+a great laugh.
+
+"Maybe you'll want to know why I changed my plans so easily, and came
+along down in a hurry to see Peterman. Why I seemed ready to fall for
+his proposition. Well, I guess I won't hand you the reason of that,
+either. I'd like to, but I won't." He shook his head and his laugh had
+gone again. "Anyway, it served my purpose, and Peterman knows just how
+things stand--and are going to stand--between us."
+
+"Then it's war? Ruthless, implacable--war?" There was awe in the girl's
+tone and her lips were dry. She sipped her wine quickly to moisten them,
+and set the glass down with a hand that was not quite steady. Bull saw
+the signs of distress.
+
+"Oh, yes, it's war all right," he said quietly. "Maybe it's ruthless,
+implacable. But it's part of the game. Don't worry a thing. You're in
+the enemy lines. You've got your duty. So far you've done your duty; and
+you've made good, and will get the reward you need. Well, go right on
+doing that duty, and there isn't a just creature on God's earth that'll
+have right to blame you. I won't blame you. Go right on; and when it's
+all through, I'll be ready to sit here with you again, and talk and
+laugh over it, as we've been doing--"
+
+He broke off. A frightened look had leapt into Nancy's eyes. She was no
+longer attending to him. She was watching the tall, squarely military
+figure of a man moving down one of the aisles between the softly lit
+tables. The man's dark eyes were searching over the room, as he followed
+the head waiter conducting him to the table that had been reserved for
+him. Bull turned and followed the direction of the girl's gaze. And as
+he did so he encountered the cold, unsmiling glance of the other man's
+eyes. It was only for an instant. Then he turned back to the girl.
+
+"Friend Peterman," he said.
+
+Nancy made a pretence of eating.
+
+"Yes," she said, without raising her eyes.
+
+Nancy's emotion was painfully obvious. Bull realised it. She was afraid.
+Why? A swift thought flashed through the man's mind, to be followed by a
+feeling such as he had never known before. Hitherto Elas Peterman had
+represented only a sufficiently worthy adversary who must be encountered
+and defeated. Now, all in a moment, that was changed into something
+fiercer, more furiously human and abiding.
+
+"Does it matter?" he asked very quietly.
+
+Nancy looked up from her plate. There was a flicker of a smile in the
+eyes that a moment before had expressed only apprehension. She shook her
+head.
+
+"I don't know--yet," she said. Her smile deepened. "You see, I refused
+to dine with him here to-night. I excused myself on a plea of weariness.
+I really did want rest. But--well, I didn't want to dine with him,
+anyway. He's seen me--with you."
+
+"Do you often dine with him?"
+
+The man had no smile in response, and his question came swiftly.
+
+"I've never dined with him."
+
+Bull sat back. His eyes were smiling.
+
+"Well, I guess the answer's easy. You're here fighting for the
+Skandinavia. And I'd say you've been doing it mighty well. Maybe
+Peterman'll feel sore, but he'll see it that way after--awhile."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+DEEPENING WATERS
+
+
+Nancy thought long and earnestly over her breakfast. She thought deeply
+as she proceeded to her office. Even the business of again taking up the
+thread of her work failed to absorb her.
+
+Apprehension disturbed, and a certain sense of guilt weighed upon her.
+The vision of the tall figure of Elas Peterman as it moved down the
+dining-room at the Chateau remained with her. She had caught the glance
+of his dark eyes. She knew he had recognised her; and there had been
+neither smile nor recognition in the swift exchange that had passed
+between them.
+
+So she answered the usual morning summons of her chief without any
+pleasant anticipation. She expected a bad time, and strove to prepare
+herself for it.
+
+But alarm vanished the moment she ushered herself into the man's
+presence. He was not at his desk poring over his littered
+correspondence. She found him standing before his favourite window,
+gazing out reflectively upon the grey light of the early winter day. He
+turned at the sound of her entry, and his smile of greeting lacked
+nothing of its usual cordiality.
+
+Had she observed him a moment before it must have been different. But
+she had been spared all sight of the mood that had driven him to abandon
+urgent correspondence in favour of the drab outlook beyond the window.
+It was a bad expression. It was the expression of a man of fierce
+cruelty. It was not an expression of open, hot anger, which flares up,
+passes, and is forgotten like the fury of a summer storm. It was rather
+the slowly banking clouds of winter, piling up for a climax that should
+be devastating. And through it all he had smiled, smiled with angry eyes
+that seemed to grow colder and harder every moment.
+
+Nancy knew little of the world, and less of men and women. It could not
+have been otherwise. Vital with a youthful optimism and strong purpose,
+she had devoted herself to work to the exclusion of everything else. And
+before that there had only been the scrupulous care of the good matrons
+of Marypoint. A wider experience, a maturer mind would have yielded her
+doubt as she beheld the man's smiling greeting now. She would have
+reminded herself of her offence, and understood its enormity in the eyes
+of a man. She would have had a better appreciation of her own
+attractions, and would have long since understood this man's regard for
+her.
+
+As it was she snatched at the relief his smile inspired.
+
+The man laughingly shook his head as the girl approached.
+
+"Nancy, my dear, I hope Mr. Bull Sternford gave you as good a dinner as
+I would have given you, and--as good a time generally. You look well
+rested, anyway."
+
+There was a sting in the words that all the man's care could not quite
+shut out. But the tone was of intended good-nature. In a moment Nancy
+was explaining.
+
+"Oh, I know you must think me terribly mean," she cried impulsively.
+"You must think I was just lying to you when you asked me to dine
+yesterday. But it wasn't so. It surely wasn't. May I tell you about it?"
+
+The man came back to his desk, and indicated the empty chair beside it.
+
+"Sure, if you feel that way," he said, dropping into his seat while
+Nancy took hers. "But I'm not angry. Truth I'm not." For a moment he
+gazed smilingly into the girl's troubled eyes. "Here," he went on. "I'll
+tell you just how I think. Maybe you won't figger it flattering, but
+it's just plain truth. Now I'm a married man and you're a young girl.
+Well, the Chateau isn't the sort of place for you and me to be seen
+together in. I didn't think of it when I asked you. I just wanted to
+hand you a good time for the good work you've done. Sort of prize for a
+good girl, eh? I hadn't another thought about it. And when you refused
+me, and I thought it over, I was kind of glad--I might have compromised
+you, and I certainly would have compromised myself. You get that? You
+understand me? Of course you do. That's what I like. You're so darn
+sensible. Now you tell me--if you fancy to?"
+
+Nancy sighed her relief. Her last cloud had passed away.
+
+"Oh, yes," she began at once. "I do want to tell you. You see I think
+it's all-important."
+
+"Yes."
+
+The man's smile was unchanged. But there was a dryness in his
+monosyllable that only Nancy could have missed.
+
+"Mr. Sternford 'phoned me after his interview with you."
+
+"He had your 'phone number?"
+
+"Surely, I gave him that before he left me after driving up from the
+docks."
+
+"I see. Of course. You drove up together after landing. I forgot."
+
+Nancy laughed.
+
+"I don't think I told you," she said. "But it doesn't matter, anyway.
+Yes, he drove me up. And the whole of this affair was so interesting I
+just had to hear the result of the interview with you. So I told him my
+'phone number. Well, right after he'd seen you he rang me up. He told me
+he couldn't speak over the 'phone the things that passed, and asked me
+to dine. I just had to fall for that. You see, this thing meant so much
+to me. It was the first big thing I'd handled, and--and I was so crazy
+to make good for you. So I promised. And it wasn't till after it was all
+fixed I realised the mean way I'd acted. You'll forgive me, won't you,
+Mr. Peterman? I just hadn't a notion to be mean, and I was all tired to
+death. But I had to hear about the things you'd fixed."
+
+"And you heard?"
+
+The man was leaning on the desk with one hand supporting his head. Not
+one shadow of condemnation or resentment was permitted in voice or look.
+And the girl was completely disarmed. But her smile died out and a swift
+apprehension, that had no relation to herself, replaced it. In a moment
+her mind had gone back to the declaration of war which was to involve
+the two enterprises.
+
+"Yes. He told me."
+
+"And--?"
+
+"Oh, it's all wrong. It's all foolish, and wrong, and just terrible,"
+she broke in impulsively. Then she became calmly thoughtful, and her
+even brows drew together in an effort to straighten out the things she
+wanted to say. She shook her head. "I'm sure he can be handled," she
+went on deliberately. "Oh, yes. In spite of the things they say of him."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+"Why he's as ready to fight as to laugh."
+
+"Who says that?"
+
+"That's the way they speak of him."
+
+"Who speaks that way?"
+
+Nancy laughed.
+
+"It was just a queer sort of missionary who told me. I met him when I
+was at Arden Laval's camp. A man they call Father Adam."
+
+Peterman nodded.
+
+"And you guess he can be handled?"
+
+"I think so." Nancy spread out her hands. "Oh, it's not for me to talk
+this way to you, Mr. Peterman, but--but--"
+
+"Go on." The man was patiently reassuring as the girl hesitated. "It's
+good to hear you talk. And then it was you who got him to listen to our
+proposal at all."
+
+The compliment had prompt effect. The girl's cheeks flushed, and a light
+of something approaching delight shone in the hazel depths of her eyes.
+
+"I don't know," she cried. "But it seems to me he's sort of reasonable.
+He's kind of full of ideals and that sort of notion. He's out for a big
+purpose and all that. But I don't believe he'd turn down any business
+arrangement that would hand him the thing he wants--"
+
+"Business arrangement?" Peterman sat up. The laugh accompanying his
+words was full of amiable derision. He shook his head. "If he won't sell
+he's got to be smashed. That's the only business arrangement that suits
+us. We're far too big for compromise. No, my dear. He won't sell. He
+asked to buy us. He--this darn fool man from Sachigo. He thinks to buy
+the Skandinavia like he's buying up all the mills he can lay hands on.
+But he bit off a chunk when he handed that stuff to me. He's as ready to
+fight as to laugh. Well, I guess he's going to get all the fight he
+needs. He'll get it plenty."
+
+"Then you mean to--smash him?"
+
+"Just as sure as it's started to snow right now," the man exclaimed,
+pointing at the window.
+
+Nancy's gaze followed the pointing finger. But it was not the snow she
+was thinking of. It was the man whom she beheld staggering under the
+tremendous weight of the Skandinavia's might. She felt pity for him. And
+incautiously she permitted Elas Peterman to realise her pity.
+
+"Can't anything be done?" she ventured gently. "Have you handled him? I
+mean--Oh, I'm sure he's reasonable. Can't the offer be made--more
+suitable? More--?"
+
+Peterman's eyes suddenly hardened.
+
+"What do you mean? I haven't handled him right? I've blundered? I--" He
+laughed without any mirth. "See here, Nancy, my dear, you're a bright
+girl, but don't hand me your worry for this darn fool. You're kind of
+tender-hearted. You guess it's a pretty tough thing to see a good-looker
+boy go down in a big commercial fight. That's because you're a woman.
+This sort of thing's part of business. It's harsher, more ruthless than
+even war on the battlefield with guns, and bombs, and stinking gas.
+We're going to fight this thing just that way. There's no mercy for Mr.
+Bull Sternford. He'll get all I can hand him just the way I know best
+how to hand it. And the tougher I can make it the better it'll please
+me. See? Now you just run right along and see to those things that are
+going to make you big in the Skandinavia, and don't give a thought for
+the feller who's handed me stuff I don't stand for in any man. There's
+liable to be big work for you in this fight, and I'd say you'll make as
+good in fight as in peace. You've got my goodwill anyway, my dear, just
+for all it's worth. That's all."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The door had closed behind the girl. Elas Peterman was on his feet
+pacing the thickly carpeted floor. There was no longer any attempt at
+disguise. A surge of jealous fury was raging through his hot heart and
+drove him mercilessly.
+
+The picture of Nancy, radiantly beautiful, seated at dinner with Bull
+Sternford had lit a fire of bitter hatred in his Teutonic heart. So he
+paced the room and permitted the fierce tide to flood the channels of
+sanity and set them awash with the ready evil of his impulse.
+
+From the first moment of the girl's story of her successful effort with
+this man, Sternford, this vaunting rival, Peterman had been bitterly
+stirred. The man's change of plans at her bidding he had understood on
+the instant. The man from Labrador had not changed his plans at the
+bidding of the Skandinavia. It was the girl who had induced him. It was
+she who had attracted him. Then the boat trip, and the girl's confession
+of his having, perhaps, saved her life. What had preceded that incident?
+What had followed it? And when Elas Peterman asked himself such
+questions it was simple for him to find the answer. He had seen
+Sternford, and had judged the position. He knew what would have happened
+had he been in this man's place. Sternford wasn't the man to throw away
+such chances, either. He had fallen for the girl, and she doubtless
+had--The picture he had witnessed at the Chateau had left him without
+any doubt. The driving up together from the docks, the telephone.
+Sternford had taken her to her apartment. Oh, it was all as clear as
+daylight. Then the girl's pity for the man who was to feel the weight of
+the Skandinavia's wrathful might. She had said he was reasonable. She
+had hinted that he, Peterman, had blundered. There was only one
+reasonable interpretation to the position. And it did not leave him
+guessing for one single moment.
+
+Once he passed a fleshy hand up over his forehead and brushed back his
+dark hair. Once he came to a pause before his window and stood gazing
+out at the falling snow with hot eyes. No such fury of jealousy had ever
+entered into his life before. Never had he dreamed before of the
+tremendous hold this girl had obtained upon him. His claim on her had
+all seemed so natural, so easy. He had looked upon her as property that
+was indisputably his. He might have learned something from his feelings
+when he had paraded her before Hellbeam. But he had not done so. Now he
+knew. Now he knew the whole measure of them. And the bitterness of his
+awakening was maddening.
+
+Well, Bull Sternford should get away with no play of that sort at his
+expense. He warned himself that he was no simple fool to be played with.
+And if Nancy wanted the man--But he broke away from under the lash of
+impotent fury, and turned to a channel of thought which was bound to
+serve a nature such as his in his present mood.
+
+He returned to his desk and flung himself into the chair. And after a
+while his mind settled itself to the task his mood demanded. He sat
+staring straight ahead of him, and presently the heat passed out of his
+eyes, and they grew cold, and hard. Later, they began to smile
+again--but it was a smile of cruelty, of evil purpose. It was a smile
+more unrelenting in its cruelty than any frown could have expressed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For the first time Nancy's eyes were open to the things of life as they
+really were. She had tasted a certain bitterness in the early days of
+her girlhood. But up till now the world had seemed something of a rose
+garden in which it was a delight to labour. Up till now she had seen no
+reverse to the picture of life as youth had painted it for her. Now,
+however, it was borne in upon her that there was a reverse, a reverse
+that was ugly and painfully distressing. It was this declaration of war
+between her own people and the man from Labrador.
+
+She lay in her bed that night thinking, thinking, and without any desire
+for sleep. Strive as she would to search the position out logically, to
+estimate the true meaning of it all, to fathom the chances of this war,
+and to grasp the necessity for it, all these efforts only resulted in a
+tangle of thought revolving about the picture of a youthful man of vast
+stature, with eyes that were always clear-searching or smiling, and with
+a head of hair that reminded her of a lion's mane. And as she gazed
+upon this mental picture there were moments when it seemed to her there
+was grave trouble in the clear depths which so appealed to her. The
+smile in her eyes seemed to fade out, to be replaced by a look that
+seemed to express the hurtful knowledge of a man disheartened, defeated,
+crushed. They were in rival camps. They were at war. Each desired
+victory. And yet the sight she beheld, the signs of defeat she
+discovered in the man's eyes gave her no joy, no satisfaction.
+
+She felt that the battle could end only one way. The might of the
+Skandinavia was too great for anything but its complete victory. She was
+sure, quite sure. Oh, yes. And she knew she would not have it otherwise.
+But the pity of it. This creature of splendid manhood. To think that he
+must go down--smashed. That was the word they used--smashed.
+
+How she hated the word. The big soul of him with his ready kindliness.
+Oh, it was a pity. It was a distracting thought. And why should it be?
+For the life of her she could see no need. A little yielding on his
+part. Just a shade less iron stubbornness. The whole thing could have
+been avoided she was sure. The olive branch had been held out by the
+Skandinavia. But he had deliberately refused it.
+
+No. He had made himself their enemy. Then surely there could be no
+complaint at the disaster that would overtake him. He was clearly to
+blame. So why let the contemplation of it distract her?
+
+She strove a hundred times to dismiss the whole thing from her mind. She
+courted sleep in every conceivable way. But it was all useless. The
+man's fine eyes and great body haunted her. They pursued her to her last
+waking thought. And, at last, she fell asleep, thinking of the strong
+supporting arms that had held her safe from the fury of Atlantic waves.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE PLANNING OF CAMPAIGN
+
+
+Nathaniel Hellbeam sat ominously calm and unruffled while Elas Peterman
+told of his meeting with Bull Sternford. He gave no sign whatever. There
+was just the flicker of a smile of appreciation of Bull's effrontery
+when he heard of his response to Peterman's invitation to sell. That
+alone of the whole story seemed to afford him interest. For the rest, it
+had only been the sort of thing he expected.
+
+He waited until the other had finished. Then he stirred in his chair. It
+was an expression of relief that his long, silent sitting had ended.
+
+"So," he said. "We do not buy him. No. We smash him."
+
+There was obvious satisfaction that the more peaceful process was to be
+set aside.
+
+He sat blinking at his subordinate in the fashion of a man who is
+thinking hard, and has no interest in the object upon which he is
+gazing.
+
+"It is as I think--all the time," he said at last. "That is all right. I
+make no cry out. It is easy to fight. I would fight always with an
+enemy. It is good. Now my friend, you have acted so. You bring the man
+from Sachigo to tell you to go to hell. Eh? Well you have thought much?
+You have planned for the fight? How is it you make this fight?"
+
+Elas was standing before the desk. He had, yielded his place to this man
+who was master of the Skandinavia. Now he looked down at the
+square-headed creature with his gross, squat body. It was a figure and
+face bristling with venom and purpose; and somehow he was conscious of a
+sudden lack of his usual assurance.
+
+"Oh, yes," he replied thoughtfully. "I've planned--sure. But I guess
+I'm in the dark a bit. It's going to cost a deal. It's not going to be
+easy. You were ready to buy. It was not necessarily to be the
+Skandinavia who bought. Well, are you--going to vote the credit for this
+fight?" He smiled uncertainly. "And to what extent?"
+
+"The limit. Go on."
+
+Peterman nodded.
+
+"There's no commercial enterprise that can stand idleness. His work must
+stop. His--"
+
+"That is the A.B.C. of it."
+
+There was sharp impatience in the financier's biting tone.
+
+"Just so. It is the A.B.C. of it."
+
+Hellbeam set back in his chair. He clasped his hands across his stomach.
+
+"I will tell you," he said, a wicked smile lighting his deep-set eyes,
+his cheeks rounding themselves in his satisfaction. "His work will stop.
+His mill is far away. There is no protection from attack except that
+which he can set up himself. He is going away. He will have eighteen
+hundred miles of water between him and his mill. It should be easy with
+a good plan and all the money. Listen.
+
+"His work must stop. How? There are ways. His mill may burn. His forests
+may burn. His men may revolt. They may refuse to work for him. All, or
+any of these things may serve. There are men at all times ready to carry
+out these things. You can tell them, or you need not, the way they must
+act." He shook his head. "You say to them his work must stop; and you
+pay them more than he can pay them. So his work will stop. That is so?
+Yes? Very well. There is ha'f a million dollars that will pay for his
+work to stop. I say that."
+
+Peterman was startled. He had not been prepared for so sweeping a
+proposal. He had understood that the man had been prepared to stand at
+almost nothing in his desire to achieve some end, the nature of which
+still remained somewhat obscure to him. For all his own lack of scruple
+in his dealings with those who offended, the calm, fiendish purpose of
+this man shocked him not a little.
+
+He took the chair usually occupied by his visitors.
+
+"You will pay ha'f a million dollars for this thing?" he demanded, to
+re-assure himself.
+
+Self-satisfaction looked out of the eyes of the man behind the desk.
+
+"More--if necessary."
+
+"By God! You must hate this boy, Sternford."
+
+Peterman's feelings had broken from under his control.
+
+"Sternford? Psha! It is not Sternford. No."
+
+The smile had gone from Hellbeam's eyes. They were fiercely burning.
+They were the hot, passionate eyes of a man obsessed, of a man possessed
+of a monomania. Peterman, watching, beheld the sudden change in him. He
+shrank before the insanity he had so deeply probed.
+
+Hellbeam sat forward in his chair. His forearms were resting on the
+desk, and his hands were clenched so that the finger-nails almost cut
+into the flesh of their palms. His massive face was flushed, and the
+coarse veins at his temples stood out like cords.
+
+"Here, I tell you," he cried gutturally, returning in his fury to the
+native Teuton in him. "Can you hate--yes? Have you known hate? Eh? No.
+You the white liver have. You cannot hate. It is not in you. Oh, no. It
+is for me. Yes. It has been so for years. And I tell you it is the only
+thing in life. Woman? No. I have known them. They mean little. They are
+a pleasure that passes. Money? What is it when you play the market as
+you choose? The day comes when you can help yourself. And you no longer
+desire so to do. Hate? That lives. That feeds on body and brain. That
+consumes till there is only a dead carcase left. Ah! Hate is for the
+lifetime. It can leave all those others as nothing. In it there is joy,
+despair, all the time, every hour of life."
+
+He held up one hand and opened his fingers. Then he slowly closed them
+with a curious expressive movement of ruthless destruction.
+
+"You hate and you think. You see your vengeance in operation. You see
+him there in your hand; and you see the blood sweat as you squeeze and
+crush out the life that has offended. Man, it is a joy that never leaves
+you till you accomplish this thing. Then, after, you have the memory.
+And while you think, even though he is dead, smashed in your grip, he
+still suffers as you think. Oh, yes."
+
+"And you hate--that way?"
+
+A feeling of sudden fear had taken possession of Peterman. This gross,
+squat man had become something terrible to him.
+
+"Ja!"
+
+The Teuton leapt in the furious emphasis hurled.
+
+"Oh, ja! I hate. I tell you of it."
+
+The man with the insane eyes picked up a pen. He turned it about in his
+fingers. Then, suddenly, but slowly, the fingers began to break it. The
+wood split under their pressure, and the pieces littered the table. He
+gazed at them for a moment. Then one hand clenched and came down with a
+crash on the blotting pad. Then he sat back in his chair again, with his
+cruel eyes gazing straight out at the window opposite.
+
+"It is years now. Oh, yes." A deep breath escaped from between the man's
+coarse lips. "I ruled the markets. I ruled them so that they obeyed me.
+I was the money power of this continent. I did as I chose. So I thought.
+Then he came. This man. He did not disturb me. Oh, no. I slept good all
+the time. Then I woke. I woke to find I was beaten of ten million
+dollars; and that Wall Street, the markets of the world, were laughing
+that this schoolmaster, this fool Scotsman from over the water, had
+picked my pocket while I slept. It was not the money. It was the laugh.
+And he got away. Oh, yes. I tell it now. The market knew of it then.
+They laughed. How they laughed. So I sat and thought. I had all. There
+was nothing more to have. And then I learned to hate."
+
+The narrowed eyes came back to the face of the man beside the desk.
+There was a sharp intake of breath.
+
+"This mill, this Sachigo, was built out of my money. And the man who
+built it was the man who robbed me while I slept."
+
+A world of fierce bitterness lay in the final words, and the man
+listening realised the enormity of the offence, as this man saw it. But
+he was left puzzled.
+
+"But you would have--bought this Sachigo?" he said, said.
+
+Hellbeam's eyes were again turned to the window.
+
+"Oh, yes," he said. "I would have bought. It would bring me to meet this
+man. It is that I ask. That only. My hands would close upon him. And I
+would see the blood sweat of his heart ooze under them."
+
+Hellbeam had finished. Peterman understood that. The passion had passed
+out of his eyes and the veins of his forehead were no longer distended.
+He remained gazing at the window.
+
+For some moments the younger man made no attempt to intrude further. He
+had little desire to, anyway. Without scruple himself, he still found
+little pleasure in probing the heart of this man, who was so powerful in
+his own destiny. That which he had witnessed had served only to show him
+the delicacy of his own position. He knew that the story had been told
+for one reason only. It was to convince him, for the sake of his own
+wellbeing in the Skandinavia, that he must make no mistake in the
+warfare he must wage against the people of Sachigo. It was for him to
+wage the battle with every faculty that was in him; and any failure of
+his would mean disaster for himself. This was no commercial warfare. It
+was the insane purpose of a monomaniac.
+
+In those silent moments Elas Peterman thought with a rapidity inspired
+by the urgency he felt to be driving him. And the fertility of his
+imagination served him unfailingly. Oh yes. Necessity was driving. But
+so, too, was his own personal feelings. He saw in the position that this
+man had revealed an advantage to himself he had never looked for. With
+the necessary money forthcoming, and no directors to concern himself
+with, literally a free hand, he could employ a power which, in these
+days of unrest and hatred between capital and labour, would be well-nigh
+overwhelming. The morality of it, the ultimate consequence of it
+mattered nothing. The smashing of Sachigo would mean the smashing of
+Bull Sternford. And he saw a way whereby the smashing of Bull Sternford
+could be achieved through--
+
+His mind focused itself, as it was bound to do, upon this thing as it
+affected his own desires. He, too, was a passionate hater, for all
+Hellbeam's denial. His thought leapt at once to Nancy McDonald and the
+man who had thrust himself between him and his desires. Whatever insane
+hatred lay behind Hellbeam's purpose, it was not one whit more insensate
+than Elas Peterman's feelings against the man who had come down from
+Sachigo at Nancy's bidding.
+
+Suddenly he looked up and glanced at the man occupying the chair that
+was his. Hellbeam was still gazing at the window, pre-occupied with his
+own thoughts.
+
+"You can leave this thing in my hands, sir," he said. "Our organisation
+has been working steadily to undermine the Sachigo people for months
+past. That has always been part of our policy. I'd say the whole
+thing's going to fit very well. You say, if necessary, you'll find half
+a million dollars for the business. We shan't need a tithe of that.
+However, it's well to know it. And none of it needs to worry our
+directors. I'll set about it right away--in my own fashion--and I'll
+promise you a quick result. We'll smash these folk all right. But how
+it's to hand you the man you need I'm not wise--"
+
+"No." Hellbeam's eyes were certainly derisive as they turned back from
+the window. "This man, Martin, will show himself when he sees
+the--destruction. My people will do the rest."
+
+"Unless he leaves it--to Sternford. They tell us this man would as soon
+fight as laugh. That's how Miss McDonald said the missionary, Father
+Adam, told her."
+
+"Father Adam?" The derision in the financier's eyes had deepened.
+"That's the man that other fool talks of."
+
+Peterman shrugged. The sting in the financier's words stirred him to
+resentment.
+
+"I don't know about that. Anyway--"
+
+"How is it you say? Get busy. Yes."
+
+Hellbeam rose stiffly from his seat and picked up his hat. He was quite
+untouched by the other's change of tone.
+
+"Do it how you please. Break that mill. I care nothing for the means.
+Smash 'em, and leave the rest to me. And when you that have done you can
+do the thing you please. You will have my good will. I say that. Now I
+go."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Peterman picked up the 'phone the moment the door had closed behind the
+one man in all the world he really feared, and at the other end of it
+Nancy took the message summoning her to his presence. The man spoke with
+unusual urgency. But his tone was pleasant, and more than conciliatory.
+He wanted her at once. She could leave her reports. She could leave
+everything. He had some news for her of the pleasantest nature. Oh, yes.
+He had determined big things for her. She had earned them all. But a
+thing had happened whereby there need be no limit to her advancement if
+she would take the chance of a big work offered her. Would she kindly
+come up right away.
+
+Nancy listened to this message with a stirring of heart. What was the
+great work that was to place no limit on her advancement? It was a
+feeling rather than a thought. For a moment she stood in her
+glass-partitioned office after she had received the message and a smile
+of great happiness lit her eyes.
+
+She was desperately earnest with a singleness of purpose which had in it
+something of the recklessness of the father before her. She was a child
+in all else. A wide vision of achievement was spread out before her. She
+could see nothing beyond. She could see nothing to give her pause,
+nothing even to bestir a belated caution. So she left her office for the
+interview Peterman had demanded without suspicion, and with a heart and
+mind ready to plunge her headlong into any labours which the Skandinavia
+demanded of her.
+
+She had completely forgotten, in that moment of exultation, the squarely
+military figure that had passed down the dining-room of the Chateau, and
+the coldly unsmiling eyes with which it had regarded her as she sat with
+her companion over their memorable meal.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+THE SAILING OF THE _Empress_
+
+
+Bull Sternford was reading over the telegram he had just written. Its
+phraseology was curious. But it expressed the things he wanted to say,
+and he knew it would be understood by the man to whom it was addressed.
+
+ "HARKER, SACHIGO, LABRADOR.
+
+ "Sailing to-morrow. War. Pass mill through hair sieve. Clear all
+ refuse. Watch fireguard. Look around. Plums otherwise ripe.
+ Return earliest date.
+
+ "BULL."
+
+He smiled as he looked up from his reading. An acquaintance passed
+through the hall of the hotel. He nodded to him. Then the smile died out
+of his eyes, and it was like the passing of a gleam of sunshine. He
+passed the message across the counter to the attendant and paid for it.
+
+War! It was only an added development in the course of the ceaseless
+work of life. The thought of it disturbed him not one whit. It was the
+element in which he thrived. But for all that his mood had lost much of
+its usual equanimity.
+
+For two weeks he had applied himself assiduously to the work upon which
+he was engaged. He had travelled hundreds of miles to the other capital
+cities of the country in pursuit of his affairs. He had worked in that
+express fashion which was characteristic of him. But under it all,
+through it all, a depressing disappointment hung like a shadow over
+every successful effort he put forth. The memory of an evening at the
+Chateau haunted him. The vision of smiling hazel eyes and a radiant
+crowning of vivid hair filled every moment of his waking dreaming. He
+had not seen or heard of Nancy McDonald since that first night in
+Quebec.
+
+To-morrow he sailed for England. The thought of it afforded him none of
+the satisfaction with which he had always looked forward to that
+journey. Yet it meant no less to him now. On the contrary. It really
+meant more. It meant that his work was marching forward to the great
+completion which was to crown his labours, and the work of those others
+who had conceived the task.
+
+It should have been a wonderful moment for him. The house of Leader and
+Company of London had thrown its doors open to him in welcome. Sir Frank
+Leader with his millions, his shipping, his great power, and the
+confidence which his name inspired in British commercial circles, would
+not fail. The prospect lying ahead, for all the threatened war, should
+have stirred him to a keen enthusiasm that achievement was within his
+grasp. But none of these emotions were stirring.
+
+He felt if he could only see Nancy McDonald, that perfect creature with
+her amazing beauty and splendid courage, just to exchange a few words,
+just to receive her smiling "bon voyage," and even to hear her laughing
+declaration of her frank enmity, why--it would--But there was no chance
+now--none at all. He sailed to-morrow.
+
+He had dreamed a wonderful dream since first he had beheld the charming
+fur-clad figure enter his office at Sachigo. He had realised, even in
+those first moments, the impish act of Fate. Nancy McDonald was the one
+woman in the world who could mean life--real life to him, and they were
+definitely arrayed against each other in the battle for commercial
+supremacy in which they were both engaged.
+
+But Fate's act had only added to his desire. The whole thing had
+appealed to his combative instinct. It had left him feeling there was
+not alone the storming of the Skandinavia's stronghold to be achieved.
+There was also a captive, a fair, innocent captive held bound and
+prisoned within the citadel for him to set free. He wanted Nancy as he
+wanted nothing else in the world. Sachigo? Canada for the Canadians?
+These things were cold, meaningless words. He only thought of the
+dawning of the day that should see Nancy his wife, his everything in
+life.
+
+He betook himself out on to the Terraces overlooking the slowly freezing
+waterway of the great St. Lawrence river. It was keenly cold, and the
+white carpet of winter's first snow remained unmelted on the ground. But
+the sun was shining, and the crisp air was sparkling, and the terraces
+were filled with fur-clad folk who, like himself, had found leisure for
+a half hour of one of the finest views in the world.
+
+He paced leisurely down the great promenade towards the old Citadel with
+all its memories of great men, and the old time Buccaneers who had made
+history about its walls. He gazed upon it and wondered. Were they such
+bad old days? Were the men who lived in those times great men? Were they
+scoundrelly Buccaneers? Were their scruples and morals any more lax than
+those of to-day? Were they any different from those who walked under the
+shadow of the old walls? They were the questions doubtless asked a
+thousand times in as many minutes by those who paused to think as they
+contemplated this fine old landmark.
+
+Bull found his own prompt answers. There was no difference, he told
+himself. The men and women of to-day were doing the same things,
+enduring the same emotions, fighting the same battles, living and
+loving, and hating and dying, just as life had ordained from the
+beginning of time. And as he stood there he wondered how long this round
+of human effort and passion must continue. How long this--
+
+"Why, I hadn't an idea you were so interested in our old history as to
+be wasting precious time out here in the snow, Mr. Sternford."
+
+The challenge was full of pleasant, even delighted greeting. And Bull
+snatched his cigar from his lips and bared his head.
+
+It was the voice he had longed to hear for many days. And it rang with
+an added charm in his delighted ears. He had turned on the instant, and
+stood smiling down into eyes that had never ceased from their haunting.
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"If you'll believe me I wasn't wasting time," he said. "I came out here
+for a very definite purpose. I've done the thing I hoped. Do you know I
+guessed I'd have to sail to-morrow without seeing you again?"
+
+Nancy's eyes sobered. And without their smile Bull thought he detected a
+cloud of trouble in them.
+
+"I didn't know you were sailing to-morrow," she said. "It's just a
+chance I couldn't help that let me meet you now."
+
+"You mean you avoided me--deliberately?"
+
+Bull's smile had passed. But there was no umbrage in his manner. The
+girl's appeal for him was never so great as at that moment. She had
+never been more beautiful to him. He had first seen her in that same
+long fur coat, and had gazed into her pretty eyes under the same fur
+cap. He was glad she was so clad now. To his mind no other costume could
+have so much charm for him.
+
+"Yes."
+
+The simple downrightness of the admission might have disconcerted
+another. But its honesty and lack of subterfuge only pleased the man.
+
+"That's what I thought. It's this business standing between your folk
+and me?"
+
+Nancy nodded.
+
+"Yes. We are enemies."
+
+"That's so," Bull agreed. "That's the pity of it. If you were on my
+side--"
+
+"But I'm not. No." Nancy's denial was almost sharp. It certainly was
+hurried. "I'm kind of glad I've seen you, though," she went on. "I've
+had it in mind I wanted to say things to you." A smile came back to her
+eyes. "You see, there are enemies and enemies. There's the enemy you can
+regard well. There's the enemy you can hate and despise. Well, I just
+want to say we're enemies who don't need to hate and despise--yet. I
+don't know how things'll be later. Maybe you'll learn to hate me good
+before we're through. But that's as maybe. I'm going to do my work for
+all I know for my folks. I'm going to be in this fight right up to my
+neck. I've been warned that way. Well, that being so, I'm going to fight
+without looking for quarter, and I shall give none. That sounds tough,
+doesn't it? But I mean it. And I wanted to say it before things start.
+I'm glad I've had the chance--against my notions of things."
+
+Bull laughed. He was in the mood to laugh--now.
+
+"It sounds fine. Say--"
+
+"Are you laughing at me?"
+
+"There isn't a thing further from my thoughts." Bull's denial was
+sincere and prompt. "I'm glad you happened along. I'm glad you said
+those things. Fight this war--as I shall--with all that's in you. It
+don't matter a thing if you're right or wrong. Fight it square and hard
+for your folk, and there isn't a right man or woman, but who'll respect
+you, and think the better of you for it. A good fight's no crime when
+you're convinced you're right."
+
+The girl drew a deep breath, and, to the man, it seemed in the nature of
+relief. A great anxiety for her stirred him.
+
+"I'm glad you said that," she said. Then she gazed reflectively up at
+the old ramparts. "No. It's no crime to fight when you're convinced.
+Besides it's right, too, to fight for your side at any time. That's how
+I see it. You'll fight for yours--"
+
+"Any old how." Bull's eyes were deeply regarding. They were very gentle.
+"Here," he went on, "fight has a clear, definite meaning for me. I
+fight to win. I'll stop at nothing. It's always a game of 'rough and
+tough' with me. Gouge, chew, and all the rest of it. Frankly, there's a
+devil inside me, when it's fight. I want you to know this, so your
+scruples needn't worry you."
+
+"Yes."
+
+Nancy's gaze was turned seawards.
+
+"And you sail--to-morrow? When do you return?" she asked a moment later.
+
+Bull smilingly shook his head.
+
+"We are at war," he said.
+
+The girl's eyes came back. She, too, smiled.
+
+"I forgot." Then she added: "You go by the _Empress_?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+They had both contrived to make it difficult. The barrier was growing.
+Both realised it, and Nancy was stirred more than she knew. She had seen
+this man and hurried over to him. She had purposely denied him for two
+weeks, but the sight of him on the promenade had been irresistible.
+Now--now she hardly knew what to say; and yet there were a hundred
+things struggling in her mind to find expression. She was paralysed by
+the memory of the recent interview she had had with her employers--the
+great financial head of her house included--wherein she had learned all
+that the coming war meant personally to herself. She would have given
+worlds at that moment to have been able to blot out that memory. But she
+had no power to do so. It loomed almost tragically in its significance
+in the presence of this man.
+
+Bull found it no less difficult. He had striven to make things easy for
+her. He had no second thought. And now he realised the thing he had
+done. His words had only served to fling an irrevocable challenge, and
+thus, finally and definitely, made the longed-for approach between them
+impossible.
+
+He drew a deep breath.
+
+"Yes. I sail on the _Empress_."
+
+"And you are glad--of course?"
+
+Bull laughed.
+
+"Some ways."
+
+"You mean--?"
+
+"Why, I shouldn't be sailing if things weren't going my way," he said.
+Then he turned about and his movement was an invitation. "But let's quit
+it," he said. "Let's forget--for the moment. You don't know what this
+meeting has meant to me. I wanted to see you, if only to say 'good-bye.'
+I thought I wasn't going to."
+
+They moved down the promenade together.
+
+Nancy did her best. They talked of everything but the impending war, and
+the meaning of it. But the barrier had grown out of all proportion. And
+a great unease tugged at the heart of each. At length, as they came back
+towards the hotel, Nancy felt it impossible to go on. And with downright
+truth she said so.
+
+"It must be 'good-bye'--now," she said. "This is all unreal. It must be
+so. We're at war. We shall be at each other's throats presently. Well, I
+just can't pretend. I don't want to think about it. I hate to remember
+it. But it's there in my mind the whole time; and it worries so I don't
+know the things I'm saying. It's best to say 'good-bye' and 'bon voyage'
+right here. And whatever the future has for us I just mean that."
+
+She held out her hand. It was bare, and soft, and warm, as the man took
+possession of it.
+
+"I feel that way, too," he said. "But--" he broke off and shook his
+head. "No. It's no use. You've the right notion of this. Until this
+war's fought out there is nothing else for it. You'll go right back to
+your camp and I'll go to mine. And we'll both work out how we can best
+beat the other. But let's make a compact. We'll do the thing we know to
+hurt the other side the most we can. If need be we'll neither show the
+other mercy. And we'll promise each to take our med'cine as it comes,
+and cut out the personal hate and resentment it's likely to try and
+inspire. We'll be fighting machines without soul or feeling till peace
+comes. Then we'll be just as we are now--friends. Can you do it? I can."
+
+For all the feeling of the moment Nancy laughed.
+
+"It sounds crazy," she exclaimed.
+
+"It is crazy. But so is the whole thing."
+
+"Yes. Oh, it surely is. It's worst than crazy." Passion rang in the
+girl's voice. Then the hazel depths smiled and set the man's pulses
+hammering afresh. "But I'll make that compact, and I'll keep it. Yes.
+Now, 'good-bye,' and a happy and pleasant trip."
+
+Their hands fell apart. Bull had held that hand, so soft and warm and
+appealing to him, till he dared hold it no longer.
+
+"Thanks," he said. "Good-bye. I can set out with a good heart--now."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was again the luncheon hour. It was also the hour at which the
+_Empress_ was scheduled to sail. Nancy was again on the Terrace. But now
+she was standing on the edge of the promenade--alone. She was gazing
+down at the grey waters of the great river, searching with eager eyes,
+and listening for the "hoot" of the vessel's siren. This was the last
+departure the _Empress_ would make from Quebec for the season. By the
+time she returned across the ocean the ice would deny her approach, and
+she would make port farther seawards.
+
+Nancy had come there in her leisure just out of simple interest, she
+told herself. The man was nothing to her. Oh, no. She felt a certain
+regret that they were at war. She felt a certain pity that it was
+necessary that so brave a man's hopes must be crushed and all his plans
+broken, but that was all. She told herself these things very
+deliberately.
+
+And so she had hurried over her mid-day meal, lest she should miss the
+sight of the _Empress_ steaming out, with Bull Sternford aboard.
+
+The day was cold and grey. There was snow in the heavy clouds, and the
+north wind was bitter. But it mattered nothing. Waiting there the girl's
+feet in their overshoes grew cold. Her hands were cold. Even her slim,
+graceful body under its outer covering of fur was none too warm. But her
+whole interest was absorbed and she remained so till the appointed time.
+
+Oh, yes. It was simply interest in the departure of the vessel that held
+her. Just the same, as it was simply interest that stirred her heart and
+set it a-flutter, as the sound of the ship's siren came up to her from
+below. And surely it was only a 'God-speed' to the departing vessel that
+was conveyed in the fluttering handkerchief she held out and waved, as
+the graceful giant passed out into the distant mid-channel.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+ON BOARD THE _Empress_
+
+
+It was the second day out and the passengers on the _Empress_ had
+already settled down to their week's trip.
+
+The sea was calm, with just that pleasant, lazy swell which the Atlantic
+never really loses. The decks were thronged with a happy company of men
+and women determined not to lose one single moment of the bodily ease
+which the clemency of the weather vouchsafed to them.
+
+Bull Sternford was amongst them. Engulfed in a heavy fur overcoat, he
+stood lounging against the lee rail of the wide promenade deck,
+contemplating the oily swell of the waters. His great stature was
+somewhat magnified by his voluminous coat, with its deep, upturned
+storm-collar. There was that about him to attract considerable
+attention. But he remained unconscious of it, and his aloofness was by
+no means studied.
+
+Deep emotion was stirring. A man of iron nerve and purpose, a man of
+cool deliberation under the harshest circumstances, just now Bull was
+afflicted like the veriest weakling with alternating hope and doubt, and
+something approaching indecision. The youth in him was plunged in that
+agony of desire which maddens with delight and drives headlong to
+despair. His whole horizon of life had changed. Old scenes, old dreams,
+had been suddenly blotted out. And in their place was the wonderful
+vision of a girl with vivid hair and gentle eyes. Nancy--Nancy McDonald.
+The name was always with him now, unspoken, unwhispered even; but
+occupying every waking thought.
+
+It was a time of reckless resolve, of hot-headed planning. He knew in
+his sober moments how almost impossible was the position. But these were
+not sober moments. He told himself, in his headlong way, that if Nancy
+was chained in the heart of Hell he would seek her out, and claim her.
+She should be his even though every infernal power were arrayed against
+him. His eyes were alight with a fierce smile, as he contemplated the
+grey waters. It was a smile of conscious strength, of reckless purpose.
+Well, he was ready. He was--
+
+"Guess we'll git this sort of stuff all the way."
+
+Bull started and swung around. A fur-coated man with a dark
+close-cropped beard was leaning over the rail beside him. He was
+expensively clad. His astrachan collar was turned up about his neck to
+shut out something of the biting winter air; and a cap of similar fur
+was pressed low down over his dark head. Bull noted the man's
+appearance, and his reply was promptly forthcoming.
+
+"Maybe," he admitted without interest.
+
+"Sure we will. It's always that way with the _Empress's_ last trip of
+the season from Quebec. I most generally make it for that reason. Your
+first trip?"
+
+"No."
+
+"It's my nineteenth. You see," the stranger went on, "I can't spare
+summer time. I'm too full gettin' orders out. I'm in the lumber
+business. It's only with the freeze up I can quit my mills. Have a
+cigar?"
+
+Bull had no alternative. The man was there to talk, and his desire to do
+so was frankly displayed.
+
+"I won't smoke, thanks," Bull replied without offense. "It's too near
+dinner."
+
+"Dinner? There's a ha'f hour to the dressing bugle." The stranger
+returned the elaborate case stuffed full of large, expensive cigars to
+his pocket, and drew out a gold cigarette case instead. "Still I don't
+blame you a thing. Cigars? Me for a cigarette all the time. I don't
+guess any feller ever heard tell of tobacco, till he'd inhaled a good,
+plain Virginia Cigarette."
+
+Bull looked on while the man wasted half-a-dozen matches lighting his
+beloved cigarette. He was not without interest. There was a slightly
+Jewish caste about his face which was frankly smiling, and lit with
+shrewd, twinkling dark eyes. He conveyed, too, somewhat blatantly, an
+atmosphere of abounding prosperity.
+
+Bull laughed as the cigarette was finally lighted.
+
+"That's better," he said. "Now--you can inhale."
+
+"Sure I can." The man's smile was full of amiability. "Inhale anything.
+Say, up in the camps I've inhaled tea-leaves rolled in cracker paper
+before now. Ever hit a lumber camp?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"But not out West? British Columbia?"
+
+"No. Only Quebec."
+
+The stranger shook his head disparagingly.
+
+"Quebec! Psha! Quebec ain't a thing. It ain't a circumstance," he said
+complacently. "No, sir. The West. That's the place for lumbering. B.C.
+West of the Rockies. Man, it's the world's greatest proposition. The
+place you can spend a lifetime cutting ninety foot baulks, and lose
+track of where you cut. Quebec's mostly small stuff," he went on
+contemptuously, "pulp-wood an' that." He shook his head. "It's no place
+for capital. And, anyway, the Frenchies have got the whole darn place
+taped out. Oh, they're wise--the Frenchies. If a feller's lookin' to get
+ahead of 'em he needs to stake out the Arctic, where you'd freeze the
+ears of a brass image. The Frenchies got it all. The only big stuff lies
+on Labrador, anyway. I know. I prospected. No, it's me for the big
+hills, West. The big hills and the big waterways that 'ud leave Quebec
+rivers looking like a leak in a bone dry bar'l. My name's Aylin P.
+Cantor, Vancouver, B.C. Maybe you know the name?"
+
+Bull shook his head.
+
+"I'm not--"
+
+"Oh, it don't matter," interjected Mr. Cantor. "You see, the West's one
+hell of a long way--west. I just didn't get your--"
+
+"Oh, my name's Sternford."
+
+Mr. Cantor's face beamed.
+
+"Why I'm glad to know you, Mr. Sternford," he exclaimed. Then a quick,
+enquiring upward glance of his shrewd eyes suggested recollection. "But
+say--you ain't Sternford of Labrador? The groundwood outfit up at--up
+at--"
+
+"Sachigo?"
+
+"That's it, sure. Guess I'd lost the name a moment."
+
+Bull nodded amusedly.
+
+"Yes. That's where I hail from. And, as you say, there's big stuff up
+there, too."
+
+"Big? Why I'd say. Well, now! That's fine! I've heard tell big yarns of
+Labrador. It's just great meeting--"
+
+The man broke off at the sound of the first blast of the dressing bugle.
+
+"Why, it's later than I guessed," he said. "Anyway, you'll take a
+cocktail with me? This vessel's good and wet, thanks be to Providence,
+and the high seas being peopled with fish instead of cranks. I hadn't a
+notion I was goin' to run into a real lumberman on this trip. It's done
+me a power of good."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Aylin P. Cantor was a diverting creature for all his appearance of
+ostentatious prosperity. Good fortune had undoubtedly been his, and his
+whole being seemed to have become absorbed in the trade which had so
+generously treated him. Before the cocktail was consumed Bull had
+listened to a long story of British Columbia, and forests of
+incomparable extent. He had also learned that a country estate, miles in
+extent, outside the city of Vancouver, and the luxuries associated with
+the multi-millionaire had fallen to the lot of Aylin P. Cantor. But
+somehow there was no offence in it all. The man was just a bubbling
+fount of enthusiasm and delight that this was so. He simply had to talk
+of it.
+
+But the acquaintance was not to terminate over a cocktail. Shipboard
+offers few avenues of escape to the man seeking to avoid another. So it
+came that Bull found himself sipping a brandy, reputed to be one hundred
+years old, over his coffee after dinner, while Aylin P. Cantor told him
+the story of how it came into his possession at something far below its
+market value.
+
+Later, again, while the auction pool was being sold, he found himself
+ensconced on a lounge in a far corner of the smokeroom beside his
+fellow craftsman, still listening chiefly, and absorbing fact and
+anecdote pertaining to a successful lumberman's life. And it was nearly
+eleven o'clock, and the pool had been sold, and the bulk of the
+occupants of the smoking-room were contemplating their last rubber of
+Auction Bridge, when the busy-minded westerner consented to abandon his
+particular venue for a brief contemplation of the despised East.
+
+"Oh, I guess there's money in your territory, too," he condescended at
+last. "I ain't a word to say against the stuff I've heard tell of
+Labrador. But you're froze up more'n ha'f the year. That's your
+trouble."
+
+"Yes."
+
+Bull nodded over the latter portion of his third cigar which Mr. Cantor
+had not permitted him to escape.
+
+"Sure," the man laughed. "Oh, the stuff's there. I know that. But
+Labrador needs a mighty big nerve to exploit. I heard it all from a
+feller I met when I was prospecting Quebec. You see, I had the notion of
+playing a million dollars in the Quebec forests once. But I weakened. I
+kind of fancied my chance against the Frenchies didn't amount to cold
+water on a red hot cookstove. I cut it out and hunted my own patch,
+West, again. But I guess I'd have fallen for the stories of Labrador, if
+it hadn't been for the feller who put me wise."
+
+"Who was that?" Bull had lost interest, but the man invited the enquiry.
+
+"Oh, a sort of missionary crank," Cantor returned indifferently. "You
+know the sort. We got 'em out West, too. They hound the boys around,
+chasin' them heavenwards by a through route they guess they know about."
+He laughed. "But the boys bein' just boys, the round up don't ever seem
+to make good; and that through trip looks most like a bum sort of
+freight in the wash-out season. Outside his missioner business I guess
+the guy was pretty wise, though. And his knowledge of the lumber play
+left me without a word. He knew it all--an' I guess he told it to me."
+
+Bull laughed. But the laugh was inspired by the thought that there could
+be found in the world a man who could leave Aylin P. Cantor without a
+word on the subject of lumber.
+
+"I'd like to make a guess at that feller," he said. "There's just one
+man I know who's a missionary in Quebec who knows anything about
+Labrador. Did he call himself, 'Father Adam?'"
+
+"That's the thing he did."
+
+"Ah, I thought so." Bull's smile had passed. "Where did you meet him?"
+he went on after a moment.
+
+"On the Shagaunty. The Skandinavia Corporation territory. He told me
+he'd just come along through from Labrador."
+
+"Oh, yes?"
+
+Mr. Cantor laughed.
+
+"Why he took me to his crazy shanty and handed me coffee. And he talked.
+My, how he talked."
+
+"Did he know you were--prospecting?"
+
+There was no lack of interest in Bull now. His steady eyes were alight,
+as he watched the stewards moving amongst the tables, setting the place
+straight for the night.
+
+"Yes. I told him."
+
+Cantor's dark eyes were questioning. As Bull remained silent he went on.
+
+"Why? Is he interested for the Skandinavia to keep folk out?"
+
+Bull shook his head.
+
+"No. It isn't that. He's a queer feller. No, I'd say he's got just one
+concern in life. It's the boys. But you're right, he knows the whole
+thing--the whole game of lumbering in Eastern Canada. And if he told
+you and warned you, I'd say it was for your good as he saw it. No. He's
+no axe to grind, and though you found him on the Skandinavia's
+territory, I don't think he likes them. I'm sure he doesn't. Still, he's
+not concerned for any employer. He just comes and goes handing out his
+dope to the boys, and--You know the forest-jacks. They're a mighty tough
+proposition. Well, it's said they feel about Father Adam so if a hair of
+his head was hurt they'd get the feller who did it, and they'd cut the
+liver out of him, and pass what was left feed for the coyotes."
+
+Mr. Cantor nodded.
+
+"Yes, I sort of gathered something of that from the folks I hit up
+against. It seems queer a feller devoting his life to bumming through
+the forests and seekin' shelter where you couldn't find shelter from a
+summer dew. He's got no fixed home. Maybe he's sort of crazed."
+
+Bull was prompt in his denial.
+
+"Saner than you or me," he said. "You know I'd want to smile if I didn't
+know the man. But I know him, and--but there we all owe him a deal, we
+forest men. And maybe I owe him more than anyone."
+
+"How's that?"
+
+Mr. Cantor's question came sharply. Even Bull, tired as he was, noted
+the keenly incisive tone of it. He turned, and his steady eyes regarded
+the dark face of the lumberman speculatively. Then he smiled, and picked
+up his glass and drained the remains of his whisky and soda.
+
+"Why, he's more power for peace with the lumber-jacks of Quebec than if
+he was their trade leader," he said, setting his empty glass down on the
+table. "We employers owe him there's never any sort of trouble with the
+boys."
+
+"I see." Mr. Cantor gazed out across the nearly empty room, and a
+shadowy smile haunted his eyes. "And if there was trouble? Could you
+locate him in time?"
+
+"We shouldn't need to. He'd be there."
+
+The lumberman stirred, and persisted with curious interest.
+
+"But he must have a place where you folks can get him? This coming and
+going. It's fine--but--"
+
+Bull stood up and stretched himself.
+
+"Oh, he's got a home, all right. It's the forests."
+
+Mr. Cantor threw up his hands and laughed.
+
+"Who is he, anyway? A sort of Wandering Jew? A ghost? A spook? That sort
+of thing beats me. He's got to be one of the two things. He's either a
+crank--you say he ain't--or he's dodging daylight."
+
+But Bull had had enough. Deep in his heart was a feeling that no man had
+any right to pry into the life of Father Adam. Father Adam had changed
+the whole course of his life. It was Father Adam who had made possible
+everything he was to-day--even his association with Nancy McDonald. He
+shook his head unsmilingly.
+
+"Father Adam's one good man," he said. "And I wouldn't recommend anyone
+to hand out anything to the contrary within hearing of the men of the
+Quebec forests. Good-night."
+
+He strode away. And Mr. Cantor followed him, slight and bediamonded in
+his evening clothes. And somehow the dark eyes gazing on the broad back
+of the man from Labrador had none of the twinkling shrewdness the other
+had originally observed in them. They were quite cold and very hard. And
+there was that in them which suggested the annoyance inspired by a long
+evening of effort that had ended in complete failure.
+
+The man's dark, foreign-looking features had lost every semblance of
+their recent good-natured enthusiasm.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE LONELY FIGURE AGAIN
+
+
+The laden sled stood ready for the moment of starting on the day's long
+run. Five train dogs, lean, powerful huskies, crouched down upon the
+snow. They gave no sign beyond the alertness of their pose and the
+watchfulness of their furtive eyes. Their haunches were tucked under
+them. And their long, wolfish muzzles, so indicative of their parentage,
+were pressed down between great, outstretched forepaws.
+
+The man studied every detail of his outfit. He knew the chances, the
+desperate nature of the long winter trail. He had no desire to increase
+the hardship of it all by any act of carelessness.
+
+Behind him lay the mockery of a camping ground. It was a minute,
+isolated bluff of stunted, windswept trees, set in a white, wide
+wilderness of barren land. Perhaps there was some half a hundred of
+them. But that was all. They had served, but only by reason that their
+shelter had satisfied habit, which, even in the men of the long trail,
+will not be denied.
+
+He turned away. Everything was to his satisfaction. So his tall,
+fur-clad figure passed in amongst the dwarf trees.
+
+The dogs remained crouching, their fierce eyes gazing out over the
+desolate expanse of winter's playground. It lay at a great altitude,
+several thousands of feet above the level of the sea. The sky was drab.
+It was bitter with threat. It was unrelieved by any break in the
+menacing winter cloud. It was a snow sky which only refrained from
+releasing its burden by reason of the high, top wind that drove the
+heavy masses relentlessly. The earthly prospect was no more inviting. It
+was wide, and flat, and devoid of vegetation. There were no hills
+anywhere, and the skyline was just a vanishing point similar to the
+horizon of the open sea. One vast, wide field of snow and ice spread out
+in every direction, and made desolation complete.
+
+When the man re-appeared he was armed with a sturdy "gee-pole," and at
+his belt was coiled a heavy-thonged, short-stocked driving whip.
+
+Without a word he thrust the pole under the front of the sled runners,
+and a sharp command broke from his lips. The effect was instantaneous.
+Each dog sprang at his "tug." The man heaved on his pole. There was a
+moment of straining, then the holding ice gave up its grip, and the sled
+shot forward.
+
+The man stood for a moment beating his mitted hands. Then he took his
+place on the sled, buried his legs and feet under the heavy seal robes
+set ready, and so the long-waited command to "mush" was hurled at the
+waiting beasts.
+
+The dogs leapt at their work and the sled swept forward with a rush. A
+blinding flurry of snow dust rose in its wake, enveloping it, and the
+dogs raced on, yelping with the joy of activity. Their great muscles
+were aquiver with the eager spirit which is bred of the wild. And so
+they would continue to run, for their load was light, and the
+heavy-thonged whip was playing in skilful hands, and they knew, and
+feared, and obeyed its constant threat.
+
+The way lay across the frozen bosom of a great lake, no less than an
+inland sea, and a hundred miles must be travelled before night, or the
+snow, overtook them. It was a hard run. But it must be accomplished.
+Failure? But failure must not be considered. No man could contemplate
+failure and face the winter trail in the barren desolation of the lofty
+interior of Labrador's untracked wild.
+
+The austerity of the country was well-nigh overwhelming. The nakedness
+of it all suggested a skeleton world robbed of everything that could
+make existence possible. It suggested a world that was sick, and aged,
+and too unfruitful to harbour aught but the fierce elemental storms of
+the northern winter. And the cold of it ate into the bones of the lonely
+figure passing through the great silence like a ghost.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The night was deathly still. A thermometer would have registered
+something colder than sixty degrees below zero. Not a breath of wind
+stirred. The only sound that came was the doleful note of a prowling
+wolf in the forest belt near by, and the booming protest of the trees
+against the bitterness of winter.
+
+The sky was ablaze with a myriad jewels in a velvet setting. And a cold
+wealth of aurora lit the northern heavens. Camp had been pitched well
+wide of the nearby forests, and three men sat crouching over the fire.
+There was little enough to differentiate between them. They were white
+men, and all were clad, from their heads to the soles of their seal hide
+moccasins, in heavy furs. The dark outlines of two sleds showed up a few
+yards away, but the dogs, themselves, were not visible. Weary with their
+day's run they had betaken themselves to their nightly snow burrows to
+dream over past battles, past labours.
+
+The men were talking earnestly in the low, slow tones which the silence
+of the forests seems to inspire. Three pairs of bare hands were outheld
+to the welcome blaze of the fire. Three pairs of clear gazing eyes
+searched the heart of it. None were smoking. It would have been a burden
+to keep the pipe stem from freezing even in the vicinity of the fire,
+and none of them were in any mood to accept any added burden.
+
+A blue-eyed, beardless youth shifted his gaze to the dark face directly
+opposite him beyond the fire.
+
+"Oh, we got that guy--good," he said. There was laughter in his eyes but
+not in his tone. "We got him plumb at the game. He was chock full of
+kerosene and tinder, and he'd fired the patch in several places. We were
+on it quick. We beat the fire in seconds. As for him, why, I guess his
+Ma's going to forget him right away. Leastways I hope so. He went out
+like the snuff of a lucifer, and his body's likely handed plenty feed to
+any wolf straying around."
+
+The dark man across the fire nodded.
+
+"Did he hand a squeal before--he went?"
+
+"Not a word. Hadn't time. Peter here didn't ast a thing either."
+
+The youth laughed softly, and the man called Peter took up the story.
+
+"Tain't no use arguin' with a feller loaded with kerosene in these
+forests," he said, in a low grumbling way. Then he reached down and
+snatched a brand from the fire and flung it out on the snow. His action
+was followed swiftly by a wolfish howl of dismay. Then he again turned
+his grizzled, whiskered face to the dark man beyond the fire. "You see,
+Father, it's our job keeping these forests from fire, an' it ain't easy.
+It don't much concern us who's out to fire 'em. That's for other folks.
+The feller with kerosene in these forests is goin' to get the stuff we
+ken hand him. That's all. Bob an' me got our own way fer actin'."
+
+Bob laughed
+
+"We sure have," he said. "But we don't allers pull it off. No. We've had
+ten fires on our range in two weeks. We've beat the fires, but we ain't
+smashed the 'bugs' that set 'em."
+
+"Would they be all one feller? The feller that got it?" The dark man's
+eyes were serious. His tone was troubled.
+
+Peter shook his head.
+
+"No, sir. There's more'n one, sure. An' from the things I've heerd tell
+from the boys on the neighbourin' ranges it's happening all along
+through our limits. They tell me there's queer things doin' an' no one
+seems to locate the meaning right."
+
+"What sort of things?"
+
+The dark man spoke sharply. Peter's reply came after profound
+deliberation.
+
+"Oh, things," he said. Then he thrust a gnarled brown hand up under his
+fur hood, and scratched his head. "There's our forest 'phones. They're
+bein' cut. It's the same everywhere. There's most always things to break
+'em happenin', but a break aint a cut. No. They're cut. Who's cuttin'
+'em, and why? Fire-bugs. It ain't grouchy jacks. No. I've heerd the
+jacks are on the buck in parts, but that ain't their play. There ain't a
+jack who'd see these forests afire, or do a thing to help that way. You
+see, it's their living, it's their whole life. We got so we can't depend
+a thing on the 'phones. An' cut our forests 'phones and we're gropin'
+like blind men."
+
+"Yes."
+
+The leaping flames were dropping, and Bob moved out to the store of
+fuel. He returned laden, and packed the wood carefully to give the
+maximum blaze. Then he squatted again, and again his hands were thrust
+out to the warmth which meant luxury.
+
+Peter had no more to add. His grey eyes searched the heart of the fire
+as he reflected on the things which were agitating his mind.
+
+"I want to get word down, but I can't depend on the 'phones," he said
+presently. "If they ain't cut I can't tell who's gettin' the message
+anyway. Maybe the wires are bein' tapped."
+
+The man across the fire nodded.
+
+"I'm going down," he said.
+
+"I'm glad." Peter's acknowledgment came with an air of relief. "I'll
+hand you a written report before you pull out."
+
+"It's best that way."
+
+The fire was leaping again. Its beneficent warmth was very pleasant. Bob
+turned his eyes skyward.
+
+"You'll get a good trip, Father," he said. "That snow's cleared out of
+the sky. It 'ud ha' been hell if it had caught you out on the lake."
+
+"Yes. I wouldn't have made here. I wouldn't have made anywhere if that
+had happened." The dark man laughed.
+
+Peter shook his head.
+
+"No. You took a big chance."
+
+"I had to."
+
+"So?"
+
+"Yes. I had to get through. There's a big piece of trouble coming."
+
+"To do with these fires?"
+
+"I guess so."
+
+"I see."
+
+Peter's comment was full of understanding. After awhile the other looked
+up.
+
+"Guess I need a big sleep," he said. "I've got to pull out with
+daylight. Anything you want besides that written report passed on down?"
+
+Peter shook his head and sat on awhile blinking silently at the
+firelight. Then the dark man scrambled to his feet. He stood for a
+moment, very tall, very bulky in his fur clothing, and nodded down at
+the others.
+
+"So long," he said. And he moved off to his sleeping bag which was laid
+out to receive his tired body.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The man stood just within the shelter of the twilit forests. He was a
+powerful creature of sturdy build, hall-marked with the forest craft
+which was his life. He was clad in tough buckskin from head to foot.
+Even his hands, which he frequently beat in a desire for warmth, were
+similarly clad. His weatherbeaten face was hard set, and his eyes were
+narrowed to confront the merciless snow fog which the rage of the
+blizzard outside hurled at him.
+
+The cold was almost unendurable even here in the wooded shelter.
+Outside, where the storm raged unrestrainedly over its fierce
+playground, only blind hopelessness prevailed.
+
+There was nothing to be done. He could only wait.
+
+He could only wait, and hope, or abandon his vigil, and return to his
+camp which was far back in the heart of the forests. Away out there,
+somewhere lost in the blinding fog of the blizzard, which had only
+sprung up within the last hour, a lonely fellow creature was making for
+the shelter in which he stood. He was driving headlong towards him. Oh,
+yes. He knew that. He had seen the moving outfit far off, several miles
+away, over the snowy plains, before the storm had arisen. Now--where was
+he? He could not tell. He could not even guess at what might have
+happened. Blinded, freezing, weary, how long could the lonely traveller
+endure and retain any sense of direction?
+
+To the forest man the position was well-nigh tragic. Had he not
+experience of the terror of a northern blizzard? Had he not many a time
+had to grope his way along a life-line lest the slightest deviation in
+direction should carry him out into the storm to perish of cold, blinded
+and lost? Oh, yes. This understanding was the alphabet of his life.
+
+As he stood there watching and wiping the snow from his eyes, he
+reminded himself not only of his own experience but of every story of
+disaster in a blizzard he had ever listened to. And so he saw no hope
+for the poor wretch he had seen struggling to make the shelter.
+
+But he could not bring himself to abandon his post. How could he with a
+fellow creature out there in peril? Besides, there was other reason,
+although it needed none. He had urgent news for this man, news which
+must be imparted without delay, news which his employers must hear at
+the earliest possible moment.
+
+His trouble grew as he waited. He searched his mind for anything
+calculated to aid the doomed traveller. He could find nothing. He
+thought to call out, to burst his lungs in a series of shouts on the
+chance of being heard in the chaos of the storm. But he realised the
+uselessness of it all, and abandoned the impulse. No puny human voice
+could hope to make impression on the din of the elemental battle being
+fought out on the plain. No. His only service must be to stand there
+beating life into his numbing hands, ready to act on the instant should
+opportunity serve.
+
+He was eaten up by anxiety, and so took no cognisance of time. He had
+forgotten the passing of daylight. Therefore sudden realisation flung
+him into headlong panic. The forest about him was growing dark. The snow
+fog outside had changed to a deeper hue. Night was coming on. The man in
+the storm was beyond all aid, human or otherwise.
+
+The impulse of the moment was irresistible. He moved. He passed out from
+behind the long limbs of his leafless shelter. He went at a run shouting
+with all the power of his lungs. Again and again his prolonged cry went
+up. And with each effort he waited listening, listening, only to receive
+the mocking reply of the howling storm. But he persisted. He persisted
+for the simple human reason that his desire outran his power to serve.
+And in the end exhaustion forced him to abandon his hopeless task.
+
+It was then the miracle happened. Far away, it seemed, a sound like the
+faintest echo of his own voice came back to him, but it came from a
+direction all utterly unexpected. For a moment he hesitated, bewildered,
+uncertain. Then he sent up another shout, and waited listening. Yes.
+There it was. Again came the faintly echoing cry through the trees. It
+came not from the open battle ground of the storm, but from the shelter
+of the forests somewhere away to the north of him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A tall, fur-clad figure stood nearby to the sled which was already
+partly unloaded. A yard or two away a fire had been kindled, and it
+blazed comfortingly in the growing dusk of the forest. It was the moment
+when the forest man came up somewhat breathlessly and flung out a mitted
+hand in greeting.
+
+"I guessed you were makin' your last run for shelter, Father," he cried.
+"I just hadn't a hope you'd make through that storm. You beat it--fine."
+
+The tall man nodded. His dark eyes were smiling a cordiality no less
+than the other's.
+
+"I guessed that way, too," he said quietly. "Then I didn't." He shrugged
+his fur-clad shoulders. "No. It's not a northern trail that's going to
+see the end of me. But it's your yarn I need to hear. How is it?"
+
+"Bad."
+
+The two men looked squarely into each others eyes, and the gravity of
+the forest man was intense. The man who had just come out of the storm
+was no less serious, but presently he turned away, and for a second his
+gaze rested on the group of sprawling dogs. The beasts looked utterly
+spent as they blinked at the fire which they were never permitted to
+approach. He indicated the fire.
+
+"Let's sit," he said. "It's cold--damnably cold."
+
+The other needed no second invitation. They both moved back to the fire
+and squatted over it, and the forest man pointed at the dogs.
+
+"Beat?" he said.
+
+"Yes. But they hauled me through. They're a great outfit. I fed 'em
+right away and now they need rest. They'll be ready for the trail again
+by morning. Anyway I can't delay."
+
+"No. You've got to get through quick."
+
+Both were holding outspread hands to the fire. Both were luxuriating in
+the friendly warmth.
+
+"Well?" The tall man turned his head so that his dark eyes searched the
+other's face again. "You'd best tell it me, Jean. If the storm lets up I
+pull out with daylight. I've come through every camp, and this is the
+last. Maybe I know the stuff you've got to tell. It's been the same most
+all the way."
+
+Jean looked up from the heart of the fire.
+
+"Trouble?" he enquired.
+
+"Every sort." The tall man's eyes were smiling. "There's jacks quitting
+and pulling out, and nobody seems to know how they're getting, seeing
+it's winter. Others are going slow. There's others grumbling for things
+you never heard tell of before. There's fire-bugs at work, and the
+forest 'phones are being cut or otherwise tampered with all the time.
+We've lost hundreds of acres by fire already."
+
+"My yarn's the same." Jean nodded and turned back to the fire. "Say," he
+went on, "have you heard of the things going on? The thing that's
+happening?"
+
+"You mean the outfit working it?"
+
+"Yes. It's a political labour gang. Leastways that's the talk of 'em.
+They call 'em 'Bolshies,' whatever that means. They're chasing these
+forests through. They make the camps by night, and get hold of the boys
+right away. They throw a hurricane of hot air at them, preachin' the
+sort of dope that sets those darn fools lyin' around when they need to
+be makin' the winter cut. And when they're through, and started the bug
+the way they want it, they pull out right away before the daylight
+comes. We never get a chance at 'em. Our boys are all plumb on the buck.
+I was just crazy for you to come along, Father. Guess you're the one man
+to fix the boys right. An' when I see you caught up in that darn
+storm--"
+
+"I'll do the thing I know," the dark man replied. "I've been doing it
+right along. But it's not enough. That's why I'm chasing down to the
+coast. We've got to lay this spook that worries the boys at night. It's
+no Bolshie outfit." He shook his head. "Anyway if it is it's got another
+thing behind it. It's the Skandinavia."
+
+He sat on for a few minutes in silence. He squatted there, hugging his
+knees. He was weary. He was weary almost to death with the incessant
+travel that had already occupied him weeks.
+
+Quite abruptly his hands parted and he stood up. Jean followed his
+movements with anxious eyes.
+
+"You goin' down to talk to the boys?" he asked at last.
+
+The man nodded.
+
+"Yes. Right away. I'll do all I know."
+
+"They'll listen to you."
+
+The other smiled.
+
+"Yes. Till the spook comes back."
+
+Jean brushed the icicles from about his eyes.
+
+"That's just it," he said. "An' meanwhile the cut's right plumb down. If
+this thing don't quit the mill's going to starve when the ice breaks.
+I've lost nigh three weeks' full cut already. It's--it's hell!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+The dark man moved away, and Jean sat on over the fire. But his troubled
+eyes watched the curious figure as it passed over to its outfit. He saw
+the man stoop over the litter of his goods. He saw him disentangle some
+garment from the rest. When he came back the furs he had been clad in
+were either abandoned or hidden under fresh raiment. The man towered an
+awesome figure in the firelight. He was clad in black from head to foot,
+and his garment possessed the flowing skirts of a priest.
+
+"I'm going right down to the boys now," he said. "You best stop around
+here. Just have an eye to the dogs. It's best you not being with me."
+
+Jean nodded. He understood. Accompanied by the camp boss this man's
+influence with the boys would have been seriously affected. Alone he was
+well-nigh all powerful.
+
+"Good," he said. "For God's sake do what you can, Father," he cried.
+"I'll stop right here till you get back. So long."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+BULL STERNFORD'S VISION OF SUCCESS
+
+
+"I'd say it's best story I've listened to since--since--Say, those
+fellers are pretty big. They surely are."
+
+Bat Harker stirred. He shifted his feet on the rail of the stove, where
+the heavy leather soles of his boots were beginning to burn.
+
+Bull's shining eyes were raised to his.
+
+"Big?" he echoed. "I tell you that feller, Leader, has the widest vision
+of any man I know."
+
+He leant back in his chair and imitated his companion's luxurious
+attitude. And so they sat silent, each regarding the thing between them
+from his own angle.
+
+It was the night of Bull's return from his journey to England. He had
+completed the final stage only that afternoon. He had travelled overland
+from the south headland, where he had been forced to disembark from the
+_Myra_ under stress of weather. It was storming outside now, one of
+those fierce wind storms of Labrador's winter, liable to blow for days
+or only for a few hours.
+
+He and Harker were closeted together in the warm comfort of the office
+on the hill. Here, without fear of interruption, in the soft lamplight,
+lounging at their ease, they were free to talk of those things so dear
+to them, and upon which hung the destiny of their enterprise.
+
+Winter was more than half spent. Christmas and New Year were already
+seasons which only helped to swell the store of memory. Labrador was
+frozen to the bone, and would remain so. But there were still two months
+and more of snow and ice, and storm, to be endured before the flies and
+mosquitoes did their best to make life unendurable.
+
+Bull's return home had been a time of great looking forward. Life to him
+had become full of every alluring possibility. He saw the approaching
+fulfilment of his hopes and aims. The contemplation of the pending war
+with the Skandinavia only afforded his fighting instincts satisfaction.
+Then there was that other. That great, new sensation which stirred him
+so deeply--Nancy McDonald. So he had returned home full of enthusiasm
+and ready to tackle any and every problem that presented itself.
+
+He had just completed the telling of the story he had brought back with
+him. It was a story of success that had stirred even the cast-iron
+emotions of Bat Harker. Nor had it lost anything in the telling, for
+Bull was more deeply moved than he knew.
+
+The recounting of his dealings in London with the man, Sir Frank Leader,
+had been coloured by the enthusiasm with which the Englishman had
+inspired him. Sir Frank Leader was known as the uncrowned king of the
+world's pulp-wood trade. But Bull felt, and declared, that the
+appellation did not come within measurable distance of expressing the
+man's real genius. Then there were those others: Stanton Brothers, and
+Lord Downtree, and the virile, youthful creature, Ray Birchall. All of
+them were strong pillars of support for the ruling genius of the house
+of Leader & Company. But it was the man himself, the head of it, who
+claimed all Bull's admiration for his intensity of national spirit, and
+the wide generosity of his enterprise.
+
+The story he had had to tell was simple in its completeness. Before
+setting out on his journey he had spent months in preparation of the
+ground by means of voluminous correspondence and documentary evidence.
+It was a preparation that left it only necessary to convince through
+personal appeal on his arrival in London. This had been achieved in the
+broad fashion that appealed to the men he encountered. His "hand" had
+been laid down. Every card of it was offered for their closest scrutiny,
+even to the baring of the last reservation which his intimate knowledge
+of the merciless climate of Labrador might have inspired.
+
+The appeal of this method had been instant to Sir Frank Leader. And the
+appeal had been as much the man himself as the thing he offered. The
+result of it all was Bull's early return home with the man's whole
+organisation fathering his enterprise, and with a guarantee of his
+incomparable fleet of freighters being flung into the pool. Leader had
+swept up the whole proposition into his widely embracing arms, and taken
+it to himself. Subject to Ray Birchall's ultimate report, after personal
+inspection on the spot of the properties involved, the flotation was to
+be launched for some seventy million dollars, and thus the consummation
+of Sachigo's original inspiration would be achieved.
+
+Bat had listened to the story almost without comment. He had missed
+nothing of it. Neither had he failed to observe the man telling it. The
+story itself was all so tremendous, so far removed from the work that
+pre-occupied him that he had little desire to probe deeper into it. But
+the success of it all stirred him. Oh, yes. It had stirred him deeply,
+and his mind had immediately flown to that other who had laboured for
+just this achievement and had staggered under the burden of it all.
+
+Bull removed his pipe and gazed across the stove.
+
+"And now for your news, Bat," he said, like a man anticipating a
+pleasant continuation of his own good news.
+
+Bat shook his head decidedly.
+
+"No," he said, in his brusque fashion. "Not to-night, boy. Guess I ain't
+got a thing to tell to match your stuff. We just carried on, and we've
+worked big. We're in good shape for the darn scrap with the Skandinavia
+you told me about. Guess I'll hand you my stuff to-morrow, when I'm
+goin' to show you things. This night's your night--sure."
+
+His twinkling eyes were full of kindly regard, for all the brusqueness
+of his denial. And Bull smiled back his content.
+
+"Well, it's your 'hand' Bat," he said easily. "You'll play it your way."
+
+His eyes turned to the comforting stove again, as the howl of the storm
+outside shook the framing of the house.
+
+Presently the other raised a pair of smiling eyes.
+
+"You know, boy," the lumberman said, ejecting a worn-out chew of
+tobacco, "all this means one mighty big thing your way. You see, you got
+life before you. Maybe I've years to run, too. But it ain't the same.
+No," he shook his grizzled head, "you can't never make nuthin' of me but
+a lumber-boss. You'll never be a thing but a college-bred fighter all
+your life. There's a third share in this thing for both of us. Well,
+that's goin' to be one a' mighty pile. I was wonderin'. Shall you quit?
+Shall you cut right out with the boodle? What'll you do?"
+
+Bull sat up and laughed. And his answer came on the instant.
+
+"Why, marry," he said.
+
+Bat nodded.
+
+"That's queer," he said. "I guessed you'd answer that way."
+
+"Why?"
+
+Bat folded his arms across his broad chest.
+
+"You're young," he replied.
+
+Bull laughed again.
+
+"Better say it," he cried. "An' darn foolish."
+
+"No, I hadn't that in mind. No, Bull. If I had your years I guess I'd
+feel that way, too. I wonder--"
+
+"You're guessing to know who I'd marry, eh?" Bull's pipe was knocked out
+into the cuspidore. Then he sat up again and his eyes were full of
+reckless delight. "Here," he cried, "I guess it's mostly school-kids who
+shout the things they reckon to do--or a fool man. It doesn't matter.
+Maybe I'm both. Anyway, I'm just crazy for--for--"
+
+"Red hair, an'--an' a pair of mighty pretty eyes?"
+
+"Sure."
+
+Bat nodded. A deep satisfaction stirred him.
+
+"I reckoned that way, ever since--Say, I'm glad."
+
+But Bull's mood had sobered.
+
+"She's in the enemy camp though," he demurred.
+
+"It'll hand you another scrap--haulin' her out."
+
+"Yes."
+
+Bat rose from his chair and stretched his trunk-like body.
+
+"Well," he said, "it's me for the blankets." Then he emitted a
+deep-throated chuckle. "You get at it, boy," he went on. "An' if you're
+needin' any help I can pass, why, count on it. If you mean marryin' I'd
+sooner see you hook up team with that red-haired gal than anything in
+the world I ever set two eyes on. Guess I'll hand you my stuff in the
+morning if the storm quits."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The dynamos were revolving at terrific speed. There were some eighteen
+in all, and their dull roar was racking upon ears unused. Bat was
+regarding them without enthusiasm. All he knew was the thing they
+represented. Skert Lawton had told him. They represented the harnessing
+of five hundred thousand horse power of the Beaver River water. The
+engineer had assured him, in his unsmiling fashion, that he had secured
+enough power to supply the whole Province of Quebec with electricity.
+All of which, in Bat's estimation, seemed to be an unnecessary feat.
+
+Bull was gazing in frank wonder on the engineer's completed work. It was
+his first sight of it. The place had been long in building. But the
+sight of it in full running, the sense of enormous power, the thought
+and labour this new power-house represented, filled him with nothing but
+admiration for the author of it all.
+
+Bat hailed one of the electricians serving the machines.
+
+"Where's Mr. Lawton?" he shouted.
+
+"He went out. He ain't here," the man shouted back.
+
+Bat regarded the man for a moment without favour. Then he turned away.
+He beckoned Bull to follow, and moved over to the sound-proof door which
+shut off the engineer's office. They passed to the quiet beyond it.
+
+It was quite a small room without any elaborate pretensions. There was a
+desk supporting a drawing board, with a chair set before it. There was
+also a rocker-chair which accommodated the lean body of Skert Lawton at
+such infrequent moments as it desired repose. Beyond that there was
+little enough furniture. The place was mainly bare boards and bare
+walls. Bat sat himself at the desk and left Bull the rocker-chair.
+
+"I'd fixed it so Skert was to meet us here," he said. "All this is his
+stuff. I couldn't tell you an' amp from a buck louse."
+
+Bull nodded.
+
+"That's all right," he said. "Maybe he's held up down at the mill. He'll
+get--"
+
+"Held up--nuthin'!"
+
+The lumberman was angry. But his anger was not at the failure of his
+arrangements. Back of his head he was wondering at the thing that
+claimed the engineer. He felt that only real urgency would have kept him
+from his appointment. And he knew that urgency just now had a more or
+less ugly meaning.
+
+"Lawton's a pretty bright boy--" Bull began. But the other caught him up
+roughly.
+
+"Bright? That don't say a thing," Bat cried. "Guess he's a whole darn
+engineering college rolled into the worst shape of the ghost of a man
+it's been my misfortune ever to locate. He's a highbrow of an elegant
+natur'. He calls this thing 'co-ordination,' which is another way of
+sayin' he's beat nigh a hundred thousand dollars out of our bank roll to
+hand us more power than we could use if we took in Broadway, New York,
+at night. But it's elegant plannin' and looks good to me. Your folks
+over the water'll maybe see things in it, too. It's them blast furnaces
+we set up for him last year made this play possible. Them, and the swell
+outfit of machine shops he squeezed us for. He figgers to raise all
+sorts of hell around. An' his latest notion's to build every darn
+machine from rough-castin' to a shackle pin, so we don't have to worry
+with the world outside. He's got a long view of things. But--"
+
+He pulled out his timepiece, and the clouds of volcanic anger swept down
+again upon his rugged brow. But it was given no play. The door of the
+office was thrust open, and the lean figure of the engineer, clad in
+greasy overalls, came hurriedly into the room.
+
+Bat challenged him on the instant.
+
+"What's the trouble, boy?" he demanded in his uncompromising fashion.
+
+"Trouble?" Skert's eyes were wide, and his tone was savage. "That's just
+it. I reckoned to show Sternford all this stuff," he went on, indicating
+the machine hall with a jerk of his head. "But we'll have to let it
+pass. Say," he glanced from one to the other, his expression developing
+to something like white fury. "They started. It's business this time. I
+got a message up they were stopping the grinders. It's the 'heads' gave
+the order. Oh, they're all in it. They got a meeting on in that darn
+recreation parliament place of theirs, and every mother's son on the
+machines was called to it. They've shut down! You get that? There isn't
+even a greaser left at the machines. It's set me with a feeling I'm
+plumb crazy. I've been down, and they're right there crowding out that
+hall. And--"
+
+"I guessed something that way," Bat interrupted with ominous calm. He
+turned to Bull, who was closely regarding his lieutenants.
+
+"It's mutiny first and then a sheer strike," he said. "Here, listen.
+I'll hand you just what's happenin'. There's been Bolshie agitators
+workin' the boys months, and I guess they got a holt on 'em good. It
+started with us openin' the new mill on this north shore. We were forced
+to collect our labour just where we could. An' they got in like the
+miser'ble rats they are. Gee! It makes me hot--hot as hell! The leaders
+of this thing ain't workers. I don't guess they done a day's work with
+anything but their yahoo mouths in their dirty lives. They're part of
+the crowd that's paid from Europe to get around and heave up this
+blazin' world of ours just anyway they know. The only thing I don't get
+is their coming along here, which is outside most all the rest of the
+world. If Labrador can hand 'em loot I'd like to know the sort it is.
+And it's just loot they're out for. If I'm a judge there's one hell of a
+scrap comin,' and if we're beat it looks like leaving Sachigo a thing
+forgotten."
+
+Bull stood up. He laughed without the least mirth.
+
+"It's the Skandinavia," he said decidedly. "War's begun. I'm going right
+down to that meeting."
+
+Bat leapt to his feet.
+
+"No," he said. "This is for Skert an' me--"
+
+"Is it?"
+
+Bull brushed his protest aside almost fiercely. Then he turned as the
+door opened and a small man hurried in. The fellow snatched his cap from
+his head and his eyes settled on Skert Lawton, the man he knew best.
+
+"It ees a document," he cried, in the broken English of a French
+Canadian. "They sign him, oh, yes. You no more are the boss. They say
+the mill it ees for the 'worker.' All dis big mill, all dis big money.
+Oh, yes. Dey sign him."
+
+"Who's this?" Bull demanded.
+
+"One of my machine-minders. He's a good boy," the engineer explained.
+
+Bull nodded.
+
+"That's all right We want all we can get of his sort." He turned to Bat.
+"Are there others? I mean boys we can trust?"
+
+"Quite a bunch."
+
+"Can we get them together?"
+
+"Sure."
+
+"Right. This is going to be the real thing. The sort of thing I'd rather
+have it."
+
+He turned to Skert who stood by, watching the light of battle in his
+chief's eyes.
+
+"Here, shut down the dynamos. Set them clean out of action. Do you get
+me? Leave the machines for the time being so they're just so much scrap.
+Then, if you got the bunch you can rely on, leave 'em guard. We'll get
+on down, an' sign that damned document for 'em."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The recreation room was crowded to suffocation. Men of every degree in
+the work of the mill had foregathered. A hubbub of talk was going on.
+Voices were raised. There was anger. There was argument, harsh-voiced
+argument which mainly expressed feeling. At the far end of the hall, on
+the raised platform designed for those who fancied their vocal
+attainments, a group of men were gathered about a table upon which was
+outspread the folios of an extensive document. The men at the table were
+talking eagerly.
+
+The gathering had listened to the furious oratory of a pale-faced man,
+with long black hair and a foreign accent. It had listened, and agreed,
+and applauded. For he had talked Communism, and the overthrow of the
+Capitalists, and the possession of the wealth creating mills for those
+who operated them. It had listened to an appeal to the latent instinct
+in every human creature, freedom from everything that could be claimed
+as servitude, freedom, and possession, and independence for those who
+would once and for all rid themselves of the shackles which the pay-roll
+and time-sheet imposed upon them.
+
+They had been called together to witness the iniquity of spending their
+lives in the degrading operation of filling the pockets of those who
+laboured not, by the toil in which their lives were spent. They had been
+told every flowery fairy tale of the modern communistic doctrine, which
+possesses as much truth and sanity in it as is to be found in an asylum
+for the mentally deficient. And they had swallowed the bait whole. The
+talk had been by the tongue of a skilled fanatic, who was well paid for
+his work, and who kept in the forefront of his talk that alluring
+promise of ease, and affluence, and luxury, which never fails in its
+appeal to those who have never known it.
+
+But something approaching an impasse had been reached when the would-be
+benefactors passed over the demand that their deluded victims should
+sign the roll of Communal Brotherhood. The bait that had been offered
+had been all to the taste of these rough creatures who had never known
+better than an existence with a threat of possible unemployment
+overshadowing their lives. But in the signature to the elaborate
+document they scented the concealed poison in the honeyed potion. There
+was hesitation, reluctance. There was argument in a confusion of tongues
+well-nigh bewildering. A surge of voices filled the great building.
+
+The agents were at work, men who posed as workers to attain their ends.
+And the pale, long-haired creature and his satellites waited at the
+table. They understood. It was their business to understand. They knew
+the minds they were dealing with, and their agents were skilled in their
+craft. The process they relied on was the unthinking stupidity of the
+sheep. Every man that could be persuaded had his friends, and each
+friend had his friend. They knew friend would follow friend well-nigh
+blindly, and, having signed, native obstinacy and fear of ridicule would
+hold them fast to their pledge.
+
+Presently the signing began. It began with a burly river-jack who
+laughed stupidly to cover his doubt. He was followed by a
+machine-minder, who hurled taunts at those who still held back. Then
+came others, others whose failure to think for themselves left them
+content to follow the lead of their comrades.
+
+The stream of signatures grew. A pale youth, whose foolish grin revealed
+only his fitness for the heavy, unskilled work he was engaged upon,
+came up. The pen was handed him, and the name of Adolph Mars was
+scrawled on the sheet. The long-haired man at the table looked up at
+him. He smiled with his lips, and patted the boy's hand. Then something
+happened.
+
+It was movement. Sudden movement on the platform. The babel in the body
+of the hall went on. But the long-haired man and his supporters at the
+table turned with eyes that were concerned and anxious. A dozen men had
+entered swiftly through the door in rear of the platform. Bull Sternford
+led them. And he moved over to the table, with the swift, noiseless
+strides of a panther, and looked into the unwholesome face of the
+Bolshevist leader.
+
+It was only for the fraction of a second. The man made a movement which
+needed no interpretation. His hand went to a hip pocket. Instantly
+Bull's great hands descended. The man was picked up like a child. He was
+lifted out of his seat and raised aloft. He was borne towards the window
+where he was held while the master of the mill crashed a foot against
+its wooden sash. The next moment the black-clothed body was hurled with
+terrific force out into the snowdrift waiting to receive it. It was all
+so swiftly done. The whole thing was a matter of seconds only. Then Bull
+Sternford was back at the table, while his comrades, Bat and Lawton, and
+the men of loyalty they relied on, lined the platform.
+
+As Bull snatched up the document and held it aloft, a deathly silence
+reigned throughout the hall, and every eye was turned angrily upon the
+intruders. Bull yielded not a moment for those witless minds to recover
+from their shock. His voice rang out fiercely.
+
+"Here," he cried, "d'you know what you're doing, listening to that fool
+guy I've thrown through that window, and signing this crazy paper he's
+set out for you? No. You don't unless you're just as crazy yourselves.
+You're declaring war. You're starting a great fight to steal the
+property that hands you your living. You reckon you've got all you need
+of our brains, and your own brute force and darnation foolishness can
+run these great mills which are to hand you the big money you reckon it
+hands us. That means war. Maybe you fancy it's the one-sided war you'd
+like to have it. Maybe you fancy there's about a dozen of us, and we're
+going to be made to work for the wage you figger to hand us. You're dead
+wrong. It's going to be a hell of a war if you swallow the dope these
+fellows hand you. You've begun it, and we're taking up the challenge.
+We've fired the first shot, too. It's not gun-play yet. No. Maybe it'll
+come to that and you'll find we can hand you shot for shot. No. We're
+quicker than that. The mill's closed down! Wages have ceased! And all
+power has been cut off! There's not a spark of light or heat, for the
+whole of Sachigo. The vital parts of the power station have been
+removed, and you can't get 'em back. I've only to give the word and the
+_penstocks on the river will be cut so you can't repair them_. It's
+forty degrees below Zero out there, where I've shot that crazy Bolshie,
+and so you know just how you stand here on Labrador with no means of
+gettin' away until the thaw comes. You and your wives and kiddies'll
+have to pay in the cold for the crime of theft you reckon to put
+through. We're ready for you, whether it's gun-play or any other sort of
+war you want to start. That's the thing I've come here to tell you."
+
+He paused for a moment to watch the effect of his words. It was there on
+the instant. A furious hubbub arose. There was not a man in the room who
+did not understand the dire threat which the _coup_ of the master mind
+imposed. Power cut off! Light! Heat! Power! Forty degrees below Zero!
+The terror of the Labrador winter was in every man's mind. Life would be
+unendurable without heat. There were the forests. Oh, yes. They could
+get heat of sorts. The sort of heat which the men on a winter trail were
+accustomed to. _Their electrically-heated houses were without stoves in
+which they could burn wood_.
+
+Bull listened to the babel of tongues while his men watched for any act
+that might come. Every man on the platform was armed ready.
+
+"Here!"
+
+Bull's voice rang out again, but he was interrupted.
+
+A man shouted at him from the back of the hall.
+
+"Who the hell are you, anyway? You ain't the guy owning these mills. We
+know where you come from--"
+
+Like lightning Bull took him up.
+
+"Do you?" he shouted back. "Then we know where you come from. The man
+who knew me before I became boss here must belong to the Skandinavia.
+That's the only place any lumber-jack could have known me. Here. Come up
+here. Stand out. Show yourself. And I'll hand the boys your pedigree.
+It'll be easy. It's the trouble with us just now, we've got too many
+stiffs from the Skandinavia, and you've got our own good boys paralysed.
+They haven't the guts to stand on the notions that have handed them the
+best wages in the pulp trade these fifteen years. Guess you've persuaded
+them they ain't got swell houses, and good food, and cheap heat and
+light, and, instead are living like all sorts of swine in their hogpens.
+It's the way of the Skandinavia just now. The Skandinavia's out for our
+blood. They want to smash us. Do you know why? Because they're an alien
+firm who wants to steal these forests from the Canadians to fill their
+own pockets with our wealth. We're for the Canadians, and we've built up
+a proposition that's going to beat the foreigner right out into the sea.
+But that don't matter now. These guys, these long-haired, unwashed guys,
+that reckon to hand you boys these mills, are sent by the Skandinavia
+to wreck us. Well, go right over to 'em. Help 'em. Sign every darn
+document they hand you. They'll be your own death warrants, anyway. You
+want war. You can have it. I'm here to fight. Meanwhile you best get
+home to your cold houses, for the mills are closed down. You're locked
+out."
+
+He turned without waiting a second and passed through the back door by
+which he had entered. And his men followed on his heels.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bull was in his office. For all the storm of the morning the rest of the
+day had passed quietly. Now it was late at night. His stove was
+radiating a luxurious heat. He was quite unconcerned that the
+electrically-heated steam radiators were cold. He was alone. Harker and
+the engineer were still down at the mill. He was awaiting the report
+they would bring him later.
+
+He had passed some time in reading the pledge of Communal Brotherhood
+which he had brought away with him from the recreation room, and he had
+read the signatures that had been affixed to it. The latter were few,
+and every name inscribed was of foreign origin. But it was the document
+itself which concerned him most. If it were honest he felt that its
+authors were wild people who should be kept under restraint. If it were
+not honest, then hanging or shooting was far too lenient a fate to be
+meted out to them. It was Communism in its wildest, most unrestrained
+form.
+
+In his final disgust he flung the papers on his desk. And as he did so a
+sound reached him from the outer office, which had long since been
+closed for the night by the half-breed, Loale.
+
+He leapt to his feet. Without a second thought he moved over to the door
+and flung it wide.
+
+"What the--?" He broke off. "Good God!" he cried. "You, Father?" He
+laughed. "Why I thought it was some of the Bolshies from down at the
+mill."
+
+He withdrew the gun from his coat pocket in explanation. Then he stood
+aside.
+
+"Will you come right in?"
+
+The man Bull had discovered made no answer. But as he stood aside, tall,
+clad in heavy fur from head to foot, Father Adam strode into the room.
+
+Bull watched him with questioning eyes. Then he closed the door and his
+visitor turned confronting him in the yellow lamplight.
+
+"I've made more than a hundred miles to get you to-night," Father Adam
+said.
+
+Then he flung back the fur hood from his head, and ran a hand over his
+long black hair, smoothing it thoughtfully.
+
+"Yes?"
+
+Bull's eyes were still questioning.
+
+"Won't you shed your furs and sit?" he went on. "The Chink's abed, but
+I'll dig him out. You must get food."
+
+The other glanced round the pleasant office, and his eyes paused for a
+moment at the chair at the desk.
+
+"Food don't worry, thanks," he said, his mildly smiling eyes coming back
+to his host's face. "I've eaten--ten miles back. I rested the dogs
+there, too. I've maybe a ha'f hour to tell you the thing I came for.
+There's trouble in the woods. Bad trouble. If it's not straightened out,
+why, it looks like all work at your mills'll quit, and you're going to
+get your forest limits burnt out stark."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+THE HOLD-UP
+
+
+Ole Porson took a final glance round his shanty. The last of the
+daylight was rapidly fading. There was still sufficient penetrating the
+begrimed double window, however, to reveal the littered, unswept
+condition of the place. But he saw none of it. It was the place he knew
+and understood. It was at once his office, and his living quarters; a
+shanty with a tumbled sleeping bunk, a wood stove, and a table littered
+with the books and papers of his No. 10 camp. He was a rough creature,
+as hard of soul as he was of head, who could never have found joy in
+surroundings of better condition.
+
+He solemnly loaded the chambers of a pair of heavy guns. Then he
+bestowed them in the capacious pockets of his fur pea-jacket. He also
+dropped in beside them a handful of spare cartridges. In his lighter
+moments he was apt to say that these weapons were his only friends. And
+those who knew him best readily agreed. Drawing up the storm-collar
+about his face, he passed out into the snow which was falling in flakes
+the size of autumn leaves. There was not a breath of wind to disturb the
+deathly stillness of the winter night.
+
+Minutes later he was lounging heavily against the rough planked counter
+of Abe Risdon's store. He was talking to the suttler over a deep
+"four-fingers" of neat Rye, while his searching eyes scanned the body of
+the ill-lit room. The place was usually crowded with drinkers when the
+daylight passed, but just now it was almost empty.
+
+"Who's that guy in the tweed pea-jacket an' looks like a city man?" he
+asked his host in an undertone, pointing at one of the tables where a
+stranger sat surrounded by four of the forest men.
+
+Abe's powerful arms were folded as he leant on the counter.
+
+"Blew in about noon," he said. "Filled his belly with good hash an' sat
+around since."
+
+"He's a bunch o' the boys about him now, anyway. An' I guess he's
+talking quite a lot, an' they're doing most o' the listening. Seems
+like he's mostly enjoying hisself."
+
+Abe shrugged. But the glance he flung at the man sitting at the far-off
+table was without approval.
+
+"It's mostly that way now," he said, with an air of indifference his
+thoughtful eyes denied. "There's too many guys come along an' sell
+truck, an' set around, an' talk, an' then pass along. Things are
+changing around this lay out, an' I don't get its meanin'. Time was I
+had a bunch of boys ready most all the time to hand me the news going
+round. Time was you'd see a stranger once in a month come along in an'
+buy our food. Time was they mostly had faces we knew by heart, and we
+knew their business, and where they came from. Tain't that way now. You
+couldn't open the boys' faces fer news of the forest with a can-opener.
+These darn guys are always about now. They come, an' feed the boys'
+drink, an' talk with 'em most all the time. An' they're mostly
+strangers, an' the boys mostly sit around with their faces open like
+fool men listenin' to fairy tales. How's the cut goin'?"
+
+Porson laughed. There was no light in his hard eyes.
+
+"At a gait you couldn't change with a trail whip."
+
+The other nodded.
+
+'"That's how 'nigger' Pilling said. He guessed the cut was down by
+fifty. What is it? A buck? Wages?"
+
+Porson's hand was fingering one of the guns in his pocket. His eyes were
+snapping.
+
+"Curse 'em," he cried at last. "I just don't get it. They're goin'
+slow."
+
+He pushed his empty glass at the suttler who promptly re-filled it.
+
+"Young Pete Cust," Abe went on confidentially, "handed me a good guess
+only this mornin'. He'd had his sixth Rye before startin' out to work.
+Maybe he was rattled and didn't figger the things he said. He was astin'
+fer word up from the mills. I didn't worry to think, and just said I
+hadn't got. I ast 'why'? The boy took a quick look round, kind o'
+scared. He said, 'jest nothin'.' He reckoned he'd a dame somewhere
+around Sachigo. She'd wrote him things wer' kind of bad with the mills.
+They were beat fer dollars, and looked like a crash. He'd heard the same
+right there, an' it had him rattled. He thought of quittin' and goin'
+over to the Skandinavia. Maybe it's the sort o' talk that's got 'em all
+rattled. Maybe they're goin' slow on the cut, worryin' for their
+pay-roll. You can't tell. They don't say a thing. Seems to me we want
+Sternford right here to queer these yarns. Father Adam's around an'
+talked some. But--"
+
+Porson drank down his liquor, and his glass hit the counter with angry
+force.
+
+"They're mush-faced hoodlams anyway," he cried fiercely. "Ther' ain't a
+thing wrong with the mills. I'd bet a million on it."
+
+He stood up from the counter and thrust his hands deep in the pockets of
+his coat. He was a powerful figure with legs like the tree trunks it was
+his work to see cut. Quite abruptly he moved away, and Abe's questioning
+eyes followed him.
+
+He strode down amongst the scattered tables and came to a halt before
+the tweed-coated stranger. All the men looked up, and their talk died
+out.
+
+"Say, what's your bizness around here?"
+
+Ole Person's manner was threatening as he made his demand. The stranger
+dived at the bag lying on the floor beside his chair. He picked it up
+and flung it open.
+
+"Why, I got right here the dandiest outfit of swell jewellery," he
+cried, grinning amiably up at the man's threatening eyes. "There's just
+everything here," he went on, with irrepressible volubility, "to suit
+you gents of the forest, an' make you the envy of every jack way down
+at Sachigo. Here, there's a be-autiful Prince Albert for your watch.
+This ring. It's full o' diamonds calculated to set Kimberly hollerin'.
+Maybe you fancy a locket with it. It'll take a whole bunch of your
+dame's--"
+
+"You'll light right out of this camp with daylight to-morrow!"
+
+The tone of the camp-boss banished the last shadow of the pedlar's
+cast-iron smile.
+
+"Oh, yes?" he said, his eyes hardening.
+
+"That's wot I said. This camp's private property an' you'll light out.
+You get that? Daylight. If you don't, we've a way of dealing with Jew
+drummers that'll likely worry you. Get it. An' get it good."
+
+For a moment they looked into each other's eyes. There was not the
+flicker of an eyelid between them. Then Porson turned and strode away.
+
+He passed down the store re-fastening his coat. He paused at the door as
+a chorus of rough laughter reached him from the little gathering at the
+table. But it was only for an instant. He looked back. No face was
+turned in his direction. So he passed out.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The night outside was inky black. The heavy falling snow made progress
+almost a blind groping. But Porson knew every inch of the way. He passed
+down the lines of huts and paused outside each bunkhouse. His reason was
+obvious. There was a question in his mind as to the whereabouts of the
+crowd of his men who usually thronged the liquor store at this hour of
+the evening.
+
+It was at the last bunkhouse he paused longest. He stood for quite a
+while listening under the double glassed window. Then he passed on and
+stood beside the tightly closed storm-door. The signs and sounds he
+heard were apparently sufficient. For, after a while, he turned back and
+set out to return to his quarters.
+
+For many minutes he groped his way through the blinding snow, his mind
+completely given up to the things his secret watch had revealed. His
+brutish nature, being what it was, left him concerned only for the
+forceful manner by which he could restore that authority which he felt
+to be slipping away from him under the curious change which had come
+over the camp. His position depended on the adequate output of his
+winter's cut and on nothing else. That, he knew, was desperately
+falling, and--
+
+But in a moment, all concern was swept from his mind. A sound leapt at
+him out of the stillness of the night. It was the whimper of dogs and
+the sharp command of a man's voice. He shouted a challenge and waited.
+And presently a dog train pulled up beside him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bull Sternford was standing before the wood stove in the camp-boss's
+shanty. He had removed his snow-laden fur coat. He had kicked the damp
+snow from his moccasins. Now he was wiping the moisture out of his eyes,
+and the chill in his limbs was easing under the warmth which the stove
+radiated.
+
+Ole Porson's grim face was alight with a smile of genuine welcome, as he
+stood surveying his visitor across the roaring stove.
+
+"It's surely the best thing happened in years, Mr. Sternford," he was
+saying. "I'm more glad you made our camp this night than any other.
+Maybe I'd ha' got through someways, but I don't know just how. We're
+down over fifty on our cut, an', by the holy snakes, I can't hand you
+why."
+
+Bull put his coloured handkerchief away, and removed the pea-jacket
+which he had worn under his furs.
+
+"Don't worry," he said with apparent unconcern. "I can hand it you.
+That's why I'm here."
+
+The camp-boss waited. He eyed his chief with no little anxiety. He had
+looked for an angry outburst.
+
+Bull pulled up a chair. He flung the litter of books it supported on to
+the already crowded table and sat down. Then he filled his pipe and lit
+it with a hot coal from the stove.
+
+"Here," he said, "I'll tell you. I've been the round of four camps. I've
+been over a month on the trail, and I've heard just the same tale from
+every camp-boss we employ. I've three more camps to visit besides yours,
+and when I've made them maybe I'll get the sleep I'm about crazy for.
+Night and day I've been on the dead jump for a month following the trail
+of a red-hot gang that's going through our forests. If I come up with
+them there's going to be murder."
+
+He spoke quietly without a sign of emotion. But the light in his hot
+eyes was almost desperate.
+
+"I want to hand you the story so you'll get it all clear," he went on
+after a moment. "So I'll start by telling you how we stand at the mill.
+Get this, an' hold it tight in your head, and the rest'll come clear as
+day. Sachigo's right on top. We've boosted it sky high on to the top of
+the world's pulp trade. In less than twelve months we'll have grabbed
+well-nigh the whole of this country's pulp industry, and we'll beat the
+foreigners right back over the sea to their own country. The Skandinavia
+folk are rattled. They know all about us and they've done their best to
+buy us out of the game. We turned 'em down cold, and they're mad--mad as
+hell. It means they're in for the fight of their lives. So are we. And
+we know Peterman an' his gang well enough to know what that means. It's
+'rough an' tough.' Everything goes. If they can't gouge our eyes they'll
+do their best to chew us to small meat. But we've got 'em every way.
+This forest gang is sent by the Skandinavia. If they can't smash us by
+fire or labour trouble next year'll see us floated into a seventy
+million dollar corporation with the whole Canadian wood-pulp industry
+lying right in the palms of our hands. That's the reason for the things
+doing."
+
+He paused, and the camp-boss nodded his rough head. It was a story he
+could clearly understand. Then there were those figures. Seventy million
+dollars! They swept the last shadow of doubt from his mind.
+
+"That's the position," Bull went on. "Now for the trouble as it is in
+the forests right now. The thing that's had me travelling night an' day
+for a month. There's an outfit going right through these forests. I
+can't locate its extent. Only the way it works. There's two objects in
+view. One is to fire our limits. The other reckons to paralyse our cut.
+So far these folks have failed against the fire-guard organisation, and
+I guess they'll likely miss most of their fire-bugs when they call the
+roll. The other's different."
+
+Bull knocked out his pipe on the stove and gazed thoughtfully at the
+streak of brilliant light under the edge of the front damper.
+
+"I've a notion there's an outfit of pedlars at work, as well as others,"
+he went on presently.
+
+The camp-boss nodded.
+
+"Sure," he said.
+
+Bull looked up.
+
+"You think that way?" he asked. Then he nodded. "Yes, I guess we're
+right. They're handing the boys dope to keep 'em guessing--worrying.
+They're telling 'em we're on the edge of a big smash at Sachigo. That we
+can't see the winter through. We're cleaned out for cash, and the mill
+folk are shouting for their wages and starting in to riot. It's a swell
+yarn. It's the sort of yarn I'd tell 'em myself if I was working for the
+Skandinavia. It's the sort of dope these crazy forest-jacks are ready to
+swallow the same as if it was Rye. Do you see? These fools are being
+told they won't get their pay for their winter's cut. So, being what
+they are, the boys are going slow. They're going slow, and drawing goods
+at the store against each cord they cut. Well, do you see what's going
+to happen if the game succeeds? With our forests ablaze, and our cut
+fifty down, and the whole outfit on the buck, when spring comes,
+Skandinavia reckons our British financiers, when they come along to look
+our land over will turn the whole proposition of the flotation down, and
+quit us cold. But that's not just all. No, sir. Elas Peterman isn't the
+boy to leave it that way. He's handing out the story that when Sachigo
+smashes the Skandinavia's going to jump right in and collect the
+wreckage cheap. Then they'll start up the mill, and sign on all hands on
+their own pay-roll, only stipulating that they won't pay one single cent
+of what Sachigo owes for their cut. So, if they're such almighty fools
+as to cut, it's going to be their dead loss and the Skandinavia's gain.
+Do you get it? It's smart. I guess there's a bigger brain behind it than
+Peterman's."
+
+The camp-boss spat into the stove. It was his one expression of disgust.
+
+Bull rose from his chair.
+
+"Here, I need food. So does my boy out there with the dogs. We'll take
+it after I'm through with the men. It's snowing like hell, but I pull
+out two hours from now. You see, I'm on a hot trail, an' don't fancy
+losing a minute."
+
+"You're goin' to talk to 'em--the boys?" Porson's eyes lit with a gleam
+of satisfaction. "Can you--twist 'em?"
+
+Bull thrust a hand into his breast pocket and drew out a sealed packet.
+He held it up before the other's questioning eyes.
+
+"I haven't failed yet," he said quietly. "In nine of our camps back on
+the river the work's running full already. I've a whole big yarn for our
+boys. But right here I've got what's better. It's the only thing that'll
+clinch the yarn I'm going to hand 'em. This," he went on, indicating the
+parcel in his hand, "is the bunch of dollars representing the price of
+this camp's full winter cut, and the price of a bonus for making up all
+leeway already lost. I'm going to have the boys count it. Then I'm going
+to have them hand it right over to Abe Risdon to set in his safe, with a
+written order from me to pay out in full the moment the winter cut is
+complete. Is it good? Can the Skandinavia's junk stand in face of it?
+No, sir. And so I've proved right along. I don't hold much of a brief
+for the intelligence of the forest-jack, but his belly rules him all the
+time. You see, he's human, and no more dishonest than the rest of us.
+Have him guessing and worried and you'll get trouble right along. Show
+him the lies the Skandinavia's been doping him with, and he'll work out
+of sheer spite to beat their game. You get right out and collect the
+gang."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The snowfall had ceased. And with its passing the temperature had fallen
+to something far below its average winter level. The clouds had vanished
+miraculously, and in their place was a night sky ablaze with the light
+of myriad stars, and the soft splendour of a brilliant moon.
+
+It was a scene of frigid desolation. Away on the southern horizon lay
+the black line which marked the tremendous forest limits of the Beaver
+River. For the rest it was a world of snow that hid up the rugged
+undulations of a sterile territory.
+
+The dog train was moving at a reckless gait over the untracked,
+hardening snow. The man Gouter was driving under imperative orders such
+as he loved. Bull Sternford had told him when he left the shelter of
+No. 10 Camp: "Get there! Get there quick! There's dogs and to spare at
+all our camps, and I don't care a curse if you run the outfit to death."
+
+To a man of Gouter's breed the order was sufficient. Half Eskimo, half
+white man, he was a savage of the wild, born and bred to the fierce
+northern trail, one of Labrador's hereditary fur hunters by sea and
+land. Speed on the fiercest trail was the dream of his vanity. Relays of
+dogs, such as he could never afford, and something accomplished which he
+could tell of over the camp fire to his less fortunate brethren. So he
+accepted the white man's order and drove accordingly.
+
+Bull Sternford sat huddled in the back of the sled under the fur robes
+which alone made life possible. His work at No. 10 Camp had left him
+satisfied, but every nerve in his body was alert for the final coup he
+contemplated. He was weary in mind as well as body. And in his heart he
+knew that the need of his physical resources was not so very far off.
+But he was beyond care. He had said he was crazy for sleep, but the
+words gave no indication of his real condition. His eyes ached. His head
+throbbed. There were moments, even, when the things he beheld, the
+things he thought became distorted. But he knew that somewhere ahead a
+ghostly outfit of strangers was pursuing its evil work against him, and
+he meant to come up with it, and to wreak his vengeance in merciless,
+summary fashion. His purpose had become an obsession in the long
+sleepless days and nights he had endured.
+
+It was war. It was bitter ruthless war on the barren hinterland of
+Labrador, where civilisation was unknown. Mercy? Nature never designed
+that terrible wilderness as a setting for mercy.
+
+The dogs had been running for hours when Gouter's voice came sharply
+back over his shoulder.
+
+"Dog!" he cried, in the laconic fashion habitual to him.
+
+Bull knelt up. His movement suggested the nervous strain he was
+enduring. It was almost electrical.
+
+"Where?" he demanded, peering out into the shining night over the man's
+furry shoulder.
+
+The half-breed raised a pointing whip ahead and to the south.
+
+"Sure," he said. "I hear him."
+
+Bull had heard nothing. Nothing but the hiss of the snow under their own
+runners, and the whimper of their own dogs.
+
+"It wouldn't be a wolf or fox?" he demurred.
+
+The half-breed clucked his tongue. His vanity was outraged.
+
+Bull gazed intently in the direction the whip had pointed. He could see
+only the far-off forest line, and the soft whiteness of the world of
+snow.
+
+"Hark!"
+
+The half-breed again held up his whip. This time it was for attention.
+Bull listened. Still he could hear nothing, nothing at all but the
+sounds of their own progress.
+
+"Man! Him speak with dog. Oh, yes."
+
+Gouter had turned. His beady black eyes were shining with a smile of
+triumph into the white man's face.
+
+"By the forest?"
+
+"Oh, yes."
+
+"Then in God's name swing over and run to head them off!"
+
+Gouter obeyed with alacrity. He had impressed his white chief. It was
+good. A series of unintelligible ejaculations and the dogs swung away to
+the south. Then the whip rolled out and fell with cruel accuracy. The
+rawhide tugs strained under a mighty effort, as the great dogs were set
+racing with their lean bellies low to the ground.
+
+Bull wiped the icicles from about his mouth and nose.
+
+"Now have your guns ready," he cried. "The driver of that team is your
+man. The other's mine. If he shows fight kill him. There's five hundred
+dollars for you if you get 'em."
+
+"I get 'em."
+
+The half-breed's confidence was supreme. Bull dropped back into the
+sled. He sat with a pair of automatic pistols ready to his hand and
+gazed out over the sled rail.
+
+It was a terrific race and all feeling of weariness had passed under the
+excitement of it. The dogs were silent now. Every nerve in their
+muscular bodies were straining. The pace seemed to increase with every
+passing moment, and up out of the horizon the dark line of the forest
+leapt at them, deepening and broadening as it came.
+
+For some time the less practised white man saw and heard nothing of his
+enemies. He was forced to rely on the half-breed. He observed the man
+closely. He noted his every sign and read it as best he could. Presently
+Gouter leant forward peering. Then he straightened up and his voice came
+back triumphantly.
+
+"I see dem," he exclaimed. And pointed almost abreast. "Dogs.
+One--two--five. Yes. Two man. Now we get him sure."
+
+Down fell the whip on the racing dogs. The man shouted his jargon at
+them. The sled lurched and swayed with the added spurt, and Bull held
+fast to the rail. A glad thrill surged through his senses.
+
+It was a moment of tremendous uplift. Bull had yearned for it for weeks.
+But the short days and long nights of deferred hope had had their
+effect. He had almost come to feel that this thing that was now at hand
+was something impossible.
+
+Yes. There was the outfit growing plainer and plainer with every moment.
+He could see it clearly. He could even count its details as the other's
+sharper eyes had counted them minutes before. There were five dogs. And
+they were running hard. They, too, were being flogged, and the man
+driving them was shouting furiously in his urgency.
+
+Suddenly there was a leap of flame and a shot rang out. It came from the
+driver of the fleeing dog train. It was replied to on the instant by
+Gouter who lost not a second. His own shot sped even as the enemy's
+bullet whistled somewhere past his head. He fired again. A third shot
+split the air. And with that last shot the enemy's sled seemed to leap
+in the air. There was a moment of hideous confusion. Then the wreckage
+dropped away behind the pursuers, sprawled and still in the snow.
+
+A fierce shout from Gouter and his dogs swung round. The sled under him
+heeled over, and took a desperate chance on a single runner. But the
+half-breed's skill saved them from catastrophe. It righted itself, and
+the dogs slowed to a trot. Then they halted. And the occupants of the
+sled flung themselves prone, with their guns ready for the first sign of
+movement in the tangled mass of their adversary's outfit.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Two of the dogs lay buried under the overturned sled. Three others were
+sprawling at the end of their rawhide tugs. They were alive. They were
+unhurt. They lay there taking full advantage of the situation for rest.
+
+But for the moment interest centred round the body of a white man lying
+some yards away. A groan of pain came up to the two men standing over
+him.
+
+Bull dropped on his knees. He reached down and turned the body over. The
+eyes of the man were visible between the sides of his fur hood. But that
+was all.
+
+There was a moment of silent contemplation. Then the injured man
+struggled desperately to rise.
+
+"Sternford?" he ejaculated
+
+Gouter was on him in a moment. He heard the tone of voice, and
+interpreted the man's movement in his own savage fashion. He knew the
+man to be the driver of the team, whom his boss had told him was his
+man. So he threw him back and held him.
+
+Bull stood up. The man's voice told him all he wanted to know.
+
+"Laval, eh?" he said quietly. "A second time. I didn't expect it. No."
+
+Then he laughed and turned away. And the sound of his laugh possessed
+something terribly mocking in the night silence of the wilderness.
+
+He passed back to the sled. There had been two men in it. He had seen
+that for himself.
+
+The wreckage looked hopeless. The sled was completely overturned and its
+gleaming runners caught and reflected the white rays of the moon. It had
+been thrown by reason of the fallen bodies of the dogs which lay under
+it, pinned by its weight, and additionally held fast by their own
+tangled harness.
+
+Bull had no thought for anything but the purpose in his mind. So he
+reached out and caught the steel runners in his mitted hands and flung
+the vehicle aside.
+
+Yes, it was there in the midst of a confusion of baggage and lying cheek
+by jowl with the mangled remains of the dogs. He cleared the debris, and
+dragged the dogs aside. Then he stood and gazed down at the figure that
+remained.
+
+It was clad in a voluminous beaver coat. It was hooded, as was every man
+who faced the fierce Labrador trail. But--
+
+The figure moved. It stirred, and deliberately sat up. Bull's hands had
+been on his guns at the first movement. But he released them, as the
+hood fell back from the face which was ghastly pale in the moonlight.
+
+He flung himself on his knees, and tenderly supported the swaying
+figure.
+
+"God in Heaven!" he cried. "Nancy! You?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+ON THE HOME TRAIL
+
+
+Nancy's eyes were desperately troubled as she gazed out across the great
+valley of the Beaver River. Somewhere behind her, in the shelter of the
+woods, a mid-day camp had been pitched, and the men who had captured her
+red-hand in the work of their enemies were preparing the, rough food of
+the trail. But she was beyond all such concern.
+
+Far out on every hand lay the amazing panorama of the splendid valley,
+but she saw none of it. The mighty frozen waterway, the depths of virgin
+snow, the far-reaching woodlands its gaping lips embraced; they were
+things of frigid beauty for her eyes to gaze upon, but their meaning was
+lost upon a mind tortured with the vivid, hateful pictures it was
+powerless to escape.
+
+From the moment of that dreadful night when she had witnessed the
+ruthless climax of the work to which she had given herself she had known
+no peace. It was no thought of her failure, her capture, that inspired
+her trouble. She could have been thankful enough for that. It was the
+only mercy, she felt, that had been vouchsafed to her.
+
+No, long before her capture, a deep undermining of regret had set in.
+She had been without realisation of it, perhaps. But it had been there.
+In yielding to the demands of those she served, in her self-confidence
+she had forgotten the woman in her. She had forgotten everything but the
+crazy ambition which had blinded her to all consequences. Yes, even in
+the excitement of the work itself she had forgotten everything but the
+achievement she desired. But through it all, under it all, the woman in
+her had been slowly awakening, and an unadmitted regret at the
+destruction of work which meant the whole life of another had been
+stirring. Then, when the leading tongues of the guns had flashed out,
+and human life, even the life of dogs, had yielded to the demand of her
+cause, the last vestige of her dreaming had been swept away, and she
+told herself it was murder, _murder at her bidding_!
+
+Now her soul was afire with the bitterness of repentance, with
+passionate self-accusation. Murder had been done through her. Murder!
+The horror of it all had driven her well-nigh demented when she gazed
+from the distance while the two men disposed of Arden Laval's body under
+the snow. The dogs? They had been left where they fell. The living had
+been cut loose from their trappings to roam the forests at their will,
+while the dead had remained to satisfy the fierce hunger of the savage
+forest creatures. Even the sled had been destroyed, and its wood used to
+make fire that the living might endure on those pitiless northern
+heights. The memory of it all was days old now, but its horror showed no
+abatement. The agony was still with her. She felt that never again could
+she know peace.
+
+So she had moved away out from camp, as she had done at every stopping
+they had made on the long journey from the highlands down to Sachigo.
+Somehow it seemed to her impossible to do otherwise. She felt she must
+hide herself from the sight of those others who were her captors, and
+who, in their hearts, she felt, must deeply abhor the presence of so
+vile a creature in their camp.
+
+How long she had been standing there, while the men prepared the mid-day
+meal, she did not know. It was a matter of no sort of consequence to her
+anyway. Nothing really seemed of any consequence now. Her jaded mind
+was obsessed by a horror she could not shake off. There was nothing,
+nothing in the world to do but nurse the anguish driving her.
+
+"You'll come right along and eat, Nancy?"
+
+The girl almost jumped at the gentle tones of the man's voice, and
+glanced round at Bull Sternford in an agony of sudden terror.
+
+"I--I--" she stammered. Then composure returned to her. "If you wish
+it," she said submissively. "But I don't need food."
+
+Bull regarded the averted face for moments. Sympathy and love were in
+his clear gazing eyes. He understood something of the thing she was
+enduring, and the tone of his voice had been a real expression of his
+feelings. This girl, with the courage of twenty men, with her radiant
+beauty, and in her pitiful, heartbroken condition, was far more precious
+to him than any victory he had set himself to achieve. He knew that the
+world held nothing half so precious.
+
+He came a step nearer.
+
+"I wonder if you'll listen to me, Nancy," he said, with a hesitation and
+doubt utterly foreign, to him. "You know, for all that's happened, for
+all we're mixed up against each other in this war, I'm the same man you
+found me on the _Myra_ and in Quebec. I--"
+
+"Don't."
+
+The girl flung out her hands in a piteous appeal. And Bull recognised
+the hysteria lying behind the movement.
+
+"I know," she cried. "Oh, I know. But--don't you understand? You must
+know what I am. It's my doing that Laval has gone to his death. I'm
+responsible, just as surely as if I'd fired the gun that robbed him of
+his life. Oh, why, why didn't I refuse the work? Why did they send me?
+And those dogs. Those poor helpless dogs. They, too. I must have been
+mad--mad. How can you come near me? How can you stand there summoning
+me to eat food--with you? It's useless. It's--I who sent that man to his
+death--I who--"
+
+"Why, I thought it was Gouter."
+
+Bull's manner had suddenly changed. The danger signal in the girl's eyes
+had determined him. So he smiled, and there was laughter in his
+challenge.
+
+"Say," he went on rapidly, "if you told that to Gouter he'd be crazy
+mad. He's the boss running shot on Labrador, and if you claimed
+responsibility for the killing of Laval you'd be dead up against it with
+him." He shook his head. "No, he's sort of grieved he didn't drop him
+plumb on the instant as it is. It won't do you talking that way with him
+around."
+
+He watched for the effect of his words and realised a slight relaxing of
+the strained look in the hazel eyes. Forthwith he plunged into the thing
+he contemplated.
+
+"I'm going to make a big talk with you before we eat," he said. "You
+see, I've wanted to right along, Nancy, but--Well, I want to tell you
+you're no more responsible for Laval's life, and the lives of those
+dogs, than I am. We're each playing our little parts in the things of
+life like the puppets we are. Our hands are clean enough, but it's not
+that way with the skunks that could send you, a girl, almost a child, to
+do the work, and live the life that boys like Gouter hardly know how to
+get through. That man, Peterman, is going to get it one day from me if I
+have luck. And I won't call it murder when I get my hands on his dirty
+alien throat. But never mind that. I want to ease that poor aching head
+of yours. I want to try and get you some peace of mind. That's why I
+tell you you've nothing to chide yourself for, nothing at all. It's
+true. You've played the game like the loyal adversary you are. And, for
+the moment, I'm top dog. You've handed me a bad nightmare by the
+wonderful courage and grit you've well-nigh shamed me, as a man, with.
+True, true you haven't a thing to blame yourself with. You've fought a
+mighty big fight I'd have been pleased to fight. It's just circumstances
+pitched you into the muss up, and let you see the thing your folks have
+brought about. It's that that's worrying. Think, Nancy, think hard. This
+is their fight. Not yours. The blood of Laval is on Elas Peterman's
+head. His, and those other creatures who are ready to commit any crime
+to steal our country from us. Oh, I'm not preaching just my side. It's
+true, true. We at Sachigo were content to compete openly, honestly.
+Peterman and those others saw disaster in our competition. And so they
+got ready to murder--if necessary. It's the soulless crime of a gang of
+unscrupulous foreigners, and those hounds of hell have left you to
+suffer for it just as sure as if they'd seared your poor gentle heart
+with a red hot iron. Say, Nancy," he went on, with persuasive
+earnestness, "put it all out of your mind. Forget it all. You're out of
+the fight now. And it just hurts me to see your eyes troubled, and that
+poor tender heart of yours all broken up. Won't you?"
+
+The girl had turned away to the gaping valley again. But she answered
+him. And her tone was less dull, and it was without the dreadful passion
+of moments ago.
+
+"I--I've tried to tell myself something of that," she said, with the
+pathetic helplessness of a child.
+
+"Then try some more."
+
+Bull had drawn nearer. He laid one hand gently on her shoulder. It moved
+down and took possession of the soft arm under her furs. Nancy shook her
+head. But there was no decision in the movement.
+
+"Oh, I wish--" she began.
+
+But she could get no further. Suddenly she buried her face in her hands,
+and broke into a passion of weeping.
+
+Bull stood helplessly by. He gazed upon the shaking woman while great
+sobs racked her whole body. There was nothing he could do, nothing he
+dared do. He knew that. His impulse was to take her in his arms and
+protect her with his body against the things which gave her pain.
+But--somehow he felt that perhaps it was good for her to weep. Perhaps
+it would help her. So he waited.
+
+Slowly the violence of the girl's grief subsided. And after a while she
+turned to him and gazed at him through her tears.
+
+"I'm--I'm--"
+
+But Bull shook his head.
+
+"Come. Shall we go and eat?"
+
+He still retained his hold upon her arm. And as he spoke he led her
+unresistingly away towards the camp.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE MAN IN THE TWILIGHT
+
+
+Bat Harker passed out of the house on the hillside. Muffled in heavy
+furs he stood for a moment filling up the storm doorway, gazing out over
+a desolate prospect, a scene of grave-like, significant stillness.
+
+The mills he loved were completely idle. But that was not all. He knew
+them to be at the mercy of an army of men who had abandoned their work
+at the call of wanton political and commercial agitators. It was
+disaster, grievous disaster. And he told himself he was about to beat a
+retreat like some hard-pressed general, hastily retiring in face of the
+enemy from a position no longer tenable.
+
+There was no yielding in the lumberman. But to a man of his forcefulness
+and headstrong courage the thought of retreat was maddening. He was
+yearning to fight in any and every way that offered. He knew that he was
+going to fight this thing out, that his present retreat was purely
+strategic. He knew that the whole campaign was only just beginning. But
+it galled his spirit that his first move must be a--retreat.
+
+The late winter day was fiercely threatening, fit setting for the
+disaster that had befallen. The cold was bitterly intense, but no more
+bitter than the lumberman's present mood. There down below were the
+deserted quays with their mountains of baled wood-pulp buried deep under
+white drifts of snow. And the voiceless mills were similarly half
+buried. Look where he would the scene was dead and deserted. There was
+not one single stirring human figure to break up the desolation of it
+all.
+
+It was a sad, white, desolate world, which for over fifteen years he had
+known only as a busy hive. Roadways should have been clear. Traffic
+should have been speeding, every service, even in the depth of winter,
+should have been in full running. The mills--those wonderful
+mills--should have been droning out their chorus of human achievement in
+a world set out for Nature's fiercest battle ground.
+
+From the moment of that first encounter in the recreation hall Bat had
+known the strike to be inevitable. Bull's swift action at the outset had
+had its effect. For the moment it had checked the movement, and reduced
+it to a simmer. Heat and power had been restored, and work had been
+resumed, and outwardly there had been peace. But it was artificial, and
+the lumberman and the engineer had been aware that this was so.
+
+Brief as was the respite it was valuable time to the men in control, and
+they used it to the uttermost. The leaders of the strike had been robbed
+of the advantage they had sought from a lightning strike. But they were
+by no means defeated. It was only that they had lost a move in the game
+they had prepared.
+
+At the end of a week Bat awoke one morning to find the mills and all
+traffic at a standstill, and the workers skulking within the shelter of
+their own homes.
+
+Then it was that the benefit of a week's respite was made plain. Every
+plan that had been prepared was forthwith put into operation. Power and
+heat were again cut off. The loyalists, which included a large number of
+the engineering staff, and the staff of the executive offices, were
+equipped with such weapons as would serve, and set guard over the food
+and liquor stores, and the essentials of the mills. And the power house
+was fortified for siege.
+
+But the strikers gave no sign. There was no attempt at violence. There
+was no picketing, and no apparent attempt at coercion of the loyalists.
+It almost seemed as if the objects of the leaders had been achieved by
+the simple cessation of work.
+
+This silent condition of the strike had gone on for days with
+exasperating effect upon the defenders. Bat endeavoured by every means
+in his power to bring the leaders of the movement into the open to
+discuss the situation. But every effort ended negatively. The men would
+not contemplate the conference table, and finally, in headlong mood, the
+lumberman had committed the grave mistake of provocation. He threatened
+to cut off food supplies if the leaders continued in their refusal to
+confer.
+
+Two weeks elapsed before his threat reacted. Two weeks of continued
+silence and apparent inaction by the strike leaders. The men's first
+terror at the loss of heat and power seemed to have passed. As Bull had
+suggested they had resorted to the methods of the trail, and day and
+night mighty beacon fires burned along the fore-shores of the cove upon
+which their homes were built. The men and women came and went peaceably
+but silently between the food stores and their homes, purchasing such
+provisions as they needed. And the manner of it all, the cold silence,
+should have served a warning of the iron hand in exercise behind the
+strike.
+
+The bombshell came at the end of the third week. It came in the form of
+a message crouched in the flamboyant phraseology beloved of the
+Communist fraternity. It was conveyed by a small youth some ten years of
+age, as though its authors were fearful lest a full grown bearer should
+be made to suffer for the temerity.
+
+Bat had received it at the office, and his manner had been
+characteristic.
+
+"Fer me, laddie?" he had said, as he took possession of the
+official-looking envelope. Then he gently patted the boy's shoulder.
+"All right, sonny," he added. "You get right back to your folks. Pore
+little bit."
+
+With the boy's departure he had lost no time in reading the ultimatum
+the message contained.
+
+ "A Soviet has been formed. The Workers will not submit to
+ inteference with the food supplies of the people such as has
+ been threatened by men who have no right over the life and death
+ of their fellows. In view of this threat, the Soviet of the
+ Workers has determined to possess itself of the mills and all
+ properties pertaining thereto. The whole territories and
+ properties hither controlled under a capitalist organisation
+ will in future be administered by the Soviet or the Workers. You
+ are required, therefore, to hand over forthwith all accountings,
+ administration, and all funds, all legal documentary titles such
+ as are held by you of freeholds and forestry rights relating to
+ Sachigo. Furthermore, it is required of you to restore intact
+ the machinery of the new power station, and to hand over the
+ whole premises in full running order. One week's grace will be
+ permitted for the execution of this order. Failing absolute
+ compliance, the ruling Soviet of the Workers reserves to itself
+ the right of adopting such measures to enforce the Will of the
+ Workers as it may deem necessary.
+
+ "On behalf of the Soviet of the Workers,
+
+ "LEO MURKO,
+
+ "Chief Commissionary."
+
+At the finish of his reading Bat had looked up into the dark face of
+Pete Loale who was standing by.
+
+"Leo Murko?" he said, in an ominously restrained tone. "Ther' ain't no
+guy o' that name on our pay-roll. Guess he'll be that feller Bull
+dropped out into the snow." Then with a sudden explosive force: "In
+God's name why in hell didn't he break that skunk's neck?"
+
+The week's grace had expired. It had been a week of further hasty
+preparations. Every day had been used to the uttermost, and even far
+into the night the work had gone on. The office on the hill, as well as
+the executive offices down at the mill, had been cleared out. Documents,
+cash, books, safe. Everything of real importance had been removed to the
+citadel power house. The mining of the penstocks had been completed, and
+left ready to be blown sky high at a moment's notice. Whatever befell,
+the men who had given their lives to the building of the mills were
+determined that only a useless husk should fall into the hands of the
+strikers.
+
+Now had come the Communists' final declaration of war. The message had
+been brought less than an hour ago by the same youth, who had again
+departed with Bat's smiling expression of pity. The letter was ominously
+brief.
+
+ "The Order of the Soviet of the Workers will be enforced
+ forthwith. No mercy will be shown in the event of resistance."
+
+Bat's fury had blazed as he read the message. Again it was signed "Leo
+Murko." How he hated that name. He had been alone in the office when the
+letter came, and had seized the 'phone and called up the engineer at the
+power house, and read the message to him. Skert Lawton's reply was as
+instant as it was characteristic.
+
+"That's all right," he said. "We're fixed for the scrap. Just come right
+over."
+
+It was this last act that Bat contemplated now. And he hated it. He
+knew well enough he must go. There was no sane alternative. The power
+station was the prepared fortress. It had everything in it that must be
+guarded and fought for. But his fierce regret was none the less for the
+knowledge.
+
+Then, too, his regret was for something else. It was at the absence of
+Bull Sternford. This was no expression of weakness. It was simply he
+desired the man's companionship. They had worked together. They had
+planned and built together. And, now, in the moment of battle, it seemed
+to him they should still be together.
+
+But he knew that was impossible. When Bull's call to the forest had come
+in the night there had been no opportunity for explanation. He, Bat, had
+been engaged down at the mill, and the other had been rushed in his
+preparations. Bull had made his farewell to him in a great hurry. He had
+outlined briefly the thing happening in the forests. That had been all.
+That and a few words on the affairs of the mill.
+
+How the news had reached Bull, and who the messenger, had never
+transpired between them. Perhaps Bull had forgotten to mention it.
+Perhaps, in the hurry of it all, Bat had forgotten to ask. Perhaps,
+even, the messenger himself had impressed secrecy for his visit, which
+had been timed for the dead of night. At any rate Bat knew none of these
+things, and was in no way concerned for them. All he was concerned for
+was the absence of the man who was something more to him than a mere
+partner.
+
+Thinking of him now Bat remembered the other's final words, and the
+memory stirred him deeply.
+
+"Remember, old friend," he had said, "young Ray Birchall will be over
+from England at the break of winter. On his report to his people depends
+the whole thing we've built up. We've got to have these mills running
+full when that boy gets around. There's not a darn thing else matters."
+
+It was the final spur. The mills running full. Bat spat out his chew,
+and turned and locked the door behind him. Then he moved away hurriedly,
+gazing straight in front of him as though he dared not even think of the
+place he was leaving.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the foreshore of the Cove, out towards the guarding headlands, half a
+hundred fires were burning. They were immense beacon fires of monstrous
+proportions. Belching columns of smoke clouded the whole region till the
+water-front looked to be in the grip of a forest fire.
+
+Men, and women, and children were gathered about them. They were basking
+in a moderation of temperature such as their homes could no longer
+afford them. But it was a curious, silent gathering, indifferent to
+everything but the feeding of the fires on which they felt their very
+existence depended.
+
+The forests which supplied the fuel came down to the edge of the now
+idle trolley track. Already acres and acres had been felled to feed the
+insatiable fires. The woodland decimated, and the devastation was going
+on in every direction.
+
+About the houses there were others engaged in homely chores. There were
+men, and women, too, clad heavily in the thick sheepskin clothing which
+alone could defeat the fierce breath of winter. Here again was silence
+and gloom, and even the children refrained from their accustomed
+pastimes.
+
+A tall, fur-clad figure was moving through the settlement. His feet were
+encased in moccasins, and thick felt leggings reached up just below his
+knees. For the rest his nether garments were loose fur trousers, and his
+body was covered by a tunic reaching just below his middle, with a
+capacious hood attached to it almost completely enveloping his head.
+
+He moved slowly and without any seeming object. He passed along, and
+paused when he encountered either man, woman, or child. With the men he
+spoke longest. But the women claimed him, too. And generally he left
+behind him a change of expression for the better in those with whom he
+talked.
+
+He paused beside a small party of elderly men. They were at work upon a
+prone tree trunk of vast girth. They were cutting and splitting it,
+fresh feed for the fires which must never be permitted to die down.
+
+The men had ceased work on his approach. But they went on almost
+immediately, all except one. He was a grizzled veteran, a man just past
+middle life. His face was deeply lined, and a scrub of whisker protected
+it from the cold. He had been seated on the log, but he stood up as the
+tall man addressed him by name.
+
+"You'll be there, Michael," he said, brushing the frost from his darkly
+whiskered face, and breaking the icicles hanging from his fur hood where
+it almost closed over his mouth.
+
+The man's grey eyes were smiling as they looked into the wide black eyes
+so mildly encouraging.
+
+"Sure, Father," came his prompt reply. "We got to be ther' anyway. That
+don't matter. But we're for your lead, an' we'll stand by it, sure.
+There's going to be no sort of damn fool mistake this time."
+
+The tall man nodded.
+
+"There must be no mistake this time," he said keenly. "Say, how many
+years is it since I sent you along here with a promise of good work and
+better wages, and a square deal?"
+
+"Nigh five years, Father."
+
+"And you got all--those things?"
+
+"Sure. More."
+
+Father Adam nodded.
+
+"And those are the things a man's entitled to. Just those," he said. "If
+a man wants more it's up to him. He must earn it in competition with the
+rest of his fellows. If he can't earn it he must do without, or quit the
+honesty that entitles him to hold his head up in the world. There's no
+honesty in the things these men propose."
+
+"That's so, Father."
+
+There was decision in the man's agreement. But even as he spoke his gaze
+wandered in the direction of two small children, like bundles of fur,
+playing in the snow.
+
+"Poor little kids," he said. "Say, it's hell for them with heat cut
+off."
+
+Again the tall man nodded as he followed the other's gaze.
+
+"That's so. But I don't blame the mill-bosses. This gang is trying to
+steal from the men who've always handed out a straight deal. Do you
+blame them for defending themselves?"
+
+Michael shook his head.
+
+"I don't see I can. After all--"
+
+"No. Listen. You boys have it in your own hands. These crooks from the
+Skandinavia got a strangle holt on the youngsters of this outfit who've
+no kiddies like those. You older boys let 'em get it. You weren't awake.
+Now you find yourselves caught in the tide. We've got to make a break
+for it. There'll be heat in plenty when you break free. Seven o'clock.
+That's the time your masters ordered the meeting for. Seven o'clock.
+That's the time they intend to commit their great crime--with you
+helping them."
+
+Father Adam smiled as he drove his satire home.
+
+"Not on your life!" The man's grey eyes were fierce. "Give us the lead,
+Father," he cried. "We--we just got to have that. Ther' ain't a real
+lumber-jack in these forests won't follow it. It'll be a scrap. A hell
+of a scrap. Oh, I know. Maybe some of us'll never see the light of
+another day. But sure it's got to be. We ought to've gone over from the
+start, and stood by our jobs. But I guess none of us with wives and
+kiddies had the guts. They threatened our women and children, an' we
+weakened. But it's different now, sure. We've learned our lesson. It's
+themselves they're out for, an' we'll be their dogs to be kicked and
+bullied as they see fit. We'll follow your lead, Father, an' it don't
+matter a cuss when the scrap comes."
+
+Father Adam nodded. His dark eyes were alight with something more than
+the smile shining in them.
+
+"Good," he said. "I shall be there."
+
+He moved away and Michael rejoined his companions. They talked together
+for a moment or two while their eyes followed the receding figure. They
+saw it stop and speak to one of their wives. She had a small child with
+her. They saw it bend down into a squatting attitude and draw the child
+towards it. Then they saw a lean hand draw out of its mit and proceed to
+touch a swelling on the little mite's neck. They understood. And when
+the figure finally passed on out of sight, they returned to their work,
+each man absorbed in his own thought, each man with a surge of deep
+feeling for that lonely figure. For they were all men who knew, and
+understood the man who lived in the twilight of the forests.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The recreation room was packed to suffocation, packed from end to end
+with a human freight. The benches were crowded, and the tables groaned
+under the weight of as many rough-clad creatures as could crowd
+themselves thereon. Every inch of floor space was occupied, and even the
+recesses in the log walls which contained the windows were utilised as
+sitting places for the audience which had gathered at the imperative
+order of the Soviet of the Workers.
+
+Kerosene lamps had replaced the brilliant electric light to which the
+men were accustomed. A haze of tobacco smoke created a sort of fog
+throughout the length of the building, and contrived to soften the harsh
+lines of the sea of human faces turned towards the raised platform
+whereon sat the members of the ruling Soviet. The temperature of the
+room was cold for all the warming influence of the human gathering, and
+every man wore his fur-lined pea-jacket closely buttoned.
+
+Once, in a light moment, Bull Sternford had declared that male human
+nature in the "bunch" was the ugliest thing in the world. Had he
+witnessed that sea of faces, so intently, so anxiously turned towards
+the leaders they had presumably elected, he must have been well
+satisfied with the truth of his conviction.
+
+Such was the ascendancy and power the Bolshevist leaders had gained in
+the brief month since the first rumble of industrial war had been heard
+in Sachigo, that there were few who had failed to obey their summons.
+Not only was the hall crowded but a gathering of many hundreds waited
+outside. It was the hour of Fate for all. They understood that. It was
+the hour of that Fate which had been decreed by men, who, under the
+guise of democratic selection had usurped a power over the rest of the
+community such as no elected parliament of the world had ever been
+entrusted with.
+
+It was doubtful if the majority fully realised the significance of what
+was being done. It is certain that a feeling of deep regret stirred
+voicelessly in many hearts. But every man there was a simple wage earner
+whose horizon was bounded by that which his wage opened up. For the rest
+he was left guessing, but more often fearing. So, with his muscles of
+iron, his human desires, and his reluctance to apply such untrained
+reasoning as he possessed, he was ripe subject for fluent, unscrupulous,
+political agitators, and ready to sweep along with any tide that set in.
+
+The leaders on the platform understood this well enough. It was their
+business to understand it. The others, the leaders' immediate
+supporters, were men of fiery youth, or those whose work it was to wreck
+at all costs, and snatch to themselves, in addition to pay for their
+fell work, such loot as the wreckage afforded them.
+
+The hum of talk snuffed right out as the leader rose to address the
+meeting. It was Leo Murko, the same man, a hard-faced, foreign-looking
+Hebrew whom a month before Bull's great arms flung through the broken
+window into the snowdrift beyond. His position now, however, was far
+different from that which it had been when his endeavours had been
+concentrated upon enrolling a Communist following. All that had been
+achieved or sufficiently so. Now he was the dictator whose orders could
+be backed by an irresistible force. His whole manner had changed. The
+velvet glove of persuasion had been discarded, and he hurled his
+commands with deep-throated authority, and the smile of encouragement
+and persuasion was completely abandoned.
+
+His preliminary was brief. A phrase or two of flattery and
+acknowledgment to those on the platform supporting him dismissed that.
+Then he passed on to the objects in view. In five minutes he had
+dismissed also the ultimate destiny of the mills, and the manner in
+which the Workers were to benefit by its administration. Then he flung
+himself into a fiery denunciation of all capitalists, and particularly
+those who had dared to employ his audience on good wages for something
+like fifteen years. That completed he passed on to the plans for taking
+over the mills forthwith.
+
+During the earlier part of his address the audience listened with grave
+attention. Here and there little outbursts of applause punctuated his
+sentences. But when he came to the task which had been set for that
+night a deathly silence prevailed everywhere. The intensity was added to
+rather than broken by the harsh clearing of throats that came from
+almost every part of the hall.
+
+"The whole thing needs cleaning up before daylight," he hurled at them.
+"Our organisation is complete. Here," and he indicated the table nearby
+littered with papers and surrounded by four or five men who were members
+of the elected Soviet, "we have the lists of the names of every comrade,
+and the numbers of men to be used in every detail of the work before us.
+They have been carefully drawn up with a view to the task required to be
+put through. Some tasks will be simple. Some will be less so." A grim
+light that was almost a smile shone in his black eyes. "But we have
+carefully discriminated in our personnel. That is as it should be. There
+will be certain bloodshed. Knowing the temperament and preparations of
+your late masters this seems to be inevitable. But again we have
+provided. Our greatest and most important task is the possession of the
+power station, and for the capture of that we have machine guns which
+will quickly reduce the enemy to capitulation. The strength of the enemy
+we know to the last fraction--"
+
+"Do you?"
+
+The challenge came from the back of the hall. It came in a quiet,
+refined voice that swept through the hall with the cold cut of a knife.
+Someone had risen from a sitting position on a table. He stood up. It
+was the tall, dark figure of Father Adam clad in a garment which
+enveloped him from head to foot like the black cassock of a priest.
+
+"Do you?" he cried again, as the startled leader stared stupidly at the
+interrupter.
+
+Every eye turned to the back of the hall on the instant. The men on the
+platform looked up from their work to witness the daring of one who
+could interrupt the elected leader of the people. One man, slight,
+foreign-looking, who had been seated at the back of the platform stood
+up and leant against the wall.
+
+"You know nothing of these people you are determined to destroy with
+machine guns," Father Adam went on. "You know nothing of the men with
+whom you are dealing, either the owners of the mill, or the men who have
+found an ample livelihood under their organisation. How can you know
+them? You are dastardly agents of an alien company, sent and paid to
+wreck a wholly Canadian enterprise. This is your first object. Your
+second is even more sinister, for you are the agents of that mad
+Leninism which has destroyed a whole race of workers in a vast country
+like Russia. You are a supreme pestilence seeking to destroy such human
+nature as will listen to your vile doctrines. It is I, I, Father Adam,
+tell you so. The men here to-night, whom you are inciting to theft and
+brutal murder, know me. They know me as their servant, as their loyal
+comrade and helper, ready to answer their call when trouble overtakes
+them, ready to yield them of my best service in the day of prosperity or
+the night of their woe. And as it is with them so it is with their women
+and their babes. That's the reason I am here to-night, the black night
+of their woe. And so I ask them to listen to me now as they have
+listened many times before in the woods and the mills, which is the
+world to which we all belong. If they do that, if only reason asserts
+itself, they'll here and now turn on you, and rend you, you and your
+wretched gang. They'll cast you out of their midst, and fling off a
+foreign yoke, as they would cast out any other unclean pestilence for
+the purification of their homes. They'll pack you out into the northern
+night where no foul germs can exist. Are they to become thieves at your
+bidding? Are they to become murderers because your foreign money has
+bought them machine guns? Would they go back to their women, and their
+innocent babes, wiping their blood-stained hands to ask them to rejoice
+in the brutal crime committed in the name of brotherhood and fellowship?
+No, sir. I know them. You don't--"
+
+The Bolshevist flung out a denouncing hand and bellowed in his seething
+wrath:
+
+"Traitor! He is of the Cap--"
+
+But immediate uproar drowned his denunciation and a great voice shouted
+in the din.
+
+"Let him speak."
+
+A dozen other voices strove to make themselves heard, and a wild
+pandemonium was rising when clear and sharp Father Adam's voice rang out
+again above it.
+
+"I tell you they'll have no more of you," he cried as the leader dropped
+back to his seat, and the dark man at the back of the platform further
+bestirred himself. "Order them now to man your machine guns and murder
+the men in the power house! Give your orders here and now! Read out your
+list of names and see--"
+
+A shot rang out. The flame of a gun leapt somewhere at the back of the
+platform, to be followed by complete, utter silence.
+
+Then came a sound. It was a hardly-suppressed moan. Father Adam reeled
+slowly. He half turned about. Then he crumpled and dropped to his knees
+and fell forward into hands outstretched to catch him.
+
+Paralysis seemed to grip that dense-packed human throng. But it was only
+for a second. Then the avalanche leapt for the abyss.
+
+"Father! Father Adam!"
+
+The cry went up seemingly from a thousand throats. And with a roar the
+crowd surged forward. It hurled itself at the platform.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bull stared up at the house. He moved away and glanced over the windows.
+Then his eyes turned to the valley below, and his gaze settled itself on
+the great fires burning on the northern foreshore of the Cove.
+
+For some moments he stood contemplating the thing he beheld. Then, at
+last, he turned back to the locked door of his office. Without a word he
+raised one foot, and, with all his force, crashed its sole against the
+lock.
+
+The lock gave and the door fell back into the pitch darkness beyond. He
+passed within. After a while a light appeared in the office window. It
+passed. Then it reappeared in each window of the building in succession.
+Presently it remained stationary and fresh lights appeared in several of
+the windows. Minutes later he reappeared in the doorway.
+
+He stepped out into the snow and came over to the waiting dog train.
+
+"It's a cold sort of welcome," he said quietly. "But--will you please
+come right in, and I'll see how I can fix you up for comfort. I guess
+things have happened since I've been away. They've turned off heat.
+However--"
+
+Nancy McDonald rose from her place in the sled. She flung back the
+wealth of furs under which she had been well-nigh buried and stepped
+out. She made no reply, but stood waiting while Bull gave orders to his
+driver.
+
+"Get those dogs fixed, Gouter," he said. "Then come right along back
+here. You'll need to gather fuel and set those stoves going."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A great fire was roaring in the wood stove in the office. Nancy and Bull
+were standing before it seeking to drive out the cold which seemed to
+have eaten into their bones. Bull had drawn up his own rocker-chair for
+the girl but she had not availed herself of it.
+
+"You are not going to keep me here, prisoner in--your house?"
+
+The girl spoke in a low, hushed tone. In the indifferent lamp-light she
+looked ghastly pale and utterly weary-eyed. She had removed her furs,
+revealing herself clad in the heavy clothing which alone could have
+served on her desperate journey through the camps. It robbed her figure
+of much of its usual grace.
+
+"I'm afraid I am." Bull smiled gently, for all the decision of his
+words. "You see, Nancy, we're still at war. Still fighting the battle
+that others have forced on us."
+
+Nancy inclined her head.
+
+"I'd forgotten," she said almost humbly. "But you have no women folk
+around you," she went on urgently a moment later. "Does war mean
+that--that I must submit even--to that?"
+
+It was the woman in her that had taken alarm. Her hands were pressed
+together as she held them over the stove. The man understood. She moved
+away to the window, over which the curtains had not been drawn, and Bull
+watched her.
+
+"Every respect will be paid you," he said. "You've nothing to fear. When
+Gouter returns he'll get food, and we'll make the best preparations we
+can. I've to consider others with more at stake than even I."
+
+"Look!"
+
+The girl had turned. Her eyes were wide with terror. She was pointing at
+the window, and Bull hurried to her side.
+
+A great fire was raging on the north shore of the Cove. It was the
+recreation room, that room which Bat had so bitterly come to hate. It
+was ablaze from end to end, and lit up its neighbourhood so that the
+scene was of daylight clearness. A horde of human figures were gathered
+about it, in a struggling, seething mass, and the man realised that a
+battle was raging, a human battle, whilst the demon of fire was left to
+work its will.
+
+He stood there, held speechless by the thing he beheld.
+
+"What is it? What does it mean?"
+
+Panic drove the questions to the girl's lips. And she turned in an agony
+of appeal to the man beside her.
+
+"It means the work of the Skandinavia has been well and truly done."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+DAWN
+
+
+The hush of dawn was unbroken. The shadows of night receded slowly,
+reluctantly renouncing their long reign in favour of the brief winter
+daylight. The shores of the Cove lay hidden under a haze of fog.
+
+There were no sounds of life. The world was desperately still. No cry of
+wild fowl rose to greet the day. There was not even the doleful cry of
+belated wolf, or the snapping bark of foraging coyote to indicate those
+conditions of life which never change in the northern wilderness. It was
+as if the world of snow and ice were waking to a day of complete
+mourning, a day of bitter reckoning for the tumult of furious human
+passions, which, under the cloak of night, had been loosed to work the
+evil of men's will.
+
+With the first gleam of the rising sun a breeze leapt out of the east.
+It came with an edge like the keenest knife, and ripped the fog to
+ribbons. It churned and tangled it. Then it flung it clear of its path,
+leaving bare the scene of wreckage which the rage of battle had
+produced.
+
+It was a scene for pity and regret. Gone was the building which had
+been set up for the workers' recreation. Only a smoking ruin remained in
+its place. A dozen other buildings in the neighbourhood bore the scars
+of fire, which they would doubtless carry for all time of their service.
+The mill, however, was safe. The work of more than fifteen years
+remaining intact. But it had been so near, so very near to complete
+destruction.
+
+With the passing of the fog further disaster was revealed. It was the
+wreck of human life which the night had produced. Daylight had made it
+possible to deal with the injured and those beyond all human aid. And
+the work was going forward in the almost voiceless fashion which the
+presence of death ever imposes on the living.
+
+Viewed even from a distance there could be no mistaking the meaning, the
+hideous significance of it all. And Nancy, gazing from a window in the
+house on the hill, shrank in terror before that which she believed to be
+the result of the cruel work to which she had lent herself.
+
+It had been a dreary, heartbreaking night of sleepless watching and
+poignant feeling. Nancy was alone in her prison, a beautiful apartment,
+the best in the house. Bull Sternford had conducted her thither
+personally, and, in doing so, had told her the thing he was doing, and
+of his real desire to save her unnecessary distress.
+
+"You see," he had explained, with a gentleness which Nancy felt she had
+no right to expect, "there's just about the best of everything right
+here. It's as it was left by the feller who designed and decorated it
+for the woman he loved better than anything in life. No one's ever used
+it since. I'd be glad for you to have it. We've only a Chink servant to
+wait around on us, and a rough choreman, and I guess they don't know a
+thing about fixing things for a woman. But they've kept it clean and
+wholesome, and that's all I can say. Can you make out in it to-night?"
+
+He smiled. Then his steady eyes had turned away to the window where the
+light of the raging fire could be seen. And after a moment he went on.
+
+"You're a prisoner. I can't help that. That's got to be. But no lock or
+bolt will be set to keep you here. You're free to come and go as you
+choose. You can make the doors of the room fast against intrusion, if
+you feel that way. But there'll be none. To-night you'll just be dead
+alone in the place. You see, I've got to get out and pull my weight down
+there."
+
+So he had left her. He had left her to a punishment more desperate than
+anything he could have designed. Her windows looked out over the mill.
+And a subtle force attracted her thereto, and held her sleepless and
+despairing the whole night long. She had been forced to sit there
+watching the tragedy being enacted. A tragedy with which she knew she
+was connected, and for which, in her exaggerated self-condemnation, she
+believed herself responsible.
+
+The agony of that prolonged vigil would never be forgotten. Fascinated,
+dreading, every act of it seared the girl's soul as with a red hot
+brand. It was the Skandinavia's work. The agents of the Skandinavia. And
+she knew that she, perhaps, was their principal agent. The rattle of
+machine guns. The human slaughter. She had witnessed the terror of it
+all in the fierce light of the conflagration which looked to be
+devouring the whole world of the mills. She could never forget it. She
+could never forgive herself her share in the ghastly plans for that
+hideous destruction. But more than all she knew she could never forgive,
+or again associate herself with those who had designed the inhuman work
+of it all and plunged her into the maelstrom of its execution.
+
+Now, in the daylight, she was still at the window. There was no relief.
+On the contrary. With the smoke cleared from the smouldering ruins she
+saw the full extent of the wreckage. It was sprawling everywhere, human
+and material. An army of men, it seemed, was searching the battlefield.
+It was searching and collecting amongst the ruins. And she watched the
+bearing away on improvised stretchers, of still, helpless, human burdens
+which none could mistake. She could bear no more of it. She shut out the
+sight and fled from the window, covering her eyes with her hands.
+
+But she was recalled almost instantly. The sound of men's rough voices
+startled her. Whence came the sound she could not judge. But it seemed
+to her it was from somewhere outside. So she stealthily peered out. It
+was a small group of fur-clad figures. They were approaching the house
+over the snowy trail that came up from the mill.
+
+New terror leapt. They were supporting a prone, human body! They were
+bringing it up to the house! Who--who could they be bringing up to that
+house, which was the home and the office of the master of the mill? In
+that supreme moment all that which had gone before was completely
+forgotten. She stood clutching at the window casing, in a desperate
+effort to steady herself.
+
+She knew. Oh, yes, it could be no other. It must be Bull Sternford they
+were bringing up. Bull Sternford--the man who--The agents of the
+Skandinavia had done him to death! The agents of the Skandinavia!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bat Harker was standing at the window of the office on the hill. His
+hard, grey eyes were searching the distance below, and his square jaws
+were busy on their usual occupation. Bull was sitting in a rocker-chair.
+He was leaning forward, gazing down at the thickly carpeted floor, and
+his hands were clasped between his outspread knees. Both men were
+dishevelled. Their clothing was stained, and their hands and faces were
+begrimed as a result of the fierce work of the night.
+
+Bat suddenly turned from his silent scrutiny.
+
+"He'll pull around? You think so?" he demanded.
+
+There was an appeal in his harsh voice such as Bull had never heard in
+it before, and he looked up with a start.
+
+"That's how Jason reckoned," he said.
+
+"Oh, to hell with Jason!" Bat's retort was fiercely uncompromising.
+"Who's Jason anyway? A medical student who hadn't the guts for his job.
+Leastways he got on the crook. It's the thing you reckon I want to
+know."
+
+"I reckon he'll pull around," Bull returned quietly. Then he stirred
+wearily. "But you're hard on young Jason, Bat. He's bright enough. I
+like the way he handles his job. And anyway he's the only feller around
+this layout with any knowledge of a sick man. He's qualified you know.
+He wasn't just a student. He practised before he went down and out and
+took to the forests. We've got to rely on him till we get a man up from
+Montreal, which won't be for weeks. He'll be through along from fixing
+him in a while. Then we can hear the thing he's got to say. Maybe we'll
+be able to judge better then."
+
+"I wired Montreal," Bat said sharply.
+
+"Good."
+
+The lumberman turned again to his window, and Bull continued to regard
+the carpet which had no interest for him. Both were weary, utterly weary
+in body as well as mind.
+
+It was full, broad daylight now, with the low, northern sun gleaming
+athwart the scene which these men had so recently left. They were
+conscious of the victory gained. They rejoiced in the complete defeat of
+an enemy who had come so near to defeating all their plans. But the cost
+appalled them. They had both faced the play of machine guns. They had
+seen their men fall to the scythe-like mowing of a cruel weapon of
+which its victims had no understanding. Then, when the machine guns had
+been silenced, they had witnessed the rage with which these hard-living
+jacks had meted out their ideas of just punishment upon the murderers of
+their comrades.
+
+The wanton inhumanity of the whole thing had sickened them both. Both
+knew and were indifferent to the roughness of the fierce northland. But
+the ordeal through which they had passed was something far beyond the
+darkest vision of conflict they had ever contemplated.
+
+Neither had been present to witness the shooting of Father Adam. But
+both had been there within minutes of the beginning of the battle which
+it had started. From the power house Bat had discovered the thing
+happening, just as Bull had seen from the window of his office the
+leaping flames which had threatened the mill. It had been largely due to
+their timely leadership that ultimate victory had been snatched. But the
+work of it had been terrible.
+
+Now they had returned to their quarters, their night's work completed.
+Down below comrade was attending to comrade in such fashion as lay to
+hand, and those beyond earthly aid were being disposed to their last
+rest. Thus these men had been left free to succour the wounded creature
+whose timely lead had made possible the defeat that had been inflicted.
+
+Bat had but one concern just now. Father Adam. The man whose secret he
+held. The man who counted for everything in his rugged life. He raised
+his blood-shot eyes to his companion's face.
+
+"If--Father Adam--passes, I'm done with Sachigo, Bull," he declared
+almost desperately. "It 'ud break me to death. You can't know the thing
+that feller means to me. You know him for the sort of missioner all
+these folks guess he is. That's how he'd have you know him. And it goes
+with me all the time. But I know him just as he is."
+
+Bull nodded. He made no reply. He knew the lumberman was well-nigh
+beside himself, and he gazed back into the hot eyes and wondered.
+
+But Bat had nothing more to say. He even felt he had said more than he
+had any right to say. So he turned again to the window.
+
+A few moments later the door communicating with the house was
+unceremoniously thrust open. The two men looked round. It was a youngish
+man dressed in the overalls of an engineer who hurried in. He was alert
+and full of business; a condition which he seemed to appreciate.
+
+"It's all right, boss," he cried cheerfully, addressing himself to Bat.
+"Guess the good Father'll get away with it. He's out of his dope an'
+smiling plenty. I jerked that darn plug that holed him right out, an'
+it's a soft-nosed swine. I left it back there for you to see. The feller
+who dropped him deserves rat poison. I hope to God they got him. Anyway
+I got the wound cleaned up and fixed things. Now we just got to keep it
+clean and open, and watch his temperature. Then we don't need to worry a
+thing. I'll do that. But someone'll have to sit around and nurse him.
+I'll have to get along down. There's nigh a hundred needin' me. Gee I
+An' after all these years, too. It makes me wonder."
+
+There was a smile of keen appreciation in the eyes that looked into
+those of the lumberman. And the look deepened when Bat thrust out a
+large and dirty hand at him.
+
+"Thanks, boy," he said, in obvious relief. "I'm goin' to nurse that pore
+feller. Maybe I ain't much in that line. But I'll promise he don't lack
+a thing I can hand him. Here, shake. You'll be along to fix him again?"
+
+"Right on time," was the quick rejoinder.
+
+Jason had readily enough gripped the outstretched hand. Then he hurried
+away. And neither of the men begrudged him the obvious vanity which his
+momentary importance had inflamed.
+
+With the man's going Bull passed a hand back over his ample hair.
+
+"God!" he exclaimed wearily. "It's been a tough night."
+
+"Tough?"
+
+Bat's response spoke a whole world of feeling. He moved from his window
+and flung himself into a chair.
+
+"He saved us," he went on. "Father Adam. He saved the whole of our darn
+outfit. How he did it I don't just know. Maybe I'll never know. He don't
+talk a lot. I gathered something of it from the boys. But there wasn't
+time for talk." He shook his grizzled head. "You see, I didn't even know
+he was around. And you never told me it was him brought you word from
+the camps. He must have been at work around from the start. He must have
+got hold of a bunch of the boys he knew. And when he got 'em right,
+why--Say, I'd have given a thousand dollars to have heard him fire his
+dope at that lousy gang. It must have been pretty. But they got him. And
+I guess that was the craziest thing they did. The fool man who could
+shoot up Father Adam in face of the forest-boys could only be fit for
+the bughouse."
+
+He sighed. It was not for the man's madness in shooting, but for the
+hurt inflicted. Then a grim, vengeful smile lit his eyes.
+
+"Why, I guess there ain't a single agent of the Skandinavia down there
+left with a puff of wind in his rotten carcase. The boys were plumb
+crazed for their blood an' got right up to their necks in it. I'm glad.
+I'm--"
+
+"Oh, forget it, man." Bull spoke sharply. "There's things we can take a
+joy in remembering. But this isn't one of 'em. No. The thing for us now
+is work. Plenty of work. The mill needs to be in full work inside a
+week. We haven't an hour to lose, with young Birchall coming along
+over. Skert's promised us power in twenty-four hours. He's at it right
+now. The camps on the river'll be working full, and making up lost time.
+The rest's up to us right here. But--but," he added, passing a hand
+nervously across his forehead, "I've got to get sleep or I'll go stark
+crazy."
+
+Bat eyed the younger man seriously. It was the first time he had
+realised his condition. His sympathy found the rough expression of a
+nod.
+
+"You had a hell of a time up there," he said.
+
+Bull laughed. There was no mirth in his laugh.
+
+"It was tough all right. I wonder if you'd guess how tough." He shook
+his head. "No. You wouldn't. You reckon Father Adam's a pretty good man,
+but I tell you right here you don't know how good, or the thing he did
+for us single-handed. I know--now. He set me wise to it all, and didn't
+leave me a thing to do but make the trail he'd set for me. It was an
+easy play dealing with the fool forest-jacks who'd swallowed the
+Skandinavia's dope. Yes. That was easy," he added thoughtfully. "But
+that was just the start of the game. Father Adam had located the trail
+of the outfit the Skandinavia had sent and it was my job to come right
+up with 'em and silence 'em."
+
+He broke off and sat staring straight in front of him. His fine eyes
+were half smiling for all the weariness he complained of. He yawned.
+
+"Well, I hit that trail," he went on presently. "I hit it, and hung to
+it like a she-wolf out for offal. I just never quit. It was that way I
+forgot sleep. It wasn't till between No. 10 and 11 Camps we got sight.
+We were out in the open, up on the high land. We'd a run of fifty mile
+ahead of the dogs. When we got sight that boy Gouter was after 'em like
+a red-hot devil. Drive? Gee, how he drove!"
+
+Again came the man's mirthless laugh.
+
+"There's things in life seem mighty queer at times. It was that way
+then. There was a man I wanted to kill once bad. Guess I've never quit
+wanting to kill him, though I'm glad Father Adam saved me from doing it.
+He was Laval--Arden Laval, one of the Skandinavia's camp-bosses. Well, I
+saw him killed on that trip, and I helped bury him in the snow. Gouter
+drew on him on the dead run at fifty yards. He dropped him cold, and
+wrecked the outfit the feller was driving. There were two in the bunch
+that the Skandinavia sent there to raise trouble for us. Laval and
+another. Laval's dead, and the other we brought right along as prisoner.
+That other's here in this--"
+
+A light knock interrupted the story. Bull turned with a start. Then he
+sprang to his feet, every sign of weariness gone. He stood for a moment
+as though in doubt. And the lumberman, watching him, remarked the
+complete transformation that had taken place. He was smiling. His
+straining eyes had softened to a tenderness the onlooker failed to
+understand.
+
+He moved swiftly across the room and flung open the door.
+
+"Will you come right in?"
+
+The lumberman heard the invitation. The tone was deep with a gentleness
+he had never before discovered in it. And in his wonder he craned to see
+who it was who had inspired it.
+
+Bull moved aside.
+
+It was then that Bat started up from his chair, and a sharp ejaculation
+broke from him. Nancy McDonald was standing framed in the doorway.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+NANCY
+
+
+Bat was hurrying down the woodland trail. For once in his hard life he
+knew the meaning of rank cowardice. The sight of Nancy McDonald had
+completely robbed him of the last vestige of courage. The atmosphere of
+the office, that room so crowded with absorbing memories for him, had
+suddenly seemed to threaten suffocation. He felt he must get out. He
+must seek the cold, crisp air of the world he knew and understood. So he
+had fled.
+
+Now he was alone with a riot of thought that was almost chaotic. There
+was only one thing that stood out clearly, definitely, in his mind. It
+was the Nemesis of the thing that had happened. It was Nemesis with a
+vengeance.
+
+His busy jaws worked furiously under his emotion. He spat, and spat
+again, into the soft white snow. Once he stopped abruptly and gazed back
+over the circuitous trail. It was as though he must look again upon the
+thing that had so deeply stirred him, as though he must look upon it to
+reassure himself that he was not dreaming. That the thing had driven him
+headlong was real, and not some troublesome hallucination.
+
+Nancy McDonald! The beautiful stepdaughter of Leslie Standing, with her
+red hair and pretty eyes, was the agent of the Skandinavia, paid to
+wreck the great work he and Leslie had set up. She was paid to achieve
+the destruction at--any cost.
+
+It was amazing. It was overwhelming. It was even--terrible.
+
+He pursued his way with hurried steps. And as he went his mind leapt
+back to the time when he had made his great appeal for the poor,
+deserted child shut up in the coldly correct halls of Marypoint College.
+What an irony it all seemed now. Then he remembered her first coming to
+Sachigo, and the mystery of the letter from Father Adam heralding her
+arrival. He had understood the moment Nancy had announced her name to
+him on the quay. He had understood the thought, the hope which had
+inspired the letter.
+
+In his rugged heart he had welcomed the letter which Father Adam had
+written. He had welcomed the girl's first coming to the place he felt
+should be her inheritance. He had seen in those things the promise of
+the belated justice for which years ago he had appealed. Father Adam had
+asked Bull to receive her well. Why? There was only one answer to that
+in the lumberman's mind. Father Adam had seen her. He understood her
+beauty, and had fallen for it. What more reasonable then that Bull
+should do the same.
+
+But that was all past and done with now. All the things he had dreamed
+of, and so ardently desired, had been lost through a mischievous Fate.
+The neglected stepdaughter of Leslie Standing was body and soul part of
+their enemy's armament of offence. It was all too crazy. It was all too
+devilish for calm contemplation.
+
+The sight of the girl's pathetic eyes, so weary, so troubled, had been
+sufficient. Bat could not have remained in that room another minute. No.
+Down at the mill were the things he understood. They were the things he
+was bred to, and could deal with. These others were something that left
+him hopeless and helpless. So he went, determined to lay the ghost of
+the thing behind him in the tremendous effort the necessities of the
+mill demanded he should put forth.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bull's emotions were deeply stirred. He gazed into the tired eyes of the
+girl, so beautiful for all their complete dejection. He marked the cold
+pallor of her cheeks, and realised the dishevelled condition of her
+glorious masses of hair. An intense pity left him gravely troubled.
+
+As Nancy stood gazing up at the man, complete hopelessness oppressed
+her. She remembered well enough the declaration of war between them. She
+remembered, too, that it had meant nothing personal when it was made. At
+the time she had had no inkling of the terrible thing it could mean, or
+how nearly it could bring them into real, personal conflict.
+
+She had been wholly unprepared for the demand that had been thrust upon
+her by the man, Peterman. It had frightened her at first. She had shrunk
+from it. Then, finally, she had accepted it as her duty, under pressure.
+Peterman had made it appear so trifling. A journey, a trying journey,
+perhaps, but one to be made with all the comfort he could provide. And
+then to preach to those ignorant forest-men the disaster towards which
+their employers were heading. As Peterman had put it, it had almost
+seemed a legitimate thing to do. Convinced as she had been of the
+disaster about to fall on Sachigo, it had seemed as if she were even
+doing them a service.
+
+Had she been able to search Peterman's mind she would never have taken
+part in the dastardly thing he had planned. Had she been able to read
+him she would have quickly discovered the real motive he had in sending
+her. She would have discovered the furious jealousy and wounded vanity
+which meant her to be a prime instrument in the wrecking of Bull
+Sternford and his mills. She would have realised the devilish ingenuity
+with which he intended to wreck her friendship with another man so that
+he might the more truly claim her for himself. But she had no suspicion,
+and had blindly yielded herself to the duty she believed to be hers.
+
+After Bat's hurried departure Bull cast about in his mind for the thing
+to say to her. And somehow, without realising it, the right words sprang
+to his lips.
+
+"We won!" he said. And the smile accompanying his words was one of
+gentle raillery, and suggested nothing of the real tragedy of the thing
+that had happened.
+
+The girl's eyes widened. She strove to understand the dreadful lightness
+with which Bull spoke. Victory? Defeat? At that moment they were the two
+things furthest from her mind.
+
+Bull drew forward a chair, and gently insisted. And Nancy, accepting it,
+realised in a dull sort of way that it was the chair she had occupied at
+the time of her first visit, which now seemed so far, far back in her
+memory. Bull sat again in his rocker. He leant forward.
+
+"Sure," he went on, "we've won out. Your Skandinavia's beaten. Beaten a
+mile. We've won, too, at less cost than I hoped. Does it grieve you?"
+
+There was no softness or yielding in his tone. It was as he intended;
+the tone of a man who cares only that victory has been won. Nancy shook
+her head.
+
+"I'm--I'm glad," she said desperately.
+
+"Glad?" Bull was startled.
+
+The girl made a little involuntary movement. She averted her gaze to the
+window through which the wintry sunlight was pouring.
+
+"Oh, don't you understand? Can't you? Is the victory so much to you that
+you have no thought, no feeling, for the suffering it has brought? Are
+you so hard set on your purpose of achievement that nothing else
+matters? Oh, it's all dreadful. I used to feel that way. I counted no
+cost. Achievement? It was everything to me. And now, now that I know the
+thing it means I feel I--I want to die."
+
+Bull took a strong hold upon himself.
+
+"I know," he said slowly. "You see, Nancy, you're just a woman. You're
+just as tender and gentle--and--womanly, as God made you to be. He gave
+you a beautiful woman's heart, and a courage that was quite wonderful
+till it came into conflict with your heart. You had no right to be flung
+into this thing. And only a man of Peterman's lack of scruple could have
+done such a thing. Well, I'm not going to preach a long sermon, but I
+want to tell you some of the things I've got in my mind before I get the
+sleep I need. God knows that none of this thing you're blaming yourself
+for lies at your door. It would all have happened without you. Peterman
+designed it, and put it through for all he was worth. Now I want to say
+I'm glad--glad of it all. I've no pity for the Bolshevic dregs of Europe
+he employed. They were out for loot, they were out to grab the things
+and the power that other folks set up. Any old death that hit them they
+amply deserved. As for our folk who've gone under--well, we mustn't
+think too deeply that way. We all took our chances, and some had to go.
+I was ready to go. So was Bat. So were we all. We wanted victory, and we
+wanted it for those who survived. We honour our dead, but our lives must
+not be clouded by their going. It's war--human war. And just as long as
+the world lasts that war will always be. Good and bad men will die, and
+good and bad women will suffer at the sight. But for God's sake have
+done with the notion that you--you have anything to take to yourself,
+except that you've fought a good fight, and--lost. It sounds like the
+devil talking, doesn't it? Maybe you'll think me a monster of
+heartlessness. I'm not."
+
+"Oh, I wish I could feel all that," Nancy exclaimed with an impulse
+which a few moments before must have been impossible.
+
+"You can." Bull nodded. "You will."
+
+"You think so?" Nancy sighed. "I wish I could." Suddenly she spread out
+her hands in a little pathetic gesture. "Oh, it all seems wrong.
+Everything. What am I to do? What can I do? I--I can't even think.
+Whichever way I look it all seems so black and hopeless. You think I
+can--will?"
+
+Bull's sympathy would no longer be denied. He rose from his chair and
+moved to the window. His face was hidden from the troubled eyes that
+watched him. But his voice came back infinite in its gentleness.
+
+"You want to do something," he said. "You want to give expression to the
+woman in you. And when that has happened it'll make you feel--better. I
+know."
+
+He nodded. Suddenly he turned back to her, and stood smiling down into
+her anxious eyes.
+
+"Tell me," he went on, "what is it you want to do? You're no prisoner
+now. The war's finished. You're just as free as air to come and go as
+you please. You can return to Quebec the moment you desire, and the
+_Myra_ comes along up. And everything I can possibly arrange shall be
+done for your happiness and comfort. When would you like to go?"
+
+The girl shook her head.
+
+"I wasn't thinking of that."
+
+"I knew that," Bull smiled.
+
+"Father Adam. He's in the house there sick and wounded," Nancy hurried
+on. "I know him. I--may I nurse him back to health and strength. May I
+try that way to teach myself I'm not the thing I think and feel. Oh, let
+me be of use. Let me help to undo the thing I've done so much to bring
+about."
+
+The girl's hands were thrust out, and her eyes were shining. Never in
+his life had Bull experienced such an appeal. Never in his life had he
+been so near to reckless disregard for all restraint. He came nearer to
+her.
+
+"Surely you may do that," he said. "And I just want to thank you from
+the bottom of my unfeeling heart for the thought that prompts you. We
+haven't a soul here to do it right--to do it as you can. And Father Adam
+is a mighty precious life to us all--in Sachigo."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+THE COMING OF SPRING
+
+
+It had been a hard day. Bull Sternford had spent it dealing with
+complicated financial schedules, an amazing, turbulent sea of figures,
+until his powers and patience had temporarily exhausted themselves.
+
+In a final fit of irritation he had flung his work aside, and risen from
+his desk. The insufferable heat of the room, and the reek of his own
+pipe disgusted him. So he had moved over to the window where the cold
+air of early spring drifted in through the open ventilating slot in the
+storm sash.
+
+His gaze was on the Cove below, where the snow-laden ice was discoloured
+by the moist slush of thaw, and the open waters, far down towards the
+distant headlands, had so deeply encroached upon the claims of winter.
+
+A great, premature thaw had set in. It was the real spring thaw a month
+or more early. Skert Lawton, who controlled the water power of the mill,
+had warned him of its coming. Bat too had spoken out of his years of
+experience of the moods of Labrador's seasons. But somehow the sight of
+it all gave him none of the joy with which it had inspired the others.
+
+The evil night of threatened disaster had become only a memory. Nearly
+six weeks had passed since Nancy McDonald had craved the privilege of
+caring for the man who had so nearly given his life in the saving of the
+mill and all the great purpose it represented. Now he was mercifully
+returned to health and strength under the devoted care that had been
+bestowed upon him. The mill was again in full work. And the human army
+it employed had returned to their peace-time labours in the full
+determination to undo the grievous hurt which the mischief of the
+Skandinavia's agents and their own folly had inflicted. In the relief of
+reaction, they, no less than their employers, had redoubled their
+efforts.
+
+All outward sign of the trouble through which the mill had passed had
+long since been cleared away under the driving power of the forceful Bat
+Harker. The scars of fire remained here and there. But they were no more
+than a reminder for those who were ready to forget the folly they had
+once committed.
+
+Everything was moving on now as Bull and his comrades would have had it.
+Only that morning word had come through that Ray Birchall was on his way
+from London for the purpose of his report, and expected to reach Sachigo
+in three weeks' time. Could anything, then, be better than this early
+thaw? It was a veritable act of Providence that the London man's
+inspection of the mills, and all the property involved would take place
+under the most active conditions.
+
+It should have been a time of rejoicing and mental ease. It should have
+been a time of stirring hope. A moment for complaisant contemplation of
+a great purpose achieved. But the man at the window regarded the thing
+he looked upon without any display of pleasurable feeling. The sight of
+it literally seemed to deepen the unease which looked out of his eyes.
+
+In the midst of Bull's pre-occupation the door from the outer office was
+thrust open, and Bat Harker's harsh voice jarred the silence of the
+room.
+
+"Gettin' a peek at things," he cried, stumping heavily across the thick
+carpet. "Well, it looks good to me, too. Say, if this lasts just one
+week we'll be as clear of snow as hell's sidewalks." Then he flung open
+his rough pea-jacket and pushed his cap back from his lined forehead.
+"Gee, it's hot!"
+
+The lumberman was standing at Bull's side, and his deep-set eyes were
+following the other's gaze with twinkling satisfaction. Bull nodded and
+moved away.
+
+"Yep," he ejaculated. "It should be good for us."
+
+He passed over to the radiators and shut them off. Then he went over to
+the wood-stove and closed down the dampers. Then, with a curious
+absent-mindedness, he stood up and held out his hands to the warmth
+radiating from the stove.
+
+Bat was watching him interestedly. And at sight of his final attitude
+he broke into one of his infrequent chuckles and flung himself into a
+chair.
+
+"Say, what in--? Feeling cold?" he demanded.
+
+Bull's hands were promptly withdrawn, and, in spite of his mood, a half
+smile at his own expense lit his troubled eyes.
+
+"That's all right," he said. "It's on me, sure. I guess my head must be
+full of those figures still."
+
+He returned to the window and stood with his back to his companion. Bat
+watched him for some moments.
+
+Bull had changed considerably in the last few weeks. The lumberman had
+been swift to observe it. Somehow the old enthusiasm had faded out. The
+keen fighting nature he had become accustomed to, with its tendency to
+swift, almost reckless action, had become less marked. The man was
+altogether less buoyant.
+
+At first it had seemed to Bat's searching mind as if the effects of that
+desperate trip through the forests, and the subsequent battle down at
+the mill, had left its mark upon him, had somehow wrought one of those
+curious, weakening changes in the spirit of the man which seemed so
+unaccountable. Later, however, he dismissed the idea for a shrewder and
+better understanding.
+
+He helped himself to a chew of tobacco and kicked a cuspidore within his
+reach.
+
+"The fire-bugs are out," he said. "The last of 'em. I jest got word
+through. It's the seventh. An' it's the tally."
+
+It was a sharp, matter-of-fact statement. He was telling of a human
+killing, and there was no softening.
+
+Bull nodded. He glanced over his shoulder.
+
+"You mean--?"
+
+"They shot five of 'em to death. The last two they hanged." A grim set
+of the jaws, as Bat made the announcement, was his only expression of
+feeling.
+
+"Makes you wonder," he went on, after a pause. "Makes you think of the
+days when locomotives didn't run. Makes you think of the days when life
+was just a pretty mean gamble with most of the odds dead against you. It
+don't sound like these Sunday School days when the world sits around,
+framed in a fancy-coloured halo, that couldn't stand for any wash-tub,
+talkin' brotherhood an' human sympathy. It's tough when you think of the
+bunch that sent those boys to fire our limits. They knew the full crime
+of it, and knew the thing it would mean if we got hands on 'em. Well,
+there it is. We got 'em. An' now ther' ain't a mother's son of 'em left
+alive to tell the yarn of it all. It's been just cold, bloody murder.
+An' the murder ain't on us. No, I guess the darn savage eatin' hashed
+missioner ain't as bad a proposition as the civilised guys who paid the
+price to get those toughs killed up in our forests. I can't feel no sort
+of regret. It won't hand me a half-hour nightmare. But it makes me
+wonder. It surely does."
+
+He spat accurately into the cuspidore.
+
+"Does the report hand you anything else?" Bull asked, without turning.
+The other noticed the complete lack of real interest. He shrugged.
+
+"The camps are all in full cut. They're not a cord behind."
+
+Bat looked for a word, the lighting of an eye. There was none. And he
+stirred in his chair, and exasperation drove him.
+
+"Don't it make you feel good?" he demanded sharply. "It's the last guess
+answered, unless there's a guess when that boy, Birchall, comes along.
+Anyway, you don't figger ther's much guess to that, with the mill
+runnin' full, an' every boom crashed full of logs. No. Here, Bull!" he
+cried, with sudden vehemence. "Turn around, man. Turn right around an'
+get a grip on it all. The game's won to the last detail. Can't you feel
+good? Can't you feel like a feller gettin' out into the light after
+years of the darkest hell? Don't it make you want to holler? Ain't
+there a thing I can say to boost you? The boys down at the mill are
+hoggin' work. The groundwood's on the quays like mountains. The mills
+are roaring like blast furnaces. Can you beat it? Spring. The flies an'
+skitters, an' shipping. Why, in a week I guess Father Adam'll be hittin
+the trail for the forests, an'--"
+
+"Nancy McDonald will be sailing for Quebec."
+
+Bat was no longer gazing on the other's broad back and the mane of hair
+which did its best to conceal his massive neck. Bull had turned. His
+strong face was flushed. His fine eyes were hot. There could be no
+mistaking the passionate emotion which the other had stirred.
+
+The two men gazed into each other's eyes. Then with a curiously
+expressive gesture of his great hands Bull turned to the chair standing
+near, and flung himself into it.
+
+The lumberman's eyes twinkled. He had done the thing he desired. "An'
+you don't want her to?" he said deliberately.
+
+Just for a moment it looked as though a headlong outburst was about to
+reply to him. Then, quite suddenly, the hot light in Bull's eyes died
+out and he smiled. He shook his head.
+
+"No," he said in simple denial. "If she goes it means the end of Sachigo
+for me."
+
+"You reckon you'll quit?"
+
+In a moment the lumberman remembered a scene which had been enacted
+years ago on the high ground on the north shore of the Cove. He would
+never forget it. It had been the final decision of another to quit
+Sachigo. And the reason had been not dissimilar.
+
+There was no reply. Bull sat staring blankly in front of him. His eyes
+were on the wintry sky which was still broad with the light of day
+beyond the window.
+
+Presently his gaze lost its abstraction and came again to the strong,
+lined face of the older man. "Yes, Bat," he said calmly, almost coldly,
+"I'd have to quit. I just couldn't stand for it. Nancy's got right into
+my life. She's the only thing I can see--now."
+
+"Fer all she's a kind of prisoner right here, caught red-hand doin' the
+damnedest she knows to break us in favour of the outfit that pays her?"
+
+Bat smiled as he flung his challenge. But his tone, his words, were no
+indication of his mood, or of the rapid thought passing behind his
+shrewd eyes. A great sense of pleasure was asurge within him. He wanted
+to tell of it. He wanted to reach out and grip the other's hand, and
+tell him all that his words meant to him. But he refrained. Another
+man's secret was involved, and that was sufficient. His lips were
+sealed.
+
+Bull stirred restlessly.
+
+"Oh, psha!" he cried at last, with a force that displayed the tremendous
+feeling he could no longer deny. "I know what you think, Bat. I'm crazy.
+Well, maybe I am. Most men get crazy one time in their lives when a
+woman gets around. It's no use. I just can't help it. I know all you're
+thinking. Nancy McDonald belongs to our enemies. As you say she's done
+her damnedest to break us. Maybe you reckon I ought to feel for her like
+the devil does about holy water. Well, I don't. I'm plumb crazy for her,
+and when spring clears up the waters of the Cove, and the _Myra_ comes
+alongside, she's going right aboard, and will pass out of Labrador and
+out of my life. I'm never going to get another sight of her. I'm never
+going to get another sound of her dandy voice, or a sight of her pretty
+eyes, and--Hell! What's the use. Oh, I know it all. You've no need to
+tell me. We've made good. We've fought and won out. My contract's
+complete, and everything's looking just as good for us as it knows
+how--now. This mill. It's ours. Yours, and mine, and that other's, who I
+don't know about. All I've to do is to sit around with the plums lying
+in my lap. Well, I don't want those plums without Nancy. That's all. I
+don't want a thing--without Nancy. All the dollars in America can burn
+in hell for all I care, and as for groundwood pulp it's a damp mess of
+fool stuff that don't signify to me if it finds its way to the bottom of
+the North Atlantic. An added month of open season? What does it mean to
+me? Work. Only work, and flies, and skitters. An added month of 'em.
+Father Adam's a whole man again now, thanks to that dandy child. He'll
+pull right out to the forests again, and--she'll pull out too. I--"
+
+"That's all right," Bat broke in drily. "I get all that. But why not
+marry the gal? Marry her an' quit all this darn argument. I guess this
+mill's goin' to hand you all you need to keep a wife on. That seems to
+me the natural answer to the stuff that's worryin' you."
+
+His eyes twinkled as he regarded the other's troubled face.
+
+"Is it?"
+
+Bull was on his feet. Hot, desperate irritation lay behind the retort
+which Bat's gentle sarcasm had drawn forth. His eyes were alight, and he
+passed an unsteady hand across his forehead in a superlatively impatient
+gesture.
+
+"Marry her?" he exploded. "Say, are you every sort of darn fool on God's
+earth, man? How can I hope to marry her? What sort of use can a girl
+like that have for the man who's beat her right out of everything she
+ever hoped to achieve? I've had to treat her like any old criminal, and
+hold her prisoner. I've brought her right down here leaving her in a
+man's household without another woman in sight. Say, these cursed mills
+have made it so I've had to commit every sort of rotten act a man can
+commit against a high-spirited girl. And you ask me why I don't marry
+her? You've been too long in the forests, Bat. Guess you've lost your
+perspective. Nancy McDonald's no sort of chattel to be dealt with any
+way we fancy. Get sense, man, an' talk it."
+
+Bat's regard was unwavering before the other's angry eyes.
+
+"Sense is a hell of a good thing to have an' talk," he said quietly. "I
+most generally notice the feller yearnin' for someone else to get it an'
+talk that way, mostly has least use for the thing he's preachin'. Maybe
+Nancy feels the way you reckon. But that don't seem to me to worry a
+deal. Still, maybe things have changed around since the days when I
+hadn't sense to keep out of gunshot of a pair of dandy eyes. And anyway
+I don't seem to remember the boys bein' worried with the sort of
+argument you're handing out. If my memory's as good as I reckon, the
+boys most gener'ly married the gal first, an' got busy wonderin' about
+things after. All of which seems like so much hoss sense, seem' the
+natur' of things is that most gals needs their minds made up for 'em.
+You see, Bull, I kind o' fancy womenfolk ain't just ord'nary. They got a
+bug that makes 'em think queer wher' men are concerned. Now Nancy's all
+sorts of a gal, an' that bein' so I don't reckon she sees the hell-fire
+crimes you've committed against her just the way you see 'em. I allow
+they're pretty darn tough. Shootin' up her outfit an' dumpin' her into a
+snowdrift up on Labrador's mighty hard sort of courtin'. Grabbin' her up
+an' settin' her hospital nurse to her enemies, in a house full of a
+bunch of tough men don't seem the surest way to make her smile on the
+feller that did it. Then most generally beatin' the game she set out to
+play looks like makin' fer trouble plenty. It sure seems that way. But
+you never can tell with a woman, Bull. You just can't."
+
+Bat shook his grizzled head in solemn denial, but his eyes were
+laughing. Bull smothered his resentment. He, too, shook his head, and
+somehow caught the infection of the other's smile.
+
+"But she's ambitious," he said. "And she isn't the sort of girl to take
+that easily. No."
+
+Bat nodded and rose from his chair. Something of his purpose had been
+achieved and he was satisfied. He felt he had said all that was needed
+for the moment. So he prepared to take his departure.
+
+"Maybe that's so, boy," he agreed readily. "But ambition's a thing that
+changes with most every wind. That don't worry me a thing. Say, you've
+sort of opened out about this thing to me, an' I ain't sure why. But I
+kind of feel good about it. You're younger than me by years I don't
+fancy reckonin'. I feel like I was an elder brother, an' I'm glad. Well,
+that bein' so, I'd like to say right here ther's just one ambition in a
+woman's life that counts. And she mostly gits it when she hits up
+against the feller that's got the guts to make her think his way. When
+that happens I guess you can roll up every other old schedule, an' pass
+it into the beater to make new paper. It's the only use for it. See? But
+I 'low I don't know women like I do groundwood, which was the stuff that
+fetched me here right now. You see, I was feelin' good about things, an'
+I fancied handin' you the news of them 'fire-bugs' myself. Guess it
+hasn't handed you any sort of delirium so far, Bull, but it will later.
+I allow ther' ain't room for two fevers at the same time in a man's
+body. When you've set Nancy McDonald figgerin' your way, your
+temperature's liable to go up on the other. So long, boy."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+NANCY'S DECISION
+
+
+With the lengthening days the world of Labrador was already donning its
+brief, annual smile. But the passing of winter was no easy thing. There
+had been rain and "freeze-up," and rain again. And the whole countryside
+was a dripping, melting sea of wintry slush. The sun was rising higher
+in the steely heavens with each passing day, but winter was still
+reluctant. It passed on to its dissolution only under irresistible
+pressure.
+
+Nancy, no less than Father Adam and those others, to whom the early thaw
+meant so much, watched the passing of winter with the closest interest.
+But her interest owed its origin to a far different inspiration. She
+knew it meant that her time at Sachigo was nearing its end, and the
+future with all its barrenness was staring at her.
+
+She moved restlessly about the large kitchen while the Chinaman, Won-Li,
+was preparing toast over the cook stove. She stood awhile at the window
+and watched the winging of a seemingly endless flight of early geese
+passing up from the South. Then she turned away and glanced about the
+scrupulously clean and neat apartment. It was so very different from the
+place she had first discovered weeks ago.
+
+After awhile she took up her position against the kitchen table, and
+stood there with her gaze upon the bent figure of the cook in its long,
+blue blouse. But she was scarcely interested in the man's labours. She
+was not even waiting for him to complete them. She was just thinking,
+filled with apprehension and without confidence. Her mind was made up to
+a definite purpose whose seeming immensity left her staggered.
+
+Nancy was no longer the distraught creature who had witnessed the
+terrible night of fire and battle down at the mill. Many weeks had
+passed since then. Weeks full of mental, bodily, and spiritual effort.
+From the first dark moments when she had begged the privilege of nursing
+the wounded missionary, broken in spirit, a beautiful creature well-nigh
+demented with the horror of the thing she believed herself to be, the
+woman soul of her had found a measure of peace.
+
+It had been slow in coming. There had been moments when she had nearly
+broken under the burden of conscience. There had been moments when the
+weight of unutterable depression, and the sense of guilt, had come near
+to robbing her of her last shred of mental balance. But the woman's
+mission of nursing had saved her in the end. That, and the physical
+effort to which she had applied herself.
+
+It was all so single-minded and simple. It was all so beautifully
+pathetic. Nancy had found a careless household rapidly decaying through
+mannish indifference to comfort. She understood. These men were
+completely absorbed in the service of the great mills, and nothing else
+mattered to them. Oh, yes, that was understandable. She knew the
+feeling. She knew how it robbed its victim of every other consideration
+in life. So she had flung herself into the task of re-ordering the
+household of which she had been forced to become a part, that she might
+yield them comfort in their labours and help herself in her own effort
+to obtain peace of mind.
+
+She had transformed an untidy, uncared-for bachelor habitation into a
+wholesome, clean establishment of well-ordered life. She had lifted a
+lazy Chinaman into a reasonable specimen of comparative energy, and saw
+to it that meals were well and carefully served, and partaken of at
+regular hours by men who quickly discovered the futility of protest.
+
+But her work by no means ended there. From one end to the other the
+house was swept and garnished, and the neglect of years disposed of.
+Bedrooms were transformed from mere sleeping places to luxury. Linen was
+duly laundered, and clothing was brushed, and folded, and mended in a
+fashion such as its owners had never thought possible. She was utterly
+untiring in her labours, and in the process of them she steadily moved
+on towards the thing she craved for herself.
+
+The men realised the tremendous effort of it all. And Bull Sternford,
+for all his absorption in his work, had watched with troubled feelings.
+His love for Nancy had perhaps robbed him of that vision which should
+have told him of the necessity, in her own interests, for that which the
+girl was doing. So there were times when he had protested, times when he
+felt that simple humanity demanded that she should not be permitted to
+submit herself to so rough a slavery. But Nancy had countered every
+protest with an irresistible appeal.
+
+"Please, please don't stop me," she had cried, almost tearfully. "It's
+just all I can do. It's my only hope. Always, till now, I've lived for
+myself and ambitions. You know where they have led me--Ah, no. Let me go
+on in my own way. Let me nurse him back to health. Let me do these
+things. However little I'm able to do there's some measure of peace in
+the doing of it."
+
+So the days and weeks had dragged on, and now the time of Nancy's
+imprisonment was drawing to its inevitable close. With Spring, and the
+coming of the _Myra_, she would have to accept her freedom and all it
+meant. She would be expected to return to her home in Quebec, and to
+those who had employed her and sent her on her godless mission. She
+understood that. But she had no intention of returning to Quebec. She
+had no intention of returning to the Skandinavia.
+
+During the long hours of her labours she had searched deeply for the
+thing the future must hold for her. It was the old process over again.
+That great searching she had once done at Marypoint. But now it was all
+different. There had been no sense of guilt then, and the only man who
+had been concerned in her life had been that unknown stepfather, whom,
+in her child's heart, she had learned to hate. It had been simple enough
+then. Now--now--
+
+But she had faced the task with all the splendid, impetuous courage that
+was hers. There was no shrinking. Her mind was swiftly and irrevocably
+made up. She would abandon the Skandinavia for ever. She would abandon
+everything and follow those dictates which had prompted her so often in
+the past. Father Adam's self-sacrificing example was always before her.
+The forests. Those submerged legions which peopled them. Was there not
+some means by which she could join in the work of rescue? She would talk
+to Father Adam. She felt he would help her. She wanted nothing for
+herself. If only the rest of her life could be translated into some
+small imitation of the life of that good man, then, indeed, she felt her
+atonement might be counted as something commensurate.
+
+It was not until her decision had been taken that she permitted herself
+to seek beyond it. But once it was taken the crushing sense of added
+desolation well-nigh paralysed her. Somehow, never before had she
+understood. But now--now the sacrifice of it all swept upon her with an
+overwhelming rush. Bull Sternford. Bull Sternford, the man whom with all
+her power she had striven to defeat, the man whose strength and force of
+character had so appealed to her, the man who must hate her as any
+clean-minded man must hate a loathsome reptile, she would never see him
+again.
+
+Oh, she knew now. She made no attempt at denial. It would have been
+quite useless. She loved him. From the moment she had looked into his
+honest eyes, and realised his kindly purpose on her behalf at their
+first meeting, she had loved him. She must cut him out of her life. It
+was the penalty she must pay for her crimes.
+
+And now the moment had arrived when she must put her plans into
+operation. Time was pressing. The season was advancing. So she had
+chosen the hour at which she served tea to Father Adam as the best in
+which to seek his advice and support.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The light tap on Father Adam's door was answered instantly. Nancy passed
+into the room with trepidation in her heart, but the hand bearing the
+tea tray was without a tremor.
+
+The man whose life belonged to the twilight of the northern forests was
+seated in a deep rocker-chair under the window through which the setting
+sun was pouring its pleasant spring light. He had been reading. But his
+book was laid aside instantly, and he stood up and smiled the thanks
+which his words hastily poured forth.
+
+"You know, Nancy, you're completely spoiling me," he said. "I'm going to
+hate my forest coffee out of a rusty pannikin. I don't know how I'm
+going on when I pull my freight out of here."
+
+The girl's responsive smile faded abruptly as she set the tray on the
+table beside the chair.
+
+"When are you going to--pull your freight?" she asked, with a curious,
+nervous abruptness.
+
+For a moment the man's eyes were averted. Then he straightened up his
+tall, somewhat stooping figure. He flung his lean shoulders back, and
+opened his arms wide. And as he did so he laughed in the pleasant
+fashion which Nancy had grown accustomed to.
+
+He was the picture of complete health. His dark face was pale. His black
+hair and sparse beard were untouched by any sign of the passage of
+years. There was not an ounce of superfluous flesh under the curiously
+clerical garments he lived in.
+
+"Why, right away, child," he said, with simple confidence. "I'll just
+need to wait for a brief 'freeze-up' to get through the mud around
+Sachigo. Once on the highlands inside there'll be snow and ice for six
+weeks or more. I told Sternford this morning I was ready to pull out.
+You see, thanks to you I've cheated the folk who reckoned to silence me.
+I'm well, and strong, and the boys of the forest are--needing me. Every
+day I remain now I'll be getting soft under the unfailing kindness of
+my nurse."
+
+Nancy poured out the tea. There were two cups on the tray and the man
+was swift to notice it. She smiled up at him.
+
+"Won't you sit down?" she urged. "You see, I've brought a cup for
+myself. I--I want to have a long talk with you. I, too, have got to
+'pull my freight.'"
+
+Father Adam obeyed. His dark eyes were deeply observant as he surveyed
+the pretty face with its red glory of hair. That which was passing in
+his mind found no betrayal. But his thought had suddenly leapt, and he
+waited.
+
+Nancy passed him his cup and set the toast within his reach. Then she
+pulled up a chair for herself and sat down before the tea tray.
+
+"Yes," she went on, "that's why I brought my cup. I must get away." She
+smiled a little wistfully. "My imprisonment is over. Mr. Sternford set
+me free long ago, but--well, anyway I'm going now, and that's why I
+wanted to talk to you."
+
+She seemed to find the whole thing an effort. But as the man's dark eyes
+remained regarding her, and no word of his came to help her, she was
+forced to go on.
+
+"You know my story," she said. "You've heard it all from Mr. Sternford.
+I know that. You told me so, didn't you?"
+
+The man inclined his dark head.
+
+"Yes," he said. "I know your story--all of it."
+
+"Yes." The girl's tea remained untouched. Suddenly she raised one
+delicate hand and passed her finger tips across her forehead. It was a
+gesture of uncertainty. Then, quite suddenly, it fell back into her lap,
+and, in a moment, her hands were tightly clasped. "Oh, I best tell you
+at once. Never, never, never as long as I live can I go back to the
+Skandinavia. All the years I've been with them I've just been lost in a
+sort of dream world of ambition. I haven't seen a thing outside it. I've
+just been a blind, selfish woman who believed in everybody, and most of
+all in herself and her selfish aims. Can you understand? Will you? Oh,
+now I know all it meant. Now I know the crime of it. And the horror of
+the thing I've done, and been, has well-nigh broken my heart. Oh, I'm
+not really bad, indeed I'm not. I didn't know. I didn't understand. I
+can never forgive myself. Never, never! And when I think of the blood
+that has been shed as the result of my work--"
+
+"No." The man's voice broke in sharply. "Put that right out of your
+mind, child. None of the blood shed is your doing. None of it lies at
+your door. It lies at the door of others. It lies at the door of two men
+only. The man who first set up this great mill at Sachigo, and the man
+whose hate of him desired its destruction. The rest, you, those others,
+Bull Sternford and Harker, here, are simply the pawns in the battle
+which owes its inception to those things that happened years ago. I tell
+you solemnly, child, no living soul but those two, and chiefly the first
+of the two, are to blame for the things that have happened to-day. Set
+your mind easy. No one blames you. No one ever will blame you. Not even
+the great God to whom we all have to answer. I know the whole story of
+it. It is my life to know the story of these forests. Set your mind at
+rest."
+
+"Oh, I wish I could think so. I wish I could believe. I feel, I feel you
+are telling me this to comfort me. But you wouldn't just do that?"
+
+The man shook his head.
+
+"It's the simple truth," he said. Then he reached for his tea and drank
+it quickly. "But tell me. You will never go back to the Skandinavia?
+I--am glad. What will you do?"
+
+"That's why I've come to you now."
+
+The tension had eased. Nancy's distress gave way before the man's strong
+words of comfort. She, too, drank her tea. Then she went on.
+
+"You know, Father--"
+
+The man stirred in his chair. It was a movement of sudden restlessness
+as if that appellation on her lips disturbed him.
+
+"--I want to--I want to--Oh, how can I tell you? You are doing the thing
+I want to help in. All my life I felt the time would come when I must
+devote myself to the service and welfare of others. I think it's bred in
+me. My father, my real father, he, too, gave up his life to those who
+could not help themselves. Well, I want to do the same in however humble
+fashion. These men, these wonderful men of the forests whom you spend
+your life in succouring. Can I not serve them, too? Is there no place
+for me under your leadership? Can I not go out into the forests? I am
+strong. I am strong to face anything, any hardship. I have no fear. The
+call of these forests has got right into my blood. Don't deny me," she
+appealed. "Don't tell me I'm just a woman with no strength to withstand
+the rigours of the winter. I couldn't stand that. I have the strength,
+and I have the will. Can you? Will you help me?"
+
+The girl's appeal was spoken with all the ardour of youthful passion.
+There was no sham in it. No hysterical impulse. It was irresistibly
+real.
+
+The man's eyes were deeply regarding her. But he was thinking far less
+of her words than of the girl herself. Her amazing beauty, the
+passionate youth and strength. The perfection of her splendid womanhood.
+These things held him, and his mind travelled swiftly back over years to
+other scenes and other emotions.
+
+When at last he spoke his words came slowly and were carefully
+considered.
+
+"I think, perhaps, I can help you," he said. "You are determined? You
+want to help those who need help? The men of the forests?" He shook his
+head. "I don't see why you shouldn't help the men of these forests
+who--need your help."
+
+Nancy drew a deep breath. A wonderful smile sprang into her pretty eyes.
+It was a glad smile of thanks such as no words of hers could have
+expressed.
+
+"Oh, thank you, Father--thank you."
+
+Again came the man's restless movement at the word "Father." He abruptly
+leant forward and held his cup out for replenishment.
+
+"May I?" he asked. Then his smile broke out again. "But tell me," he
+went on. "What have you done about the Skandinavia?"
+
+"Nothing."
+
+Nancy returned him his cup with an unsteady hand.
+
+"Nothing? But you must communicate with them. You should write and tell
+them of your decision. You should tell them you don't intend to return
+to them."
+
+Father Adam sipped his tea. He was watching intently but unobtrusively
+the transparent display of emotions which his words had conjured.
+
+"I hadn't thought about it," Nancy said at last, not without some
+disappointment. "Do you really think I should write? But it will take so
+long to reach them. I can't wait for that. It--"
+
+"Wire."
+
+"Yes. I suppose I could--wire."
+
+"Sternford will have it sent for you."
+
+In a moment the light of hope died out of the girl's eyes. The excited
+flush on her cheeks paled. And the man saw, and read the sign he beheld.
+
+He waited. But Nancy remained silent, crushed under the feeling of utter
+desolation to which the mention of Bull Sternford's name had reduced
+her.
+
+Father Adam set his cup down.
+
+"Don't let the sending of that message worry, child," he said quickly.
+"These people deserve no better treatment after the thing they've done
+to you. All you need say is, 'You will accept my resignation forthwith.'
+Write that out on a piece of paper, and sign it. Then take it along to
+Mr. Sternford. Tell him of your decision, and ask him to have it sent by
+the wireless. He'll do it, my dear. And after that--why, after that, if
+you still feel the same about things, and want to turn missionary in the
+lumber camps, come right back to me here, and I'll do for you as you
+ask. It's a great thought, Nancy, and I honour you for it. It's a hard,
+desperate sort of life, without comfort or earthly reward. Once the
+twilight of the forest claims you, and its people know you, there's
+nothing to do but to go on and on to the end. Will you go--and send just
+that message?"
+
+Nancy inclined her head.
+
+"Yes. I'll go right away, just as soon as I've taken this tray back."
+
+She rose abruptly. She gathered the remains of the meal on to the tray
+and picked it up. And the manner of her movements betrayed her. She
+stood for a moment, and the man saw the struggle for composure that was
+going on behind her pretty eyes.
+
+"Father," she said at last, and the man abruptly rose from his chair and
+moved away, "I just can't thank you--for this. It's given me fresh hope.
+A hope I never thought would be mine. Some day--"
+
+Her voice broke and the man turned at once. He was smiling again.
+
+"Don't say a word, my dear. Not a word. Go and write that message, and
+take it to Sternford. And then--why--"
+
+He moved over to the door and held it open for her. As she passed out he
+nodded kindly, and looked after her till she vanished into the kitchen
+at the end of the passage.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Father Adam was alone again in the room that had been his for so many
+weeks. The door was closed and he stood at the window gazing out at the
+dreary world beyond. But he saw nothing of it. He was thinking with the
+speed of a mind chafing at delay. He was wondering and hoping,
+and--fearing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+THE MESSAGE
+
+
+It was a woman of desperately fortified resolve who turned the handle of
+the office door in response to Bull Sternford's peremptory summons. The
+thought of the coming interview terrified Nancy, and her terror had
+nothing whatever to do with the sending of her message.
+
+Bull failed to look up from the mass of papers that littered his desk.
+His sharp "Well," as Nancy approached him, was utterly impatient at the
+interruption. And its effect was crushing upon the girl in her present
+dispirited mood. She felt like headlong flight. She stood her ground,
+however, and the sound of her little nervous clearing of the throat came
+to the man at the table.
+
+Bull looked up. In an instant his whole attitude underwent a complete
+change. His eyes lit, and he sprang from his seat behind the desk. He
+came towards the shrinking girl, eager and smiling with the welcome his
+love inspired.
+
+"Why, say, Nancy," he cried. "I just hadn't a notion it was you. I was
+up to my neck in all this stuff," he said, indicating the litter on his
+desk, "and I hadn't a thought but it was the darn Chink come to worry
+with food." He laughed. "You certainly have handed me some scare since
+you got a grip on our crazy household. I've got a nightmare all the time
+I've got to eat. And the trouble is I'd hate to miss any of it. Will you
+come right over to the window and sit? There's daylight enough still. We
+don't need to use Skert's electric juice till we have to. I'm real glad
+you came along."
+
+The man's delight was transparent. Nancy remained unresponsive, however.
+She was blind to everything but the thing she had come to do, and the
+hopelessness that weighed so heavily upon her.
+
+"I'm sorry," she said simply, accepting the chair he set for her. "I
+didn't think you'd--you see, I waited till I guessed you'd be through.
+But I won't keep you. It's just a small favour, that's all."
+
+Bull observed her closely. She was so amazingly and completely charming.
+She was no longer clad in the rough, warm garments of the trail. Even
+the cotton overall she used in the work of the house had been removed.
+Now a dainty frock, that had no relation to the rigours of Labrador,
+displayed the delicate beauty of her figure, and perfectly harmonised
+with the colouring of her wonderful hair. Somehow it seemed to the man
+her beauty had intensified in its appeal since the day of her supreme
+confidence in the cause for which she had so devotedly fought.
+
+"A favour?" he laughed. "Why, I'm just glad."
+
+Even while he spoke Bull remembered his talk with Bat Harker when he had
+listened to a wealth of pitying comment upon the feelings and opinions
+he had then laid bare. The girl's unsmiling eyes troubled him.
+
+"What's the favour?" he asked simply, as Nancy remained silent.
+
+The girl started. She had turned to the evening light pouring in through
+the window. Her thought had wandered to that grim, dark future when the
+twilit forests would close about her, and the strong tones of this
+man's voice would never again be able to reach her.
+
+She drew a folded paper from the bosom of her frock.
+
+"Would you let them send it for me--wireless?" she asked timidly.
+"It's--it's to Mr. Peterman."
+
+All Bull's desire to smile had passed. He nodded.
+
+"Yes," he said. "If you wish it. It shall be sent right off."
+
+His tone had suddenly lost its warmth. It seemed as if the mention of
+Peterman's name had destroyed his goodwill.
+
+Nancy searched his face anxiously. The man's brows had depressed and his
+strong jaws had become set. She knew that expression. Usually it was the
+prelude to uncompromising action.
+
+She drew a deep breath.
+
+"Oh, I know," she cried. "I know the thing you're thinking. You're
+reminding yourself of all I've done, and of the injury I've striven to
+inflict on you. You're wondering at my temerity in asking you to help me
+communicate with your enemies. But please, please don't think worse of
+me than you can help. I'm not just trying to use you. It's not that.
+Will you read the message? Maybe it'll tell you better than any words of
+mine."
+
+The paper was held out to him in an unsteady hand. Bull ignored it. He
+shook his head.
+
+"No," he said.
+
+Nancy sprang to her feet.
+
+"But you must read it," she cried. "If you don't I--oh, I won't send it.
+I couldn't. Don't make me sorry I asked this favour. It is so little to
+you, and--and it means so much to me."
+
+She stood waiting, but Bull showed no sign of yielding. He was thinking
+of the man, Peterman. He remembered his good-looking Teutonic face, and
+the favour with which Nancy had seemed to regard him. A smouldering
+jealousy had suddenly blazed up within him.
+
+Nancy turned away in desperation. She moved to depart.
+
+"I'm sorry," she said. And even in her trouble there was a coldness in
+her tone no less than his.
+
+Bull choked down his feelings.
+
+"Please don't go," he cried, urgently. "It would please me very much to
+have that message sent. Say, I wasn't thinking the way you reckoned. I
+wasn't thinking of the message at all."
+
+"Then you will read it?" The girl came back readily.
+
+"Why should I?" Bull asked smilingly. "Say, a friend asking me to send a
+message for him, a message no concern of mine, what would you think,
+what would he feel, if I demanded to read its contents?"
+
+He ran the fingers of one hand through his mane of hair and stood
+smiling down into the girl's pretty eyes.
+
+"You know this thing makes me want to talk. I've just got to talk. The
+position's sort of impossible as it stands. Maybe you don't guess the
+thing I'm feeling, and maybe I don't just know how it is with you. We've
+got to talk right out and show down our hands. If we don't--"
+
+He turned away and glanced out of window. Then his eyes came back
+claimed by the magnetism which the girl exercised.
+
+"You know, Nancy, our war is over. The war between you and me. We
+declared war, didn't we? We declared it in Quebec, and we both promised
+to do our best, or--worst. It was a sort of compact. We made it meaning
+it, and understanding the meaning of it. If you got the drop on me you
+were to use it. The same with me. It was one of those friendly things,
+between friends, which might easily mean life or death. We knew that,
+and were ready to stand just for whatever came along. Well, we fought
+our battle. It's over. It's done. Now for God's sake let's forget it.
+It's easy for me. You see, I'm a rough, hard sort of product of these
+forests that doesn't worry with scruples and things. I'm not a woman
+who's full of the notions belonging to her sex. I can wipe the whole
+thing out of my mind. I can feel glad for the scrap you put up. I can
+think one hell of a great piece of you for it. Maybe it's different with
+you, being a woman. I guess it's not going to be easy forgiving the way
+I had to handle you back out there on the trail. Or the way you were
+forced to live our camp life on the way down here. Or how I've had to
+hold you prisoner in a rough household of rougher men. I get all that. I
+know the thing it is to a woman. All it means. Still, it must have been
+plain to you the chances of that sort of thing before you started in.
+That is if I was worth my salt as a fighter. Well, can you kind of
+forgive it? Can't you try to forget? Can't you figger the whole darn
+thing's past and done with, and we're back at where we were in those
+days in Quebec, when you didn't hate me to death, and felt good taking
+dinner in my company? Say, do you remember the old _Myra_ you'll soon be
+boarding again? You remember our talk on the deck, when the howling gale
+hit us? We were talking of the sense of things in Nature, and how she
+mussed them up. And how we'd have done a heap better if the job had been
+ours. Well?" His smile deepened. "Here we are standing in the sort of
+fool position of--what'll I call it? Antagonism? Anyway we agreed to
+fight, and stand for all it meant to us, and we're both feeling all
+broken up at the way we had to act to hurt each other most." He shook
+his head. "Where's our boasted sense of things? We ought to be sitting
+right here talking it over, and laughing to beat the band, that I had to
+treat you like a dangerous bunch of goods li'ble to get me by the
+throat, and choke the life out of me, while you were chasing every old
+notion folks could stuff into your dandy head to set me broke and busted
+so I wouldn't know where to collect a square feed once a week. That's
+what we ought to be doing, if we had the sense we guess. Instead of that
+you're feeling badly at me for the things I had to do to you. And I'm
+worried to death I'll never get a laugh from you for the fool talk I
+don't know better than to make. You need me to send that message to
+Peterman. Why, sure I'll send it, even if it's to tell him how mighty
+glad you are to be quitting the prison I'd condemned you to, and the joy
+it's going to hand you to see his darnation Teuton face again. Sure I'll
+send it. It's the least I can do to make up to you for those things I've
+done to you. But--but for God's sake don't ask me to read it."
+
+The man concluded with a gesture that betrayed his real feelings. He was
+in desperate earnest for all his attempt at lightness. His words came
+swiftly, in that headlong fashion so characteristic of his most earnest
+mood. And Nancy listening to him, caught something of that which lay
+behind them. The faintest shadow of a smile struggled into her eyes. She
+shook her head.
+
+"I haven't a thought in my head about you--that way," she said. "It's
+not been that way with me. No." She averted her gaze from the eager eyes
+before her. "It's the thing I've done and been. It's the thing you, and
+every other honest creature, must feel about me. Oh, don't you see? The
+killing, the bloodshed and suffering--But I can't talk about it even
+now. It's all too dreadful still. I'm quitting when Father Adam goes,
+and--and--But believe me no judgment you can pass on me can begin to
+express the thing I feel about myself. Please don't think I bear one
+single hard thought against you."
+
+The man laughed outright. The buoyancy of that moment was supreme. Bat
+Harker was again in his mind. Bat, with all his quaint, crude
+philosophy.
+
+"Say, that beats everything," Bull cried. "My judgment of you. And all
+this time I've been guessing--Oh, hell! Say, do you know, it gets me bad
+when I think of you going back to Peterman and his crew? It sets me
+well-nigh crazy. Oh, I know. I've no right. None at all. But it don't
+make me feel any better. Here, I'll tell you about it. I'm not going to
+take to myself virtues I don't possess, and have no right to anyway. I
+wanted to win out in the fight against the Skandinavia because I'm a bit
+of a fighting machine. I wanted to win out for the dollars I'm going to
+help myself to. But I also wanted to win out because of the great big
+purpose that lies behind these mills of Sachigo. I want you to get right
+inside my mind on that thing so you'll know one of the reasons why I
+hate that you're sending word to Peterman. You'll maybe understand then
+the thing that made me fight you, a woman, as well as the others, and
+treat you in a fashion that's made me hate myself ever since. I'm going
+to say it as bluntly as I know how. It'll be like beating you, a
+helpless victim, right over the head with a club. I've acted the brute
+right along to you, an' I s'pose I best finish up that way. You were
+doing your best to sell your birthright, my birthright, to the
+foreigner. You were helping the alien, Peterman, and his gang, to snatch
+the wealth of our forests. Why? You didn't think. You didn't know. There
+was no one to tell you. You simply didn't know the thing you were doing.
+
+"This man Peterman was good to you. He held out prospects that
+glittered. It was good enough. And all the time he was looking to steal
+your birthright. The birthright of every Canadian. That makes you feel
+bad. Sure it does. I can see it. But I got to tell it that way,
+because--Here, I'm on the other side. It was chance, not virtue set me
+there. But once there the notion got me good. Sachigo was built to
+defend the great Canadian forests against the foreigner. That slogan got
+a grip on me. Yes, it got me good. I could scrap with every breath in my
+body for that. Well, now we've got the Skandinavia beat, and in a year
+or so they'll be on the scrap heap, ready to sell at scrap price. That's
+so. I know. Sachigo will be the biggest thing of its kind in the world
+next year, and there won't be any room for the Skandinavia. That's a
+reason I hate for you to go back to Peterman--one reason."
+
+"But I'm not going back," Nancy cried vehemently.
+
+Bull stared wide-eyed.
+
+"You're not going back?" he echoed stupidly. Then of a sudden he held
+out his hand. "Say, pass that message right over. Why in--Guess I'm
+crazy to read it--now."
+
+Nancy held the paper out to him. There was something so amazingly
+headlong in his manner. All the girl's apprehensions, all her
+depression, were swept away, and a rising excitement replaced them. A
+surge of thankfulness rose up in her. At least he would learn that she
+had no intention of further treachery to the land of her birth.
+
+"Accept my resignation forthwith."
+
+Bull read the brief message aloud. It was addressed to Peterman, and it
+was signed "Nancy McDonald." The force, the coldness of the words were
+implacable. He revelled in the phrasing. He revelled in the thing they
+conveyed. He looked up. The girl was smiling. She had forgotten
+everything but the approval she saw shining in his eyes.
+
+Suddenly he reached out and his great hands came gently down upon her
+softly rounded shoulders. It was a wonderful caress. They held her
+firmly while he gazed into her eyes.
+
+"Say, Nancy," he cried, in a voice that was deep with emotion. "You mean
+that? Those words? You've quit the Skandinavia? What--what are you going
+to do?"
+
+"I--I'm going to the forests with Father Adam. I'm going to help the
+boys we've so often talked about. I'm--"
+
+"Not on your life!"
+
+The man's denial rang out with all the force of his virile nature.
+
+"Say, listen right here. You've quit them. You've quit Peterman. And you
+reckon from one fool play you're going right over to another. No, sir,
+not on your life. It's my chance now, and by God I don't pass it. I'm
+kind of a rough citizen and don't know the way a feller should say this
+sort of stuff. But I'm crazy to marry you and have been that way ever
+since you came along, and sat right in this office, and invited me to
+take tea in the parlour of that darnation bug, Peterman. Do you know all
+that means, Nancy? It means I'm just daft with love for you, and have
+been ever since I set eyes on you, for all I had to treat you worse than
+a 'hold-up.' Say, my dear, will you give me the chance to show you? Can
+you forget it all? Can you? I'll raise every sort of hell to fix you
+good and happy. And you and me, together, we'll just send this great
+Sachigo of ours booming sky high, and in a year I promise to hand you
+the wreckage that was once the Skandinavia. Marry me, dear, and I'll
+show you the thing a man can be and do. And I'll make you forget the
+ruffian I've had to act towards you. Will you let me help you to forget?
+Will you--?"
+
+Nancy's eyes were frankly raised to the passionate gaze which revealed
+the depths of the man's great heart.
+
+"I have," she said in a low voice. "I've forgotten everything
+but--but--you."
+
+She moved as she spoke. There was no hesitation. All her soul was
+shining in her eyes, and she yielded to the impulse she was powerless to
+deny. She came to him, releasing herself from the great hands that held
+her shoulders. She reached up and placed her soft arms about the neck
+that rose trunk-like above his shoulders. In a moment she was caught and
+crushed in his arms.
+
+"Why--that's just fine!"
+
+The exclamation broke from the man out of sheer delight and happiness.
+And the while he bent down and kissed the smiling upturned face, and
+permitted one hand to wander caressingly over the girl's wealth of
+beautiful hair.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+LOST IN THE TWILIGHT
+
+
+A fierce wind swept down off the hills. So it had blown all night and
+all the day before. The sky was overcast, and the thermometer had
+dropped below zero. It was one of those brief "freeze-ups" such as
+Father Adam had awaited, and it might last two or three days. Then would
+come prompt reaction, and the rapidity of the thaw would be an
+hundred-fold increased.
+
+The sun was hidden, and the sky looked to be heavily burdened with snow.
+The earth was frozen solid, and the wide flung forests were white with
+the hoar frosts of Spring.
+
+Father Adam was standing beside the crouching team of dogs. There were
+five of them; great huskies, shaggy of coat and fiercely wolfish. They
+were fat and soft from idleness. But they would serve, for the sled was
+light, and a few days' run would swiftly harden them.
+
+The outfit was waiting just beyond the kitchen door of the house on the
+hill, and the view of the busy Cove below was completely shut out. The
+position for the waiting sled had not been calculated by the man who
+owned it, but by the shrewd, troubled mind of Bat Harker.
+
+He was standing beside the tall figure of the missionary now, squat and
+sturdy, looking on with half-angry, wholly anxious eyes. His expression
+was characteristic of the man when he was disturbed. Father Adam's dark
+eyes were surveying his outfit. There was no emotion in them. They were
+calm, and simply searching, in the fashion of the practised trail man.
+
+"Say, Les, this is just the craziest thing of all your crazy life," Bat
+said at last, in a tone kept low for all the feeling that lay behind it.
+"I tell you they're waiting on you. They've got you set. Just as sure as
+God this'll be your last trip. It's kind of useless talkin' it again out
+here, I know. We've talked an' talked it in that darn sick room of yours
+till I'm sick to death trying to git sense into you. We know the game
+from A to the hindmost letter of the darn alphabet. We haven't shouted
+it, you an' me, because there wasn't need. But Idepski's been right here
+since ever he got his nose on your trail. It was his gun that took you
+weeks back, an' sent you sick. If I know a thing he meant just to wing
+you, and leave you kind of helpless, so he could get hands on you when
+he fancied. He wants you alive, and he's goin' to git you. Ther's word
+got round you're pulling out. It's clear to me. A bunch of boys hit the
+trail out of here three nights gone, and I've a notion Idepski went with
+'em. Are they wise you're pulling out? Sure they are. Why, in God's
+name, don't you quit it?"
+
+The man whom the forest world knew as Father Adam, but whom Bat knew as
+Leslie Standing, shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Why should I?" he said, his dark eyes mildly enquiring, "you can't
+tell me a thing I don't know about Idepski. I knew it was he who dropped
+me. I saw him that night down there and knew him right away. Maybe he
+can fool you with his disguises. He can't fool me. I'd been watching him
+days before that."
+
+"Why didn't you show yourself? Why didn't you say?"
+
+Bat spoke fiercely in his exasperation.
+
+The missionary smiled.
+
+"You'd have had him shot up," he said. "I know. No. If you'd known I was
+around it would have queered the hand I was playing. Here, Bat, let's
+get this thing right. You could shoot up a dozen Idepskis, and there'd
+be others to replace 'em. Hellbeam's dogs'll never let up." He shook his
+head. "It's a play that'll go on to the--end. I know that. I tell you
+I've got past caring a curse about things. When the end comes, what does
+it matter! Not a thing. It's useless talking, old friend," he said, as
+Bat attempted to break in, "quite useless. But don't reckon I'm a
+willing quitter. I'll play the game till it can't be played longer. And
+when I've got to I'll throw my hands up. Not before. But Idepski can't
+follow my trail."
+
+"But he ken cut it," Bat cried, desperation finding expression in a
+clenched, out-held fist.
+
+"Can he?"
+
+The missionary smiled confidently. And Bat suddenly flung out both
+hands.
+
+"Say, Les," he cried, "do you think I want to see my partner, and best
+friend, hounded to a life of hell by that swine, Hellbeam? It breaks me
+to death the thought of it. Man, man, it sets me nigh crazed thinking
+that way. Don't I count with you? Don't the others you came along to
+help count? That dandy gal I've heard you wish was your own daughter?
+Don't she count? Say, we're all for you, Bull an' Nancy, an' me, just
+the same as the rest of the folk of the forest. Stop right here, man.
+Take your place again, an' we'll fight Hellbeam as we've fought his
+Skandinavia. Say, we'll fight for you as we've never fought before.
+We'll fight him, and beat him, and keep you safe from that hell he's got
+waitin' for you. Just say the word, and stop right here. And I'll swear
+before God--"
+
+Leslie Standing raised a protesting hand. His eyes were unsmiling.
+
+"It's useless, old friend," he said with irrevocable decision. "You
+don't know the thing you're trying to pledge yourself to. You think me a
+crazy man. You think I'm just asking for the trouble Hellbeam figures to
+hand out to me. I'm not. I've got the full measure of the whole thing.
+And I know the thing I'm doing doesn't matter. I'm not going to change
+the plan of life I've laid down. I've learnt happiness in the forests.
+The twilight of it all has been my salvation. Time was when I had other
+desires, other delights. They've long since passed. Now there's only one
+appeal to me in life. It's the boys, the scallawags, who haunt the
+forest like I do. I love them. And my life's theirs as long as Hellbeam
+leaves it to me. Get just that into your thick, old head, Bat, and for
+our last five minutes together we can talk of things more pleasant than
+Hellbeam."
+
+The missionary smiled down into the strong face of his companion. And
+the lumberman realised the uselessness of further protest. He yielded
+grudgingly. He yielded because he knew and loved the man. By a great
+effort he turned his mind from the dread haunting it.
+
+"You've got me beat, Les," he growled. Then he spat in his disgust.
+
+The missionary nodded, and, with a gesture of the hand, he indicated the
+hidden mills below them.
+
+"It's queer the way the whole thing's completed itself as I hoped and
+dreamed so long ago," he said thoughtfully. "You know, Bat, that yellow
+streak in me was a better thing than either of us knew. If I hadn't had
+it I'd have stood my ground. I'd have fought to the end, and I'd have
+been beaten, and Sachigo would have crashed. Do you see that? No. That's
+because you look at things with the obstinate eyes of great courage.
+While I, through fear, see things as they are. We won't debate it now.
+The accomplished fact is the thing. You've set Sachigo on top. Sachigo
+will rule the Canadian forest industry. The foreigner is on the scrap
+heap. We've helped to build something for this great old Empire of ours,
+and so our lives haven't been wholly wasted. It's good to feel that when
+the time comes to pay our debts. That boy Sternford's a great feller.
+I'm glad about him. Say, I felt I could cry last night when he and Nancy
+came along like two school-kids to tell me of the thing they'd fixed. I
+felt like handing them my story and claiming my place as Nancy's
+stepfather. But I didn't. You see, she's glad about me as Father Adam, a
+dopey missionary. But I can see her eyes blaze up red-hot with anger at
+the man who took her mother from her, and denied her existence. No, it's
+best that way. She's found the man I could have chosen for her, and I'm
+glad. She's a great lass. She's all her mother--and more."
+
+Bat inclined his stubborn head. He was still thinking of the dogs, and
+the sled, and all they meant to him just now.
+
+"Does she know about her share in the mills?" he asked brusquely.
+
+The other shook his head.
+
+"Not yet. But I've sent word to Charlie Nisson. He'll be along up on the
+_Myra_. And when he comes she'll know." He laughed quietly. "Say, I'd be
+glad to see them when they know about it--she and Bull. They're going to
+be married right after Birchall's been along and finally fixed things.
+It'll be a great day. I wonder. You know, Bat, I'd like to think
+Nancy--my Nancy--knows all about this. I wonder if she does. Do you
+think so?"
+
+Bat turned away. His eyes were on the surrounding forest, and the white
+gossamer of the hoar-frost clinging to the dark foliage. He dared not
+trust himself to reply.
+
+Again came the missionary's quiet laugh.
+
+"I wonder," he said. Then, in a moment, a curious flicker marred the
+calm of his eyes. "Bat, old friend," he went on, after a pause, "there's
+just one thing I'm going to ask you before I pull out. It's a promise I
+want. When the time comes for me to pay, will you tell her? Will you
+tell them both? If I'm gone will you tell them the thing you know--all
+of it? Don't make me out to be any old angel I guess you'd like to paint
+me. Just hand 'em the story of the white-livered creature I am, without
+the nerve of a jack-rabbit. Will you do that?"
+
+He held out a hand from which he removed his fur mitt. Bat turned. He
+saw the hand, and disregarded it in a surge of feeling.
+
+"Tell 'em? Tell 'em?" he cried. "Say, Les, for God Almighty's sake don't
+you pull out. You're my friend. You're the one feller in the world that
+matters a curse to me. Quit boy. Stop right here, an'--"
+
+"Will you tell 'em?"
+
+The hand was thrust further towards the lumberman so that he could no
+longer ignore it.
+
+"Hell! Yes!" he cried, in fierce mental anguish. "I'll tell 'em--if I
+have to." He seized the outstretched hand in both of his and gripped it
+with crushing force. "You're goin'--now?"
+
+"Sure."
+
+Their hands fell apart. Bat's dropped to his side like leaden weights.
+"So long," he said dully, as the other took his place in the sled. Then
+he added, "So long, Les."
+
+The sled needed breaking out, and the lumberman watched the operation of
+it without a word. His emotions were too real, to deep for anything
+more. He looked on while the first sharp order was flung at the dogs. He
+watched them leap to their feet and stand ready, great, powerful,
+untamed souls eager for their, task. Then the man in the sled looked
+round as he strung out the long lash of his short-stocked whip.
+
+"So long, Bat," he cried smilingly. And his farewell was instantly
+followed by the sharp command to "mush."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Far out on the desolate highlands the dogs broke trail over a waste of
+virgin snow. The cold had abated, and the flurry of snow that rose up
+under their feet was wet and melting. The way lay through the maze of
+woodland bluffs which lined the upper slopes of the course of the Beaver
+River. Beyond them, northward, lay the windswept barrens of the
+highlands.
+
+Father Adam knew the trail by heart. The maze of bluffs through which he
+was passing afforded him no difficulties or anxieties. He read them with
+the certainty of wide and long experience. There was nothing new that
+Labrador had to show him. He knew it all, and revelled in the wide
+freedom its fierce territory afforded. The moods of the country
+concerned him not at all. Furious or gentle, tearful or hard with the
+bitterness of desperate winter, it was all one to him. He loved the
+twilight of its mysterious, fickle heart. It was as much his home as any
+place on earth.
+
+The dogs swept on at a steady gait. The cruel whip played over furry
+backs, a never-ceasing threat. And so the miles were hungrily devoured.
+It was the first day of freedom for dogs and man alike, and each moment
+of it yielded a sense of almost fierce joy.
+
+The bluffs narrowed in, and the softer snow slowed the going. Instantly
+a sharp command hurled the leading dog heading for the open where the
+surface was hard and dry. The team swung away behind him and the sled
+pursued. Then the silence broke.
+
+A shot rang out. It came from the shelter of a bluff directly ahead. The
+leading dog floundered. Then the brute fell with a fierce yelp, and
+sprawled in the snow while the others swept over his inert body. The man
+in the sled strove to brake the sled with the "gee-pole" which he
+snatched to his aid. There was a moment of desperate struggle. Then the
+sled flung tail up in the air and the man was hurled headlong amidst his
+dogs.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Father Adam stood with mitted hands thrust up above his head. He was
+gazing into the smiling eyes of a man no less dark than himself. There
+were three others confronting him, and each was armed with a stubby,
+automatic pistol which covered his body.
+
+"Guess Hellbeam's waiting for you over the other side, Mr. Leslie
+Martin, or Standing, or Father Adam, as you choose to call yourself.
+He's waited a long time. But you ain't tired him out. Guess your game's
+up."
+
+"Oh, yes?"
+
+The missionary smiled back into Idepski's derisive eyes.
+
+"You can drop your hands," the agent went on. "We've got your gun. And I
+guess you'll be kind of tired before we get you to the coast. You're
+going to find things a heap tougher than No. 10 Camp--where you sent me.
+You surely are."
+
+"The coast?"
+
+The missionary was startled.
+
+"Yep. There's going to be no play game this time. Hellbeam's yacht's
+waiting on you. You'll take the sea trip. It's safer that way."
+
+"Yes."
+
+The mitted hands had dropped to the missionary's sides. He moistened his
+lips, which seemed to have become curiously dry. Once, and once only,
+there was a flicker of the eyes as he looked into the face of his
+captor. Otherwise he gave no sign. His time had come. He knew that. He
+had always known it would come. There was neither heat nor resentment in
+him against these men who had finally hunted him down.
+
+"How do we travel?" he asked quietly. "You've shot up my leader."
+
+The other nodded. He understood the tone of complaint and regret in
+which the trail man spoke of his dog. He grinned maliciously.
+
+"We'll shoot up the rest for you. They'd only feed the wolves if we left
+'em. We've two dog trains with us. Don't let that worry. You best get
+your kit loosed from your sled."
+
+The prisoner turned to obey, but the agent changed his mind. He laughed.
+
+"No. Guess the boys can fix that. It's safer that way. You move right on
+into yonder bluff. And you best not try making any break. There ain't
+only Hellbeam in this. I haven't forgotten--No. 10 Camp. Your game's
+plumb up."
+
+"Yes, plumb up."
+
+Father Adam obeyed. He moved away, followed closely by the man who had
+hunted him for so many years. There was no escape. He knew that. The
+reckoning he had always foreseen had overtaken him. So, without a word
+of protest, he passed for the last time into the twilight of the woods.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+The Heart of Unaga
+
+By
+
+Ridgwell Cullum
+
+Author of "The Way of the Strong," etc.
+
+
+Many a stalwart deed has been done and many a brave tale told of the
+forbidding but romantic North-land, but seldom has an author so combined
+a tale of love, adventure, and strong swift action with mystery.
+
+The terrible fires of Unaga crimsoning the white silent wastes are so
+vividly portrayed, that the reader must feel authenticity. The strange
+"sleeper" Indians are real Indians, the big-souled Northwest policeman
+is not a superman, but a real human being, the girl is bonafide, the
+villain is not fictional, but an actual personality, brave and base
+alike--all the characters are living and breathing folk, that you feel
+are there in far-off Unaga, and that you know you would find there, were
+you hardy enough to visit that remorseless country.
+
+G, P. Putnam's Sons
+
+New York London
+
+
+
+
+SNOWDRIFT
+
+BY
+
+JAMES B. HENDRYX
+
+
+A Romance of the barrens--"straight north--between the Mackenzie and the
+Bay," where Snowdrift, waif of the Arctic, Indian bred, bearing a false
+but heavy burden of shame, and Carter Brent, Southerner, find their
+great happiness among the icy wastes.
+
+Swept to the Klondike by the first wave of the great gold rush, Brent
+plunges, with the enthusiasm of youth, into the whirl of Dawson, the
+city of men gone mad. How luck sat upon his shoulder, and how his
+recklessness and daring won him the admiration of those wild times,
+until the raw red liquor of Alaska downed him "for the count," is but
+the beginning of the tale; for with him, we are carried into the
+Northern night and fight the long fight back to manhood till purged by
+the cleansing cruelty of the Arctic.
+
+G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS
+
+NEW YORK LONDON
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MAN IN THE TWILIGHT***
+
+
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+<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Man in the Twilight, by Ridgwell Cullum</h1>
+<pre>
+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 <a href = "https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: The Man in the Twilight</p>
+<p>Author: Ridgwell Cullum</p>
+<p>Release Date: January 22, 2005 [eBook #14756]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MAN IN THE TWILIGHT***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h4 class="pg">E-text prepared by Wallace McLean, Josephine Paolucci, Joshua Hutchinson,<br>
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team</h4>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full">
+<div class="text">
+<div class="front">
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div>
+<h2>The Man in the Twilight</h2>
+<p>by Ridgwell Cullum</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h6>G.P. Putnam's Sons<br />
+
+New York and London<br />
+
+The Knickerbocker Press</h6>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<p>To My Nephew</p>
+<p>Geoffrey Frederick Burghard</p>
+<p>This Book Is Affectionately Dedicated</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<p>THE AUTHOR TO THE READER</p>
+
+
+<p>The story of the Sachigo wood-pulp mills, told in this
+book, is entirely a work of imagination. But as I have
+had to draw very largely on my knowledge of the wood-pulp
+trade of Eastern Canada, and the conditions under
+which it is carried on, I desire it to be clearly understood
+that this story contains no portraiture of any
+person or persons, living or dead, and contains no
+representation of any business organisation connected
+with the trade.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div class="div" id="toc"><a name="toc_1"></a><h2>Contents</h2><ul class="toc">
+
+<li style="margin: 0em 0em;"><a href="#toc_1">Contents</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 0em;"><a href="#toc_2">Part I</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_3">Chapter I&mdash;The Crisis</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_4">Chapter II&mdash;The Man With The Mail</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_5">Chapter III&mdash;Idepski</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_6">Chapter IV&mdash;The "Yellow Streak"</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_7">Chapter V&mdash;Nancy Mcdonald</a></li>
+
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_8">Chapter VI&mdash;Nathaniel Hellbeam</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 0em;"><a href="#toc_9">Part II&mdash;Eight Years Later</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_10">Chapter I&mdash;Bull Sternford</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_11">Chapter II&mdash;Father Adam</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_12">Chapter III&mdash;Bull Learns Conditions</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_13">Chapter IV&mdash;Drawing The Net</a></li>
+
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_14">Chapter V&mdash;The Progress Of Nancy</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_15">Chapter VI&mdash;The Lonely Figure</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_16">Chapter VII&mdash;The Skandinavia Moves</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_17">Chapter VIII&mdash;An Affair Of Outposts</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_18">Chapter IX&mdash;On The Open Sea</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_19">Chapter X&mdash;In Quebec</a></li>
+
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_20">Chapter XI&mdash;Drawn Swords</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_21">Chapter XII&mdash;At The Chateau</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_22">Chapter XIII&mdash;Deepening Waters</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_23">Chapter XIV&mdash;The Planning Of Campaign</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_24">Chapter XV&mdash;The Sailing Of The Empress</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_25">Chapter XVI&mdash;On Board The Empress</a></li>
+
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_26">Chapter XVII&mdash;The Lonely Figure Again</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_27">Chapter XVIII&mdash;Bull Sternford'S Vision Of Success</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_28">Chapter XIX&mdash;The Hold-Up</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_29">Chapter XX&mdash;On The Home Trail</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_30">Chapter XXI&mdash;The Man In The Twilight</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_31">Chapter XXII&mdash;Dawn</a></li>
+
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_32">Chapter XXIII&mdash;Nancy</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_33">Chapter XXIV&mdash;The Coming Of Spring</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_34">Chapter XXV&mdash;Nancy's Decision</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_35">Chapter XXVI&mdash;The Message</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_36">Chapter XXVII&mdash;Lost In The Twilight</a></li>
+</ul></div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<p>Also By Ridgwell Cullum</p>
+
+<p>THE DEVIL'S KEG</p>
+<p>THE HOUND FROM THE NORTH</p>
+<p>THE BROODING WILD</p>
+<p>THE NIGHT RIDERS</p>
+<p>THE WATCHERS OF THE PLAINS</p>
+
+<p>THE COMPACT</p>
+<p>THE TRAIL OF THE AXE</p>
+<p>THE ONE WAY TRAIL</p>
+<p>THE SHERIFF OF DYKE HOLE</p>
+<p>TWINS OF SUFFERING CREEK</p>
+<p>THE GOLDEN WOMAN</p>
+<p>THE WAY OF THE STRONG</p>
+<p>THE LAW BREAKERS</p>
+<p>THE SON OF HIS FATHER</p>
+
+<p>THE MEN WHO WROUGHT</p>
+<p>THE PURCHASE PRICE</p>
+<p>THE TRIUMPH OF JOHN KARS</p>
+<p>THE LAW OF THE GUN</p>
+<p>THE HEART OF UNAGA</p>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="body">
+
+<hr class="doublepage">
+
+<div>
+<h2>THE MAN IN THE TWILIGHT</h2>
+
+</div>
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_2"></a>
+<h2>Part I</h2>
+
+
+<div>
+
+<a name="toc_3"></a>
+<h3>Chapter I&mdash;The Crisis</h3>
+
+<p>They sat squarely gazing into each other's eyes. Bat
+Marker had only one mood to express. It was a mood
+that suggested determination to fight to a finish, to
+fight with the last ounce of strength, the last gasp of
+breath. He was sitting at the desk, opposite his friend
+and employer, Leslie Standing, and his small grey eyes
+were shining coldly under his shaggy, black brows. His
+broad shoulders were squared aggressively.</p>
+
+<p>There was far less display in the eyes of Leslie Standing.
+They were wide with a deep pre-occupation. But
+then Standing was of very different type. His pale face,
+his longish black hair, brushed straight back from an
+abnormally high forehead, suggested the face of a
+student, even a priest. Harker was something of the
+roused bull-dog, strong, rugged, furious; a product of
+earth's rough places.</p>
+
+<p>"Give us that last bit again."</p>
+
+<p>Bat's tone matched his attitude. It was abrupt, forceful,
+and he thrust out a hand pointing at the letter from
+which the other had been reading.</p>
+
+<p>Standing's eyes lit with a shadow of a smile as he
+turned again to the letter.</p>
+
+<div class="display">
+<p>"There's just one thing more. It's less pleasant, so I've
+kept it till the last. Hellbeam is in Quebec. So is his agent&mdash;the
+man Idepski. My informant tells me he saw the latter
+leaving the steam-packet office. It suggests things are on
+the move your way again. However, my man is keeping tab.
+I'll get warning through at the first sign of danger."</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>Standing looked up. His half smile had gone. There
+was doubt in his eyes, and the hand grasping the letter
+was not quite steady. But when he spoke his tone was
+a flat denial of the physical sign that Bat had been quick
+to observe.</p>
+
+<p>"Charlie Nisson's as keen as a needle," Standing said.
+"His whisper's a sight more than another fellow's shout."</p>
+
+<p>Bat regarded the letter. He watched the other lay
+it aside on a pile of papers. He was thinking, thinking
+hard. And his thought was mostly of the man whose
+shaking hand betrayed him. Suddenly an explosive
+movement brought his clenched fist down on the table
+with a thud.</p>
+
+<p>"Hell!" he cried, in a fury of impatience. "What's
+the use? The danger sign's hoisted. I know it. You
+know it. Nisson knows it. Well? Say, Hellbeam's
+been in Quebec a score of times since&mdash;since&mdash;. That
+don't worry a thing. No. He's got big finance in the
+Skandinavia bunch in Quebec. We know all about that.
+It's Idepski. Idepski ain't visiting the packet office for
+his health. He ain't figgerin' on a joy trip up the Labrador
+coast. No. That's the signal, sure. Idepski at the
+packet office. Their darn mud-scow mostly runs here,
+to Sachigo, and there ain't a thing along the way to
+interest Idepski&mdash;but Sachigo. We'll be getting word
+from Charlie Nisson in some hurry."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, we'll get it in a hurry."</p>
+
+<p>Standing nodded. He was transparently perturbed.
+Bat watched him closely. Then, in a moment, his mind
+was made up.</p>
+
+<p>"See right here, Les," he cried, in a tone he vainly
+endeavoured to restrain. "I've figgered right along this
+thing would need to happen sometime. You can't beat a
+feller like Hellbeam all the time and leave him without
+a kick. It don't need me to tell you that. But I want
+to get a square eye on the whole darn game. Maybe you
+
+don't get all you did to that guy when you cleaned him
+out of ten million dollars on Wall Street seven years ago.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, you were a mathematical professor at a Scottish
+University before you reckoned to buck the game on
+Wall Street, weren't you?" he went on, more moderately.
+He forced a grin into eyes that were scarcely accustomed.
+"One of those guys who mostly make two and two into
+four, and by no sort of imagination can cypher 'em into
+five. I know. You figgered out that Persian Oil gamble
+to suit yourself, and forgot to figger that Hellbeam was at
+the other end of it. No. The other feller don't cut
+any ice with you while you're playing around with
+figgers. It's only afterwards you find that figgers ain't
+the whole game, and wrostling ten million dollars out of
+one of the biggest railroad kings and bank presidents
+in America has something to it liable to hand you nightmare.
+Well, you got that nightmare. So did I. You've
+had it for most the whole of the last seven years. But
+it ain't a nightmare now. It's dead real, which is only
+a way of sayin' Hellbeam's set his dogs on a hot trail,
+and we're the poor darn gophers huntin' our holes right
+up here on the Labrador coast.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes. I know what you'd say. You've said it
+all before. Hellbeam hasn't a kick comin'. You were
+both operators on Wall Street. You were both playing
+the financial game as all the world knows it. You beat
+him on a straight financial fight. It was just a matter
+of the figgers which it's your job to play around with.</p>
+
+<p>"Now I'm just going to say the thing that's in my
+mind," he went on, his tone changing again to something
+clumsily persuasive. "You can take it easy from me.
+You see, you picked me up when I was down and out.
+You passed me a hand when there wasn't a hope left
+me but a stretch of penitentiary. I fought that darn
+lumber-jack to a finish, which is mostly my way in things.
+And it was plumb bad luck that he went out by accident.
+
+Well, it don't matter. It was you who got me clear away
+when they'd got the penitentiary gates wide open waiting
+for me, and it's a thing I can't never forget. I'm out for
+you all the time, and I want you to know it when I'm
+telling you the things in my mind. Hellbeam's got a
+mighty big kick coming. It's the biggest kick any feller
+of his sort can have. He's the money power of Sweden.
+He's one of the big money powers of the States. He lives
+for money and the power it hands him. Well? This is
+how I figger. Just how you played him up I can't say.
+But it's his job to juggle around with figgers same as
+it's yours, and if you beat him out of ten million dollars
+you must have played a slicker hand than him. All of
+which says you must have got more to windward of the
+law than him&mdash;and he knows it. Why, it's easy. The
+feller who has the money power to hold the crown jewels
+of Sweden from falling into the hands of yahoo politicians
+out to grab the things they haven't the brains to
+come by honestly, is mostly powerful enough to buy up
+the justice he needs, or any other old thing. Hellbeam
+means to get his hands on you. He's going to get you
+across the darn American border. And when he's got
+you there he's going to send you down, by hook or crook,
+to the worst hell an American penitentiary can show
+you. It's seven years since you hurt him. But that ain't
+a circumstance. If it takes him seventy-seven he'll never
+quit your trail."</p>
+
+<p>Bat paused, and, for a moment, turned from the wide
+black eyes he had held seemingly fascinated while he
+was talking. It almost seemed that the emotions stirring
+in his broad bosom were too overpowering for him,
+and he needed respite from their pressure. But he came
+again. He was bound to. It was his nature to drive to
+the end at whatever cost to himself.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm handing you this stuff, Les, because I got to,"
+he went on. "It ain't because I'm liking it. No, sir.
+
+And if you've the horse sense I reckon you have, you'll
+locate my object easy. Those words of Nisson's have
+told us plain we got to fight. We got to fight like hell.
+And the time's right now. Oh, yes, we're going to fight.
+You an' me, just the same as we've fought a heap of
+times before. There ain't a feller I know who's got
+more fight in him than you&mdash;when you feel that way.
+But&mdash;well, say, you just need a boost to make you feel
+like it. You ain't like me who wants to fight most all
+the time. No. Well&mdash;I'm going to hand you that boost."</p>
+
+<p>"How?"</p>
+
+<p>Standing's unruffled interrogation was in sharp contrast
+with the other's earnestness. There was a calm
+tolerance in it. The tolerance of a temperament given to
+philosophy rather than passion. Perhaps it was a mask.
+Perhaps it was real. Whatever it was, Bat's next words
+sent the hot fire of a man's soul leaping into his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"When your boy's born, what then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!"</p>
+
+<p>Bat's fists clenched at the sound of the other's ejaculation.
+It was the nervous clenching at a sound that
+threatened danger. Swift as a shot he followed up his
+challenge.</p>
+
+<p>"Your pore gal's down there in Quebec hopin' and
+prayin' to hand you that boy child you reckon Providence
+is going to send you. Well, when he gets along, and
+Hellbeam's around&mdash;and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Bat broke off. Standing had risen from his chair.
+He had moved swiftly, his lean figure propelled towards
+the window by long, nervous strides. His voice came
+back to the man at the table, while his eyes gazed down
+upon the waters of Farewell Cove, over the widespread
+roofs of the great groundwood mill, the building of which
+was the result of his seven years' sojourn on the Labrador
+coast.</p>
+
+<p>"You've handed it me, Bat," he said, in a quick,
+
+nervous way. "I'll fight. I know. You guess I'm
+scared at Nisson's news. Maybe I am, I don't know.
+I'm not a man of iron guts. Maybe I never shall be.
+It's hell to me to feel a shadow dogging my every step.
+Yes, you're right. It's been a nightmare, and now&mdash;why,
+now it's real. But get your mind at rest. I'm going to
+fight Hellbeam all I know. And with the thought of
+Nancy, and the boy she's going to give me, I don't need
+a thing else. No."</p>
+
+<p>"That's how I figgered."</p>
+
+<p>Bat's delight softened his hard eyes for the moment,
+and his attitude relaxed as Standing went on.</p>
+
+<p>"You reckon I've no imagination," he said. "You
+reckon I'm just a calculating machine that can juggle
+figures better than any other machine." He shook his
+dark head. "I guess you don't do me full justice.
+When I quit the university on the other side it was
+because I had built myself up a big dream. I crossed to
+the United States with my imagination full of the things
+I hoped to do. It was the chance I looked for. And I
+found it in Hellbeam, and the Persian Oils it was his
+hobby to manipulate. I jumped in and grabbed it with
+both hands. And, as you say, I beat him at his own
+game. But that was only part of my dream. The next
+part you also know, though you choose to think it was
+only as a refuge from Hellbeam that I came here to
+Sachigo. I admit circumstances have modified my
+original dream, but then I dreamed my first dream as a
+man unmarried. Now I have added to it in the thought
+of the son my wife's going to present me with. After
+beating Hellbeam and making the fortune I desired, I
+didn't flee here to the coast of Labrador as a mere refuge
+from the man you tell me I robbed. No. This place
+served its purpose that way, it's true. But it was the
+place I selected long since for the fulfilment of the second
+part of my dream.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Bat&mdash;Bat, old friend. It isn't I who lack imagination.
+It's you, with your bull-dog, fighting nature.
+Years ago, way back there in my rooms at the university,
+I took up a study that interested me mightily. It was
+when the European war was on, and was doing its best
+to unship the brains of half the world. I took it up to
+relieve myself of the strain of things. And it inspired
+me with a desire to achieve something that looked well-nigh
+impossible. I was watching the Swedes, the
+Skandinavians generally, and I saw them getting fat and
+rich by holding the rest of the world to ransom for paper
+and wood pulp&mdash;the stuff we call here groundwood. It
+was then that my dream was born. Oh, yes, it's changed
+a bit since then. But not so much. All I learned at
+that time told me there was only one country in the
+world that was due to hold the world's paper industry,
+and that country was yours&mdash;Canada. The illimitable
+forests of the country are one of the most amazing features
+of it. The water power&mdash;yes, and even the climate.
+But I saw all Skandinavia's advantage. Hitherto they've
+had a complete monopoly. Geographically they were
+in the thick of the world. The whole darn thing was
+in their lap. But they have a weakness which you
+could never find in this country. Their forests are being
+eaten into. Their lumber is receding farther and farther
+from their mills. Their labour is difficult. Well, I
+set to work with a map and those figures which you
+guess are my strong point. I played around with all the
+information of Quebec and Labrador I could get hold
+of. Then, after worrying around awhile, I realised
+that, with only eighteen hundred sea miles dividing
+Britain from Labrador, given the cheapness of power,
+sufficiently extensive plant and forest limits and adequate
+shipping, I could put groundwood on the European
+market in favourable competition with Skandinavia. By
+this means I could build up an industry which means the
+
+wealth of Canada for the Canadians, and establish the
+paper industry of the world within the heart of our
+British Empire. So it was Farewell Cove and Sachigo
+on the coast of Labrador for me. And the locality had
+nothing to do with the man who guesses I robbed him."</p>
+
+<p>It was Bat who was held silent now. He nodded his
+head at the narrow back that remained turned on him.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, since then," Standing went on, "seven years
+have passed. Circumstances have forced modifications
+on my plans. Hellbeam is the circumstance. You say
+we are the gophers hunting our holes. Maybe you're
+right. Anyway Hellbeam's shadow is haunting me.
+It's haunting me in that I know&mdash;<em>I</em> feel&mdash;that the fulfilment
+of this dream is not for me. Why?"</p>
+
+<p>He turned abruptly from the window. His pale face
+was even paler under the excitement burning in his
+dark eyes. He thrust out a hand, a delicate, long-fingered
+hand pointing at his friend and faithful
+servant.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, you reckon I've no imagination. Listen. I
+see the time coming when all you say of Hellbeam's
+purpose will be fulfilled, and my dream shattered and
+tumbling about my head. If Hellbeam succeeds, can
+I let this thing happen? Can I sacrifice this great purpose
+in such a personal disaster? No. My hope is in
+my little wife, that dear woman who's given herself to
+me with the full knowledge of the threat hanging over
+my future. She and I have dreamed a fresh dream.
+And she's even now fulfilling her part of that dream. Yes,
+you're right. I'm going to fight for our dream with
+every ounce that's in me. I know my failings. I'm
+at heart a coward. But I'm out to fight though the gates
+of hell are agape waiting for me. And when I'm beaten,
+and Hellbeam's satisfied his kick, my boy, my little son,
+will step into my shoes and carry on the work till it's
+complete. Oh, yes, I say 'my son.' Nancy will see to
+
+it that she gives me a son. And, by God, how I will
+fight for him!"</p>
+
+<p>Bat was silent before the tide of his friend's passion.
+He listened to the strange mixture of clear thinking and
+unreasoning faith with a feeling of something like awe
+of a man whom he had long since given up attempting
+to fathom. He was a rough lumberman, a mill-boss,
+who, by sheer force, had raised himself from the dregs of
+a lumber camp to a position where his skill and capacity
+had full play. And in his utter lack of education it was
+impossible that he should be able to fathom a nature so
+complex, so far removed from his sphere of culture.</p>
+
+<p>His devotion to the ex-university professor was based
+on a splendid gratitude such as only the native generosity
+of his temper could bestow. The man had once served
+him in his extremity. Even to this day he never quite
+realised how the thing had come about, and Leslie Standing
+refused to talk of it. All he knew was that as mill-boss
+of an obscure mill, far in the interior of Quebec,
+away down south of Sachigo, he had fought one of
+those sudden battles with a lumber-jack which seem to
+spring up without any apparent reason. And in the
+desperateness of it, in the fierce height to which his
+battling temper had arisen, he had killed his man. Even
+so, these things were sufficiently common for little notice
+of the matter to have been taken. But it so happened
+that the dead man was the hero of the workers of the
+mill, and Bat Harker was their well-hated boss. Forthwith,
+in their numbers, the workers at once determined
+that Bat should pay the penalty. They seized and imprisoned
+him, while they sent down country to get him
+duly tried and condemned. It was then the miracle
+happened.</p>
+
+<p>It happened in the night, with the appearance of a
+lean, tall man, with a high forehead, and smooth black
+hair, and the clothes of civilisation to which Bat Harker
+
+was little enough accustomed. He entered his prison
+room seemingly without question. He told Bat that if
+he cared to get away he had the means awaiting him
+outside. And the prisoner who had visions of hanging,
+or at best, a long term of imprisonment, snatched at the
+helping hand held out. And Leslie Standing had brought
+him in safety straight to Farewell Cove, where together,
+with the vast capital which the former had wrung from
+the Swedish financier, Nathaniel Hellbeam, they had
+undertaken the creation of the great mill of Sachigo.</p>
+
+<p>Bat, in his wonder at the apparent ease of his rescue,
+had sought information. But little enough had been
+forthcoming. Leslie Standing had only smiled in his
+pensive fashion.</p>
+
+<p>"Money," he had said calmly. "Just money. It can
+do most things."</p>
+
+<p>That was all. And thenceforward the subject had
+been taboo. Even after seven years of intimate relations,
+Bat was still mystified on the subject, he was still
+guessing.</p>
+
+<p>Now, as he listened to his friend's expressions of faith,
+so strangely jumbled with calculated purpose, he sat at
+the table groping helplessly. Suppose&mdash;suppose that
+faith were to be shattered. What then? His mind
+was concerned, deeply concerned. And he dared not put
+his fears into words.</p>
+
+<p>Standing came back to his chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, we've talked these things enough," he said.
+"You've got my word. Just don't worry a thing. If
+Hellbeam's dogs get around, well&mdash;we're here first. All
+I want is news of Nancy. And that'll be along any old
+time now. When I get that&mdash;."</p>
+
+<p>The door of the office was thrust open, and an olive-hued
+face appeared. It was the clerk who worked in
+direct contact with the owner of the Sachigo mill. He
+was one-third nigger, another French Canadian, and the
+
+rest of him was Indian. It was a combination that
+appealed to the man who employed him.</p>
+
+<p>"They've 'phoned it through from the wireless at
+the headland, Boss," the man said without preamble,
+pushing a sheet of paper into Leslie Standing's hand.</p>
+
+<p>He had gone as swiftly and silently as he came, and
+the door was closed softly behind him.</p>
+
+<p>Standing was gazing across at Bat. He had not even
+glanced at the message.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd like to bet," he cried, his eyes alight with a smiling
+excitement. Then he shook his head. "No. I
+wouldn't bet on it. It's too sacred. Nancy&mdash;my
+Nancy&mdash;."</p>
+
+<p>He broke off, and glanced down at the paper. In a
+moment the smile fell from his eyes. When he looked
+up it was to flash a keen glance at the rugged face beyond
+the desk.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, listen," he cried, with a sharp intake of breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Watch <em>Lizzie</em> for U.G.P. Signed&mdash;Nisson."</p>
+
+<p>Bat nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"U.G.P. That's Union Great Peninsular Railroad.
+That's Hellbeam's. It means&mdash;."</p>
+
+<p>"It means Hellbeam's men are aboard. The packet
+<em>Lizzie</em> is due at our quay in less than an hour."</p>
+
+<p>Standing tore the message into small fragments and
+dropped them into the wastepaper basket beside him.
+Only was his emotion displayed in the deliberate care
+with which he reduced the paper to the smallest possible
+fragments.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_4"></a>
+<h3>Chapter II&mdash;The Man With The Mail</h3>
+
+
+<p>The calm waters of Farewell Cove lay a-shimmer under
+the slanting rays of the sun. A wealth of racing white
+cloud filled the dome of the summer sky, speeding under
+
+the pressure of a strong top wind. Even the harsh world
+of Labrador was smiling under the beneficence of the
+brief summer season.</p>
+
+<p>Leslie Standing stood for a moment before passing
+down the winding woodland trail on his way to the
+water-front below. The view of it all was irresistible to
+him in his present mood, and he feasted his eyes hungrily
+while the resolve he had taken yielded an inflexible
+hardening.</p>
+
+<p>Bat Harker was less affected by the things spread out
+before him. He was concerned only for the mood of the
+man beside him. So he waited with such patience as
+his hasty nature could summon.</p>
+
+<p>"It's all good, Bat, old friend," Standing said, after a
+moment's silent contemplation. "It's too good to lose.
+It's too good for us to stand for interference from&mdash;Nathaniel
+Hellbeam."</p>
+
+<p>Bat grunted some sort of acquiescence. He was gazing
+steadily out over the spruce belt which covered the
+lower slopes of the hillside. His keen deep-set eyes were
+on the shipping lying out in the cove, watching the fussy
+approach of the bluff packet boat.</p>
+
+<p>It was a scene of amazing natural splendour which
+the works of man had no power to destroy. Farewell
+Cove was a perfect natural harbour, deep-set amidst
+surrounding, lofty, forest-clad hills. It was wide and
+deep, a veritable sea-lake, backing inland some fifteen
+miles behind the wide headland gateway to the East,
+which guarded its entrance from the storming Atlantic.
+Its shores were of virgin forest, peopled with the delicate-hued
+spruce, and all the many other varieties of soft,
+white, long-fibred timber demanded in the manufacture
+of the groundwood pulp needed for the world's paper
+industry.</p>
+
+<p>Far as the eye could see, in every direction, it was the
+same; forest and hill. And, in the heart of it all, the
+
+great watercourse of the Beaver River debouched upon
+the cove which linked it with the ocean beyond. It was a
+world of forest, seeming of limitless extent.</p>
+
+<p>But the feast that had inspired Leslie Standing's words
+was less the banquet which Nature had spread than the
+things which expressed the labours he and his companion
+had expended during the past seven years. He was
+concerned for the endless forests. He appreciated the
+great waterfall to the west, where the Beaver River fell
+off the highlands of the interior and precipitated itself into
+the cove below. These were the two things in Nature
+he had demanded to make his work possible. For the
+rest, the rugged immensity of scenery, the mighty contours
+of the aged land about him, the vastness of the
+harsh primordial world, so inhospitable, so forbidding
+under the fierce climate which Nature had imposed, made
+no appeal. It served, and so it was sufficient. The
+lights and shades under the summer sunlight were full of
+splendour. No artist eye could have gazed upon it all
+and missed its appeal. But these men lived amidst it
+the year round, and they had learned something of the
+fear which the ruthless northland inspires. To them
+the beauty of the open season was a mockery, a sham,
+the cruel trap of a heartless mistress.</p>
+
+<p>It was on the wide southern foreshore, just below
+where the falls of the Beaver River thundered into the
+chasm which the centuries of its flood had hewn in
+the granite rock, that Standing had founded his great
+mill. It lay there, in full view from the hillside, amidst
+a tangle of stoutly made roads, where seven years ago
+not even a game track had existed. He had set it up beside
+his water-power, and had given it the name which belonged
+to the ruined trading post he had found on the
+southern headland of the cove when first he had explored
+the region. Sachigo. A native, Labrador word which
+meant "Storm." The trading post had since been re-built
+
+into a modern wireless station, and so had become no
+longer the landmark it once had been. But Standing's
+whim had demanded the necessity for preserving the
+name, if only for the sake of its meaning.</p>
+
+<p>In seven years the translation of the wilderness had
+been well-nigh complete. Its vast desolation remained.
+That could never change under human effort. It was
+one of the oldest regions of the earth's land, driven and
+beaten and desolated under a climate beyond words in
+its merciless severity. But now the place was peopled.
+Now human dwellings dotted the forest foreshore of the
+cove. And the latter were the homes of the workers
+who had come at the mill-owner's call to share in his
+great adventure.</p>
+
+<p>Then there was shipping in the cove. A fleet of
+merchant shipping awaiting cargoes. There was a built
+inner harbour, with quays, and warehouses. There were
+travelling cranes, and every appliance for the loading
+of the great freighters with all possible dispatch. There
+were light railways running in every direction. There
+were sheltering "booms" in the river mouth crammed
+with logs, and dealt with by an army of river men
+equipped with their amazing peavys with which they
+thrust, and rolled, and shepherded the vast mass of hewn
+timber towards the slaughterhouse of saws. Then, immediately
+surrounding the mill, there was a veritable
+town of storehouses and offices and machine shops of
+every description. There were power-houses, there were
+buildings in the process of construction, and the laid
+foundations of others projected. It was a world of active
+human purpose lost in the heart of an immense solitude
+which it was nevertheless powerless to disturb.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it's all too good to have things happen, Bat,"
+Standing went on presently. "Hark at the roar of the
+falls. What is it? Five hundred thousand horsepower
+of water, summer and winter. Listen to the drone of
+
+the grinders." He shook his head. "It's a great song,
+boy, and they never get tired of singing it. There's
+only thirty-six of 'em at present. Thirty-six. We'll
+have a hundred and thirty-six some day. Look down
+there at the booms." He stood pointing, a tall, lean
+figure on the hillside. "Tens of thousands of logs, and
+hundreds of men. We'll multiply those again and again&mdash;one
+day. It's fine. The freighters lying at anchor
+awaiting their cargoes. Some day we'll have our own
+ships&mdash;a big fleet of 'em. See the smoke pennants floating
+from our smoke stacks. They're the triumphant
+pennants of successful industry, eh? We can't have
+too many such flags flying. One day we'll have trolley
+cars running along the shores of the cove to bring the
+workers in to the mill. It'll be like a veritable Atlantic
+City. Oh, it's a great big dream. There's nothing
+amiss. No."</p>
+
+<p>"Only the <em>Lizzie</em> getting in."</p>
+
+<p>Bat was without apparent appreciation. He was
+thinking only of the message they had received, and
+the threat it contained.</p>
+
+<p>Standing glanced round at the sturdy figure beside
+him. A half smile lit his sallow features. Then he
+turned again and sought out the tubby vessel approaching
+the wharf below. But it was only for a moment. Some
+subtle thought impelled him, and he glanced back at the
+house on the hillside he had just left, the house he had
+erected for the woman whose devotion had taught him
+the real meaning of life.</p>
+
+<p>It was a long, low, rambling, gabled building. It was
+an extensive timber-built home with a wide verandah
+and those many vanities and conceits of building that
+would never have been permitted had it been intended
+for bachelordom. He remembered how Nancy and he
+had designed it together. He remembered the delight
+with which they had looked forward to its completion, and
+
+ultimately their boundless joy in the task of its furnishing.
+He remembered how Nancy had insisted that it should
+contain not only their home, but his own private office,
+from which he could control the great work he had set his
+hand to. It had been her ardent desire to be always
+near him, always there to support him under the burden
+of his immense labours. And remembering these things
+a fierce desire leapt within him, and he turned again to
+the man at his side.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, she's getting in, Bat," he said. "But I just
+wanted to get a peek at things. Well, I've seen all I
+want, old friend. Now I'm ready. Fight? Oh, yes,
+I'm ready to fight. Come on." And he laughed as he
+hurried down the woodland trail to the water-side.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>The two men had reached the quay-side, which was
+lined with bales of wood-pulp stacked ready for shipment.
+Farther down its length the cranes were rattling their
+chains, swinging their burdens out over the holds of the
+vessel taking in its moist cargo. The stevedores were
+vociferously busy, working against time. For, in the
+brief open season, time was the very essence of the success
+demanded for the mills. The noise, the babel of it all
+was usually the choicest music to Standing and his
+manager.</p>
+
+<p>But just now they were less heeding. Their eyes were
+turned upon the small steamer plugging its deliberate
+way over the water towards them. It was a small,
+heavily-built tub of a vessel calculated to survive the
+worst Atlantic storms.</p>
+
+<p>Bat's face was without any expression of undue emotion.
+But the hard lines about his clean-shaven mouth
+were sharply set. Standing was asurge with an excitement
+that fired his dark eyes. His wide-brimmed hat was
+thrust back from his forehead, and he stood with his
+hands thrust deeply in the pockets of his moleskin
+
+trousers. His nervous fingers were playing with loose
+coins and keys which they found irresistible.</p>
+
+<p>The <em>Lizzie</em> came steadily on.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll know the whole game in minutes now."</p>
+
+<p>Standing could keep silent no longer. Bat nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Yep."</p>
+
+<p>Orders from the bridge of the packet boat rang out
+over the water. Then Standing went on.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to find Idepski aboard," he said. He was
+scarcely addressing his companion. "It would be good
+to get Master Walter here, fifty-three degrees north."
+A short, hard laugh punctuated his words. Then he
+turned abruptly. "Who's running No. 10 camp?"</p>
+
+<p>Just for an instant Bat withdrew his gaze from the
+approaching vessel. He flashed a keen look of enquiry
+into the eyes of the questioner.</p>
+
+<p>"Ole Porson," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought so. He's a good boy. He'll do."</p>
+
+<p>Standing nodded. The cold significance of his tone
+was not lost on his companion. Maybe Bat understood
+the thing that was passing in the other's mind. At any
+rate he turned again to the broad-beamed tub steaming
+so busily towards them.</p>
+
+<p>"I see old Hardy on the bridge," Standing went on a
+moment later. Then he added: "Fancy navigating the
+Labrador coast for forty years. No, I couldn't do it.
+I wouldn't have the&mdash;guts."</p>
+
+<p>Bat still remained silent. He understood. The other
+was talking because it was impossible for him to refrain.</p>
+
+<p>"They're standing ready to make fast," Standing said
+sharply. He drew a quick breath. Then his manner
+changed and his words came pensively. "Say, it's a queer
+life&mdash;a hell of a life. The sea folk, I mean. It's about
+the worst on earth. Think of it, cooped within those
+timbers that are never easy till they lie at anchor in the
+shelter of a harbour. I'd just hate it. Their life? What
+
+is it? It's not life at all. Hard work, hard food, hard
+times, and hard drinking&mdash;when they're ashore&mdash;most
+of them. I think I can understand. They surely need
+something to drown the memory of the threat they're
+always living under. No, they don't live. They exist.
+Here, let's stand clear. They're coming right in."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>The bustle of landing was in full swing. Even with so
+small a craft as the <em>Lizzie</em> there was commotion. Orders
+flew from lip to lip. Creaking cables strained at unyielding
+bollards. Gangways clattered out from deck, and
+ran down on to the quay with a crash. Hatches were
+flung open and the steam winches rattled incessantly.</p>
+
+<p>Standing and Harker were looking on from a vantage
+point well clear of the work of unloading. The captain
+of the vessel, "Old Man" Hardy, was with them. The
+seaman was beaming with that satisfaction which belongs
+to the master when his vessel is safely in port.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I guess it ain't been too bad a trip," he was
+saying. "Takin' the 'ins' with the 'outs,' I'd say it was
+a fairish passage, which is mostly as it should be, seein'
+
+it's my last voyage in the old barge. Y'see, you folks are
+kind of robbing me of this blessed old kettle," he explained,
+with a grin that lit up the whole of his mahogany
+features. "Y'see we're loaded well-nigh rail under with
+stuff for your mill, which don't leave a dog's chance for
+the other folks along the coast. The Company guesses
+they got to put on a two thousand tonner. The <em>Myra</em>.
+I haven't a kick comin'. She's all a seaboat. Still, I'm
+kind of sorry, don't you know. I've known the <em>Lizzie</em>
+
+since she came off the stocks, which is mostly forty years,
+and we're mighty good friends, which ain't allus the way.
+I'd say, too, I'm getting old for a change. Still&mdash;."</p>
+
+<p>Standing shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"What do they say? 'Hardy' by name, 'Hardy' by
+nature. The toughest and best sailorman on the Labrador
+
+coast! Well, I'm sorry you don't feel good about it.
+But," he added with a smile, "it means a good deal to
+us getting a bigger packet."</p>
+
+<p>Captain Hardy nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Thankee kindly. It's good to know folks reckon a
+fellow something more than just part of a kettle of scrap
+like this old packet. But I'd have been glad to finish
+my job with her. Still, times don't stand around even
+in Labrador." He finished up with something in the
+nature of a sigh.</p>
+
+<p>The work going forward was full of interest. But it
+was not the work that held Standing, or the watchful
+eyes of Bat Harker. Their sole interest was in the personality
+of the crew and the five passengers, mostly
+"drummers," from the great business houses of Quebec
+and Montreal, who were struggling to land their trunks
+of samples and get them off to the offices of the mill so
+as to complete their trade before the <em>Lizzie</em> put to sea
+again. Not one of these escaped their observation.</p>
+
+<p>"You seem to keep much the same crew right along,
+Hardy," Standing said pleasantly. "I suppose they like
+shipping with a good skipper. I seem to recognise most
+of their faces."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes. They're mostly the same boys," Hardy
+agreed, obviously appreciating the compliment. "But
+I guess I lost four boys this trip. They skipped half an
+hour before putting to sea. It happens that way now
+and then, if they're only soused enough when they get
+aboard. They're a crazy lot with rye under their belts.
+I just had to replace 'em with some dockside loafers, or
+lie alongside another day."</p>
+
+<p>Standing nodded. A man was moving down the gangway
+bearing a large, grey, official-looking sack on his
+shoulders. He was a slight, dark man with a curiously
+foreign cast about his features.</p>
+
+<p>"The mail?" he enquired. And a curious sharpness
+
+flavoured his demand. Then he added, with studied indifference.
+"One of your&mdash;dockside loafers?"</p>
+
+<p>Captain Hardy laughed. He continued to laugh as
+he watched the unhandiness of the man staggering down
+the gangway under his burden.</p>
+
+<p>"Yep. The mail," he said. "And I'd hate to set
+that feller to work on a seaman's job. He's about as
+unhandy as a doped Chinaman. I'd say Masters is playing
+safe keeping him from messing up the running gear
+while we're discharging. Say, get a look at it."</p>
+
+<p>A great laugh accompanied the old man's words as the
+foreign-looking creature tripped on the gangway, and
+only saved himself from a bad fall by precipitating his
+burden upon the quay. There was no responsive laughter
+in Standing. And Bat Harker's features remained rigidly
+unsmiling. Standing turned sharply.</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe you can spare that boy to run those mails
+up to my office," he said. "It's a good healthy pull
+up the hill for him, and my folks are full to the neck
+with things. I'd be glad."</p>
+
+<p>"Sure he can." Captain Hardy was only too delighted
+to be able to oblige so important a customer of his company.
+He promptly shouted at the landing officer.</p>
+
+<p>"Ho, you! Masters! Just let that darn Dago tote
+them mails right up to Mr. Standing's office. He ain't
+no sort of use out of hell down here&mdash;anyway."</p>
+
+<p>The mate's reply came back with an appreciative grin.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, sir," he cried, and forthwith hurled the order at
+the mail carrier with a plentiful accompaniment of
+appropriate adjectives.</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks," Standing turned away. His smiling
+luminous eyes were shining. "I'll get right along up,
+Captain. There's liable to be things need seeing to in
+that mail before you pull out. You'd best come along,
+too, Bat," he added pointedly.</p>
+
+<p>Standing hurried away. A sudden fierce passion was
+
+surging through his veins. Nisson was right. He knew
+it&mdash;now. And in a fever of impatience he was yearning
+to come to grips with those who would rob him of the
+hopes in which his whole being was bound up.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_5"></a>
+<h3>Chapter III&mdash;Idepski</h3>
+
+
+<p>The two men reached the office on the hillside minutes
+before the mail carrier. They took the hill direct, passing
+hurriedly through the aisles of scented woods which
+shadowed its face. The other, the stranger, was left
+with no alternative but the roadway, zigzagging at an
+easier incline.</p>
+
+<p>Standing passed into the house. His confidential man
+of many races looked up from his work. The quick,
+black eyes were questioning. He was perhaps startled
+at the swift return of the man whom he regarded above
+all others.</p>
+
+<p>Standing spoke coldly, emphatically.</p>
+
+<p>"There's a man coming along up. He's a sailorman,
+and he's dressed in dirty dungaree, and he's carrying a
+sack of mail. Now see and get this clearly, Loale. It's
+important. It's so important I can't stand for any sort
+of mistake. When he comes you've got to send him
+right into my room with the mail-bag. I want him to
+take it in <em>himself</em>. You get that?"</p>
+
+<p>The half-breed's eyes blinked. It was rather the
+curious attitude of an attentive dog. But that was always
+his way when the master of the Sachigo Mill spoke to
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Pete Loale was quite an unusual creature. He looked
+unkempt and unclean, with his yellow, pock-marked skin,
+and his clothes that would have disgraced a second-hand
+dealer's stores of waste. But for all his lack in these
+
+directions there was that in the man which was more
+than worth while. Out of his black eyes looked a world
+of intelligence. There was also a resource and initiative
+in him that Standing fully appreciated.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure I get that," he said simply. Then he repeated
+in the manner of a child determined to make no mistake.
+"He's to take that mail-bag right into your office&mdash;<em>himself</em>."</p>
+
+<p>"That's it. Don't knock on my door. Don't let
+him think there's a soul inside that room. Just boost
+him right in. You get that?"</p>
+
+<p>The half-breed nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll just say: 'Here you! Just push that darn
+truck right inside that room, an' don't worry me with it,
+I'm busy.' That how?" The man hunched his slim
+shoulders into a shrug.</p>
+
+<p>"See you do it&mdash;just that way," Standing said. Then
+he turned to Bat. "We'll get inside," he went on. "He'll
+be right along."</p>
+
+<p>They passed into the office. The door closed behind
+them and Standing moved over to his seat at the crowded
+desk.</p>
+
+<p>"Wal?"</p>
+
+<p>Bat was still standing. He failed to grasp his friend's
+purpose. His wit was unequal to the rapid process of
+the other's swiftly calculating mind.</p>
+
+<p>Standing littered his writing-pad with papers. He
+picked up a pen and jabbed it in the inkwell. Then he
+flung it aside and adopted a fountain-pen which he drew
+from his waistcoat pocket. His eyes lit with a half-smile
+as he finally raised them to the rugged face before him.</p>
+
+<p>"You sit right over there by that window, Bat," he
+said easily. "If you get a look out of it you'll be amazed
+at the number of things to interest you." He nodded as
+Bat moved away with a grin and took the chair indicated.
+"That's it. Just sit around, and you won't see or even
+
+hear the fellow with the mail fall in through the door.
+And maybe, sitting there, you'll want to smoke your
+foul old pipe. Sort of pipe of peaceful meditation. Yes,
+I'd smoke that pipe, old friend, but you can cut out the
+peaceful meditation. You need to be ready to act quick
+when I pass the word. It's going to be easy. So easy
+I almost feel sorry for&mdash;Idepski."</p>
+
+<p>"It <em>is</em>&mdash;Idepski?" Bat filled and lit his pipe.</p>
+
+<p>"It surely is. No other. And&mdash;I'm glad. Now we'll
+quit talk, old friend. Just smoke, and look out of that
+window, and&mdash;think like hell."</p>
+
+<p>Bat's understanding of his friend was well founded.
+The extreme nervous tension in Standing was obvious.
+It was in the wide, dark eyes. It was in the constant
+shifting of the feet which the table revealed. For the
+time, at least, the cowardice Standing claimed for himself
+was entirely swamped. He was stirred by the headlong
+excitement of battle in a manner that left Bat more than
+satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>Once Bat turned from his contemplation of the piled-up
+country beyond the valley. It was at the sound of
+Standing's fiercely scratching pen. And his quick gaze
+took in the luxury of the setting for the little drama he
+felt was about to be enacted.</p>
+
+<p>It was a wide, pleasant room, built wholly of red pine,
+and polished as only red pine will polish. There was a
+thick oriental carpet on the floor, and all the mahogany
+furniture was upholstered in red morocco. There were
+a few carefully selected pictures upon the walls, hung
+with an eye to the light upon each. But it was not an
+extravagant room. It suggested the homeland of Scotland,
+from which the owner of it all hailed. The Canadian
+atmosphere only found expression in the great steel
+stove which stood in one corner, and the splendid timber
+of which the walls of the room were built.</p>
+
+<p>But Bat's eyes swiftly returned to their allotted task,
+
+and his reeking pipe did its duty with hearty goodwill.
+There was the sound of strident voices in the outer room,
+and the rattle of the door handle turning with a wrench.</p>
+
+<p>The door swung open. The next moment there was
+the sound of a sack pitched upon the soft pile of the
+carpet. And through the open doorway the harsh voice
+of Loale pursued the intruder in sharp protest.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, do you think you're stowing cargo in your
+darn, crazy old barge?" he cried. "If you fancy throwing
+things around you best get out an' do it. Guess
+you ain't used to a gent's office, you darn sailorman&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But the door was closed with a slam and the rest of the
+protest was cut off. Bat swung about in his chair to
+discover a picture not easily to be forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>Standing had left his desk. He was there with his
+back against the closed door, and his lean figure towered
+over the shorter sailorman in dungaree, who stood gazing
+up at him questioningly. The sight appealed to the grim
+humour of the manager. He wanted to laugh. But he
+refrained, though his eyes lit responsively as he watched
+the smile of irony that gleamed in the mill-owner's eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well." Standing's tone lost none of the aggravation
+of his smile. "Say, I'd never have recognised
+you, Idepski, if it hadn't been that I was warned you'd
+shipped on the <em>Lizzie</em>." He laughed outright. "I can't
+help it. You wouldn't blame me laughing if you could
+see yourself. Last time I had the pleasure of encountering
+you was in Detroit. That's years ago. How many?
+Nearly seven. It seems to me I remember a bright-looking
+
+'sleuth,' neat, clean, spruce, with a crease to his
+pant-legs like a razor edge, a fellow more concerned for
+his bath than his religion. Say, where did you raise all
+that junk? From old man Hardy's slop-chest? Hellbeam
+makes you work for your money when you're driven to
+wallowing in a muck-hole like the <em>Lizzie</em>. It isn't worth
+it. You see, you've run into the worst failure you've
+
+made in years. But I only wish you could see the sorry
+sort of sailorman you look."</p>
+
+<p>Standing's right hand was behind him, and Bat heard
+the key turn in the lock of the door. He waited. But the
+trapped agent never opened his lips.</p>
+
+<p>Idepski had seen Standing and the other down at the
+quay-side. He had left them there when he started up
+the hill. Yet&mdash;A bitter fury was driving him. He
+realised the trap that had been laid. He realised something
+of the deadly purpose lying behind it. So he
+remained silent under the scourge that was intended to
+hurt.</p>
+
+<p>For all the filthy dungarees tucked into the clumsy
+legs of high leather sea boots, the dirty-coloured handkerchief
+knotted about his neck, the curious napless cloth
+cap with its peak pulled down over one eye, that curious
+cap which seems to be worn by no one else in the world
+but seafaring men, it was easy enough for Bat to visualise
+the dapper picture, that other picture of Walter Idepski
+that Standing had described. The man possessed a well-knit,
+sinuous figure which his dungarees could not
+disguise. His alert eyes were good-looking. And, cleaned
+of the black, stubbly growth of beard and whisker, an
+amazing transformation in his looks would surely have
+been achieved. But Bat's interest was less with these
+things than with the possible reaction the man might
+contemplate.</p>
+
+<p>For the moment, however, the situation was entirely
+dominated by Standing, who displayed no sign of relaxing
+his hold upon it. He flung out a pointing hand, and
+Bat saw it was grasping the door key.</p>
+
+<p>"You'd best take that chair, Idepski," he ordered.
+"You've opened war on me, but there's no need to keep
+you standing for it. You'll take that seat against my
+writing table. But first, Bat, here, is going to relieve
+you of the useless weapons I see you've got on you. Get
+
+those, Bat! There's a gun and a sheath knife, and they're
+clumsily showing their shape under his dungarees."</p>
+
+<p>It was the word the mill-manager had awaited. He
+was on his feet in an instant. Idepski stirred to action.
+He turned to meet him.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep your darn hands off!" he cried fiercely.
+"By&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>His hand had flown to his hip. But he was given no
+time. Bat was on him like an avalanche, an avalanche
+of furious purpose. The fighting spirit in him yearned,
+and in a moment his victim was caught up in a crushing
+embrace. There was a short, fierce struggle. But
+Idepski was no match for the super lumber-jack.</p>
+
+<p>While Bat held on, the tenacious hands of Standing
+tore the weapons he had discovered from their hiding
+places. Then in a moment Idepski found himself sprawling
+in the chair he had been invited to take.</p>
+
+<p>Standing's appreciation was evident as he watched the
+man draw a gold cigarette case from the breast pocket
+of his overalls as though nothing had occurred. It was
+an act of studied coolness that did not for a moment
+deceive, but it pleased. However, his next effrontery
+pleased the mill-owner still more.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, boys," Idepski observed quietly, as he opened
+the case and extracted a cigarette. "I guess I'm kind o'
+glad you left me this. But I don't figger you're out for
+loot, anyway." Then he glanced up at the man watching
+him so interestedly. "Maybe you'll oblige me with a
+light," he demanded, and cocked up the cigarette he had
+thrust between his lips with an exaggerated impertinence.</p>
+
+<p>The action was quite irresistible and Standing nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," he said smilingly, and picked up the matchbox
+lying on his table.</p>
+
+<p>He struck a match and held it while the other obtained
+the required light. Then he passed round the desk to
+the seat he had originally occupied.</p>
+
+
+<p>Idepski leant back in his chair, and luxuriated in a
+deep inhalation of smoke. Bat watched him from his
+place at the window. Standing placed the revolver and
+sheath knife he had taken possession of in a drawer in the
+desk, and closed it carefully.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what's the play?" Idepski addressed himself
+solely to Standing. "I guess you've said a deal calculated
+to rile, and your pardner's done more," he went on.
+"Still&mdash;anyway we're mostly men and not school-kids.
+What's the play?"</p>
+
+<p>Standing, too, was leaning back in his chair.</p>
+
+<p>"It's easy," he said, after a moment's thoughtful
+regard. Suddenly he drew his chair up to the table,
+and, leaning forward, folded his arms upon the littered
+blotting pad in front of him. "It's seven years since
+Hellbeam&mdash;blazed the war trail," he said deliberately.
+"I know he's persistent. He's angry. And he's the
+sort of man who doesn't cool down easily. But it's taken
+him seven years to locate me here. And during all that
+time I've been looking on, watching his every move."
+He shook his head. "He's badly served, for all his
+wealth. He was badly served from the start. You
+should never have let me beat you in that first race across
+the border. I got away with every cent of the stuff,
+and&mdash;you shouldn't have let me. You certainly were at
+fault. However, it doesn't matter."</p>
+
+<p>Idepski removed his cigarette from his lips and dropped
+the ash of it in the waste basket.</p>
+
+<p>"No. It doesn't matter, because I'll get you&mdash;in the
+end," he retorted coldly.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps."</p>
+
+<p>Standing shrugged. But there was no indifference in
+his eyes. The acid sharpness of Idepski's retort had
+driven straight home. If the agent failed to detect it,
+the watchful eyes of Bat missed nothing. To him the
+danger signal lay in the curious flicker of his friend's
+
+eyelids. The sight impelled him. He jumped in and
+took up the challenge in the blunt fashion he best
+understood.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess you've got nightmare, boy," he said, with a
+sneering laugh. "I ain't much at figgers, but it seems
+to me if it's taken you seven years to locate us here, it's
+going to take you seventy-seven gettin' Standing back
+across that border. Work it out."</p>
+
+<p>Idepski had no intention of being drawn. He replied
+without turning.</p>
+
+<p>"You think that?" he said easily. "Say, don't worry
+a thing; I'm satisfied. Just as sure as the sun'll rise
+to-morrow, Hellbeam'll get Leslie Martin, or Standing
+as he chooses to call himself now, just where he needs
+him. And if I know Hellbeam that'll be in the worst
+penitentiary the United States can produce. Guess you're
+going to wish you hadn't, Mister&mdash;Standing."</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps Idepski knew his man, and understood the
+weakness of which Bat was so painfully aware. Perhaps
+he was just fencing, or even putting up a bluff in view
+of his own position. Whatever his purpose the effect
+of his added threat was instant.</p>
+
+<p>Standing's luminous eyes hardened. The muscles of
+his jaws gripped. He sat up, and his whole attitude
+expressed again that fighting mood in which Bat rejoiced.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right," he said sharply. "That's just talk.
+You've come a hell of a long way with those boys of
+yours down at the <em>Lizzie</em> to worry out some body-snatching.
+That's all right. I don't just see how you've
+figgered to do it. But that's your affair. The point is,
+I'm going to do the body-snatching instead of you. And
+it's quite clear to me how I intend doing it. You're
+going a trip&mdash;right off. And it's a trip from which you
+won't get a chance of getting back to Quebec under this
+time next year. You see, winter's closing down in a
+month, and Labrador and Northern Quebec aren't wholesome
+
+territory for any man to set out to beat the trail in
+winter, especially with folks around anxious to stop him.
+You reckon I'm to pass a while in a States penitentiary.
+Well, meanwhile you're going to try what this country
+can show you in the way of a&mdash;prison ground. And
+you're going to try it for at least a year. You'll be
+treated white. But you'll need to work for your grub
+like other folks, and if you don't feel like working you
+won't eat. We're fifty-three degrees north here, and our
+ways are the tough ways of the tough country we live
+in. There's no sort of mercy in this country. Bat, here,
+is going to see you on your trip, and, if you take my
+advice, you won't rile Bat. He's got it in him, and in
+his hands, to make things darn unpleasant for you.
+You've a goodish nerve, and maybe you've goodish sense.
+You'll need 'em both for the next twelve months. After
+that it's up to you. But if you try kicking between now
+and then, why&mdash;God help you."</p>
+
+<p>Standing beckoned Bat from his seat at the window.
+He held up the door key.</p>
+
+<p>"You best take this," he said. "No. 10. And he
+starts out right away. He needs to be well on the road
+before the <em>Lizzie</em> puts to sea."</p>
+
+<p>Bat took the key. He moved away and unlocked
+the door, and remained beside it grimly regarding the
+man who had listened without comment to the sentence
+passed on him, without the smallest display of emotion.
+Idepski was smoking his second cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>"No. 10. I s'pose that's one of your lumber camps."
+Idepski looked up from his contemplation of the cigarette.
+His dark eyes were levelled at the man across the writing
+table. "A tough place, eh? or you wouldn't be sending
+me there." He laughed in a fashion that left his eyes
+coldly enquiring.</p>
+
+<p>Standing inclined his head. He was without mercy,
+without pity.</p>
+
+
+<p>"It's a tough camp in a tough country," he said deliberately.
+"It's a camp where you'll get just as good a
+time as you choose to earn. The boy who runs it learnt
+his job in the forests of Quebec, and you'll likely understand
+what that means. Well, you're going right off
+now. But there's this I want to tell you before I see
+the last of you&mdash;for a year. I know you, Idepski. I
+know you for all you are, and all you're ever likely to
+be. You're an unscrupulous blackmailer and crook.
+You're a parasite battening yourself on the weakness of
+human nature, taking your toll from whichever side of
+a dispute will pay you best. You're taking Hellbeam's
+money in the dispute between him and me, and you'll
+go on taking it till you pull off the play he's asking, or
+get broken in the work of it. That's all right as far as
+I'm concerned. You've nerve, you've courage, or you
+wouldn't be the crook you are. I guess you'll go on
+because I've no intention of competing with Hellbeam
+for your services. But I want you to understand clearly
+you've jumped into a mighty big fight. This is a country
+where a fight can go on without the prying eyes of the
+laws of civilisation peeking into things. And by that I
+take it you'll understand I reckon to make war to the
+knife. You came here prepared to use force. That's all
+right. We shan't hesitate to use force on our side. And
+we're going to use it to the limit. If peace is only to be
+gained at the cost of your life you're going to pay that
+cost&mdash;if it suits me. That's all I've to say at the moment.
+For the present, for a year, you'll be safely muzzled.
+You see, I don't need to worry with those boys you
+brought with you. You best go along with Bat now.
+He'll fix things ready for your trip."</p>
+
+<p>The dismissal was complete, and Bat was prompt to
+accept his cue. He moved towards the man smoking at
+the table, much in the fashion of a warder advancing to
+take possession of his prisoner after sentence of the court.</p>
+
+
+<p>It was at that moment that the cold mask of indifference
+fell from the agent. Hardy as he was, the contemplation
+of his momentary failure, which was about to
+cost him twelve months of hardship in one of the roughest
+lumber camps in Labrador, robbed him of something of
+that nerve which was his chief asset. He glanced for
+the first time at the burly figure of Bat. He contemplated
+the rugged features of the man whose battling instinct
+was his strongest characteristic. He read the purpose
+in the grim set of the square jaws, and in the unyielding
+light of the grey eyes peering out from under shaggy
+brows. And that which he read reduced him to a feeling
+of impotence. He flung a look of fury and hate at the
+man behind the desk.</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe that's all you've to say," he cried, his jaws
+snapping viciously over his words, his eyes fiercely
+alight. "You think you've won when you've only gained
+a moment's respite. You can't win. You don't know.
+Oh, yes. I guess you can send me along out of the way.
+You can do just all you reckon. And if it suits you, you
+can shoot me up or any other old thing. You forget
+Hellbeam. You tell me I'm a crook and a blackmailer,
+you give me credit for nerve and courage. That's all
+right. You think these things, and I don't have to worry.
+But you've robbed Hellbeam. You've robbed him like
+any common 'hold-up'&mdash;of millions. It's not for you to
+talk of crooks and blackmailers. The laws of the States
+are going to find you the crook, and Hellbeam'll see they
+don't err for leniency. Hellbeam'll get you as sure as
+God. You've got months to think it over, and when
+you've done I reckon you won't fancy shouting. Well,
+I'm ready for this joy spot you call No. 10. I'm not
+going to kick. I've sense enough to know when the
+drop's on me. But you'll see me again. Oh, yes, you'll
+see me again because you're not going to shoot me up.
+For all your talk you haven't the nerve. You'll see me
+
+again, and when you do&mdash;well, don't forget Hellbeam's
+at the other end of this business. Guess I'm ready."</p>
+
+<p>The man stood up. And as he stood his eyes looked
+squarely into those of Bat.</p>
+
+<p>"Get on with it," he cried, and flung the remains of
+his lighted cigarette on the pile of the carpet, and trod
+it viciously underfoot with his heavy sea boot.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Standing was alone. He was alone with the thoughts
+his encounter with Idepski had inspired. Judging by
+the expression of his reflective eyes they were scarcely
+those of a man confident of victory. Had Bat been
+there to witness, the task he was at that moment engaged
+upon would surely have been robbed of half its satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>But Bat had gone. And with him had gone the man
+who was to learn the rigours of a Labrador winter under
+conditions of hardship he had not yet realised. Meanwhile
+Standing was free to think as his emotions guided
+him, with no watchful eyes to observe.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll see me again, and when you do&mdash;well, don't
+forget Hellbeam's at the other end of this business."</p>
+
+<p>The words haunted. The threat of them appealed
+to an imagination that was a-riot.</p>
+
+<p>After a time Standing stirred restlessly. He sat up
+and brushed the litter of paper aside. Then he leant back
+in his chair and his fine eyes were lit with an agony of
+doubt and disquiet. The poisonous seed of the agent's
+retort had fallen upon fruitful soil.</p>
+
+<p>But after awhile the tension seemed to relax, and his
+gaze wandered from the grey daylight beyond the window
+and was suddenly caught and held by the mail bag, still
+lying where the man had flung it. It was like the swift
+passing of a summer storm. The man's whole expression
+underwent a complete transformation. The mail!
+The mail from Quebec&mdash;unopened!</p>
+
+
+<p>He sprang to his feet. For the moment Idepski, Hellbeam,
+everything was forgotten. His thought had
+bridged the miles between Farewell Cove and the ancient
+city of the early French, Nancy! That woman&mdash;that
+devoted wife who was striving with all the power of a
+frail body to serve him. There would be a letter in that
+mail from Nisson, telling him&mdash;Yes. There might
+even be a letter from Nancy herself.</p>
+
+<p>The sack was in his hands. He had broken the seals.
+He shook out the contents upon the floor. A packet of
+less than half a hundred letters, and the rest was an
+assortment of parcels of all shapes and sizes. It was the
+letter packet that interested him, and he untied the string
+that held it.</p>
+
+<p>A swift search produced the expected. Standing looked
+for the handwriting of Charles Nisson, the shrewd, obscure
+lawyer in the country town of Abercrombie. He had
+never yet failed him. He would not be likely to. A
+bulky letter remained in his hand. The others lay
+scattered broadcast upon the desk.</p>
+
+<p>For some moments he held the letter unopened. The
+lean fingers felt the bulk of the envelope, while feverish
+eyes surveyed, and read over and over the address in the
+familiar small, cramped handwriting. The impulse of
+the moment was to tear open the letter forthwith, to
+snatch at the tidings he felt it to contain. But something
+deterred. Something left him doubting, hesitating. It
+was what Bat had called his "yellow streak." Suppose&mdash;suppose&mdash;But
+with all his might he thrust his fears
+aside. He tore off the outer cover and unfolded the closely
+written pages.</p>
+
+<p>Long, silent moments passed, broken only by the
+shuffling of the sheets of the letter as he turned them.
+Not once did he look up from his reading. Right through
+to the end, the dreadful, bitter end, he read the hideous
+news his loyal friend had to impart. Twice, during the
+
+reading, the sharp intake of breath, that almost whistled
+in the silence of the room, told of an emotion he had no
+power to repress, and at the finish of it all the mechanically
+re-folded page's fell from shaking, nerveless fingers upon
+the littered desk.</p>
+
+<p>His eyes remained lowered gazing at the fallen letter.
+His hands remained poised where the letter had fallen
+from them. His face had lost its healthful hue. It was
+grey, and drawn, and the lips that parted as he muttered
+had completely blanched.</p>
+
+<p>"Dead!" he whispered without consciousness of
+articulation. "Dead! Nancy! My boy! Both! Oh,
+God!"</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_6"></a>
+<h3>Chapter IV&mdash;The "Yellow Streak"</h3>
+
+
+<p>The grey, evening light was significant of the passing
+season. A chilly breeze whipped about the faces of the
+men at the fringe of the woods. They were resting after
+a long tramp of inspection through the virgin forests.
+It was on a ledge, high up on the hillside of the northern
+shore of the cove, where the ground dropped away in
+front of them several hundreds of feet to the waters
+below. Behind them was a backing of standing timber
+which sheltered them from the full force of the biting
+wind.</p>
+
+<p>It was nearly a week since Bat Harker had returned
+from his mission to No. 10 Camp. He had returned
+full of satisfaction at the completion of his task, and
+comforted by the knowledge that the horizon of the
+mill had been cleared of threatening clouds for at least
+the period of a year. Then he encountered the ricochet
+of the blow which Fate had dealt his friend and
+employer.</p>
+
+
+<p>It had been within half an hour of his return, while
+yet the stains and dust of his journey remained upon
+him, while yet he was yearning for that rest for his
+body to which it was entitled.</p>
+
+<p>Bat had concluded the report of his journey, and
+the two men were closeted together in the office on
+the hillside. The lumberman had had no suspicion of
+the thing that had happened in his absence, and
+Standing had given no indication. Standing seemed
+unchanged. There had been the customary smile of welcome
+in his eyes. There had been the cordial handshake
+of friendship. Maybe Standing had talked less,
+and the searching questions usual in him had not been
+forthcoming. Maybe there was a curiously tired,
+strained look in his eyes. But that was all.</p>
+
+<p>At the conclusion of his report Bat had bent eagerly
+forward over the desk which stood between them. His
+hard eyes were smiling. His whole manner was that
+of a man anticipating something pleasant.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, Les," he cried, "guess you've maybe some
+news for me, too. It's more than a month since&mdash;and
+you were expecting&mdash;Things all right?"</p>
+
+<p>Standing reached towards the drawer beside him, and
+as he did so there was a sound. It was a curious, inarticulate
+sound that Bat interpreted into a laugh. The
+other opened the drawer and drew out the folded pages
+of a letter. These he passed across the table, and his
+eyes were without a shadow of the laugh which Bat
+thought he had heard.</p>
+
+<p>"Best read it," he said. "Take your time. I'll just
+finish these figures I'm working on."</p>
+
+<p>It was the curious, cold tone that stirred Bat to his
+first misgiving.</p>
+
+<p>He took the letter. There were pages of it. He set
+them in order and commenced to read. And meanwhile
+Standing remained apparently engrossed in his figures.</p>
+
+
+<p>He read the letter through. He read it slowly,
+carefully. Then, like the other had done, the man to
+whom it was addressed, he read it a second time. And
+as he read every vestige of his previous satisfaction
+passed from him. A cold constriction seemed to fasten
+upon his strong heart. And a terrible realisation of
+the tragedy of it all took possession of him. At the
+end of his second reading he handed the letter back to
+its owner without comment of any sort, without a word,
+but with a hand that, for once in his life, was
+unsteady.</p>
+
+<p>"That was in the mail Idepski brought," Standing
+said, as he returned the letter to its place, and shut and
+locked the drawer.</p>
+
+<p>"You remember?" he went on, pointing. "He flung
+it down there. Just by the door. Yes, it was just
+there, because I stood against the door, and was only
+just clear of it."</p>
+
+<p>He paused and his hand remained pointing at the
+spot where the mail bag had lain. It was as if the
+spot held him fascinated. Then his arm lowered
+slowly, and his hand came to rest on the edge of the
+table, gripping it with unnecessary force.</p>
+
+<p>"Seems queer," he went on, after a while. Then he
+shook his head. "Think of it. Nancy&mdash;my Nancy.
+Dead! She died giving birth to my boy. And he&mdash;he
+was stillborn. Why? I&mdash;I can't seem to realize it.
+I&mdash;don't&mdash;" He paused, and a strained, hunted look
+grew in his eyes. "No. It's easy. It's just Fate.
+That's it. There's no escape."</p>
+
+<p>He drew a deep breath and one lean hand smoothed
+back his shining black hair. Then his eyes came back
+to the face of the man opposite, and the agony in them
+was beyond words. After a moment their terrible expression
+became lost as he bent over his work. "I'm
+glad you're back, Bat," he said, without looking up.</p>
+
+
+<p>"There's a hell of a lot of orders to get out. We're
+running close up to winter."</p>
+
+<p>The lumberman understood. At a single blow this
+man's every hope had been smashed and ground under
+the heel of an iron fate. The wife, the woman he had
+worshipped, had given her life to serve him, and with her
+had gone the man-child, about whom had been woven
+the entire network of a father's hopes and desires.</p>
+
+<p>A week had passed since Bat had witnessed the voiceless
+agony of his friend. A week of endless labour
+and unspoken fears. He knew Standing as it is given
+to few to know the heart of another. His sympathy
+was real. It was of that quality which made him
+desire above all things to render the heartbroken man
+real physical and moral help. But no opening had
+been given him, and he feared to probe the wound
+that had been inflicted. During those first seven
+days Standing seemed to be obsessed with a desire to
+work, to work all day and every night, as though he
+dared not pause lest his disaster should overwhelm
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Now it was Sunday. Night and day the work had
+gone on. No less than ten freighters had been loaded
+and dispatched since Bat's return, and only that morning
+two vessels had cast off, laden to the water-line, and
+passed down on the tide for the mouth of the cove. At
+the finish of the midday meal Standing had announced
+his intentions for the afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>"We need to get a look into the lumber on the north
+side, Bat," he said. "You'd best come along with me.
+How do you think?"</p>
+
+<p>And Bat had agreed on the instant.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," he said. "There's a heap to be done that
+way if we're to start layin' the penstocks down on that
+side next year."</p>
+
+<p>So they had spent the hours before dusk in a
+
+prolonged tramp through the forests of the Northern
+shore. And never for one moment was their talk and
+apparent interest allowed to drift from the wealth of
+long-fibred timber they were inspecting.</p>
+
+<p>But somehow to Bat the whole thing was unreal. It
+meant nothing. It could mean nothing. He felt like
+a man walking towards a precipice he could not avoid.
+He felt disaster, added disaster, was in the air and
+was closing in upon them. He knew in his heart that
+this long, weary inspection, all the stuff they talked, all
+the future plans they were making for the mill was
+the merest excuse. And he wondered when Standing
+would abandon it and reveal his actual purpose. The
+man, he knew, was consumed by a voiceless grief.
+His soul was tortured beyond endurance. And there
+was that "yellow streak," which Bat so feared. When,
+when would it reveal itself? How?</p>
+
+<p>Now, at last, as they rested on the ledge overlooking
+the mill and the waters of the cove, he felt the moment
+of its revelation had arrived. He was propped against
+the stump of a storm-thrown tamarack. Standing was
+stretched prone upon the fallen trunk itself. Neither
+had spoken for some minutes. But the trend of
+thought was apparent in each. Bat's deep-set, troubled
+eyes were regarding the life and movement going on
+down at the mill, whose future was the greatest concern
+of his life. Standing, too, was gazing out over the
+waters. But his darkly brooding eyes were on the splendid
+house he had set up on the opposite hillside. It was
+the home about which his every earthly hope had centred.
+And even now, in his despair, it remained a magnet for
+his hopeless gaze.</p>
+
+<p>Winter was already in the bite of the air and in the
+absence of the legions of flies and mosquitoes as well
+as in the chilly grey of the lapping waters below them.
+It was doubtless, too, searching the heart of these men
+
+whose faces gave no indication of the sunlight of
+summer shining within.</p>
+
+<p>"Bat!"</p>
+
+<p>The lumberman turned sharply. He spat out a stream
+of tobacco juice and waited.</p>
+
+<p>"Bat, old friend, it's no use." Standing had swung
+himself into a sitting posture. He was leaning forward
+on the tree-trunk with his forearms folded across
+his knees. "We've done a lot of talk, and we've searched
+these forests good. And it's all no use. None at all.
+There's going to be no penstocks set up this side of the
+water next year&mdash;as far as I'm concerned. I've done.
+Finished. Plumb finished. I'm quitting. Quitting it all."</p>
+
+<p>The lumberman ejected a masticated chew and took
+a fresh one.</p>
+
+<p>"You see, old friend, I'll go crazy if I stop around,"
+Standing went on. "I've been hit a pretty desperate
+punch, and I haven't the guts to stand up to it. When
+it came I set my teeth. I wanted to keep sane. I reminded
+myself of all I owed to the folks working for
+us. I thought of you. And I tried to bolster myself
+with the schemes we had for beating the Skandinavians
+out of this country's pulp-wood trade. Yes, I tried.
+God, how I tried! But my guts are weak, and I know
+what lies ahead. For nearly six weeks I've been working
+things out, and for a week I've been wondering
+how I should tell you. I brought you here to tell you.</p>
+
+<p>"I want you to understand it good," he went on,
+after the briefest pause. "I can't stand to live on in
+the house that Nancy and I built up. Every room is
+haunted by her. By her happy laugh, and by memories
+of the hours we sat and talked of the boy-child we'd
+both set our hearts on. I just can't do it without going
+stark, staring, raving mad. I can't."</p>
+
+<p>"That's how I figgered. I've watched it in you, Les.
+Tell me the rest."</p>
+
+
+<p>Bat chewed steadily. It was a safety-valve for his
+feelings.</p>
+
+<p>"The rest?" Standing turned to gaze out at the
+house across the water. "If it weren't for you, Bat,
+I'd close right down. I'd leave everything standing
+and&mdash;get out," he went on slowly. "The whole thing's
+a nightmare. Look at it. Look around. The forests
+of soft wood. The township we've set up. The
+harnessed water power. That&mdash;that house of mine. It's
+all nightmare, and I don't want it. I'm afraid. I'm
+scared to death of it."</p>
+
+<p>Bat moved away from the stump he had been propped
+against. He passed across to the edge of the ledge and
+stood gazing down on the scenes below.</p>
+
+<p>"You needn't worry for me," he said. "It don't
+matter a cuss where or how I hustle my dry hash. I
+was born that way. Fix things the way you feel. Cut
+me right out."</p>
+
+<p>The man's generosity was a simple expression of
+his rugged nature. His love of that great work below
+him, in the creation of which he had taken so great a
+part, was nothing to him at that moment. He was
+concerned only for the man, who had held out a succouring
+hand, and led him, in his darkest moments, to safety
+and prosperity.</p>
+
+<p>Standing shook his head at the broad back squared
+against the grey, wintry sky.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't mean it that way, old friend," he said.</p>
+
+<p>Bat swung around. His grey eyes were wide. His
+face seemed to have softened out of its usual harsh cast.</p>
+
+<p>"But I do, Les," he cried. "You don't need to figger
+a thing about me. You're hurt, boy. You're hurt
+mighty sore. Cut me right out of your figgers, and
+do the things that's goin' to heal that sore. If there's
+a thing I can do to help you, why, I guess I'd be glad
+to know it."</p>
+
+
+<p>For a few moments Standing remained silent.
+Perhaps he was pondering upon what he had to say.
+Perhaps he was simply gaining time to suppress the
+emotions which the selflessness of the other had inspired.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," he cried at last, "I best tell you the whole
+story that's in my mind. I told you I've been figuring
+it out. Well, it's figured to the last decimal. You
+think you know me. Maybe you do. Maybe you know
+only part of the things I know about myself. If you
+knew them all I'd hate to think of the contempt you'd
+have to hand me. You see, Bat, I'm a coward, a terrible
+moral coward. Oh, I'm not scared of any man living
+when it comes to a fight. But my mind's full of ghosts
+and nightmares ready to jump at me with every doubt,
+every new effort where I can't figure the end. Years
+ago, when I was a youngster, I yearned for fortune.
+And I realised that I had it in me to get it quick by
+means of that crazy talent for figures you reckon is so
+wonderful. I got the chance and jumped, for it. But
+every step I took left me scared to the verge of craziness.
+When I hit up against Hellbeam I got a desire to beat
+him that was irresistible, and I jumped into the fight
+with my heart in my mouth. It was easy&mdash;so easy.
+Hellbeam was a babe in my hands. I could play with
+him as a spider plays with its victim, and when, like a
+spider, I'd bound him with my figures, hand and foot,
+I was free to suck his blood till I was satiated. I did
+all that, and then my nightmare descended upon me
+again. You know how I fled with Hellbeam's hounds
+on my heels. I was terrified at the enormity of the
+thing I'd done. I could have stood my ground and
+beaten him&mdash;and them. But moral cowardice overwhelmed
+me and drove me to these outlands. God,
+what I suffered! And after all I haven't the certainty
+that I deserved it."</p>
+
+
+<p>Bat came back to his stump and stood against it while
+Standing passed a weary hand across his forehead.</p>
+
+<p>"The happenings since then you know as well as I
+do. I don't need to talk of them. I mean, how I met
+and married Nancy, when she was widow of that no-account
+McDonald feller, the editor of <em>The Abercrombie
+Herald!</em>"</p>
+
+<p>Bat nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sure, I know, Les. When you married
+Nancy an' made her thirteen-year-old daughter&mdash;your
+daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I'd almost forgotten. Yes, there's her girl,
+Nancy. She's still at school. Well, anyway, you know,
+these things, all of 'em. But what you don't know is
+that you&mdash;you Bat, old friend, are solely responsible
+for all the work that's being done here. You, old
+friend, are responsible that I've enjoyed seven years of
+something approaching peace of mind. You, you with
+your bulldog fighting spirit, you with your hell-may-care
+manner of shouldering responsibility, and facing
+every threat, have been the staunch pillar on which I
+have always leant. Without you I'd have gone under
+years ago, a victim of my own mental ghosts. No, no,
+Bat," he went on quickly, as the lumberman shook his
+head in sharp denial, "it's useless. I know. Leaning
+on you I've built up around me the reality of that
+original dream, with the other things I've now lost, and
+with every ounce in me I've worked for its fulfilment.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what's the logic of it all?" he continued, after
+a moment's pause. "Yes, it is the logic of it. You
+may argue that for seven years I've been doing a big
+work and there's no reason, in spite of what's happened,
+that I should now abandon it all. But there is. And
+in your strong old heart you'll know the thing I say is
+true&mdash;if cowardly. During seven years, or part of
+them, I've known a happiness that's compensated for
+
+every terror I've endured. Nancy's been my guardian
+angel, and the boy, that was to be born, was the beacon
+light of my life. My poor little wife has gone, and that
+beacon light, the son we yearned for, has been snuffed
+right out. And in the shadows left I see only the groping
+hand of Hellbeam reaching out towards me. In
+the end that hand will get me, and crush the remains
+of my miserable life out. I know. Just as sure as God,
+Hellbeam's going to get me."</p>
+
+<p>The sweat of terror stood on the man's high forehead,
+and he wiped it away.</p>
+
+<p>Bat flung a clenched fist down upon the tree stump.</p>
+
+<p>"You're wrong, Les. You're plumb wrong. If it
+means murder I swear before God Hellbeam'll never
+lay hands on you. Hellbeam? Gee! Let him set his
+nose north of 'fifty' and I'll promise him a welcome so
+hot that'll leave hell like a glacier. As for his darn
+agents? Why, say, I want to feel sorry for 'em 'fore
+they start. Idepski's hating himself right&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I know," cried Standing impatiently. "I know it
+all. Everything you've said you mean, but&mdash;it won't
+save me. But we can leave all that. There's the other
+things. Why should I go on living here, working,
+slaving, haunted by the terror of Hellbeam? With my
+boy, my wife, to fight for it was worth all the agony.
+But without them&mdash;why? Why in the name of sanity
+should I go on? To beat the Skandinavians out of
+Canada's trade, and claim it all for a country that doesn't
+care a curse? To build up a great name that in the
+end must be dragged in the mire of public estimation?
+Not on your life, Bat. No, no. I'm going to cut
+adrift. I'm going to quit. I'm going to lose myself
+in these forests, and live the remaining years of my
+life free to run to earth at the first shot of the hunter's
+gun. It's all that's left me&mdash;as I see it."</p>
+
+<p>"And all this?" Bat said, reaching out one great
+
+hand in the direction of the Cove. "An' that school
+gal 'way down at Abercrombie, learning her knitting,
+an' letters, an' crying her dandy eyes out for the mother
+who had to leave her there when she passed over to you?
+Say, Les, you best go on. Jest go right on an' I'll say
+my piece after."</p>
+
+<p>Standing sat up. A deep earnestness was in the dark
+eyes that looked fearlessly into Bat's. He took the
+other at his word and went on. He had nothing to
+conceal.</p>
+
+<p>"The mill? Why, I want to pass it over to your
+care, Bat," he said, permitting one swift regretful glance
+in the direction of the grey waters below them. Then
+he spoke almost feverishly. "Here's the proposition.
+I'm going to hand you full powers&mdash;through Charles
+Nisson. You'll run this thing on the lines laid down.
+If you fancy carrying on the original proposition of
+extension, well and good. If not, just carry on and
+leave the rest for&mdash;later. You'll be manager for me
+through Nisson. I shan't remove one cent of capital.
+I don't want Hellbeam's money beyond the barest grub
+stake. It'll remain under Nisson's guardianship for your
+use in running this mill. You'll simply satisfy Nisson.
+For the rest I shan't interfere. You're drawing a big
+salary now. Well, seeing I go out of the work, that
+salary will be doubled. That's for the immediate. Then
+there's the future. I've a notion. Maybe it's a crazy
+notion. But it's mine and I mean to test it. Here.
+We reckon to build up this enterprise for one great,
+big purpose. It was my dream to break the Skandinavian
+ring governing the groundwood trade of this
+country. It was work that appealed to my imagination.
+I wanted to build this great thing and pass it on to my
+boy. It seemed to me fine. Worth while. It was a
+man's work, and it seemed to me a life well spent. I
+had the guts then&mdash;with your support, and the support
+
+the thought of my son gave me. I haven't the guts
+now. The notion fired you, too. It fired you, and
+it'll grieve you desperately to see it abandoned. It shan't
+be abandoned. Once in the woods of this queer country
+I found a man&mdash;such a man as is rarely found. He
+was a man into whose hands I could put my life. And
+I guess there's no greater trust one man can have in
+another. He was a man of immense capacity. A man
+of intellect for all he had no schooling but the schooling
+of Quebec's rough woods. That man was you, Bat.
+I'd like to say to you: 'Here's the property. You know
+the scheme. Go on. Carry it through.' But I can't.
+I can't because one man can't do it. Well, the woods
+gave me one man, and they're going to give me another
+to take the place of the weak-gutted creature who intends
+to 'rat.' I'm going to find you a partner, a man with
+brain and force like yourself. A man of iron guts.
+And when I've found him I'm going to send him on
+to you. And if you approve him he shall be full partner
+with you in this concern the day that sees the Canadian
+Groundwood Trust completed, and the breaking of the
+Skandinavian ring. Do you follow it all? You and
+this man will be equal partners in the mill, and every
+available cent of its capital&mdash;the capital I made Hellbeam
+provide. It'll be yours and his, solely and alone.
+I&mdash;I shall pass right out of it. Hellbeam has no score
+against you. He has no penitentiary preparing for you.
+You are not concerned with him. Whatever he may
+have in store for me he can do nothing to you, and the
+money I beat him out of will have passed beyond his
+reach."</p>
+
+<p>"And this man you figger to locate? You reckon
+to take a chance on your judgment?"</p>
+
+<p>Bat's challenge came on the instant.</p>
+
+<p>"On mine, and&mdash;yours." Standing's eyes were full
+of a keen confidence. And Bat realised something of
+
+the sanity lying behind a seemingly mad proposition.
+"He'll own nothing until he and you have completed
+the work as we see it. To own his share in the thing
+he must prove his capacity. He'll be held by the tightest
+and strongest contract Charles Nisson can draw up."</p>
+
+<p>Bat spat out his chew. He replaced it with a pipe,
+and prepared to flake off its filling from a plug of
+tobacco. Standing watched him with the anxious eyes
+of a prisoner awaiting sentence. With the cutting of
+the first flakes of tobacco, Bat looked up.</p>
+
+<p>"And this little gal-child, with the same name as the
+mother who just meant the whole of everything life
+could hand you? This kiddie with her mother's blood
+running in innocent veins? She's your Nancy's daughter
+and I guess your marriage made her yours."</p>
+
+<p>"She's another man's child."</p>
+
+<p>Standing's retort was instant. And the tone of it
+cut like a knife.</p>
+
+<p>Bat regarded him keenly. His knife had ceased from
+its work on the plug.</p>
+
+<p>"That's so," he said after a while. Then his gaze
+drifted in the direction of the house across the water,
+and the expression in the grey depths of his eyes became
+lost to the man who could not forget that the remaining
+child of his wife was the offspring of another man.
+"It seems queer," he went on reflectively. "That
+woman, your Nancy, was about the best loved wife, a
+fellow could think of. She was all sorts of a woman
+to you. Guess she was mostly the sun, moon, an' stars
+of your life. Yet her kiddie, a pore, lonesome kiddie,
+was toted right off to school so she couldn't butt in on
+you. You've never seen her, have you? And she was
+blood of the woman that set you nigh crazy. Only her
+father was another feller. No, Les." He shook his
+head, and went on filling his pipe. "No, Les, this mill
+and all about it can go hang if that pore, lone kiddie
+
+is wiped out of your reckoning. Maybe I'm queer about
+things. Maybe I'm no account anyway when it comes
+to the things of life mostly belonging to Sunday School.
+But I'd as lief go back to the woods I came from, as
+handle a proposition for you that don't figger that little
+gal in it. You best take that as all I've to say. There's
+a heap more I could say. But it don't matter. You're
+feelin' bad. Things have hit you bad. And you reckon
+they're going to hit you worse. Maybe you're right.
+Maybe you're wrong. Anyway these things are for
+you, though I'd be mighty thankful to help you. You
+want to go out of it all. You want to follow up some
+queer notion you got. You reckon it's going to give
+you peace. I hope so. I do sure. The thing you've
+said goes with me without shouting one way or the
+other. It grieves me bad. But that's no account anyway.
+But there's that gal standing between us, and
+she's going to stand right there till you've finished the
+things you're maybe going to say."</p>
+
+<p>For a moment the men looked into each other's eyes.
+It was a tense moment of sudden crisis between them.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?"</p>
+
+<p>Bat's unyielding interrogation came sharply. Standing
+nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"I hadn't thought, Bat," he said. Then he drew a
+deep breath. "I surely hadn't, but I guess you're right.
+She's my stepdaughter. And I've a right to do the
+thing you say. Yes. It's queer when I think of it,"
+he went on musingly. "When I married her mother
+the girl didn't seem to come into our reckoning. She
+was at school, and I never even saw her. Then her
+mother wanted her left there, anyway till her schooling
+was through. Everything was paid. I saw to that. But&mdash;yes,
+I guess you're right. It's up to me, and I'll fix it."</p>
+
+<p>"The mill?"</p>
+
+<p>"She shall have equal share when the time comes."</p>
+
+
+<p>"When the whole work's put through?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. And meanwhile she'll be amply provided for."
+Standing spread out his hands deprecatingly. "You see,
+we did things in a hurry, Bat. There was always Hellbeam.
+And my Nancy understood that. I wonder&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Bat smoked on thoughtfully, and presently the other
+roused himself from the pre-occupation into which he
+had fallen.</p>
+
+<p>"Does that satisfy?" he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>Bat nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll do the darnedest I know, Les," he said in his
+sturdy fashion. Fix that pore gal right. Hand her
+the share she's a right to&mdash;when the time comes along.
+Do that an' I'll not rest till the Skandinavians are left
+hollerin'. That kid's your daughter, for all she ain't
+flesh and blood of yours, an' you ain't ever see her.
+And anyway she's flesh of your Nancy, which seems
+to me hands her even a bigger claim."</p>
+
+<p>He moved away from his leaning post and his back was
+turned to hide that which looked out of his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm grieved," he went on, in his simple fashion,
+"I'm so grieved about things I can't tell you, Les. I
+always guessed to drive this thing through with you. I
+always reckoned to make good to you for that thing you
+did by me. Well, there's no use in talkin'. You reckon
+this notion of yours'll make you feel better, it's goin'
+to hand you&mdash;peace. That goes with me. Oh, yes, all
+the time, seein' you feel that way. But&mdash;say, we best
+get right home&mdash;or I'll cry like a darn-fool kid."</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_7"></a>
+<h3>Chapter V&mdash;Nancy Mcdonald</h3>
+
+
+<p>Charles Nisson was standing at the window. His eyes
+were deeply reflective as he watched the gently falling
+
+snow outside. He was a sturdy creature in his well-cut,
+well-cared-for black suit. For all he was past middle
+life there was little about him to emphasise the fact
+unless it were his trim, well-brushed snow-white hair,
+and the light covering of whisker and beard of a similar
+hue. He looked to be full of strength of purpose and
+physical energy.</p>
+
+<p>His back was turned on the pleasant dining-room of his
+home in Abercrombie, a remote town in Ontario, where he
+and his wife had only just finished breakfast. Sarah
+Nisson was sitting beside the anthracite stove which
+radiated its pleasant warmth against the bitter chill of
+winter reigning outside. She was still consuming the
+pages of her bulky mail.</p>
+
+<p>A clock chimed the hour, and the wife looked up from
+her letter. She turned a face that was still pretty for all
+her fifty odd years, in the direction of the man at the
+window.</p>
+
+<p>"Ten o'clock, Charles," she reminded him. Then her
+enquiring look melted into a gentle smile. "The office
+has less attraction with the snow falling."</p>
+
+<p>"It has less attraction to-day, anyway," the lawyer
+responded without turning. A short laugh punctuated
+his prompt reply.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean the Nancy McDonald business?"</p>
+
+<p>Sarah Nisson laid her mail aside.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes." The lawyer sighed and turned from his
+contemplation of the snow. He moved across to the
+stove. "I'm a bit of a coward, Sally," he went on,
+holding out his hands to the warmth. "The lives of
+other people are nearly as interesting as they are exasperating.
+They seem just as foolishly ordered as we
+believe our own to be well and truly ordered. I don't
+know who it was said 'all men are fools,' or liars, or
+something, but I guess he was right. Yes, we're all
+fools. I really don't know how we manage to get through
+
+a day, let alone a lifetime, without absolute disaster.
+We spend most of our time abusing Providence for the
+result of our own shortcomings, when really we ought to
+be mighty polite and thankful to the blind good fortune
+that lets us dodge the results of our follies."</p>
+
+<p>"All of which I suppose has to do with the way Leslie
+Martin, or Leslie Standing, as he calls himself now, is
+acting."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, most of it."</p>
+
+<p>The man's eyes had become seriously reflective again.</p>
+
+<p>Sarah Nisson nodded her pretty head. She leant her
+ample proportions towards the stove and emulated her
+husband's attitude, warming her plump hands. Her brown
+eyes were twinkling, and her broad, unlined brow was
+calmly serene. Her iron-grey hair was as carefully
+dressed as though she were still in the twenties, moreover
+it was utterly untouched by any of the shams so beloved
+of the modern woman of advancing years.</p>
+
+<p>"The death of his poor wife almost seems to have
+unhinged him," she said, with a troubled pucker of her
+brows. "But&mdash;but I don't wonder, I really don't. She
+was the sweetest girl. Poor soul. And that bonny wee
+boy. But there, I can't bear to think of it all. You
+mustn't blame him too much, Charles. I guess you don't
+in your heart. It's just as his attorney you feel mad
+about things. It's best to remember you were his friend
+first, and only his adviser, and man of business, after.
+The whole thing makes me feel I want to cry. And that
+poor girl coming to see you to-day. The other Nancy, I
+mean. I don't think I'd feel so bad about things if it
+wasn't for her. You know, I like Leslie. And I was as
+fond of his wife as I just could be, for all she made a fool
+of herself when she married that hateful James McDonald,
+who was no better than a revolutionary. Thank goodness
+he died and got out before he could do any harm.
+But I do think Leslie and poor Nancy were selfish about
+
+her child. I don't believe it was so much him as Nancy.
+From the moment Leslie came on the scene it was she
+who kept the poor child at college. She never even let
+him see her. And she's such a bonny girl, too. Do you
+know, I believe Nancy's death, and even the death of the
+baby boy, wouldn't have meant half so much to Leslie
+if he'd had Nancy's own girl with him. She'd have got
+herself right into his heart with her bonny ways, and her
+hazel eyes that look like great, big smiling flowers. Then
+her hair. She's a lovely, lovely child. I wish she was
+mine. I'd like to have her right here always. Couldn't
+you fix it that way?"</p>
+
+<p>The man shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd like to&mdash;but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But what?"</p>
+
+<p>"You see there's a whole lot to think about," the
+lawyer went on seriously. "Why, I don't even know
+how to get through my interview with her to-day without
+lying to her like a politician. Now just get a look at the
+position. Here's a girl, a beautiful, high-spirited girl of
+sixteen, straight out from college, at the beginning of
+life, with her, head full of 'whys,' and 'wherefores.'
+
+Sixteen's well-nigh grown up these days, mind you. Her
+mother's dead, and curiously the fact didn't seem to
+break her up as you'd have expected it to. Why?" The
+man shrugged. "It's not because she lacks feeling. Oh,
+no. Maybe it's because of the strength of those feelings.
+Remember her mother married Leslie when the child was
+thirteen. A good understanding age. She was never
+allowed to see her father. No. She was packed off to
+school and kept there&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I know," Sarah broke in, with impatient warmth.
+"And just at the time a girl most needs she never even
+saw her mother for over three years. God doesn't give us
+women our babies to treat them as if they weren't our
+own flesh and blood. Young Nancy was left to those
+
+maiden dames at college, who don't know more about
+a child than is laid down by highbrow officials in the
+text books they need to study to qualify for their posts.
+They haven't a notion beyond stuffing her poor wee
+head with the sort of view of life set down in fool
+history books. They say she's clever and bright. Well,
+that's all they care about. When they've done with her
+they'll have knocked all the girl out of her, and turned
+her adrift on the world behind a pair of disfiguring
+spectacles, with her beautiful hair all scratched back off
+her pretty face, and maybe 'bobbed,' and they'll fill
+her grips with pamphlets and literature enough to stock
+a patent med'cine factory, instead of the lawn, and lace,
+and silk a girl should think about, and leave her with as
+much chance of getting happily married as a queen
+mummy of the Egyptians. It's a shame, just a real
+shame. Why, if that poor, lonesome child came right
+along to me, I'd&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Teach her all the bright tricks of hunting down a
+husband and&mdash;hooking him." The lawyer shook his
+head and smiled. "You know, Sally, you're almost an
+outrage on the subject of marriage. Sometimes I wonder
+the sort of tricks I was up against when I&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>A plump warning finger and smiling threat interrupted
+the laughing charge.</p>
+
+<p>"You were due at the office long ago, Charles," his
+wife admonished. "If you aren't careful I'll have to
+pack you off right away."</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right, Sally," the man demurred. "I
+won't go further with that. I'll get back to the things I
+was saying before you interrupted." His pale blue eyes
+became serious again. "Do you think Nancy didn't
+understand why she was packed off to school&mdash;and kept
+there? Of course she did. She knew she wasn't
+wanted. She knew she was in the way. She must not
+be permitted to intrude on this stepfather, or her mother's
+
+new life. It was all a bit heartless, and if I know anything
+of the child, she understands it that way. I felt
+that when she came to see her mother, and went to her
+funeral. Now then, Nancy's coming to see me to-day.
+Remember she's sixteen. She's got to learn from me the
+settlement Leslie's made on her. She's got to learn
+further that she isn't likely to ever see her stepfather.
+She knows I'm his business man. She knows I'm his
+friend. Well, when she's financially independent, do you
+think she'll feel like rushing into our arms, here, for a
+home, feeling the way I believe she does about her
+parent? It's going to be difficult, and&mdash;damned unpleasant.
+And for all I'm ready to help Leslie anyway
+I know, I'd rather see anybody on his behalf than that
+kiddie, with her wide, honest, angry eyes and red hair.
+I'm not going to press our home on her, Sally, because,
+sooner or later, if she accepted it, which I don't believe
+she would, she'd have to learn things of Leslie, and&mdash;well,
+the affairs you know about. That must not be. She's
+not going to learn these things from us. I'm going to do
+the best I know for the child, and when it comes to the
+matter of a home she must choose for herself. There's
+always her mother's folk, or even James McDonald's
+folk&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"God forbid! No. Oh, no." The woman's instant
+denial was horrified. "Not the McDonald lot. They're
+all revolutionaries. All of them. It's&mdash;it's unthinkable.
+It certainly is."</p>
+
+<p>The man moved away.</p>
+
+<p>"That's so," he agreed. "Well, anyway, I'll do the
+best I know for the child, Sally. You can trust me."</p>
+
+<p>The woman's anxiety abated, and she rose from her
+chair.</p>
+
+<p>"I know that, Charles," she said. "But the McDonalds!
+They're&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure they are." The man laughed. "Well, good-bye,
+
+my dear. I'll tell you all about it when I've fixed things.
+Thank goodness it's quit snowing and the sun's shining
+again. I wish I felt as good as it looks outside here."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Charles Nisson had become a lawyer without any
+marked inclination or enthusiasm for his profession. It
+had been simply a matter of following the father before
+him. It would have been much the same if his father
+had been a farmer, or a politician, or anything else. The
+son was patient, temperate, and of no great ambition.
+But he was also keenly intelligent. Without impulse,
+or striking originality, but with a tremendous capacity
+for hard work, he was bound to be moderately successful
+in any career. In his father's profession his temperament
+was particularly suited, and in spite of lacking
+enthusiasm he had become unquestionably a better lawyer
+than the country attorney he had succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>Just now his mind was filled with unease. The matter
+of his forthcoming interview with a child of sixteen years
+had only small place in the affairs which disturbed him.
+His real concern was for his friend, Leslie Standing, and
+the disaster, which, in a seemingly overwhelming rush
+had befallen at far-off Sachigo. Again his trouble had
+no relation to these things as they affected his own
+worldly affairs. It was of the man himself he was thinking.</p>
+
+<p>He knew it all now. He had painfully learned the
+complete story of disaster. And, to his sturdy mind, it
+was a deplorable example of almost unbelievable human
+weakness.</p>
+
+<p>Standing had conveyed his final determination to
+abandon his Labrador enterprise in the correspondence
+which had passed between them during the three months
+which had elapsed since the funeral of his wife and stillborn
+child. And during that time their friendship had
+
+been sorely tested. There had been times when the
+lawyer's native patience had been unequal to the strain.
+There had been times when his temper had leapt from
+under the bonds which so strongly held it. But for all
+the ordeals of that prolonged correspondence, for all he
+deplored the pitiful weakness in the other, his friendship
+remained, and he finally accepted his instructions. But
+the whole thing left him very troubled.</p>
+
+<p>As the hour of noon approached, his trouble showed no
+sign of abatement. It was the reverse. There were
+moments, as he sat in the generously upholstered chair
+before his desk, in the comfortable down-town office
+which overlooked Abercrombie's principal thoroughfare,
+that he felt like abandoning all responsibility in the chaos
+of his friend's affairs. But this was only the result of
+irritation, and had no relation to his intentions. He
+knew well enough that everything in his power would
+be done for the man who never so surely needed his help
+as now.</p>
+
+<p>He refreshed his memory with the details of the deed
+of settlement for the abandoned stepdaughter. Then, as
+the hands of the clock approached the hour of his appointment,
+he sat back yielding his whole concentration upon
+those many problems confronting him.</p>
+
+<p>What, he asked himself, was going to become of
+Standing now that he had cut himself adrift from that
+anchorage which had held him safe for the past seven
+years? He strove to follow the driving of the man's
+curiously haunted mind. He had declared his intention
+of going away. Where? Definite information had been
+withheld. He was going to devote himself to some purpose
+he claimed to have always lain at the back of his
+mind. What was that purpose? Again there had been
+no information forthcoming. Was it good, or&mdash;bad?
+The man who was endeavouring to solve the riddle of it
+all dared not trust himself to a decision. He felt that
+
+his friend's unstable soul might drive him in almost any
+direction after the shock it had sustained.</p>
+
+<p>No. Speculation was useless. The crude facts were
+like a brick wall he had to face. Standing's wealth and
+the great mill at Sachigo were left to his administration
+with the trusting confidence of a child. The responsibility
+for the neglected stepdaughter had similarly been
+flung upon his shoulders. And, satisfied with this manner
+of disposing of his worldly concerns, Standing intended to
+fare forth, shorn of any possession but a bare pittance
+for his daily needs, to lose himself, and all the shadows
+of a haunted mind, in the dim, remote interior of the
+unexplored forests of Northern Quebec. The whole
+thing was mad&mdash;utterly&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The muffled electric bell on his table drubbed out its
+summons. One swift glance at the clock and the lawyer
+yielded to professional instinct. He became absorbed in
+the papers neatly spread out on his table as a bespectacled
+clerk thrust open the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss McDonald to see you," he announced, in the
+modulated tone which was part of his professional make-up.</p>
+
+<p>The lawyer rose at once. He moved toward the door
+with a smiling welcome. The sex and personality of his
+visitor demanded this departure from his custom.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy McDonald stood just inside the doorway
+through which the clerk had departed. She was tall,
+beautifully tall, for all she was only sixteen. In her simple
+college girl's overcoat, with its muffling of fur about the
+neck, it was impossible to detect the graces of the youthful
+figure concealed. Her carriage was upright, and her
+bearing full of that confidence which is so earnestly
+taught in the schools of the newer countries.</p>
+
+<p>But these things passed unnoticed by the white-haired
+lawyer. He was smiling into the radiant face under the
+low-pressed fur cap. It was the wide, hazel eyes, so
+
+deeply fringed with a wealth of curling, dark lashes, that
+inspired his smiling interest. It was the level brows, so
+delicately pencilled, and dark as were the eyelashes.
+It was the perfect nose, and lips, and chin, and the
+chiselled beauty of oval cheeks, all in such classic harmony
+with the girl's wealth of vivid hair.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy returned his gaze without the shadow of a
+smile. She had come at this man's call from the coldly
+correct halls of Marypoint College, which was also the
+soulless home she had been condemned to for the three
+or four most impressionable years of her life. And she
+knew the purpose of the summons.</p>
+
+<p>There was a deep abiding resentment in her heart. It
+was not against this man or his wife. From these two
+she had received only kindness and affection. It was
+directed against the stepfather whom she believed to
+be the cause of the banishment she had had to endure.
+Furthermore, she could never forget that her banishment
+was only terminated that she might gaze at last upon the
+dead features of her dearly loved mother before the cold
+earth hid them from view forever.</p>
+
+<p>The lawyer understood. He had understood from her
+reply to his letter summoning her. There was no need
+for the confirmation he read now in her unsmiling eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"You sent for me?" she said.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy's voice was deep and rich for all her youth.
+Then with a display of some slight confusion, she suddenly
+realised the welcoming hand outheld. She took
+it hurriedly, and the brief hand clasp completely broke
+down the barrier she had deliberately set up.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it's a shame, Uncle Charles," she cried, almost
+tearfully. "It's&mdash;it's a shame. I know. I'm just a kid&mdash;a
+fool kid who hasn't a notion, or a feeling, or&mdash;or
+anything. I'm to be treated that way. When he says
+
+'listen,' why, I've just got to listen. And when he says
+'obey,' I've got to obey, because the law says he's
+
+my stepfather. He's robbed me of my mother. Oh,
+it's cruel. Now he's going to rob me of everything else I
+s'pose. Who is he? What is he that he has the power
+to&mdash;to make me a sort of slave to his wishes? I've never
+seen him. I hate him, and he hates me, and yet&mdash;oh&mdash;I'm
+kind of sorry," she said, in swift contrition at the
+sight of the old man's evident distress. "I&mdash;I&mdash;didn't
+think. I&mdash;oh, I know it's not your fault, uncle. It's
+just nothing to do with you. You've always been so
+kind and good to me&mdash;you and Aunt Sally. You've
+got to send for me and tell me the things he says, because&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I'm his 'hired man.' But also because I'm
+his friend."</p>
+
+<p>The lawyer spoke kindly, but very firmly. He knew
+the impulsive nature of this passionate child. He knew
+her unusual mentality. He realised, none better, that
+he was dealing with a strong woman's mind in a girl of
+childhood's years. He knew that Nancy had inherited
+largely from her father, that headstrong, headlong
+creature whose mentality had driven him to every length
+in a wild endeavour to upset civilisation that he might
+witness the birth of a millennium in the ashes of a world
+saturated with the blood of countless, helpless creatures.
+So he checked the impulsive flow of the child's protest.
+He held out his hands.</p>
+
+<p>"You'd best let me take your coat, my dear," he said,
+with a smile the girl found it impossible to resist. "Maybe
+you'd like to remove your overshoes, too. There's a big
+talk to make, and I want to get things fixed so you can
+come right along up home and take food with us before
+you go back to Marypoint."</p>
+
+<p>The child capitulated. But she needed no assistance.
+Her coat was removed in a moment and flung across a
+chair, and she stood before him, the slim, slightly angular
+schoolgirl she really was.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Guess I'll keep my rubbers on," she said. Then she
+added with a laugh which a moment before must have
+been impossible. "That way I'll feel I can run away when
+I want to. What next?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, just sit right here."</p>
+
+<p>The lawyer drew up a chair and set it beside his desk.
+His movements were swift now. He had no desire to
+lose the girl's change of mood.</p>
+
+<p>And Nancy submitted. She took the chair set for her
+while the man she loved to call "Uncle Charlie" passed
+round to his. He gave her no time for further reflection,
+but plunged into his talk at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, my dear," he said earnestly, "you came here
+feeling pretty bad about things, and maybe I don't
+blame you. But there isn't the sort of thing waiting on
+you you're guessing. Before we get to the real business
+I just want to tell you the things in my mind. Of course,
+as you say, you're a 'kid' yet&mdash;a school-kid, eh? That's
+all right. But I know you can get a grip of things that
+many much older girls could never hope to. That's why
+I want to tell you the things I'm going to. Now you've
+worked it out in your mind that your stepfather is just a
+heartless, selfish creature who has no sort of use for you,
+and just wants to forget your existence. He married
+your mother, but had no idea of taking on her burdens&mdash;that's
+you. It isn't so. It wasn't so. I know, because
+this man is my friend, and I know all there is to know
+about him. The whole thing has been deplorable.
+You've been the victim of circumstances that I may not
+explain even to you. But I promise you this, your stepfather
+is not the man to have desired to cut you out of
+your mother's life."</p>
+
+<p>"Who did then? Mother?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl's beautiful face flushed under her stirring
+emotions. The man shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Circumstances. Yes, those circumstances I told
+
+you of. Those circumstances I can't explain." Charles
+Nisson picked up a typescript and held it out to the child.</p>
+
+<p>"I want you to take this. It's not the deed, but a
+true copy. I want you to read it over and think about it,
+and when you get back to Marypoint, and feel like talking
+to those teachers you trust there, you can tell them what
+it contains, and hear what they have to say about it, and
+see if they won't think better of your stepfather than
+you do. You needn't read it now," as the girl turned
+the pages and glanced down the confusion of legal
+phraseology. "I'm going to tell you what it contains in
+plain words. But I want you to have it, and read it,
+and think over it, because I want you to try and get a
+real understanding of the man whose signature is set to
+the original deed."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he went on, meditatively, and in a tone of real
+regret. "I'd be pretty glad to have you think better of
+him. I think just now he needs the kind thought of anyone
+who belongs to him. He's in pretty bad trouble&mdash;someways."</p>
+
+<p>The girl looked up. A curious anxiety was shining in
+her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Trouble?" she demanded. "You mean he's done
+wrong? What d'you mean? What sort of&mdash;trouble?"</p>
+
+<p>The man shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"No. It's not that. It's&mdash;your mother. You know,
+Nancy, he loved your mother in a way that leaves a good
+man broken to pieces when he loses the object of his love.
+Every good thought he ever had was bound up in your
+mother. And your mother was his strong support, and
+literally his guiding star. You've lost your mother. You
+know how you felt. Well, I can't tell you, but think,
+try and think what it would be if you'd lost just every
+hope in life, too&mdash;the same as he has."</p>
+
+<p>"I'd&mdash;I'd want to die," the girl cried impulsively.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. So would anyone. So does he. Just as far
+
+as the world's concerned he's dead now. You'll never
+see him, or hear from him. Nor will anyone else&mdash;except
+me. He'll never come into your life after this.
+He'll never claim his legal guardianship of you, beyond
+that document. To you he's dead, leaving you heir to
+what is contained in that deed. He's just a poor devil of
+a man hunted and haunted through the rest of his existence
+by the memory of a love that was more than life
+to him. Try and think better of him, Nancy, my dear.
+He's got enough to bear. I think he deserves far better
+than he's ever likely to get handed to him. I tell you
+solemnly, my dear, whatever sins he may have committed,
+and most of us have committed plenty," he added, with a
+gentle smile, "he's done you no real hurt. And now he's
+only doing that good by you I would expect from him."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy sighed deeply, and it needed no words of hers
+to tell the man of law how well he had fought his friend's
+battle. A deep wave of childish pity had swept away
+the last of a resentment which had seemed so bitter, so
+implacable. It was the generous heart of the child,
+shorn, for the moment, of its inheritance from her father.
+Her even brows had puckered, and the man knew that
+tears, real tears of sympathy, were not far off.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me," she said, in a low voice. "Tell me some
+more."</p>
+
+<p>But the man shook his head. "I can't tell you more,"
+he said gently. "Where your stepfather is, or where he
+will be to-morrow, I may not tell you. Even when your
+mother was alive you were not permitted to know these
+things. That was due to the 'circumstances' I told you
+of. It just remains for me to tell you the contents of
+that document. They're as generous as only your stepfather
+knows how to make them. He's appointed me
+your trustee. And he's settled on you a life annuity of
+$10,000. There are a few simple conditions. You will
+remain at college till your education is complete, and,
+
+until you are twenty-one I shall have control of your
+income. That is," he explained, "I shall see that you
+don't handle it recklessly. During that time, subject
+to my approval, you can make your home with whom
+you like. After you've passed your twenty-first birthday
+you are as free as air to go or come, to live where you
+choose, and how you choose. And your income will be
+forthcoming from this office&mdash;every quarter. Do you
+understand all that, my dear? It's so very simple.
+Your stepfather has gone to the limit to show you how
+well he desires for you, and how free of his authority he
+wants you to be. There is another generous act of his
+that will be made clear to you when the time comes.
+But that is for the future&mdash;not now. His last word to
+me," he went on, picking up a letter, "when he sent me
+the deed duly signed, was: 'Tell this little girl when you
+hand her these things, it isn't my wish to trouble her
+with an authority which can have little enough appeal
+for her. Tell her that her mother was my whole world,
+and it is my earnest desire that her daughter should
+have all the good and comfort this world can bestow. If
+ever she needs further help she can have it without question,
+and that she only has to appeal to my friend and adviser,
+Charles Nisson, for anything she requires.'"</p>
+
+<p>The man laid the letter aside and looked up.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the last paragraph of the last communication
+I had from him. And they're not the words of a monstrous
+tyrant who is utterly heartless, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl made no answer. Her emotion was too strong
+for her. Two great tears rolled slowly down her beautiful
+cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>The lawyer rose from his chair. He came round the
+desk and laid a gentle hand on the heaving shoulder,
+while Nancy strove to wipe her tears away with a wholly
+inadequate handkerchief.</p>
+
+<p>"That's right, my dear," he said very gently. "Wipe
+
+them away. There's no need to cry. Leslie's done all
+a man in his peculiar position can do for you. You've
+got the whole wide world before you, and everything you
+can need for comfort&mdash;thanks to him. Now let's forget
+about it all. Just take that paper back to school with you.
+And maybe you'll write, or come and let me know what
+you think about it. If you feel like making your home
+with us, why, that way you'll just complete our happiness.
+If you feel like going to your mother's sister, Anna
+Scholes, I shan't refuse you. Anyway, think about it
+all. That's my big talk and it's finished. Just get your
+overcoat on, and we'll get right along home to food."</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_8"></a>
+<h3>Chapter VI&mdash;Nathaniel Hellbeam</h3>
+
+
+<p>The room was furnished with extreme modern luxury.
+The man standing over against the window with his
+broad back turned, somehow looked to be in perfect
+keeping with the setting his personal tastes had inspired.
+He was broad, squat, fat. His head and neck were set
+low upon his shoulders, and the hair oil was obvious on
+the longish dark hair which seemed to grow low down
+under his shirt collar.</p>
+
+<p>The other man, seated in one of the many easy chairs,
+was in strong contrast. His was the familiar face of the
+agent, Idepski, dark, keen, watchful. He was smoking
+the cigarette to which he had helped himself from the
+gold box standing near him on the ornate desk.</p>
+
+<p>"You seem to have made a bad mess of things."</p>
+
+<p>Nathaniel Hellbeam turned from the window and came
+back to his desk with quick, short, energetic strides.</p>
+
+<p>He presented a picture of inflamed wrath. His fleshy,
+square face was flushed and almost purple. His small
+eyes were hot with anger. They snapped as he launched
+
+his harshly spoken verdict. His whole manner bristled
+with merciless intolerance.</p>
+
+<p>He was enormously fat, and breathed heavily through
+clean shaven lips that protruded sensually. His age
+was doubtful, but suggested something under middle
+life. It was the gross bulk of the man that made it almost
+impossible to estimate closely. The only real youth
+about him was his dark, well oiled hair which possessed
+not a sign of greying in it.</p>
+
+<p>He flung himself into the wide chair which gaped to
+receive him, and glared at the dark face of his visitor.</p>
+
+<p>"What in the hell do I pay you for?" he cried brutally,
+lapsing, in his anger, into that gutteral Teutonic accent
+which it was his life's object to avoid. "A wild cat's
+scheme it was I tell you from the first. You go to this
+Sachigo with your men. You think to get this 'sharp'
+
+asleep, or what? You find him wide awake waiting for
+you to arrive. What then? He jumps quick. So quick
+you can't think. You a prisoner are. You go where
+he sends you. You live like a swine in the woods. You
+are made to work for your food. And a year is gone.
+A year! Serve you darn right. Oh, yes. Bah! You
+quit. You understand? I pay you no more. You are
+a fool, a blundering fool. I wash my hands with you."</p>
+
+<p>Idepski sat still, patient, as once before he had sat
+under the whip lash of a man's tongue. And he continued
+smoking till the great banker's last word was spoken.</p>
+
+<p>Then he stirred, and removed his cigarette from his
+thin lips.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right, Mr. Hellbeam," he said coldly.
+"It seems like you've a right to all you've said. It
+seems, I said. But the 'fool' talk." He shook his
+head. "My best enemies don't reckon me that&mdash;generally.
+The game I'm playing has room enough for things
+that look like blunders. I allow that. It doesn't matter.
+You see, I know more of this feller Martin maybe than
+
+you do. I guess he's a mighty big coward, except when
+he's got the drop on a feller. I've given him the scare
+of a lifetime, and I've unshipped him from his safe
+anchorage on that darn Labrador coast. Do you know
+what's happened? I'll tell you. He's quit Sachigo.
+From what I can learn he's sold out his mill to that
+uncouth hoodlum, Harker, who was sort of his partner,
+and quit. Where? I don't know yet. Why has he
+quit? Why, because he knows we've located his hiding,
+and will get him if he remains. You reckon I've mussed
+things up." He shook his head. "He was well-nigh safe
+up there on Labrador&mdash;and I knew it. We had to get
+him out of it. Well, I've got him out. He's bolted like
+a gopher, and it's up to me to locate him. I shall locate
+him. I'm glad he's quit that hellish country. I've had
+a year of it, and it's put the fear of God into me. You
+needn't worry. I'm quite ready to quit your pay. But
+I'm going on with this thing, sure. You see, I owe him
+quite a piece for myself&mdash;now. I've been through the
+hell he intended me to go through when he sent me along
+up to be held prisoner by that skunk, Ole Porson. I'm
+going to pay him for that&mdash;good. I don't want your
+pay&mdash;now. One day I'll hand that feller over to you&mdash;and
+when you've doped him plenty&mdash;you'll have paid
+me." He rose leisurely from his comfortable chair.
+"May I take another of your good cigarettes?" he went
+on, with a half smile in his cold eyes. "You see, I won't
+get another, seeing I'm quitting you."</p>
+
+<p>He deliberately helped himself without waiting for
+permission, while his eyes dwelt on the gold box containing
+them.</p>
+
+<p>But the financier's mood had changed. The keen
+mind was busy behind his narrow eyes. Perhaps Idepski
+understood the man. Perhaps the coolness of the agent
+appealed to the implacable nature of the Swede. Whatever
+it was the hot eyes had cooled, and the fleshy cheeks
+
+had returned to their normal pasty hue. He raised a
+hand pointing.</p>
+
+<p>"Sit down and smoke all you need," he said, in the
+sharp, autocratic fashion that was his habit. "We aren't
+through yet." Then, for a few moments, he regarded
+the slim figure as it lay back once more in the armchair.
+"Say," he began, abruptly, "you reckon to go on for&mdash;yourself?
+Yes? You're a good hater."</p>
+
+<p>He went on as the other inclined his head.</p>
+
+<p>"I like a good hater. Yes. Well, just cut out all I
+said. We'll go on. I guess you'll need to blunder some
+before we get this swine. You're bound to. But I want
+him. I want him bad. If it's good for you to go on for
+yourself, that's good for me. There's a lifetime ahead
+yet, and I don't care so I see him down&mdash;right down
+where I need him. Maybe I won't get the money, but
+we'll get him, and that'll do. Yes, cut out what I said,
+and go ahead. Tell me about it."</p>
+
+<p>Idepski displayed neither enthusiasm nor added
+interest. He accepted the position with seeming indifference.
+Hellbeam to him was just an employer. A
+means to those ends which he had in view. If Hellbeam
+turned him down it would mean a setback, but not
+a disaster, and Idepski appraised setbacks at their
+simple value, without exaggeration. Besides, he knew
+that this Swede, powerful, wealthy as he was, could not
+afford to do without him in this matter. His intolerant,
+hectic temper mattered nothing at all. He paid for the
+privilege of its display, and he paid well. So&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"There's nothing much to tell," the agent returned,
+with a shrug. "I'm going to get him&mdash;that's all. See
+here, Mr. Hellbeam," he went on after a pause, with a
+sudden change to keen energy, "you're a mighty big
+power in the financial world, and to be that I guess
+you've had to be some judge of the other feller. That's
+so. You most generally know when he's beat before
+
+you begin. And when he squeals it don't come as a
+surprise. Well, that's how it is with me, only it's a
+bigger thing to me because it sometimes happens to mean
+the difference between life and death. Say, when you
+put up your bluff at a feller, and watch him square in the
+eyes, and you see 'em flicker and shift, do you reckon
+you've lit on the 'yellow streak,' that lies somewhere
+in most folk? I guess so. Well, that's how I know
+my man. I've seen it in this bum, Leslie Standing as
+he calls himself now. And when I saw it I knew he was
+beat, for all he'd the drop on me. Since then my
+notion's proved itself. He's lit out. He's cut from his
+gopher hole at Sachigo. An' when a gopher gets away
+from his hole, the man with the gun has him dead set.
+But say, that muss up you reckon I made doesn't look
+that way when you know the things it's taught me.
+While I was way up at that penitentiary camp on the
+Beaver River I kept all my ears and eyes wide, and I
+learned most of the things a feller's liable to learn in
+this world when he acts that way. I learned something
+of the notions lying back of this feller's work up there.
+Say, he hadn't finished with you when he took that ten
+millions out of you." An ironical smile lit the man's
+dark eyes as he thrust home his retaliation for the financier's
+insults. "Not by a lot," he went on, with a
+smiling display of teeth that conveyed nothing pleasant.
+"They've a slogan up there that means a whole heap,
+and it comes from him, and runs through the whole
+work going on, right down to the Chink camp cooks.
+Guess that mill is only beginning. It's the ground work
+of a mighty big notion. And the notion is to drive the
+Skandinavians out of Canada's pulp trade, and very particularly
+the Swedes, as represented by the interests of
+Nathaniel Hellbeam. Guess you sit right here in New
+York, but up there they've got you measured up to the
+last pant's button."</p>
+
+
+<p>"They that think?"</p>
+
+<p>The financier's bloated cheeks purpled as he put his
+clumsy interrogation.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes. This feller Standing reckons he's made a
+big start, and there are mighty big plans out. When he
+and that clownish partner of his, Harker, are through,
+Sachigo'll be the biggest proposition in the way of groundwood
+pulp in the world. They've forests such as you in
+Skandinavia dream about when your digestion's feeling
+good. They've a water power that leaves Niagara a
+summer trickle. They've got it all with a sea journey of
+less than eighteen hundred miles to Europe. But there's
+more than that. When Sachigo's complete it's to be the
+parent company of a mighty combine that's going to
+take in all the mills of Canada outside Nathaniel Hellbeam's
+group. And then&mdash;then, sir, the squeeze'll start
+right in. And it isn't going to stop till the sponge&mdash;that's
+Nathaniel Hellbeam&mdash;is wrung dry."</p>
+
+<p>"You heard all this&mdash;when you were held prisoner and
+working like a swine in Martin's forests?"</p>
+
+<p>The smile in Hellbeam's eyes was no less ironical than
+the agent's.</p>
+
+<p>"When I was working like a swine."</p>
+
+<p>"These lumber-jacks. They knew all that in Standing's
+mind is?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. But I learned it all."</p>
+
+<p>"How?"</p>
+
+<p>The demand was instant, and a surge of force lay
+behind it.</p>
+
+<p>"Because some I saw. Some I picked up from general
+talk. And the rest I pieced together because it's my job
+to think hard when the game's against me. But it don't
+matter. You know that the things I've told you are
+right. It's news to you, but you know it's right,
+because you're thinking hard, and the game's against&mdash;you."</p>
+
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>The financier's admission was the act of a man who has
+no hesitation in looking facts in the face and acknowledging
+them. Idepski's deductions were irrefutable, because
+the Swede was a shrewd business man with a full
+appreciation of the man who had lightened his finances
+by ten million dollars.</p>
+
+<p>For some moments the fleshy face was turned towards
+the window which yielded the hum of busy traffic many
+stories below them. His narrow eyes were earnestly
+reflective, but there was no concern in them. To the waiting
+man he was simply measuring the threat against him,
+and probing its possibilities for mischief.</p>
+
+<p>"Yet this fellow. He on the run is&mdash;Yes?"</p>
+
+<p>The eyes were smiling as they came back again to
+Idepski's face. The agent nodded, flinging his cigarette
+end into the porcelain cuspidore beside the desk.</p>
+
+<p>"Which makes me all the more sure of the game,"
+he said confidently. "He's rattled. He's so scared to
+death for himself, and for his purpose, he's getting out.
+It's as clear as daylight to me. He feels he's plumb
+against it if he stops around. He knows we've located
+him. He knows what he's done to me. He knows all
+he wants to know of you. Well, he reckons there's no
+sort of chance for him at Sachigo. And if he stops there's
+no sort of chance for this purpose of his. He reckons to
+call off the hounds on his own trail, while the feller
+Harker carries on the good work of squeezing the Swedes.
+That's how I see it. And I guess I'm right. Remember
+I had a year of hell up there to think in, and when I
+finally got clear away I had two months' solitary chasing
+of those woods to think in, and then, when I made the
+coast, I had the trip down with the folks on the boat to
+listen to. He's scared for his life, and of anything you
+hope to hand him. But he's more scared for the purpose
+that made him set up that mill at Sachigo."</p>
+
+
+<p>Hellbeam leant back in his chair. His great paunch
+protruded invitingly and he clasped his hands over it.</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe you're right," he said, with an air intended to
+conciliate. "Anyway you've picked up some pieces and
+set them together so they make a fancy shape. But&mdash;it
+isn't good. No. Here, I think, too. I see another, way
+from you. Without this fellow Sachigo is&mdash;nothing.
+See? I care nothing because of this Harker. No.
+The other&mdash;that's different. Yes. He the brain has.
+All this piece you make. He is capable of it. But he
+is on the run. Good. I still sleep well while he runs.
+Sachigo? Bah! It is nothing without Leslie Martin.
+Now, go you. Hunt this man. Maybe your year of
+the woods will help you," he said, with biting emphasis.
+"You know the woods? Well, don't quit his trail. Get
+him. Get him alive."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I shall get him. Your urging ain't needed. I'll
+get him as you say&mdash;alive. And he knows it."</p>
+
+<p>Idepski's cold eyes hardened with a frigid hatred as
+he spoke. He had only been paid for the work hitherto.
+Now he was implacable.</p>
+
+<p>"But it's Sachigo I mean to watch," he went on, after
+a brief pause. "I mean to play in that direction. It's
+the home burrow where you lay your traps once your
+quarry's on the run."</p>
+
+<p>Hellbeam nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"That's good sense."</p>
+
+<p>"Sure it is," retorted the agent. "I'm glad you see
+it that way," he added with a smile under which the
+financier grew restive once more.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Well, see you get him. Money? It doesn't
+matter. Get him! Get him!" he reiterated fiercely.
+"You understand me? It doesn't matter how you get
+him. I can deal with the rest."</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he raised a clenched fist, fat, and strong,
+and white, and extended his thumb. He turned it
+
+downwards and pressed its extremity on the gold
+mounted blotting pad before him with a force that bent
+the knuckle backwards. "Get him so I can crush him&mdash;like
+that," he cried. "Get him alive. I want him alive.
+See?"</p>
+
+<p>"I see. I'll get him&mdash;sure. You needn't worry a
+thing."</p>
+
+<p>And as Walter Idepski rose to take his departure,
+for all his nerve, he felt glad that the passion of this
+Swede's hate was not directed against him.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="doublepage">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_9"></a>
+<h2>Part II&mdash;Eight Years Later</h2>
+
+
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_10"></a>
+<h3>Chapter I&mdash;Bull Sternford</h3>
+
+
+<p>A great gathering thronged the heart of the clearing.
+There were men of every shade of colour, men of well-nigh
+every type. They stood about in a wide circle,
+whose regularity remained definite even under the
+stirring of fierce excitement. They had gathered for a
+fight, a great fight between two creatures, full human
+in shape and splendid manhood, but bestial in the method
+of the battle demanded. It was a battle with muscles
+of iron, and hearts that knew no mercy, and body and
+mind tuned only to endure and conquer. It was a battle
+that belonged to the savage out-world, acknowledging
+only the vicious laws of "rough and tough."</p>
+
+<p>The rough creatures stood voiceless and well-nigh
+breathless. The combatants were well matched and redoubtable,
+even in a community whose only deity was
+physical might and courage and the skill of the wielded
+axe. The lust of it all was burning fiercely in every
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>The sun poured out its flood of summer upon a world
+of virgin forest. The sky was without blemish. A
+dome of perfect azure roofed in the length and breadth
+of Nature's kingdom. Nevertheless the fairness of the
+summer day, with its ravishing accompaniment of soft,
+mystery sounds from an unseen world and the lavish
+beauty of shadowed woods were fit setting for the pulsing
+of savage emotions. It was far out in the lost world of
+Northern Quebec. It was far, far beyond the widest-flung
+frontiers of civilisation. It was out there where
+
+man soon learns to forget his birthright, and readily
+yields to the animal in him.</p>
+
+<p>It was a scene of mighty slaughter amongst the giants
+of the forest. Hundreds sprawled in the path of man's
+gleaming axe. Giants they were, hoary with age, and
+gnarled with the sinews built up by Nature to resist her
+fiercest storms. They lay there, in every direction, reaching
+up with tattered arms outstretched, as though appealing
+for the light, the warmth, and the sweetness of life
+they would know no more.</p>
+
+<p>Amidst this carnage a great camp was growing up.
+There were huts completed. There were huts only in the
+skeleton. They were dotted about in a fashion apparently
+without order or purpose. Yet long before the falling of
+the first snow, order would reign everywhere and man's
+purpose would be achieved.</p>
+
+<p>The bunkhouses, the stores, the offices, the stables, they
+must all be ready before the coming of the "freeze-up."
+Summer is the time of preparation. Winter is the season
+when the lumber-jack's work must go forward without
+cessation or break of any sort. Not even the excuse
+of sickness can be accepted. There is no excuse. The
+lumber-jack must work, or sink to the dregs of a life
+that has already created in him a spirit of indifference to
+the laws of God and man. So the life of the forest is hard
+and fierce, and the battle of it all is long.</p>
+
+<p>But the men who seek it are more than equal to the
+task. They are of all sorts, and all races. They drift to
+the forest from all ranks of life by reason of the spirit
+driving them. They come from the universities of the
+world. They come straight from the gates of the penitentiary.
+They come from the land, the sea, the office.
+They come from all countries, and they come for every
+reason. The call of the forest is deep with significance.
+Its appeal is profound. Its life is free, and shadowed, and
+afar.</p>
+
+
+<p>For long moments the clinch of the fighting men remained
+unbroken. They lay there upon the ground locked
+in a deadly embrace. A spasmodic jolt, a violent, muscular
+heave. The result was changed position, while the clinch
+remained unrelaxed. There were movements of gripping
+hands. There were changes of position in the intertwined
+legs clad in their hard cord trousers. The heavily-booted
+feet stirred and stirred again in response to the impulse
+of the searching brains of the fighters, and every slight
+movement had deep meaning for the onlookers.</p>
+
+<p>Yet none of these movements revealed the inspiration
+of passion. They were calculated and full of purpose.
+It was devilish purpose driving towards the objects of
+the fight. The stirring fingers yearned to reach the eyes
+of the adversary to blind him, and leave his organs of
+vision gouged from their sockets. The bared, strong
+teeth were only awaiting that dire chance to close upon
+the enemy's flesh, whether ear, or nose, or throat. Then
+the knee and foot. They were striving under ardent
+will for that inhuman maiming which would leave the
+victim crippled for life.</p>
+
+<p>Each movement of the fighters was estimated by the
+onlookers at its due worth. They understood it all, the
+skill, the chance of it. Not one of them but had fought
+just such a battle in his time, and not a few carried the
+scars of it, and would continue to carry the scars of it
+for the rest of their days.</p>
+
+<p>The moments of quiescence yielded to a spasmodic
+violence. There was a wild rolling, and the unlocking
+of mighty, clinging legs. One dishevelled head was raised
+threateningly. It remained poised for a fraction of time
+over the upturned face of the man lying in a position
+of disadvantage. Then it lunged downwards. And as
+it descended, a sound like the clipping of teeth came
+back to the taut strung senses of the onlookers. A sigh
+escaped from a hundred throats.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Bull missed it that time."</p>
+
+<p>Abe Kristin whispered his comment. The two men
+beside him had nothing to add at the moment. Their
+eyes were intent for the next development.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the fair-haired giant who had missed his
+attack seemed to disengage himself from the under man's
+desperate hold. It was impossible to ascertain the means
+he employed. But he clearly released himself and one
+hammer fist swung up. It crashed sickeningly down on
+the upturned face, and a whistling breath escaped the
+emotional Abe.</p>
+
+<p>"Gee! He's takin' a chance! That ain't the play in
+a 'rough and tough,'" he muttered.</p>
+
+<p>"Nope. You're right, Abe," Luke Gats agreed without
+turning. "He's crazy. Gee! It's a chance. But
+he's maybe rattled. Bull's been fightin' over an hour."</p>
+
+<p>"Here get it!" Tug Burke was pointing with a cant-hook
+in his excitement. "Get it quick. See? He's&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The man's excitement found reflection in the whole
+concourse of onlookers. There was a furious movement
+in the human body crushed on the ground beneath the
+man they called Bull. Its knees came up under his adversary's
+body with a terrific jolt. The purpose of maiming
+was obvious.</p>
+
+<p>"Gee! I'm glad."</p>
+
+<p>Tug's relief found an echo in the sigh that escaped his
+companions. The intended victim had promptly swung
+his body clear and the threatened injury was averted.
+But his retaliation was instant. His great open hand
+spread over the man's face, smothering it; and it seemed
+the sought-for goal had been reached.</p>
+
+<p>"Gouge! Gouge!"</p>
+
+<p>The cry roared in hoarse, excited tones from every
+direction. Unanimity displayed the general feeling.
+The man whose face had been smothered was Arden
+Laval, the camp boss, the man they hated as only forest-men
+
+can hate. The other was a giant youngster, not
+long a member of the camp, the usual object for
+victimisation by such a man as the French Canadian
+boss.</p>
+
+<p>The demand remained unsatisfied. The fingers remained
+spread out over the man's eyes, but the foul act
+was never perpetrated. The younger man's efforts were
+directed towards a deeper, more significant purpose, and
+perhaps less cruel. He could have blinded in a twinkling.
+But he refrained. Instead, he pressed up mightily
+with a fore-arm crooked under the back of the man's
+neck, his smothering hand pressed down with all his
+enormous strength.</p>
+
+<p>"The darn fool! Why in hell don't he&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>Abe was interrupted by the excited voice of the man
+with the cant-hook.</p>
+
+<p>"God A'mighty!" Tug cried. "Do you get it?
+Gouge? It ain't good enough fer Master Bull. He's
+playin' bigger. He's playin' fer dollars while we was
+reck'nin' cents. Look! It'll crack sure! His gorl-darn
+neck! He means&mdash;!"</p>
+
+<p>"To kill!"</p>
+
+<p>Luke Gat's jubilation was dreadful to witness. His
+hard, be-whiskered features were alight with fiendish
+joy. This youngster had gone beyond all expectations.
+No less than the life of the greatest bully in the lumber
+world would satisfy him.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, the nerve! He'll break the life out o' the
+skunk," he exulted. "The kid means crackin' his neck,
+sure as God!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ken he do it?" Tug had thrust forward.</p>
+
+<p>"Laval ain't the feller he was," mused Abe. "He
+shouldn't a let the boy get that holt. It's goin' back.
+It certainly is."</p>
+
+<p>The men stood hushed before the terrible significance
+of what they beheld. In the abstract, a life-and-death
+
+struggle meant little enough to them. Witnessing it, however,
+violently stirred their deepest emotions. They hated
+the camp boss, the libertine, drunkard, bully, Arden
+Laval, who only held his position by reason of his fighting
+powers. They would be infinitely pleased to witness
+his end. All the more sure was their delight that it
+should come at the hands of this pleasant-voiced young
+giant, who had come amongst them out of the very lap
+of civilisation. Later on they would laugh at the thought
+of the redoubtable Laval in the hands of this "kid," as
+they considered him. But for the moment they were
+held enthralled by the excitement of it all.</p>
+
+<p>The moments prolonged. The thrusting hand, and
+the crushing arm were forcing, forcing slowly, in their
+terrible strangle hold. The face of the camp boss was
+hidden from the spectators under the smothering hand.
+But the perilous angle at which his dark head was thrust
+back was there for all to see. His struggles, in that
+merciless hold, were becoming less violent. There was
+despair in their impotence.</p>
+
+<p>The man called Bull was fighting with no less desperation.
+His youthful, resilient muscles were extended
+to the last ounce of their power, and an active, steely-tempered
+brain lay behind his every effort. The memory
+of months of brutal injustice and bullying, the bitterness
+of which had galled beyond endurance, supported this
+last mighty effort. Yes, for all he was bred in the gentle
+life of civilisation, for all ruthless cruelty had no place
+in his normal temper, his one desire now was to kill, to
+slay this brute-man who had made his life unendurable.</p>
+
+<p>It was an awful moment. It was terrible even to
+these hardy men of the forests. The spectacle of a slow,
+deliberate killing was incomparable with the blood feuds
+to which they were used. There were those whose nerves
+prompted them to shout for haste. There were some
+even who welcomed the prolonged agony of the victim.
+
+But none shouted, none spoke or stirred. Furthermore,
+not one pair of shining eyes revealed the quality of
+mercy. Bull's right was his own. If he demanded death
+it was his due. Certainly it was the due of the bully,
+Laval.</p>
+
+<p>On the far side of the circle a sudden commotion broke
+up the tense expectancy of the onlookers. Every eye
+responded, and the unanimity of the change of interest
+suggested the desire for relief. The commotion continued.
+There was some sort of struggle going on.
+Then, in a moment, it ceased. A tall, lean, dark-clad
+figure leapt into the arena and flung itself upon the
+combatants.</p>
+
+<p>The circle had re-formed. Again were eyes fastened
+upon the point of fascination which had held them so
+long. But now a buzz of talk hummed on the summer
+air.</p>
+
+<p>"What in hell!" demanded Luke, in the bitterness
+of disappointment.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, I'm&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Tug Burke made a move to break into the arena.
+But the powerful hand of Abe was fastened about one
+of his arms in a grip of iron.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, quit, kid!" he cried hoarsely.</p>
+
+<p>The man's harsh tones were stirred out of their usual
+quiet.</p>
+
+<p>"Stop right here," he went on. "There's just one
+feller on this earth has a right to butt in when Death's
+flappin' his wings around. That's Father Adam. Maybe
+you're feeling sick to think Laval's going to get clear
+with his life. Maybe I am. Father Adam ain't buttin'
+
+in ordinary. He's savin' that hothead kid the blood
+of a killin' on his hands. Guess I'm glad."</p>
+
+<p>The next moments were abounding with amazing
+incident. It seemed as though a flying, priestly figure
+had been absorbed in the life-and-death struggle. He
+
+seemed to become part of it. Then, with kaleidoscopic
+suddenness, the men lay apart, and the death strangle
+hold of Bull Sternford was broken. And the magic of
+it all lay in the fact that the stranger was standing over
+the prone combatants, his dark, bearded face, and wide,
+shining black eyes turned upon the living fury gazing
+up out of the eyes of the man who had been robbed of
+his prey.</p>
+
+<p>"There's going to be no killing, Bull." Father Adam
+spoke quietly, deliberately, but with cold decision.</p>
+
+<p>There was no yielding in his pale, ascetic features.
+One hand slipped quickly into a pocket of his short,
+black, semi-clerical coat, as he allowed his eyes to glance
+down at the still prostrate camp boss.</p>
+
+<p>"And you, Laval," he cried, with more urgency, "get
+out quick. Get right out to your shanty and stop there.
+Later I'll come along and fix up your hurts."</p>
+
+<p>Young Bull Sternford leapt to his feet. His youthful
+figure towered. His handsome blue eyes were ablaze
+with almost demoniac fury. His purpose was obvious.
+A voiceless passion surged as he started to rush again
+upon his victim.</p>
+
+<p>But the priestly figure, with purpose no less, instantly
+barred the way.</p>
+
+<p>"Quit," he cried sharply. "What I say, goes."</p>
+
+<p>Bull halted. He halted within a yard of the automatic
+pistol whose muzzle was covering him. He stood for a
+second staring stupidly. And something of his madness
+seemed to pass out of his eyes. Then, in a moment,
+his voice rang out harshly.</p>
+
+<p>"Get away. Let me get at him. Oh, God, I'll smash
+him! I'll&mdash;!"</p>
+
+<p>"You'll quit right now!" Father Adam still barred
+the way with the threatening gun. He raised the muzzle
+the least shade. "There's this gun says you're not
+going to have murder on your hands, boy; and there's
+
+a man behind it knows how to make it stop your mad
+attempt. That's better," he went on, as, even in his fury
+the younger man drew back in face of the threat. "Say,
+you've done enough, boy. You've done all you need.
+He's deserved everything he's got, the same as most of us
+deserve the bad times we get. You've licked him like the
+good man you are. You've licked him without any filthy
+maiming, or unnecessary cruelty. Now leave him his life.
+He'll never trouble you again. Let it go at that."</p>
+
+<p>The calm of the man, the gentleness of his tones were
+irresistible. The fury of the youth died hard, but it so
+lessened in face of the simple exhortation that it had
+passed below the point where insanity rules.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly a great, bleeding hand was raised to his
+mane of fair hair, and he smoothed it back off his forehead
+helplessly.</p>
+
+<p>"Why? Why?" he demanded. Then spasmodically:
+"Why should&mdash;he&mdash;get away with it? He's handed
+me a dog's life He's&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He broke off. His emotions were overwhelming.</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam's dark eyes never wavered. They
+squarely held their grip on the stormy light shining in
+the other's. Laval had not stirred. He still lay sprawled
+on the ground. Quite abruptly the hand gripping the
+automatic pistol was thrust into the pocket of the black
+coat. When it was removed it was empty. The man
+took a quick step towards the half-dazed Bull.</p>
+
+<p>"Come along, boy," he said persuasively, taking him
+by the arm. "Come right over to my shanty," he went
+on. "You'll feel better in a while. You'll feel better
+all ways, and glad you&mdash;didn't." Then he paused, holding
+the man's unresisting arm. He looked down at
+Laval who displayed belated signs of movement. "Get
+up, Laval," he ordered, returning to a coldness that displayed
+his inner feeling. "Get up, and&mdash;get out. Get
+away right now, and thank God your neck's still whole."</p>
+
+
+<p>He waited for the obedience he demanded, and waiting
+he realised by the quiescence of the man beside him
+that all danger had passed.</p>
+
+<p>Laval staggered to his feet. He stood up, a giant
+in the prime of early manhood, but bowed under the
+weight of physical hurt, and the knowledge of his first
+defeat. He stood for a moment as though uncertain.
+Then he moved slowly towards the crowding onlookers,
+finally passing through them on his way to his quarters
+pursued by a hundred contemptuous, unpitying glances,
+while busy tongues expressed regret at his escape. It
+was the scowl of the wolf pack in its merciless regard
+for a fallen leader.</p>
+
+<p>Very different was the general attitude when Father
+Adam led the victor away. Hard faces were a-grin.
+The tongues that cursed the defeated camp boss hurled
+jubilant laudations at the unresponsive youth, who
+towered even amongst these great creatures. But for
+the presence of Father Adam, who seemed to exercise
+a miraculous restraining influence, these lumber-jacks
+would have crowded in and forcibly borne their champion
+to the suttler's store for those copious libations,
+which, in their estimate, was the only fitting conclusion
+to the scene they had witnessed. As it was they made
+way. They stood aside in spontaneous and real respect,
+and the two men passed on in silence leaving the crowd
+to disperse to its labours.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_11"></a>
+<h3>Chapter II&mdash;Father Adam</h3>
+
+
+<p>The hush of the forest was profound. For all the proximity
+of the busy lumber camp its calm was unbroken.</p>
+
+<p>It was a break in the endless canopy of foliage, a
+narrow rift in the dark breadth of the shadowed woods.</p>
+
+
+<p>It was one of those infinitesimal veins through which
+flows the life-blood of the forest.</p>
+
+<p>A tiny streamlet trickled its way over a bed of decayed
+vegetation often meandering through a dense growth
+of wiry reeds in a channel set well below the general
+level. Banks of attenuated grass and rank foliage lined
+its course, and the welcome sunlight poured down
+upon its water in sharp contrast with the twilight of the
+forest.</p>
+
+<p>Clear of the crowding trees a rough shanty stood out
+in the sunlight. It was a crazy affair constructed of
+logs laterally laid and held in place by uprights, with
+walls that looked to be just able to hold together while
+suffering under the constant threat of collapse. The
+place was roofed with a thatch of reeds taken from the
+adjacent stream-bed, and its doorway was protected by
+a sheet of tattered sacking. There was also a window
+covered with cotton, and a length of iron stove-pipe
+protruding through the thatch of the roof seemed to
+threaten the whole place with fire at its first use.</p>
+
+<p>Inside there was no attempt to better the impression.
+There was no furnishing. A spread of blankets on a
+waterproof sheet laid on a bed of reeds formed the bed
+of its owner, with a canvas kit-bag stuffed with his
+limited wardrobe serving as a pillow. There were
+several upturned boxes to be used as seats, and a larger
+box served the purpose of a table and supported a tiny
+oil lamp. There was not even the usual wood stove
+connected up to the protruding stove-pipe. A smouldering
+fire was burning between two large sandstone blocks,
+which, in turn, supported a cooking pot. An uncultured
+Indian of the forests would have demanded greater
+comfort for his resting moments.</p>
+
+<p>But Father Adam had no concern for comfort of
+body. He needed his blankets and his fire solely to
+support life against the bitterness of the night air. For
+
+the rest the barest, hardest food kept the fire of life
+burning in his lean body.</p>
+
+<p>Squatting on his upturned box he gazed out upon the
+sunlit stream below him. His dark eyes were full
+of a pensive calm. His body was inclining forward,
+supported by arms folded across his knees. An unlit
+pipe thrust in the corner of his mouth was the one
+touch that defeated the efforts of his flowing hair and
+dark beard to suggest a youthful hermit meditating in
+the doorway of his retreat.</p>
+
+<p>Bull Sternford was seated on another box at the
+opposite side of the doorway. He, too, had a pipe
+thrust between his strong jaws. But he was smoking.
+Beyond the dressings applied to a few abrasions he bore
+no signs of his recent battle. But there still burned a
+curiously fierce light in his handsome blue eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"You shouldn't have butted in, Father," he said, in
+a tone which betrayed the emotion under which he was
+still labouring. "You just shouldn't." Then with a
+movement of irritation: "Oh, I'm not a feller yearning
+for homicide. No. It's not that. You know Arden
+Laval," he went on, his brows depressing. "Of course
+you do. You must know him a whole heap better than
+I do. Well? Say, I guess that feller hasn't a right to
+walk this earth. He boasts the boys he's smashed the
+life clean out of. He's killed more fool lumber-jacks
+than you could count on the fingers of two hands. He
+wanted my scalp to hang on his belt. That man's a
+murderer before God. But he's beyond the recall of
+law up here. And he stops around on the fringe looking
+for the poor fool suckers who don't know better than
+to get within his reach. Gee, it was tough! I'd a holt
+on him I wouldn't get in a thousand years, and I'd
+nearly got the life out of him. I'd stood for all his
+dirt weeks on end. He made his set at me because I'm
+green and college-bred. But he called me a 'son-of-a-bitch!'
+
+Think of it! Oh, I can't rest with that hitting
+my brain. It's no use. I'll have to break him. God,
+I'll break him yet. And I'll see you aren't around when
+I do it."</p>
+
+<p>The man's voice had risen almost to a shout. His
+bandaged hands clenched into fists like limbs of mutton.
+He held them out at the man opposite, and in his agony
+of rage, it gave the impression he was threatening.</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam stirred. He reached down into the
+box under him and picked up a pannikin. Then he
+produced a flask from an inner pocket. He unscrewed
+the top and poured out some of its contents. He held
+it out to the other.</p>
+
+<p>"Drink it," he said quietly.</p>
+
+<p>The blue eyes searched the dark face before them.
+In a moment excitement had begun to pass.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?" Bull demanded roughly.</p>
+
+<p>"It's brandy, and there's dope in it."</p>
+
+<p>"Dope?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Bromide. You'll feel better after you've
+swallowed it. You see I want to make a big talk with
+you. That's why I brought you here. That's why I
+stopped you killing that feller&mdash;that, and other reasons.
+But I can't talk with you acting like&mdash;like I'd guess
+Arden Laval would act. Drink that right up. And
+you needn't be scared of it. It'll just do you the good
+you need."</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam watched while the other took the pannikin.
+He watched him raise it, and sniff suspiciously at
+its contents. And a shadowy smile lit his dark eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"It's as I said," he prompted. Then he added: "I'm
+not a&mdash;Cæsar."</p>
+
+<p>The youth glanced across at him, and for the first
+time since his battle a smile broke through the angry
+gleam of his eyes. He put the pannikin to his lips and
+gulped down the contents.</p>
+
+
+<p>Father Adam drew a deep sigh. It was curious how
+this act of obedience and faith affected him. The weight
+of his responsibility seemed suddenly to have become
+enormous.</p>
+
+<p>It was always the same. This man accepted him as
+did every other lumber-jack throughout the forests of
+Quebec. He was a father whose patient affection for
+his lawless children was never failing, a man of healing,
+with something of the gentleness of a woman. An
+adviser and spiritual guide who never worried them,
+and yet contrived, perhaps all unknown to themselves,
+to leave them better men for their knowledge of him.
+He came, and he departed. Whence he came and
+whither he went no one enquired, no one seemed to know.
+He just moved through the twilight forests like a
+ghostly, beneficent shadow, supreme in his command
+of their rugged hearts.</p>
+
+<p>Bull set the pannikin on the ground beside him. His
+smile had deepened.</p>
+
+<p>"You needn't to tell me that, Father," he said, almost
+humbly. "There isn't a feller back there in the camp,"
+he added with a jerk of his head, "that would have
+hesitated like me when you handed him your dope.
+Thanks. Say, that darn stuff's made me feel easier."</p>
+
+<p>"Good."</p>
+
+<p>The missionary removed his empty pipe, and Bull
+hastily dragged his pouch from a pocket in his buckskin
+shirt. He held it out.</p>
+
+<p>"Help yourself," he invited. And the other took it.
+For a moment Bull looked on at the thoughtful manner
+in which Father Adam filled his pipe. Then a curiosity
+he could no longer restrain prompted him.</p>
+
+<p>"This big talk," he said. "What's it about?"</p>
+
+<p>The missionary's preoccupation vanished. His eyes
+lit and he passed back the pouch.</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, boy," he said in his amiable way. "Guess
+
+I'll need to smoke, too&mdash;you see our talk needs some
+hard thinking. Pass me a stick from that fire."</p>
+
+<p>Bull did as he was bid. And the missionary's eyes
+were on the fair head of the man as he leant down over
+the smouldering embers stewing his own meagre midday
+meal.</p>
+
+<p>Bull Sternford was a creature of vast stature and
+muscular bulk. It was no wonder that the redoubtable
+Laval had run up against defeat. The camp boss had
+lived for twenty years the hard life of the forests. His
+body was no less great than this man's. His experience
+in physical battle was well-nigh unlimited. But so, too,
+was his debauchery.</p>
+
+<p>Bull Sternford was younger. He was clean and fresh
+from one of the finest colleges of the world. He was an
+athlete by training and nature. Then, too, his mentality
+was of that amazing fighting quality which stirs youth
+to go out and seek the world rather than vegetate in the
+nursery of childhood. It was all there written in his
+keen, blue eyes, in the set of his jaws of even white
+teeth. It was all there in the muscular set of his great
+neck, and in the poise of his handsome head, and in the
+upright carriage of his breadth of shoulder. Even his
+walk was a thing to mark him out from his fellows. It
+was bold, perhaps even there was a suggestion of arrogance
+in it. But it was only the result of the military
+straightness of his body.</p>
+
+<p>Little wonder, then, a man of Arden Laval's brutal
+nature should mark him down as desired victim. This
+man was "green." He was educated. He possessed a
+spirit worth breaking. Later he would learn. Later he
+would become a force in the calling of the woods. Now
+he would be easy.</p>
+
+<p>The brute had sought every opportunity to bait and
+goad the man to his undoing. For months he had
+"camped on his trail," and Bull had endured. Then
+
+came that moment of the filthy epithet, and Bull's spirit
+broke through the bonds of will that held it. The insult
+had been hurled at the moment and at the spot where
+the battle had been fought. Bull had flung himself
+forthwith at the throat of the French Canadian almost
+before the last syllable of the insult had passed the man's
+lips. And the end of nearly a two hours' battle had been
+the downfall of the bully, with the name of Bull Sternford
+hailed as a fighting man in his place.</p>
+
+<p>The firebrand was passed to the waiting missionary.
+He sucked in the pleasant fumes of a lumberman's
+tobacco. Then the stick was flung back to its place in
+the fire.</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam nursed one long leg, which he flung
+across the other, while his wide, intelligent eyes gazed
+squarely into the eyes of the man opposite.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me," he said. "What brought you into the life
+of the woods? What left you quitting the things I can
+see civilisation handed you? This is the life of the
+wastrel, the fallen, the man who knows no better. It's
+not for men starting out in possession of all those things&mdash;you
+have."</p>
+
+<p>Bull sat for a moment without replying. Father
+Adam's "dope" had done its work. His passionate
+moments had vanished like an ugly dream. His turbulent
+spirit had attained peace. Suddenly he looked
+up with a frank laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, why in hell should I tell you?"</p>
+
+<p>It was an irresistible challenge. The missionary
+nodded his approval.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Why&mdash;in hell&mdash;should you?"</p>
+
+<p>He, too, laughed. And his laugh miraculously lit
+up his ascetic features.</p>
+
+<p>Instantly Bull flung out one bandaged hand in a sweeping
+gesture.</p>
+
+<p>"Why shouldn't I&mdash;anyway?" he cried, with the
+
+abandon of a man impatient of all subterfuge. "Guess
+I ought to turn right around and ask who the devil you
+are to look into my affairs? Who are you to assume
+the right of inquisitor?" He shook his head. "But
+I'm not going to. Now I'm sane again I know just
+how much you did for me. I meant killing Laval. Oh,
+yes, there wasn't a thing going to break my hold until
+he was dead&mdash;dead. You got me in time to save me
+from wrecking my whole life. And you got in at&mdash;the
+risk of your own. If I'd killed him all the things and
+purposes I've worried with since I left college would
+have been just so much junk; and I'd have drifted into
+the life of a bum lumber-jack without any sort of notion
+beyond rye whiskey, and the camp women, and a well
+swung axe. You saved me from that. You saved me
+from myself. Well, you're real welcome to ask me any
+old thing, and I'll hand you all the truth there is in me.
+I'm an 'illegitimate.' I'm one of the world's friendless. I'm
+a product of a wealthy man's licence and unscruple.
+I'm an outcast amongst the world's honest born. But
+it's no matter. I'm not on the squeal. Those who're
+responsible for my being did their best to hand me the
+things a man most needs. Mind, and body, and will.
+Further, they gave me all that education, books, and
+college can hand a feller. More than that, my father,
+who seems to have had more honesty than you'd expect,
+handed me a settlement of a hundred thousand dollars
+the day I became twenty-one. I never knew him, and
+I never knew my mother. The circumstances of my
+birth were simply told me on my twenty-first birthday.
+I know no more. And I care nothing to hunt out those
+spectres that don't figger to hand a feller much comfort.
+The rest is easy. I hope I'm a feller of some guts&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam nodded, and his eyes lit.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," was all he commented.</p>
+
+<p>"Anyway, I feel like it," Bull laughed. "When I
+
+learned all these things I started right in to think. I
+thought like hell. I said to myself something like this:
+'There's nothing to hold me where I am. There's no
+one around to care a curse. There's that feeling right
+inside the pit of my stomach makes me feel I want to
+make good. I want to build up around me all that my
+birth has refused me. A name, a life circle, a power, a&mdash;anyway,
+get right out and do things! Well, what was
+I going to do? It needed thinking. Then I hit the
+notion."</p>
+
+<p>He laughed again. He was gazing in at himself
+and laughing at the conceits he knew were real, and
+strong, and vital.</p>
+
+<p>"Say." He nodded at the prospect through the doorway.
+"There it is. This country's beginning. We
+don't know half it means to the world yet. Well, I
+hadn't enough capital to play with, so I resolved right
+away to start in and learn a trade from its first step to
+its topmost rung, and to earn my keep right through.
+Meanwhile my capital's lying invested against the time
+I open out. I'm going to jump right into the groundwood
+pulp business when the time comes. And out of
+that I mean to build a name that folks won't easily forget.
+Well, I guess you won't find much that's interesting
+in all this. It don't sound anything particularly bright
+or new. But for what it is it's my notion, and&mdash;I'm
+going to put it through. That's why I'm here. I'm
+learning my job from the bottom."</p>
+
+<p>The decision and force of the man were remarkable.
+The conciseness of his story, and his indifference to the
+tragedy of his birth, indicated a level mind under
+powerful control. And Father Adam knew he had
+made no mistake.</p>
+
+<p>"It's the best story I've heard in years," he replied,
+a whimsical smile lighting his dark eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it?"</p>
+
+
+<p>Bull's smile was no less whimsical.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. You've guts of iron, boy. And I've been
+looking years for just such a man."</p>
+
+<p>"That sounds&mdash;tough," Bull laughed, but he was
+interested. "What's the job you want him for? Are
+you yearning to hand out a killing? Is it a trip&mdash;a trip
+to some waste space of God's earth that 'ud freeze up a
+normal heart? Do you want a feller to beat the laws
+of God and man? Guts of iron! It certainly sounds
+tough, and I'm not sure you've found the feller you're
+needing."</p>
+
+<p>"I am."</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam was no longer smiling. The gravity
+of his expression gave emphasis to his words.</p>
+
+<p>Bull was impressed. His laugh died out.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know I'm yearning," he said deliberately.
+"Anyway I don't quit the track I've marked out. That
+way there's nothing doing. It's a crank with me; I
+can't quit a notion."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't have to."</p>
+
+<p>"No?"</p>
+
+<p>They were regarding each other steadily.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, it's not my way to beat around," the missionary
+exclaimed suddenly. "When you find the thing you
+need you've got to act quick and straight. Just listen
+a while, while I make a talk. Ask all you need as I go
+along. And when I've done I'd thank you for a straight
+answer and quick. An answer that'll hold you, and
+bind you the way your own notions do."</p>
+
+<p>"That's talk."</p>
+
+<p>Bull nodded appreciatively. The missionary let his
+gaze wander to the pleasant sunlight through the doorway,
+where the flies and mosquitoes were basking.</p>
+
+<p>"There was a fellow who started up a groundwood
+mill 'way out on the Labrador coast. He was bright
+enough, and a mighty rich man. And he'd got a notion&mdash;a
+
+big notion. Well, I know him. I know him intimately.
+I don't know if he's a friend to me or not.
+Sometimes I think he isn't. Anyway, that doesn't
+matter to you. The thing that does matter is, he set
+out to do something big. His notions were always big.
+Maybe too big. This notion was no less than to drive
+the Skandinavians out of the groundwood trade of this
+country. He figured his great mill was to be the nucleus
+of an all-Canadian and British combination, embracing
+the entire groundwood industry of this country. It
+was to be Canadian trade for Canada with the British
+Empire."</p>
+
+<p>Bull emitted a low whistle.</p>
+
+<p>"An elegant slogan," he commented.</p>
+
+<p>He shifted his position. In his interest his pipe had
+gone out, and he leant forward on his upturned box.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," Father Adam went on. "And, like your
+notion, it was something not easily shifted from his
+mind. It was planned and figured to the last detail. It
+was so planned it could not fail. So he thought. So
+all concerned thought. You see, he had ten million
+dollars capital of his own; and he was something of a
+genius at figures and finance&mdash;his people reckoned. He
+was a man of some purpose, and enthusiasm, and&mdash;something
+else."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!"</p>
+
+<p>Bull's alert brain was prompt to seize upon the reservation.
+But denial was instant.</p>
+
+<p>"No. It wasn't drink, or women, or any foolishness
+of that sort," the missionary said. "The whole edifice
+of his purpose came tumbling about his ears from a
+totally unexpected cause. Something happened. Something
+happened to the man himself. It was disaster&mdash;personal
+disaster. And when it came a queer sort of
+weakness tripped him, a weakness he had always
+hitherto had strength to keep under, to stifle. His
+
+courage failed him, and the bottom of his purpose fell
+out like&mdash;that."</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam clipped his fingers in the air and his
+regretful eyes conveyed the rest. Then, after a moment,
+he smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"He'd no&mdash;iron guts," he said, with a sigh. "He had
+no stomach for battle in face of this&mdash;this disaster that
+hit him."</p>
+
+<p>"It has no relation to his&mdash;undertaking?"</p>
+
+<p>"None whatever. I know the whole thing. We were
+'intimates.' I know his whole life story. It was a disaster
+to shake any man."</p>
+
+<p>The missionary sighed profoundly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I knew him intimately," he went on. "I
+deplored his weakness. I censured it. Perhaps I went
+far beyond any right of mine to condemn. I don't
+know. I argued with him. I did all I could to support
+him. You see, I appreciated the splendid notion of the
+thing he contemplated. More than that, I knew it could
+be carried out."</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"It was useless. This taint&mdash;this yellow streak&mdash;was
+part of the man. He could no more help it than you
+could help fighting to the death."</p>
+
+<p>"Queer."</p>
+
+<p>A sort of pitying contempt shone in the younger
+man's eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Queer?" Father Adam nodded. "It was&mdash;crazy."</p>
+
+<p>"It surely was."</p>
+
+<p>The missionary turned back to the prospect beyond
+the doorway. But it was only for a moment. He turned
+again and went on with added urgency.</p>
+
+<p>"But the scheme wasn't wholly to be abandoned. It
+was&mdash;say, here was the crazy proposition he put up.
+You see I was his most intimate friend. He said:
+'The forests are wide. They're peopled with men of
+
+our craft. There must be a hundred and more men
+capable of doing this thing. Of putting it through.
+Well, the forests must provide the man, or the idea
+must die.' He said: 'We must find a man!' He said:
+
+'You&mdash;you whose mission it is to roam the length
+and breadth of these forests&mdash;you may find such a man.
+If you do&mdash;when you do&mdash;if it's years hence&mdash;send
+him along here, and there's ten million dollars waiting
+for him, and all this great mill, and these timber limits
+inexhaustible waiting for him to go right ahead. It
+doesn't matter a thing who he is, or what he is, or
+where he comes from, so long as he gets this idea&mdash;sticks
+to it faithfully&mdash;and puts it through. I want nothing
+out of it for myself. And the day he succeeds in
+the great idea all that would have been mine shall be
+his.'"</p>
+
+<p>As Father Adam finished, he looked into the earnest,
+wonder-filled eyes of the other.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>Bull cleared his throat.</p>
+
+<p>"The mill? Where is it?" He demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"Sachigo. Farewell Cove."</p>
+
+<p>"Sachigo! Why it's&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The greatest groundwood mill in the world."</p>
+
+<p>There was a note of pride and triumph in the missionary's
+tone. But it passed unheeded. Bull was
+struggling with recollection.</p>
+
+<p>"This man? Wasn't it Leslie Standing who built it?
+Didn't it break him or something? That's the story
+going round. There was something&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"There's ten million dollars says it didn't. Ten
+millions you can handle yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"Gee!"</p>
+
+<p>Bull drew a sharp breath. Strong, forceful as he was
+the figure was overwhelming.</p>
+
+
+<p>"This&mdash;all this you're saying&mdash;offering? It's all real,
+true?" Bull demanded at last.</p>
+
+<p>"All of it."</p>
+
+<p>"You want me to go and take possession of Sachigo,
+and ten&mdash;Say, where's the catch?"</p>
+
+<p>"There's no 'catch'&mdash;anywhere."</p>
+
+<p>The denial was cold. It was almost in the tone of
+affronted dignity. The missionary had thrust his hand
+in a pocket. Now he produced a large, sealed envelope.
+Bull's eyes watched the movement, but bewilderment was
+still apparent in them. Suddenly he raised a bandaged
+hand, and smoothed back his hair.</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam held out the sealed letter. It was
+addressed to "Bat Harker," at Sachigo Mill.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," he said quietly. "You're the man with iron
+guts Leslie Standing wants for his purpose. Take this.
+Go right off to Sachigo and take charge of the greatest
+enterprise in the world's paper industry. You're looking
+to make good. It's your set purpose to make good
+in the groundwood industry. Opportunities don't come
+twice in a lifetime. If you've the iron courage I believe,
+you'll grab this chance. You'll grab it right away.
+Will you? Can you do it? Have you the nerve?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a taunt in the challenge. It was calculated.
+There was something else. The missionary's dark eyes
+were almost pleading.</p>
+
+<p>Bull seized the letter. He almost snatched it.</p>
+
+<p>"Will I do it? Can I do it? Have I the nerve?"
+he cried, in a tone of fierce exulting. "If there's a feller
+crazy enough to hand me ten million dollars and trust
+me with a job&mdash;if it was as big as a war between nations&mdash;I'd
+never squeal. Can I? Will I? Sure I will.
+And time'll answer the other for you. Iron guts, eh! I
+tell you in this thing they're chilled steel."</p>
+
+<p>"Good!"</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam was smiling. A great relief, a great
+
+happiness stirred his pulses as he stood up and moved
+over to the miserable fire with its burden of stewing
+food.</p>
+
+<p>"Now we'll eat," he said. And he stooped down and
+stirred the contents of the pot.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_12"></a>
+<h3>Chapter III&mdash;Bull Learns Conditions</h3>
+
+
+<p>The <em>Myra</em> ploughed her leisurely way up the cove.
+There was dignity in the steadiness with which she glided
+through the still waters. The cockleshell of the Atlantic
+billows had become a thing of pride in the shelter of
+Farewell Cove. Her predecessor, the <em>Lizzie</em>, had never
+risen above her humble station.</p>
+
+<p>Her decks were wide and clean. Her smoke-stack had
+something purposeful in its proportions. The bridge
+was set high and possessed a spacious chart house. She
+had an air of importance not usual to the humble coasting
+packet.</p>
+
+<p>"Old man" Hardy was at his post now. One of his
+officers occupied the starboard side of the bridge, while
+he and another looked out over the port bow.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a deep water channel," the skipper said, with all
+a sailor's appreciation. "That's the merricle that makes
+this place. It'ud take a ten-thousand tonner with
+fathoms to spare right away up to the mooring berth.
+Guess Nature meant Sachigo for a real port, but got
+mussed fixing the climate."</p>
+
+<p>Bull Sternford was leaning over the rail. For all
+summer was at its height the thick pea-jacket he was
+wearing was welcome enough. His keen eyes were
+searching, and no detail of the prospect escaped them.
+He was filled with something akin to amazement.</p>
+
+<p>"It compares with the big harbours of the world," he
+
+replied. "And I'd say it's not without advantages many
+of the finest of 'em lack. Those headlands we passed
+away back. Why, the Atlantic couldn't blow a storm
+big enough to more than ripple the surface here inside."
+He laughed. "What a place to fortify. Think of this
+in war time, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>The grizzled skipper grinned responsively.</p>
+
+<p>"It's all you reckon," he said. "But she needs
+humouring. You need to get this place in winter when
+ice and snow make it tough. This cove freezes right
+around its shores. You'd maybe lay off days to get
+inside, only to find yourself snow or fog bound for
+weeks on end. We make it because we have to with
+mails. But you can't run cargo bottoms in winter.
+It's a coasting master's job in snow time. It's a life
+study. You can get in, and you can get out&mdash;if you've
+nerve. If you're short that way you'll pile up sure as
+hell."</p>
+
+<p>He turned away to the chart room, and a moment
+later the engine-room telegraph chimed his orders to
+those below.</p>
+
+<p>Bull was left with his busy thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>It was a remarkable scene. The forest slopes came
+right down almost to the water's edge on either hand.
+They came down from heights that rose mountainously.
+And there, all along the foreshore were dotted timber-built
+habitations sufficient to shelter hundreds of workers.
+Their quality was staunch and picturesque, and pointed
+much of the climate rigour they were called upon to
+endure. But they only formed a background to, perhaps,
+the most wonderful sight of all. A road and
+trolley car line skirted each foreshore, and the mind behind
+the searching eyes was filled with admiration for
+the skill and enterprise that had transplanted one of
+civilisation's most advanced products here on the desperate
+coast of Labrador. Many of the forest whispers
+
+of Sachigo had been incredible. But this left the
+onlooker ready to believe anything of it.</p>
+
+<p>The mill, and the township surrounding it, were
+already within view, a wide-scattered world of buildings,
+occupying all the lower levels of the territory on both
+sides of the mouth of the Beaver River before it rose
+to the heights from which its water power fell.</p>
+
+<p>Bull was amazed. And as he gazed, his wonder and
+admiration were intensified a hundredfold by his self-interest.
+This place was to be in his control, possibly
+his possession if he made good. He thrust back the
+fur cap pressed low on his forehead.</p>
+
+<p>His thought leapt back on the instant to the man who
+had sent him down to this Sachigo. Father Adam,
+with his thin, ascetic features, his long, dark hair and
+beard, his tall, spare figure. His patient kindliness
+and sympathy, and yet with the will and force behind
+it which could fling the muzzle of a gun into a man's
+face and force obedience. He had sent him. Why?
+Because&mdash;oh, it was all absurd, unreal. And yet here he
+was on the steamer; and there ahead lay the wonders of
+Sachigo. Well, time would prove the craziness of it all.</p>
+
+<p>"Makes you wonder, eh?" The coasting skipper was
+at his side again. "You know these folks needed big
+nerve to set up this enterprise. It keeps me guessing
+at the limits where man has to quit. I've spent my life
+on this darn coast, an' never guessed to see the day
+when trolley cars 'ud run on Labrador, and the working
+folk 'ud sit around in their dandy houses, with electric
+light making things comfortable for them, and electric
+heat takin' the place of the cordwood stove it seemed
+to me folk never could do without. Can you beat it?
+No. You can't. Nor anyone else."</p>
+
+<p>"Who is it? A corporation?" Bull asked, knowing
+full well the answer. He wanted to hear, he wanted
+to learn all that this man could tell him.</p>
+
+
+<p>Hardy shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Standing," he said. "That was the guy's name who
+started it all up. But," he added thoughtfully, "I never
+rightly knew which feller it was. If it was Standing,
+or that tough hoboe feller who calls himself Bat Harker.
+They never talk a heap. But since Leslie Standing
+passed out o' things eight years back&mdash;the time I was
+first handed command of this kettle&mdash;the mill's jumped
+out of all notion. Those trolleys," he pointed at the
+foreshore of the cove: "They started in to haul the
+'hands' to their work only two years back. I'd say it's
+Bat Harker. But he looks more like a longshore tough
+than a&mdash;genius."</p>
+
+<p>He shrugged expressively. Then he shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he went on. "I don't know a thing but what
+any guy can learn who comes along up this coast. I've
+thought a heap. An', like you, I've ast questions all
+the time. But you don't learn a thing of this enterprise
+but the things you see. Bat Harker don't ever
+talk." He laughed in quiet enjoyment. "He's most
+like a clam mussed up in a cement bar'l. There don't
+seem any clear reason either. The only thing queer to
+me was Standing's 'get out.' There was talk then when
+that happened along. But it was jest talk. Canteen
+talk. Something sort of happened. No one seemed
+rightly to know. They guessed Bat was a tough guy
+who'd boosted him out&mdash;some way. Then I heard his
+wife had quit and he was all broke up. Then they said
+he'd made losses of millions on stock market gambles.
+But the yarns don't fit. You see, the mill's gone right
+ahead. The capital's there, sure. They've just built
+and built. There's more than twice the 'hands' there
+was eight years back. And get a look at the 'bottoms'
+
+loading at the wharves. No. Say, when I came aboard
+the <em>Myra</em> and they scrapped the <em>Lizzie</em>, I never guessed
+to get a full cargo. Well, I can load right down to the
+
+water line for this place alone all the time. No.
+Sachigo's a mighty big fixture in the trade of this coast.
+It's a swell proposition for us sea folk. It keeps our
+propellers moving all the time. They're bright folk,
+sure."</p>
+
+<p>The old seaman laughed and moved off again to his
+telegraphs. The business of running in to the quayside
+was beginning in earnest.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>The hawsers creaked and strained at the bollards.
+The vessel yawed. Then she settled at her berth. The
+engine-room telegraph chimed its final order, and the
+vessel's busy heart came to rest. Instantly activity
+reigned upon the deck, and the discharge of cargo was
+in full swing.</p>
+
+<p>Bull Sternford was one of the first to pass down the
+gangway. Clad in the pleasant tweeds of civilisation,
+part hidden under a close-buttoned pea-jacket, he bulked
+enormously. His more than six feet of height was lost
+against his massive breadth of shoulder. Then, too,
+his keen face under a beaver cap, and his shapely head
+with its mane of hair, were things to deny his body that
+attention it might otherwise have attracted.</p>
+
+<p>For all that, at least one pair of critical eyes lost no
+detail of his personality. Bat Harker was unobtrusively
+standing amongst the piled bales of groundwood that
+stacked the wharf from end to end. There was nothing
+about him to single him out from those who stood on
+the quay. The rough clothing of his original calling
+was very dear to him, and he clung to it tenaciously.
+He seemed to have aged not one whit in the added eight
+years. His iron-grey hair was just as thick and colourful
+as before. There was no added line in his hard
+face. His girth was no less and no more. And his
+eyes, penetrating, steady, had the same spirit shining
+in them.</p>
+
+
+<p>He had laboured something desperately in the past
+eight years. With the passing of Leslie Standing from
+the life of Sachigo he had realized a terrible loss. His
+loss had more than embarrassed him. There was even
+a moment when it shook his purpose. But with him
+Sachigo was a religion, and his faith saved him. For
+a while, in both letter and spirit, he obeyed his orders,
+and Sachigo stood still. Then his philosophy carried
+the day. It was his dictum that no one could stand
+still on Labrador without freezing to death. He saw
+the application of it to his beloved mill. It must be
+"forward" or decay. So he scrapped his original orders,
+and drove with all his force.</p>
+
+<p>Bull stared about him for the fascination of his
+journey up the cove was still on him. His pre-occupation
+left him watching the hurried, orderly movement
+going on about him.</p>
+
+<p>"That all your baggage?"</p>
+
+<p>The demand was harsh, and Bull swung round with
+a start. He was gazing down into the upturned face of
+Bat Harker, who was pointing at the suit case he was
+carrying.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess I've a trunk back there in the hold somewhere,"
+Bull replied indifferently, taking his interrogator
+for a quayside porter.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right. I'll have one of the boys tote it
+up. Best come right along. It's quite a piece up to the
+office. You've a letter for me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I've a letter for Mr. Bat Harker."</p>
+
+<p>The doubt in Bull's tone set a genuine grin in the
+other's eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure. That's me. Bat Harker. Maybe you don't
+guess I look it. Don't worry. Just pass it over."</p>
+
+<p>Bull groped in an inner pocket, surprise affording
+him some amusement. His interest in Sachigo had
+abruptly focussed itself on this man.</p>
+
+
+<p>"I'm kind of sorry," he said. "I surely took you for
+some sort of&mdash;porter."</p>
+
+<p>Bat laughed outright, and glanced down at his work-stained
+clothing.</p>
+
+<p>"Wal, that ain't new," he said. Then his eyes resumed
+their keen regard. "We don't need to wait
+around though. The skitters are mighty thick down
+here. Sachigo's gettin' a special breed I kind o' hate.
+That letter, an'&mdash;we'll get along."</p>
+
+<p>Bull drew out Father Adam's letter and waited while
+the other tore it open. Bat glanced at the contents and
+jumped to the signature. Then he thrust out a gnarled
+and powerful hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Shake," he cried. And there could be no doubting
+his good will. "Glad to have you around, Mr. Bull
+Sternford."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Bull Sternford was seated in the luxurious chair that
+had once known Leslie Standing. His pea-jacket was
+removed and his cap was gone. The room was warm,
+and the sun beyond the window was radiant. Beyond
+the desk Bat was seated, where his wandering gaze
+could drift to the one object of which it never tired.
+He was at the window which looked out upon the mill
+below.</p>
+
+<p>He was reading Father Adam's letter. Sternford was
+silently regarding his squat figure. He was waiting
+and wondering, speculating as to the hard-faced, uncultured
+creature who had built up all the amazing details
+that made up an industrial city in a territory that was
+outlawed by Nature.</p>
+
+<p>Bat thrust the letter away and looked up.</p>
+
+<p>"Father Adam didn't write that letter for you? He
+just handed it out to you to bring along?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's how," Bull nodded.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Sure." Bat's tone became reflective. "He must
+have wrote that letter years, and held it against the time
+he located you. He's queer."</p>
+
+<p>Bull laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe he is," he said, "I don't know about that.
+But he's one hell of a good man," he went on warmly.
+"Do you know him? But of course you do. Say, he's
+just father and mother to every darn lumber-jack that
+haunts the forests of Quebec, and it don't worry him if
+his children are hellhound or honest. There's that to
+him sets me just crazy. I'd like to see his thin, tired face,
+always smiling." He stirred. And the warmth died
+abruptly out of his manner. "Say, you knew me&mdash;at
+the wharf?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure. I knew you before you came along. We've
+a wireless out on the headland."</p>
+
+<p>"I see. Father Adam warned you I was coming. He
+told you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The whole darn yarn. Sure."</p>
+
+<p>Bull laughed grimly.</p>
+
+<p>"That he guessed to shoot me to small meat if I didn't
+do as he said?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you didn't cut out homicide from your notions of&mdash;sport."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. It was tough," Bull regretted. "But I'm glad&mdash;now."</p>
+
+<p>"Yep. Guess any straight sort of feller would feel
+that way&mdash;after."</p>
+
+<p>The lumberman's regret was unnoticed by the other.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Bull leant forward in his chair. A smile,
+half whimsical, half incredulous, lit his eyes. He thrust
+his elbows on the desk and supported his face in his hands.</p>
+
+<p>"It just beats hell!" he cried. "It certainly does. Oh,
+I'm awake all right. Sure, I am. One time I wasn't
+sure. Two months back I was lying around a lousy
+summer camp getting ready to take a hand in the winter
+
+cut for the Skandinavia Corporation. I was within
+two seconds of breaking a man's life&mdash;the rotten camp
+boss. And now? Why, now I'm sitting around in dandy
+tweeds in the boss chair of a swell office, with a crazy
+notion back of my head I'm here to beat the game with
+the greatest groundwood mill in the world, and ten
+million dollars capital behind me. Maybe there's folks
+wouldn't guess I'm awake, but I allow I am. But the
+whole thing sets me thinking of the fairy stories I used
+to read when I was a kid, and never could see the horse
+sense in wasting time over."</p>
+
+<p>Bat helped himself to a chew from a fragment of plug
+tobacco.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, listen," Bull went on, after the briefest pause.
+"It's my 'show down.' I don't understand a thing. I'm
+mostly a kid from college with a yearning for fight.
+So far I've learned some of the things the forest can
+teach the feller who wants to learn. They're the rough
+things. And I like rough things. I've some grip on
+groundwood. And the making of groundwood's the
+main object of my life. That, and the notion of licking
+hell out of the other feller. That's me, and those are the
+things made Father Adam send me along down to
+Sachigo. Well, it's up to you." He spread out his hands,
+"Where do I stand? How do I stand? And why in
+the name of all that's crazy am I sitting in this boss chair&mdash;right
+now?"</p>
+
+<p>Bat swung one trunk-like leg across the other. His
+movement suggested an easing of mind and a measure
+of enjoyment. He pointed at the window and nodded
+in its direction.</p>
+
+<p>"Quite a place," he said, in a tone and with a pride
+that had no relation to the other's demands. "Makes
+you feel man ain't the bum sort of inseck in the scheme
+of things some highbrows ain't happy not tellin' you.
+There's folks who guess it's Nature the proposition
+
+that matters. It's her does it all, an' keeps on doin' it
+all the time. But Nature's most like one mighty foolish,
+extravagant female. That sort o' woman who don't
+care but to please the notion of the moment. And when
+that's done, goes right on to please the next. Wal, anyway
+I guess she's got her uses if it's only to hand
+chances to the guy that's lookin' on. Take a look right
+down there below," he went on. "That's the truck the
+guy lookin' on has sweppen up in Nature's trail. It's
+taken most of fifteen years collectin' it. We've had to
+push that broom hard. And now I guess you're going
+to boost your weight behind it too. There's other things
+to collect, and that's what we want from you. You got
+nerve. You got big muscle, and education, too. Well,
+you'll handle the biggest sweeper of us all. Does it
+scare you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a thing." Bull was smiling confidently.</p>
+
+<p>Bat chuckled. His eyes were sparkling as he ruthlessly
+masticated his tobacco. This man pleased him
+mightily.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right," he said. Then he went on after a
+silent moment while he gazed thoughtfully out of the
+window. "It's right here," he exclaimed. "Here's a mill,
+a swell mill that don't lack for a thing to make it well-nigh
+perfect. I'll tell you about it. Its capacity. Its
+present limit is six thousand tons dry weight groundwood
+pulp to the week. That's runnin' full. There's a hundred
+and twenty grinders feeding a hundred and eighty
+sheetin' machines. And they're figgered to use up fifty-five
+thousand horse power of the five hundred thousand
+we got harnessed on this great little old river that
+falls off the highlands. That power is ours winter an'
+
+summer. It don't matter a shuck the 'freeze up.' It's
+there for us all the darn time. Then we've forest limits
+to hand us the cordage for that output that could give us
+three times what we're needing for a thousand years.
+
+Labour? We got it plenty. And later, by closing in
+our system of foresting, I figger to cut out present costs
+on a sight bigger output. The plans for all that are fixed
+in my head. Then we come to the market for our stuff,
+an' I guess that's the syrup in the pie. The world's
+market's waitin' on us. It's ours before we start. Why?
+Our power don't cost us one cent a unit. We're able to
+hand our folks a standard of living through the nature
+of things that leaves wages easy. The river's wide, and
+full, and it's <em>our own</em>. Then our sea passage to Europe's
+just eighteen hundred miles instead of three thousand.
+An' these things mean our costs leave us cutting right
+under other folks, and Skandinavia beat. There it is," he
+cried, with a wide gesture of his knotted hands. "It's
+pie!"</p>
+
+<p>Something of the lumberman's enthusiasm found reflection
+in Sternford's eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"But Nature's handed us a lemon in the basket of
+oranges," Bat went on, with a shake of his head. "It's
+that woman in her again. Y'see, she gives us just four
+months in the year to get our stuff out. Oh, she don't
+freeze the cove right up. No. That's the tough of it.
+The channel's mostly open. But storm, and fog, and ice,
+beats the ocean-going skipper's power to navigate it
+with any sort o' safety. The headlands are desperate
+narrow, and&mdash;well, there it is. We've four months in the
+year to get our stuff out. It's a sum. Figger it yourself.
+Set us goin' full. Six thousand tons in the week. What
+is it? Three hundred thousand in the year. How
+many trips at ten thousand tons? Or put the average
+tonnage lower. Say eight thousand. Forty trips. Four
+months. A vessel making two trips on an average turn
+round. We need a fleet of twenty 'bottoms,' to do it
+in the time. And they'll need to be our own. You can't
+help yourself to the world's market, and fix prices, and
+all the while fight for shipping in the open market. See?"</p>
+
+
+<p>"Sure&mdash;I see."</p>
+
+<p>Bat nodded approval.</p>
+
+<p>"When we get that the rest can go through. Meanwhile
+there's sixty grinders idle, which leaves us workin'
+half capacity. As it stands it's a dandy enterprise.
+We're making a swell balance sheet. But profit ain't the
+whole purpose. There's the rest."</p>
+
+<p>The super lumber-jack turned again to the window
+with that fascination that was almost pathetic.</p>
+
+<p>"And the rest?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull Sternford urged the other sharply, and Bat turned
+at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Canada's groundwood for the Canadian, inside the
+Empire," he shot at him.</p>
+
+<p>The other nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"The world's market for the country that can and
+should supply it," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"The smashing of the darn Skandinavian ring," cried
+Bat, his deep-set eyes alight.</p>
+
+<p>"And drive them&mdash;back over the sea."</p>
+
+<p>Bat suddenly leant across the table.</p>
+
+<p>"That's it, boy," he cried. "That's it! Hellbeam
+and all his gang. The Skandinavia Corporation. Smash
+
+'em! Drive 'em to Hell! It ain't profit. It's the trade.
+The A'mighty made Canada an' built the Canadian. He
+set him right here to help himself to the things He gave
+him. It's being filched by these foreigners&mdash;his birthright.
+They're fat on it. Did we fight the world war
+for that? Not by a darn sight. We fought to hold a
+place on the map for ourselves. And that's a proposition
+we've all got to get our back teeth into."</p>
+
+<p>"It sure is."</p>
+
+<p>The mill manager sat back in his chair and chewed
+vigorously.</p>
+
+<p>"That's it," he said. "How?" he went on. "Combination.
+Finance&mdash;and the interest of the little, great
+
+old country across the water. It's all planned and laid
+out by the feller that started up this proposition. It's
+scheduled for you. Guess you'll find the last word of
+it writ out in the locked book in this desk. It's clear
+and straight for the feller with the nerve. That's you.
+Wal?"</p>
+
+<p>Bat was watching&mdash;searching. He was looking for
+that flicker of an eyelid he had learned to dread in the
+past. But he failed to discover it. The wide, clear eyes
+of the younger man returned his regard unwaveringly.
+The uncultured lumberman had stirred a responsive enthusiasm,
+and somehow the project no longer seemed the
+crazy thing it had once appeared to Bull Sternford.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess my back teeth have got it," he said, with a
+smile. "You needn't worry I'll let go."</p>
+
+<p>Bat drew a deep breath. He stood up and spat his
+mangled chew into the cuspidore.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm glad. I'm real glad," he cried. "I'm a heap
+more glad you told me those words without askin' the
+other things you need to know. But you got to know
+'em right away. Say, the day that fixes up the things
+we been talkin' sees you with me and another masters of
+this mill an' all it means. And while you're playin'
+
+your hand there's one big fat salary for you to draw.
+This house and office is yours, an' me an' the mill's ready
+to do all we know all the time, just the way you need it.
+Down in Abercrombie there's the attorney, Charles
+Nisson, who's got the outfit of papers that you're goin'
+to sign. And when you seen him, why you'll get busy.
+Shake, boy," he cried, thrusting out one knotted hand.
+"Father Adam sent you, and I don't guess he's made any
+mistake."</p>
+
+<p>Bull had risen, and his height left him towering over
+the man across the table.</p>
+
+<p>"Now for the mill," he cried, as their hands fell apart.
+"The <em>Myra</em> sails sundown to-morrow and I need to get a
+
+swift look around before then. Say, you folk have kind
+of taken me on a chance&mdash;well, that's all right. I'm
+glad."</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_13"></a>
+
+<h3>Chapter IV&mdash;Drawing The Net</h3>
+
+
+<p>Nathaniel Hellbeam was contemplating the spiral of
+smoke rising from his long cigar. He was dreaming
+pleasantly. He was dreaming of those successful manipulations
+of finance it was his purpose to achieve. He had
+lunched, so his dream was of the things which most appealed.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of his reflections the drub of the muffled
+telephone beat its insistent tattoo. His dream vanished,
+and his senses became alert. He leant forward in his
+chair and picked up the receiver.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said shortly. And it sounded more like the
+Teutonic, "Ja!"</p>
+
+<p>Putting up the receiver again he leant his clumsy
+body back in his chair. His small eyes no longer contained
+their dreaming light. They were turned expectantly
+upon the polished mahogany door.</p>
+
+<p>The door swung silently open.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Idepski!" The announcement was made in a
+carefully modulated tone.</p>
+
+<p>The agent passed into the great man's presence, slim,
+dark, confident. Then the door closed without a sound.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?"</p>
+
+<p>There was no cordiality in the greeting. That was
+not Hellbeam's way with a paid agent.</p>
+
+<p>Idepski walked across to the chair always waiting to
+receive a visitor and sat down.</p>
+
+<p>"May I sit?" he inquired coolly, after the operation
+had been performed.</p>
+
+
+<p>Hellbeam nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" he repeated.</p>
+
+<p>The agent laid his hat on the ornate desk, and removed
+his gloves with care and deliberation.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm just back from Sachigo," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Hah!"</p>
+
+<p>The financier settled himself more comfortably in his
+chair, and returned his cigar to his gross mouth.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me," he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"Easy. Things are moving our way."</p>
+
+<p>The dark eyes glanced over the table for the gold
+cigarette box that always stood there.</p>
+
+<p>"Help yourself," the banker ordered rather than invited.</p>
+
+<p>Idepski needed no second bidding.</p>
+
+<p>"You got all my code messages?" he asked. "Good,"
+as the Swede nodded. "Then you know the position
+of the mill. Say, that feller Harker needs a sort of
+apology from me&mdash;also from you. The mill's a wonder.
+And he's the guy that's fixed it that way. You haven't
+a thing in Skandinavia comparable. I'd say you haven't
+a feller on your side capable of touching the fringe of
+that tough's genius for organisation. It's him. Not
+Martin&mdash;I mean Standing."</p>
+
+<p>"And Standing?"</p>
+
+<p>But Idepski was not to be deflected from his purpose.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right," he said easily. "I'm coming to
+him presently. I gave you, at times, the whole length
+and breadth, and size, and capacity of the Sachigo of to-day.
+You got all that stuff. But I've saved up the plum.
+There's a new man come into it. His name's Sternford&mdash;Bull
+Sternford. Guess it's him I need to tell you about
+before I pass on to the other. It's taken me a while to
+locate all I needed. And I guess I had luck or I wouldn't
+have got it all yet."</p>
+
+<p>For once the man's smile reached his eyes.</p>
+
+
+<p>"What's his position&mdash;in Sachigo?" Hellbeam demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"Right on top of the business side of it."</p>
+
+<p>"A financial man?"</p>
+
+<p>The banker's interest was obviously stirred. But
+Idepski shook his dark head.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the queer of it," he said. "He's a youngster
+straight out of the forest with no sort of record except
+as a pretty tough fighting proposition. Here, let me
+hand it to you in my own way, and I'll answer any sort of
+question after. I got men chasing up the forest camps.
+You know that. Well, I get their reports right here in
+this city at my office. They're read carefully, and anything
+that looks good is coded, and sent on to me
+wherever I am. Well, right after I located this feller,
+Sternford, coming into Sachigo, I got word of some stuff
+reported from one of your own camps way out north-west
+of Lake St. Anac. Guess it's about the farthest
+north in that direction, and it's cut off from any other
+camp by a hundred miles. On the face of it the stuff
+didn't seem to need more than a single thought. It was
+to say my man was quitting the camp. He'd sifted it
+right through, but there wasn't a 'jack' in the camp with
+any sort of story worth wasting paper on. There wasn't
+a trace of our man that way, and he proposed drawing
+another cover. At the end of his report was one of those
+notes these boys never seem able to resist mixing up with
+their official work. It told me of one of those scraps
+that happened in the camps, and he seemed mighty struck
+by it. It was between the camp boss, Arden Laval, and a
+kid called Sternford. Say, when I read that name I
+jumped. I felt like handing my feller promotion right
+away. Well, his story was good anyway. It seems this
+camp boss is about the biggest bluff in the scrap way
+known to that country. The kid licked him. They
+fought nearly two hours, 'rough and tough.' And the
+
+kid would have killed his man, but for the interference of
+a missionary feller called Father Adam. He broke 'em
+loose with a gun, and when he got 'em loose he took the
+kid right away so he shouldn't hand out the homicide he
+reckoned to. This report was more than two months old
+when I got it. Anyway I got it after a feller called Bull
+Sternford, a queer name by the way, had jumped in on
+the Sachigo proposition."</p>
+
+<p>The agent flung away his cigarette and helped himself
+afresh.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," he went on, smiling, "I guess it didn't take
+me thinking five seconds. I set the wires humming
+asking a description of this fighting kid. I got it. It
+was my man. The feller at Sachigo. Well?"</p>
+
+<p>Idepski's smiling interrogation was full of satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>"Go on." The watchful eyes of the financier seemed
+to have narrowed.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, by what chance does this feller, Bull Sternford,
+come straight from one hell of a scrap in a far-off
+camp belonging to Skandinavia to run the business end
+of Sachigo? What happened after that fool missionary
+got him away? And&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Idepski broke off, pondering. He flicked his cigarette
+ash without regard for the carpet.</p>
+
+<p>Hellbeam stirred in his chair impatiently. His lips
+seemed to become more prominent. His small eyes
+seemed to become smaller.</p>
+
+<p>"You ask that, yes? You?" he snorted. "A child
+may answer that thing. You think? Oh, yes, you
+think." The hand supporting his cigar made a gesture
+that implied everything disparaging. "Our man&mdash;this
+Martin&mdash;has gone out of Sachigo because&mdash;of you? I
+tell you, no! Does a man give up the money, the big
+plan he makes, at the sight of an&mdash;agent? He took
+you in his hand and sent you to the swine life of the
+forest where he could have crushed you like that." He
+
+gripped the empty air. "Then he goes&mdash;where? You
+say he fears and quits. What does he fear? You?"
+The man shook his head till his cheeks were shaken by
+the violence of his movement. "He goes somewhere.
+But he does not quit. That is clear. Oh, yes. The mill
+goes on. It grows and prospers. The man Harker remains.
+Where comes the money for Sachigo to grow?
+Trade? Yes, some. But not all. I know these things.
+The mill goes on&mdash;the same as with Martin there. So
+Martin does not quit. He&mdash;just goes. Then who sets
+this Bull Sternford in the mill? Why? He says, 'This
+man can do the things I need.' Well? Say quick to
+your man, 'Do not leave this camp of Skandinavia.' Martin
+is there, or near by. He must know this Father
+Adam, too. He must be in touch with him. Maybe he
+watches the Skandinavia work. Maybe he plays his
+game so. Maybe he goes from Sachigo for that reason.
+Yes?"</p>
+
+<p>The financier's undisguised contempt left the agent
+apparently undisturbed.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the simple horse sense of it," Idepski retorted
+promptly. "I get all that. But you're wrong when
+you say, Martin's playing any other game than lying low
+because of one hell of a scare. I know him. You think
+you know him because you can't get away from judging
+a man from your end. However, that don't matter
+a shuck. I've told that man of mine to stop around.
+Don't worry. I told him that right away. I told him
+to watch this missionary." He shook his head. "Nothing
+doing. The missionary has quit. As I said, I'm
+right back from Sachigo. I didn't come back just to
+hand you this stuff. I'm on my way up to this camp
+of yours. We've been hunting this guy eight years&mdash;blind.
+Now there's a streak of daylight. I'm going for
+that streak myself. Anyway, it's liable to be pleasanter
+work than lumbering in the booms at Sachigo, and wondering
+
+when that feller Bat Harker, was going to locate
+me through a lumber-jack's outfit. And while I'm up
+there I mean to learn all I can of this Father Adam. I
+don't look for much that way. He's just a missioner
+that every feller in the forest's got a good word for, and
+anyway, it don't seem to me the feller who jumped in
+on you, and touched your bank roll is the sort to pass
+his time handlin' out tracts to the bums of the forest. I
+came in on my way to pass you these things. I go north
+again to-night. I'll be away quite a while, and, shut off
+up there, you'll not be likely to get word easy. But
+you'll hear things when I've got anything to hand you."</p>
+
+<p>A sardonic light crept into Hellbeam's eyes as he
+listened to the final assurance.</p>
+
+<p>"So," he ejaculated with a nod.</p>
+
+<p>The agent rose to go.</p>
+
+<p>"Meanwhile," he said, leaning over the desk, "it
+might be well for you to get a grip on the fact that
+Sachigo's going right on. It's the greatest groundwood
+proposition in the world. I know enough of Harker to
+realise his capacity to make it do just what he needs.
+And as for that other&mdash;this Sternford kid&mdash;why, I gather
+he's a pretty live wire that's set there for a reason. The
+slogan up there's much what it was, only the words are
+changed."</p>
+
+<p>Hellbeam sucked his cigar and removed it from his
+lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Changed? How?" he demanded, without suspicion.</p>
+
+<p>"It was 'Canadian trade for the Canadians,'" Idepski
+said, his dark eyes snapping maliciously. "It's more
+personal since the fighting kid came along. It reminds
+me of the German slogans of the war. It's 'To hell with
+the Swedes, we'll drive 'em <em>into</em> the sea.'"</p>
+
+<p>The financier nodded. His armour was impenetrable.</p>
+
+<p>"The Germans said much," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right, these folks aren't Germans," came
+
+the prompt retort, as Idepski picked up his hat and
+gloves.</p>
+
+<p>"No." Hellbeam remained seated. It was not his
+way to speed a departing visitor. "I'm glad. Oh, yes."
+He smiled into the other's face, and his meaning was
+obvious. "You go to this camp. You find this missionary.
+That's work for you. The other&mdash;" his
+eyes dropped to the papers on the desk before him&mdash;"this
+mill, this Sachigo is for me. It is much nearer
+to the sea than the Skandinavia. Oh, yes."</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_14"></a>
+<h3>Chapter V&mdash;The Progress Of Nancy</h3>
+
+
+<p>The girl reached out a hand in response to the ring of
+the telephone. It was slim and white; and her finger
+nails displayed that care which suggests a healthy regard
+for the niceties of a woman's life.</p>
+
+<p>"Hullo! Yes?"</p>
+
+<p>She remained silently intent upon the rapidly spoken
+message coming down to her over the wire. Her deep,
+hazel eyes were soberly regarding the blotting pad,
+upon which an idle pencil was describing a number of
+meaningless diagrams.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she replied, after a while. "Oh, yes. All
+reports are in. I've gone through them all, and my
+summary is being prepared now. They're a pretty bad
+story. Yes. What's that? How? Oh, yes. Some
+of the camps are in pretty bad shape, I'd say. Output's
+fallen badly. Output! Yes. All sorts of reasons and&mdash;" she
+laughed, "&mdash;to me, none quite satisfactory. I
+think I've my finger on the real trouble, and fancy I've
+seen all this coming quite a while back. Very well. I'll
+be right up. Yes, I'll bring my rough notes if the summary
+isn't ready."</p>
+
+
+<p>Nancy McDonald thrust the receiver back in its place
+and sat for a moment gazing at it. She knew she had
+committed herself. She had intended to. She knew
+that she had reached one of the important milestones
+in her career. In her youth, in the springtime energy
+abounding in her, she meant to pit her opinion against
+the considered policy of those who formed the management
+of the great Skandinavia Corporation she served.
+She understood her temerity. A surge of nervous anticipation
+thrilled her. But she was resolved. Her
+ambition was great, and her youthful courage was no
+less.</p>
+
+<p>The brazen clack of typewriters beyond the glass
+partitions of her little private office left her unaffected.
+It was incessant. She would have missed it had it not
+been there. She would have lost that sense of rush
+which the tuneless chorus of modern commercialism
+inspired. And, to a woman of her temperament, that
+would have been a very real loss.</p>
+
+<p>The great offices of the Skandinavia Corporation, in
+the heart of the city of Quebec, with their machine-like
+precision of life, their soulless method, their passionless
+progress towards the purpose of their organisation,
+meant the open road towards the fulfilment of her desires
+for independence and achievement.</p>
+
+<p>All the promise of her earlier youth had been abundantly
+fulfilled. Tall, gracious of figure, her beauty had
+a charm and dignity which owed almost as much to
+mentality as it did to physical form. Yet, for all she
+had already passed her twenty-fourth birthday, she was
+amazingly innocent of those things which are counted
+as the governing factors of a woman's life. Certainly
+she knew and loved the Titian hue of her wealth of hair;
+her mirror was constantly telling her of the hazel depths
+of her wide, intelligent eyes, with their fringes of dark,
+curling, Celtic lashes. Then the almost classic moulding
+
+of her features. She could not escape realising these
+things. But they meant no more to her than the fact
+that her nose was not awry, and her lips were not misshapen,
+and her even, white teeth were perfectly
+competent for their proper function.</p>
+
+<p>She was a happy blending of soul and mentality.
+Heredity seemed to have done its best for her. The
+Gaelic fire and the brilliance and irresponsibility of her
+misguided father seemed to have been balanced and
+tempered by the gentle woman soul of her mother. And
+through the eyes of both she gazed out upon the world,
+inspired and supported by a tireless nervous energy.</p>
+
+<p>Since the memorable day of her interview with her
+appointed trustee, Charles Nisson, her development had
+been rapid. The events which had suddenly been flung
+into her life at the interview seemed to have unloosed a
+hundred latent, unguessed emotions in her child heart,
+and translated her at once into a thinking, high-spirited
+woman.</p>
+
+<p>She honestly strove to banish bitterness against the
+man who had deprived her of that mother love which
+had been her childhood's treasure, but always a shadow
+of it remained to colour her thought, and influence her
+impulse. She had studied the deed of settlement as
+she had promised. She had studied it coldly, dispassionately.
+She had looked upon it as a mere document aimed
+to benefit her, without regard for her feelings for the
+man who had made it. She had thought over it at night
+when passion was less to be controlled. She had consulted
+those she had been bidden to consult, and had
+listened to, and had weighed their kindly advice. And
+when all was done she took her own decision as she was
+bound to do. It was a decision that had no relation to
+reason, only to passionate impulse.</p>
+
+<p>She would not accept the things the deed offered her.
+She would not accept this reparation so coldly held out.
+
+She would not live a leisured, vegetable life, with no
+greater ambition than to marry and bear children. The
+simple prospect of marriage and motherhood could never
+satisfy in itself. That would be a happy incident, but
+not the whole, and acceptance of that deed would surely
+have robbed her of the rest.</p>
+
+<p>There were times when she felt the disabilities of her
+sex. She knew she was deprived of the physical strength
+which the battle of life seemed to demand. But to her
+the world was wide, and big, and, in her girl's imagination,
+teeming with appealing adventure. The world
+alone could not satisfy her.</p>
+
+<p>Once her decision was taken all the kindly efforts of
+her mentors at Marypoint were rallied in her support.
+They had advised out of their wisdom, but acted from
+their hearts. And the day on which the principal of
+the college notified her that the Skandinavia Corporation
+of Quebec had signified its willingness to absorb her
+into its service as typist and stenographer, at one hundred
+dollars per month, was the happiest she had known
+since her well-loved mother had been taken out of her
+life.</p>
+
+<p>Now, after three years of unwearying effort, there
+was still no shadow to mar her happiness, or temper
+her enthusiasm. On the contrary, there was much to
+stimulate both. In that brief period she had succeeded
+almost beyond her dreams. Was she not already the
+trusted, confidential secretary to the ruling power in
+the great offices of the Skandinavia Corporation? Had
+she not been taken out of the ranks of the many capable
+stenographers, and been given a private office, a doubled
+salary, and work to do which left her wide scope for
+the play of those gifts with which she was so liberally
+endowed? Yes. All these things had been showered
+upon her in three years. She was a figure of authority
+in the great establishment. And furthermore, the man
+
+she served&mdash;this man, Elas Peterman&mdash;had hinted, and
+even definitely talked of, further rapid promotion.</p>
+
+<p>She had worked hard for it all. Oh, yes. She had
+worked morning, noon, and night. When other girls
+had been content to study fashions and styles, and
+chatter "beaus" and husbands, she had given herself
+up to the study of the wood-pulp trade, and the world's
+market of the material she was interested in. She had
+saturated herself with the whole scheme, and purpose,
+and methods of her employers, till, as Peterman himself
+had once told her in admiration at her grasp of the business,
+she knew as much of the trade as he did himself.
+And even after that her mirror, that oracle of a
+woman's life, failed to yield her the real truth it is always
+ready to tell to its devotees.</p>
+
+<p>The pre-occupation suddenly passed out of the girl's
+eyes. She stirred. Then she stood up and collected a
+number of papers into a small leather attaché case. A
+moment later she pressed the bell push on the desk.</p>
+
+<p>Her summons was promptly answered by a slim
+figured girl, with fair hair, and "jumpered" in the latest
+style.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be away a while. See to the 'phone, Miss
+Webster," Nancy said, in a tone of quiet but definite
+authority. "I shall be with Mr. Peterman. Don't ring
+me unless it's something important. That summary.
+Is it ready?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's being checked right now."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, speed them up. You can send it up directly
+it's through. Mr. Peterman is needing it."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy passed out of the room. Her discipline was
+strict. Sometimes it approached severity. But she
+understood its necessity for obtaining results. Her
+orders would be carried out.</p>
+
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Elas Peterman set the 'phone back in its place. His
+dark eyes were smiling. They were shining, too, in a
+curious, not altogether wholesome fashion. He had
+just finished talking to Nancy McDonald, and he was
+thinking of the vision of red hair, of the serious hazel
+eyes gazing out of their setting of fair, almost transparent
+complexion.</p>
+
+<p>He took up his pen to continue the letter he had been
+writing. But he added no word. The girl he had been
+speaking with still occupied his thoughts to the exclusion
+of all else.</p>
+
+<p>He was a good-looking man, clean cut and youthful.
+His profile was finely chiselled. But his Teutonic origin
+was clearly marked. It was in the straight square back
+of his head. It was in the prominent, heavily, rounded
+chin, and the squareness of his lower jaw. Furthermore,
+the high, mathematical forehead was quite unmistakable.
+There was power, force, in the personality of the man.
+But there was something else. It lay in his mouth, in
+his eyes. The former was gross, and definite sensuality
+looked out of the latter.</p>
+
+<p>As the door opened to admit Nancy his pen promptly
+descended on his paper. But he did not write. He
+looked up with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Come right in, my dear," he said cordially, with the
+patronising familiarity of a man conscious of his power.
+"Just sit right down while I finish this letter." Then he
+added gratuitously, "It's a rude letter to a feller I've no
+use for; and I don't guess to rob myself of the pleasure
+of passing it plenty to him&mdash;in my own handwriting."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy smiled as she took the chair beside the desk
+which was usually assigned to her in her intercourse
+with her chief.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish I felt that way writing a bad letter," she said.
+"But I don't. It just makes me madder with folks, and
+I go right on thinking things, and&mdash;and&mdash;it worries."</p>
+
+<p>Elas Peterman shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess you'll get over that, my dear," he said easily.
+"Sure you will. You're just a dandy-minded kid,
+learning the things of life. You feel good most all the
+time. That's how it is. You want to laff and see
+things happy all around you. Later you'll get so you
+see the other feller mostly thinks of himself, and don't
+care a hoot for the folks sitting around. Then you'll
+feel different; and you'll tell folks you don't like the
+things you feel about them."</p>
+
+<p>He went on writing, smiling at his own cynicism.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy leant back in her chair. His words left her
+unaffected. She was used to him. But, for a moment,
+she contemplated the dark head, supported on his hand,
+without any warmth of regard.</p>
+
+<p>After awhile she glanced away, her gaze wandering
+over the luxurious furnishings of the room. And it
+occurred to her to wonder how much, if any, of the
+excellent taste of the decorations owed inception to the
+man at the desk. No. Not much. The cheque-book
+and the decorator's artist must have been responsible.
+This grossly Teutonic creature with his cynical, commercial
+mind, was something of an anachronism, and
+could never have inspired the perfect harmony of the
+palatial offices of his Corporation. It was rather a pity.
+He had been exceedingly good to her. She would have
+liked to think that he was the genius of the whole structure
+of the Skandinavia, even to the decorations of the
+office. But it was impossible.</p>
+
+<p>The man blotted and folded his letter. He enclosed
+and sealed it. He even addressed it himself.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm kind of sorry I had to break in on you while
+you were fixing those reports," he said, in his friendliest
+fashion. "But, you see, I'm just through with the
+Board, and we took a bunch of decisions that need
+handling right away. Tell me," he went on, an ironical
+
+light creeping into his smiling eyes, "you reckon you've
+set your finger on the real trouble with our dropping
+output. I want to know about it because the Board
+and I can't be sure we've located it right."</p>
+
+<p>The sarcasm hurt. It was not intended to. Elas
+Peterman had no desire in the world to hurt this girl.
+A cleverer man would have avoided it. But this man
+had no refinement of thought or feeling. Cynicism and
+sarcasm were his substitutes for a humour he did not
+possess.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy's cheeks flushed hotly. But she stifled her
+feelings. She was confident of herself, and despite the
+manner of the challenge, she knew the moment of her
+great opportunity had come.</p>
+
+<p>With a quick movement she crossed her knees and
+leant forward. She smiled in response.</p>
+
+<p>"Yet, it's easy," she said boldly, with bland retaliation.
+"The reports are not good. And the trouble stands out
+clear as daylight. I guess a big scale contour map is
+the key to it. We've 'hand-weeded' the Shagaunty
+Valley. It's picked bare to the bone. The folks have
+cleared the forests right away to the higher slopes of
+the river. We're moving farther and farther away from
+the river highway. Well, that's all right in its way.
+Ordinarily that would just mean our light railways are
+extending farther, and a few cents more are added to
+our transport costs. Owing to our concentration of
+organisation that wouldn't signify. No. It's Nature,
+it's the forest itself turning us down. And the map, and
+the reports show that. The camps are right out on the
+plateau surrounding the valley, which is unprotected
+from winter storms. The close, luxurious growth of
+the valley we have been accustomed to is gone. The
+standing cordage of lumber is no less, only in bulk,
+girth. The trees are mostly less than half the girth.
+The result? Why, they have to work farther out. Each
+
+camp cuts over four times the area. Instead of a proportion
+of, say, two trees in five, it's about one in, say,
+ten. It looks like a simple sum. I should say we've
+lumbered that valley at least one season too long."</p>
+
+<p>The man's smile had passed. There was no longer
+derision in his keen eyes. He had invited this girl's
+talk for the sake of hearing it. Now he was caught in
+admiration of her clear perception.</p>
+
+<p>"Do the reports bear out those facts?"</p>
+
+<p>His question was sharp, and Nancy realised she had
+done well.</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"No. They do just the thing you'd expect them to
+do," she said. "They make every sort of excuse that
+couldn't possibly account for the drop. And avoid the
+real cause which their writers are perfectly aware of."
+She shrugged her pretty shoulders. "You wouldn't
+expect it otherwise. You want to remember those reports
+are written by bosses who're more interested in
+their own comfort than in the affairs of the Skandinavia."</p>
+
+<p>"How?"</p>
+
+<p>Again the girl's expressive shrug.</p>
+
+<p>"To quit the Shagaunty and break new ground means
+the break up of those amenities and comforts they've
+accumulated in years. It means work, real hard work,
+and discomfort for at least two seasons. You see, we
+need to get into the skin of these folk. They can keep
+the booms full from these forests, and the kick only
+comes when the grinders get to work. Output falls
+automatically with the girth of the lumber sent down.
+It's a close calculation; but on the year it means a lot.
+I learned that from Mr. Osbert, at the mills on the
+Shagaunty. Well, so long as the booms are kept full,
+the camp bosses are satisfied. There's a limit below
+which the girth of logs may not go. They watch that
+limit, and are careful not to go below it. Well, our big
+
+output has been made up always, not by the minimum
+logs, but the maximum to which we have been hitherto
+accustomed. These boys know all about that; but they're
+satisfied with such bulk as doesn't fall below the minimum.
+And when asked, suggest fire, storm and sickness,
+anything rather than the real cause which drops our
+output. They'll not willingly face the discomfort and
+added work of opening a new territory. There's just
+one decision needed."</p>
+
+<p>"What's that?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl laughed. It was a low, pleasant, happy laugh.
+She felt glad. Her chief was serious. He was in deadly
+earnest, and it represented her revenge for his sarcasm.</p>
+
+<p>"We've five other rivers running down to the lake.
+The Shagaunty isn't even the largest. Well, these boys
+will have to be shaken out of their dream. We ought to
+quit the Shagaunty right away and make a break for
+fresh 'limits.' It's simple."</p>
+
+<p>The man had no responsive smile. He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"That's what it isn't, my dear," he said.</p>
+
+<p>For the time the girl's beauty, her personality were
+quite forgotten. Peterman was absorbed.</p>
+
+<p>"It means the complete dislocation of our forest
+organisation," he went on. "Here, I'll tell you something.
+We've done a very great thing in the past. And
+it's been easy. Years ago we decided by concentration
+of all our forest work on a limited area we could cut
+costs to the lowest. That way we could jump in on the
+market cheaper than all the rest. Our forest limits were
+the finest in Canada. We had standing stuff practically
+inexhaustible, and of a size almost unheard of. What
+was the result? Why, one by one we've absorbed competitors
+at our own price till the Skandinavia stands
+head and shoulders above the world's groundwood
+industry. That's all right. That's fine," he went on,
+after a pause. "But like most easy trails, you're liable
+
+to keep on 'em longer than is good for you. We haven't
+had to worry a thing up to now. You see, we'd stifled
+competition, and we'd paid a steady thirty per cent
+dividend. Which left our Board in an unholy state of
+dope. I've tried to wake 'em. Oh, yes. I tried when
+that guy started up his outfit on Labrador. The Sachigo
+outfit. Then he seemed to fade away, and I couldn't
+rouse 'em again." He shook his head&mdash;"Nothing doing.
+Well, for something like fifteen years those guys of
+Sachigo have been doing and working; and now, to-day,
+they've jumped into the market with both feet. I
+haven't the full measure of things yet. But the play's
+a big thing. They're out for the game we've been playing.
+Say, they're combining every old mill we've left
+over. All the derelicts and moth-bounds. Their hands
+are out grabbing all over the country. Well, that
+wouldn't scare me worth a cent, only they've never let up
+in fifteen years, and there's talk about big British finance
+getting behind 'em."</p>
+
+<p>The man broke off. His serious eyes remained steadily
+regarding the girl's interested face.</p>
+
+<p>"You reckon this change is easy," he went on again.
+"I guess it would be easy if these folk hadn't jumped
+into the market. That makes all the difference. While
+we're changing they're busy. Their stuff's coming down
+in thousands of tons. And it's <em>better</em> groundwood than
+ours. If we change over we're going to leave the market
+short and these folk will get big contracts. You're right.
+We've been working the Shagaunty too long. But it's
+been by three or four seasons. Not one. The time's
+coming, if it hasn't already come, when we've got to
+fight these folks and smash 'em; or get right out of
+business."</p>
+
+<p>Something of the girl's joy had passed in face of the
+man's statement.</p>
+
+<p>"There's been talk of these Sachigo folk in the trade,"
+
+she said thoughtfully, "but I didn't know it was as big
+as you say. Of course&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure you didn't. You haven't had to handle our
+stuff on the market." The man laughed. And something
+of his seriousness passed. "But you're a bright
+kid. And the Skandinavia's looking for bright kids
+all the time. It needs 'em to counter a doped Board. It's
+taken you five minutes to locate a trouble the Board's
+taken years to realise. And you've been talking one of
+the bunch of decisions we've taken. I mean quitting
+the Shagaunty. We didn't have your argument, but we
+had the 'drop.' So the decision was taken. We've got
+to move like hell. Sachigo has our measure, and it's
+going to be a big fight. How'd you fancy a trip up
+country? I mean up the Shagaunty?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a change in the man's voice and manner as
+he put his demand. He was leaning forward in his
+chair. A hot light had suddenly leapt into his eyes,
+which left them shining unwholesomely. Nancy was
+startled at his words. And his attitude shocked her not
+a little out of her self-satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know&mdash;. How do you mean?" she demanded
+awkwardly.</p>
+
+<p>The man realised her astonishment and laughed.
+Then he reached out, and his hand patted the rounded
+shoulder nearest him. It was a touch that lingered
+unnecessarily, and the girl stirred restlessly under it.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, it's the chance of a life&mdash;for you," he said
+boisterously. "You'll go right up through the camps.
+You'll take your notions with you and investigate. I'll
+hand you a written commission, and the folk'll lay their
+
+'hands' down for you to see. When you've seen it all
+you'll get right back here, and I'll set you before the
+Board to tell your story. I don't need to tell a bright
+girl like you what that means to you. You'll get one
+dandy summer trip, and I'll lose one dandy secretary.
+
+But I'm not kicking. No. You see, Nancy, I'm out to
+help you all you need. Well?"</p>
+
+<p>It was crude, clumsy. It was all so blatantly vulgar.
+It was not the thing he said. It was the manner of it
+and all that which was lying unspoken behind.</p>
+
+<p>For the first time Nancy experienced a curious uncertainty
+in dealing with him. But here was real
+opportunity. She had dreamed of such. And she must
+take it. The touch of the man's hand upon her shoulder
+had disturbed her. But she smiled her gratitude at him.</p>
+
+<p>"It's too good," she exclaimed, with apparent impulse.
+"It's just too good of you. Will I go? Why, yes.
+Surely. And I'll make good for you. I believe it's the
+best thing. Someone to go who'll bring back a dead
+right story. I'd be real glad."</p>
+
+<p>"That's bully!" The man beamed as he leant back
+in his chair more than satisfied with himself. "But I
+don't fancy losing my dandy secretary," he went on.
+"No, sir. I'm going to hate this summer bad. I surely
+am. Still, there's next winter. Winter's not too bad
+with us. And a feller needs consolation in winter.
+There's theatres, and ice parties, and dances, and things.
+And I guess when the Board's fixed a big jump up for
+you, you'll feel like getting around some. Well, I'm
+mostly vacant. A feller can't live all the time at home
+with his wife and kids. I guess I could show you Quebec
+at night better than most&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The telephone saved Nancy the rest of the man's
+rendering of his account and she breathed deeply her
+relief. But the interruption was by no means welcome
+to the man. And his irritation was promptly displayed
+by the vindictive "Well?" he flung at the unyielding
+receiver.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! What's that? Who? Hellbeam? Oh. Sure.
+Yes. Send him right up. Don't keep him waiting.
+Right up now. Yes."</p>
+
+
+<p>He thrust up the instrument and sat back in his chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Curse the man!"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy had risen from her chair at the mention of
+Hellbeam's name. She was glad enough of the excuse.
+She understood Hellbeam was the great outstanding
+figure in the concern of the Skandinavia. His was the
+one personality that dwarfed everybody. He was the
+moving power of the whole concern.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll let me know later?" she said. "I mean, just
+when I'm to start out. I'm ready when you like. I'll
+just go and see why those reports have not been sent up."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, don't worry with the reports. You've told me
+the things that matter."</p>
+
+<p>The man's irritation was as swift as it was violent.
+But it passed as quickly as it came. He laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right, my dear. Be off now. I'll let you
+know about things this afternoon."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy gladly accepted her dismissal. She wanted to
+think. She wanted to get things into their proper focus.
+As she closed the door behind her her beautiful eyes had
+no joy in them. She had realised two things as a result of
+her interview. The opportunity she had looked forward
+to had materialised, and she had seized it with both
+hands. But the goodness of Elas Peterman to herself
+possessed none of that disinterested kindliness she had
+hitherto believed. Furthermore, there was dawning
+upon her that which her mirror should have told her
+long ago. She was beginning to understand that her
+work, her capacity, her application, counted far less in
+the favour of her chief than did those things with which
+nature had equipped her. She was shocked out of her
+youthful dream. And it left her so troubled, that, had
+she not been passing down the carpeted corridor of the
+Skandinavia offices, she would have burst into a flood
+of tears.</p>
+
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>It was a different Elas Peterman who confronted the
+squat figure of Nathaniel Hellbeam. The master in the
+younger man was completely submerged. He possessed
+all the Teutonic capacity for self-abnegation in the
+presence of the power it is necessary to woo. There
+was only one master when the great financier was present.
+Elas Peterman knew that his part was to listen and obey
+with just that humility which he would have demanded
+had the position been reversed.</p>
+
+<p>Another type than Hellbeam's would have despised
+the attitude. But the financier had no scruple. Nature
+had denied him qualities for inspiring affectionate regard,
+or even respect. But she had bestowed on him a
+lust for power, and a great vanity, and these he satisfied
+to the uttermost.</p>
+
+<p>The financier drove straight to the object of his visit.</p>
+
+<p>"I come for an important purpose," he said, in his
+guttural fashion. "There must be a special Board
+assemble. Skandinavia will buy the mill on Labrador.
+The Sachigo mill. I come on the night train, which is
+the worst thing I can think to do, to say this thing. If
+we do not buy this mill, then&mdash;" He broke off with
+an expressive gesture.</p>
+
+<p>Elas nodded. He was startled, but his powers of dissimulation
+were profound.</p>
+
+<p>"I understand," he said. "They have been approached?"</p>
+
+<p>Hellbeam stirred his bulk in the chair Nancy had so
+recently occupied. It was a movement of irritation.</p>
+
+<p>"That is for you. You represent Skandinavia. I&mdash;I
+say this thing. I the money find."</p>
+
+<p>The face of Peterman was a study. His eyes were
+serious, his manner calmly considering. Amazement
+was struggling with a desire to laugh outright in the
+face of this grossly insolent money power.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing could suit us better, sir," he said, deferentially.
+"They've been handing us more trouble than I
+
+fancy talking about. And they look like handing us still
+more. These people have grown slowly, but very
+deliberately. There's something very like genius in their
+management. And seemingly they possess unlimited
+capital or credit. I guess I know something of their
+contemplated manoeuvres. They're assembling all the
+free mills outside our ring. I see a great big scrap
+coming. May I ask the price you're considering?"</p>
+
+<p>Hellbeam produced a gold cigar case. A greater man
+would have been content with a certain modesty of
+appointment. His case was comparable in vulgarity
+with the size of his cigars. He thrust the pierced end
+of the cigar between his gross lips and spoke with the
+huge thing lolling.</p>
+
+<p>"It does not matter. I say buy."</p>
+
+<p>The tone, the snapping of the man's eyes forbade
+further probing in this direction. He lit his cigar.</p>
+
+<p>"It will need careful handling," ventured Peterman.</p>
+
+<p>Hellbeam snorted.</p>
+
+<p>"It careful handling always needs. Eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Surely. I was thinking."</p>
+
+<p>"So. You will think. Then you will act. You will
+communicate forthwith. See? You listen. I buy this
+Sachigo, yes. The price matters nothing. There is a
+reason. This fight. It is not that. Who is the head?
+I would know. I fancy this man to meet. He is what
+you call&mdash;bright. So."</p>
+
+<p>Elas shook his head-</p>
+
+<p>"There are two men in it we recognise. A man named
+Harker and another called Sternford&mdash;Bull Sternford.
+We know little of either. You see, it's kind of far away.
+Anyway, between them they're pretty&mdash;bright. I don't
+think they built the mill. I'm sure that's so. It was
+a man called Standing. But he seems to have gone out
+of active management. I might start by writing them
+and feel the way."</p>
+
+
+<p>"Ach no!" Hellbeam shook his head in violent protest.
+"You write&mdash;no. You have your confidential
+man, yes? You send him. I give you the outline of
+terms. I give you alternative terms. Big terms. He
+will go. He will talk. He will hear. Then we will
+later come to terms. All men will sell&mdash;on terms.
+Your man. Where is he? I must see him. Then the
+Board. It meets. I will address it. I show them how
+this thing will serve."</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right, sir," Elas was smiling. "You
+couldn't offer the Board a more welcome proposition
+than the purchase of Sachigo just now. We're changing
+our forest organisation right now, and that means temporary
+delays and drop in output. Sachigo's our worry
+while we're doing it. But with your permission I won't
+send a man up there. I think," he added deliberately,
+"I'd like to send a&mdash;woman."</p>
+
+<p>Hellbeam's face was a study. His little eyes opened
+to their widest extent. His heavy lips parted, and he
+snatched his cigar into the safety of his white fingers.</p>
+
+<p>"A&mdash;woman&mdash;for this thing? You crazy are!"</p>
+
+<p>There was no restraint or pretence of restraint. The
+other's smile was more confident than might have been
+expected before such an intolerant outburst.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess a woman has her limitations, sir. Maybe this
+one hasn't a wide experience. But she's clever. She's
+loyal to us, and she's got that which counts a whole heap
+when it comes to getting a man on her side. You reckon
+to buy Sachigo. If you send a man to deal he'll get
+short shrift. If there's anyone to put through this deal
+for Skandinavia it's the woman I'm thinking of. And
+she'll put it through because she's the woman she is, and
+not because of any talents. Your pardon, sir, if
+I speak frankly. But from all I know of Sachigo, if
+you&mdash;perhaps the king of financiers on this continent&mdash;went
+to these folk and offered them double what their
+
+enterprise is worth, I guess they'd chase you out of
+Labrador so quick you wouldn't have time to think the
+blasphemy suitable to the occasion."</p>
+
+<p>Peterman's explanation caught the humour of his
+countryman. The bulk of the visitor shook under a
+suppressed laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," he retorted, "I do not go. This woman. A
+good-looker, eh? She is pleasant&mdash;to men? Where is
+she? Who is she?"</p>
+
+<p>"She's my secretary, sir." Elas jumped at the change
+of his visitor's humour. "She's not much more than a
+kid. But she's quite a 'looker,' I'll send for her, if
+you'll permit me. She's getting some reports for me.
+I'll ask her to bring them up. You can see her then,
+sir, and, if you'll forgive me, I won't present her to
+you. If I do she'll guess something, and it's best she
+knows nothing of this contemplated deal&mdash;as regards
+you."</p>
+
+<p>For a moment the banker made no reply. He sat, an
+adipose mass, breathing heavily, and sucking at his cigar.
+Then quite suddenly, he nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Send for her," he said sharply.</p>
+
+<p>Elas reached the telephone and rang down.</p>
+
+<p>"Hello! That you? Oh, will you step up a moment,
+Miss McDonald? Yes. Are they ready? Good. That's
+just what I want. Please. All of them."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Nancy knocked at the door and stepped into the room.
+She was carrying a large typescript of many pages. It
+represented many days and evenings of concentrated
+labour. It had been a labour not so much of love as of
+ambition. It was an exhaustive summary of the position
+of the Skandinavia's forestry in the Shagaunty Valley.</p>
+
+<p>She missed the squat figure in the chair she usually
+occupied. She saw nothing of the stare of the narrow
+
+eyes concentrated upon her. She saw only the tall figure
+of Peterman, standing waiting for her beyond his
+desk in such a position that, to reach him, she must
+pass herself in review before the devouring gaze of the
+great banker.</p>
+
+<p>She walked briskly towards him, her short skirt yielding
+the seductive rustle of the silk beneath it. Her
+movements were beyond words in grace. Her tall figure,
+so beautifully proportioned, and so daintily rounded,
+displayed the becoming coat-frock she usually wore in
+business to absolute perfection.</p>
+
+<p>The banker's searching eyes realised all this to the
+last detail. He realised much more. For his was the
+regard that sought beneath the surface of things. It was
+that regard which every wholesome, good woman resents.
+But ultimately it was the girl's face and hair
+that held him. The rare beauty of the latter's colour
+sent a surge of appreciation running through his sensual
+veins. And the perfect beauty, and delicate charm of
+her pretty features, stirred him no less. Only her eyes,
+those pretty, confident, intelligent, hazel depths he
+missed. But he waited.</p>
+
+<p>"These are the papers, Mr. Peterman."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy held out the typescript to the waiting man
+whose eyes had none of the smiling welcome they would
+have had in Hellbeam's absence.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you." Elas glanced down at the neatly bound
+script.</p>
+
+<p>"It's all complete?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes. It's the whole story. It's in tabloid form.
+You will be able to take the whole close in half an hour."</p>
+
+<p>A rough clearing of the throat interrupted her, and
+Nancy discovered the banker beside the desk. In something
+of a hurry she promptly turned to depart. But
+Elas claimed her.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you come to me after lunch?" he said pleasantly.</p>
+
+
+<p>"I want to go into the details of that trip I explained
+to you. You must get away as soon as possible."</p>
+
+<p>"Directly after lunch?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Say three o'clock."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well."</p>
+
+<p>The girl again turned to go, but the banker anticipated
+her. As she reached the door he stood beside it,
+and opened it for her to pass out. He was holding
+something in his hand. It was an exquisitely formed
+gold fountain-pen.</p>
+
+<p>"This yours is, I think," he said heavily, while his
+eyes searched those depths of hazel he had missed before.</p>
+
+<p>The girl smiled as she gazed at the beautiful pen.
+She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said. "I never possessed anything so
+beautiful in my life."</p>
+
+<p>"But you drop it as you come, I think, yes?" The
+man's eyes were levelled at her devouringly. Quick as
+thought he turned to Elas watching the scene. "Is it
+yours? I see it on the carpet, yes?"</p>
+
+<p>The manager was prompt to take his cue.</p>
+
+<p>"It's not mine," he said. "It must be yours, Miss
+McDonald. If it isn't I guess you'd best have it till we
+find its owner."</p>
+
+<p>The girl smiled from one to the other.</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks ever so much," she said, with frank pleasure.
+"I'll keep it till we find the owner. It's a lovely thing."</p>
+
+<p>She took the glittering pen from the fleshy fingers
+holding it. And just for an instant her hand encountered
+the banker's. It was only for an instant, however. A
+moment later the door was closed carefully behind her by
+the man who had thought Elas crazy to employ a woman.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?"</p>
+
+<p>Elas Peterman was seated behind his desk again. His
+challenging smile was directed at the heavily breathing
+figure of the banker who had hurried back to his chair.</p>
+
+
+<p>The great man laughed. It was a curious, unpleasant
+laugh. His heavy cheeks were flushed, and his eyes glittered
+curiously.</p>
+
+<p>"You're a judge, Elas, my boy," he exclaimed, with
+clumsy geniality. "Oh, yes. But you are a young man.
+There is power in that young woman's eyes." He
+laughed again. "Oh, no, I think of the young woman.
+It not her capability is. See you look to your place in
+Skandinavia. Let her go. She may not buy this Sachigo
+as I think to buy it. She will buy the men we would
+drive from our path."</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_15"></a>
+<h3>Chapter VI&mdash;The Lonely Figure</h3>
+
+
+<p>The girl was leaning against the storm-ripped bole of
+a fallen tree. The great figure of her companion was
+silhouetted against the brilliant sky-line. He was contemplating
+the distance at the brink of a sheer-cut ravine,
+which dropped away at his feet to giddying depths.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy gazed out beyond him. For the moment he
+held no interest for her. She only had eyes for the
+splendid picture of Nature. They were on high ground,
+a great shoulder lifted them clear above their surroundings.
+Far as the eye could see was a lustreless green
+world of unbroken forest. It seemed to have neither
+beginning nor end. To the girl's imagination there could
+be no break in it until the eternal snows of the Arctic
+were reached.</p>
+
+<p>The breadth of it all was a little overwhelming. Nancy
+was gazing upon just one portion of the Skandinavia's
+untouched forest limits, and somehow it left her with a
+feeling of protest.</p>
+
+<p>She pointed with one gauntleted hand, stirred to an
+impulse she could not deny.</p>
+
+
+<p>"It's too beautiful," she said. "It isn't fair: it's not
+right. To think it's all ours, and we have the right to
+destroy it."</p>
+
+<p>The man turned. He gazed back at this unusual
+vision of a beautiful, well-gowned woman in the heart
+of the forests. He grinned ironically, this great, rough-bearded
+creature, in hard cord clothing, and with his
+well-worn fur cap pressed low over his lank hair that
+reached well-nigh to his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" he demanded roughly. "Oh, yes. It's
+Skandinavia's, every mile of it. An' I guess there's
+hundreds an' hundreds of 'em. Ain't that what Canada's
+forests are for? To feed us the stuff we're needin'?
+But you don't need to worry any. We ain't cuttin' that
+stuff for years. Guess the waterways out there are
+mostly a mean outfit that wouldn't raft a bunch of
+lucifers. We need to wait permanent railroad for
+haulage."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy accepted the statement without reply. It was
+impossible to stir a man like Arden Laval to any sort
+of sympathy. He was hardened, crude, first, last and
+all the time. He was big and brutal. His limbs were
+like to the trees his men were accustomed to fell, and his
+hands reminded her of the hind limbs of the mutton.
+She felt he had a mind that matched his physical
+development.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy McDonald was nearing the end of her third
+month of forest travel. The Shagaunty valley lay behind
+her, desolated by the fierce axe of the men who
+lived by their slaughter. She had seen it all. She had
+studied the re-afforestation which followed on the heels
+of the axemen. And the seeming puerility of this effort
+to salve the wounds inflicted upon Nature had filled her
+with pitying contempt.</p>
+
+<p>She knew the whole process of the forest industry by
+heart now. It fascinated her. Oh, yes. It was picturesque,
+
+it was real, vital. The men on the river driving
+down to the booms had stirred her greatest admiration.
+These supermen with their muscles of iron, with the
+hearts of lions, and the tongues and habits of beasts
+of the forest. But they were men, wonderful men for
+all their savage crudity. So, too, with the transporters
+and freighters handling sixty-foot logs as though dealing
+with matchwood. But above all, and before all, the
+axemen made their appeal.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing comparable with the rough skill
+of these creatures, She had watched the flash and
+swing of the axe, with its edge like the finest razor. She
+had seen the standing muscles like whipcord writhing
+under sunburnt flesh as they served the lethal weapon.
+She had noted every blow, how it was calculated to a
+hair's-breadth, and fell without waste of one single ounce
+of power. And then the amazing result. The fallen
+tree stretched out on the exact spot and in the exact
+direction ready for the hauliers to bear straight away
+to the final transport station.</p>
+
+<p>The summer days had been filled with vital interest.
+And at night, weary in body, Nancy still had time, lying
+in the amply, if crudely blanketed bed provided for her
+in some lumber-built shanty, to contemplate the lives of
+this strangely assorted race. She knew the pay of the
+forest men, from the haulier to the princely axeman and
+river-jack. She had seen their food, and their dwelling
+accommodation. She had heard such details as were possible
+of telling of their recreations, and had guessed
+the rest. And for all her admiration of their manhood
+she pitied, in her woman's way, and felt shame for the
+slavery of it all.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, yes. She had no illusions. She was not weakly
+sentimental. She looked at it all with wide-open eyes.
+It was a well-paid animal life. It was a life of eating
+well, of sleeping well, of gambling, and drinking, and
+
+licence. But it was a life of such labour that only perfect
+physical creatures could face.</p>
+
+<p>She felt that these folks were wage slaves in the crudest
+meaning of the words. There was nothing for them
+beyond their daily life, which was wholly animal. Of
+spirituality there was none. Of future there was none.
+Their leisure was given over to their pastimes, while
+ahead the future lay always threatening. Stiffening
+muscles, disease, age. The king of them all in his youth,
+in age would be abandoned and driven forth, weary in
+body, aching in limbs, a derelict in the ranks of the world's
+labour.</p>
+
+<p>She was gravely impressed by the things she saw, by
+the men she met.</p>
+
+<p>Her summer had been an education which had stirred
+feelings and sympathies almost unguessed. It was the
+father, she could scarcely remember, making himself
+known to her. For all the ambitions firing her, the long,
+fascinating days in the forests of the Shagaunty had
+taught her of the existence of an "underdog," who, in
+himself, was the foundation upon which the personal
+ambition of the more fortunate was achieved. Without
+him to support the whole edifice of civilisation must
+crash to the ground, and life would go back again to the
+bosom of that Nature from which it sprang.</p>
+
+<p>Her realisation inspired her with an added desire. It
+was a desire coming straight from an honest, unsophisticated
+heart. She registered a vow that whithersoever
+her ambitions might lead her, she would always remember
+the "underdog," and work for his betterment and greater
+happiness.</p>
+
+<p>"So you can only cut the stuff here within reach of
+our light haulage system?" Nancy demanded at last.
+"The rest's gone. The real big stuff, I mean, down below
+in the valley. We're just driven to the plateau where the
+cut looks to me more like one in twenty than any better?"</p>
+
+
+<p>Arden Laval left his position at the brink of the ravine.
+He came back to the girl in her modish costume that
+seemed so out of place beside the rough clothing that
+Covered his body.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I guess that's so," he said. "Still, it's a deal
+better than one in twenty." He laughed. "Sure. If
+it wasn't the darn booms 'ud need to go hungry."</p>
+
+<p>The man's French temperament left him more than
+appreciative of the beauty he beheld. But he was
+wondering. He was searching his shrewd mind for the
+real explanation of Nancy's presence in these forests. To
+him it was amazing that the Skandinavia should send
+this girl, this good-looker, on a journey through their
+forests alone. He would willingly have asked the question.
+But he remembered her written commission,
+signed by Elas Peterman. So he was left with no alternative
+but to yield the utmost respect.</p>
+
+<p>"Y'see, mam," he went on easily. "I guess I could
+talk quite a piece on this thing, but maybe you won't
+fancy my dope. Skandinavia's been badly spoilt by the
+cut in the Shagaunty Valley. You've seen it all. Guess
+you've come right through. Well, that being so, you'll
+understand the Shagaunty cut's been far above average.
+Now we're down to average. That's all. That's how
+the Skandinavia's been spoilt."</p>
+
+<p>He thrust his cap back from his forehead. It was a
+movement of irritation. Then he produced a plug of
+tobacco from his hip-pocket, and bit off a chew.</p>
+
+<p>"I've been twenty odd years lumbering," he went on
+a moment later. "I've lumbered most every forest in
+Ontario and Quebec. "There ain't more'n one bunch of
+plums like the Shagaunty. Mostly the forest's full of
+the sort of stuff we're handling here. These forests are
+average and I'd like to say to the Skandinavia, 'you've
+got to figger results on the average.' We're cutting down
+to the minimum because we've got to, to feed the booms
+
+right. Well, that's goin' on if I know my job. There's
+patch stuff better. I daresay there's new ground on
+our limits liable to hand us Shagaunty stuff. But that's
+just as I say, patch stuff, an' not average. If they want
+Shagaunty quality right through let 'em get out and
+get limits up on Labrador. I reckon there's a hundred
+years cutting up there that 'ud leave Shagaunty a bunch
+of weed grass. They say the folks out on the coast are
+worried to death there's so much stuff, an' so big, an'
+
+good, an' soft, an' long-fibred. The jacks out that way
+are up to the neck in a hell of a good time, sure. I get it
+they've time to sleep half the year, it's so easy. Well,
+it ain't that way here. We've no time singing hymns
+around this lay-out. It's hell, here, keeping the darn
+booms fed. Speakin' for my outfit I'd say they're a pretty
+bright lot of boys. What a feller can do they can do, I
+guess. But there are times I get mighty sick chasing to
+get even the minimum. An' it's all the time kick. The
+Skandinavia seems to have got a grouch about now you
+couldn't beat with a tank of rye whisky. You've seen
+it all as far as I can show you, mam, and I'd be glad to
+know if you're satisfied I've done the things you want.
+If I have, and you feel good about it, I'd be thankful if
+you'd report the way we're workin' this camp. And if
+you've a spare moment to talk other things, you might
+say that the boys of my camp are mighty hard put to get
+the stuff, and they're as tough a gang of jacks as ever
+heard tell of the dog's life of the forest."</p>
+
+<p>The man spoke with the fluency of real protest. He
+somehow felt he was on his defence in the presence of
+this woman representative of his employers. This girl
+was not there enduring the discomforts of the forests for
+amusement. She came with authority, and she seemed
+to possess great understanding. Arden Laval knew his
+own value. His record was one of long service with his
+company. Furthermore, his outfit was trusted with the
+
+pioneering work of the forest where judgment and enterprise,
+and great experience were needed. He felt it was
+the moment to talk, and to talk straight to this woman
+with the red hair who had invaded his domain. So he
+gave full rope to his feelings.</p>
+
+<p>It was some moments before the girl replied, and the
+man waited expectantly. He was studying the far-off
+gaze of the pretty hazel eyes, and wondering at the
+thought moving behind them. At length Nancy withdrew
+her gaze from the forest.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall certainly report the things I've seen," she said
+with a smile that found prompt response in the man's
+dark eyes. "You've certainly done your best to show
+me, and tell me, the exact position. I shall make a point
+of reporting all that. Yes, I've seen it all, thank you very
+much."</p>
+
+<p>Then her smile suddenly vanished. The shrewd gaze
+of commercial interest replaced it.</p>
+
+<p>"But these Labrador folk?" she demanded. "Is that
+stuff just&mdash;hearsay?"</p>
+
+<p>The man shook his head. He was feeling easier.</p>
+
+<p>"It's God's truth, mam." He spat out a stream of
+tobacco juice. "I know them forests. Say," his eyes
+had lost their smile, "I don't guess I figger to know the
+business side of things, I don't calculate to know if the
+folks on Labrador work with, or against the Skandinavia.
+But I do know that if they're up against us they've got
+us plumb beat before we start. They got the sort of
+lumber the jacks dream about when they got their bellies
+full on a Saturday night, and they're going to wake up to
+find it Sunday mornin'. I'm just a lumberman, and if I
+hadn't fifteen years' record with the Skandinavia, and
+wasn't pouching two hundred and fifty bucks, and what
+I can make besides, a month, why, it 'ud be me for the
+coast where you can jamb the rivers in a three months'
+
+cut, and souse rye the rest of the year till the bugs look as
+
+big as mountains. Guess it's the summer rose garden of
+the lumber-jack, for all it's under snow eight months in
+the year, when you can't tell your guts from an iceflow,
+and the skitters, in summer, mostly reach the size of a
+gasoline tank. It's a dog's life, mam, lumberin' anywhere.
+But they're lap-dogs out that way."</p>
+
+<p>The man's words brought the return of the girl's smile.
+"Yes, I spose it's&mdash;tough," she observed thoughtfully.
+Then quite suddenly she spread out her hands.
+"Oh, yes," she exclaimed, with a sudden vehemence,
+"it's worse than tough. It's hopeless. Utterly hopeless.
+I've seen it. I've watched it. I had to. I couldn't
+escape it. It's so desperately patent. But it's not the
+life as these folk live it. It's the future I'm thinking of.
+It's middle life and old age. These boys. They're wonders&mdash;now.
+How long does it last, and then&mdash;what
+happens? I'm here on business, hard business. But I
+guess this thing's got hold of me so I can't sometimes sleep
+at nights. Tell me about them."</p>
+
+<p>Arden Laval, one of the hardest specimens of the
+lumber boss, turned away. His understanding of women
+was built up out of intimacy with the poor creatures
+who peopled the camps he knew. This girl's burst of
+feeling only stirred him to a cynical humour.</p>
+
+<p>"Mam," he said, with a grin that was almost hateful,
+"if I was to start in to hand you the life history of a
+lumber-jack you'd feel like throwing up your kind heart,
+and any other old thing you hadn't use for in your
+stummick. But I guess I can say right here, a lumber-jack's
+a most disgustin' sort of vermin who hasn't more
+right than a louse to figger in your reckonin'. I guess he
+was born wrong, and he'll mostly die as he was born.
+And meanwhile he's lived a life that's mostly dirt, and
+no account anyway. There's a few things we ask of a
+lumber-jack, and if he fulfils 'em right he can go right
+on living. When he can't fulfil 'em, why, it's up to him
+
+to hit the trail for the pay box, an' get out. Guess you
+feel good when you see a boy swingin' an axe, or handlin'
+
+a peavy. Sure. That sort of thing don't come your
+way often. Neither does it come your way to see the
+rest. He's mostly a sink of filth in mind and body, and
+if he ain't all that at the start he gets it quick. He's a
+waster of God's pure air, and is mostly in his right surroundings
+when the forest does its best to hide him
+up from the eyes of the rest of the world. Guess he's the
+best man I know&mdash;dead."</p>
+
+<p>For all his grin Arden Laval was in deadly earnest.
+Nancy stared at the broad back he had turned on her
+with his final word. And her indignation surged.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't believe it," she cried. "I can't believe it.
+You're just talking out of years of experience of a life
+you've probably learned to hate. Man, if that's your
+opinion of your fellows, then it's you who ought never
+to leave the forest you claim does its best to hide up folk
+from the eyes of the rest of the world. You're a camp
+boss. You're our head man in these forests. You're
+trusted, and we know your skill. Well, it seems to me
+you've a duty that goes further than just feeding the
+booms right. You've a moral duty towards these men
+you condemn. You can help them. It should surely
+be your pride to lift them out of the desperate mire you
+claim they are floundering in. I'll not believe you mean
+it all."</p>
+
+<p>The man turned away as a black-clothed figure
+emerged from the trees, and came to a stand at the brink
+of the ravine some hundred and more yards to the east
+of them. Nancy, too, beheld the lonely figure and she,
+too, became interested in its movements.</p>
+
+<p>The lumber boss laughed shortly, roughly, and raised
+an arm, pointing as he turned a grinning face to the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"See him, there?" he cried. "Say, mam, with all
+respect, I'd say to you, if you're feeling the way you
+
+talk, and look to get the sort of stuff you'd maybe fancy
+hearing, that's the guy you need to open out to. As
+you say, I'm the head camp-boss on the Skandinavia's
+limits. I've had nigh twenty years an' more experience
+of the lumber-jack. An' I'm tellin' you the things any
+camp-boss speakin' truth'll tell you. That's all, I
+don't hate the boys. I don't pity 'em. But I don't
+love 'em. They're just part of a machine to cut lumber,
+and it don't matter a hoot in hell to me what they are,
+or who they are, or what becomes of 'em. I ain't shepherdin'
+
+souls like that guy. It ain't in me, anyway. I
+just got to make good so that some day I ken quit these
+cursed forests and live easy the way I'd fancy. When
+that time comes maybe I'll change. Maybe I'll feel like
+that guy standin' doping over that spread of forest scene.
+I don't know. And just now I don't care&mdash;a curse."</p>
+
+<p>But Nancy was no longer listening. The lonely, black-coated
+figure Laval had pointed out absorbed all her
+interest. His allusion to the man's calling had created
+in her an irresistible desire.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is he? That man?" she demanded abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>Laval laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Father Adam," he replied. There was a curious
+softening in his harsh voice, which brought the girl's
+eyes swiftly back to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Father Adam? A priest?" she questioned.</p>
+
+<p>Laval shook his head. He had turned again, regarding
+the stranger. His face was hidden from the searching
+eyes of the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"I just can't rightly say," he demurred. "Maybe
+he is, an' maybe he ain't. But," he added reflectively
+"he's just one hell of a good man. Makes me laff sometimes.
+Sometimes it makes me want to cry like a kid
+when I think of the things he's up against. He's out for
+the boys. He's out to hand 'em dope to make 'em better.
+Oh, it ain't Sunday School dope. No. He's the kind o'
+
+missioner who does things. He don't tell 'em they're a
+bum lot o' toughs who oughter to be in penitentiary. But
+he makes 'em feel that way&mdash;the way he acts. He's
+just a lone creature, sort of livin' in twilight, who comes
+along, an' we don't know when he's comin'. He passes
+out like a shadow in the forests, an' we don't see him
+again till he fancies. He's after the boys the whole darn
+time. It don't matter if they're sick in body or mind.
+He helps 'em the way he knows. An', mam, they just
+love him to death. There's just one man in these forests
+I wouldn't dare blaspheme, if I felt like it&mdash;which I
+don't. No, mam, my life wouldn't be worth a two
+seconds buy if I blasphemed&mdash;Father Adam. He's one
+of God's good men, an' I'd be mighty thankful to be like
+him&mdash;some. Gee, and I owe him a piece myself."</p>
+
+<p>"How?"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy's interest was consuming.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, only he jumped in once when I was being
+scrapped to death. He jumped right in, when he looked
+like gettin' killed for it. And," he laughed cynically, "he
+gave me a few more years of the dog's life of the forest."</p>
+
+<p>The girl moved away from her support.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to thank you, Mr. Laval, for the trouble
+you've taken, and the time you've given up to me." The
+hazel eyes were smiling up into the man's hard face. "I
+don't agree with some of the things you've just been
+telling me; I should hate to, anyway. I don't even believe
+you feel the way you say about your men. Still,
+that's no account in the matters I came about. The
+things I've got to say when I get back are all to your
+credit. I'm going over now to talk to&mdash;Father Adam.
+And you needn't come along with me. You see, you've
+fired my curiosity. Yes, I want to hear the stuff I fancy
+about the&mdash;boys. So I'll go and talk to your&mdash;shepherd
+of souls. Good-bye."</p>
+
+
+<p>Nancy's eyes were bright and smiling as she gazed up
+into the lean, ascetic face of the man in the black, semi-clerical
+coat. His garments were worn and almost
+threadbare. At close quarters she realised an even
+deeper interest in the man whose presence had wrought
+such a magical change in the harsh tones of the camp-boss.
+He was in the heyday of middle life, surely. His
+hair was long and black. His beard was of a similar hue,
+and it covered his mouth and chin in a long, but patchy
+mass. His eyes were keen but gentle. They, too, were
+very dark, and the whole cast of his pale face was curiously
+reminiscent.</p>
+
+<p>"I just had to come along over, sir," she said. "I
+was with Mr. Laval, and he told me of the work&mdash;the
+great work you do in these camps. Maybe you'll forgive
+me intruding. But you see, I've come from our headquarters
+on business, and the folk of these camps interest
+me. I kind of feel the life the boys live around these
+forests is a pretty mean life. There's nothing much to
+it but work. And it seems to me that those employing
+them ought to be made to realise they've a greater responsibility
+than just handing them out a wage for work
+done. So when I saw you come out of the forest and
+stand here, and Mr. Laval told me about you, I made
+up my mind right away to come along and&mdash;speak to
+you. My name's McDonald&mdash;Nancy McDonald."</p>
+
+<p>It was all a little hasty, a little timidly spoken. The
+dark eyes thoughtfully regarding the wonder of red hair
+under the close fitting hat were disconcerting, for all
+there was cordiality in their depths.</p>
+
+<p>At Nancy's mention of her name, Father Adam instantly
+averted his gaze, and dropped the hand which
+he had taken possession of in greeting. It was almost
+as if the pronouncement had caused him to start. But
+the change, the movement, were unobserved by the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"And you are&mdash;Father Adam?" she asked.</p>
+
+
+<p>The man's gaze came quickly back.</p>
+
+<p>"That's how I'm known. It&mdash;was kind of you to come
+along over."</p>
+
+<p>In a moment all the girl's timidity was gone. If the
+man had been startled when she had announced her name,
+he displayed perfect ease now.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know," Nancy went on, with a happy laugh,
+"I almost got mad with Laval for his cynicism at the
+expense of the poor boys who work under his orders.
+But I think I understand him. He's a product of a life
+that moulds in pretty harsh form. He doesn't mean
+half he says."</p>
+
+<p>"I'd say few of us do&mdash;when we let our feelings go."
+Father Adam smiled back into the eyes which seemed to
+hold him fascinated. "You see, Laval's much what we
+all are. He's got a tough job to put through, and he
+does his utmost. He's a big man, a brave man, a&mdash;yes,
+perhaps&mdash;a harsh man. But he couldn't do his job as
+he's paid to do it if he weren't all those things." He
+shook his head. "No, I guess we can't play with fire
+long without getting a heap of scars." He shrugged.
+"But after all I suppose it's just&mdash;life. We've got to
+eat, and we want to live. We don't need to judge too
+harshly."</p>
+
+<p>"No. That's how I feel about the boys&mdash;he so condemned."</p>
+
+<p>The girl turned away gazing pensively over the forest.
+Father Adam was free to regard her without restraint.
+With her turning the whole expression of his eyes had
+changed. Incredulous amazement had replaced his smiling
+ease.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you care to come along through the woods
+to my shanty, Miss McDonald?" he said, almost diffidently,
+at last. "Maybe I've a cup of coffee there. And
+I'd say coffee's the most welcome thing on earth in these
+forests. It's a pretty humble shanty but, if you feel like
+
+talking things, why, I guess we can sit around there
+awhile."</p>
+
+<p>The girl snatched at the invitation.</p>
+
+<p>"I was just hoping you'd say something that way,"
+she laughed readily. "I'd give worlds for a cup of coffee,
+and I guess the folks in the forests of Quebec know more
+about coffee in half a second than we city folk know in a
+year. Which way?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's only a few yards. You'd best follow me."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>The girl stood amazed. She was even horrified. She
+was gazing in through the opening of the merest shelter,
+a shelter built of green boughs with roof and sides of
+interlaced foliage. True it was densely interlaced, but
+no sort of distorted imagination could have translated
+the result into anything but a shelter. Habitation was
+out of the question. She stared at the primitive, less
+than aboriginal home, of the priestly man. She stared
+round her at the undergrowth upon which were spread
+his brown coarse blankets airing. She looked down at
+the smouldering fire between two granite stones upon
+which a tin of coffee was simmering and emitting its
+pleasant aroma upon the woodland air. It was too crude,
+too utterly lacking in comfort and even the bare necessites
+of existence.</p>
+
+<p>The man emerged from the interior bearing two
+enamelled tin cups. He realised the amazement with
+which Nancy was regarding his home, and shook his head
+with a pleasant laugh as he indicated two upturned boxes
+beside the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"You'd best sit, and I'll tell you about it," he said.
+"It's not exactly a swell hotel, is it? But it's sufficient."</p>
+
+<p>The girl silently took her seat on one of the boxes.
+Father Adam took the other. Then he poured out two
+cups of coffee, and passed a tin of preserved milk across
+
+to the girl. There was a spoon in it. After that he produced
+a small tin of sugar and offered that.</p>
+
+<p>You see, it's all I need," he said, in simple explanation.
+"When the rain comes I mostly get wet, except
+at nights when I get under my rubber sheet. But, anyway,
+there's plenty of sun to dry me. Oh, winter's different.
+I cut out a dug-out then, and burrow like the
+rest of the forest creatures. But, you see, this thing
+suits me well. I'm never long in one place. I've been
+here two weeks, and I pull out to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"You pull out? Where to?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I just pass on to some other camp. The boys
+are pretty widely scattered in these forests. You'd never
+guess the distances I sometimes make. Even Labrador.
+But it doesn't much matter. I've a good smattering of
+physic, and the boys are always getting hurt one way and
+another. I'd hate to feel I couldn't go to them wherever
+they are. Maybe if I built a better house I'd not want
+to leave it. It would be hard getting on the move. You
+see, I get their call any old time. Maybe it comes along on
+the forest breezes," he said whimsically. "Then I have
+to be quick to locate it, and read it right."</p>
+
+<p>The girl had helped herself to milk and sugar, and
+sipped the steaming coffee. But she was listening with
+all her ears and thinking feverishly. This strange creature,
+with his deprecating manner, and smiling, sane
+eyes, filled her with a sense of shame at his utter selflessness.</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean they&mdash;always want help?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure. Same as we all do."</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam sipped his coffee appreciatively.</p>
+
+<p>"But tell me," he said. "It's kind of new the Skandinavia
+sending a woman along up here. It's your first
+trip?"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy set her cup down.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"They're a great firm," Father Adam went on, reflectively.
+"I mean the&mdash;extent of their operations."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"I like the distinction. Yes, they're big. You don't
+like their&mdash;methods?"</p>
+
+<p>It was the man's turn for a smiling retort.</p>
+
+<p>"Their methods?" he shook his head. "I don't know,
+I guess they pay well. And their boys are no worse
+treated than in other camps. They employ thousands.
+And that's all to the good."</p>
+
+<p>"But you don't like them," Nancy persisted. "I can
+hear it in your voice. It's in your smile. Few people
+like the Skandinavia," she added regretfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you?"</p>
+
+<p>Like a shot the challenge came, and Nancy found herself
+replying almost before she was aware of it.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Why shouldn't I? They've been good to
+me. More than good, when those who had a right to
+be completely deserted me. No. I mustn't say just
+that," she hurried on in some contrition. "They provided
+for me, but cut me out of their lives. Maybe you
+won't understand what that means to a girl. It meant
+so much to me that I wouldn't accept their charity. I
+wouldn't accept a thing. I'd make my own way with
+the small powers Providence handed me. So I went to
+the Skandinavia who have only shown me the best of
+kindness. Well, I'm frankly out for the Skandinavia
+and all their schemes and methods in consequence. It's
+not for me to look into the things that make folks hate
+them. That's theirs. My loyalty and gratitude are all
+for them for the thing they've done for me. Isn't that
+right?"</p>
+
+<p>"Surely," the man concurred. "But your coffee. It's
+getting cold," he added.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy hastily picked up her cup.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Why am I telling you all this?" she laughed. "We
+were going to talk of the&mdash;boys."</p>
+
+<p>"We surely were." Father Adam laughed responsively.
+"But personal interest I guess doesn't figure to
+be denied for long. We sort of get the notion we can
+shut it out. But we can't. We try to guess there's other
+things. Things more important. Things that matter a
+whole lot more." He shook his head. "It's no use.
+There aren't. I guess it doesn't matter where we look.
+Self's pushing out at every angle, and won't be denied.
+It would be hypocrisy to deny it, wouldn't it? It's the
+biggest thing in life. It's the whole thing."</p>
+
+<p>"And it's such a pity," Nancy agreed slyly. "Just
+think," she went on, "I've got a hundred notions for
+the good of the world. These boys for instance. I'd
+like to make their lives what they ought to be. Full of
+comfort and security and&mdash;and everything to make it
+worth while. Instead of that my first and whole concern
+is to make good for Nancy McDonald. To do all
+those things for her. It's dreadful when you think of it,
+isn't it?" She sighed. "I want to do good to the&mdash;the
+'underdog,' and all the time I'm planning for myself.
+I want to fight all the time for those who hold opportunity
+out to me. It doesn't really matter to me why the
+Skandinavia is disliked. They give me opportunity. I
+reckon they've been good to me. So I'm their slave to
+fight for them, and work for them, whatever their
+methods. Yes. It's too bad," she laughed frankly. "I
+can't deny it. I'd like to, but&mdash;I can't."</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam set down his empty cup, and sat with
+his arms resting on his parted knees. His hands were
+clasped.</p>
+
+<p>"You remind me of someone," he said, in his simple
+disarming fashion. "Queerly enough it's a man. A
+strong, hard, kindly, good-natured man. I found him
+
+without a thought but to make good. And I knew he
+would make good. Then it came my way to show him
+how. I offered him a notion. The notion was fine.
+Oh, yes&mdash;though I say it. It was the sort of thing if it
+were carried to success would hand the fellow working it
+down to posterity as one of his country's benefactors.
+The notion appealed to him. It stirred something in
+him, and set fire to his enthusiasm. He jumped for it.
+Why? Was it the thought of doing a great act for his
+country? Was it for that something that was all good
+stirring in him? No. I guess it was because he was a
+strong, physical, and spiritual, and mental force concentrated
+on big things, primarily inspired by Self. Personal
+achievement. It seems to me the good man always
+does what's real and worth while in the way of helping
+himself."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I think I understand." The girl nodded. "And
+this strong physical, and spiritual, and mental force?
+Have I heard of him? Is he known? Has he achieved?"</p>
+
+<p>"He's carrying on. Oh, yes." Father Adam paused.
+Then he went on quickly. "You don't know him yet.
+But I think you will. He's out on the coast of Labrador.
+He's driving his great purpose with all his force through
+the agency of a groundwood mill that would fill your
+Skandinavia folk with envy and alarm if they saw it.
+He's master of forests such as would break your heart
+when compared with these of your Skandinavia. His
+name's Sternford. Bull Sternford, of Sachigo."</p>
+
+<p>At the mention of Sachigo, Nancy's eyes widened.
+Then she laughed. It was a laugh of real amusement.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, that's queer. It's&mdash;I'm going right on there
+from here. I'm going to meet this very man, Sternford.
+They tell me I've just time to get there and pull out
+again for home before winter freezes them up solid.
+So he is this great man, with this great&mdash;notion. Tell
+me, what is he like?"</p>
+
+
+<p>"Oh, he's a big, strong man, as ready to laugh as to
+fight."</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam smiled, and stooped over the fire to
+push the attenuated sticks of it together.</p>
+
+<p>"May I ask why you're going to Sachigo?" he asked,
+without looking up.</p>
+
+<p>Just for a moment Nancy hesitated. Then she
+laughed happily.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see why you shouldn't," she cried. "There's
+no secret. Skandinavia intends to buy him, or crush
+him."</p>
+
+<p>The man sat up.</p>
+
+<p>"And you&mdash;a girl&mdash;are the emissary?"</p>
+
+<p>Incredulity robbed the man of the even calmness of'
+his manner.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Why not?"</p>
+
+<p>The challenge in the girls's eyes was unmistakable.</p>
+
+<p>"You won't buy him," Father Adam said quietly.
+"And you certainly won't crush him."</p>
+
+<p>"Because I'm a girl?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no. I was thinking of the Skandinavia." The
+man shook his head. "If I'm a judge of men, the crushing
+will be done from the other end of the line."</p>
+
+<p>"This man will crush Skandinavia?"</p>
+
+<p>The idea that Skandinavia could be crushed was quite
+unthinkable to Nancy. It was the great monopoly of the
+country. It was&mdash;but she felt that this lonely creature
+could have no real understanding of the power of her
+people.</p>
+
+<p>"Surely," he returned quietly. "But that," he added,
+with a return of his pleasant smile, "is just the notion
+of one man. I should say it's no real account. Yes, you
+go there. You see this man. The battle of your people
+with him matters little. It will be good for you to see
+him. It&mdash;may help you. Who can tell? He's a white
+man, and a fighter. He's honest and clean. It's&mdash;in
+
+the meeting of kindred spirits that the great events of
+life are brought about. It should be good for you both."</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder?" Nancy rose from her chair.</p>
+
+<p>The man rose also.</p>
+
+<p>"I think so," he said, very decidedly.</p>
+
+<p>The girl laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope so. But&mdash;" She held out her hand. "Thank
+you, Father," she said. "I'll never be able to think of
+the things I'm set on achieving without remembering
+our talk&mdash;and the man I met in the forest. I wish&mdash;but
+what's the use? I've got to make good. I must.
+I must go on, and&mdash;do the thing I see. Good-bye."</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam was holding the small gauntleted hand,
+and he seemed loth to release it. His eyes were very
+gentle, very earnest.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't worry to remember, child. Don't ever think
+about&mdash;this time. It won't help you. You've set your
+goal. Make it. You will do the good things you fancy
+to do, though maybe not the way you think them. It
+seems to me that 'good' mostly has its own way all the
+time. You can't drive it. And the best of it is I don't
+think there's a human creature so bad in this world,
+but that in some way God's work has been furthered
+through his life. Good-bye."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>For some moments the lonely figure stood gazing down
+the woodland aisles. The deep, shining light of a great
+hope was in his eyes. A wonderful tender smile had
+dispersed the shadows of his ascetic face. At length,
+as the girl's figure became completely swallowed up in
+the twilight of it all, he turned away and passed into the
+foliage shelter which was his home.</p>
+
+<p>He was squatting on his box, and the small canvas
+bag containing his belongings was open beside him. Its
+contents were strewn about. He was writing a long
+
+letter. There was several pages of it. When he had
+finished he read it over carefully. Then he carefully
+folded it and placed it in an envelope, and addressed it.
+It was addressed:</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: right">MR. BULL STERNFORD,</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">Sachigo, Farewell Cove,</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">Labrador.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_16"></a>
+<h3>Chapter VII&mdash;The Skandinavia Moves</h3>
+
+
+<p>Bat gazed up at the wooded ridge. They were standing
+in the marshy bottom of a natural hollow amidst a
+sparse scattering of pine and attenuated spruce. Beyond
+the ridge lay the waters of the cove. And to the
+left the broad waters of the river mouth flowed by. It
+was a desolate, damp spot, but its significance to the two
+men studying it was profound.</p>
+
+<p>Skert Lawton, the chief engineer of Sachigo, tall,
+loose-limbed, raw-boned, watched his superior with somewhat
+mournful, unsmiling eyes. There was something
+of deadly earnest in his regard, something anxious.
+But that was always his way. Bat had once said of
+him: "Skert Lawton's one hell of a good boy. But I
+won't get no comfort in the grave if I ain't ever see him
+grin." There was not the smallest sign of a smile in
+him now.</p>
+
+<p>"It's one big notion," Bat said, at last. Then he
+added doubtfully. "It comes mighty nigh being too big."</p>
+
+<p>Lawton emitted a curious sound like a snort. It was
+mainly, however, an ejaculation of violent impatience.
+Bat turned with a twinkling grin, surveying the queer
+figure. His engineer was always a source of the profoundest
+
+interest for him. Just now, in his hard, rough
+clothing, he might have been a lumber-jack, or casual
+labourer. Anything, in fact, rather than the college-bred,
+brilliant engineer he really was.</p>
+
+<p>Bat's doubt had been carefully calculated. He knew
+his man. And just now as he awaited the explosion he
+looked for, his thoughts went back to a scene he had
+once had with a half drunken machine-minder whom
+he had had to pay off. The man had epitomised the chief
+engineer's qualities and character, as those who encountered
+his authority understood them, in a few lurid,
+illuminating phrases. "You know," he had said, "that
+guy ain't a man. No, sir. He's the mush-fed image
+of a penitentiary boss. I guess he'd set the grease box
+of a driving shaft hot with a look. His temper 'ud burn
+holes in sheet iron. As for work&mdash;work? Holy Mackinaw!
+I've worked hired man to a French Canuk mossback
+which don't leave a feller the playtime of a nigger
+slave, but that hell-hired Scotch machine boss sets me
+yearnin' for that mossback's wage like a bull-pup chasin'
+
+offal. I tell you right here if that guy don't quit his notions
+there'll be murder done. Bloody murder! An' it's a
+God's sure thing when that happens he'll freeze to death
+in hell. It don't rile me a thing to be told the things he
+guesses my mother was. Maybe that's a matter of
+opinion, and, anyway, she's mixin' with a crop of
+angels who don't figger to have no truck with Scotch
+machine bosses. I guess a sight of his flea-bitten features
+'ud set 'em seein' things so they wouldn't rec'nise their
+harps from frypans, and they'd moult feathers till you
+wouldn't know it from a snowfall on Labrador. But when
+he mixes his notions of my ma with 'lazy'! Lazy! Lazy!
+Gee! Why, if I signed in a half hour late from that
+bum suttler's canteen, I guess it was only the time it took
+me digestin' two quarts of the gut-wash they hand out
+there in the hope you won't know it from beer. No,
+
+sir, 'lazy son-of-a-bitch' from that guy is the talk no
+decent citizen with a bunch of guts is goin' to stand
+for."</p>
+
+<p>Skert Lawton was known for a red-hot "burner," a
+"nigger driver." No doubt he was all this in addition to
+his brilliant attainments as an engineer. But the methods
+he applied to others he applied to himself. And the
+whole of him, brain and body, was for the enterprise
+they were all engaged in. Bat had intended to goad
+the demon of obstinate energy which possessed the man,
+and he succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>Skert flung out his hand in a comprehensive gesture.</p>
+
+<p>"Hell!" he cried. "That's no sort of talk anyway.
+I've been weeks on this thing. And I've got it to the
+last fraction. Big notion? Of course it is. Aren't
+we mostly concerned with big notions? Here, what are
+you asking? An inland boom with capacity for anything
+over a million cords. Well? It's damn ridiculous
+talking the size of the notion. This hollow is fixed right.
+Its bed is ten feet below the bed of the river. It's surrounded
+with a natural ridge on all sides a hundred and
+fifty feet high. There's a quarter mile below the hollow
+and the river bank, and the new mill extensions are just
+to the east of this ridge. It's well-nigh child's play.
+Nature's fixed it that way. Two cuttings, and a race-way
+on the river. We flood this. Feed it full of lumber in
+the summer with surplus from the cut and you've got
+that reserve for winter, so you can keep every darn
+machine grinding its guts out. What's the use talking?
+Big notion? Of course it is. We're out for big notions
+all the time. That's the whole proposition. Well?"</p>
+
+<p>Bat grinned at the heated disgust in the man's tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Sounds like eatin' pie," he retorted aggravatingly.
+"The cost? The labour? Time? You got those
+things?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's right up at your office now." Skert's eyes
+
+widened in surprise at such a question. "It's not my
+way to play around."</p>
+
+<p>"No." Bat's eyes refused seriousness.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, psha! This is no sort of time chewing these
+details. It's figgered to the last second, the last man,
+the last cent. I brought you to see things. Well, you've
+seen things. And if you're satisfied we'll quit right
+away. I've no spare play time."</p>
+
+<p>There was no pretence of patience in Skert Lawton.
+He had looked for appreciation and only found doubt. He
+moved off.</p>
+
+<p>Bat had done the thing intended. He had no intention
+of hurting the man. He understood the driving
+power of the mood he had stirred.</p>
+
+<p>They moved off together.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right, Skert," he said kindly. "You've
+done one big thing. An' it's the thing Bull and I
+want&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Then why in hell didn't you say it instead of talking&mdash;notions?"</p>
+
+<p>For all the sharpness of his retort, Skert was mollified.
+Bat shook his head and a shrewd light twinkled in his
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"You're a pretty bright boy, Skert," he said. "But
+you're brightest when you're riled."</p>
+
+<p>They had gained the river bank where booms lined
+the shore, and scores of men were rafting. They had left
+the water-logged hollow behind them, and debouched
+on the busy world of the mill. Ahead lay the new extensions
+where the saws were shrieking the song of their
+labours upon the feed for the rumbling grinders. It
+was a township of buildings of all sizes crowding about
+the great central machine house.</p>
+
+<p>They crossed the light footbridge over the "cut in"
+from the river, and moved along down the main highway
+of the northern shore.</p>
+
+
+<p>Both were pre-occupied. The engineer was listening
+to the note of his beloved machinery. Bat was concerned
+with any and every movement going on within
+the range of his vision. They walked briskly, the lean
+engineer setting a pace that kept the other stumping
+hurriedly beside him.</p>
+
+<p>Abreast of the mill they approached a new-looking,
+long, low building. It was single storied and lumber
+built, with a succession of many windows down its
+length. The hour was noon. And men were hurrying
+towards its entrance from every direction.</p>
+
+<p>Bat watched interestedly.</p>
+
+<p>"They seem mighty keen for their new playground,"
+he said at last, with a quick nod in the direction of the
+recreation house.</p>
+
+<p>The engineer came out of his dream. His mournful
+eyes turned in the direction indicated and devoured the
+scene. Then he glanced down at the squat figure stumping
+beside him.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess that's so. But not the way you figgered when
+you got that fool notion of handing 'em a playhouse,"
+he said roughly. "If you pass a hog a feather bed, it's
+a sure thing he'll work out the best way to muss it quick."</p>
+
+<p>"How? I don't get you?"</p>
+
+<p>There was no humour in Bat's eyes now.</p>
+
+<p>"They call it a 'Chapel'," Skert said dryly. "They've
+surely got preachers, but they don't talk religion. Maybe
+that's sort of new to you, here. It isn't across the water
+where I come from. Guess you think those boys are
+racing out to get a game of checkers, or billiards, or cards,
+or some other fool play you reckoned to hand 'em to
+make 'em feel good." He shook his head. "They're not.
+They've turned their 'Chapel' into a sort of parliament.
+Every dinner hour there's a feller, different fellers most
+all the time, gets up and hands 'em out an address. It's
+short, but red hot. The afternoon shift in the mill is
+
+given up to brightening up their fool brains on it. And
+when evening comes along, and they've their bellies full
+of supper and beer, they get along to the 'Chapel' and
+they debate the address, handing out opinions and notions
+just as bellies guide 'em."</p>
+
+<p>"And the addresses. What are they mostly? On
+the work? The trade they're working at?"</p>
+
+<p>A world of pity looked out of Skert's eyes as he surveyed
+the man he believed to be the greatest organiser
+the mill industry had ever seen. He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Work? Not on your life! Socialism, Communism&mdash;Revolution!"</p>
+
+<p>Bat spat out a stream of tobacco juice. He was startled.</p>
+
+<p>"But I ain't heard tell of any sort of unrest gettin'
+
+busy. We're payin' big money. It's bigger than the
+market. They got&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Best talk to Sternford when you get back up there
+to your office. He's got the boys sized right up to the
+last hair of their stupid heads. But I'll hand you something
+I've reckoned to hand you a while back, only I
+wanted to be sure. There's nothing of this truck about
+the 'hands' of the old mill. It's the new hands you've
+been collecting from the forests. We've grown by two
+thousand hands in the past year or so. And they're so
+darn mixed I wouldn't fancy trying to sort 'em. They
+come from all parts. The world's been talking revolution
+since ever these buzzy-headed Muscovites reckoned
+to start in grabbing the world's goods for themselves.
+Well, it's a hell of a long piece here to Labrador, but
+it's found its way, and the mutton-brained fools who're
+supposed to play around that shanty you handed 'em
+are recreating themselves talking about it in there. Here,
+come right over to that window. It's open."</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps Skert was enjoying himself. Certainly his
+mournful eyes were less mournful as he led his chief
+over to the open window. Bat had had his innings with
+
+him. He was planning the game and hitting hard in
+his turn.</p>
+
+<p>"The enemy of the world, of more particularly the
+worker is the&mdash;CAPITALIST!"</p>
+
+<p>The words were hurled from the platform of the
+recreation room at the heads of the listening throng
+below and reached the open window just as Lawton and
+his chief came up to it. There was applause following
+this profound announcement, and Skert turned on his
+companion.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" he demanded, in a tone of biting triumph.</p>
+
+<p>They had reached the window at the psychological
+moment. Nothing could have suited his purpose better.</p>
+
+<p>Bat turned away abruptly. It was as if some fierce
+emotion made it impossible for him to remain another
+second. His heavy brows depressed, and his deep-set eyes
+narrowed to gimlet holes. Skert pursued him. Once clear
+of the window, and beyond earshot, Bat flung his reply
+with all the passionate force of his fighting nature.</p>
+
+<p>"The lousy swine!" he cried. "I'll close that place
+sure as&mdash;hell."</p>
+
+<p>Skert shook his head as they walked on.</p>
+
+<p>"No, you won't," he said. "Guess you aren't crazy.
+You'll talk this over with Sternford. And when you've
+talked it some, you'll keep that place running, and let
+them talk. It's best that way. But I've got tab of most
+of the speakers, and I've located where they come from.
+Most of them have sometime worked for the Skandinavia.
+Maybe that's the reason of their talk. Maybe
+even Skandinavia's glad they're talking that way here
+on Labrador. I don't know. But&mdash;well, I'll have to quit
+you here. They're setting up the two big new machines,
+and it don't do leaving them long. So long. Anything
+else you need to know about that recreation room, why,
+I guess I can hand it to you."</p>
+
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Bull Sternford laid the telegram aside while a shadowy
+smile hovered about his firm lips. Then he settled himself
+back in his chair, and gave himself up to the thoughtful
+contemplation of the brilliant sunlight, and the perfect,
+steely azure of the sky beyond the window opposite him.</p>
+
+<p>The change in the man was almost magical. The
+hot-headed, determined, fighting lumber-jack whom
+Father Adam had rescued from furious homicide had
+hidden himself under something deeper than the veneer
+which the modest suit of conventional life provides. It
+was the subtle change that comes from within which had
+transformed him. It was in his eyes. In the set of his
+jaws. It was in the man's whole poise. His resources
+of spiritual power; his mental force; his virility of
+personality. All these things were concentrated. They
+were no longer sprawling, groping, seeking the great
+purpose of his life as they had been in the lumber camp
+of the Skandinavia.</p>
+
+<p>A feeling akin to triumph filled the man's heart as he
+gazed out upon the pleasant light of Labrador's late
+summer day. In something like twelve months he had
+thrust leagues along the road he meant to travel. And
+his progress had been of a whirlwind nature. It had
+been work, desperate, strenuous work. It had been the
+double labour of intensive study combined with the necessary
+progress in the schemes laid down for the future
+of Sachigo. It had only been possible to a man of his
+amazing faculties, combined with the fact that Bat
+Harker and the mournful Skert Lawton had left him
+free from the clogging detail of the mill organisation and
+routine.</p>
+
+<p>In twelve months he had crystallised the dreams and
+projects of his predecessor in the chair he was now
+occupying. In twelve months he had built up the shell
+of the great combination of groundwood and paper mills
+which was to have such far-reaching effect upon the paper
+
+trade of the world. And now, ahead of him was spread
+out the sea of finance upon which he must next embark.
+He felt that already giant's work had been done. But
+his yearning could never be satisfied by a mere measure
+of completion. He must embrace it all, complete it all.</p>
+
+<p>Already he seemed to have lived with bankers and
+financial specialists, but he felt it was only the beginning
+of that which he had yet to do. He was unappalled.
+He was more than confident. He had discovered unguessed
+faculties for finance in himself. He had surprised
+himself as well as those others with whom he had
+come in contact. They had discovered in him all that
+which Father Adam had been so prompt to realise. They
+had found in him a young, untrained mind, untrained in
+their own calling, whose natural aptitude was amazing,
+and whose courage and confidence were beyond words.
+But greatest of all was the perception he displayed. They
+realised he never required the telling of more than half
+the story. Intuition and inspiration completed it for
+him without the labour of their words. The result of
+those twelve months was there for all to see. The
+lumberman had been translated into a hard, fighting,
+business man.</p>
+
+<p>The train of the man's thought was broken by the
+unceremonious entry of Bat Harker. Bull turned. One
+swift glance into the grizzled face warned him his
+associate's mood was by no means easy. He, like everyone
+who came into contact with Bat, had learned to
+appreciate the volcanic fires burning under the lumberman's
+exterior.</p>
+
+<p>Bull promptly fended any storm that might possibly
+be brewing. He held up his telegram and his eyes were
+smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"The Skandinavia's on the move," he cried. And
+Bat recognised the battle note in the tone.</p>
+
+<p>"How?"</p>
+
+
+<p>Bull flung the message across the desk.</p>
+
+<p>"The Skandinavia's representative is arriving on the
+<em>Myra</em>," he said. Then he added, "Elas Peterman
+says so."</p>
+
+<p>"What for?"</p>
+
+<p>Bat had picked up the message and stood reading it.</p>
+
+<p>The other searched amongst his papers.</p>
+
+<p>"I kind of forgot putting you wise before," he said.
+"There were two letters came along a week back. One
+was from Elas Peterman, of the Skandinavia folk, and
+the other from Father Adam. That message was
+'phoned on from the headland. The letters didn't just
+concern a deal, so I set 'em aside. This message is
+different."</p>
+
+<p>For the moment the affairs down at the recreation
+room were forgotten, and Bat contented himself with
+the interest of the moment.</p>
+
+<p>"How?" he demanded again in his sharp way.</p>
+
+<p>Bull laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," he cried, holding out the letters he had found.
+"I best pass you these. That's from Peterman. There's
+not much written, but a deal lies under the writing.
+You'll see he asks permission for a representative of the
+Skandinavia to wait on us. I wirelessed back, 'I'd just
+love to death meeting him.' By the same mail came
+Father Adam's yarn. An' I guess that's where the soup
+thickens. He says some woman's coming along from the
+Skandinavia folk. He guesses they're going to put up
+some proposition that looks like butting in on the plans
+laid out for Sachigo. But that don't seem to worry him
+a thing. I guess his letter wasn't written to hand us
+warning. He seems concerned for the woman. You'll see.
+He asks me to treat her gently. Firmly, yes. But also,
+
+'very, very gently.' He says, 'you see, she's a woman'."</p>
+
+<p>Bull waited while the other perused both letters. Then,
+as Bat looked up questioningly, he went on:</p>
+
+
+<p>"That telegram got here half an hour back," he said.
+Then he shrugged. "The woman's on the <em>Myra</em>, and the
+vessel's been sighted off the headland. She'll be along
+in two hours."</p>
+
+<p>"And what're you doin' about it?"</p>
+
+<p>Bat's eyes were searching. Perhaps Father Adam's
+letter had told him something it had failed to tell the
+other.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll see her right away," Bull laughed. "If she
+feels like stopping around and getting a sight of the
+things we're doin' she's welcome. She can put up at
+the visitor's house. It 'ud do me good for her to pass
+the news on to the folk she comes from."</p>
+
+<p>But Bat's manner had none of the light confidence of
+the other. Bitter hatred of the Skandinavia was deeply
+ingrained in him. He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep 'em guessin'," he said. "It'll worry 'em&mdash;that
+way."</p>
+
+<p>Then he passed the letters back, and dropped into the
+chair that was always his.</p>
+
+<p>"But this woman," he went on, in obvious puzzlement.
+"It's&mdash;it's kind of new, I guess. Then there's
+Father Adam's message. That don't hand us much."</p>
+
+<p>Bull's lightness passed.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said, "that message is queer. He knows
+about it. Yet he hasn't given her name or said a thing.
+Say&mdash;I like that phrase though. What is it? He says,
+'treat her very, very gently&mdash;you see, she's a woman.'
+That's Father Adam right thro'&mdash;sure. But&mdash;well it's a
+pity he don't say more."</p>
+
+<p>Bat nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll go along down an' meet her?"</p>
+
+<p>"No." Bull shook his head decidedly. "You will."</p>
+
+<p>Bat's eyes twinkled with a better humour than they had
+hitherto displayed.</p>
+
+<p>"Why&mdash;me?"</p>
+
+
+<p>"She comes from the Skandinavia. Guess Skandinavia
+would fancy me meeting their representative at the quay&mdash;quite
+a lot."</p>
+
+<p>The argument met with Bat's entire approval. He
+pulled out a silver timepiece and consulted it.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right," he said, "I'll quit you in ha'f an
+hour. Say&mdash;I'm kind of guessin' there's other representatives
+of the Skandinavia around. I didn't guess ther'
+
+was much to Sachigo that I wasn't wise to. But that
+boy, Skert Lawton, showed me a play I hadn't a notion
+about. It's that darn play shanty I set up for the boys.
+I feel that mad about it I got a notion closing it right
+down. It worried me startin' it. It worries me more
+now. You see, I guess it's come of me lappin' up the
+ha'f-baked notions you find wrote in the news-sheets.
+Folks seem to be guessin' the worker needs somethin'
+more than his wage. They guess he's gotten some sort
+of queer soul needin' things he can't pay for. I allow I
+hadn't seen it that way myself. It mostly seemed to me a
+hell of a good wage and a full belly was mostly the need
+of a lumber-jack, and a dead sure thing all he deserved.
+But I fell for the news-sheet dope, an' set up that cursed
+recreation shanty. Now we're goin' to git trouble."</p>
+
+<p>"How?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull's ejaculation was sharp.</p>
+
+<p>"They hold meetings there. They dope out Capital and
+Labour stuff there, instead of pushing games at each other.
+Guess they got the bug of politics an' are scratching
+themselves bad. It ain't the old Labrador guys, Skert
+says. It's mostly new hands passin' their stuff on. Skert
+reckons we got a whole heap of the Skandinavia 'throw-outs,'
+
+around here now. That don't say Skandinavia's
+workin' monkey tricks. Though they might be. You
+see, this sort of dope's been talked most everywhere,
+except on Labrador, years now. I guess we need to go
+through the bunch with a louse comb. But maybe the
+
+mischief's done. I'm dead crazy to shut that darn place
+down."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't!" Bull was emphatic. "Shut it down and
+you'll make it a thousand times worse. No, sir. Let
+'em shout. Let 'em blow off any old steam they need.
+Just sit tight. If it's the usual hot air there's nothing
+much coming of it up here on Labrador. There's this
+to remember. We're a thousand miles of hell's own
+winter, and a pretty tough sea, from the politicians who
+spend their lives befooling a crowd of unthinking muttons.
+Pay 'em well, and feed 'em well, and they've the horse
+sense to know there ain't no electric stoves out in the
+Labrador forests in winter. That way we don't need
+to worry. If it's the Skandinavia tricks it's different.
+They'll play the game to the finish. It don't signify a
+curse if you close down the recreation shanty or not.
+We've got to meet it as a competition, and fight it the way
+we'd fight any other."</p>
+
+<p>Bat's eyes snapped.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the kind of dope Skert Lawton's handed me,"
+he protested.</p>
+
+<p>"And Skert's a wise guy," came the prompt retort.</p>
+
+<p>Quite suddenly Bat flung out his gnarled hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Hell!" he cried violently. "Have we got to sit
+around like mush-men, while the rats are chawin' our
+vitals. Fifteen or sixteen year I've handled this lay-out
+without a growl I couldn't kick plumb out o' the feller
+who made it. Now&mdash;now, because of a fool play I made,
+I've got to set the kid gloves on my hands, sayin' 'thank
+you,' while the boys git up and plug me between the
+eyes. No, sir. It ain't my way. It's me for the shot
+gun in the stern of the gopher all the time. It's me to
+mush up the features of any hoboe who don't know
+better than to grin when I'm throwin' the hot air. I
+can't stand for the politics of labour where I hand out
+the wage. A man's a man to me, not one darn slobber
+
+of policy. I'm goin' to jump in on that talk. And
+when I'm thro'&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You'll get all the trouble in the world plumb on your
+neck." Bull's fine eyes were alight with humour. He
+revelled in the fighting spirit of the older man. "Here,
+Bat," he cried, "I'm a fool kid beside you. I don't
+begin to know my job when I think of you. But I'm
+up sides with all the politics games. Politics are ideals,
+notions. They haven't real horse sense within a mile.
+They're just the fool thoughts of folk who haven't better
+to do than sit around and think, and talk, an' see how
+they can make other folk conform to the things they
+think. That's all right. It's human nature in its biggest
+conceit, or it's another way of helping themselves
+without pushing a shovel. It don't matter which it is.
+But what I want to impress on you is, it's the biggest
+thing in life. It's the whole thing in life. Get a notion
+and think it hard enough, and talk it hard enough, and
+you'll hypnotise a hundred brains bigger than your own,
+and sweep the crowd with you. You'll even hypnotise
+yourself into believing the truth of a thing your better
+sense knows isn't true, never was true, an' couldn't be
+true anyway. And when you're fixed that way you'll
+die for your notion. Oh, a politician ain't yearning for
+any old grave. He wouldn't get an audience there.
+Politicians 'ud hate to die worse than a condemned man.
+But that's the queer of it; he'd die rather than give up a
+notion he's built up. He'd hate to death to push a blue
+pencil through it and&mdash;try again. All of which means,
+bar the doors of this recreation room parliament, and
+you'll start up a hundred such parliaments, and worse,
+throughout your enterprise here on Labrador, and you'll
+finish by wrecking the whole blessed concern."</p>
+
+<p>If Bull looked for yielding he was disappointed. But
+he appreciated the twinkle that had crept into the lumberman's
+stern eyes. The answer he received was a curiously
+
+expressive grunt as the man took out his timepiece
+and consulted it. When he saw him rise abruptly
+from his chair, Bull felt that if his talk had not had the
+effect he desired it had not been wholly wasted.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess I'll git goin'," Bat said shortly. Then he
+glanced out of the window, where he could plainly see
+the stream of the <em>Myra's</em> smoke as she came down the
+cove. "I'll bring your lady friend right up. Maybe
+she'll fancy the dope, which I 'low you can hand out
+good an' plenty."</p>
+
+<p>With this parting shot he hurried from the room, and
+Bull fancied he detected the sound of a chuckle as the
+man departed.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_17"></a>
+<h3>Chapter VIII&mdash;An Affair Of Outposts</h3>
+
+
+<p>The business of making fast the vessel had no interest
+for Nancy McDonald. The thing that was about her,
+the thing that had leapt at her out of the haze hanging
+over the waters of Farewell Cove, as the <em>Myra</em> steamed
+to her haven, pre-occupied her to the exclusion of everything
+else. Her feelings were something of those of the
+explorer suddenly coming upon a new, unguessed world.</p>
+
+<p>"Old Man" Hardy was at her side, waiting for the
+adjustment of the gangway. He was quietly observing
+her with a sense of enjoyment at the obvious surprise
+and interest she displayed. Besides, her beauty charmed
+him for all his years. And then had she not been entrusted
+to his especial care by those people who held
+powerful influence in all concerning the coastal trade upon
+which he was engaged?</p>
+
+<p>Sachigo was not only a mill. It was a&mdash;city. This
+was the sum of Nancy's astonishing discovery. And the
+picture of it held her fascinated. She commented little,
+
+she had questioned little of the old skipper at her elbow.
+The thing she saw was too overwhelming. Besides,
+reticence was impressed upon her by the nature of her
+visit.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a mighty elegant place," the seaman said at last.</p>
+
+<p>The girl nodded. Then she smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"I've seen trolley cars on the seashore. I've seen
+electric standards for lighting. What am I to see next
+on&mdash;Labrador?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Hardy laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"You've to see the folks who've done it all," he replied.
+"And&mdash;there's one of 'em."</p>
+
+<p>He indicated the squat figure of Bat Harker leaning
+against some bales piled on the quay. Nancy turned in
+that direction.</p>
+
+<p>She discovered the rough-clad, almost uncouth figure
+of Bat. She noted his moving jaws as he chewed vigorously.
+She saw that a short stubble of beard was growing
+on a normally clean-shaven face, and that the man's
+clothing might have been the clothing of any labourer.
+But the iron cast of his face left her with sudden qualms.
+It was so hard. To her imagination it suggested complete
+failure for her mission.</p>
+
+<p>"Is he the&mdash;owner? Is he&mdash;Mr. Sternford?" Her
+questions came in a hushed tone that was almost awed.</p>
+
+<p>"No. That's Bat&mdash;Bat Harker. He's mill-boss."</p>
+
+<p>"I see." There was relief in Nancy's tone. But it
+passed as the seaman continued.</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe he's waiting for you though. Are they wise
+you're coming along? You don't see Bat around this
+quay without he's lookin' for some folk to come along
+on the <em>Myra</em>."</p>
+
+<p>The gangway clattered out on to the quay, and the
+man moved toward it.</p>
+
+<p>We best get ashore," he said. "You see, mam, my
+orders are to pass you over to the folks waiting for
+
+you. That'll be&mdash;Bat. He'll pass you on to Sternford.
+I take it you'll sleep aboard to-night. Your stateroom's
+booked that way. We sail to-morrow sundown, which
+will give you plenty time looking around if you fancy
+that way. I allow Sachigo's worth it. One day it'll be
+a big city, if I'm a judge. Will you step this way?"</p>
+
+<p>The seaman's deference was obvious. But Nancy
+remained oblivious to it. To her it was just kindliness,
+and she was more than grateful. But his final remark
+about Sachigo left her pathetically disquieted. For the
+first time in her life she doubted the all-powerful position
+of the people to whom she had sold her services.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, thanks," she returned, smiling to disguise her
+feelings. Then she added, "I'm glad we don't sail till
+to-morrow evening. You see, I couldn't leave&mdash;this,
+without a big look around."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>The ship-master had hurried away.</p>
+
+<p>Bat's deep-set eyes were steadily regarding the beautiful
+face before him. He was gazing into the hazel depths
+of Nancy's eyes without a sign. He had noted everything
+as the girl had come down the gangway. The
+height, the graceful carriage in the long plucked-beaver
+coat which terminated just above the trim ankles in their
+silken, almost transparent, hose. Not even at Captain
+Hardy's pronouncement of her name had he yielded a
+sign. And yet&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Miss&mdash;Nancy McDonald?"</p>
+
+<p>Bat's tone had lost its usual roughness. His mind had
+leapt back over many years to a time when he had been
+concerned for that name in a way that had stirred him to
+great warmth. He smiled. It was a baffling, somewhat
+derisive smile.</p>
+
+<p>"You're the lady representing the&mdash;Skandinavia?"
+he added.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Why, yes," Nancy cried, "and I feel I want to thank
+you for the privilege of obtaining even an outside view
+of your wonderful, wonderful place here."</p>
+
+<p>Bat raked thoughtfully at the stubble on his chin.</p>
+
+<p>"If you feel that way, Miss, it'll hand me pleasure to
+show you and tell you about things," he said. "You
+come right out of what the folks around here like to call
+the enemy camp, but it don't matter a little bit. Not
+a little bit. The whole of Sachigo's standin' wide open
+for you to walk through." Then he dashed his hand
+across his face to clear the voracious mosquitoes. "But
+if we stop around here mor'n ha'f another minute, the
+memory you'll mostly carry away with you from Labrador'll
+be skitters&mdash;an' nothing much else. Will you
+come right along up to Mr. Sternford's office? It's quite
+a piece up the hill, which helps to keep it clear of skitters
+an' things?"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy laughed. Her early impression of the super-lumberjack
+had passed. The man's smile was beyond
+words in its kindliness. His deep, twinkling eyes were
+full of appeal.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, surely," she assented. "If you'll show me the
+way I'll be glad. The flies and things are certainly thick,
+and as I intend leaving Sachigo with happy memories,
+well&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Come right along. I'm here for just that purpose."</p>
+
+<p>As they made their way up the woodland trail they
+talked together with an easy intimacy. Nancy was
+young. She was full of the joy of life, full of real enthusiasm.
+And this rough creature with his ready smile
+appealed to her. His frank, open way was something
+so far removed from that which prevailed under the
+Skandinavia's rule.</p>
+
+<p>For Bat, the walk up from the quayside was one of the
+many milestones in his chequered life. He talked readily.
+He listened, too. But under it all his thought was busy.
+
+The mystery of Father Adam's letter was no longer a
+mystery. He understood. But he was also puzzled.
+How had this thing come about? How had Father
+Adam learned of this visit? How had this girl become
+representative of the Skandinavia? A hundred questions
+flashed through his mind, for none of which he could find
+a satisfactory answer. But he smiled to himself as he
+thought of that last line in Father Adam's letter. "Treat
+her gently&mdash;firmly, yes&mdash;but very gently. You see, she's
+a&mdash;woman."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>It was a moment likely to live with both in the years
+to come. For Nancy it was at least the final stage of
+her apprenticeship, the passing of the portal beyond
+which opened out the world she so completely desired to
+take her place in. Did it not mean the moment of
+shouldering the great burden of responsibility she had
+so steadfastly trained herself to bear? For Bull Sternford
+it had no such meaning. His powers had long
+since been tested. As a meeting with the representative
+of a rival enterprise it was merely an incident in the life
+to which he had become completely accustomed. Its significance
+lay in quite another direction.</p>
+
+<p>Bat had taken his departure. He had witnessed the
+meeting of Nancy with this protégé Father Adam had
+sent him from the dark world of the forests. And his
+witness of it had been with twinkling eyes, and the happy
+sense of an amusement he had never looked to discover in
+the presence of a representative of the Skandinavia. In
+an unexpressed fashion he realised he was gazing upon
+something in the nature of a stage play.</p>
+
+<p>He had found Bull transformed. The office suit was
+gone. The man's hair was carefully brushed. He even
+suspected the liberal use of soap and water. And then,
+too, the heavy, rough boots had given place to shining
+patent leather. The youth and human nature of it
+
+pleased him. So he had departed to the workshops below
+with a voiceless chuckle, and a greater appreciation
+of the inevitability of the things of life.</p>
+
+<p>Apart from Nancy's appreciation of that meeting,
+the woman in her sought to appraise the man she beheld.
+Her impression was far deeper than she knew. The
+height and muscular girth she beheld left her with a
+feeling that she was gazing upon one of the pictures
+her school-girl mind had created for the great men of
+Greek and Roman history. The clean-shaven, clear-cut
+face, with its fine eyes and broad brow, its purposeful
+mouth; these were details that had to be there, and
+were there. And somehow, as she realised them, and
+the sense of the man's power and personality forced
+itself upon her, her original confidence still further
+lessened, and she wondered not a little anxiously as to
+the outcome of this interview she had sought.</p>
+
+<p>As for the man, his eyes had calmly smiled his spoken
+greeting. His handshake had been conventionally firm.
+But behind the mask of it all was one great surge of
+feeling. The vision of a beautiful, fur-coated figure, with
+the peeping lure of pretty ankles, the warm cap pressed
+low on the girl's head as though endeavouring to hide
+up the radiant framing of the sweetest, most beautiful
+face he felt he had ever seen, dealt all his preconceived
+purpose for the interview one final, smashing blow.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm real glad to welcome you to Sachigo," he had
+begun. Then in a moment, the conventional gave place
+to the man in him. "But say," he added with a pleasant
+laugh, "we've a big piece of talk to make. You best let
+me help you remove that coat. The stove we always
+need to keep going here on Labrador makes this shanty
+hot as&mdash;very hot."</p>
+
+<p>The manner of it sent convention, caution, business
+pose, scattering to the winds. The girl laughed and
+yielded.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Why, thanks," she said readily. "I'm glad you
+reckon we're to make a big talk. You see," she added
+slyly, "I've been looking out of the window, and there's
+quite a drop below. Up to now I felt my fur might&mdash;be
+useful."</p>
+
+<p>Bull laughed as he laid the coat aside. He had drawn
+up a comfortable lounging chair which Nancy was prompt
+to accept. For himself he stood at the window.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, yes." He smiled. "I'd say it's a wise general
+who looks to his retreat before the encounter. I'd sort
+of half forgotten you come from the&mdash;Skandinavia."</p>
+
+<p>"But I hadn't."</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>They both laughed. Nancy leant back in her chair.
+Her pose was all unconscious. She had toiled hard to
+keep pace with the sturdy gait of Bat in the ascent from
+the quay. Now she was glad of the ease the chair
+afforded.</p>
+
+<p>"Why did you say that?" Nancy asked a moment later.</p>
+
+<p>Bull spread out his great hands.</p>
+
+<p>"The Skandinavia don't usually let folks forget they're
+behind them."</p>
+
+<p>"Now that's just too bad. It&mdash;it isn't generous," the
+girl said half seriously.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull left the window and took the chair that was
+usually Bat's. He set it so that he could feast his eyes
+on the beauty he found so irresistible.</p>
+
+<p>"You see," he went on, "I've got a right to say that
+all the same. It's not the&mdash;the challenge of a&mdash;what'll
+I say&mdash;competitor? I once had the honour of drawing
+a few bucks a month on the paysheets of the Skandinavia.
+And folks reckoned, and I guess I was amongst 'em, that
+Skandinavia said to its people: 'Make good or&mdash;beat it.'
+That being so it makes it a sure thing they're not liable
+to leave you forgetting who's behind you."</p>
+
+<p>His smile had gone. He was simply serious. This
+man had worked for her people, and Nancy felt he was
+entitled to his opinion.</p>
+
+<p>"That's going to make my talk harder," she said. "I'm
+sorry. But there," she went on. "It doesn't really matter,
+does it? Anyway I want to tell you right away of the
+craze the sight of your splendid Sachigo has started buzzing
+in my head. Say, Mr. Sternford, it beats anything I
+ever dreamed, and I want to say that there's no one in the
+Skandinavia, from Mr. Peterman downwards, has the
+littlest notion of it. It's not a mill. It's a world of real,
+civilised enterprise. And it's set here where you'd look
+for the roughest of forest life. I just had no idea."</p>
+
+<p>It was all said spontaneously. And the pleasure it gave
+was obvious in the man's eyes. He nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said. "The construction of this mill, here
+on Labrador, isn't short of genius by a yard. And the
+genius of it lies where you won't guess."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy's pretty eyes were mildly searching.</p>
+
+<p>"You're the head of Sachigo," she suggested.</p>
+
+<p>Bull's eyes lit.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," he cried, "an' I'm mighty proud that's so.
+But I'm not the genius of this great mill. No. That
+grizzled, tough old lumberman who toted you along up
+from the quayside is the brain of this organisation. He's
+a&mdash;wonder. There's times I want to laff when I think of
+it. There's times I'm most ready to cry. You see, you
+don't know that great feller. I'm just beginning to guess
+I do. He's a heart as big as a house, and the manner to
+scare a 'hold-up.' He's the grit of a reg'ment of soldiers
+and the mutton softness of a kid girl. He's the brain of
+a Solomon, and the illiteracy of a one day school kid.
+He's all those things, and he's the biggest proposition in
+men I've ever heard tell about. It's kind of tough. Don't
+you feel that way? He'll suck a pint of tobacco juice in
+the day, and blaspheme till your ears get on edge. And
+
+while your folks are guessing he'll put through a proposition
+that 'ud leave ha'f the world gasping."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy stirred. This man's whole-hearted appreciation
+of another was something rather fine in her simple
+philosophy. The last thing she had contemplated in
+approaching the head of a rival enterprise was such talk
+as this. But somehow it seemed to fit the man. Somehow
+as she noted the squarely gazing eyes, and the power
+in every line of his features, she realised that whatever
+lines he chose to talk on, nothing could change the decision
+lying behind it all. She liked him all the better for
+that, and found herself drawing comparison between him
+and Elas Peterman to the latter's detriment.</p>
+
+<p>"I like that," she cried impulsively. Then the colour
+rose in her cheeks at the thought of her temerity. "I
+guess he's all you say. Maybe some day I'll hear his
+side of things. I'd like to. You see&mdash;I felt I'd known
+him years when he brought me in here. Maybe you won't
+understand what that implies."</p>
+
+<p>"I think I do."</p>
+
+<p>Bull stood up from his chair and passed round his desk.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, say, Miss McDonald," he went on, in his keen
+fashion. "You come from Skandinavia. And I guess
+you come on a pretty stiff proposition. It's going to be
+difficult for you to hand it me. Maybe you're young in
+the game. Well, it doesn't matter a thing. Now we're
+going to start right in talking that proposition, and I'm
+going to help you. But before that starts I just want to
+say this. You, I guess, are going right back on the <em>Myra</em>
+and she sails to-morrow, sundown. That means you'll
+stay a night in Sachigo&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm stopping on the vessel. It's all fixed."</p>
+
+<p>Bull sat down at his desk.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm kind of glad," he said, with a shade of relief.
+"It isn't that you aren't welcome to all the old hospitality
+Sachigo can hand you. You're just more than welcome.
+
+But Bat hasn't built his swell hotel yet," he laughed.
+"And as for us here, why, we 'batch' it. There isn't
+a thing in skirts around this place, only a Chink cook,
+a half-breed secretary, and a clerk or two, and a bum sort
+of decrepit lumber-jack who does my chores. So you
+see I'm&mdash;kind of relieved. Anyway you sleeping on the
+
+<em>Myra</em> makes it easy. Now there's a mighty big conceit
+to me, and it's all for this mill in our country's wilderness.
+And I just can't let you quit to-morrow night
+without showing you all it means. You've simply got
+to see the thing that's going to make the whole world's
+groundwood trade holler before we're through. You're
+my prisoner until you've seen the things I'm going to
+show you. Is it anyway agreeable?"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy smiled delightedly.</p>
+
+<p>"You couldn't drive me out of Sachigo till I've peeked
+into all your secrets down there," she said.</p>
+
+<p>Bull leant forward with his arms outspread across the
+desk.</p>
+
+<p>"Great!" he cried. "And," he added, "you shall see
+them all. The things I can't show you Bat will. And if
+I'm a judge that old rascal'll be tickled to death handing
+his dope out to you. But&mdash;let's get to business."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy sat up. In a moment all ease was banished.
+She knew the great moment had come when she must
+prove herself to those who had entrusted her with her
+mission.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said, almost hurriedly. "I don't know the
+word Mr. Peterman sent you. And anyway it doesn't
+matter. I must put things my way. You are a great
+enterprise here. We are a great enterprise. It looks to
+us a pretty tough clash is bound to come between us in
+the near future, and&mdash;there should be no necessity for it.
+There's room&mdash;plenty of room&mdash;for both of us in our
+trade&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She paused. The keen eyes of Bull were closely
+
+observing. He realised her attitude. Her words and tone
+were almost mechanical, as though she had schooled herself
+and rehearsed her lesson. And her voice was not
+quite steady. He jumped in with the swift impulse of a
+man whose rivalry could not withstand that sign of a
+beautiful girl's distress.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," he cried, with that command so natural to
+him. "Just don't say another word. Let me talk. I
+guess I can tell you the things it's up to you to hand
+me. It'll save you a deal, and it'll hand me a chance to
+blow off the hot air that's mostly my way. This is the
+position. Peterman's wise to the things doing right here.
+The Skandinavia's up against years of cutting on the
+Shagaunty. The Shagaunty's played right out. You
+folks have got to open new stuff. It's my job to know all
+this. Very well. As I said, Peterman's at last got wise
+to us. He knows we look like flooding the market, and
+jumping right in on him. So&mdash;you're a mighty wealthy
+corporation&mdash;he figures to recognise us, and embrace us&mdash;with
+a business arrangement. That so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. A business arrangement."</p>
+
+<p>The girl's relief was almost pathetic. Bull smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"That's so. A business arrangement. Should I
+entertain one, eh? That's the question you're right here
+to ask. And you want to take back my answer." He
+paused. "Well, you're going to take back my answer.
+And I kind of feel it's the answer you'll like taking back.
+Say, Miss McDonald, I'm only a youngster, myself, but
+I guess I know what it means to set out on a work hoping
+and yearning to make good. Will it make good for you
+to go back to Elas Peterman and say the feller at Sachigo
+is coming right along down by the <em>Myra</em> to-morrow, and
+would be pleased to death to talk this proposition right out
+in the offices of the Skandinavia? Will it?"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy's eyes lit. Their hazel depths were wells of
+thankfulness.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Why, surely," she said. "You mean you're going
+to sail to-morrow?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull laughed and his laugh was infectious. The girl
+was smiling her delight.</p>
+
+<p>"That's so. I need to cross the Atlantic. I wasn't
+going till the <em>Myra's</em> next trip. I'll go to-morrow an'
+
+stop over in Quebec to see your people. It just means
+hurrying my choreman packing my stuff while I show
+you around to-morrow. That kind of fixes things, and
+if you'll hand me that pleasure I'd just love to show you
+around some this afternoon. There's a heap to see, and
+I don't fancy you missing any of it." He passed round
+the desk, and picked up the girl's coat and held it out
+invitingly. "Will you come right along?"</p>
+
+<p>There was no denying him. Nancy looked up into
+his smiling eyes. She felt there was a lot she wanted
+to say, ought to say, on the business matter in hand.
+But it was impossible. And in her heart she was thankful.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I'd just love to," she said, and stood up from
+her chair.</p>
+
+<p>Very tenderly, very carefully the man's hands helped
+her into her coat. And somehow Nancy was very glad
+the hands were big, and strong, and&mdash;yes&mdash;clumsy.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_18"></a>
+<h3>Chapter IX&mdash;On The Open Sea</h3>
+
+
+<p>The <em>Myra</em> laboured heavily. With every rise and fall
+of her high bows a whipping spray lashed the faces of
+those on deck. The bitter north-easterly gale churned the
+ocean into a white fury, and the sky was a-race with
+leaden masses of cloud. There was no break anywhere.
+Sky and sea alike were fiercely threatening, and the wind
+howled through the vessel's top gear.</p>
+
+<p>Bull Sternford had been sharing the storm with the
+
+sturdy skipper on the bridge. He had been listening to
+the old man's talk of fierce experience on the coast of
+Labrador. It had all been interesting to the landsman
+in view of the present storm, but at last he could no
+longer endure the exposure of the shelterless bridge.</p>
+
+<p>"It's me for the deck and a sheltered corner," he finally
+declared, preparing to pass down the iron "companion."</p>
+
+<p>And the Captain grinned.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't blame you," he bellowed in the shriek of the
+gale. "But I guess I'd as lief have it this way. It's
+better than a flat sea an' fog, which is mostly the alternative
+this time o' year. The Atlantic don't offer much
+choice about now. She's like a shrew woman. Her
+smile ain't ever easy. An' when you get it you've most
+always got to pay good. She can blow herself sick with
+this homeward bound breeze for all I care."</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right," Bull shouted back at him. "Guess
+you've lost your sense of the ease of things working this
+coast so long. It 'ud be me for the flat sea and fog all
+the time. I like my chances taken standing square on
+two feet. So long."</p>
+
+<p>He passed below, beating his hands for warmth. And
+as he went he glanced back at the sturdy, oil-skinned
+figure clinging to the rail of the bridge. The man's far-off
+gaze was fixed on the storm-swept sky, reading every
+sign with the intimate knowledge of long years of experience.
+It was a reassuring figure that must have put heart
+into the veriest weakling. But Bull Sternford needed no
+such support. In matters of life and death he was without
+emotion.</p>
+
+<p>He scrambled his way to the leeward side of the
+engines where a certain warmth and shelter was to be had,
+and where a number of hardly tested deck chairs were
+securely lashed. It was the resting place of those few
+beset passengers who could endure no longer the indifferent,
+odorous accommodation of the <em>Myra's</em> saloon.
+
+Only one chair was occupied. For the rest the deck was
+completely deserted.</p>
+
+<p>Bull's first glance at the solitary passenger was sufficient.
+The gleam of red hair under the fur cap told him
+all he wanted to know, and he groped his way along the
+slippery deck, and deposited his bulk safely into the chair
+beside Nancy McDonald.</p>
+
+<p>"Say," he cried, with a cheerful grin, as he struggled
+with his rug, "this sort of thing's just about calculated
+to leave a feller feeling sympathy with the boy who hasn't
+more sense than to spend his time trying to climb outside
+more Rye whisky than he was built to hold. It makes
+you wonder at the fool thing that lies back of it all. I
+mean the fuss going on out yonder."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy smiled round from amidst her furs.</p>
+
+<p>"It does seem like useless mischief," she agreed readily.
+Then she laughed outright. "But to see you crawling
+along the deck just now, grabbing any old thing for support,
+and often missing it, was a sight to leave one wondering
+how much dignity owes to personality, and how
+much to environment. Guess environment's an easy win."</p>
+
+<p>"Did I look so darn foolish?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull's eyes were smiling, and Nancy laughed again.</p>
+
+<p>"Just about as foolish as that fellow with the Rye
+whisky you were talking about."</p>
+
+<p>The man settled himself comfortably.</p>
+
+<p>"That's tough. And I guess I was doing my best,
+too. Say," he went on with a laugh, "just look at those
+flapping sea-gulls, or whatever they are out there. Makes
+you wonder to see 'em racing along over this fool waste
+of water. Look at 'em fighting, struggling, and using up
+a whole heap of good energy to keep level with this old
+tub. You know they've only to turn away westward to
+find land and shelter where they could build nests and
+make things mighty comfortable for themselves. I
+don't get it. You know it seems to me Nature got in
+
+a bad muss handing out ordinary sense. I'd say She
+never heard of a card index. Maybe Her bookkeeper
+was a drunken guy who didn't know a ledger from a
+scrap book. Now if She'd engaged you an' me to keep tab
+of things for Her, we'd have done a deal better. Those
+poor blamed sea-gulls, or whatever they are, would have
+been squatting around on elegant beds of moulted feathers,
+laid out on steam-heat radiators, feeding on oyster cocktails
+and things, and handing out the instructive dope of a
+highbrow politician working up a press reputation, and
+learning their kids the decent habits of folk who're yearning
+to keep out of penitentiary as long as the police'll
+let 'em. No. It's no use. Nature got busy. Look at the
+result. Those fool birds'll follow us till they're tired, in
+the hope that some guy'll dump the contents of the <em>Myra's</em>
+
+swill barrel their way. Then they'll have one disgusting
+orgy on the things other folks don't fancy, and start right
+in to fly again to ease their digestions. It's a crazy game
+anyway. And it leaves me with a mighty big slump in
+Nature's stock."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy listened delightedly to the man's pleasant
+fooling.</p>
+
+<p>"It's worse than that," she cried, falling in with his
+humour. "Look at some of them taking a rest, swimming
+about in that terribly cold water. Ugh! No, if
+we'd fixed their sense we'd have made it so they'd have
+had enough to get on dry land, like any other reasonable
+folk yearning for a rest."</p>
+
+<p>The man studied the girl's pretty profile, and a great
+sense of regret stirred him that the Skandinavia had been
+able to buy her services. What a perfect creature to
+have been supported by in the work he was engaged on.</p>
+
+<p>"That sounds good," he said. "Reasonable folks!"
+He shook his head. "Nature again. Guess we're all
+reasonable till we're found out. No. Even the greatest
+men and women on earth are fools at heart, you know."</p>
+
+
+<p>The girl sat up as the vessel lurched more heavily and
+flung their chairs forward, straining dangerously.</p>
+
+<p>"How?" she questioned, glancing down anxiously at
+the moorings of her chair.</p>
+
+<p>"They're safe&mdash;so far," Bull reassured her. Then he
+leant back again, and produced and lit a cigar. "Guess
+I'll smoke," he said. "Maybe that'll help me tell you&mdash;'how.'"</p>
+
+<p>The girl watched him light his cigar and her eyes were
+full of laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a real pity women can't sit themselves behind a
+cigar," she said at last, with a pretence of regret. "It's
+the wisest looking thing a man does. A cigarette kind
+of makes him seem pleasantly undependable. A pipe
+makes you feel he's full of just everyday notions. But a
+cigar! My! It sort of dazzles me when I see a man
+with a big cigar. I feel like a lowgrade earthworm,
+don't you know. Say," she cried, with an indescribable
+gesture of her gloved hands, "he handles that cigar, he
+sort of fondles it. He cocks it. He depresses it. He
+rolls it across his lips to the opposite corner of his mouth,
+and finally blows a thin, thoughtful stream of smoke
+gently between his pursed lips. And that stream is
+immeasurable in its suggestion of wise thought and keen
+calculation. I'd say a man's cigar is his best disguise."</p>
+
+<p>Bull nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"That's fine," he cried. "But you've forgotten the
+other feller. The man who 'chews.'"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy laughed happily.</p>
+
+<p>"Easy," she cried promptly. "When he of the bulged
+cheek gets around just watch your defences. He's
+mostly tough. He's on the jump, and hasn't much
+fancy for the decencies of life. The harder he chews
+the more he's figgering up his adversary. And when he
+spits, get your weapons ready. When the chewing man
+succeeds in life I guess he's dangerous. And it's because
+
+his force and character have generally lifted him from
+the bottom of things."</p>
+
+<p>Bull shook his head in mock despair.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy settled herself back in her chair.</p>
+
+<p>"That's fixed it. Guess you'll need to tell <em>me</em> 'how.'"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir," she cried. "You can't go back. 'The greatest
+men and women in the world are fools at heart.'
+
+That's what you said."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I seem to remember."</p>
+
+<p>The man stirred and sat up. He folded the rug more
+closely about his feet. Then he turned with a whimsical
+smile in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" he cried. "And isn't it so? What do we
+work, and fight, and hate for? What do we spend our
+lives worrying to beat the other feller for? Why do we
+set our noses into other folks' affairs and worry them to
+death to think, and act, and feel the way we do? And
+all the while it don't matter a thing. Of course we're
+fools. We'll hand over when the time comes, and the
+old world'll roll on, and it's not been shifted a hair's-breadth
+for our having lived, in spite of the obituaries
+the news-sheets hand out like a Sunday School mam at
+prize time. Say, here, it's no use fooling ourselves.
+Life's one great big thing that don't take shape by reason
+of our acts. What's the civilisation we love to pat ourselves
+on the back for? I'll tell you. It's just a thing
+we've invented, like&mdash;wireless telegraphy, or soap, or
+steam-heat; and it hands us a cloak to cover up the evil
+that man and woman'll never quit doing. Before we
+made civilisation a feller got up on to his hind legs and
+hit the other feller over the head with a club; and if he
+was hungry he used him as a lunch. Now we don't do
+that. We break him for his dollars and leave him and
+his poor wife and kids hungry, while we buy a lunch with
+the stuff we beat out of him. Why do we work? For
+one of two elegant notions. It's either to fill ourselves up
+
+with the things we've dreamt about when appetite was
+sharp set, and hate to death when we get, or it's to satisfy
+a conceit that leaves us hoping and believing the rest of
+the world'll hand us an epitaph like it handed no other
+feller since ever it got to be a habit burying up the garbage
+death produces. Why do we fight and hate?
+Because we're poor darn fools that don't know better,
+and don't know the easy thing life would be without
+those things. And as for settin' our noses into the affairs
+of other folk, that's mostly disease. But it isn't all. No,
+sir. There's more to it than that," he laughed. "If it
+was just disease it wouldn't matter a lot, but it isn't.
+There isn't a fool man or woman born into this world
+that doesn't reckon he or she can put right the fool
+notions and acts of other fools. And when the other
+feller persuades them the game's not the one-sided racket
+they guessed it was, then they get mad, and start groping
+and scheming how to boost their notions on to a world
+that's spent a whole heap of time fixing things, mostly
+foolish, to its own mighty good satisfaction. I say right
+here we're fools if we aren't crooks, which is the exception.
+There's a dandy world around us full of sun to
+warm us and food to eat, and birds to sing to us, and
+flowers and things to make us feel good. If we needed
+more I guess Providence would have handed it out. But
+it didn't. And so we got busy with our own notions till
+we've turned God's elegant creation into a home for crazes
+and cranks. I could almost fancy the Archangels hovering
+around, like those silly sea-gulls, with a bunch of
+straight-jackets to wrap about us when we jump the limit
+they figger we've a right to. Fools, yes? Why, I guess
+so&mdash;sure."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy breathed a deep sigh.</p>
+
+<p>"My, but that's a big say."</p>
+
+<p>Then she broke into a laugh which found prompt
+response in the other. It was cut short, however. A
+
+sea thundered against the staunch side of the vessel and
+left her staggering. The girl's eyes became seriously
+anxious. The straining chairs held, and presently the
+deck swung up to a comparative level.</p>
+
+<p>"I had visions of the&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Scuppers?" Bull laughed. "Yes. That sea's one of
+the elegant things Providence handed out for our
+happiness."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"So man built things like the <em>Myra</em>, which, of course,
+was&mdash;foolish?"</p>
+
+<p>"An' set out sailing around in a winter storm off
+Labrador, instead of basking in a pleasant tropical sun,
+which hasn't any&mdash;sense."</p>
+
+<p>Bull chuckled.</p>
+
+<p>"All because two mighty fine enterprises reckoned
+they'd common interests which were jeopardised by rivalry,
+which was also&mdash;foolishly?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull's cigar ash tumbled into his lap.</p>
+
+<p>"But not ha'f so foolish as the notion that a girl has to
+suffer the worries and dangers of one hell of a trip on the
+worst sea that God ever made to try and square the
+things between them."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't grant that," she cried quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"No?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean&mdash;oh, psha! Don't you see, or does your
+cynical philosophy blind you? We're fools, maybe.
+The things Providence sends us aren't the things we've
+got a notion for. Maybe we know better than Providence,
+and can't find happiness in the things it's handed us.
+What then? As you say, we start right in chasing
+happiness in the way we fancy. It seems to me the only
+real happiness in life is in doing. Ease, wealth, love,
+all the things folk talk and write about are just dreams of
+happiness that aren't real. Work, achievement, even if
+
+it's wrong-headed&mdash;that's life; that's happiness. That's
+why I'd say there's nothing foolish in a girl putting up
+with dangers and discomforts to bring two enterprises to
+an understanding, calculated to promote a greater achievement
+for both. It's my little notion of snatching a bunch
+of happiness for myself."</p>
+
+<p>There was no laughter in Nancy's eyes now. They
+were quite serious. Her words were alive with vehemence.
+Bull was watching her intently, probing, in his searching
+way, the depths which her hazel eyes hinted at. The
+things she said pleased him. Her tone thrilled him. He
+wanted more.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder," he said, as he rolled the cigar across his
+lips in the way Nancy had laughingly pointed. "You
+reckon it's handed you happiness&mdash;this thing?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl was stirred.</p>
+
+<p>"Surely," she cried. "Later, when things get fixed
+up between the Skandinavia and Sachigo, I'll get a focus
+of my little share in the business of it&mdash;the achievement.
+Then I'll get warm all through with a glow of happiness
+because I&mdash;helped it along."</p>
+
+<p>Bull nodded as he watched the rising colour in the
+perfect cheeks. The girl was very, very beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I suppose you will," he said. Then he went on
+provocatively. "But do you guess it's always so? I
+mean that always happens? Isn't it to do with temperament?
+Now, take the forest-jacks. Do you guess they
+feel happiness in a tree dropped right? Do you guess
+there's happiness for the poor fool who don't know better
+than to spend his days in a forest risking his life boosting
+logs on the river jamb? Do you guess there's any sort
+of old joy for the feller turned adrift, when he's getting
+old in the tooth, and there's no room for him on the pay
+roll of the camp, in the thought that he <em>was</em> the best
+axeman the forest ever bred? It seems like a crazy sort
+of happiness that way. Happiness in achievement's great
+
+while the achieving's going on. But at the finish we get
+right back to Nature. And when that time comes Nature
+doesn't do much to help us out."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy sat up.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing? That great Sachigo!" she
+demanded challengingly. "You're building, building one
+magnificent enterprise. Is there happiness in it for you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," Bull admitted frankly. "Oh, yes. But I've
+no illusions," he said. "I don't go back on the things
+I said. Nature as she dopes out life couldn't hand me a
+hundredth part of the happiness I get that way. But
+when I'm through, like that lumber-jack who's struck
+off the pay roll, how's it going to be with me? A trained
+mind without the bodily ability to thrust on in the game
+of life. It'll be hell&mdash;just hell. The one hope is to die
+in harness. Like the forest-jack who drowns under the
+logs on the river, or who gets up against the other feller's
+knife in a drunken scrap. That way lies happiness.
+The rest is a sort of passing dream with the years of old
+age for regret."</p>
+
+<p>The girl spread out her hands.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't believe you feel that way," she cried, with
+something very like distress. "Oh, if I had your power,
+your ability. Why, I'd say there's no end to the things
+you could achieve, not only now, but right through, right
+through that time when you're old in body, but still
+strong in brain. A limited goal for achievement isn't
+the notion in my foolish head. Why, if I'd only the
+strength to knit socks for the folks who need them,
+there'd still be happiness and to spare. But let's keep to
+our own ground. The forest-jack. I guess you're one
+big man who employs thousands. What of those boys
+when they're struck off the&mdash;pay roll. Is there nothing
+to be achieved that way&mdash;nothing to last you to your
+last living moment? Think of their needs. Think of
+the happiness you could hand yourself in handing them
+
+comfort and happiness when they're&mdash;through. It's a
+thing I've promised myself, if luck ever hands me the
+chance. You've got the pity of their lives. Your words
+tell that. Well?"</p>
+
+<p>The man had forgotten the storm. He had forgotten
+everything but the charm of the girl's hot enthusiasm.
+And the picture of superlative beauty she made in her
+animation.</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a bully notion," he demurred, "but it's not for
+me. No. You see, I'm just a tough sort of man who's big
+for a scrap. I haven't patience or sympathy for the feller
+who don't feel the same. You've seen the forest boys?"</p>
+
+<p>"I've been through the Shagaunty."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!"</p>
+
+<p>Bull Sternford's ejaculation was sharp. The problem
+of Father Adam's letter was partially solved.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I guess you're a woman," he went on. "And
+I'd like to say right here a woman's sympathy is just
+about the best thing on this old earth. That's why I'd
+like to cry like a kid when I see it going out to the things
+that haven't any sort of excuse for getting it. It's good
+to hear you talk for those boys. It isn't they deserve it,
+but&mdash;as I said, you're a woman. Talk it all you fancy,
+but leave it at talk. Don't let it get a holt. Don't
+waste one moment of your hard earned happiness on
+
+'em. I was a forest-jack. I know 'em. I know it&mdash;the
+life. And if you knew the thing I know you wouldn't
+harden all up as you listen to the things I'm saying:&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Bull flung his cigar away with vicious force.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me say this thing out," he went on. "There's
+a man in the forest I know, every jack knows. He's a
+feller who sort of lives in the twilight. You see, he sort
+of comes and goes; and no one knows a thing about him,
+except he haunts the forests like a shadow. Well, he's
+
+settin' the notion you feel into practice&mdash;in a way. He's
+out for the boys. To help 'em, physically, spiritually,
+the whole time. They love him. We all love him to
+death. Well, ask him how far he gets. Maybe he'd tell
+you, and I guess his story 'ud break the heart of a stone
+image. He'll tell you&mdash;and he speaks the truth&mdash;there
+isn't a thing to be done but heal 'em, and feed 'em, and
+just help 'em how you can. The rest's a dream. You
+see, these jacks come from nowhere particular. They
+take to the forests because it's far off; and it's dark, and
+covers most things up. And they go nowhere particular,
+except it's to the hell waiting on most of us if we don't
+live life the way that's intended for us. No. Quit
+worrying for the forest-jack. Maybe life's going to hand
+you all sorts of queer feelings as you go along. And the
+good heart that sees suffering and injustice is going to
+ache mighty bad. The forest wasn't built for daylight,
+and the folks living there don't fancy it. And there isn't
+a broom big enough in the world to clean up the muck
+you'll find there."</p>
+
+<p>"You're talking of Father Adam?"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy's interest had redoubled. It had instantly
+centred itself on the man she had met in the Shagaunty
+forests. The lumber-jacks were forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes." Bull nodded. "Do you know him?" There
+was eagerness in his question.</p>
+
+<p>"I met him on the Shagaunty."</p>
+
+<p>The man had produced a fresh cigar. But the renewed
+heavy rolling of the vessel delayed its lighting. Nancy
+gazed out to sea in some concern.</p>
+
+<p>"It's getting worse," she said.</p>
+
+<p>Bull struck a match and covered it with both hands.</p>
+
+<p>"It seems that way," he replied indifferently. Then
+after a moment he looked up. His cigar was alight.
+"He's a great fellow&mdash;Father Adam," he said reflectively.</p>
+
+<p>"He's just&mdash;splendid."</p>
+
+
+<p>The girl's enthusiasm told Bull something of the thing
+he wanted to know.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said. "He's the best man I know. The
+world doesn't mean a thing to him. Why he's there I
+don't know, and I guess it's not my business anyway.
+But if God's mercy's to be handed to any human creature
+it seems to me it won't come amiss&mdash;Say!"</p>
+
+<p>He broke off, startled. He sat up with a jump. A
+great gust of wind broke down upon the vessel. It came
+with a shriek that rose in a fierce crescendo. His startled
+eyes were riveted upon a new development in the sky.
+An inky cloud bank was sweeping down upon them out
+of the north-east, and the wind seemed to roar its way out
+of its very heart.</p>
+
+<p>The vessel heeled over. Again the wind tore at the
+creaking gear. It was a moment of breathless suspense
+for those seated helplessly looking on. Then something
+crashed. A vast sea beat on the quarter and deluged
+the decks, and the chairs were torn from their moorings.</p>
+
+<p>Bull Sternford was sprawling in the race of water.
+Nancy, too, was hurled floundering in the scuppers.
+They were flung and beaten, crashing about in the
+swirling sea that swept over the vessel's submerged
+rail.</p>
+
+<p>Bull struggled furiously. Every muscle was straining
+with the effort of it. A fierce anxiety was in his eyes as
+he fought his way foot by foot towards the saloon companion.
+The handicap was terrible. There was practically
+no foothold, for the vessel was riding at an angle
+of something like forty-five degrees. Then, too, he had
+but one hand with which to help himself along. The
+other was supporting the dead-weight of the body of
+the unconscious girl.</p>
+
+<p>At last, breathless and nearly beaten, he reached his
+goal and clutched desperately at the door-casing of the
+
+companion. He staggered within. And as he did so
+relief found expression in one fierce exclamation.</p>
+
+<p>"Hell!" he cried. And clambered down, bearing
+his unconscious burden into the safety of the vessel's
+interior.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_19"></a>
+<h3>Chapter X&mdash;In Quebec</h3>
+
+
+<p>It was the final stage of her journey. Nancy was on her
+way up from the docks, where she had left the staunch
+<em>Myra</em> discharging her cargo.</p>
+
+<p>It was that triumphant return to which she had always
+looked forward, for which she had hoped and prayed.
+Her work was completed. It had been crowned with
+greater success than she had dared to believe possible.
+Yet her triumph somehow found her unelated, even a
+shade depressed.</p>
+
+<p>A belated sense of humour battled with her mood.
+There were moments when she wanted to laugh at
+herself. There were others when she had no such desire.
+So she sat gazing out of the limousine window, as though
+all her interest were in the drab houses lining the way,
+and the heavy-coated pedestrians moving along the sidewalks
+of the narrow streets through which they were
+passing.</p>
+
+<p>It was winter all right, for all no snow had as yet
+fallen, and the girl felt glad that it was so. It suited
+her mood.</p>
+
+<p>Once or twice she took a sidelong glance at the man
+seated beside her; but Bull Sternford's mood was no
+less reticent than her own. Once she encountered the
+glance of his eyes, and it was just as the vehicle bumped
+heavily over the badly paved road.</p>
+
+
+<p>"We can do better in the way of roads up at Sachigo,"
+he said with a belated smile.</p>
+
+<p>"You surely can," Nancy admitted readily. "The
+roads down here in the old town are terrible. This old
+city of ours could fill pages of history. It's got beauties,
+too, you couldn't find anywhere else in the world. But
+it seems to need most of the things a city needs to make
+it the place we folk reckon it is."</p>
+
+<p>She went on at random.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you always keep an automobile in Quebec?" she
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>Bull shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Hired," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"I see."</p>
+
+<p>Bull's eyes twinkled.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he went on, "when I make this old city it's
+with the purpose of driving twenty-four hours work into
+twelve. An automobile helps that way."</p>
+
+<p>"And you're wasting all this time driving me up to
+my apartments?" Nancy smiled. "I'm more indebted
+than I guessed."</p>
+
+<p>The man's denial was instant.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said. "Your apartments are about two
+blocks from the Château. But tell me, when'll you be
+through making your report to Peterman?"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy's depression passed. She was caught again
+in the interest of everything.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, to-day&mdash;surely," she said. "You see, I want
+to get word to you right away."</p>
+
+<p>Bull nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"That's fine," he said. "It's not my way leaving
+things lying around either. I'll be on the jump to get
+through before sailing time to that little old country
+across the water. But tell me. That report. After
+it's in you'll have made all the good you reckon to? And
+then you, personally, cut right out of this thing?"</p>
+
+
+<p>His manner gave no indication of the thing in his
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," Nancy replied happily. "You see, I've
+bearded you&mdash;only you've no beard&mdash;in your fierce den
+up in Sachigo. And I've&mdash;and you've come right down
+here to Quebec with me to discuss with my people the
+thing they want to discuss with you. They didn't
+think I&mdash;they didn't hope that. Maybe I've done better
+than they expected. Why, when I hand the news to Mr.
+Peterman he'll&mdash;he'll&mdash;oh, I'm just dying to see his face
+when I tell him."</p>
+
+<p>"You&mdash;haven't wired him already?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. The news was too good to send by wire."</p>
+
+<p>For a moment the man contemplated the simple radiant
+creature beside him. She was so transparently happy.
+And the sight of her happiness satisfied him.</p>
+
+<p>"It'll&mdash;astonish him, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Astonish him?" Nancy laughed. "That doesn't
+say a thing. I shouldn't wonder if he refused to believe
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"And you'll get&mdash;promotion? Promotion&mdash;in Skandinavia?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl's eyes sobered on the instant.</p>
+
+<p>"Surely. Why not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Why not?"</p>
+
+<p>Just for a moment Nancy hesitated. Then her
+challenge came incisively.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>But the man smilingly shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"You want promotion under Peterman&mdash;in the
+Skandinavia?"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy's eyes widened.</p>
+
+<p>"Why shouldn't I? The Skandinavia's everything to
+me. It ought to be everything. Isn't that so? Now, I
+wonder what you mean?" she went on, after the briefest
+pause. "Are you talking that way just because you are
+
+a rival concern?" She shook her head. "That's no
+affair of mine. But wait while I tell you. Try and
+think yourself a young girl without folks that count,
+with a pretty tough world laid out in front of her, and
+with a healthy desire to dress, and eat the same as any
+other girl of her age. She's given a chance in life to
+make good, to gather round her all those things she
+needs, by&mdash;the Skandinavia. Well, how would you feel?
+Wouldn't you want that&mdash;promotion? Yes. I want it.
+I want it with all my heart. The Skandinavia gave me my
+first start. They've been very, very good to me. I've
+big room in my heart for them. Their work's my work all
+the time. I've nothing but gratitude for Mr. Peterman."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes." Bull's smile had passed. He was thinking of
+Nancy's feeling of gratitude towards the Swede&mdash;Peterman.</p>
+
+<p>He turned away, and the grey wintry daylight beyond
+the window seemed to absorb him. He was possessed
+by a mad desire to fling prudence to the winds and then
+and there point out the wrong he felt she was committing
+against the country that had bred her in spending her
+life in the service of these foreigners. But he knew he
+must refrain. It was not the moment. And somehow he
+felt she was not the girl to listen patiently to such ethics
+as he preached when their force was directed against
+those who claimed her whole loyalty and gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>To Nancy it seemed as though some shadow had arisen
+between them. She was a little troubled at the thing
+she had said. But somehow she had no desire to withdraw
+a single word of it.</p>
+
+<p>The car had passed out of the old part of the city.
+And Nancy realised it was ascending the great hill where
+the Château Hotel looked out over the old citadel and
+the wide waters of the busy St. Lawrence river. In a
+few minutes the happy companionship of the past few
+days would be only a memory.</p>
+
+
+<p>It was only a little way to her apartments now. Such
+a very little way. Yes. The porter would be there. He
+would take her trunks and baggage, and then her door
+would close behind her, and&mdash;She remembered that
+moment at which she had awakened to consciousness in
+this man's strong arms in the poor little saloon of the
+storm-beaten <em>Myra</em>. She remembered the embracing
+strength of them, and the way she had thrilled under
+their pressure. It had been all very wonderful.</p>
+
+<p>"Say!"</p>
+
+<p>Bull Sternford had turned back from the window. He
+was smiling again.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes?" The girl was all eager attention.</p>
+
+<p>"I was wondering," Bull went on. "Maybe you'll'
+
+fancy hearing how things are fixed after I see Peterman?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll be ever so glad. There's the 'phone. You can
+get me most any time after business hours. I don't go
+out much. I&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy broke off to glance out of the window. The
+automobile had slowed.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, we're at my place," she cried. And the man
+fancied he detected disappointment in her tone.</p>
+
+<p>The car stopped before the apartment house, and Bull
+hurled himself at the litter of the girl's belongings strewn
+about their feet. A few moments later they were standing
+together on the sidewalk surrounded by the baggage.</p>
+
+<p>Bull gazed up at the building.</p>
+
+<p>"You live here?" he asked at random.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. It isn't much. But some day, maybe, I'll be
+able to afford a swell apartment with&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure you will," Bull agreed, as they passed up the steps
+to the entrance doors. "But meanwhile I mostly need
+your 'phone number of this," he added with a laugh.</p>
+
+<p>The baggage was left to the porter's care, and they
+stood together in the hallway. Bull's youthful stature
+
+was overshadowing for all Nancy was tall. Somehow
+the girl was glad of it. She liked his height, and the
+breadth of his great shoulders, and the power of limbs
+his tweed suit was powerless to disguise.</p>
+
+<p>She moved across to the porter's office and wrote down
+her 'phone number while the man looked on. But he
+only had eyes for the girl herself. At that moment her
+telephone number was the last thing he desired to think
+about.</p>
+
+<p>She stood up and offered him the paper.</p>
+
+<p>"You won't forget it that way," she said, with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>Bull glanced down at it. Then he looked again into
+the smiling eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks," he said. "I'll ring up." Then he held out
+a hand. "So long."</p>
+
+<p>He was gone. The glass door had swung to behind him.
+Nancy watched him pass into the waiting automobile,
+and responded to his final wave of the hand. Then she
+turned to the porter, and her smile had completely
+vanished.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Nathaniel Hellbeam stood up. He had been seated
+at Elas Peterman's desk studying the papers which his
+managing director had set out for his perusal. His gross
+body hung over the table for a moment as he reached
+towards his hat. He took his gloves from inside it and
+commenced to put them on.</p>
+
+<p>"The <em>Myra</em>? You say she is in?" he asked in his
+guttural fashion. "This girl? This girl who is to buy
+up this&mdash;this Sachigo man," he laughed. "Is she
+arrived?"</p>
+
+<p>The man's eyes were alight with unpleasant derision.
+Peterman gave no heed. The man's arrogance was all
+too familiar to him.</p>
+
+
+<p>"I've not heard&mdash;yet," he said. "She should be."</p>
+
+<p>"You not have heard&mdash;yet?" The challenge was superlatively
+offensive. "You a beautiful secretary have. You
+lose her for weeks&mdash;months. Yet you do not know of her
+return&mdash;yet? Sho! You are not the man for this beautiful
+secretary. She for me is&mdash;yes? Hah!"</p>
+
+<p>Peterman smiled as was his duty.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be glad to get her back," he said quietly. "But
+I haven't heard from her at all. And&mdash;well, she's not the
+sort of woman to bombard with telegrams. She's out on
+a difficult job and I felt it best to leave her to it. I shall
+hear when she's ready, I guess she'll be right along in to
+tell me personally. Maybe&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He broke off and picked up the telephone whose buzzer
+was rattling impatiently on the desk.</p>
+
+<p>"Hullo!" he said softly. "Oh, yes. Oh, how are you?
+So glad you've got back. What sort of passage did&mdash;oh,
+bad, eh? Well, well; I'm sorry. Oh, you're a good
+sailor. That's fine. Right away? You'll be over right
+away? Wouldn't you like to rest awhile? All right, I
+see. Yes, surely I'll be glad. I just thought&mdash;oh, not at
+all. You see, if you were a man I wouldn't be concerned
+at all. Yes, come right along whenever you choose. Eh?
+Successful? You have been? Why, that's just fine. Well,
+I'm dying to hear your news. Splendid. I shall be here.
+G'bye."</p>
+
+<p>Peterman set the 'phone down. His smiling eyes
+challenged those of the man who a moment before had
+derided him.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?"</p>
+
+<p>Hellbeam's impatience was without scruple at any time.</p>
+
+<p>"She's got back all right, and she's succeeded far better
+than you hoped. Better than she hoped herself. But&mdash;no
+better than I expected."</p>
+
+<p>The other's eyes snapped under the quiet satisfaction of
+the man's reply.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Ah, she has. Does she say&mdash;yes?"</p>
+
+<p>Elas shook his dark head.</p>
+
+<p>"No. She's coming right over to tell me the whole
+story."</p>
+
+<p>"Now?"</p>
+
+<p>"In a while."</p>
+
+<p>Elas Peterman knew his position to the last fraction
+when dealing with Nathaniel Hellbeam. He knew it was
+for him to obey, almost without question. But somehow,
+for the moment, his Teutonic self-abnegation had become
+obscured. He was yielding nothing in the matter of this
+woman to anyone. Not even to Nathaniel Hellbeam whom
+he regarded almost as the master of his destiny.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the gross nature of the financier possessed a
+certain sympathy. Perhaps even there was a lurking sense
+of honour in him, where a woman, whom he regarded as
+another man's property, was concerned. Again it may
+simply have been that he understood the other's reticence,
+and it suited him for the moment to restrain his grosser
+inclinations. He laughed. And it was not an hilarious
+effort.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," he said. "You will see her first. That is as
+it should be. Later, we both will talk with her. Well&mdash;good
+luck my friend."</p>
+
+<p>Hellbeam thrust his hat on his great head and strutted
+his way across to the door.</p>
+
+<p>"These people must be bought. Or&mdash;" he said,
+pausing before passing out&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Smashed!"</p>
+
+<p>Hellbeam nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"It suits me better to&mdash;buy."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. You want to come into touch with&mdash;the owner."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>The gross figure disappeared through the doorway.</p>
+
+<p>Peterman did not return to his desk. He crossed to
+the window and stood gazing out of it. His hands were
+
+thrust deep into his pockets. And his fingers moved
+nervously, rattling the contents of them. He was a goodly
+specimen of manhood. He was tall, and squarely erect,
+and carried himself with that military bearing which
+seems to belong to all the races of Teutonic origin. It was
+only in the study of the man's face that exception could be
+taken. Just now there was none to observe and he was
+free from all restraint.</p>
+
+<p>His dark eyes were smiling, for his thoughts were
+streaming along the channel that most appealed. He was
+thinking of the beauty of the girl who was about to return
+to him, and it seemed to him a pity she was so simply
+honest, so very young in the world as he understood it.
+Then her ambition. It was&mdash;but he was rather glad of her
+ambition. Ambition might prove his best friend in the
+end. In his philosophy an ambitious woman could have no
+scruple. Anyway it seemed to him that ambition pitted
+against scruple was an easy winner. He could play on that,
+and he felt he knew how to play on it, and was in a position
+to do so. She had come back to him successful. He
+wondered how successful.</p>
+
+<p>He moved from the window and passed over to the
+desk, where he picked up his 'phone and asked for a
+number.</p>
+
+<p>"Hullo! Oh, that Bennetts? Oh, yes. This is Peterman&mdash;Elas
+Peterman speaking. Did you send that fruit,
+and the flowers I ordered to the address I gave you? Yes?
+Oh, you did? They were there before eleven o'clock.
+Good. Thanks&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He set the 'phone down and turned away. But in a
+moment he was recalled. It was a message from downstairs.
+Nancy McDonald wished to see him.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Peterman was leaning back in his chair. Nancy was
+occupying the chair beside the desk which had not known
+her for several months.</p>
+
+
+<p>It was a moment of stirring emotions. For the girl
+it was that moment to which she had so long looked
+forward. To her it seemed she was about to vindicate
+this man's confidence in her, and offer him an adequate
+return such as her gratitude desired to make. And deep
+down in her heart, where the flame of ambition steadily
+burned, she felt she had earned the promised reward, all
+of it.</p>
+
+<p>The man was concerned with none of these things. He
+was not even concerned for the girl's completed mission.
+It was Nancy herself. It was the charming face with its
+halo of red hair, and the delightful figure so rounded, so
+full of warmth and charm, which concerned him.</p>
+
+<p>He had no scruple as he feasted his eyes upon her. He
+did nothing to disguise his admiration, and Nancy, full of
+her news and the thrilling joy of her success, saw nothing
+of that which a less absorbed woman, a more experienced
+woman, must unfailingly have observed.</p>
+
+<p>"You've a big story for me," Peterman said, with a
+light laugh. "Have you completed an option on&mdash;Sachigo?
+You look well. You're looking fine. Travelling
+in Labrador seems to have done you good."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy's smiling eyes were alight with delight.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," she said. "It's done me good. But then
+I've had a success I didn't reckon on. Maybe it's made all
+the difference. It was a real tough journey. I'm not sure
+you'd have seen me back at all if it hadn't been for Mr.
+Sternford."</p>
+
+<p>"How?"</p>
+
+<p>The man's smiling eyes had changed. Their dark
+depths were full of sharp enquiry. Nancy read only
+anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, we were sitting on deck, and it was storming.
+It was just terrible. We lurched heavily and shipped a
+great sea. Our chairs were flung into the scuppers by the
+rush of water, and I&mdash;why, I guess I was beaten unconscious
+
+and drowning when he got hold of me. He just
+fought his way to safety. I didn't know about it till I
+was safe down in the saloon. I woke up then, and he was
+carrying me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Sternford?"</p>
+
+<p>The change in the man's eyes had deepened. Then his
+smile came back to them. But that, too, was different.
+It was curiously fixed and hard.</p>
+
+<p>"You've gone a bit too fast for me," he said. "I don't
+get things right. Sternford, the man running Sachigo
+was with you on the <em>Myra</em>? He's here&mdash;in Quebec?"</p>
+
+<p>It was Nancy's great moment.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said, with a restraint that failed to disguise
+her feelings. "He's come down to discuss a business
+arrangement between the Skandinavia and his enterprise.
+That's what you wanted&mdash;isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>The man leant forward in his chair. He set his elbows
+on the desk and supported his chin in both hands. His
+smile was still there, and his eyes were steadily regarding
+her. But they expressed none of the surprise and delight
+Nancy looked for. They were smiling as he literally forced
+them to smile.</p>
+
+<p>"You brought him down with you&mdash;to meet us?" he
+asked slowly.</p>
+
+<p>The girl nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"You did your work so well that he entertained the
+notion sufficiently to come along down&mdash;with you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I&mdash;he's come down for that purpose."</p>
+
+<p>The man's eyes were searching.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is he?"</p>
+
+<p>"At the Chateau. He's waiting to hear from you for
+an appointment."</p>
+
+<p>Peterman flung himself back in his chair with a great
+laugh. Nancy missed the mirthless tone of it.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, my dear," he cried at last. "How did you do it?
+How in&mdash;You're just as bright and smart as I reckoned.
+
+You've done one big thing and I guess you've earned
+all the Skandinavia can hand you. But&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He broke off, and his gaze drifted away from the face
+with its vivid halo. The wintry daylight beyond the
+window claimed him, and Nancy waited.</p>
+
+<p>"How did you persuade him to ship down on the <em>Myra</em>
+with you?" he asked, after a moment's thought.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't persuade him. He volunteered."</p>
+
+<p>"Volunteered?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. He was coming down on her next trip. You
+see, he's making England right away. He guessed he'd
+come along down with me instead. He seemed keen set
+to discuss this thing with you."</p>
+
+<p>"I see. Keen set, eh? Keen set to talk with me?"</p>
+
+<p>The man shook his head. It was not denial. It was
+the questioning of something left unspoken.</p>
+
+<p>The girl became anxious. Somehow a sense of disappointment
+was stirring.</p>
+
+<p>"Is there anything wrong?" she asked at last, as the
+man remained silent.</p>
+
+<p>Peterman shook his head again.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a thing, my dear," he said. "No. You've done
+everything. You couldn't have done more if&mdash;if you'd
+been the most experienced woman schemer in big business.
+You went up to prepare the ground for our business.
+Well, you prepared it in a way I'd never have guessed.
+You've brought this hard business head, Bull Sternford,
+right down out of his fortress to meet us on our business
+proposition. Guess only you could have done that." He
+laughed. "And this man saved your life, eh? And he
+carried you in his arms to&mdash;safety. Say he was lucky.
+That's something any man would be crazy to do. Well,
+well, I&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He rose from his chair and passed round to the window
+where he stood with back turned. Nancy's gaze followed
+him. For all his praise she was disturbed.</p>
+
+
+<p>The man at the window saw nothing of that upon which
+he gazed. His eyes were unsmiling now that the girl
+could no longer observe them. They were the eyes of a
+man of unbridled jealous fury. They were burning with
+an insensate hatred for the man who had hitherto been
+only a stranger rival in business.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, he understood. Was it likely that this Bull Sternford
+was going to yield for a business proposition in this
+fashion at the request of a formidable rival? Was he
+going to change all his plans at the bidding of the Skandinavia,
+and seize the first boat to come and tell them he was
+prepared to fall for any plans they might design to beat
+him? Not likely. No. It was the girl he had fallen for.
+He had changed his plans for her, and for his nerve he had
+reaped a harvest such as he, Peterman, had never reaped.
+He had held this beautiful creature in his arms, this innocent,
+red-haired child, whom he, Peterman, had marked
+down for his own. For how long? And she was all
+unconscious. Oh, it was maddening, infuriating.
+And&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he came back to the desk. Nancy was relieved
+as she beheld the familiar smiling kindness in his
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, my dear. I can't tell you how delighted I am to
+get you back," he said, pausing at her side. "My work's
+not been by any means satisfactory with you away.
+There's just no one suits me in this house like you. But
+the thing I'm most glad about is your success. That's
+been wonderful. I felt you would make good, but I didn't
+know how good. Now I'm going to ring this fellow up and
+fix things to see him. Meanwhile you get your big report
+of the camps ready for the Board. Then, when you're
+ready, I'm going to let them see you, and hear it all from
+you first hand, and I'm going to get them to give you the
+head of the forestry department right here. It'll be a
+mighty jump, but&mdash;well&mdash;"</p>
+
+
+<p>Nancy was on her feet and her eyes were shining a
+gratitude which words could never express. Impulsively
+she held out a hand in ardent thanks.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, say&mdash;" she began.</p>
+
+<p>The man had seized the delicate tapering fingers and
+held them warmly in the palms of both of his.</p>
+
+<p>"Now just don't say a thing," he said. "I know. I
+know just how you feel, and the things you want to say.
+But don't. You've earned the best, and I'm going to see
+you get it. I'm going to lose a smart secretary, but I
+don't care if I make one good little friend. Now, Nancy,
+what about to-night? I think we ought to celebrate your
+triumphant return with a little dinner up at the Chateau.
+What say? Will you&mdash;honour me? Eight o'clock. Thank
+goodness we're not a dry country yet, and it's still possible
+to enjoy our successful moments properly. Will
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy longed to withdraw the hand the man still held.
+It was curious. Every word he said expressed just those
+things and tributes which her girlish vanity had desired.
+There was not a word in all of it to give offence. But
+for the second time she experienced a sense of trouble
+which her woman's instinct prompted, and a feeling akin
+to panic stirred. But she resisted it, as she knew she
+must, and her mind was quite made up.</p>
+
+<p>"You're&mdash;very kind," she said, with all the earnestness
+she could summon, and with a gentleness that was intended
+to disarm. "But I'm so very&mdash;very tired. You
+don't know what it was like on the <em>Myra</em>. We were battered
+and beaten almost to death. I feel as if I needed sleep
+for a week."</p>
+
+<p>The man released her hand lingeringly. His disappointment
+was intense, but he smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, sure," he said, "if you feel that way. I hadn't
+thought."</p>
+
+<p>Then he turned abruptly back to his desk. "That's all
+
+right. Guess we'll leave it. You go right home and get
+your rest."</p>
+
+<p>For a moment Nancy hesitated. She was fearful of
+giving offence. She felt the man's disappointment in his
+tone, and in the manner of his turning away. But she
+dared not yield to his request. Suddenly she remembered,
+and all hesitation passed.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I just want to thank you for your kind thought
+sending me those flowers and fruit," she exclaimed. "I
+wanted to thank you before, but I was too excited with
+my news. I&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The man cut her short.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right, my dear," he said. Then he nodded
+and deliberately turned to his work. "I'm glad. Now&mdash;just
+run right along home and&mdash;rest."</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_20"></a>
+<h3>Chapter XI&mdash;Drawn Swords</h3>
+
+
+<p>The palatial halls and public rooms of the hotel were
+crowded. Everywhere was the hum of voices, which
+penetrated even to the intended quiet of the writing rooms.
+Every now and then the monotony of it all was broken by
+the high-pitched, youthful voices of the messenger boys
+seeking out their victims.</p>
+
+<p>Bull Sternford was at work. Within an hour of his
+arrival he was plunged in the affairs connected with the
+great business organisation he projected. The earlier date
+of his visit to Quebec had necessitated considerable changes
+in plans already prepared. He had entailed for himself
+endless added work for the pleasure of the companionship
+of a beautiful girl on the journey down the coast, and
+begrudged no detail of it. Just now he was writing to a
+number of important people, bankers and financial men,
+re-arranging appointments to suit his change of plans.</p>
+
+
+<p>There was something tremendously purposeful in the
+poise of the man's body as he sat at one of the many
+writing tables scattered about the smoking lounge. There
+were few passers-by who did not glance a second time in
+his direction with that curiosity which is unfailing in
+human nature at sight of an unusual specimen of their
+kind.</p>
+
+<p>Twice a name was called by a uniformed boy in that
+unintelligible fashion which seems to be the habit of his
+species. The boy hovered round. Then he came up
+behind the chair on which Bull was seated and hurled
+his final challenge.</p>
+
+<p>"Sternford, sir?" he asked curtly.</p>
+
+<p>His victim turned.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Wanted on the 'phone, sir."</p>
+
+<p>The boy was gone on the run. He had hunted his
+quarry down. There were still fresh victories to be
+achieved.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Bull was at the 'phone, and his eyes were smiling at
+an insurance advertisement set up for the edification and
+interest of those whose use of the instrument prevented
+their escape.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Oh, yes. Got in this morning. What's that?
+Oh, pretty rough. Yes. It's a bad sea most all the
+time. Why, that's good of you, Mr. Peterman." His
+smile broadened. "Yes. You sent an excellent ambassador.
+A charming girl. Well, there's no time like
+the present. Yes. I've lunched. I'm just through with
+my mail. Four o'clock would suit me admirably. Why
+sure I'd like to. All right. G'bye."</p>
+
+<p>He stood for a moment after replacing the receiver.
+Then, becoming aware of another wanting to use the
+instrument, he moved away.</p>
+
+<p>Returning to the smoking lounge he finished off his
+
+correspondence and took possession of one of the couches
+and lit a cigar.</p>
+
+<p>For a time the hang-over of business pre-occupied him.
+But it was not for long. His whole thought swiftly
+became absorbed in Nancy McDonald, with her wonderful
+halo of vivid hair. It had been the same during the
+whole of his journey down from Sachigo, in fact, from
+the moment he had first set eyes on her when she entered
+his office on that memorable day of her visit. She pre-occupied
+all his leisure.</p>
+
+<p>He had thought deeply on the meaning of her visit
+to him, and his thought had had little to do with the
+mission she had come upon. Swift decision had dealt
+with that. No, it was the girl herself who claimed him.</p>
+
+<p>He understood the sheer design of the Skandinavia in
+sending so perfect a creature to him. That was easy.
+It only helped to prove their desire&mdash;their urgent desire&mdash;to
+free themselves from the threat of his competition.
+But he wondered at their selection.</p>
+
+<p>Somehow he felt that the Skandinavia should have
+chosen, if their choice fell upon a woman, a clever, brilliant,
+unscrupulous creature who knew her every asset,
+and was capable of playing every one of them in the
+game of commercial warfare. Instead of that they had
+sent Nancy, with her sweetly beautiful face and perfect
+hair, to be their unthinking tool. He realised her simplicity,
+her splendid loyalty to those she served. He
+knew she was without design or subterfuge. She was
+just the most beautiful, desirable creature he had ever
+beheld in his life.</p>
+
+<p>He told himself it was all wrong. This wonderful
+child should never have been sent on such a journey, on
+such an errand. She was fit only for the shelter of a
+happy home life, protection from every roughness, every
+taint with which the sordid world of commerce could
+besmirch her. His chivalry was stirred to its depths,
+
+and the wrong of it all, as he saw it, only the more surely
+deepened his purpose for his dealings with an unscrupulous
+rival who could commit so egregious an outrage.</p>
+
+<p>Bull Sternford's existence, until now had always been
+a joyous heart-whole striving which had no more in it
+than the calmly conceived ideals of a heart undisturbed
+by sexual emotions. Now&mdash;now that had been completely
+changed. Perhaps he was not yet wholly aware of the
+thing that had come to him. He saw a woman, a perfect
+creature who had come to him out of the forest world in
+which his whole life was bound up, and a passionate
+excitement had taken possession of him. There could
+be no denial of that. But so far the full measure of his
+feelings had not revealed itself. All he wanted was to
+think of nothing and nobody just now, but this girl who
+had stirred him so deeply. So he stretched himself out
+on the well-sprung couch and yielded to the delight of
+it all.</p>
+
+<p>But the hour he had been free to dispose of thus was
+swiftly used up with his pleasant dreaming. And it was
+with a feeling of real irritation that he finally flung away
+his cigar and bestirred himself. His irritation did not
+last long, however, and his consolation was found in the
+fact that Elas Peterman was awaiting him, and Elas
+Peterman was the man who had so outrageously offended
+against his ideas of chivalry.</p>
+
+<p>He stood up and brushed the fallen cigar ash from his
+clothing. His one desire now was to get through with
+the business once and for all, to do the thing that should
+leave Nancy McDonald with the reward of her labours.
+Yes, he wanted to do that. Afterwards&mdash;well, he must
+leave the "afterwards" to itself.</p>
+
+<p>He hurried away in search of his heavy winter overcoat.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Elas Peterman looked up as the door opened to admit
+his visitor. His first impression startled him not a little.</p>
+
+
+<p>It was the first time he had encountered the man from
+Sachigo.</p>
+
+<p>Bull moved into the room with that large ease which
+big men so often display. And he paused and frankly
+gripped the carefully manicured hand Peterman held
+out to him.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm real glad to meet you, Mr. Peterman," he said
+quietly. Then he dropped into the chair set for him,
+while his eyes responded unsmilingly to the measuring
+gaze of the other.</p>
+
+<p>"It's queer we've never met before," Bull said, leaning
+back in his chair.</p>
+
+<p>Peterman laughed. He pushed a large box of cigars
+close to the visitor's hand.</p>
+
+<p>"It's mostly that way with the high command in&mdash;war,"
+he said easily. "The opposing generals don't meet except
+at the&mdash;peace table. Those are Bolivars. Try one?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull helped himself with a laugh that was about as
+real as the other's.</p>
+
+<p>"The pipe of&mdash;peace, eh?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"That's how I hope," Peterman replied.</p>
+
+<p>Bull nodded as he lit his cigar.</p>
+
+<p>"Most of us hope for peace, and do our best to
+aggravate war. That so?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's damn fool human nature."</p>
+
+<p>Peterman sat back in his chair, and laughed a little
+boisterously. Then he turned to the window while Bull
+silently consulted the white ash of his cigar.</p>
+
+<p>"You're projecting a big thing in pulp," the Swede
+said a moment later. "You figger to split the Canadian
+pulp trade into two opposing camps. The Skandinavia
+and the Labrador enterprises. It means one great, big
+prolonged battle in which one or the other is to be beaten.
+Guess it's liable to be a battle in which the public'll get
+temporary benefit, while we&mdash;who fight it&mdash;look like
+losing all along the line. It seems a pity, eh?"</p>
+
+
+<p>"War's a tough proposition, anyway," Bull replied
+slowly. "Its only excuse is it's Nature's way of wiping
+out the fool mistakes and crimes human nature spends
+most of its time committing. If two sets of criminals
+set out to grab, it's odds they'll do hurt to each other,
+and end by leaving the world easier when they're completely
+despoiled."</p>
+
+<p>Peterman laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," he said. "And these fool criminals? Is there
+need for them to fall out?"</p>
+
+<p>"None."</p>
+
+<p>"That's how we of the Skandinavia feel. That's the
+notion always in my mind. Say&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yep?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull's eyes were squarely gazing. Their clear depths
+looked straight into the dark eyes of the man at the desk.
+Their regard was intense. It was almost disconcerting.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the proposition?" he went on. And his firm
+lips closed over the last word and contrived to transform
+the simple question into a definite challenge.</p>
+
+<p>Peterman stirred uneasily. At that moment he beheld
+more clearly than ever the picture of this man with his
+great arms about the body of the woman he coveted,
+and feeling lent sharpness to his tone.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the price you set on your enterprise up at
+Labrador?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>Bull removed his cigar. He emitted a pensive stream
+of smoke. His eyes were again pre-occupied with the
+white ash, so firm and clean on its tip. Then quite
+suddenly he looked up.</p>
+
+<p>"If you'll tell me the price you set on the whole of
+the Skandinavia, I'll talk."</p>
+
+<p>"What d'you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>The Swede had less command of his feelings than the
+other. He had never learnt the methods of the forest
+as Bull had learned them.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Why, I can't set a price on Sachigo till I know the
+price you set on the Skandinavia," Bull's eyes were smiling.
+"You see I should need to double it for&mdash;Sachigo."</p>
+
+<p>The man from Labrador had driven home to the quick,
+and the Teutonic vanity of the Swede was instantly
+aflame. Peterman had committed the one offence which
+the younger man could not forgive. He had dared, in
+his vanity, to believe that the situation between them
+was a question of price.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't invite you here to sell you&mdash;the Skandinavia,"
+Peterman blustered, giving way to anger he could not
+restrain.</p>
+
+<p>"No. And I didn't accept your invitation for the
+purpose of selling&mdash;Sachigo. If there's any buying and
+selling going on you'd best understand quite clearly I
+am the buyer."</p>
+
+<p>There was a dangerous light in Bull's eyes levelled so
+steadily on the angry face of the Swede.</p>
+
+<p>"Then&mdash;it's war?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull shrugged at the challenge.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm quite indifferent," he said coldly.</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment of tense silence. Then the Swede
+smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"You're ready then to let the fool public benefit at
+your expense?"</p>
+
+<p>"No." A smile of real humor flashed in Bull's eyes.
+"At yours."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean&mdash;you think to&mdash;smash us?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just as sure as the sun'll rise to-morrow. Just as
+sure as Providence set up forest and water powers on
+Labrador such as you've never dreamed of since you
+forgot your boyhood. Just as sure as your Shagaunty's
+played out and you need to start in on fresh limits you
+aren't sure of yet. Just as sure as they're going to cost
+you a heap more than when you were busy treating the
+
+fortune that Shagaunty handed you like the worst fool-head
+spendthrift who ever broke a bank at the gambling
+tables."</p>
+
+<p>Bull rose abruptly from his chair.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm obliged for this interview, Mr. Peterman," he
+went on. "It's suited me. That's why I came along
+down in a hurry. You're fortunate in that lady representative.
+Her tact and persuasion left me feeling you
+had a real proposition that was worth considering. I
+guess she'll go a long way for you, and if there's any
+live person can help your ship along, she's that live
+person. But you can't buy me, and you can't smash me.
+I mean that. You see, I know your position. It's my
+job to know the position of any possible competitor, and
+naturally I know yours. Your Shagaunty's run dry, and,
+well, I don't need to tell you all that means to you."
+He dropped the stump of his cigar into an ash tray.
+"That's a good cigar," he went on with a derisive smile.
+"Thanks. Good-bye."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Bull was at the telephone again. He was again smiling
+at the insurance advertisement. But now his smile
+was of a different quality. It was full of delighted
+anticipation.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," he was saying. "I spent quite a pleasant
+ha'f hour with him. I enjoyed it immensely. Yes. He
+seems to be the man to run an enterprise like yours. He
+certainly has both initiative and confidence. A little
+hasty in judgment, I think. But&mdash;yes, I'd like to tell
+you all about it. What are you doing this evening?
+Oh, resting. I suppose you eat while resting. Yes. It's
+necessary, isn't it? Anyway I find it so. Eh? Oh,
+yes. You see, I've a big frame to support. Will you
+help me to support it this evening? I mean dinner here?
+Will you? Oh, that's fine. I'd love to tell you about
+
+it all. Fine. Right. Eight o'clock then. I'll go and
+arrange it all now. It shall be a very special dinner, I
+promise you. Good-bye."</p>
+
+<p>He put up the receiver and turned away. His smile
+remained, and it had no relation to anything but his
+delight that Nancy McDonald had consented to dine with
+him.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_21"></a>
+<h3>Chapter XII&mdash;At The Chateau</h3>
+
+<p>Nancy was standing before the mirror which occupied
+the whole length of the door of the dress-closet with
+which her modest bedroom had been provided by a
+thoughtful architect.</p>
+
+<p>She was studying the results of her preparations. She
+was to dine with Bull Sternford, the man who had caught
+and held her interest for all she knew that they belonged
+to camps that were sternly opposed to each other. She
+wanted to look her best, whatever that best might be,
+and she was haunted by a fear that her best could never
+rank in its due place amongst the superlatives.</p>
+
+<p>However, she had arrayed herself in her newest and
+smartest party frock. She had spent hours, she believed,
+on her unruly masses of hair, and furthermore, she had
+assiduously applied herself to obliterating the weather
+stain which the fierce journey from Labrador had inflicted
+upon the beautiful oval of her cheeks. Now, at
+last, the final touches had been given, and she was
+critically surveying the result.</p>
+
+<p>The longer she studied her reflection the deeper grew
+the discontent in her pretty, hazel eyes. It was the
+same old reflection, she told herself. It was a bit tricked
+out; a bit less real. It was a tiresome thing which gave
+her no satisfaction at all. There was the red hair that
+
+looked so very red. There were the eyes, which, at
+times, she was convinced were really green. There was
+the stupid nose that always seemed to her to occupy too
+much of her face. And as for her cheeks, the wind and
+sea had left them looking more healthy, but&mdash;She
+sighed and hurriedly turned away. She felt that mirrors
+were an invention calculated to upset the conceit of any
+girl.</p>
+
+<p>She moved quickly round the little room. Her gloves,
+her wrap. She picked them up. The gloves she was
+painfully aware had already been cleaned twice, and her
+cloak had no greater merits than the modest-priced frock
+which had strained her limited bank roll. Then she
+consulted the clock on her bureau, and, picked up her
+scent-spray. This was the last, the final touch she could
+not resist.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of using it she set it down with a feeling
+of sudden panic.</p>
+
+<p>She had remembered. She stood staring down at the
+dressing table with a light of trouble in her eyes. The
+whole incident had been forgotten till that moment. She
+remembered she had refused to dine with Elas Peterman
+that night on a plea of weariness, and without a
+thought had unhesitatingly accepted the invitation of the
+man whom the Skandinavia had marked down for its
+victim.</p>
+
+<p>For some seconds the enormity of the thing she had
+done overwhelmed her. Then a belated humour came
+to her rescue and a shadowy smile drove the trouble
+from her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Suppose&mdash;but no. Her chief would be dining at home,
+as was his habit. Then, anyway, there could be no
+harm. She was concerned in this thing. She had a
+right. She even told herself it was imperative she should
+know what had transpired at the interview she had
+brought about. Besides, was there not the possibility of
+
+certain rougnnesses occurring between the two men which
+it might be within her power to smooth down? That
+was surely so. She had no right to miss any opportunity
+of furthering the ends of her own people.</p>
+
+<p>Then she laughed outright. Oh, it was excuse. She
+knew. She was looking forward to the evening. Of
+course she was. Then, just as suddenly all desire to
+laugh expired. Why? Why was she looking forward
+to dining with Bull Sternford?</p>
+
+<p>Bull! What a quaint name. She had thought of it
+before. She had thought of it at the time when the
+lonely missionary of the forest had told her of him.</p>
+
+<p>Swiftly her thought passed on to her meeting with the
+man himself. She remembered her nervousness when
+she had first looked into his big, wholesome face, with
+its clear, searching eyes. Yes, she had realised then the
+truth of Father Adam's description. He would as soon
+fight as laugh. There could be no doubt of it.</p>
+
+<p>And then those days on the <em>Myra</em>. She recalled their
+talk of the sea-gulls, and of the men of the forests, and
+she remembered the almost brutal contempt for them he
+had so downrightly expressed. Then the moment of
+disaster to herself. It was he who had saved her, he
+who had fought for her, although he had been in little
+better case himself.</p>
+
+<p>What was it they had told her? He must be bought
+or smashed. She wondered if they realised the man
+they were dealing with. She wondered what they would
+have felt and thought if they had listened to the confident
+assurance of Father Adam. If they had listened
+to Bull Sternford himself, and learned to know him as
+she had already learned to know him. The Skandinavia
+was powerful, but was it powerful enough to deal as
+they desired with this man who was as ready to fight as
+to laugh?</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head. And it was a negative movement
+
+she was unaware of. Well, anyway, the game had begun,
+and she was in it. Her duty was clear enough. And
+meanwhile she would miss no opportunity to pull her
+whole weight for her side, even when she knew that was
+not the whole thought in her mind.</p>
+
+<p>But somehow there were things she regretted when
+she remembered the fight ahead. She regretted the
+moment when this man had saved her from almost
+certain death against the iron stanchions and sides of
+the <em>Myra</em>. She regretted his fine eyes, and he had
+fine eyes which looked so squarely out of their setting.
+Then, too, he had been so kindly concerned that she
+should achieve the mission upon which she had embarked.
+It would have been so easy and even exacting had he
+been a man of less generous impulse. A man whom she
+could have thoroughly disliked. But he was the reverse
+of all those things which make it a joy to hurt. He
+was&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>She pulled herself up and seized the pretty beaded
+vanity bag lying ready to her hand. Then the telephone
+rang.</p>
+
+<p>It was the cab which the porter had ordered, and she
+hastily switched off the lights.</p>
+
+<p>On the way down in the elevator her train of thought
+persisted. And long before she reached the Chateau, a
+feeling that she was playing something of the part of
+Delilah took hold of her and depressed her.</p>
+
+<p>But she was determined. Whatever happened her
+service and loyalty was in support of her early benefactors,
+and no act of hers should betray them.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>The scene was pleasantly seductive. There was no
+doubt or anxiety in Nancy McDonald's mind now. How
+should there be? She was young. She was beautiful.
+The man with whom she was dining was remarkable
+
+amongst the well-dressed throng that filled the great
+dining-room. Then the dinner had been carefully considered.</p>
+
+<p>But it was the delightful surroundings, the little excitement
+of it all that left the girl's thought care-free.
+The shaded table lights. The wonderful flowers. The
+dark panelling of the great room constructed and designed
+in imitation of an old French Chateau. Then the throng
+of beautifully gowned women, and the men who purposed
+an evening of enjoyment. The soft music of the
+distant string band and&mdash;oh, it was all dashed with a
+touch of Babylonic splendour with due regard for the
+decorum required by modern civilisation, and Nancy was
+sufficiently young and unused to delight in every moment
+of it.</p>
+
+<p>The first excitement of it all had spent itself, and
+laughing comment had given place to those things with
+which the girl was most concerned.</p>
+
+<p>"Folks can't accuse us of dilatoriness," she said. "Let's
+see. Why, we made land this morning after every sort
+of a bad passage, battered and worn, and in less than
+how many hours?&mdash;eight?&mdash;nine?&mdash;" she laughed.
+"Why, I guess a sewing bee wouldn't have got through
+their preliminary talk in that time."</p>
+
+<p>"No." Bull too was in the mood for laughter. "A
+sewing bee's mighty well named. There's a big buzz
+mostly all the time, and the tally of work only needs
+to be figgered when the season closes. We've settled up
+the future of two enterprises liable to cut big ice in
+this country's history in record time."</p>
+
+<p>"You've settled with Mr. Peterman?"</p>
+
+<p>"Roughly."</p>
+
+<p>The man's eyes were shining with a smile of keen
+enjoyment.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy experienced a thrill of added excitement as she
+disposed of her last oyster.</p>
+
+
+<p>"I haven't a right to butt in asking too many questions,"
+she suggested.</p>
+
+<p>Bull tasted his wine and thoughtfully set his glass
+down. Then he looked across at the eager face alight
+with every question woman's curiosity and interest could
+inspire. He smiled into it. And somehow his smile
+was very, very gentle.</p>
+
+<p>"That's pretty well why we're here now though," he
+said. "You can just ask all you fancy to know, and
+I'll tell you. But maybe I can save you worry by telling
+you first."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, yes," Nancy said eagerly. "You see, I'm only
+a secretary. I'm not one of the heads of the Skandinavia.
+I sort of feel this is high policy which doesn't
+really concern me. You're sure you feel like telling me?
+Was Mr. Peterman&mdash;friendly?"</p>
+
+<p>"As amiable as a tame&mdash;shark."</p>
+
+<p>"That's pretty fierce."</p>
+
+<p>Bull shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"It's just a way of putting it. Y'see even a tame
+shark don't get over a lifetime habit of swallowing most
+things that come his way. Peterman figures to swallow
+me&mdash;whole."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy's eyes widened. But the man's tone had been
+undisturbed. There was a contented smile in his eyes,
+and an atmosphere of unruffled confidence about him that
+was rather inspiring. The girl felt its influence.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean he figures to have you join up with the
+Skandinavia?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull shook his head as the waiter set the next course
+on the table.</p>
+
+<p>"No. He guesses the Skandinavia can buy me."</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;see."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy waited. She remembered this man was as
+ready to fight as to laugh. Somehow she scented the
+battle in him now, for all the ease in his manner.</p>
+
+
+<p>"I told him it couldn't. I pointed out if there was
+any buying to be done I figgered to do it."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean you would buy up&mdash;the Skandinavia?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull's smile deepened. The girl's incredulity amused
+him. He understood. To her the Skandinavia Corporation
+was the beginning and end of all things. In her eyes
+it was the last word in power and influence and wealth.
+She knew nothing beyond&mdash;the Skandinavia. A man in
+her place would have received prompt and biting retort.
+But she was a girl, and Bull was young, and strong, and
+at the beginning of a great manhood. He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, not just that," he said. "But say, let's get it
+right. How'd a woman feel if she'd an elegant baby
+child, thoroughbred from the crown of his dandy bald
+head to the pretty pink soles of his feet? Just a small
+bit of her, of her own creation. Then along comes some
+big, swell woman, who's only been able to raise a no
+account, sickly kid, an' wants to buy up the first mother's
+bit of sheer love. Wouldn't she hear the sort of things
+a woman of that sort ought to? Wouldn't she get hell
+raised with her?"</p>
+
+<p>"But the Skandinavia's no&mdash;sickly kid."</p>
+
+<p>The girl's eyes were challenging. There was warmth,
+too, in her retort. His words had stirred her as he
+intended them to stir her.</p>
+
+<p>"You think that?" he said. "You think that they
+have the right to demand my&mdash;child? You approve?
+That was your desire when you came to me&mdash;that
+they should buy me up?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull's smile still remained. There was no shadow of
+change in it. But his questions came in headlong
+succession.</p>
+
+<p>Just for an instant a feeling of helplessness surged
+through the girl's heart. Then it passed, leaving her quite
+firm and decided. She looked squarely into the smiling
+eyes, and hers were unsmiling but earnestly honest.</p>
+
+
+<p>"My approval isn't of any concern. I knew that was
+the Skandinavia's purpose when I came to you."</p>
+
+<p>"And you called it a business arrangement?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. You did."</p>
+
+<p>The man broke into a laugh. It was a laugh of sheer
+amusement.</p>
+
+<p>"That's so," he said. "You were going to hand me
+the story of your mission, and I&mdash;and I butted in and
+told it to you&mdash;myself."</p>
+
+<p>The girl nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"You were very good to me," she said. "You saw I
+was going to flounder, and you took pity on me."</p>
+
+<p>Bull's denial was prompt.</p>
+
+<p>"I just short-circuited things. That's all," he said.
+Then he laughed again. "And I'm going to do it again
+right now. Here, I want you to hear things the way they
+seem to me. You think the Skandinavia's no sickly kid.
+Well, I tell you it is. Anyway, in this thing. Peterman
+wants to buy me. Why? Don't you know? I think
+you do. The Skandinavia's got a mighty bad scare right
+now. The Shagaunty's played out. And I'm jumping
+the market. For the practical purposes of the moment
+the Skandinavia's mighty sick. So Peterman and his
+friends reckon to buy me. You're wise to it all?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull's eyes were levelled squarely at the girl's. There
+was a challenge in them. But there was no roughness.
+It was his purpose to arrive at the full measure of the
+girl's feelings and attitude, so far as this effort on the
+part of his rivals was concerned.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy was swift to understand. In an ordinary way
+her reply would have been prompt. There would have
+been no hesitation. But, somehow, there was reluctance
+in her now. She made no attempt to analyse her feelings.
+All she knew was that this man had a great appeal for
+her. He was so big, he was so strongly direct and fearless.
+Then, too, his manner was so very gentle, and his
+
+expressive eyes so kindly smiling, while all the while
+she felt the fierce resentment against her people going
+on behind them.</p>
+
+<p>After a moment decision came to her rescue. She was
+of the opposing camp. She could not, and would not,
+pretend. It was clear that war lay ahead, and her position
+must be that of an honest enemy.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said simply. "I think I know all there is
+to know about the position."</p>
+
+<p>She hesitated again. Then she went on in a fashion
+that displayed the effort her words were costing.</p>
+
+<p>"We're out to buy you or break you, and I shall play
+the part they assign me in the game. Oh, I've nothing
+to hide. I've no excuse to make. You will fight your
+battle, and we shall fight ours. Maybe we shall learn to
+hate each other in the course of it. I don't know. Yet
+there's nothing personal in the fight. That's the queer
+thing in commercial warfare, isn't it? I'd be glad for
+our two concerns to run right along side by side. But
+they can't. They just can't. And, as I understand,
+one or the other's got to go right to the wall before we're
+through. Can't all this be saved? Must all this sort of&mdash;bloodshed&mdash;go
+on? We're two great enterprises, and,
+combined, we'd be just that much greater. Together
+we'd rule the whole world's markets and dictate our own
+terms. And then, and then&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"We'd be doing the thing I'm out to stop&mdash;if it costs
+me all I have or am in this world."</p>
+
+<p>For a moment the man's eyes forgot to smile, and
+Nancy was permitted to gaze on the great, absorbing
+purpose his manner had hitherto held concealed. She
+was startled at the passionate denial, and robbed of all
+desire to reply.</p>
+
+<p>"Here!" Bull set his elbows on the table and supported
+his chin on his hands. "Get this. Get it good,
+and all the time. I wouldn't work with the Skandinavia
+
+for all the dollars this country's presses could print.
+I'm not going to hand you the reason. Some day, maybe
+when your folks have smashed me, or I've smashed
+them, I'll tell you about it. But I tell you this now,
+there's no sort of business arrangement I ever figgered
+to enter into with Elas Peterman, and there's no sort
+of thing in God's world ever could, or would, induce
+me to come to any terms of his."</p>
+
+<p>Then his manner changed again, and his passionate
+moment became lost in a great laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe you'll want to know why I changed my plans
+so easily, and came along down in a hurry to see Peterman.
+Why I seemed ready to fall for his proposition.
+Well, I guess I won't hand you the reason of that, either.
+I'd like to, but I won't." He shook his head and his
+laugh had gone again. "Anyway, it served my purpose,
+and Peterman knows just how things stand&mdash;and are
+going to stand&mdash;between us."</p>
+
+<p>"Then it's war? Ruthless, implacable&mdash;war?" There
+was awe in the girl's tone and her lips were dry. She
+sipped her wine quickly to moisten them, and set the
+glass down with a hand that was not quite steady. Bull
+saw the signs of distress.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, it's war all right," he said quietly. "Maybe
+it's ruthless, implacable. But it's part of the game.
+Don't worry a thing. You're in the enemy lines. You've
+got your duty. So far you've done your duty; and you've
+made good, and will get the reward you need. Well,
+go right on doing that duty, and there isn't a just
+creature on God's earth that'll have right to blame
+you. I won't blame you. Go right on; and when
+it's all through, I'll be ready to sit here with you
+again, and talk and laugh over it, as we've been
+doing&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He broke off. A frightened look had leapt into Nancy's
+eyes. She was no longer attending to him. She was
+
+watching the tall, squarely military figure of a man
+moving down one of the aisles between the softly lit
+tables. The man's dark eyes were searching over the
+room, as he followed the head waiter conducting him to
+the table that had been reserved for him. Bull turned
+and followed the direction of the girl's gaze. And as he
+did so he encountered the cold, unsmiling glance of the
+other man's eyes. It was only for an instant. Then
+he turned back to the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"Friend Peterman," he said.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy made a pretence of eating.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said, without raising her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy's emotion was painfully obvious. Bull realised
+it. She was afraid. Why? A swift thought flashed
+through the man's mind, to be followed by a feeling
+such as he had never known before. Hitherto Elas
+Peterman had represented only a sufficiently worthy
+adversary who must be encountered and defeated. Now,
+all in a moment, that was changed into something fiercer,
+more furiously human and abiding.</p>
+
+<p>"Does it matter?" he asked very quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy looked up from her plate. There was a flicker
+of a smile in the eyes that a moment before had expressed
+only apprehension. She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know&mdash;yet," she said. Her smile deepened.
+"You see, I refused to dine with him here to-night. I
+excused myself on a plea of weariness. I really did want
+rest. But&mdash;well, I didn't want to dine with him, anyway.
+He's seen me&mdash;with you."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you often dine with him?"</p>
+
+<p>The man had no smile in response, and his question
+came swiftly.</p>
+
+<p>"I've never dined with him."</p>
+
+<p>Bull sat back. His eyes were smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I guess the answer's easy. You're here fighting
+for the Skandinavia. And I'd say you've been doing it
+
+mighty well. Maybe Peterman'll feel sore, but he'll see
+it that way after&mdash;awhile."</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_22"></a>
+<h3>Chapter XIII&mdash;Deepening Waters</h3>
+
+
+<p>Nancy thought long and earnestly over her breakfast.
+She thought deeply as she proceeded to her office. Even
+the business of again taking up the thread of her work
+failed to absorb her.</p>
+
+<p>Apprehension disturbed, and a certain sense of guilt
+weighed upon her. The vision of the tall figure of Elas
+Peterman as it moved down the dining-room at the
+Chateau remained with her. She had caught the glance
+of his dark eyes. She knew he had recognised her; and
+there had been neither smile nor recognition in the swift
+exchange that had passed between them.</p>
+
+<p>So she answered the usual morning summons of her
+chief without any pleasant anticipation. She expected a
+bad time, and strove to prepare herself for it.</p>
+
+<p>But alarm vanished the moment she ushered herself
+into the man's presence. He was not at his desk poring
+over his littered correspondence. She found him standing
+before his favourite window, gazing out reflectively
+upon the grey light of the early winter day. He turned
+at the sound of her entry, and his smile of greeting lacked
+nothing of its usual cordiality.</p>
+
+<p>Had she observed him a moment before it must have
+been different. But she had been spared all sight of the
+mood that had driven him to abandon urgent correspondence
+in favour of the drab outlook beyond the window.
+It was a bad expression. It was the expression
+of a man of fierce cruelty. It was not an expression of
+open, hot anger, which flares up, passes, and is forgotten
+like the fury of a summer storm. It was rather the slowly
+
+banking clouds of winter, piling up for a climax that
+should be devastating. And through it all he had smiled,
+smiled with angry eyes that seemed to grow colder and
+harder every moment.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy knew little of the world, and less of men and
+women. It could not have been otherwise. Vital with
+a youthful optimism and strong purpose, she had devoted
+herself to work to the exclusion of everything else. And
+before that there had only been the scrupulous care of
+the good matrons of Marypoint. A wider experience, a
+maturer mind would have yielded her doubt as she beheld
+the man's smiling greeting now. She would have
+reminded herself of her offence, and understood its
+enormity in the eyes of a man. She would have had
+a better appreciation of her own attractions, and would
+have long since understood this man's regard for her.</p>
+
+<p>As it was she snatched at the relief his smile inspired.</p>
+
+<p>The man laughingly shook his head as the girl
+approached.</p>
+
+<p>"Nancy, my dear, I hope Mr. Bull Sternford gave you
+as good a dinner as I would have given you, and&mdash;as
+good a time generally. You look well rested, anyway."</p>
+
+<p>There was a sting in the words that all the man's care
+could not quite shut out. But the tone was of intended
+good-nature. In a moment Nancy was explaining.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I know you must think me terribly mean," she
+cried impulsively. "You must think I was just lying to
+you when you asked me to dine yesterday. But it wasn't
+so. It surely wasn't. May I tell you about it?"</p>
+
+<p>The man came back to his desk, and indicated the
+empty chair beside it.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure, if you feel that way," he said, dropping
+into his seat while Nancy took hers. "But I'm not
+angry. Truth I'm not." For a moment he gazed
+smilingly into the girl's troubled eyes. "Here," he
+went on. "I'll tell you just how I think. Maybe you
+
+won't figger it flattering, but it's just plain truth. Now
+I'm a married man and you're a young girl. Well, the
+Chateau isn't the sort of place for you and me to be seen
+together in. I didn't think of it when I asked you. I
+just wanted to hand you a good time for the good work
+you've done. Sort of prize for a good girl, eh? I hadn't
+another thought about it. And when you refused me,
+and I thought it over, I was kind of glad&mdash;I might have
+compromised you, and I certainly would have compromised
+myself. You get that? You understand me?
+Of course you do. That's what I like. You're so darn
+sensible. Now you tell me&mdash;if you fancy to?"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy sighed her relief. Her last cloud had passed
+away.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," she began at once. "I do want to tell
+you. You see I think it's all-important."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>The man's smile was unchanged. But there was a
+dryness in his monosyllable that only Nancy could have
+missed.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Sternford 'phoned me after his interview with
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"He had your 'phone number?"</p>
+
+<p>"Surely, I gave him that before he left me after
+driving up from the docks."</p>
+
+<p>"I see. Of course. You drove up together after landing.
+I forgot."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think I told you," she said. "But it doesn't
+matter, anyway. Yes, he drove me up. And the whole
+of this affair was so interesting I just had to hear the
+result of the interview with you. So I told him my 'phone
+number. Well, right after he'd seen you he rang me up.
+He told me he couldn't speak over the 'phone the things
+that passed, and asked me to dine. I just had to fall
+for that. You see, this thing meant so much to me.
+
+It was the first big thing I'd handled, and&mdash;and I was so
+crazy to make good for you. So I promised. And it
+wasn't till after it was all fixed I realised the mean way
+I'd acted. You'll forgive me, won't you, Mr. Peterman?
+I just hadn't a notion to be mean, and I was all tired to
+death. But I had to hear about the things you'd fixed."</p>
+
+<p>"And you heard?"</p>
+
+<p>The man was leaning on the desk with one hand supporting
+his head. Not one shadow of condemnation or
+resentment was permitted in voice or look. And the
+girl was completely disarmed. But her smile died out
+and a swift apprehension, that had no relation to herself,
+replaced it. In a moment her mind had gone back to
+the declaration of war which was to involve the two
+enterprises.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. He told me."</p>
+
+<p>"And&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it's all wrong. It's all foolish, and wrong, and
+just terrible," she broke in impulsively. Then she became
+calmly thoughtful, and her even brows drew together
+in an effort to straighten out the things she wanted
+to say. She shook her head. "I'm sure he can be
+handled," she went on deliberately. "Oh, yes. In spite
+of the things they say of him."</p>
+
+<p>"What's that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why he's as ready to fight as to laugh."</p>
+
+<p>"Who says that?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's the way they speak of him."</p>
+
+<p>"Who speaks that way?"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"It was just a queer sort of missionary who told me.
+I met him when I was at Arden Laval's camp. A man
+they call Father Adam."</p>
+
+<p>Peterman nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"And you guess he can be handled?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think so." Nancy spread out her hands. "Oh,
+
+it's not for me to talk this way to you, Mr. Peterman,
+but&mdash;but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Go on." The man was patiently reassuring as the
+girl hesitated. "It's good to hear you talk. And then
+it was you who got him to listen to our proposal at all."</p>
+
+<p>The compliment had prompt effect. The girl's cheeks
+flushed, and a light of something approaching delight
+shone in the hazel depths of her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know," she cried. "But it seems to me he's
+sort of reasonable. He's kind of full of ideals and that
+sort of notion. He's out for a big purpose and all that.
+But I don't believe he'd turn down any business arrangement
+that would hand him the thing he wants&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Business arrangement?" Peterman sat up. The
+laugh accompanying his words was full of amiable
+derision. He shook his head. "If he won't sell he's got
+to be smashed. That's the only business arrangement that
+suits us. We're far too big for compromise. No, my
+dear. He won't sell. He asked to buy us. He&mdash;this
+darn fool man from Sachigo. He thinks to buy the
+Skandinavia like he's buying up all the mills he can lay
+hands on. But he bit off a chunk when he handed that
+stuff to me. He's as ready to fight as to laugh. Well,
+I guess he's going to get all the fight he needs. He'll
+get it plenty."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you mean to&mdash;smash him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just as sure as it's started to snow right now," the
+man exclaimed, pointing at the window.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy's gaze followed the pointing finger. But it was
+not the snow she was thinking of. It was the man whom
+she beheld staggering under the tremendous weight of
+the Skandinavia's might. She felt pity for him. And
+incautiously she permitted Elas Peterman to realise her
+pity.</p>
+
+<p>"Can't anything be done?" she ventured gently.
+"Have you handled him? I mean&mdash;Oh, I'm sure he's
+
+reasonable. Can't the offer be made&mdash;more suitable?
+More&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>Peterman's eyes suddenly hardened.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean? I haven't handled him right?
+I've blundered? I&mdash;" He laughed without any mirth.
+"See here, Nancy, my dear, you're a bright girl, but don't
+hand me your worry for this darn fool. You're kind of
+tender-hearted. You guess it's a pretty tough thing to
+see a good-looker boy go down in a big commercial fight.
+That's because you're a woman. This sort of thing's
+part of business. It's harsher, more ruthless than even
+war on the battlefield with guns, and bombs, and stinking
+gas. We're going to fight this thing just that way.
+There's no mercy for Mr. Bull Sternford. He'll get all
+I can hand him just the way I know best how to hand it.
+And the tougher I can make it the better it'll please me.
+See? Now you just run right along and see to those
+things that are going to make you big in the Skandinavia,
+and don't give a thought for the feller who's handed me
+stuff I don't stand for in any man. There's liable to be
+big work for you in this fight, and I'd say you'll make
+as good in fight as in peace. You've got my goodwill
+anyway, my dear, just for all it's worth. That's all."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>The door had closed behind the girl. Elas Peterman
+was on his feet pacing the thickly carpeted floor. There
+was no longer any attempt at disguise. A surge of
+jealous fury was raging through his hot heart and drove
+him mercilessly.</p>
+
+<p>The picture of Nancy, radiantly beautiful, seated at
+dinner with Bull Sternford had lit a fire of bitter hatred
+in his Teutonic heart. So he paced the room and permitted
+the fierce tide to flood the channels of sanity and
+set them awash with the ready evil of his impulse.</p>
+
+<p>From the first moment of the girl's story of her
+
+successful effort with this man, Sternford, this vaunting
+rival, Peterman had been bitterly stirred. The
+man's change of plans at her bidding he had understood
+on the instant. The man from Labrador had not changed
+his plans at the bidding of the Skandinavia. It was the
+girl who had induced him. It was she who had attracted
+him. Then the boat trip, and the girl's confession of his
+having, perhaps, saved her life. What had preceded
+that incident? What had followed it? And when Elas
+Peterman asked himself such questions it was simple
+for him to find the answer. He had seen Sternford, and
+had judged the position. He knew what would have
+happened had he been in this man's place. Sternford
+wasn't the man to throw away such chances, either. He
+had fallen for the girl, and she doubtless had&mdash;The
+picture he had witnessed at the Chateau had left him
+without any doubt. The driving up together from the
+docks, the telephone. Sternford had taken her to her
+apartment. Oh, it was all as clear as daylight. Then
+the girl's pity for the man who was to feel the weight of
+the Skandinavia's wrathful might. She had said he was
+reasonable. She had hinted that he, Peterman, had
+blundered. There was only one reasonable interpretation
+to the position. And it did not leave him guessing for
+one single moment.</p>
+
+<p>Once he passed a fleshy hand up over his forehead and
+brushed back his dark hair. Once he came to a pause
+before his window and stood gazing out at the falling
+snow with hot eyes. No such fury of jealousy had ever
+entered into his life before. Never had he dreamed
+before of the tremendous hold this girl had obtained
+upon him. His claim on her had all seemed so natural,
+so easy. He had looked upon her as property that was
+indisputably his. He might have learned something from
+his feelings when he had paraded her before Hellbeam.
+But he had not done so. Now he knew. Now he knew
+
+the whole measure of them. And the bitterness of his
+awakening was maddening.</p>
+
+<p>Well, Bull Sternford should get away with no play of
+that sort at his expense. He warned himself that he was
+no simple fool to be played with. And if Nancy wanted
+the man&mdash; But he broke away from under the lash of
+impotent fury, and turned to a channel of thought which
+was bound to serve a nature such as his in his present
+mood.</p>
+
+<p>He returned to his desk and flung himself into the
+chair. And after a while his mind settled itself to the
+task his mood demanded. He sat staring straight ahead
+of him, and presently the heat passed out of his eyes, and
+they grew cold, and hard. Later, they began to smile
+again&mdash;but it was a smile of cruelty, of evil purpose. It
+was a smile more unrelenting in its cruelty than any
+frown could have expressed.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>For the first time Nancy's eyes were open to the things
+of life as they really were. She had tasted a certain
+bitterness in the early days of her girlhood. But up till
+now the world had seemed something of a rose garden
+in which it was a delight to labour. Up till now she had
+seen no reverse to the picture of life as youth had painted
+it for her. Now, however, it was borne in upon her
+that there was a reverse, a reverse that was ugly and
+painfully distressing. It was this declaration of war
+between her own people and the man from Labrador.</p>
+
+<p>She lay in her bed that night thinking, thinking, and
+without any desire for sleep. Strive as she would to
+search the position out logically, to estimate the true
+meaning of it all, to fathom the chances of this war, and
+to grasp the necessity for it, all these efforts only resulted
+in a tangle of thought revolving about the picture of a
+youthful man of vast stature, with eyes that were always
+clear-searching or smiling, and with a head of hair that
+
+reminded her of a lion's mane. And as she gazed upon
+this mental picture there were moments when it seemed
+to her there was grave trouble in the clear depths which
+so appealed to her. The smile in her eyes seemed to fade
+out, to be replaced by a look that seemed to express
+the hurtful knowledge of a man disheartened, defeated,
+crushed. They were in rival camps. They were at war.
+Each desired victory. And yet the sight she beheld, the
+signs of defeat she discovered in the man's eyes gave
+her no joy, no satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>She felt that the battle could end only one way. The
+might of the Skandinavia was too great for anything
+but its complete victory. She was sure, quite sure. Oh,
+yes. And she knew she would not have it otherwise.
+But the pity of it. This creature of splendid manhood.
+To think that he must go down&mdash;smashed. That was
+the word they used&mdash;smashed.</p>
+
+<p>How she hated the word. The big soul of him with
+his ready kindliness. Oh, it was a pity. It was a distracting
+thought. And why should it be? For the life
+of her she could see no need. A little yielding on his
+part. Just a shade less iron stubbornness. The whole
+thing could have been avoided she was sure. The olive
+branch had been held out by the Skandinavia. But he
+had deliberately refused it.</p>
+
+<p>No. He had made himself their enemy. Then surely
+there could be no complaint at the disaster that would
+overtake him. He was clearly to blame. So why let
+the contemplation of it distract her?</p>
+
+<p>She strove a hundred times to dismiss the whole thing
+from her mind. She courted sleep in every conceivable
+way. But it was all useless. The man's fine eyes and
+great body haunted her. They pursued her to her last
+waking thought. And, at last, she fell asleep, thinking of
+the strong supporting arms that had held her safe from
+the fury of Atlantic waves.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_23"></a>
+<h3>Chapter XIV&mdash;The Planning Of Campaign</h3>
+
+
+<p>Nathaniel Hellbeam sat ominously calm and unruffled
+while Elas Peterman told of his meeting with Bull Sternford.
+He gave no sign whatever. There was just the
+flicker of a smile of appreciation of Bull's effrontery
+when he heard of his response to Peterman's invitation
+to sell. That alone of the whole story seemed to afford
+him interest. For the rest, it had only been the sort of
+thing he expected.</p>
+
+<p>He waited until the other had finished. Then he
+stirred in his chair. It was an expression of relief that
+his long, silent sitting had ended.</p>
+
+<p>"So," he said. "We do not buy him. No. We
+smash him."</p>
+
+<p>There was obvious satisfaction that the more peaceful
+process was to be set aside.</p>
+
+<p>He sat blinking at his subordinate in the fashion of a
+man who is thinking hard, and has no interest in the
+object upon which he is gazing.</p>
+
+<p>"It is as I think&mdash;all the time," he said at last. "That
+is all right. I make no cry out. It is easy to fight. I
+would fight always with an enemy. It is good. Now
+my friend, you have acted so. You bring the man from
+Sachigo to tell you to go to hell. Eh? Well you have
+thought much? You have planned for the fight? How
+is it you make this fight?"</p>
+
+<p>Elas was standing before the desk. He had, yielded
+his place to this man who was master of the Skandinavia.
+Now he looked down at the square-headed creature with
+his gross, squat body. It was a figure and face bristling
+with venom and purpose; and somehow he was conscious
+of a sudden lack of his usual assurance.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," he replied thoughtfully. "I've planned&mdash;sure.
+
+But I guess I'm in the dark a bit. It's going to
+cost a deal. It's not going to be easy. You were ready
+to buy. It was not necessarily to be the Skandinavia
+who bought. Well, are you&mdash;going to vote the credit
+for this fight?" He smiled uncertainly. "And to what
+extent?"</p>
+
+<p>"The limit. Go on."</p>
+
+<p>Peterman nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"There's no commercial enterprise that can stand idleness.
+His work must stop. His&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That is the A.B.C. of it."</p>
+
+<p>There was sharp impatience in the financier's biting
+tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Just so. It is the A.B.C. of it."</p>
+
+<p>Hellbeam set back in his chair. He clasped his hands
+across his stomach.</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you," he said, a wicked smile lighting his
+deep-set eyes, his cheeks rounding themselves in his
+satisfaction. "His work will stop. His mill is far
+away. There is no protection from attack except that
+which he can set up himself. He is going away. He will
+have eighteen hundred miles of water between him and
+his mill. It should be easy with a good plan and all the
+money. Listen.</p>
+
+<p>"His work must stop. How? There are ways. His
+mill may burn. His forests may burn. His men may
+revolt. They may refuse to work for him. All, or any
+of these things may serve. There are men at all times
+ready to carry out these things. You can tell them, or
+you need not, the way they must act." He shook his
+head. "You say to them his work must stop; and you
+pay them more than he can pay them. So his work will
+stop. That is so? Yes? Very well. There is ha'f a
+million dollars that will pay for his work to stop. I say
+that."</p>
+
+<p>Peterman was startled. He had not been prepared for
+
+so sweeping a proposal. He had understood that the
+man had been prepared to stand at almost nothing in
+his desire to achieve some end, the nature of which still
+remained somewhat obscure to him. For all his own
+lack of scruple in his dealings with those who offended,
+the calm, fiendish purpose of this man shocked him not
+a little.</p>
+
+<p>He took the chair usually occupied by his visitors.</p>
+
+<p>"You will pay ha'f a million dollars for this thing?"
+he demanded, to re-assure himself.</p>
+
+<p>Self-satisfaction looked out of the eyes of the man
+behind the desk.</p>
+
+<p>"More&mdash;if necessary."</p>
+
+<p>"By God! You must hate this boy, Sternford."</p>
+
+<p>Peterman's feelings had broken from under his control.</p>
+
+<p>"Sternford? Psha! It is not Sternford. No."</p>
+
+<p>The smile had gone from Hellbeam's eyes. They were
+fiercely burning. They were the hot, passionate eyes of
+a man obsessed, of a man possessed of a monomania.
+Peterman, watching, beheld the sudden change in him.
+He shrank before the insanity he had so deeply probed.</p>
+
+<p>Hellbeam sat forward in his chair. His forearms were
+resting on the desk, and his hands were clenched so that
+the finger-nails almost cut into the flesh of their palms.
+His massive face was flushed, and the coarse veins at
+his temples stood out like cords.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, I tell you," he cried gutturally, returning in his
+fury to the native Teuton in him. "Can you hate&mdash;yes?
+Have you known hate? Eh? No. You the white liver
+have. You cannot hate. It is not in you. Oh, no. It
+is for me. Yes. It has been so for years. And I tell
+you it is the only thing in life. Woman? No. I have
+known them. They mean little. They are a pleasure that
+passes. Money? What is it when you play the market
+as you choose? The day comes when you can help
+yourself. And you no longer desire so to do. Hate?
+
+That lives. That feeds on body and brain. That consumes
+till there is only a dead carcase left. Ah! Hate
+is for the lifetime. It can leave all those others as nothing.
+In it there is joy, despair, all the time, every hour of life."</p>
+
+<p>He held up one hand and opened his fingers. Then
+he slowly closed them with a curious expressive movement
+of ruthless destruction.</p>
+
+<p>"You hate and you think. You see your vengeance in
+operation. You see him there in your hand; and you
+see the blood sweat as you squeeze and crush out the
+life that has offended. Man, it is a joy that never leaves
+you till you accomplish this thing. Then, after, you
+have the memory. And while you think, even though
+he is dead, smashed in your grip, he still suffers as you
+think. Oh, yes."</p>
+
+<p>"And you hate&mdash;that way?"</p>
+
+<p>A feeling of sudden fear had taken possession of
+Peterman. This gross, squat man had become something
+terrible to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Ja!"</p>
+
+<p>The Teuton leapt in the furious emphasis hurled.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, ja! I hate. I tell you of it."</p>
+
+<p>The man with the insane eyes picked up a pen. He
+turned it about in his fingers. Then, suddenly, but
+slowly, the fingers began to break it. The wood split
+under their pressure, and the pieces littered the table.
+He gazed at them for a moment. Then one hand clenched
+and came down with a crash on the blotting pad. Then
+he sat back in his chair again, with his cruel eyes gazing
+straight out at the window opposite.</p>
+
+<p>"It is years now. Oh, yes." A deep breath escaped
+from between the man's coarse lips. "I ruled the markets.
+I ruled them so that they obeyed me. I was the money
+power of this continent. I did as I chose. So I thought.
+Then he came. This man. He did not disturb me. Oh,
+no. I slept good all the time. Then I woke. I woke
+
+to find I was beaten of ten million dollars; and that Wall
+Street, the markets of the world, were laughing that this
+schoolmaster, this fool Scotsman from over the water,
+had picked my pocket while I slept. It was not the money.
+It was the laugh. And he got away. Oh, yes. I tell
+it now. The market knew of it then. They laughed.
+How they laughed. So I sat and thought. I had all.
+There was nothing more to have. And then I learned to
+hate."</p>
+
+<p>The narrowed eyes came back to the face of the man
+beside the desk. There was a sharp intake of breath.</p>
+
+<p>"This mill, this Sachigo, was built out of my money.
+And the man who built it was the man who robbed me
+while I slept."</p>
+
+<p>A world of fierce bitterness lay in the final words, and
+the man listening realised the enormity of the offence, as
+this man saw it. But he was left puzzled.</p>
+
+<p>"But you would have&mdash;bought this Sachigo?" he said,
+said.</p>
+
+<p>Hellbeam's eyes were again turned to the window.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," he said. "I would have bought. It would
+bring me to meet this man. It is that I ask. That only.
+My hands would close upon him. And I would see the
+blood sweat of his heart ooze under them."</p>
+
+<p>Hellbeam had finished. Peterman understood that.
+The passion had passed out of his eyes and the veins of
+his forehead were no longer distended. He remained
+gazing at the window.</p>
+
+<p>For some moments the younger man made no attempt
+to intrude further. He had little desire to, anyway.
+Without scruple himself, he still found little pleasure in
+probing the heart of this man, who was so powerful in
+his own destiny. That which he had witnessed had
+served only to show him the delicacy of his own position.
+He knew that the story had been told for one reason only.
+It was to convince him, for the sake of his own wellbeing
+
+in the Skandinavia, that he must make no mistake
+in the warfare he must wage against the people of Sachigo.
+It was for him to wage the battle with every faculty that
+was in him; and any failure of his would mean disaster
+for himself. This was no commercial warfare. It was
+the insane purpose of a monomaniac.</p>
+
+<p>In those silent moments Elas Peterman thought with a
+rapidity inspired by the urgency he felt to be driving
+him. And the fertility of his imagination served him
+unfailingly. Oh yes. Necessity was driving. But so,
+too, was his own personal feelings. He saw in the position
+that this man had revealed an advantage to himself
+he had never looked for. With the necessary money
+forthcoming, and no directors to concern himself with,
+literally a free hand, he could employ a power which, in
+these days of unrest and hatred between capital and
+labour, would be well-nigh overwhelming. The morality
+of it, the ultimate consequence of it mattered nothing.
+The smashing of Sachigo would mean the smashing of
+Bull Sternford. And he saw a way whereby the smashing
+of Bull Sternford could be achieved through&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>His mind focused itself, as it was bound to do, upon
+this thing as it affected his own desires. He, too, was a
+passionate hater, for all Hellbeam's denial. His thought
+leapt at once to Nancy McDonald and the man who had
+thrust himself between him and his desires. Whatever
+insane hatred lay behind Hellbeam's purpose, it was not
+one whit more insensate than Elas Peterman's feelings
+against the man who had come down from Sachigo at
+Nancy's bidding.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he looked up and glanced at the man occupying
+the chair that was his. Hellbeam was still gazing
+at the window, pre-occupied with his own thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>"You can leave this thing in my hands, sir," he said.
+"Our organisation has been working steadily to undermine
+the Sachigo people for months past. That has
+
+always been part of our policy. I'd say the whole thing's
+going to fit very well. You say, if necessary, you'll find
+half a million dollars for the business. We shan't need
+a tithe of that. However, it's well to know it. And
+none of it needs to worry our directors. I'll set about it
+right away&mdash;in my own fashion&mdash;and I'll promise you a
+quick result. We'll smash these folk all right. But how
+it's to hand you the man you need I'm not wise&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No." Hellbeam's eyes were certainly derisive as they
+turned back from the window. "This man, Martin,
+will show himself when he sees the&mdash;destruction. My
+people will do the rest."</p>
+
+<p>"Unless he leaves it&mdash;to Sternford. They tell us this
+man would as soon fight as laugh. That's how Miss
+McDonald said the missionary, Father Adam, told her."</p>
+
+<p>"Father Adam?" The derision in the financier's eyes
+had deepened. "That's the man that other fool talks of."</p>
+
+<p>Peterman shrugged. The sting in the financier's words
+stirred him to resentment.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know about that. Anyway&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"How is it you say? Get busy. Yes."</p>
+
+<p>Hellbeam rose stiffly from his seat and picked up his
+hat. He was quite untouched by the other's change
+of tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Do it how you please. Break that mill. I care nothing
+for the means. Smash 'em, and leave the rest to
+me. And when you that have done you can do the thing
+you please. You will have my good will. I say that.
+Now I go."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Peterman picked up the 'phone the moment the door
+had closed behind the one man in all the world he really
+feared, and at the other end of it Nancy took the message
+summoning her to his presence. The man spoke with
+unusual urgency. But his tone was pleasant, and more
+
+than conciliatory. He wanted her at once. She could
+leave her reports. She could leave everything. He had
+some news for her of the pleasantest nature. Oh, yes.
+He had determined big things for her. She had earned
+them all. But a thing had happened whereby there
+need be no limit to her advancement if she would take
+the chance of a big work offered her. Would she kindly
+come up right away.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy listened to this message with a stirring of heart.
+What was the great work that was to place no limit on
+her advancement? It was a feeling rather than a thought.
+For a moment she stood in her glass-partitioned office
+after she had received the message and a smile of great
+happiness lit her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>She was desperately earnest with a singleness of purpose
+which had in it something of the recklessness of the
+father before her. She was a child in all else. A wide
+vision of achievement was spread out before her. She
+could see nothing beyond. She could see nothing to give
+her pause, nothing even to bestir a belated caution.
+So she left her office for the interview Peterman had
+demanded without suspicion, and with a heart and mind
+ready to plunge her headlong into any labours which
+the Skandinavia demanded of her.</p>
+
+<p>She had completely forgotten, in that moment of
+exultation, the squarely military figure that had passed
+down the dining-room of the Chateau, and the coldly
+unsmiling eyes with which it had regarded her as she sat
+with her companion over their memorable meal.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_24"></a>
+<h3>Chapter XV&mdash;The Sailing Of The <em>Empress</em></h3>
+
+
+<p>Bull Sternford was reading over the telegram he had
+just written. Its phraseology was curious. But it expressed
+
+the things he wanted to say, and he knew it would
+be understood by the man to whom it was addressed.</p>
+
+<div class="display">
+<p>"HARKER, SACHIGO, LABRADOR.</p>
+
+<p>"Sailing to-morrow. War. Pass mill through hair sieve.
+Clear all refuse. Watch fireguard. Look around. Plums
+otherwise ripe. Return earliest date.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: right">"BULL."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He smiled as he looked up from his reading. An
+acquaintance passed through the hall of the hotel. He
+nodded to him. Then the smile died out of his eyes, and
+it was like the passing of a gleam of sunshine. He passed
+the message across the counter to the attendant and paid
+for it.</p>
+
+<p>War! It was only an added development in the course
+of the ceaseless work of life. The thought of it disturbed
+him not one whit. It was the element in which he thrived.
+But for all that his mood had lost much of its usual
+equanimity.</p>
+
+<p>For two weeks he had applied himself assiduously to
+the work upon which he was engaged. He had travelled
+hundreds of miles to the other capital cities of the country
+in pursuit of his affairs. He had worked in that express
+fashion which was characteristic of him. But under it
+all, through it all, a depressing disappointment hung like
+a shadow over every successful effort he put forth. The
+memory of an evening at the Chateau haunted him.
+The vision of smiling hazel eyes and a radiant crowning
+of vivid hair filled every moment of his waking dreaming.
+He had not seen or heard of Nancy McDonald since that
+first night in Quebec.</p>
+
+<p>To-morrow he sailed for England. The thought of it
+afforded him none of the satisfaction with which he had
+always looked forward to that journey. Yet it meant
+no less to him now. On the contrary. It really meant
+more. It meant that his work was marching forward
+
+to the great completion which was to crown his labours,
+and the work of those others who had conceived the
+task.</p>
+
+<p>It should have been a wonderful moment for him. The
+house of Leader and Company of London had thrown
+its doors open to him in welcome. Sir Frank Leader with
+his millions, his shipping, his great power, and the confidence
+which his name inspired in British commercial
+circles, would not fail. The prospect lying ahead, for
+all the threatened war, should have stirred him to a keen
+enthusiasm that achievement was within his grasp. But
+none of these emotions were stirring.</p>
+
+<p>He felt if he could only see Nancy McDonald, that perfect
+creature with her amazing beauty and splendid
+courage, just to exchange a few words, just to receive
+her smiling "bon voyage," and even to hear her laughing
+declaration of her frank enmity, why&mdash;it would&mdash;But
+there was no chance now&mdash;none at all. He sailed to-morrow.</p>
+
+<p>He had dreamed a wonderful dream since first he had
+beheld the charming fur-clad figure enter his office at
+Sachigo. He had realised, even in those first moments,
+the impish act of Fate. Nancy McDonald was the one
+woman in the world who could mean life&mdash;real life to
+him, and they were definitely arrayed against each other
+in the battle for commercial supremacy in which they
+were both engaged.</p>
+
+<p>But Fate's act had only added to his desire. The
+whole thing had appealed to his combative instinct. It
+had left him feeling there was not alone the storming of
+the Skandinavia's stronghold to be achieved. There was
+also a captive, a fair, innocent captive held bound and
+prisoned within the citadel for him to set free. He
+wanted Nancy as he wanted nothing else in the world.
+Sachigo? Canada for the Canadians? These things
+were cold, meaningless words. He only thought of the
+
+dawning of the day that should see Nancy his wife, his
+everything in life.</p>
+
+<p>He betook himself out on to the Terraces overlooking
+the slowly freezing waterway of the great St. Lawrence
+river. It was keenly cold, and the white carpet of
+winter's first snow remained unmelted on the ground.
+But the sun was shining, and the crisp air was sparkling,
+and the terraces were filled with fur-clad folk who, like
+himself, had found leisure for a half hour of one of the
+finest views in the world.</p>
+
+<p>He paced leisurely down the great promenade towards
+the old Citadel with all its memories of great men, and
+the old time Buccaneers who had made history about
+its walls. He gazed upon it and wondered. Were they
+such bad old days? Were the men who lived in those
+times great men? Were they scoundrelly Buccaneers?
+Were their scruples and morals any more lax than those
+of to-day? Were they any different from those who
+walked under the shadow of the old walls? They were
+the questions doubtless asked a thousand times in as
+many minutes by those who paused to think as they
+contemplated this fine old landmark.</p>
+
+<p>Bull found his own prompt answers. There was no
+difference, he told himself. The men and women of to-day
+were doing the same things, enduring the same emotions,
+fighting the same battles, living and loving, and hating
+and dying, just as life had ordained from the beginning
+of time. And as he stood there he wondered how long
+this round of human effort and passion must continue.
+How long this&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I hadn't an idea you were so interested in our
+old history as to be wasting precious time out here in
+the snow, Mr. Sternford."</p>
+
+<p>The challenge was full of pleasant, even delighted
+greeting. And Bull snatched his cigar from his lips and
+bared his head.</p>
+
+
+<p>It was the voice he had longed to hear for many days.
+And it rang with an added charm in his delighted ears.
+He had turned on the instant, and stood smiling down
+into eyes that had never ceased from their haunting.</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"If you'll believe me I wasn't wasting time," he said.
+"I came out here for a very definite purpose. I've done
+the thing I hoped. Do you know I guessed I'd have to
+sail to-morrow without seeing you again?"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy's eyes sobered. And without their smile Bull
+thought he detected a cloud of trouble in them.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't know you were sailing to-morrow," she said.
+"It's just a chance I couldn't help that let me meet you
+now."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean you avoided me&mdash;deliberately?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull's smile had passed. But there was no umbrage
+in his manner. The girl's appeal for him was never so
+great as at that moment. She had never been more beautiful
+to him. He had first seen her in that same long
+fur coat, and had gazed into her pretty eyes under the
+same fur cap. He was glad she was so clad now. To his
+mind no other costume could have so much charm for
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>The simple downrightness of the admission might have
+disconcerted another. But its honesty and lack of subterfuge
+only pleased the man.</p>
+
+<p>"That's what I thought. It's this business standing
+between your folk and me?"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. We are enemies."</p>
+
+<p>"That's so," Bull agreed. "That's the pity of it. If
+you were on my side&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But I'm not. No." Nancy's denial was almost sharp.
+It certainly was hurried. "I'm kind of glad I've seen
+you, though," she went on. "I've had it in mind I wanted
+
+to say things to you." A smile came back to her eyes.
+"You see, there are enemies and enemies. There's the
+enemy you can regard well. There's the enemy you can
+hate and despise. Well, I just want to say we're enemies
+who don't need to hate and despise&mdash;yet. I don't know
+how things'll be later. Maybe you'll learn to hate me
+good before we're through. But that's as maybe. I'm
+going to do my work for all I know for my folks. I'm
+going to be in this fight right up to my neck. I've been
+warned that way. Well, that being so, I'm going to fight
+without looking for quarter, and I shall give none. That
+sounds tough, doesn't it? But I mean it. And I wanted
+to say it before things start. I'm glad I've had the chance&mdash;against
+my notions of things."</p>
+
+<p>Bull laughed. He was in the mood to laugh&mdash;now.</p>
+
+<p>"It sounds fine. Say&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Are you laughing at me?"</p>
+
+<p>"There isn't a thing further from my thoughts."
+Bull's denial was sincere and prompt. "I'm glad you
+happened along. I'm glad you said those things. Fight
+this war&mdash;as I shall&mdash;with all that's in you. It don't
+matter a thing if you're right or wrong. Fight it square
+and hard for your folk, and there isn't a right man or
+woman, but who'll respect you, and think the better of
+you for it. A good fight's no crime when you're convinced
+you're right."</p>
+
+<p>The girl drew a deep breath, and, to the man, it seemed
+in the nature of relief. A great anxiety for her stirred
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm glad you said that," she said. Then she gazed
+reflectively up at the old ramparts. "No. It's no
+crime to fight when you're convinced. Besides it's right,
+too, to fight for your side at any time. That's how I see
+it. You'll fight for yours&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Any old how." Bull's eyes were deeply regarding.
+They were very gentle. "Here," he went on, "fight has
+
+a clear, definite meaning for me. I fight to win. I'll
+stop at nothing. It's always a game of 'rough and
+tough' with me. Gouge, chew, and all the rest of it.
+Frankly, there's a devil inside me, when it's fight. I want
+you to know this, so your scruples needn't worry you."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy's gaze was turned seawards.</p>
+
+<p>"And you sail&mdash;to-morrow? When do you return?"
+she asked a moment later.</p>
+
+<p>Bull smilingly shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"We are at war," he said.</p>
+
+<p>The girl's eyes came back. She, too, smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"I forgot." Then she added: "You go by the <em>Empress</em>?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>They had both contrived to make it difficult. The
+barrier was growing. Both realised it, and Nancy was
+stirred more than she knew. She had seen this man
+and hurried over to him. She had purposely denied him
+for two weeks, but the sight of him on the promenade had
+been irresistible. Now&mdash;now she hardly knew what to
+say; and yet there were a hundred things struggling in
+her mind to find expression. She was paralysed by the
+memory of the recent interview she had had with her
+employers&mdash;the great financial head of her house included&mdash;wherein
+she had learned all that the coming war
+meant personally to herself. She would have given worlds
+at that moment to have been able to blot out that memory.
+But she had no power to do so. It loomed almost tragically
+in its significance in the presence of this man.</p>
+
+<p>Bull found it no less difficult. He had striven to make
+things easy for her. He had no second thought. And
+now he realised the thing he had done. His words had
+only served to fling an irrevocable challenge, and thus,
+finally and definitely, made the longed-for approach between
+them impossible.</p>
+
+
+<p>He drew a deep breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I sail on the <em>Empress</em>."</p>
+
+<p>"And you are glad&mdash;of course?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Some ways."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I shouldn't be sailing if things weren't going
+my way," he said. Then he turned about and his movement
+was an invitation. "But let's quit it," he said.
+"Let's forget&mdash;for the moment. You don't know what
+this meeting has meant to me. I wanted to see you, if
+only to say 'good-bye.' I thought I wasn't going to."</p>
+
+<p>They moved down the promenade together.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy did her best. They talked of everything but
+the impending war, and the meaning of it. But the
+barrier had grown out of all proportion. And a great
+unease tugged at the heart of each. At length, as they
+came back towards the hotel, Nancy felt it impossible to
+go on. And with downright truth she said so.</p>
+
+<p>"It must be 'good-bye'&mdash;now," she said. "This is all
+unreal. It must be so. We're at war. We shall be at
+each other's throats presently. Well, I just can't pretend.
+I don't want to think about it. I hate to remember
+it. But it's there in my mind the whole time; and it
+worries so I don't know the things I'm saying. It's best
+to say 'good-bye' and 'bon voyage' right here. And
+whatever the future has for us I just mean that."</p>
+
+<p>She held out her hand. It was bare, and soft, and
+warm, as the man took possession of it.</p>
+
+<p>"I feel that way, too," he said. "But&mdash;" he broke
+off and shook his head. "No. It's no use. You've the
+right notion of this. Until this war's fought out there
+is nothing else for it. You'll go right back to your
+camp and I'll go to mine. And we'll both work out how
+we can best beat the other. But let's make a compact.
+We'll do the thing we know to hurt the other side the
+
+most we can. If need be we'll neither show the other
+mercy. And we'll promise each to take our med'cine as
+it comes, and cut out the personal hate and resentment
+it's likely to try and inspire. We'll be fighting machines
+without soul or feeling till peace comes. Then we'll be
+just as we are now&mdash;friends. Can you do it? I can."</p>
+
+<p>For all the feeling of the moment Nancy laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"It sounds crazy," she exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>"It is crazy. But so is the whole thing."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Oh, it surely is. It's worst than crazy."
+Passion rang in the girl's voice. Then the hazel depths
+smiled and set the man's pulses hammering afresh.
+"But I'll make that compact, and I'll keep it. Yes.
+Now, 'good-bye,' and a happy and pleasant trip."</p>
+
+<p>Their hands fell apart. Bull had held that hand, so
+soft and warm and appealing to him, till he dared hold
+it no longer.</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks," he said. "Good-bye. I can set out with
+a good heart&mdash;now."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>It was again the luncheon hour. It was also the hour
+at which the <em>Empress</em> was scheduled to sail. Nancy was
+again on the Terrace. But now she was standing on the
+edge of the promenade&mdash;alone. She was gazing down
+at the grey waters of the great river, searching with
+eager eyes, and listening for the "hoot" of the vessel's
+siren. This was the last departure the <em>Empress</em> would
+make from Quebec for the season. By the time she
+returned across the ocean the ice would deny her
+approach, and she would make port farther seawards.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy had come there in her leisure just out of simple
+interest, she told herself. The man was nothing to her.
+Oh, no. She felt a certain regret that they were at war.
+She felt a certain pity that it was necessary that so brave
+a man's hopes must be crushed and all his plans broken,
+
+but that was all. She told herself these things very
+deliberately.</p>
+
+<p>And so she had hurried over her mid-day meal, lest
+she should miss the sight of the <em>Empress</em> steaming out,
+with Bull Sternford aboard.</p>
+
+<p>The day was cold and grey. There was snow in the
+heavy clouds, and the north wind was bitter. But it
+mattered nothing. Waiting there the girl's feet in their
+overshoes grew cold. Her hands were cold. Even her
+slim, graceful body under its outer covering of fur was
+none too warm. But her whole interest was absorbed and
+she remained so till the appointed time.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, yes. It was simply interest in the departure of
+the vessel that held her. Just the same, as it was simply
+interest that stirred her heart and set it a-flutter, as the
+sound of the ship's siren came up to her from below. And
+surely it was only a 'God-speed' to the departing
+vessel that was conveyed in the fluttering handkerchief
+she held out and waved, as the graceful giant passed out
+into the distant mid-channel.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_25"></a>
+<h3>Chapter XVI&mdash;On Board The <em>Empress</em></h3>
+
+
+<p>It was the second day out and the passengers on the
+<em>Empress</em> had already settled down to their week's trip.</p>
+
+<p>The sea was calm, with just that pleasant, lazy swell
+which the Atlantic never really loses. The decks were
+thronged with a happy company of men and women
+determined not to lose one single moment of the bodily
+ease which the clemency of the weather vouchsafed to
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Bull Sternford was amongst them. Engulfed in a
+heavy fur overcoat, he stood lounging against the lee rail
+
+of the wide promenade deck, contemplating the oily
+swell of the waters. His great stature was somewhat
+magnified by his voluminous coat, with its deep, upturned
+storm-collar. There was that about him to
+attract considerable attention. But he remained unconscious
+of it, and his aloofness was by no means studied.</p>
+
+<p>Deep emotion was stirring. A man of iron nerve and
+purpose, a man of cool deliberation under the harshest
+circumstances, just now Bull was afflicted like the veriest
+weakling with alternating hope and doubt, and something
+approaching indecision. The youth in him was
+plunged in that agony of desire which maddens with
+delight and drives headlong to despair. His whole
+horizon of life had changed. Old scenes, old dreams, had
+been suddenly blotted out. And in their place was the
+wonderful vision of a girl with vivid hair and gentle eyes.
+Nancy&mdash;Nancy McDonald. The name was always with
+him now, unspoken, unwhispered even; but occupying
+every waking thought.</p>
+
+<p>It was a time of reckless resolve, of hot-headed
+planning. He knew in his sober moments how almost
+impossible was the position. But these were not sober
+moments. He told himself, in his headlong way, that if
+Nancy was chained in the heart of Hell he would seek
+her out, and claim her. She should be his even though
+every infernal power were arrayed against him. His eyes
+were alight with a fierce smile, as he contemplated the
+grey waters. It was a smile of conscious strength, of
+reckless purpose. Well, he was ready. He was&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Guess we'll git this sort of stuff all the way."</p>
+
+<p>Bull started and swung around. A fur-coated man with
+a dark close-cropped beard was leaning over the rail
+beside him. He was expensively clad. His astrachan
+collar was turned up about his neck to shut out something
+of the biting winter air; and a cap of similar fur was
+pressed low down over his dark head. Bull noted the
+
+man's appearance, and his reply was promptly
+forthcoming.</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe," he admitted without interest.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure we will. It's always that way with the
+<em>Empress's</em> last trip of the season from Quebec. I most
+generally make it for that reason. Your first trip?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"It's my nineteenth. You see," the stranger went on,
+"I can't spare summer time. I'm too full gettin' orders
+out. I'm in the lumber business. It's only with the
+freeze up I can quit my mills. Have a cigar?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull had no alternative. The man was there to talk,
+and his desire to do so was frankly displayed.</p>
+
+<p>"I won't smoke, thanks," Bull replied without offense.
+"It's too near dinner."</p>
+
+<p>"Dinner? There's a ha'f hour to the dressing bugle."
+The stranger returned the elaborate case stuffed full of
+large, expensive cigars to his pocket, and drew out a gold
+cigarette case instead. "Still I don't blame you a thing.
+Cigars? Me for a cigarette all the time. I don't guess
+any feller ever heard tell of tobacco, till he'd inhaled a
+good, plain Virginia Cigarette."</p>
+
+<p>Bull looked on while the man wasted half-a-dozen
+matches lighting his beloved cigarette. He was not
+without interest. There was a slightly Jewish caste
+about his face which was frankly smiling, and lit with
+shrewd, twinkling dark eyes. He conveyed, too, somewhat
+blatantly, an atmosphere of abounding prosperity.</p>
+
+<p>Bull laughed as the cigarette was finally lighted.</p>
+
+<p>"That's better," he said. "Now&mdash;you can inhale."</p>
+
+<p>"Sure I can." The man's smile was full of amiability.
+"Inhale anything. Say, up in the camps I've inhaled
+tea-leaves rolled in cracker paper before now. Ever hit
+a lumber camp?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+
+<p>"But not out West? British Columbia?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. Only Quebec."</p>
+
+<p>The stranger shook his head disparagingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Quebec! Psha! Quebec ain't a thing. It ain't a
+circumstance," he said complacently. "No, sir. The
+West. That's the place for lumbering. B.C. West of
+the Rockies. Man, it's the world's greatest proposition.
+The place you can spend a lifetime cutting ninety foot
+baulks, and lose track of where you cut. Quebec's
+mostly small stuff," he went on contemptuously, "pulp-wood
+an' that." He shook his head. "It's no place for
+capital. And, anyway, the Frenchies have got the whole
+darn place taped out. Oh, they're wise&mdash;the Frenchies.
+If a feller's lookin' to get ahead of 'em he needs to stake
+out the Arctic, where you'd freeze the ears of a brass
+image. The Frenchies got it all. The only big stuff lies
+on Labrador, anyway. I know. I prospected. No, it's
+me for the big hills, West. The big hills and the big
+waterways that 'ud leave Quebec rivers looking like a
+leak in a bone dry bar'l. My name's Aylin P. Cantor,
+Vancouver, B.C. Maybe you know the name?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it don't matter," interjected Mr. Cantor. "You
+see, the West's one hell of a long way&mdash;west. I just
+didn't get your&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my name's Sternford."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cantor's face beamed.</p>
+
+<p>"Why I'm glad to know you, Mr. Sternford," he
+exclaimed. Then a quick, enquiring upward glance of
+his shrewd eyes suggested recollection. "But say&mdash;you
+ain't Sternford of Labrador? The groundwood outfit
+up at&mdash;up at&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Sachigo?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's it, sure. Guess I'd lost the name a moment."</p>
+
+<p>Bull nodded amusedly.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Yes. That's where I hail from. And, as you say,
+there's big stuff up there, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Big? Why I'd say. Well, now! That's fine!
+I've heard tell big yarns of Labrador. It's just great
+meeting&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The man broke off at the sound of the first blast of the
+dressing bugle.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, it's later than I guessed," he said. "Anyway,
+you'll take a cocktail with me? This vessel's good and
+wet, thanks be to Providence, and the high seas being
+peopled with fish instead of cranks. I hadn't a notion
+I was goin' to run into a real lumberman on this trip.
+It's done me a power of good."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Aylin P. Cantor was a diverting creature for all his
+appearance of ostentatious prosperity. Good fortune
+had undoubtedly been his, and his whole being seemed
+to have become absorbed in the trade which had so
+generously treated him. Before the cocktail was consumed
+Bull had listened to a long story of British
+Columbia, and forests of incomparable extent. He had
+also learned that a country estate, miles in extent, outside
+the city of Vancouver, and the luxuries associated
+with the multi-millionaire had fallen to the lot of Aylin
+P. Cantor. But somehow there was no offence in it all.
+The man was just a bubbling fount of enthusiasm and
+delight that this was so. He simply had to talk of it.</p>
+
+<p>But the acquaintance was not to terminate over a
+cocktail. Shipboard offers few avenues of escape to the
+man seeking to avoid another. So it came that Bull
+found himself sipping a brandy, reputed to be one hundred
+years old, over his coffee after dinner, while Aylin P.
+Cantor told him the story of how it came into his
+possession at something far below its market value.</p>
+
+<p>Later, again, while the auction pool was being sold, he
+found himself ensconced on a lounge in a far corner of
+
+the smokeroom beside his fellow craftsman, still listening
+chiefly, and absorbing fact and anecdote pertaining to a
+successful lumberman's life. And it was nearly eleven
+o'clock, and the pool had been sold, and the bulk of the
+occupants of the smoking-room were contemplating their
+last rubber of Auction Bridge, when the busy-minded
+westerner consented to abandon his particular venue for
+a brief contemplation of the despised East.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I guess there's money in your territory, too," he
+condescended at last. "I ain't a word to say against
+the stuff I've heard tell of Labrador. But you're froze
+up more'n ha'f the year. That's your trouble."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>Bull nodded over the latter portion of his third cigar
+which Mr. Cantor had not permitted him to escape.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," the man laughed. "Oh, the stuff's there.
+I know that. But Labrador needs a mighty big nerve to
+exploit. I heard it all from a feller I met when I was
+prospecting Quebec. You see, I had the notion of playing
+a million dollars in the Quebec forests once. But I
+weakened. I kind of fancied my chance against the
+Frenchies didn't amount to cold water on a red hot cookstove.
+I cut it out and hunted my own patch, West,
+again. But I guess I'd have fallen for the stories of
+Labrador, if it hadn't been for the feller who put me
+wise."</p>
+
+<p>"Who was that?" Bull had lost interest, but the
+man invited the enquiry.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, a sort of missionary crank," Cantor returned
+indifferently. "You know the sort. We got 'em out
+West, too. They hound the boys around, chasin' them
+heavenwards by a through route they guess they know
+about." He laughed. "But the boys bein' just boys,
+the round up don't ever seem to make good; and that
+through trip looks most like a bum sort of freight in the
+wash-out season. Outside his missioner business I guess
+
+the guy was pretty wise, though. And his knowledge
+of the lumber play left me without a word. He knew it
+all&mdash;an' I guess he told it to me."</p>
+
+<p>Bull laughed. But the laugh was inspired by the
+thought that there could be found in the world a man who
+could leave Aylin P. Cantor without a word on the
+subject of lumber.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd like to make a guess at that feller," he said.
+"There's just one man I know who's a missionary in
+Quebec who knows anything about Labrador. Did he
+call himself, 'Father Adam?'"</p>
+
+<p>"That's the thing he did."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, I thought so." Bull's smile had passed.
+"Where did you meet him?" he went on after a
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>"On the Shagaunty. The Skandinavia Corporation
+territory. He told me he'd just come along through
+from Labrador."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cantor laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Why he took me to his crazy shanty and handed me
+coffee. And he talked. My, how he talked."</p>
+
+<p>"Did he know you were&mdash;prospecting?"</p>
+
+<p>There was no lack of interest in Bull now. His steady
+eyes were alight, as he watched the stewards moving
+amongst the tables, setting the place straight for the
+night.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I told him."</p>
+
+<p>Cantor's dark eyes were questioning. As Bull
+remained silent he went on.</p>
+
+<p>"Why? Is he interested for the Skandinavia to keep
+folk out?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"No. It isn't that. He's a queer feller. No, I'd
+say he's got just one concern in life. It's the boys.
+But you're right, he knows the whole thing&mdash;the whole
+
+game of lumbering in Eastern Canada. And if he told
+you and warned you, I'd say it was for your good as
+he saw it. No. He's no axe to grind, and though you
+found him on the Skandinavia's territory, I don't think
+he likes them. I'm sure he doesn't. Still, he's not concerned
+for any employer. He just comes and goes
+handing out his dope to the boys, and&mdash;You know the
+forest-jacks. They're a mighty tough proposition. Well,
+it's said they feel about Father Adam so if a hair of his
+head was hurt they'd get the feller who did it, and they'd
+cut the liver out of him, and pass what was left feed for
+the coyotes."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cantor nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I sort of gathered something of that from the
+folks I hit up against. It seems queer a feller devoting
+his life to bumming through the forests and seekin' shelter
+where you couldn't find shelter from a summer
+dew. He's got no fixed home. Maybe he's sort of
+crazed."</p>
+
+<p>Bull was prompt in his denial.</p>
+
+<p>"Saner than you or me," he said. "You know I'd want
+to smile if I didn't know the man. But I know him,
+and&mdash;but there we all owe him a deal, we forest men.
+And maybe I owe him more than anyone."</p>
+
+<p>"How's that?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cantor's question came sharply. Even Bull,
+tired as he was, noted the keenly incisive tone of it.
+He turned, and his steady eyes regarded the dark face of
+the lumberman speculatively. Then he smiled, and
+picked up his glass and drained the remains of his whisky
+and soda.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, he's more power for peace with the lumber-jacks
+of Quebec than if he was their trade leader," he
+said, setting his empty glass down on the table. "We
+employers owe him there's never any sort of trouble with
+the boys."</p>
+
+
+<p>"I see." Mr. Cantor gazed out across the nearly
+empty room, and a shadowy smile haunted his eyes.
+"And if there was trouble? Could you locate him in
+time?"</p>
+
+<p>"We shouldn't need to. He'd be there."</p>
+
+<p>The lumberman stirred, and persisted with curious
+interest.</p>
+
+<p>"But he must have a place where you folks can get
+him? This coming and going. It's fine&mdash;but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Bull stood up and stretched himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, he's got a home, all right. It's the forests."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cantor threw up his hands and laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is he, anyway? A sort of Wandering Jew?
+A ghost? A spook? That sort of thing beats me.
+He's got to be one of the two things. He's either a crank&mdash;you
+say he ain't&mdash;or he's dodging daylight."</p>
+
+<p>But Bull had had enough. Deep in his heart was a
+feeling that no man had any right to pry into the life
+of Father Adam. Father Adam had changed the whole
+course of his life. It was Father Adam who had made
+possible everything he was to-day&mdash;even his association
+with Nancy McDonald. He shook his head unsmilingly.</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam's one good man," he said. "And I
+wouldn't recommend anyone to hand out anything to the
+contrary within hearing of the men of the Quebec forests.
+Good-night."</p>
+
+<p>He strode away. And Mr. Cantor followed him,
+slight and bediamonded in his evening clothes. And
+somehow the dark eyes gazing on the broad back of
+the man from Labrador had none of the twinkling
+shrewdness the other had originally observed in them.
+They were quite cold and very hard. And there was that
+in them which suggested the annoyance inspired by a long
+evening of effort that had ended in complete failure.</p>
+
+<p>The man's dark, foreign-looking features had lost
+every semblance of their recent good-natured enthusiasm.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_26"></a>
+<h3>Chapter XVII&mdash;The Lonely Figure Again</h3>
+
+
+<p>The laden sled stood ready for the moment of starting
+on the day's long run. Five train dogs, lean, powerful
+huskies, crouched down upon the snow. They gave no
+sign beyond the alertness of their pose and the watchfulness
+of their furtive eyes. Their haunches were
+tucked under them. And their long, wolfish muzzles,
+so indicative of their parentage, were pressed down
+between great, outstretched forepaws.</p>
+
+<p>The man studied every detail of his outfit. He knew
+the chances, the desperate nature of the long winter
+trail. He had no desire to increase the hardship of it
+all by any act of carelessness.</p>
+
+<p>Behind him lay the mockery of a camping ground.
+It was a minute, isolated bluff of stunted, windswept
+trees, set in a white, wide wilderness of barren land.
+Perhaps there was some half a hundred of them. But
+that was all. They had served, but only by reason
+that their shelter had satisfied habit, which, even in the
+men of the long trail, will not be denied.</p>
+
+<p>He turned away. Everything was to his satisfaction.
+So his tall, fur-clad figure passed in amongst the dwarf
+trees.</p>
+
+<p>The dogs remained crouching, their fierce eyes gazing
+out over the desolate expanse of winter's playground.
+It lay at a great altitude, several thousands of feet
+above the level of the sea. The sky was drab. It was
+bitter with threat. It was unrelieved by any break in
+the menacing winter cloud. It was a snow sky which
+only refrained from releasing its burden by reason of the
+high, top wind that drove the heavy masses relentlessly.
+The earthly prospect was no more inviting. It was
+wide, and flat, and devoid of vegetation. There were
+
+no hills anywhere, and the skyline was just a vanishing
+point similar to the horizon of the open sea. One vast,
+wide field of snow and ice spread out in every direction,
+and made desolation complete.</p>
+
+<p>When the man re-appeared he was armed with a
+sturdy "gee-pole," and at his belt was coiled a heavy-thonged,
+short-stocked driving whip.</p>
+
+<p>Without a word he thrust the pole under the front of
+the sled runners, and a sharp command broke from his
+lips. The effect was instantaneous. Each dog sprang
+at his "tug." The man heaved on his pole. There
+was a moment of straining, then the holding ice gave
+up its grip, and the sled shot forward.</p>
+
+<p>The man stood for a moment beating his mitted hands.
+Then he took his place on the sled, buried his legs and
+feet under the heavy seal robes set ready, and so the
+long-waited command to "mush" was hurled at the
+waiting beasts.</p>
+
+<p>The dogs leapt at their work and the sled swept forward
+with a rush. A blinding flurry of snow dust rose
+in its wake, enveloping it, and the dogs raced on, yelping
+with the joy of activity. Their great muscles were
+aquiver with the eager spirit which is bred of the wild.
+And so they would continue to run, for their load was
+light, and the heavy-thonged whip was playing in skilful
+hands, and they knew, and feared, and obeyed its
+constant threat.</p>
+
+<p>The way lay across the frozen bosom of a great lake,
+no less than an inland sea, and a hundred miles must be
+travelled before night, or the snow, overtook them. It
+was a hard run. But it must be accomplished. Failure?
+But failure must not be considered. No man could
+contemplate failure and face the winter trail in the
+barren desolation of the lofty interior of Labrador's untracked
+wild.</p>
+
+<p>The austerity of the country was well-nigh overwhelming.
+
+The nakedness of it all suggested a skeleton world
+robbed of everything that could make existence possible.
+It suggested a world that was sick, and aged, and too unfruitful
+to harbour aught but the fierce elemental storms
+of the northern winter. And the cold of it ate into the
+bones of the lonely figure passing through the great
+silence like a ghost.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>The night was deathly still. A thermometer would
+have registered something colder than sixty degrees
+below zero. Not a breath of wind stirred. The only
+sound that came was the doleful note of a prowling wolf
+in the forest belt near by, and the booming protest of
+the trees against the bitterness of winter.</p>
+
+<p>The sky was ablaze with a myriad jewels in a velvet
+setting. And a cold wealth of aurora lit the northern
+heavens. Camp had been pitched well wide of the nearby
+forests, and three men sat crouching over the fire. There
+was little enough to differentiate between them. They
+were white men, and all were clad, from their heads
+to the soles of their seal hide moccasins, in heavy furs.
+The dark outlines of two sleds showed up a few yards
+away, but the dogs, themselves, were not visible. Weary
+with their day's run they had betaken themselves to
+their nightly snow burrows to dream over past battles,
+past labours.</p>
+
+<p>The men were talking earnestly in the low, slow tones
+which the silence of the forests seems to inspire. Three
+pairs of bare hands were outheld to the welcome blaze
+of the fire. Three pairs of clear gazing eyes searched
+the heart of it. None were smoking. It would have
+been a burden to keep the pipe stem from freezing even in
+the vicinity of the fire, and none of them were in any
+mood to accept any added burden.</p>
+
+<p>A blue-eyed, beardless youth shifted his gaze to the
+dark face directly opposite him beyond the fire.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Oh, we got that guy&mdash;good," he said. There was
+laughter in his eyes but not in his tone. "We got him
+plumb at the game. He was chock full of kerosene and
+tinder, and he'd fired the patch in several places. We were
+on it quick. We beat the fire in seconds. As for him,
+why, I guess his Ma's going to forget him right away.
+Leastways I hope so. He went out like the snuff of a
+lucifer, and his body's likely handed plenty feed to any
+wolf straying around."</p>
+
+<p>The dark man across the fire nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Did he hand a squeal before&mdash;he went?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a word. Hadn't time. Peter here didn't ast a
+thing either."</p>
+
+<p>The youth laughed softly, and the man called Peter
+took up the story.</p>
+
+<p>"Tain't no use arguin' with a feller loaded with kerosene
+in these forests," he said, in a low grumbling way. Then
+he reached down and snatched a brand from the fire and
+flung it out on the snow. His action was followed
+swiftly by a wolfish howl of dismay. Then he again
+turned his grizzled, whiskered face to the dark man beyond
+the fire. "You see, Father, it's our job keeping
+these forests from fire, an' it ain't easy. It don't much
+concern us who's out to fire 'em. That's for other
+folks. The feller with kerosene in these forests is goin'
+
+to get the stuff we ken hand him. That's all. Bob an'
+me got our own way fer actin'."</p>
+
+<p>Bob laughed</p>
+
+<p>"We sure have," he said. "But we don't allers
+pull it off. No. We've had ten fires on our range in
+two weeks. We've beat the fires, but we ain't smashed
+the 'bugs' that set 'em."</p>
+
+<p>"Would they be all one feller? The feller that got
+it?" The dark man's eyes were serious. His tone
+was troubled.</p>
+
+<p>Peter shook his head.</p>
+
+
+<p>"No, sir. There's more'n one, sure. An' from the
+things I've heerd tell from the boys on the neighbourin'
+ranges it's happening all along through our limits. They
+tell me there's queer things doin' an' no one seems to
+locate the meaning right."</p>
+
+<p>"What sort of things?"</p>
+
+<p>The dark man spoke sharply. Peter's reply came after
+profound deliberation.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, things," he said. Then he thrust a gnarled
+brown hand up under his fur hood, and scratched his
+head. "There's our forest 'phones. They're bein'
+cut. It's the same everywhere. There's most always
+things to break 'em happenin', but a break aint a cut.
+No. They're cut. Who's cuttin' 'em, and why? Fire-bugs.
+It ain't grouchy jacks. No. I've heerd the
+jacks are on the buck in parts, but that ain't their play.
+There ain't a jack who'd see these forests afire, or do a
+thing to help that way. You see, it's their living, it's
+their whole life. We got so we can't depend a thing on
+the 'phones. An' cut our forests 'phones and we're
+gropin' like blind men."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>The leaping flames were dropping, and Bob moved
+out to the store of fuel. He returned laden, and packed
+the wood carefully to give the maximum blaze. Then
+he squatted again, and again his hands were thrust out
+to the warmth which meant luxury.</p>
+
+<p>Peter had no more to add. His grey eyes searched
+the heart of the fire as he reflected on the things which
+were agitating his mind.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to get word down, but I can't depend on
+the 'phones," he said presently. "If they ain't cut I
+can't tell who's gettin' the message anyway. Maybe
+the wires are bein' tapped."</p>
+
+<p>The man across the fire nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going down," he said.</p>
+
+
+<p>"I'm glad." Peter's acknowledgment came with an
+air of relief. "I'll hand you a written report before you
+pull out."</p>
+
+<p>"It's best that way."</p>
+
+<p>The fire was leaping again. Its beneficent warmth was
+very pleasant. Bob turned his eyes skyward.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll get a good trip, Father," he said. "That
+snow's cleared out of the sky. It 'ud ha' been hell if it
+had caught you out on the lake."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I wouldn't have made here. I wouldn't have
+made anywhere if that had happened." The dark man
+laughed.</p>
+
+<p>Peter shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"No. You took a big chance."</p>
+
+<p>"I had to."</p>
+
+<p>"So?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I had to get through. There's a big piece of
+trouble coming."</p>
+
+<p>"To do with these fires?"</p>
+
+<p>"I guess so."</p>
+
+<p>"I see."</p>
+
+<p>Peter's comment was full of understanding. After
+awhile the other looked up.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess I need a big sleep," he said. "I've got to
+pull out with daylight. Anything you want besides
+that written report passed on down?"</p>
+
+<p>Peter shook his head and sat on awhile blinking silently
+at the firelight. Then the dark man scrambled to his
+feet. He stood for a moment, very tall, very bulky in
+his fur clothing, and nodded down at the others.</p>
+
+<p>"So long," he said. And he moved off to his sleeping
+bag which was laid out to receive his tired body.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>The man stood just within the shelter of the twilit
+forests. He was a powerful creature of sturdy build,
+hall-marked with the forest craft which was his life. He
+
+was clad in tough buckskin from head to foot. Even
+his hands, which he frequently beat in a desire for
+warmth, were similarly clad. His weatherbeaten face
+was hard set, and his eyes were narrowed to confront
+the merciless snow fog which the rage of the blizzard
+outside hurled at him.</p>
+
+<p>The cold was almost unendurable even here in the
+wooded shelter. Outside, where the storm raged unrestrainedly
+over its fierce playground, only blind hopelessness
+prevailed.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing to be done. He could only wait.</p>
+
+<p>He could only wait, and hope, or abandon his vigil,
+and return to his camp which was far back in the heart
+of the forests. Away out there, somewhere lost in the
+blinding fog of the blizzard, which had only sprung up
+within the last hour, a lonely fellow creature was making
+for the shelter in which he stood. He was driving headlong
+towards him. Oh, yes. He knew that. He had
+seen the moving outfit far off, several miles away, over
+the snowy plains, before the storm had arisen. Now&mdash;where
+was he? He could not tell. He could not even
+guess at what might have happened. Blinded, freezing,
+weary, how long could the lonely traveller endure and
+retain any sense of direction?</p>
+
+<p>To the forest man the position was well-nigh tragic.
+Had he not experience of the terror of a northern blizzard?
+Had he not many a time had to grope his way
+along a life-line lest the slightest deviation in direction
+should carry him out into the storm to perish of cold,
+blinded and lost?" Oh, yes. This understanding was
+the alphabet of his life.</p>
+
+<p>As he stood there watching and wiping the snow from
+his eyes, he reminded himself not only of his own
+experience but of every story of disaster in a blizzard he
+had ever listened to. And so he saw no hope for the poor
+wretch he had seen struggling to make the shelter.</p>
+
+
+<p>But he could not bring himself to abandon his post.
+How could he with a fellow creature out there in peril?
+Besides, there was other reason, although it needed none.
+He had urgent news for this man, news which must be
+imparted without delay, news which his employers must
+hear at the earliest possible moment.</p>
+
+<p>His trouble grew as he waited. He searched his mind
+for anything calculated to aid the doomed traveller. He
+could find nothing. He thought to call out, to burst his
+lungs in a series of shouts on the chance of being heard in
+the chaos of the storm. But he realised the uselessness
+of it all, and abandoned the impulse. No puny human
+voice could hope to make impression on the din of the
+elemental battle being fought out on the plain. No.
+His only service must be to stand there beating life into
+his numbing hands, ready to act on the instant should
+opportunity serve.</p>
+
+<p>He was eaten up by anxiety, and so took no cognisance
+of time. He had forgotten the passing of daylight.
+Therefore sudden realisation flung him into headlong
+panic. The forest about him was growing dark. The
+snow fog outside had changed to a deeper hue. Night
+was coming on. The man in the storm was beyond all
+aid, human or otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>The impulse of the moment was irresistible. He
+moved. He passed out from behind the long limbs of
+his leafless shelter. He went at a run shouting with
+all the power of his lungs. Again and again his prolonged
+cry went up. And with each effort he waited
+listening, listening, only to receive the mocking reply
+of the howling storm. But he persisted. He persisted
+for the simple human reason that his desire outran his
+power to serve. And in the end exhaustion forced him
+to abandon his hopeless task.</p>
+
+<p>It was then the miracle happened. Far away, it
+seemed, a sound like the faintest echo of his own voice
+
+came back to him, but it came from a direction all utterly
+unexpected. For a moment he hesitated, bewildered,
+uncertain. Then he sent up another shout, and waited
+listening. Yes. There it was. Again came the faintly
+echoing cry through the trees. It came not from the
+open battle ground of the storm, but from the shelter of
+the forests somewhere away to the north of him.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>A tall, fur-clad figure stood nearby to the sled
+which was already partly unloaded. A yard or two
+away a fire had been kindled, and it blazed comfortingly
+in the growing dusk of the forest. It was the moment
+when the forest man came up somewhat breathlessly
+and flung out a mitted hand in greeting.</p>
+
+<p>"I guessed you were makin' your last run for shelter,
+Father," he cried. "I just hadn't a hope you'd make
+through that storm. You beat it&mdash;fine."</p>
+
+<p>The tall man nodded. His dark eyes were smiling a
+cordiality no less than the other's.</p>
+
+<p>"I guessed that way, too," he said quietly. "Then
+I didn't." He shrugged his fur-clad shoulders. "No.
+It's not a northern trail that's going to see the end of me.
+But it's your yarn I need to hear. How is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Bad."</p>
+
+<p>The two men looked squarely into each others eyes,
+and the gravity of the forest man was intense. The man
+who had just come out of the storm was no less serious,
+but presently he turned away, and for a second his gaze
+rested on the group of sprawling dogs. The beasts looked
+utterly spent as they blinked at the fire which they were
+never permitted to approach. He indicated the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"Let's sit," he said. "It's cold&mdash;damnably cold."</p>
+
+<p>The other needed no second invitation. They both
+moved back to the fire and squatted over it, and the
+forest man pointed at the dogs.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Beat?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. But they hauled me through. They're a great
+outfit. I fed 'em right away and now they need rest.
+They'll be ready for the trail again by morning. Anyway
+I can't delay."</p>
+
+<p>"No. You've got to get through quick."</p>
+
+<p>Both were holding outspread hands to the fire. Both
+were luxuriating in the friendly warmth.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" The tall man turned his head so that his
+dark eyes searched the other's face again. "You'd best
+tell it me, Jean. If the storm lets up I pull out with
+daylight. I've come through every camp, and this is the
+last. Maybe I know the stuff you've got to tell. It's
+been the same most all the way."</p>
+
+<p>Jean looked up from the heart of the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"Trouble?" he enquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Every sort." The tall man's eyes were smiling.
+"There's jacks quitting and pulling out, and nobody
+seems to know how they're getting, seeing it's winter.
+Others are going slow. There's others grumbling for
+things you never heard tell of before. There's fire-bugs
+at work, and the forest 'phones are being cut or otherwise
+tampered with all the time. We've lost hundreds of
+acres by fire already."</p>
+
+<p>"My yarn's the same." Jean nodded and turned back
+to the fire. "Say," he went on, "have you heard of the
+things going on? The thing that's happening?"</p>
+
+<p>"You mean the outfit working it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. It's a political labour gang. Leastways that's
+the talk of 'em. They call 'em 'Bolshies,' whatever
+that means. They're chasing these forests through.
+They make the camps by night, and get hold of the boys
+right away. They throw a hurricane of hot air at them,
+preachin' the sort of dope that sets those darn fools lyin'
+around when they need to be makin' the winter cut.
+And when they're through, and started the bug the
+
+way they want it, they pull out right away before the daylight
+comes. We never get a chance at 'em. Our boys
+are all plumb on the buck. I was just crazy for you to
+come along, Father. Guess you're the one man to fix
+the boys right. An' when I see you caught up in that
+darn storm&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll do the thing I know," the dark man replied.
+"I've been doing it right along. But it's not enough.
+That's why I'm chasing down to the coast. We've got
+to lay this spook that worries the boys at night. It's no
+Bolshie outfit." He shook his head. "Anyway if it is
+it's got another thing behind it. It's the Skandinavia."</p>
+
+<p>He sat on for a few minutes in silence. He squatted
+there, hugging his knees. He was weary. He was
+weary almost to death with the incessant travel that
+had already occupied him weeks.</p>
+
+<p>Quite abruptly his hands parted and he stood up.
+Jean followed his movements with anxious eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"You goin' down to talk to the boys?" he asked at
+last.</p>
+
+<p>The man nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Right away. I'll do all I know."</p>
+
+<p>"They'll listen to you."</p>
+
+<p>The other smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Till the spook comes back."</p>
+
+<p>Jean brushed the icicles from about his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"That's just it," he said. "An' meanwhile the cut's
+right plumb down. If this thing don't quit the mill's
+going to starve when the ice breaks. I've lost nigh
+three weeks' full cut already. It's&mdash;it's hell!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>The dark man moved away, and Jean sat on over
+the fire. But his troubled eyes watched the curious
+figure as it passed over to its outfit. He saw the man
+stoop over the litter of his goods. He saw him disentangle
+some garment from the rest. When he came
+
+back the furs he had been clad in were either abandoned
+or hidden under fresh raiment. The man towered an
+awesome figure in the firelight. He was clad in black
+from head to foot, and his garment possessed the flowing
+skirts of a priest.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going right down to the boys now," he said.
+"You best stop around here. Just have an eye to the
+dogs. It's best you not being with me."</p>
+
+<p>Jean nodded. He understood. Accompanied by the
+camp boss this man's influence with the boys would have
+been seriously affected. Alone he was well-nigh all
+powerful.</p>
+
+<p>"Good," he said. "For God's sake do what you can,
+Father," he cried. "I'll stop right here till you get back.
+So long."</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_27"></a>
+<h3>Chapter XVIII&mdash;Bull Sternford'S Vision Of Success</h3>
+
+
+<p>"I'd say it's best story I've listened to since&mdash;since&mdash;Say,
+those fellers are pretty big. They surely are."</p>
+
+<p>Bat Harker stirred. He shifted his feet on the rail
+of the stove, where the heavy leather soles of his boots
+were beginning to burn.</p>
+
+<p>Bull's shining eyes were raised to his.</p>
+
+<p>"Big?" he echoed. "I tell you that feller, Leader,
+has the widest vision of any man I know."</p>
+
+<p>He leant back in his chair and imitated his companion's
+luxurious attitude. And so they sat silent, each
+regarding the thing between them from his own angle.</p>
+
+<p>It was the night of Bull's return from his journey to
+England. He had completed the final stage only that
+afternoon. He had travelled overland from the south
+headland, where he had been forced to disembark from
+the <em>Myra</em> under stress of weather. It was storming
+
+outside now, one of those fierce wind storms of Labrador's
+winter, liable to blow for days or only for a few
+hours.</p>
+
+<p>He and Harker were closeted together in the warm
+comfort of the office on the hill. Here, without fear of
+interruption, in the soft lamplight, lounging at their ease,
+they were free to talk of those things so dear to them, and
+upon which hung the destiny of their enterprise.</p>
+
+<p>Winter was more than half spent. Christmas and
+New Year were already seasons which only helped to
+swell the store of memory. Labrador was frozen to
+the bone, and would remain so. But there were still
+two months and more of snow and ice, and storm, to be
+endured before the flies and mosquitoes did their best
+to make life unendurable.</p>
+
+<p>Bull's return home had been a time of great looking
+forward. Life to him had become full of every alluring
+possibility. He saw the approaching fulfilment of his
+hopes and aims. The contemplation of the pending
+war with the Skandinavia only afforded his fighting
+instincts satisfaction. Then there was that other.
+That great, new sensation which stirred him so deeply&mdash;Nancy
+McDonald. So he had returned home full of
+enthusiasm and ready to tackle any and every problem
+that presented itself.</p>
+
+<p>He had just completed the telling of the story he had
+brought back with him. It was a story of success that
+had stirred even the cast-iron emotions of Bat Harker.
+Nor had it lost anything in the telling, for Bull was more
+deeply moved than he knew.</p>
+
+<p>The recounting of his dealings in London with the man,
+Sir Frank Leader, had been coloured by the enthusiasm
+with which the Englishman had inspired him. Sir Frank
+Leader was known as the uncrowned king of the world's
+pulp-wood trade. But Bull felt, and declared, that the
+appellation did not come within measurable distance
+
+of expressing the man's real genius. Then there were
+those others: Stanton Brothers, and Lord Downtree,
+and the virile, youthful creature, Ray Birchall. All of
+them were strong pillars of support for the ruling genius
+of the house of Leader &amp; Company. But it was the
+man himself, the head of it, who claimed all Bull's admiration
+for his intensity of national spirit, and the
+wide generosity of his enterprise.</p>
+
+<p>The story he had had to tell was simple in its completeness.
+Before setting out on his journey he had
+spent months in preparation of the ground by means of
+voluminous correspondence and documentary evidence.
+It was a preparation that left it only necessary to convince
+through personal appeal on his arrival in London.
+This had been achieved in the broad fashion that appealed
+to the men he encountered. His "hand" had been
+laid down. Every card of it was offered for their closest
+scrutiny, even to the baring of the last reservation which
+his intimate knowledge of the merciless climate of
+Labrador might have inspired.</p>
+
+<p>The appeal of this method had been instant to Sir Frank
+Leader. And the appeal had been as much the man
+himself as the thing he offered. The result of it all
+was Bull's early return home with the man's whole
+organisation fathering his enterprise, and with a guarantee
+of his incomparable fleet of freighters being flung into
+the pool. Leader had swept up the whole proposition
+into his widely embracing arms, and taken it to himself.
+Subject to Ray Birchall's ultimate report, after personal
+inspection on the spot of the properties involved, the
+flotation was to be launched for some seventy million
+dollars, and thus the consummation of Sachigo's original
+inspiration would be achieved.</p>
+
+<p>Bat had listened to the story almost without comment.
+He had missed nothing of it. Neither had he
+failed to observe the man telling it. The story itself
+
+was all so tremendous, so far removed from the work
+that pre-occupied him that he had little desire to probe
+deeper into it. But the success of it all stirred him. Oh,
+yes. It had stirred him deeply, and his mind had immediately
+flown to that other who had laboured for just
+this achievement and had staggered under the burden of
+it all.</p>
+
+<p>Bull removed his pipe and gazed across the stove.</p>
+
+<p>"And now for your news, Bat," he said, like a man
+anticipating a pleasant continuation of his own good
+news.</p>
+
+<p>Bat shook his head decidedly.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said, in his brusque fashion. "Not to-night,
+boy. Guess I ain't got a thing to tell to match your
+stuff. We just carried on, and we've worked big. We're
+in good shape for the darn scrap with the Skandinavia
+you told me about. Guess I'll hand you my stuff to-morrow,
+when I'm goin' to show you things. This
+night's your night&mdash;sure."</p>
+
+<p>His twinkling eyes were full of kindly regard, for all
+the brusqueness of his denial. And Bull smiled back
+his content.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it's your 'hand' Bat," he said easily. "You'll
+play it your way."</p>
+
+<p>His eyes turned to the comforting stove again, as the
+howl of the storm outside shook the framing of the house.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the other raised a pair of smiling eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"You know, boy," the lumberman said, ejecting a
+worn-out chew of tobacco, "all this means one mighty
+big thing your way. You see, you got life before you.
+Maybe I've years to run, too. But it ain't the same.
+No," he shook his grizzled head, "you can't never
+make nuthin' of me but a lumber-boss. You'll never
+be a thing but a college-bred fighter all your life. There's
+a third share in this thing for both of us. Well, that's
+goin' to be one a' mighty pile. I was wonderin'. Shall
+
+you quit? Shall you cut right out with the boodle?
+What'll you do?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull sat up and laughed. And his answer came on the
+instant.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, marry," he said.</p>
+
+<p>Bat nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"That's queer," he said. "I guessed you'd answer
+that way."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>Bat folded his arms across his broad chest.</p>
+
+<p>"You're young," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>Bull laughed again.</p>
+
+<p>"Better say it," he cried. "An' darn foolish."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I hadn't that in mind. No, Bull. If I had your
+years I guess I'd feel that way, too. I wonder&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You're guessing to know who I'd marry, eh?"
+Bull's pipe was knocked out into the cuspidore. Then he
+sat up again and his eyes were full of reckless delight.
+"Here," he cried, "I guess it's mostly school-kids who
+shout the things they reckon to do&mdash;or a fool man. It
+doesn't matter. Maybe I'm both. Anyway, I'm just
+crazy for&mdash;for&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Red hair, an'&mdash;an' a pair of mighty pretty eyes?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure."</p>
+
+<p>Bat nodded. A deep satisfaction stirred him.</p>
+
+<p>"I reckoned that way, ever since&mdash; Say, I'm glad."</p>
+
+<p>But Bull's mood had sobered.</p>
+
+<p>"She's in the enemy camp though," he demurred.</p>
+
+<p>"It'll hand you another scrap&mdash;haulin' her out."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>Bat rose from his chair and stretched his trunk-like
+body.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," he said, "it's me for the blankets." Then
+he emitted a deep-throated chuckle. "You get at it,
+boy," he went on. "An' if you're needin' any help I
+can pass, why, count on it. If you mean marryin'
+
+I'd sooner see you hook up team with that red-haired
+gal than anything in the world I ever set two eyes on.
+Guess I'll hand you my stuff in the morning if the storm
+quits."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>The dynamos were revolving at terrific speed. There
+were some eighteen in all, and their dull roar was racking
+upon ears unused. Bat was regarding them without
+enthusiasm. All he knew was the thing they represented.
+Skert Lawton had told him. They represented the
+harnessing of five hundred thousand horse power of the
+Beaver River water. The engineer had assured him,
+in his unsmiling fashion, that he had secured enough
+power to supply the whole Province of Quebec with
+electricity. All of which, in Bat's estimation, seemed to
+be an unnecessary feat.</p>
+
+<p>Bull was gazing in frank wonder on the engineer's
+completed work. It was his first sight of it. The place
+had been long in building. But the sight of it in full
+running, the sense of enormous power, the thought and
+labour this new power-house represented, filled him
+with nothing but admiration for the author of it all.</p>
+
+<p>Bat hailed one of the electricians serving the machines.</p>
+
+<p>"Where's Mr. Lawton?" he shouted.</p>
+
+<p>"He went out. He ain't here," the man shouted back.</p>
+
+<p>Bat regarded the man for a moment without favour.
+Then he turned away. He beckoned Bull to follow,
+and moved over to the sound-proof door which shut off
+the engineer's office. They passed to the quiet beyond
+it.</p>
+
+<p>It was quite a small room without any elaborate pretensions.
+There was a desk supporting a drawing
+board, with a chair set before it. There was also a
+rocker-chair which accommodated the lean body of
+Skert Lawton at such infrequent moments as it desired
+repose. Beyond that there was little enough furniture.
+
+The place was mainly bare boards and bare walls. Bat
+sat himself at the desk and left Bull the rocker-chair.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd fixed it so Skert was to meet us here," he said.
+"All this is his stuff. I couldn't tell you an' amp from
+a buck louse."</p>
+
+<p>Bull nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right," he said. "Maybe he's held up down
+at the mill. He'll get&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Held up&mdash;nuthin'!"</p>
+
+<p>The lumberman was angry. But his anger was not
+at the failure of his arrangements. Back of his head he
+was wondering at the thing that claimed the engineer.
+He felt that only real urgency would have kept him
+from his appointment. And he knew that urgency just
+now had a more or less ugly meaning.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawton's a pretty bright boy&mdash;" Bull began. But the
+other caught him up roughly.</p>
+
+<p>"Bright? That don't say a thing," Bat cried. "Guess
+he's a whole darn engineering college rolled into the worst
+shape of the ghost of a man it's been my misfortune ever
+to locate. He's a highbrow of an elegant natur'. He
+calls this thing 'co-ordination,' which is another way of
+sayin' he's beat nigh a hundred thousand dollars out of
+our bank roll to hand us more power than we could use
+if we took in Broadway, New York, at night. But it's
+elegant plannin' and looks good to me. Your folks over
+the water'll maybe see things in it, too. It's them blast
+furnaces we set up for him last year made this play possible.
+Them, and the swell outfit of machine shops he
+squeezed us for. He figgers to raise all sorts of hell
+around. An' his latest notion's to build every darn machine
+from rough-castin' to a shackle pin, so we don't
+have to worry with the world outside. He's got a long
+view of things. But&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He pulled out his timepiece, and the clouds of volcanic
+anger swept down again upon his rugged brow.
+
+But it was given no play. The door of the office was
+thrust open, and the lean figure of the engineer, clad in
+greasy overalls, came hurriedly into the room.</p>
+
+<p>Bat challenged him on the instant.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the trouble, boy?" he demanded in his uncompromising
+fashion.</p>
+
+<p>"Trouble?" Skert's eyes were wide, and his tone was
+savage. "That's just it. I reckoned to show Sternford
+all this stuff," he went on, indicating the machine hall with
+a jerk of his head. "But we'll have to let it pass. Say,"
+he glanced from one to the other, his expression developing
+to something like white fury. "They started. It's
+business this time. I got a message up they were stopping
+the grinders. It's the 'heads' gave the order. Oh, they're
+all in it. They got a meeting on in that darn recreation
+parliament place of theirs, and every mother's son on the
+machines was called to it. They've shut down! You get
+that? There isn't even a greaser left at the machines.
+It's set me with a feeling I'm plumb crazy. I've been
+down, and they're right there crowding out that hall.
+And&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I guessed something that way," Bat interrupted with
+ominous calm. He turned to Bull, who was closely regarding
+his lieutenants.</p>
+
+<p>"It's mutiny first and then a sheer strike," he said.
+"Here, listen. I'll hand you just what's happenin'.
+There's been Bolshie agitators workin' the boys months,
+and I guess they got a holt on 'em good. It started with
+us openin' the new mill on this north shore. We were
+forced to collect our labour just where we could. An'
+they got in like the miser'ble rats they are. Gee! It
+makes me hot&mdash;hot as hell! The leaders of this thing
+ain't workers. I don't guess they done a day's work
+with anything but their yahoo mouths in their dirty lives.
+They're part of the crowd that's paid from Europe to
+get around and heave up this blazin' world of ours just
+
+anyway they know. The only thing I don't get is their
+coming along here, which is outside most all the rest of
+the world. If Labrador can hand 'em loot I'd like to
+know the sort it is. And it's just loot they're out for.
+If I'm a judge there's one hell of a scrap comin,' and
+if we're beat it looks like leaving Sachigo a thing
+forgotten."</p>
+
+<p>Bull stood up. He laughed without the least mirth.</p>
+
+<p>"It's the Skandinavia," he said decidedly. "War's
+begun. I'm going right down to that meeting."</p>
+
+<p>Bat leapt to his feet.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said. "This is for Skert an' me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Is it?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull brushed his protest aside almost fiercely. Then
+he turned as the door opened and a small man hurried in.
+The fellow snatched his cap from his head and his eyes
+settled on Skert Lawton, the man he knew best.</p>
+
+<p>"It ees a document," he cried, in the broken English
+of a French Canadian. "They sign him, oh, yes. You
+no more are the boss. They say the mill it ees for the
+'worker.' All dis big mill, all dis big money. Oh, yes.
+Dey sign him."</p>
+
+<p>"Who's this?" Bull demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"One of my machine-minders. He's a good boy," the
+engineer explained.</p>
+
+<p>Bull nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right We want all we can get of his sort."
+He turned to Bat. "Are there others? I mean boys we
+can trust?"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite a bunch."</p>
+
+<p>"Can we get them together?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure."</p>
+
+<p>"Right. This is going to be the real thing. The sort
+of thing I'd rather have it."</p>
+
+<p>He turned to Skert who stood by, watching the light
+of battle in his chief's eyes.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Here, shut down the dynamos. Set them clean
+out of action. Do you get me? Leave the machines
+for the time being so they're just so much scrap. Then,
+if you got the bunch you can rely on, leave 'em guard.
+We'll get on down, an' sign that damned document for
+
+'em."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>The recreation room was crowded to suffocation. Men
+of every degree in the work of the mill had foregathered.
+A hubbub of talk was going on. Voices were raised.
+There was anger. There was argument, harsh-voiced
+argument which mainly expressed feeling. At the far
+end of the hall, on the raised platform designed for those
+who fancied their vocal attainments, a group of men were
+gathered about a table upon which was outspread the
+folios of an extensive document. The men at the table
+were talking eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>The gathering had listened to the furious oratory of
+a pale-faced man, with long black hair and a foreign
+accent. It had listened, and agreed, and applauded. For
+he had talked Communism, and the overthrow of the
+Capitalists, and the possession of the wealth creating mills
+for those who operated them. It had listened to an appeal
+to the latent instinct in every human creature, freedom
+from everything that could be claimed as servitude,
+freedom, and possession, and independence for those who
+would once and for all rid themselves of the shackles
+which the pay-roll and time-sheet imposed upon them.</p>
+
+<p>They had been called together to witness the iniquity
+of spending their lives in the degrading operation of
+filling the pockets of those who laboured not, by the toil
+in which their lives were spent. They had been told every
+flowery fairy tale of the modern communistic doctrine,
+which possesses as much truth and sanity in it as is to be
+found in an asylum for the mentally deficient. And they
+had swallowed the bait whole. The talk had been by the
+
+tongue of a skilled fanatic, who was well paid for his
+work, and who kept in the forefront of his talk that alluring
+promise of ease, and affluence, and luxury, which
+never fails in its appeal to those who have never
+known it.</p>
+
+<p>But something approaching an impasse had been
+reached when the would-be benefactors passed over the
+demand that their deluded victims should sign the roll
+of Communal Brotherhood. The bait that had been
+offered had been all to the taste of these rough creatures
+who had never known better than an existence with a
+threat of possible unemployment overshadowing their
+lives. But in the signature to the elaborate document
+they scented the concealed poison in the honeyed potion.
+There was hesitation, reluctance. There was argument
+in a confusion of tongues well-nigh bewildering. A surge
+of voices filled the great building.</p>
+
+<p>The agents were at work, men who posed as workers
+to attain their ends. And the pale, long-haired creature
+and his satellites waited at the table. They understood.
+It was their business to understand. They knew the
+minds they were dealing with, and their agents were
+skilled in their craft. The process they relied on was
+the unthinking stupidity of the sheep. Every man that
+could be persuaded had his friends, and each friend had
+his friend. They knew friend would follow friend
+well-nigh blindly, and, having signed, native obstinacy and
+fear of ridicule would hold them fast to their pledge.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the signing began. It began with a burly
+river-jack who laughed stupidly to cover his doubt. He
+was followed by a machine-minder, who hurled taunts
+at those who still held back. Then came others, others
+whose failure to think for themselves left them content
+to follow the lead of their comrades.</p>
+
+<p>The stream of signatures grew. A pale youth, whose
+foolish grin revealed only his fitness for the heavy, unskilled
+
+work he was engaged upon, came up. The pen
+was handed him, and the name of Adolph Mars was
+scrawled on the sheet. The long-haired man at the table
+looked up at him. He smiled with his lips, and patted
+the boy's hand. Then something happened.</p>
+
+<p>It was movement. Sudden movement on the platform.
+The babel in the body of the hall went on. But the
+long-haired man and his supporters at the table turned
+with eyes that were concerned and anxious. A dozen
+men had entered swiftly through the door in rear of the
+platform. Bull Sternford led them. And he moved
+over to the table, with the swift, noiseless strides of a
+panther, and looked into the unwholesome face of the
+Bolshevist leader.</p>
+
+<p>It was only for the fraction of a second. The man
+made a movement which needed no interpretation. His
+hand went to a hip pocket. Instantly Bull's great hands
+descended. The man was picked up like a child. He was
+lifted out of his seat and raised aloft. He was borne
+towards the window where he was held while the master
+of the mill crashed a foot against its wooden sash. The
+next moment the black-clothed body was hurled with
+terrific force out into the snowdrift waiting to receive it.
+It was all so swiftly done. The whole thing was a
+matter of seconds only. Then Bull Sternford was back
+at the table, while his comrades, Bat and Lawton, and
+the men of loyalty they relied on, lined the platform.</p>
+
+<p>As Bull snatched up the document and held it aloft, a
+deathly silence reigned throughout the hall, and every
+eye was turned angrily upon the intruders. Bull yielded
+not a moment for those witless minds to recover from
+their shock. His voice rang out fiercely.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," he cried, "d'you know what you're doing,
+listening to that fool guy I've thrown through that
+window, and signing this crazy paper he's set out for you?
+No. You don't unless you're just as crazy yourselves.
+
+You're declaring war. You're starting a great fight to
+steal the property that hands you your living. You reckon
+you've got all you need of our brains, and your own
+brute force and darnation foolishness can run these great
+mills which are to hand you the big money you reckon
+it hands us. That means war. Maybe you fancy it's
+the one-sided war you'd like to have it. Maybe you fancy
+there's about a dozen of us, and we're going to be made
+to work for the wage you figger to hand us. You're
+dead wrong. It's going to be a hell of a war if you swallow
+the dope these fellows hand you. You've begun it,
+and we're taking up the challenge. We've fired the first
+shot, too. It's not gun-play yet. No. Maybe it'll come
+to that and you'll find we can hand you shot for shot.
+No. We're quicker than that. The mill's closed down!
+Wages have ceased! And all power has been cut off!
+There's not a spark of light or heat, for the whole of
+Sachigo. The vital parts of the power station have been
+removed, and you can't get 'em back. I've only to give
+the word and the <em>penstocks on the river will be cut so you
+can't repair them</em>. It's forty degrees below Zero out there,
+where I've shot that crazy Bolshie, and so you know
+just how you stand here on Labrador with no means of
+gettin' away until the thaw comes. You and your wives
+and kiddies'll have to pay in the cold for the crime of
+theft you reckon to put through. We're ready for you,
+whether it's gun-play or any other sort of war you want
+to start. That's the thing I've come here to tell you."</p>
+
+<p>He paused for a moment to watch the effect of his
+words. It was there on the instant. A furious hubbub
+arose. There was not a man in the room who did not
+understand the dire threat which the <em>coup</em> of the master
+mind imposed. Power cut off! Light! Heat! Power!
+Forty degrees below Zero! The terror of the Labrador
+winter was in every man's mind. Life would be unendurable
+without heat. There were the forests. Oh,
+
+yes. They could get heat of sorts. The sort of heat
+which the men on a winter trail were accustomed to.
+<em>Their electrically-heated houses were without stoves in
+which they could burn wood</em>.</p>
+
+<p>Bull listened to the babel of tongues while his men
+watched for any act that might come. Every man on
+the platform was armed ready.</p>
+
+<p>"Here!"</p>
+
+<p>Bull's voice rang out again, but he was interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>A man shouted at him from the back of the hall.</p>
+
+<p>"Who the hell are you, anyway? You ain't the guy
+owning these mills. We know where you come
+from&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Like lightning Bull took him up.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you?" he shouted back. "Then we know where
+you come from. The man who knew me before I became
+boss here must belong to the Skandinavia. That's the
+only place any lumber-jack could have known me. Here.
+Come up here. Stand out. Show yourself. And I'll
+hand the boys your pedigree. It'll be easy. It's the
+trouble with us just now, we've got too many stiffs from
+the Skandinavia, and you've got our own good boys
+paralysed. They haven't the guts to stand on the notions
+that have handed them the best wages in the pulp trade
+these fifteen years. Guess you've persuaded them they
+ain't got swell houses, and good food, and cheap heat
+and light, and, instead are living like all sorts of swine
+in their hogpens. It's the way of the Skandinavia just
+now. The Skandinavia's out for our blood. They want
+to smash us. Do you know why? Because they're an
+alien firm who wants to steal these forests from the
+Canadians to fill their own pockets with our wealth. We're
+for the Canadians, and we've built up a proposition that's
+going to beat the foreigner right out into the sea. But
+that don't matter now. These guys, these long-haired,
+unwashed guys, that reckon to hand you boys these mills,
+
+are sent by the Skandinavia to wreck us. Well, go right
+over to 'em. Help 'em. Sign every darn document they
+hand you. They'll be your own death warrants, anyway.
+You want war. You can have it. I'm here to fight.
+Meanwhile you best get home to your cold houses, for the
+mills are closed down. You're locked out."</p>
+
+<p>He turned without waiting a second and passed through
+the back door by which he had entered. And his men
+followed on his heels.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Bull was in his office. For all the storm of the morning
+the rest of the day had passed quietly. Now it
+was late at night. His stove was radiating a luxurious
+heat. He was quite unconcerned that the electrically-heated
+steam radiators were cold. He was alone. Harker
+and the engineer were still down at the mill. He was
+awaiting the report they would bring him later.</p>
+
+<p>He had passed some time in reading the pledge of
+Communal Brotherhood which he had brought away with
+him from the recreation room, and he had read the
+signatures that had been affixed to it. The latter were
+few, and every name inscribed was of foreign origin.
+But it was the document itself which concerned him most.
+If it were honest he felt that its authors were wild people
+who should be kept under restraint. If it were not honest,
+then hanging or shooting was far too lenient a fate to
+be meted out to them. It was Communism in its wildest,
+most unrestrained form.</p>
+
+<p>In his final disgust he flung the papers on his desk.
+And as he did so a sound reached him from the outer
+office, which had long since been closed for the night
+by the half-breed, Loale.</p>
+
+<p>He leapt to his feet. Without a second thought he
+moved over to the door and flung it wide.</p>
+
+<p>"What the&mdash;?" He broke off. "Good God!" he
+
+cried. "You, Father?" He laughed. "Why I thought
+it was some of the Bolshies from down at the mill."</p>
+
+<p>He withdrew the gun from his coat pocket in explanation.
+Then he stood aside.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you come right in?"</p>
+
+<p>The man Bull had discovered made no answer. But
+as he stood aside, tall, clad in heavy fur from head to
+foot, Father Adam strode into the room.</p>
+
+<p>Bull watched him with questioning eyes. Then he
+closed the door and his visitor turned confronting him
+in the yellow lamplight.</p>
+
+<p>"I've made more than a hundred miles to get you
+to-night," Father Adam said.</p>
+
+<p>Then he flung back the fur hood from his head, and ran
+a hand over his long black hair, smoothing it thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull's eyes were still questioning.</p>
+
+<p>"Won't you shed your furs and sit?" he went on.
+"The Chink's abed, but I'll dig him out. You must get
+food."</p>
+
+<p>The other glanced round the pleasant office, and his
+eyes paused for a moment at the chair at the desk.</p>
+
+<p>"Food don't worry, thanks," he said, his mildly smiling
+eyes coming back to his host's face. "I've eaten&mdash;ten
+miles back. I rested the dogs there, too. I've maybe a
+ha'f hour to tell you the thing I came for. There's
+trouble in the woods. Bad trouble. If it's not
+straightened out, why, it looks like all work at your
+mills'll quit, and you're going to get your forest limits
+burnt out stark."</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_28"></a>
+<h3>Chapter XIX&mdash;The Hold-Up</h3>
+
+
+<p>Ole Porson took a final glance round his shanty. The
+last of the daylight was rapidly fading. There was still
+
+sufficient penetrating the begrimed double window, however,
+to reveal the littered, unswept condition of the place.
+But he saw none of it. It was the place he knew and
+understood. It was at once his office, and his living
+quarters; a shanty with a tumbled sleeping bunk, a wood
+stove, and a table littered with the books and papers of his
+No. 10 camp. He was a rough creature, as hard of soul
+as he was of head, who could never have found joy in
+surroundings of better condition.</p>
+
+<p>He solemnly loaded the chambers of a pair of heavy
+guns. Then he bestowed them in the capacious pockets
+of his fur pea-jacket. He also dropped in beside them
+a handful of spare cartridges. In his lighter moments
+he was apt to say that these weapons were his only friends.
+And those who knew him best readily agreed. Drawing
+up the storm-collar about his face, he passed out into
+the snow which was falling in flakes the size of autumn
+leaves. There was not a breath of wind to disturb the
+deathly stillness of the winter night.</p>
+
+<p>Minutes later he was lounging heavily against the rough
+planked counter of Abe Risdon's store. He was talking
+to the suttler over a deep "four-fingers" of neat Rye,
+while his searching eyes scanned the body of the ill-lit
+room. The place was usually crowded with drinkers
+when the daylight passed, but just now it was almost
+empty.</p>
+
+<p>"Who's that guy in the tweed pea-jacket an' looks
+like a city man?" he asked his host in an undertone,
+pointing at one of the tables where a stranger sat surrounded
+by four of the forest men.</p>
+
+<p>Abe's powerful arms were folded as he leant on the
+counter.</p>
+
+<p>"Blew in about noon," he said. "Filled his belly with
+good hash an' sat around since."</p>
+
+<p>"He's a bunch o' the boys about him now, anyway.
+An' I guess he's talking quite a lot, an' they're doing most
+
+o' the listening. Seems like he's mostly enjoying hisself."</p>
+
+<p>Abe shrugged. But the glance he flung at the man
+sitting at the far-off table was without approval.</p>
+
+<p>"It's mostly that way now," he said, with an air of
+indifference his thoughtful eyes denied. "There's too
+many guys come along an' sell truck, an' set around, an'
+talk, an' then pass along. Things are changing around
+this lay out, an' I don't get its meanin'. Time was I
+had a bunch of boys ready most all the time to hand me
+the news going round. Time was you'd see a stranger
+once in a month come along in an' buy our food. Time
+was they mostly had faces we knew by heart, and we
+knew their business, and where they came from. Tain't
+that way now. You couldn't open the boys' faces fer
+news of the forest with a can-opener. These darn guys
+are always about now. They come, an' feed the boys'
+
+drink, an' talk with 'em most all the time. An' they're
+mostly strangers, an' the boys mostly sit around with
+their faces open like fool men listenin' to fairy tales.
+How's the cut goin'?"</p>
+
+<p>Porson laughed. There was no light in his hard eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"At a gait you couldn't change with a trail whip."</p>
+
+<p>The other nodded.</p>
+
+<p>'"That's how 'nigger' Pilling said. He guessed the
+cut was down by fifty. What is it? A buck? Wages?"</p>
+
+<p>Porson's hand was fingering one of the guns in his
+pocket. His eyes were snapping.</p>
+
+<p>"Curse 'em," he cried at last. "I just don't get it.
+They're goin' slow."</p>
+
+<p>He pushed his empty glass at the suttler who promptly
+re-filled it.</p>
+
+<p>"Young Pete Cust," Abe went on confidentially,
+"handed me a good guess only this mornin'. He'd had
+his sixth Rye before startin' out to work. Maybe he
+was rattled and didn't figger the things he said. He was
+astin' fer word up from the mills. I didn't worry to
+
+think, and just said I hadn't got. I ast 'why'? The
+boy took a quick look round, kind o' scared. He said,
+
+'jest nothin'.' He reckoned he'd a dame somewhere
+around Sachigo. She'd wrote him things wer' kind of
+bad with the mills. They were beat fer dollars, and
+looked like a crash. He'd heard the same right there,
+an' it had him rattled. He thought of quittin' and goin'
+over to the Skandinavia. Maybe it's the sort o' talk that's
+got 'em all rattled. Maybe they're goin' slow on the cut,
+worryin' for their pay-roll. You can't tell. They don't
+say a thing. Seems to me we want Sternford right here
+to queer these yarns. Father Adam's around an' talked
+some. But&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Porson drank down his liquor, and his glass hit the
+counter with angry force.</p>
+
+<p>"They're mush-faced hoodlams anyway," he cried
+fiercely. "Ther' ain't a thing wrong with the mills. I'd
+bet a million on it."</p>
+
+<p>He stood up from the counter and thrust his hands
+deep in the pockets of his coat. He was a powerful
+figure with legs like the tree trunks it was his work to
+see cut. Quite abruptly he moved away, and Abe's
+questioning eyes followed him.</p>
+
+<p>He strode down amongst the scattered tables and came
+to a halt before the tweed-coated stranger. All the men
+looked up, and their talk died out.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, what's your bizness around here?"</p>
+
+<p>Ole Person's manner was threatening as he made his
+demand. The stranger dived at the bag lying on the
+floor beside his chair. He picked it up and flung it
+open.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I got right here the dandiest outfit of swell
+jewellery," he cried, grinning amiably up at the man's
+threatening eyes. "There's just everything here," he went
+on, with irrepressible volubility, "to suit you gents of the
+forest, an' make you the envy of every jack way down
+
+at Sachigo. Here, there's a be-autiful Prince Albert for
+your watch. This ring. It's full o' diamonds calculated
+to set Kimberly hollerin'. Maybe you fancy a locket
+with it. It'll take a whole bunch of your dame's&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You'll light right out of this camp with daylight
+to-morrow!"</p>
+
+<p>The tone of the camp-boss banished the last shadow
+of the pedlar's cast-iron smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes?" he said, his eyes hardening.</p>
+
+<p>"That's wot I said. This camp's private property an'
+you'll light out. You get that? Daylight. If you don't,
+we've a way of dealing with Jew drummers that'll likely
+worry you. Get it. An' get it good."</p>
+
+<p>For a moment they looked into each other's eyes.
+There was not the flicker of an eyelid between them.
+Then Porson turned and strode away.</p>
+
+<p>He passed down the store re-fastening his coat. He
+paused at the door as a chorus of rough laughter reached
+him from the little gathering at the table. But it was
+only for an instant. He looked back. No face was
+turned in his direction. So he passed out.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>The night outside was inky black. The heavy falling
+snow made progress almost a blind groping. But Porson
+knew every inch of the way. He passed down the lines
+of huts and paused outside each bunkhouse. His reason
+was obvious. There was a question in his mind as to the
+whereabouts of the crowd of his men who usually
+thronged the liquor store at this hour of the evening.</p>
+
+<p>It was at the last bunkhouse he paused longest. He
+stood for quite a while listening under the double glassed
+window. Then he passed on and stood beside the tightly
+closed storm-door. The signs and sounds he heard were
+apparently sufficient. For, after a while, he turned back
+and set out to return to his quarters.</p>
+
+
+<p>For many minutes he groped his way through the
+blinding snow, his mind completely given up to the things
+his secret watch had revealed. His brutish nature, being
+what it was, left him concerned only for the forceful
+manner by which he could restore that authority which he
+felt to be slipping away from him under the curious
+change which had come over the camp. His position
+depended on the adequate output of his winter's cut and
+on nothing else. That, he knew, was desperately falling,
+and&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>But in a moment, all concern was swept from his
+mind. A sound leapt at him out of the stillness of the
+night. It was the whimper of dogs and the sharp command
+of a man's voice. He shouted a challenge and
+waited. And presently a dog train pulled up beside him.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Bull Sternford was standing before the wood stove
+in the camp-boss's shanty. He had removed his snow-laden
+fur coat. He had kicked the damp snow from his
+moccasins. Now he was wiping the moisture out of his
+eyes, and the chill in his limbs was easing under the
+warmth which the stove radiated.</p>
+
+<p>Ole Porson's grim face was alight with a smile of genuine
+welcome, as he stood surveying his visitor across the
+roaring stove.</p>
+
+<p>"It's surely the best thing happened in years, Mr.
+Sternford," he was saying. "I'm more glad you made
+our camp this night than any other. Maybe I'd ha' got
+through someways, but I don't know just how. We're
+down over fifty on our cut, an', by the holy snakes, I
+can't hand you why."</p>
+
+<p>Bull put his coloured handkerchief away, and removed
+the pea-jacket which he had worn under his furs.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't worry," he said with apparent unconcern. "I
+can hand it you. That's why I'm here."</p>
+
+
+<p>The camp-boss waited. He eyed his chief with no
+little anxiety. He had looked for an angry outburst.</p>
+
+<p>Bull pulled up a chair. He flung the litter of books it
+supported on to the already crowded table and sat down.
+Then he filled his pipe and lit it with a hot coal from the
+stove.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," he said, "I'll tell you. I've been the round
+of four camps. I've been over a month on the trail, and
+I've heard just the same tale from every camp-boss we
+employ. I've three more camps to visit besides yours,
+and when I've made them maybe I'll get the sleep I'm
+about crazy for. Night and day I've been on the dead
+jump for a month following the trail of a red-hot gang
+that's going through our forests. If I come up with
+them there's going to be murder."</p>
+
+<p>He spoke quietly without a sign of emotion. But the
+light in his hot eyes was almost desperate.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to hand you the story so you'll get it all
+clear," he went on after a moment. "So I'll start by telling
+you how we stand at the mill. Get this, an' hold
+it tight in your head, and the rest'll come clear as
+day. Sachigo's right on top. We've boosted it sky high
+on to the top of the world's pulp trade. In less than
+twelve months we'll have grabbed well-nigh the whole
+of this country's pulp industry, and we'll beat the foreigners
+right back over the sea to their own country. The
+Skandinavia folk are rattled. They know all about us
+and they've done their best to buy us out of the game.
+We turned 'em down cold, and they're mad&mdash;mad as
+hell. It means they're in for the fight of their lives.
+So are we. And we know Peterman an' his gang well
+enough to know what that means. It's 'rough an'
+
+tough.' Everything goes. If they can't gouge our
+eyes they'll do their best to chew us to small meat.
+But we've got 'em every way. This forest gang is sent
+by the Skandinavia. If they can't smash us by fire or
+
+labour trouble next year'll see us floated into a seventy
+million dollar corporation with the whole Canadian wood-pulp
+industry lying right in the palms of our hands.
+That's the reason for the things doing."</p>
+
+<p>He paused, and the camp-boss nodded his rough head.
+It was a story he could clearly understand. Then there
+were those figures. Seventy million dollars! They swept
+the last shadow of doubt from his mind.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the position," Bull went on. "Now for the
+trouble as it is in the forests right now. The thing that's
+had me travelling night an' day for a month. There's an
+outfit going right through these forests. I can't locate
+its extent. Only the way it works. There's two objects
+in view. One is to fire our limits. The other reckons
+to paralyse our cut. So far these folks have failed against
+the fire-guard organisation, and I guess they'll likely miss
+most of their fire-bugs when they call the roll. The
+other's different."</p>
+
+<p>Bull knocked out his pipe on the stove and gazed
+thoughtfully at the streak of brilliant light under the
+edge of the front damper.</p>
+
+<p>"I've a notion there's an outfit of pedlars at work, as
+well as others," he went on presently.</p>
+
+<p>The camp-boss nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," he said.</p>
+
+<p>Bull looked up.</p>
+
+<p>"You think that way?" he asked. Then he nodded.
+"Yes, I guess we're right. They're handing the boys
+dope to keep 'em guessing&mdash;worrying. They're telling
+'em we're on the edge of a big smash at Sachigo. That
+we can't see the winter through. We're cleaned out
+for cash, and the mill folk are shouting for their wages
+and starting in to riot. It's a swell yarn. It's the sort
+of yarn I'd tell 'em myself if I was working for the
+Skandinavia. It's the sort of dope these crazy forest-jacks
+are ready to swallow the same as if it was Rye.
+
+Do you see? These fools are being told they won't
+get their pay for their winter's cut. So, being what
+they are, the boys are going slow. They're going slow,
+and drawing goods at the store against each cord they
+cut. Well, do you see what's going to happen if the
+game succeeds? With our forests ablaze, and our cut
+fifty down, and the whole outfit on the buck, when spring
+comes, Skandinavia reckons our British financiers, when
+they come along to look our land over will turn the
+whole proposition of the flotation down, and quit us
+cold. But that's not just all. No, sir. Elas Peterman
+isn't the boy to leave it that way. He's handing out
+the story that when Sachigo smashes the Skandinavia's
+going to jump right in and collect the wreckage cheap.
+Then they'll start up the mill, and sign on all hands on
+their own pay-roll, only stipulating that they won't pay
+one single cent of what Sachigo owes for their cut. So,
+if they're such almighty fools as to cut, it's going to be
+their dead loss and the Skandinavia's gain. Do you
+get it? It's smart. I guess there's a bigger brain behind
+it than Peterman's."</p>
+
+<p>The camp-boss spat into the stove. It was his one
+expression of disgust.</p>
+
+<p>Bull rose from his chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, I need food. So does my boy out there with the
+dogs. We'll take it after I'm through with the men. It's
+snowing like hell, but I pull out two hours from now.
+You see, I'm on a hot trail, an' don't fancy losing a
+minute."</p>
+
+<p>"You're goin' to talk to 'em&mdash;the boys?" Porson's
+eyes lit with a gleam of satisfaction. "Can you&mdash;twist
+'em?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull thrust a hand into his breast pocket and drew out
+a sealed packet. He held it up before the other's questioning
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't failed yet," he said quietly. "In nine of
+
+our camps back on the river the work's running full
+already. I've a whole big yarn for our boys. But
+right here I've got what's better. It's the only thing
+that'll clinch the yarn I'm going to hand 'em. This," he
+went on, indicating the parcel in his hand, "is the bunch
+of dollars representing the price of this camp's full winter
+cut, and the price of a bonus for making up all leeway
+already lost. I'm going to have the boys count it. Then
+I'm going to have them hand it right over to Abe Risdon
+to set in his safe, with a written order from me to
+pay out in full the moment the winter cut is complete.
+Is it good? Can the Skandinavia's junk stand in face
+of it? No, sir. And so I've proved right along. I
+don't hold much of a brief for the intelligence of the
+forest-jack, but his belly rules him all the time. You
+see, he's human, and no more dishonest than the rest
+of us. Have him guessing and worried and you'll get
+trouble right along. Show him the lies the Skandinavia's
+been doping him with, and he'll work out of sheer spite
+to beat their game. You get right out and collect the
+gang."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>The snowfall had ceased. And with its passing the
+temperature had fallen to something far below its average
+winter level. The clouds had vanished miraculously, and
+in their place was a night sky ablaze with the light of
+myriad stars, and the soft splendour of a brilliant moon.</p>
+
+<p>It was a scene of frigid desolation. Away on the
+southern horizon lay the black line which marked the tremendous
+forest limits of the Beaver River. For the rest
+it was a world of snow that hid up the rugged undulations
+of a sterile territory.</p>
+
+<p>The dog train was moving at a reckless gait over the
+untracked, hardening snow. The man Gouter was
+driving under imperative orders such as he loved. Bull
+
+Sternford had told him when he left the shelter of No.
+10 Camp: "Get there! Get there quick! There's dogs
+and to spare at all our camps, and I don't care a curse
+if you run the outfit to death."</p>
+
+<p>To a man of Gouter's breed the order was sufficient.
+Half Eskimo, half white man, he was a savage of the
+wild, born and bred to the fierce northern trail, one of
+Labrador's hereditary fur hunters by sea and land.
+Speed on the fiercest trail was the dream of his vanity.
+Relays of dogs, such as he could never afford, and something
+accomplished which he could tell of over the camp
+fire to his less fortunate brethren. So he accepted the
+white man's order and drove accordingly.</p>
+
+<p>Bull Sternford sat huddled in the back of the sled
+under the fur robes which alone made life possible. His
+work at No. 10 Camp had left him satisfied, but every
+nerve in his body was alert for the final coup he contemplated.
+He was weary in mind as well as body. And
+in his heart he knew that the need of his physical resources
+was not so very far off. But he was beyond care. He
+had said he was crazy for sleep, but the words gave no
+indication of his real condition. His eyes ached. His
+head throbbed. There were moments, even, when the
+things he beheld, the things he thought became distorted.
+But he knew that somewhere ahead a ghostly
+outfit of strangers was pursuing its evil work against
+him, and he meant to come up with it, and to wreak his
+vengeance in merciless, summary fashion. His purpose
+had become an obsession in the long sleepless days and
+nights he had endured.</p>
+
+<p>It was war. It was bitter ruthless war on the barren
+hinterland of Labrador, where civilisation was unknown.
+Mercy? Nature never designed that terrible wilderness
+as a setting for mercy.</p>
+
+<p>The dogs had been running for hours when Gouter's
+voice came sharply back over his shoulder.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Dog!" he cried, in the laconic fashion habitual to him.</p>
+
+<p>Bull knelt up. His movement suggested the nervous
+strain he was enduring. It was almost electrical.</p>
+
+<p>"Where?" he demanded, peering out into the shining
+night over the man's furry shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>The half-breed raised a pointing whip ahead and to the
+south.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," he said. "I hear him."</p>
+
+<p>Bull had heard nothing. Nothing but the hiss of the
+snow under their own runners, and the whimper of their
+own dogs.</p>
+
+<p>"It wouldn't be a wolf or fox?" he demurred.</p>
+
+<p>The half-breed clucked his tongue. His vanity was
+outraged.</p>
+
+<p>Bull gazed intently in the direction the whip had
+pointed. He could see only the far-off forest line, and
+the soft whiteness of the world of snow.</p>
+
+<p>"Hark!"</p>
+
+<p>The half-breed again held up his whip. This time it
+was for attention. Bull listened. Still he could hear
+nothing, nothing at all but the sounds of their own
+progress.</p>
+
+<p>"Man! Him speak with dog. Oh, yes."</p>
+
+<p>Gouter had turned. His beady black eyes were shining
+with a smile of triumph into the white man's face.</p>
+
+<p>"By the forest?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Then in God's name swing over and run to head
+them off!"</p>
+
+<p>Gouter obeyed with alacrity. He had impressed his
+white chief. It was good. A series of unintelligible
+ejaculations and the dogs swung away to the south.
+Then the whip rolled out and fell with cruel accuracy.
+The rawhide tugs strained under a mighty effort, as
+the great dogs were set racing with their lean bellies
+low to the ground.</p>
+
+
+<p>Bull wiped the icicles from about his mouth and nose.</p>
+
+<p>"Now have your guns ready," he cried. "The driver
+of that team is your man. The other's mine. If he
+shows fight kill him. There's five hundred dollars for
+you if you get 'em."</p>
+
+<p>"I get 'em."</p>
+
+<p>The half-breed's confidence was supreme. Bull
+dropped back into the sled. He sat with a pair of automatic
+pistols ready to his hand and gazed out over the
+sled rail.</p>
+
+<p>It was a terrific race and all feeling of weariness had
+passed under the excitement of it. The dogs were silent
+now. Every nerve in their muscular bodies were straining.
+The pace seemed to increase with every passing
+moment, and up out of the horizon the dark line of the
+forest leapt at them, deepening and broadening as it came.</p>
+
+<p>For some time the less practised white man saw and
+heard nothing of his enemies. He was forced to rely on
+the half-breed. He observed the man closely. He noted
+his every sign and read it as best he could. Presently
+Gouter leant forward peering. Then he straightened up
+and his voice came back triumphantly.</p>
+
+<p>"I see dem," he exclaimed. And pointed almost
+abreast. "Dogs. One&mdash;two&mdash;five. Yes. Two man.
+Now we get him sure."</p>
+
+<p>Down fell the whip on the racing dogs. The man
+shouted his jargon at them. The sled lurched and swayed
+with the added spurt, and Bull held fast to the rail. A
+glad thrill surged through his senses.</p>
+
+<p>It was a moment of tremendous uplift. Bull had
+yearned for it for weeks. But the short days and long
+nights of deferred hope had had their effect. He had
+almost come to feel that this thing that was now at hand
+was something impossible.</p>
+
+<p>Yes. There was the outfit growing plainer and plainer
+with every moment. He could see it clearly. He could
+
+even count its details as the other's sharper eyes had
+counted them minutes before. There were five dogs.
+And they were running hard. They, too, were being
+flogged, and the man driving them was shouting furiously
+in his urgency.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly there was a leap of flame and a shot rang
+out. It came from the driver of the fleeing dog train.
+It was replied to on the instant by Gouter who lost not a
+second. His own shot sped even as the enemy's bullet
+whistled somewhere past his head. He fired again. A
+third shot split the air. And with that last shot the
+enemy's sled seemed to leap in the air. There was a
+moment of hideous confusion. Then the wreckage
+dropped away behind the pursuers, sprawled and still in
+the snow.</p>
+
+<p>A fierce shout from Gouter and his dogs swung round.
+The sled under him heeled over, and took a desperate
+chance on a single runner. But the half-breed's skill
+saved them from catastrophe. It righted itself, and the
+dogs slowed to a trot. Then they halted. And the occupants
+of the sled flung themselves prone, with their guns
+ready for the first sign of movement in the tangled mass
+of their adversary's outfit.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Two of the dogs lay buried under the overturned sled.
+Three others were sprawling at the end of their rawhide
+tugs. They were alive. They were unhurt. They lay
+there taking full advantage of the situation for rest.</p>
+
+<p>But for the moment interest centred round the body
+of a white man lying some yards away. A groan of
+pain came up to the two men standing over him.</p>
+
+<p>Bull dropped on his knees. He reached down and
+turned the body over. The eyes of the man were visible
+between the sides of his fur hood. But that was all.</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment of silent contemplation. Then
+the injured man struggled desperately to rise.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Sternford?" he ejaculated</p>
+
+<p>Gouter was on him in a moment. He heard the tone
+of voice, and interpreted the man's movement in his
+own savage fashion. He knew the man to be the driver
+of the team, whom his boss had told him was his man.
+So he threw him back and held him.</p>
+
+<p>Bull stood up. The man's voice told him all he wanted
+to know.</p>
+
+<p>"Laval, eh?" he said quietly. "A second time. I
+didn't expect it. No."</p>
+
+<p>Then he laughed and turned away. And the sound of
+his laugh possessed something terribly mocking in the
+night silence of the wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>He passed back to the sled. There had been two men
+in it. He had seen that for himself.</p>
+
+<p>The wreckage looked hopeless. The sled was completely
+overturned and its gleaming runners caught and
+reflected the white rays of the moon. It had been thrown
+by reason of the fallen bodies of the dogs which lay
+under it, pinned by its weight, and additionally held fast
+by their own tangled harness.</p>
+
+<p>Bull had no thought for anything but the purpose in
+his mind. So he reached out and caught the steel runners
+in his mitted hands and flung the vehicle aside.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, it was there in the midst of a confusion of baggage
+and lying cheek by jowl with the mangled remains of the
+dogs. He cleared the debris, and dragged the dogs aside.
+Then he stood and gazed down at the figure that
+remained.</p>
+
+<p>It was clad in a voluminous beaver coat. It was
+hooded, as was every man who faced the fierce Labrador
+trail. But&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The figure moved. It stirred, and deliberately sat up.
+Bull's hands had been on his guns at the first movement.
+But he released them, as the hood fell back from the
+face which was ghastly pale in the moonlight.</p>
+
+
+<p>He flung himself on his knees, and tenderly supported
+the swaying figure.</p>
+
+<p>"God in Heaven!" he cried. "Nancy! You?"</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_29"></a>
+<h3>Chapter XX&mdash;On The Home Trail</h3>
+
+
+<p>Nancy's eyes were desperately troubled as she gazed out
+across the great valley of the Beaver River. Somewhere
+behind her, in the shelter of the woods, a mid-day camp
+had been pitched, and the men who had captured her red-hand
+in the work of their enemies were preparing the,
+rough food of the trail. But she was beyond all such
+concern.</p>
+
+<p>Far out on every hand lay the amazing panorama of
+the splendid valley, but she saw none of it. The mighty
+frozen waterway, the depths of virgin snow, the far-reaching
+woodlands its gaping lips embraced; they were
+things of frigid beauty for her eyes to gaze upon, but their
+meaning was lost upon a mind tortured with the vivid,
+hateful pictures it was powerless to escape.</p>
+
+<p>From the moment of that dreadful night when she
+had witnessed the ruthless climax of the work to which
+she had given herself she had known no peace. It was
+no thought of her failure, her capture, that inspired her
+trouble. She could have been thankful enough for that.
+It was the only mercy, she felt, that had been vouchsafed
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>No, long before her capture, a deep undermining of
+regret had set in. She had been without realisation of
+it, perhaps. But it had been there. In yielding to the
+demands of those she served, in her self-confidence she
+had forgotten the woman in her. She had forgotten
+everything but the crazy ambition which had blinded
+her to all consequences. Yes, even in the excitement of
+
+the work itself she had forgotten everything but the
+achievement she desired. But through it all, under it
+all, the woman in her had been slowly awakening, and
+an unadmitted regret at the destruction of work which
+meant the whole life of another had been stirring. Then,
+when the leading tongues of the guns had flashed out,
+and human life, even the life of dogs, had yielded to the
+demand of her cause, the last vestige of her dreaming
+had been swept away, and she told herself it was murder,
+<em>murder at her bidding</em>!</p>
+
+<p>Now her soul was afire with the bitterness of repentance,
+with passionate self-accusation. Murder had been
+done through her. Murder! The horror of it all had
+driven her well-nigh demented when she gazed from the
+distance while the two men disposed of Arden Laval's
+body under the snow. The dogs? They had been
+left where they fell. The living had been cut loose from
+their trappings to roam the forests at their will, while
+the dead had remained to satisfy the fierce hunger of
+the savage forest creatures. Even the sled had been
+destroyed, and its wood used to make fire that the living
+might endure on those pitiless northern heights. The
+memory of it all was days old now, but its horror showed
+no abatement. The agony was still with her. She felt
+that never again could she know peace.</p>
+
+<p>So she had moved away out from camp, as she had
+done at every stopping they had made on the long
+journey from the highlands down to Sachigo. Somehow
+it seemed to her impossible to do otherwise. She felt
+she must hide herself from the sight of those others who
+were her captors, and who, in their hearts, she felt, must
+deeply abhor the presence of so vile a creature in their
+camp.</p>
+
+<p>How long she had been standing there, while the men
+prepared the mid-day meal, she did not know. It was
+a matter of no sort of consequence to her anyway. Nothing
+
+really seemed of any consequence now. Her jaded
+mind was obsessed by a horror she could not shake off.
+There was nothing, nothing in the world to do but nurse
+the anguish driving her.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll come right along and eat, Nancy?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl almost jumped at the gentle tones of the man's
+voice, and glanced round at Bull Sternford in an agony
+of sudden terror.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I&mdash;" she stammered. Then composure returned
+to her. "If you wish it," she said submissively. "But I
+don't need food."</p>
+
+<p>Bull regarded the averted face for moments. Sympathy
+and love were in his clear gazing eyes. He understood
+something of the thing she was enduring, and the
+tone of his voice had been a real expression of his feelings.
+This girl, with the courage of twenty men, with
+her radiant beauty, and in her pitiful, heartbroken condition,
+was far more precious to him than any victory he
+had set himself to achieve. He knew that the world held
+nothing half so precious.</p>
+
+<p>He came a step nearer.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder if you'll listen to me, Nancy," he said, with
+a hesitation and doubt utterly foreign, to him. "You
+know, for all that's happened, for all we're mixed up
+against each other in this war, I'm the same man you
+found me on the <em>Myra</em> and in Quebec. I&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't."</p>
+
+<p>The girl flung out her hands in a piteous appeal. And
+Bull recognised the hysteria lying behind the movement.</p>
+
+<p>"I know," she cried. "Oh, I know. But&mdash;don't you
+understand? You must know what I am. It's my doing
+that Laval has gone to his death. I'm responsible, just
+as surely as if I'd fired the gun that robbed him of his
+life. Oh, why, why didn't I refuse the work? Why did
+they send me? And those dogs. Those poor helpless
+dogs. They, too. I must have been mad&mdash;mad. How
+
+can you come near me? How can you stand there summoning
+me to eat food&mdash;with you? It's useless. It's&mdash;I
+who sent that man to his death&mdash;I who&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I thought it was Gouter."</p>
+
+<p>Bull's manner had suddenly changed. The danger
+signal in the girl's eyes had determined him. So he
+smiled, and there was laughter in his challenge.</p>
+
+<p>"Say," he went on rapidly, "if you told that to
+Gouter he'd be crazy mad. He's the boss running shot
+on Labrador, and if you claimed responsibility for the
+killing of Laval you'd be dead up against it with him."
+He shook his head. "No, he's sort of grieved he didn't
+drop him plumb on the instant as it is. It won't do you
+talking that way with him around."</p>
+
+<p>He watched for the effect of his words and realised a
+slight relaxing of the strained look in the hazel eyes.
+Forthwith he plunged into the thing he contemplated.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to make a big talk with you before we
+eat," he said. "You see, I've wanted to right along,
+Nancy, but&mdash;Well, I want to tell you you're no more
+responsible for Laval's life, and the lives of those dogs,
+than I am. We're each playing our little parts in the
+things of life like the puppets we are. Our hands are
+clean enough, but it's not that way with the skunks that
+could send you, a girl, almost a child, to do the work, and
+live the life that boys like Gouter hardly know how to
+get through. That man, Peterman, is going to get it
+one day from me if I have luck. And I won't call it
+murder when I get my hands on his dirty alien throat.
+But never mind that. I want to ease that poor aching
+head of yours. I want to try and get you some peace of
+mind. That's why I tell you you've nothing to chide
+yourself for, nothing at all. It's true. You've played
+the game like the loyal adversary you are. And, for the
+moment, I'm top dog. You've handed me a bad nightmare
+by the wonderful courage and grit you've well-nigh
+
+shamed me, as a man, with. True, true you haven't
+a thing to blame yourself with. You've fought a mighty
+big fight I'd have been pleased to fight. It's just circumstances
+pitched you into the muss up, and let you
+see the thing your folks have brought about. It's
+that that's worrying. Think, Nancy, think hard. This
+is their fight. Not yours. The blood of Laval is on
+Elas Peterman's head. His, and those other creatures
+who are ready to commit any crime to steal our country
+from us. Oh, I'm not preaching just my side. It's
+true, true. We at Sachigo were content to compete
+openly, honestly. Peterman and those others saw disaster
+in our competition. And so they got ready to murder&mdash;if
+necessary. It's the soulless crime of a gang of
+unscrupulous foreigners, and those hounds of hell have
+left you to suffer for it just as sure as if they'd seared your
+poor gentle heart with a red hot iron. Say, Nancy," he
+went on, with persuasive earnestness, "put it all out of
+your mind. Forget it all. You're out of the fight now.
+And it just hurts me to see your eyes troubled, and that
+poor tender heart of yours all broken up. Won't you?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl had turned away to the gaping valley again.
+But she answered him. And her tone was less dull, and
+it was without the dreadful passion of moments ago.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I've tried to tell myself something of that," she
+said, with the pathetic helplessness of a child.</p>
+
+<p>"Then try some more."</p>
+
+<p>Bull had drawn nearer. He laid one hand gently on
+her shoulder. It moved down and took possession of
+the soft arm under her furs. Nancy shook her head.
+But there was no decision in the movement.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I wish&mdash;" she began.</p>
+
+<p>But she could get no further. Suddenly she buried her
+face in her hands, and broke into a passion of weeping.</p>
+
+<p>Bull stood helplessly by. He gazed upon the shaking
+woman while great sobs racked her whole body. There
+
+was nothing he could do, nothing he dared do. He knew
+that. His impulse was to take her in his arms and protect
+her with his body against the things which gave her
+pain. But&mdash;somehow he felt that perhaps it was good
+for her to weep. Perhaps it would help her. So he waited.</p>
+
+<p>Slowly the violence of the girl's grief subsided. And
+after a while she turned to him and gazed at him through
+her tears.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm&mdash;I'm&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But Bull shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Come. Shall we go and eat?"</p>
+
+<p>He still retained his hold upon her arm. And as he
+spoke he led her unresistingly away towards the camp.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_30"></a>
+<h3>Chapter XXI&mdash;The Man In The Twilight</h3>
+
+
+<p>Bat Harker passed out of the house on the hillside.
+Muffled in heavy furs he stood for a moment filling up the
+storm doorway, gazing out over a desolate prospect, a
+scene of grave-like, significant stillness.</p>
+
+<p>The mills he loved were completely idle. But that
+was not all. He knew them to be at the mercy of an
+army of men who had abandoned their work at the call
+of wanton political and commercial agitators. It was
+disaster, grievous disaster. And he told himself he was
+about to beat a retreat like some hard-pressed general,
+hastily retiring in face of the enemy from a position no
+longer tenable.</p>
+
+<p>There was no yielding in the lumberman. But to a man
+of his forcefulness and headstrong courage the thought
+of retreat was maddening. He was yearning to fight
+in any and every way that offered. He knew that he
+was going to fight this thing out, that his present retreat
+was purely strategic. He knew that the whole campaign
+
+was only just beginning. But it galled his spirit
+that his first move must be a&mdash;retreat.</p>
+
+<p>The late winter day was fiercely threatening, fit setting
+for the disaster that had befallen. The cold was bitterly
+intense, but no more bitter than the lumberman's present
+mood. There down below were the deserted quays
+with their mountains of baled wood-pulp buried deep
+under white drifts of snow. And the voiceless mills
+were similarly half buried. Look where he would the
+scene was dead and deserted. There was not one single
+stirring human figure to break up the desolation of it all.</p>
+
+<p>It was a sad, white, desolate world, which for over
+fifteen years he had known only as a busy hive. Roadways
+should have been clear. Traffic should have been
+speeding, every service, even in the depth of winter,
+should have been in full running. The mills&mdash;those
+wonderful mills&mdash;should have been droning out their
+chorus of human achievement in a world set out for
+Nature's fiercest battle ground.</p>
+
+<p>From the moment of that first encounter in the recreation
+hall Bat had known the strike to be inevitable.
+Bull's swift action at the outset had had its effect. For
+the moment it had checked the movement, and reduced it
+to a simmer. Heat and power had been restored, and
+work had been resumed, and outwardly there had been
+peace. But it was artificial, and the lumberman and
+the engineer had been aware that this was so.</p>
+
+<p>Brief as was the respite it was valuable time to the
+men in control, and they used it to the uttermost. The
+leaders of the strike had been robbed of the advantage
+they had sought from a lightning strike. But they were
+by no means defeated. It was only that they had lost
+a move in the game they had prepared.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of a week Bat awoke one morning to find
+the mills and all traffic at a standstill, and the workers
+skulking within the shelter of their own homes.</p>
+
+
+<p>Then it was that the benefit of a week's respite was
+made plain. Every plan that had been prepared was
+forthwith put into operation. Power and heat were
+again cut off. The loyalists, which included a large
+number of the engineering staff, and the staff of the executive
+offices, were equipped with such weapons as would
+serve, and set guard over the food and liquor stores, and
+the essentials of the mills. And the power house was
+fortified for siege.</p>
+
+<p>But the strikers gave no sign. There was no attempt
+at violence. There was no picketing, and no apparent
+attempt at coercion of the loyalists. It almost seemed
+as if the objects of the leaders had been achieved by the
+simple cessation of work.</p>
+
+<p>This silent condition of the strike had gone on for
+days with exasperating effect upon the defenders. Bat
+endeavoured by every means in his power to bring the
+leaders of the movement into the open to discuss the
+situation. But every effort ended negatively. The men
+would not contemplate the conference table, and finally,
+in headlong mood, the lumberman had committed the
+grave mistake of provocation. He threatened to cut off
+food supplies if the leaders continued in their refusal
+to confer.</p>
+
+<p>Two weeks elapsed before his threat reacted. Two
+weeks of continued silence and apparent inaction by the
+strike leaders. The men's first terror at the loss of heat
+and power seemed to have passed. As Bull had suggested
+they had resorted to the methods of the trail, and
+day and night mighty beacon fires burned along the fore-shores
+of the cove upon which their homes were built.
+The men and women came and went peaceably but silently
+between the food stores and their homes, purchasing
+such provisions as they needed. And the manner of
+it all, the cold silence, should have served a warning of the
+iron hand in exercise behind the strike.</p>
+
+
+<p>The bombshell came at the end of the third week. It
+came in the form of a message crouched in the flamboyant
+phraseology beloved of the Communist fraternity.
+It was conveyed by a small youth some ten years of
+age, as though its authors were fearful lest a full grown
+bearer should be made to suffer for the temerity.</p>
+
+<p>Bat had received it at the office, and his manner had
+been characteristic.</p>
+
+<p>"Fer me, laddie?" he had said, as he took possession
+of the official-looking envelope. Then he gently patted
+the boy's shoulder. "All right, sonny," he added. "You
+get right back to your folks. Pore little bit."</p>
+
+<p>With the boy's departure he had lost no time in reading
+the ultimatum the message contained.</p>
+
+<div class="display">
+<p>"A Soviet has been formed. The Workers will not submit
+to inteference with the food supplies of the people such
+as has been threatened by men who have no right over the life
+and death of their fellows. In view of this threat, the Soviet
+of the Workers has determined to possess itself of the
+mills and all properties pertaining thereto. The whole territories
+and properties hither controlled under a capitalist
+organisation will in future be administered by the Soviet
+or the Workers. You are required, therefore, to hand
+over forthwith all accountings, administration, and all
+funds, all legal documentary titles such as are held by you
+of freeholds and forestry rights relating to Sachigo. Furthermore,
+it is required of you to restore intact the machinery
+of the new power station, and to hand over the whole
+premises in full running order. One week's grace will be
+permitted for the execution of this order. Failing absolute
+compliance, the ruling Soviet of the Workers reserves to
+itself the right of adopting such measures to enforce the
+Will of the Workers as it may deem necessary.</p>
+
+<p>"On behalf of the Soviet of the Workers,</p>
+
+<p>"LEO MURKO,</p>
+
+<p>"Chief Commissionary."</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>At the finish of his reading Bat had looked up into
+the dark face of Pete Loale who was standing by.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Leo Murko?" he said, in an ominously restrained
+tone. "Ther' ain't no guy o' that name on our pay-roll.
+Guess he'll be that feller Bull dropped out into the snow."
+Then with a sudden explosive force: "In God's name
+why in hell didn't he break that skunk's neck?"</p>
+
+<p>The week's grace had expired. It had been a week of
+further hasty preparations. Every day had been used
+to the uttermost, and even far into the night the work
+had gone on. The office on the hill, as well as the executive
+offices down at the mill, had been cleared out. Documents,
+cash, books, safe. Everything of real importance
+had been removed to the citadel power house. The
+mining of the penstocks had been completed, and left
+ready to be blown sky high at a moment's notice. Whatever
+befell, the men who had given their lives to the building
+of the mills were determined that only a useless husk
+should fall into the hands of the strikers.</p>
+
+<p>Now had come the Communists' final declaration of
+war. The message had been brought less than an hour
+ago by the same youth, who had again departed with
+Bat's smiling expression of pity. The letter was ominously
+brief.</p>
+
+<div class="display">
+<p>"The Order of the Soviet of the Workers will be enforced
+forthwith. No mercy will be shown in the event of resistance."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Bat's fury had blazed as he read the message. Again it
+was signed "Leo Murko." How he hated that name.
+He had been alone in the office when the letter came, and
+had seized the 'phone and called up the engineer at the
+power house, and read the message to him. Skert Lawton's
+reply was as instant as it was characteristic.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right," he said. "We're fixed for the scrap.
+Just come right over."</p>
+
+<p>It was this last act that Bat contemplated now. And
+
+he hated it. He knew well enough he must go. There
+was no sane alternative. The power station was the
+prepared fortress. It had everything in it that must be
+guarded and fought for. But his fierce regret was none
+the less for the knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>Then, too, his regret was for something else. It
+was at the absence of Bull Sternford. This was no
+expression of weakness. It was simply he desired the
+man's companionship. They had worked together. They
+had planned and built together. And, now, in the moment
+of battle, it seemed to him they should still be together.</p>
+
+<p>But he knew that was impossible. When Bull's call
+to the forest had come in the night there had been no
+opportunity for explanation. He, Bat, had been engaged
+down at the mill, and the other had been rushed
+in his preparations. Bull had made his farewell to him
+in a great hurry. He had outlined briefly the thing
+happening in the forests. That had been all. That and
+a few words on the affairs of the mill.</p>
+
+<p>How the news had reached Bull, and who the messenger,
+had never transpired between them. Perhaps
+Bull had forgotten to mention it. Perhaps, in the hurry
+of it all, Bat had forgotten to ask. Perhaps, even, the
+messenger himself had impressed secrecy for his visit,
+which had been timed for the dead of night. At any
+rate Bat knew none of these things, and was in no way
+concerned for them. All he was concerned for was the
+absence of the man who was something more to him than
+a mere partner.</p>
+
+<p>Thinking of him now Bat remembered the other's
+final words, and the memory stirred him deeply.</p>
+
+<p>"Remember, old friend," he had said, "young Ray
+Birchall will be over from England at the break of winter.
+On his report to his people depends the whole thing we've
+built up. We've got to have these mills running full when
+
+that boy gets around. There's not a darn thing else
+matters."</p>
+
+<p>It was the final spur. The mills running full. Bat
+spat out his chew, and turned and locked the door behind
+him. Then he moved away hurriedly, gazing straight
+in front of him as though he dared not even think of the
+place he was leaving.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>On the foreshore of the Cove, out towards the guarding
+headlands, half a hundred fires were burning. They
+were immense beacon fires of monstrous proportions.
+Belching columns of smoke clouded the whole region
+till the water-front looked to be in the grip of a forest
+fire.</p>
+
+<p>Men, and women, and children were gathered about
+them. They were basking in a moderation of temperature
+such as their homes could no longer afford them.
+But it was a curious, silent gathering, indifferent to everything
+but the feeding of the fires on which they felt their
+very existence depended.</p>
+
+<p>The forests which supplied the fuel came down to the
+edge of the now idle trolley track. Already acres and
+acres had been felled to feed the insatiable fires. The
+woodland decimated, and the devastation was going on
+in every direction.</p>
+
+<p>About the houses there were others engaged in homely
+chores. There were men, and women, too, clad heavily
+in the thick sheepskin clothing which alone could defeat
+the fierce breath of winter. Here again was silence and
+gloom, and even the children refrained from their accustomed
+pastimes.</p>
+
+<p>A tall, fur-clad figure was moving through the settlement.
+His feet were encased in moccasins, and thick
+felt leggings reached up just below his knees. For the
+rest his nether garments were loose fur trousers, and his
+
+body was covered by a tunic reaching just below his
+middle, with a capacious hood attached to it almost completely
+enveloping his head.</p>
+
+<p>He moved slowly and without any seeming object.
+He passed along, and paused when he encountered either
+man, woman, or child. With the men he spoke longest.
+But the women claimed him, too. And generally he
+left behind him a change of expression for the better in
+those with whom he talked.</p>
+
+<p>He paused beside a small party of elderly men. They
+were at work upon a prone tree trunk of vast girth. They
+were cutting and splitting it, fresh feed for the fires which
+must never be permitted to die down.</p>
+
+<p>The men had ceased work on his approach. But they
+went on almost immediately, all except one. He was
+a grizzled veteran, a man just past middle life. His face
+was deeply lined, and a scrub of whisker protected it from
+the cold. He had been seated on the log, but he stood up
+as the tall man addressed him by name.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll be there, Michael," he said, brushing the frost
+from his darkly whiskered face, and breaking the icicles
+hanging from his fur hood where it almost closed over
+his mouth.</p>
+
+<p>The man's grey eyes were smiling as they looked into
+the wide black eyes so mildly encouraging.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure, Father," came his prompt reply. "We got
+to be ther' anyway. That don't matter. But we're for
+your lead, an' we'll stand by it, sure. There's going to
+be no sort of damn fool mistake this time."</p>
+
+<p>The tall man nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"There must be no mistake this time," he said keenly.
+"Say, how many years is it since I sent you along here
+with a promise of good work and better wages, and a
+square deal?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nigh five years, Father."</p>
+
+<p>"And you got all&mdash;those things?"</p>
+
+
+<p>"Sure. More."</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"And those are the things a man's entitled to. Just
+those," he said. "If a man wants more it's up to him.
+He must earn it in competition with the rest of his fellows.
+If he can't earn it he must do without, or quit the
+honesty that entitles him to hold his head up in the world.
+There's no honesty in the things these men propose."</p>
+
+<p>"That's so, Father."</p>
+
+<p>There was decision in the man's agreement. But even
+as he spoke his gaze wandered in the direction of two
+small children, like bundles of fur, playing in the snow.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor little kids," he said. "Say, it's hell for them
+with heat cut off."</p>
+
+<p>Again the tall man nodded as he followed the other's
+gaze.</p>
+
+<p>"That's so. But I don't blame the mill-bosses. This
+gang is trying to steal from the men who've always handed
+out a straight deal. Do you blame them for defending
+themselves?"</p>
+
+<p>Michael shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see I can. After all&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No. Listen. You boys have it in your own hands.
+These crooks from the Skandinavia got a strangle holt
+on the youngsters of this outfit who've no kiddies like
+those. You older boys let 'em get it. You weren't
+awake. Now you find yourselves caught in the tide.
+We've got to make a break for it. There'll be heat in
+plenty when you break free. Seven o'clock. That's the
+time your masters ordered the meeting for. Seven
+o'clock. That's the time they intend to commit their great
+crime&mdash;with you helping them."</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam smiled as he drove his satire home.</p>
+
+<p>"Not on your life!" The man's grey eyes were fierce.
+"Give us the lead, Father," he cried. "We&mdash;we just
+got to have that. Ther' ain't a real lumber-jack in these
+
+forests won't follow it. It'll be a scrap. A hell of a
+scrap. Oh, I know. Maybe some of us'll never see the
+light of another day. But sure it's got to be. We ought
+to've gone over from the start, and stood by our jobs.
+But I guess none of us with wives and kiddies had the
+guts. They threatened our women and children, an' we
+weakened. But it's different now, sure. We've learned our
+lesson. It's themselves they're out for, an' we'll be their
+dogs to be kicked and bullied as they see fit. We'll
+follow your lead, Father, an' it don't matter a cuss when
+the scrap comes."</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam nodded. His dark eyes were alight with
+something more than the smile shining in them.</p>
+
+<p>"Good," he said. "I shall be there."</p>
+
+<p>He moved away and Michael rejoined his companions.
+They talked together for a moment or two while their
+eyes followed the receding figure. They saw it stop and
+speak to one of their wives. She had a small child with
+her. They saw it bend down into a squatting attitude
+and draw the child towards it. Then they saw a lean
+hand draw out of its mit and proceed to touch a swelling
+on the little mite's neck. They understood. And
+when the figure finally passed on out of sight, they returned
+to their work, each man absorbed in his own
+thought, each man with a surge of deep feeling for that
+lonely figure. For they were all men who knew, and
+understood the man who lived in the twilight of the
+forests.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>The recreation room was packed to suffocation, packed
+from end to end with a human freight. The benches
+were crowded, and the tables groaned under the weight
+of as many rough-clad creatures as could crowd themselves
+thereon. Every inch of floor space was occupied,
+and even the recesses in the log walls which contained
+
+the windows were utilised as sitting places for the audience
+which had gathered at the imperative order of the
+Soviet of the Workers.</p>
+
+<p>Kerosene lamps had replaced the brilliant electric light
+to which the men were accustomed. A haze of tobacco
+smoke created a sort of fog throughout the length of the
+building, and contrived to soften the harsh lines of the
+sea of human faces turned towards the raised platform
+whereon sat the members of the ruling Soviet. The
+temperature of the room was cold for all the warming
+influence of the human gathering, and every man wore
+his fur-lined pea-jacket closely buttoned.</p>
+
+<p>Once, in a light moment, Bull Sternford had declared
+that male human nature in the "bunch" was the ugliest
+thing in the world. Had he witnessed that sea of faces,
+so intently, so anxiously turned towards the leaders
+they had presumably elected, he must have been well
+satisfied with the truth of his conviction.</p>
+
+<p>Such was the ascendancy and power the Bolshevist
+leaders had gained in the brief month since the first
+rumble of industrial war had been heard in Sachigo,
+that there were few who had failed to obey their summons.
+Not only was the hall crowded but a gathering of
+many hundreds waited outside. It was the hour of Fate
+for all. They understood that. It was the hour of that
+Fate which had been decreed by men, who, under the
+guise of democratic selection had usurped a power over
+the rest of the community such as no elected parliament
+of the world had ever been entrusted with.</p>
+
+<p>It was doubtful if the majority fully realised the
+significance of what was being done. It is certain that a
+feeling of deep regret stirred voicelessly in many hearts.
+But every man there was a simple wage earner whose
+horizon was bounded by that which his wage opened
+up. For the rest he was left guessing, but more often
+fearing. So, with his muscles of iron, his human desires,
+
+and his reluctance to apply such untrained reasoning as
+he possessed, he was ripe subject for fluent, unscrupulous,
+political agitators, and ready to sweep along with any
+tide that set in.</p>
+
+<p>The leaders on the platform understood this well
+enough. It was their business to understand it. The
+others, the leaders' immediate supporters, were men of
+fiery youth, or those whose work it was to wreck at all
+costs, and snatch to themselves, in addition to pay for
+their fell work, such loot as the wreckage afforded them.</p>
+
+<p>The hum of talk snuffed right out as the leader rose
+to address the meeting. It was Leo Murko, the same
+man, a hard-faced, foreign-looking Hebrew whom a
+month before Bull's great arms flung through the
+broken window into the snowdrift beyond. His position
+now, however, was far different from that which it
+had been when his endeavours had been concentrated
+upon enrolling a Communist following. All that had
+been achieved or sufficiently so. Now he was the dictator
+whose orders could be backed by an irresistible force.
+His whole manner had changed. The velvet glove of
+persuasion had been discarded, and he hurled his commands
+with deep-throated authority, and the smile of
+encouragement and persuasion was completely abandoned.</p>
+
+<p>His preliminary was brief. A phrase or two of flattery
+and acknowledgment to those on the platform supporting
+him dismissed that. Then he passed on to the objects
+in view. In five minutes he had dismissed also the ultimate
+destiny of the mills, and the manner in which the
+Workers were to benefit by its administration. Then he
+flung himself into a fiery denunciation of all capitalists,
+and particularly those who had dared to employ his
+audience on good wages for something like fifteen years.
+That completed he passed on to the plans for taking
+over the mills forthwith.</p>
+
+<p>During the earlier part of his address the audience
+
+listened with grave attention. Here and there little
+outbursts of applause punctuated his sentences. But
+when he came to the task which had been set for that
+night a deathly silence prevailed everywhere. The
+intensity was added to rather than broken by the harsh
+clearing of throats that came from almost every part of
+the hall.</p>
+
+<p>"The whole thing needs cleaning up before daylight,"
+he hurled at them. "Our organisation is complete.
+Here," and he indicated the table nearby littered with
+papers and surrounded by four or five men who were
+members of the elected Soviet, "we have the lists of
+the names of every comrade, and the numbers of men to
+be used in every detail of the work before us. They have
+been carefully drawn up with a view to the task required
+to be put through. Some tasks will be simple. Some
+will be less so." A grim light that was almost a smile
+shone in his black eyes. "But we have carefully discriminated
+in our personnel. That is as it should be.
+There will be certain bloodshed. Knowing the temperament
+and preparations of your late masters this seems to
+be inevitable. But again we have provided. Our
+greatest and most important task is the possession
+of the power station, and for the capture of that we have
+machine guns which will quickly reduce the enemy to
+capitulation. The strength of the enemy we know to the
+last fraction&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you?"</p>
+
+<p>The challenge came from the back of the hall. It came
+in a quiet, refined voice that swept through the hall with
+the cold cut of a knife. Someone had risen from a sitting
+position on a table. He stood up. It was the tall, dark
+figure of Father Adam clad in a garment which enveloped
+him from head to foot like the black cassock of a priest.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you?" he cried again, as the startled leader
+stared stupidly at the interrupter.</p>
+
+
+<p>Every eye turned to the back of the hall on the instant.
+The men on the platform looked up from their
+work to witness the daring of one who could interrupt
+the elected leader of the people. One man, slight,
+foreign-looking, who had been seated at the back of the
+platform stood up and leant against the wall.</p>
+
+<p>"You know nothing of these people you are determined
+to destroy with machine guns," Father Adam
+went on. "You know nothing of the men with whom
+you are dealing, either the owners of the mill, or the
+men who have found an ample livelihood under their
+organisation. How can you know them? You are
+dastardly agents of an alien company, sent and paid to
+wreck a wholly Canadian enterprise. This is your
+first object. Your second is even more sinister, for you
+are the agents of that mad Leninism which has destroyed
+a whole race of workers in a vast country like Russia.
+You are a supreme pestilence seeking to destroy such
+human nature as will listen to your vile doctrines. It is
+I, I, Father Adam, tell you so. The men here to-night,
+whom you are inciting to theft and brutal murder, know
+me. They know me as their servant, as their loyal
+comrade and helper, ready to answer their call when
+trouble overtakes them, ready to yield them of my best
+service in the day of prosperity or the night of their
+woe. And as it is with them so it is with their women and
+their babes. That's the reason I am here to-night, the
+black night of their woe. And so I ask them to listen
+to me now as they have listened many times before in
+the woods and the mills, which is the world to which
+we all belong. If they do that, if only reason asserts
+itself, they'll here and now turn on you, and rend you,
+you and your wretched gang. They'll cast you out of
+their midst, and fling off a foreign yoke, as they would
+cast out any other unclean pestilence for the purification
+of their homes. They'll pack you out into the
+
+northern night where no foul germs can exist. Are they
+to become thieves at your bidding? Are they to become
+murderers because your foreign money has bought
+them machine guns? Would they go back to their
+women, and their innocent babes, wiping their blood-stained
+hands to ask them to rejoice in the brutal crime
+committed in the name of brotherhood and fellowship?
+No, sir. I know them. You don't&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The Bolshevist flung out a denouncing hand and
+bellowed in his seething wrath:</p>
+
+<p>"Traitor! He is of the Cap&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But immediate uproar drowned his denunciation and
+a great voice shouted in the din.</p>
+
+<p>"Let him speak."</p>
+
+<p>A dozen other voices strove to make themselves heard,
+and a wild pandemonium was rising when clear and sharp
+Father Adam's voice rang out again above it.</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you they'll have no more of you," he cried as
+the leader dropped back to his seat, and the dark man
+at the back of the platform further bestirred himself.
+"Order them now to man your machine guns and murder
+the men in the power house! Give your orders here and
+now! Read out your list of names and see&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>A shot rang out. The flame of a gun leapt somewhere
+at the back of the platform, to be followed by complete,
+utter silence.</p>
+
+<p>Then came a sound. It was a hardly-suppressed
+moan. Father Adam reeled slowly. He half turned
+about. Then he crumpled and dropped to his knees
+and fell forward into hands outstretched to catch him.</p>
+
+<p>Paralysis seemed to grip that dense-packed human
+throng. But it was only for a second. Then the avalanche
+leapt for the abyss.</p>
+
+<p>"Father! Father Adam!"</p>
+
+<p>The cry went up seemingly from a thousand throats.
+
+And with a roar the crowd surged forward. It hurled
+itself at the platform.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Bull stared up at the house. He moved away and
+glanced over the windows. Then his eyes turned to
+the valley below, and his gaze settled itself on the great
+fires burning on the northern foreshore of the Cove.</p>
+
+<p>For some moments he stood contemplating the thing
+he beheld. Then, at last, he turned back to the locked
+door of his office. Without a word he raised one foot,
+and, with all his force, crashed its sole against the lock.</p>
+
+<p>The lock gave and the door fell back into the pitch
+darkness beyond. He passed within. After a while
+a light appeared in the office window. It passed. Then it
+reappeared in each window of the building in succession.
+Presently it remained stationary and fresh lights
+appeared in several of the windows. Minutes later he
+reappeared in the doorway.</p>
+
+<p>He stepped out into the snow and came over to the
+waiting dog train.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a cold sort of welcome," he said quietly. "But&mdash;will
+you please come right in, and I'll see how I can
+fix you up for comfort. I guess things have happened
+since I've been away. They've turned off heat. However&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy McDonald rose from her place in the sled. She
+flung back the wealth of furs under which she had been
+well-nigh buried and stepped out. She made no reply,
+but stood waiting while Bull gave orders to his driver.</p>
+
+<p>"Get those dogs fixed, Gouter," he said. "Then
+come right along back here. You'll need to gather
+fuel and set those stoves going."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>A great fire was roaring in the wood stove in the office.
+Nancy and Bull were standing before it seeking to drive
+
+out the cold which seemed to have eaten into their
+bones. Bull had drawn up his own rocker-chair for the
+girl but she had not availed herself of it.</p>
+
+<p>"You are not going to keep me here, prisoner in&mdash;your
+house?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl spoke in a low, hushed tone. In the indifferent
+lamp-light she looked ghastly pale and utterly weary-eyed.
+She had removed her furs, revealing herself clad
+in the heavy clothing which alone could have served
+on her desperate journey through the camps. It robbed
+her figure of much of its usual grace.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I am." Bull smiled gently, for all the
+decision of his words. "You see, Nancy, we're still at
+war. Still fighting the battle that others have forced
+on us."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy inclined her head.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd forgotten," she said almost humbly. "But
+you have no women folk around you," she went on
+urgently a moment later. "Does war mean that&mdash;that I
+must submit even&mdash;to that?"</p>
+
+<p>It was the woman in her that had taken alarm. Her
+hands were pressed together as she held them over the
+stove. The man understood. She moved away to the
+window, over which the curtains had not been drawn,
+and Bull watched her.</p>
+
+<p>"Every respect will be paid you," he said. "You've
+nothing to fear. When Gouter returns he'll get food,
+and we'll make the best preparations we can. I've
+to consider others with more at stake than even I."</p>
+
+<p>"Look!"</p>
+
+<p>The girl had turned. Her eyes were wide with terror.
+She was pointing at the window, and Bull hurried to her
+side.</p>
+
+<p>A great fire was raging on the north shore of the Cove.
+It was the recreation room, that room which Bat had
+so bitterly come to hate. It was ablaze from end to
+
+end, and lit up its neighbourhood so that the scene was
+of daylight clearness. A horde of human figures were
+gathered about it, in a struggling, seething mass, and
+the man realised that a battle was raging, a human
+battle, whilst the demon of fire was left to work its will.</p>
+
+<p>He stood there, held speechless by the thing he beheld.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it? What does it mean?"</p>
+
+<p>Panic drove the questions to the girl's lips. And she
+turned in an agony of appeal to the man beside her.</p>
+
+<p>"It means the work of the Skandinavia has been well
+and truly done."</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_31"></a>
+<h3>Chapter XXII&mdash;Dawn</h3>
+
+
+<p>The hush of dawn was unbroken. The shadows of
+night receded slowly, reluctantly renouncing their long
+reign in favour of the brief winter daylight. The shores
+of the Cove lay hidden under a haze of fog.</p>
+
+<p>There were no sounds of life. The world was desperately
+still. No cry of wild fowl rose to greet the day.
+There was not even the doleful cry of belated wolf, or
+the snapping bark of foraging coyote to indicate those
+conditions of life which never change in the northern
+wilderness. It was as if the world of snow and ice were
+waking to a day of complete mourning, a day of bitter
+reckoning for the tumult of furious human passions,
+which, under the cloak of night, had been loosed to work
+the evil of men's will.</p>
+
+<p>With the first gleam of the rising sun a breeze leapt out
+of the east. It came with an edge like the keenest knife,
+and ripped the fog to ribbons. It churned and tangled it.
+Then it flung it clear of its path, leaving bare the scene
+of wreckage which the rage of battle had produced.</p>
+
+<p>It was a scene for pity and regret. Gone was the
+
+building which had been set up for the workers' recreation.
+Only a smoking ruin remained in its place. A dozen
+other buildings in the neighbourhood bore the scars of
+fire, which they would doubtless carry for all time of
+their service. The mill, however, was safe. The work
+of more than fifteen years remaining intact. But it had
+been so near, so very near to complete destruction.</p>
+
+<p>With the passing of the fog further disaster was revealed.
+It was the wreck of human life which the night
+had produced. Daylight had made it possible to deal
+with the injured and those beyond all human aid. And
+the work was going forward in the almost voiceless
+fashion which the presence of death ever imposes on
+the living.</p>
+
+<p>Viewed even from a distance there could be no mistaking
+the meaning, the hideous significance of it all. And
+Nancy, gazing from a window in the house on the hill,
+shrank in terror before that which she believed to be the
+result of the cruel work to which she had lent herself.</p>
+
+<p>It had been a dreary, heartbreaking night of sleepless
+watching and poignant feeling. Nancy was alone in her
+prison, a beautiful apartment, the best in the house. Bull
+Sternford had conducted her thither personally, and, in
+doing so, had told her the thing he was doing, and of his
+real desire to save her unnecessary distress.</p>
+
+<p>"You see," he had explained, with a gentleness which
+Nancy felt she had no right to expect, "there's just
+about the best of everything right here. It's as it was
+left by the feller who designed and decorated it for the
+woman he loved better than anything in life. No one's
+ever used it since. I'd be glad for you to have it. We've
+only a Chink servant to wait around on us, and a rough
+choreman, and I guess they don't know a thing about
+fixing things for a woman. But they've kept it clean
+and wholesome, and that's all I can say. Can you make
+out in it to-night?"</p>
+
+
+<p>He smiled. Then his steady eyes had turned away
+to the window where the light of the raging fire could be
+seen. And after a moment he went on.</p>
+
+<p>"You're a prisoner. I can't help that. That's got
+to be. But no lock or bolt will be set to keep you here.
+You're free to come and go as you choose. You can
+make the doors of the room fast against intrusion, if you
+feel that way. But there'll be none. To-night you'll
+just be dead alone in the place. You see, I've got to
+get out and pull my weight down there."</p>
+
+<p>So he had left her. He had left her to a punishment
+more desperate than anything he could have designed.
+Her windows looked out over the mill. And a subtle
+force attracted her thereto, and held her sleepless and
+despairing the whole night long. She had been forced to
+sit there watching the tragedy being enacted. A tragedy
+with which she knew she was connected, and for which,
+in her exaggerated self-condemnation, she believed herself
+responsible.</p>
+
+<p>The agony of that prolonged vigil would never be forgotten.
+Fascinated, dreading, every act of it seared the
+girl's soul as with a red hot brand. It was the Skandinavia's
+work. The agents of the Skandinavia. And she
+knew that she, perhaps, was their principal agent. The
+rattle of machine guns. The human slaughter. She had
+witnessed the terror of it all in the fierce light of the
+conflagration which looked to be devouring the whole
+world of the mills. She could never forget it. She could
+never forgive herself her share in the ghastly plans for that
+hideous destruction. But more than all she knew she
+could never forgive, or again associate herself with those
+who had designed the inhuman work of it all and plunged
+her into the maelstrom of its execution.</p>
+
+<p>Now, in the daylight, she was still at the window.
+There was no relief. On the contrary. With the smoke
+cleared from the smouldering ruins she saw the full extent
+
+of the wreckage. It was sprawling everywhere,
+human and material. An army of men, it seemed, was
+searching the battlefield. It was searching and collecting
+amongst the ruins. And she watched the bearing away
+on improvised stretchers, of still, helpless, human burdens
+which none could mistake. She could bear no more of it.
+She shut out the sight and fled from the window, covering
+her eyes with her hands.</p>
+
+<p>But she was recalled almost instantly. The sound of
+men's rough voices startled her. Whence came the sound
+she could not judge. But it seemed to her it was from
+somewhere outside. So she stealthily peered out. It was
+a small group of fur-clad figures. They were approaching
+the house over the snowy trail that came up from the
+mill.</p>
+
+<p>New terror leapt. They were supporting a prone,
+human body! They were bringing it up to the house!
+Who&mdash;who could they be bringing up to that house, which
+was the home and the office of the master of the mill?
+In that supreme moment all that which had gone before
+was completely forgotten. She stood clutching at the
+window casing, in a desperate effort to steady herself.</p>
+
+<p>She knew. Oh, yes, it could be no other. It must be
+Bull Sternford they were bringing up. Bull Sternford&mdash;the
+man who&mdash;The agents of the Skandinavia had
+done him to death! The agents of the Skandinavia!</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Bat Harker was standing at the window of the office
+on the hill. His hard, grey eyes were searching the distance
+below, and his square jaws were busy on their usual
+occupation. Bull was sitting in a rocker-chair. He was
+leaning forward, gazing down at the thickly carpeted
+floor, and his hands were clasped between his outspread
+knees. Both men were dishevelled. Their clothing was
+stained, and their hands and faces were begrimed as a
+result of the fierce work of the night.</p>
+
+
+<p>Bat suddenly turned from his silent scrutiny.</p>
+
+<p>"He'll pull around? You think so?" he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>There was an appeal in his harsh voice such as Bull
+had never heard in it before, and he looked up with a
+start.</p>
+
+<p>"That's how Jason reckoned," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, to hell with Jason!" Bat's retort was fiercely
+uncompromising. "Who's Jason anyway? A medical
+student who hadn't the guts for his job. Leastways he
+got on the crook. It's the thing you reckon I want to
+know."</p>
+
+<p>"I reckon he'll pull around," Bull returned quietly.
+Then he stirred wearily. "But you're hard on young
+Jason, Bat. He's bright enough. I like the way he
+handles his job. And anyway he's the only feller around
+this layout with any knowledge of a sick man. He's
+qualified you know. He wasn't just a student. He practised
+before he went down and out and took to the
+forests. We've got to rely on him till we get a man up
+from Montreal, which won't be for weeks. He'll be
+through along from fixing him in a while. Then we can
+hear the thing he's got to say. Maybe we'll be able to
+judge better then."</p>
+
+<p>"I wired Montreal," Bat said sharply.</p>
+
+<p>"Good."</p>
+
+<p>The lumberman turned again to his window, and Bull
+continued to regard the carpet which had no interest for
+him. Both were weary, utterly weary in body as well as
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>It was full, broad daylight now, with the low, northern
+sun gleaming athwart the scene which these men had
+so recently left. They were conscious of the victory
+gained. They rejoiced in the complete defeat of an
+enemy who had come so near to defeating all their plans.
+But the cost appalled them. They had both faced the play
+of machine guns. They had seen their men fall to the
+
+scythe-like mowing of a cruel weapon of which its victims
+had no understanding. Then, when the machine guns had
+been silenced, they had witnessed the rage with which these
+hard-living jacks had meted out their ideas of just
+punishment upon the murderers of their comrades.</p>
+
+<p>The wanton inhumanity of the whole thing had sickened
+them both. Both knew and were indifferent to the roughness
+of the fierce northland. But the ordeal through which
+they had passed was something far beyond the darkest
+vision of conflict they had ever contemplated.</p>
+
+<p>Neither had been present to witness the shooting of
+Father Adam. But both had been there within minutes
+of the beginning of the battle which it had started. From
+the power house Bat had discovered the thing happening,
+just as Bull had seen from the window of his office the
+leaping flames which had threatened the mill. It had been
+largely due to their timely leadership that ultimate victory
+had been snatched. But the work of it had been terrible.</p>
+
+<p>Now they had returned to their quarters, their night's
+work completed. Down below comrade was attending to
+comrade in such fashion as lay to hand, and those beyond
+earthly aid were being disposed to their last rest.
+Thus these men had been left free to succour the wounded
+creature whose timely lead had made possible the defeat
+that had been inflicted.</p>
+
+<p>Bat had but one concern just now. Father Adam.
+The man whose secret he held. The man who counted
+for everything in his rugged life. He raised his blood-shot
+eyes to his companion's face.</p>
+
+<p>"If&mdash;Father Adam&mdash;passes, I'm done with Sachigo,
+Bull," he declared almost desperately. "It 'ud break me
+to death. You can't know the thing that feller means to
+me. You know him for the sort of missioner all these
+folks guess he is. That's how he'd have you know him.
+And it goes with me all the time. But I know him just as
+he is."</p>
+
+
+<p>Bull nodded. He made no reply. He knew the lumberman
+was well-nigh beside himself, and he gazed back into
+the hot eyes and wondered.</p>
+
+<p>But Bat had nothing more to say. He even felt he
+had said more than he had any right to say. So he
+turned again to the window.</p>
+
+<p>A few moments later the door communicating with
+the house was unceremoniously thrust open. The two
+men looked round. It was a youngish man dressed in the
+overalls of an engineer who hurried in. He was alert
+and full of business; a condition which he seemed to
+appreciate.</p>
+
+<p>"It's all right, boss," he cried cheerfully, addressing
+himself to Bat. "Guess the good Father'll get away with
+it. He's out of his dope an' smiling plenty. I jerked
+that darn plug that holed him right out, an' it's a soft-nosed
+swine. I left it back there for you to see. The
+feller who dropped him deserves rat poison. I hope to
+God they got him. Anyway I got the wound cleaned up
+and fixed things. Now we just got to keep it clean and
+open, and watch his temperature. Then we don't need to
+worry a thing. I'll do that. But someone'll have to sit
+around and nurse him. I'll have to get along down.
+There's nigh a hundred needin' me. Gee I An' after all
+these years, too. It makes me wonder."</p>
+
+<p>There was a smile of keen appreciation in the eyes
+that looked into those of the lumberman. And the look
+deepened when Bat thrust out a large and dirty hand
+at him.</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, boy," he said, in obvious relief. "I'm goin'
+to nurse that pore feller. Maybe I ain't much in that
+line. But I'll promise he don't lack a thing I can hand
+him. Here, shake. You'll be along to fix him again?"</p>
+
+<p>"Right on time," was the quick rejoinder.</p>
+
+<p>Jason had readily enough gripped the outstretched
+hand. Then he hurried away. And neither of the men
+
+begrudged him the obvious vanity which his momentary
+importance had inflamed.</p>
+
+<p>With the man's going Bull passed a hand back over
+his ample hair.</p>
+
+<p>"God!" he exclaimed wearily. "It's been a tough
+night."</p>
+
+<p>"Tough?"</p>
+
+<p>Bat's response spoke a whole world of feeling. He
+moved from his window and flung himself into a chair.</p>
+
+<p>"He saved us," he went on. "Father Adam. He
+saved the whole of our darn outfit. How he did it I don't
+just know. Maybe I'll never know. He don't talk a lot.
+I gathered something of it from the boys. But there
+wasn't time for talk." He shook his grizzled head. "You
+see, I didn't even know he was around. And you never
+told me it was him brought you word from the camps.
+He must have been at work around from the start. He
+must have got hold of a bunch of the boys he knew. And
+when he got 'em right, why&mdash;Say, I'd have given a
+thousand dollars to have heard him fire his dope at that
+lousy gang. It must have been pretty. But they got
+him. And I guess that was the craziest thing they did.
+The fool man who could shoot up Father Adam in face
+of the forest-boys could only be fit for the bughouse."</p>
+
+<p>He sighed. It was not for the man's madness in
+shooting, but for the hurt inflicted. Then a grim, vengeful
+smile lit his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I guess there ain't a single agent of the Skandinavia
+down there left with a puff of wind in his rotten
+carcase. The boys were plumb crazed for their blood
+an' got right up to their necks in it. I'm glad. I'm&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, forget it, man." Bull spoke sharply. "There's
+things we can take a joy in remembering. But this isn't
+one of 'em. No. The thing for us now is work. Plenty
+of work. The mill needs to be in full work inside a
+week. We haven't an hour to lose, with young Birchall
+
+coming along over. Skert's promised us power in twenty-four
+hours. He's at it right now. The camps on the
+river'll be working full, and making up lost time. The
+rest's up to us right here. But&mdash;but," he added, passing
+a hand nervously across his forehead, "I've got to get
+sleep or I'll go stark crazy."</p>
+
+<p>Bat eyed the younger man seriously. It was the first
+time he had realised his condition. His sympathy found
+the rough expression of a nod.</p>
+
+<p>"You had a hell of a time up there," he said.</p>
+
+<p>Bull laughed. There was no mirth in his laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"It was tough all right. I wonder if you'd guess how
+tough." He shook his head. "No. You wouldn't. You
+reckon Father Adam's a pretty good man, but I tell you
+right here you don't know how good, or the thing he did
+for us single-handed. I know&mdash;now. He set me wise
+to it all, and didn't leave me a thing to do but make the
+trail he'd set for me. It was an easy play dealing with the
+fool forest-jacks who'd swallowed the Skandinavia's dope.
+Yes. That was easy," he added thoughtfully. "But that
+was just the start of the game. Father Adam had located
+the trail of the outfit the Skandinavia had sent and it was
+my job to come right up with 'em and silence 'em."</p>
+
+<p>He broke off and sat staring straight in front of him.
+His fine eyes were half smiling for all the weariness he
+complained of. He yawned.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I hit that trail," he went on presently. "I hit
+it, and hung to it like a she-wolf out for offal. I just
+never quit. It was that way I forgot sleep. It wasn't
+till between No. 10 and 11 Camps we got sight. We were
+out in the open, up on the high land. We'd a run of fifty
+mile ahead of the dogs. When we got sight that boy
+Gouter was after 'em like a red-hot devil. Drive? Gee,
+how he drove!"</p>
+
+<p>Again came the man's mirthless laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"There's things in life seem mighty queer at times.
+
+It was that way then. There was a man I wanted to kill
+once bad. Guess I've never quit wanting to kill him,
+though I'm glad Father Adam saved me from doing it.
+He was Laval&mdash;Arden Laval, one of the Skandinavia's
+camp-bosses. Well, I saw him killed on that trip, and I
+helped bury him in the snow. Gouter drew on him on the
+dead run at fifty yards. He dropped him cold, and
+wrecked the outfit the feller was driving. There were two
+in the bunch that the Skandinavia sent there to raise
+trouble for us. Laval and another. Laval's dead, and
+the other we brought right along as prisoner. That
+other's here in this&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>A light knock interrupted the story. Bull turned with
+a start. Then he sprang to his feet, every sign of weariness
+gone. He stood for a moment as though in doubt.
+And the lumberman, watching him, remarked the complete
+transformation that had taken place. He was smiling.
+His straining eyes had softened to a tenderness the onlooker
+failed to understand.</p>
+
+<p>He moved swiftly across the room and flung open
+the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you come right in?"</p>
+
+<p>The lumberman heard the invitation. The tone was
+deep with a gentleness he had never before discovered in
+it. And in his wonder he craned to see who it was who
+had inspired it.</p>
+
+<p>Bull moved aside.</p>
+
+<p>It was then that Bat started up from his chair, and a
+sharp ejaculation broke from him. Nancy McDonald
+was standing framed in the doorway.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_32"></a>
+<h3>Chapter XXIII&mdash;Nancy</h3>
+
+
+<p>Bat was hurrying down the woodland trail. For once
+in his hard life he knew the meaning of rank cowardice.
+
+The sight of Nancy McDonald had completely robbed
+him of the last vestige of courage. The atmosphere of
+the office, that room so crowded with absorbing memories
+for him, had suddenly seemed to threaten suffocation.
+He felt he must get out. He must seek the cold, crisp
+air of the world he knew and understood. So he had fled.</p>
+
+<p>Now he was alone with a riot of thought that was
+almost chaotic. There was only one thing that stood
+out clearly, definitely, in his mind. It was the Nemesis
+of the thing that had happened. It was Nemesis with
+a vengeance.</p>
+
+<p>His busy jaws worked furiously under his emotion. He
+spat, and spat again, into the soft white snow. Once
+he stopped abruptly and gazed back over the circuitous
+trail. It was as though he must look again upon the
+thing that had so deeply stirred him, as though he must
+look upon it to reassure himself that he was not dreaming.
+That the thing had driven him headlong was real,
+and not some troublesome hallucination.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy McDonald! The beautiful stepdaughter of
+Leslie Standing, with her red hair and pretty eyes, was
+the agent of the Skandinavia, paid to wreck the great
+work he and Leslie had set up. She was paid to achieve
+the destruction at&mdash;any cost.</p>
+
+<p>It was amazing. It was overwhelming. It was even&mdash;terrible.</p>
+
+<p>He pursued his way with hurried steps. And as he
+went his mind leapt back to the time when he had made
+his great appeal for the poor, deserted child shut up in
+the coldly correct halls of Marypoint College. What an
+irony it all seemed now. Then he remembered her first
+coming to Sachigo, and the mystery of the letter from
+Father Adam heralding her arrival. He had understood
+the moment Nancy had announced her name to him on the
+quay. He had understood the thought, the hope which
+had inspired the letter.</p>
+
+
+<p>In his rugged heart he had welcomed the letter which
+Father Adam had written. He had welcomed the girl's
+first coming to the place he felt should be her inheritance.
+He had seen in those things the promise of the belated
+justice for which years ago he had appealed. Father
+Adam had asked Bull to receive her well. Why? There
+was only one answer to that in the lumberman's mind.
+Father Adam had seen her. He understood her beauty,
+and had fallen for it. What more reasonable then that
+Bull should do the same.</p>
+
+<p>But that was all past and done with now. All the
+things he had dreamed of, and so ardently desired, had
+been lost through a mischievous Fate. The neglected stepdaughter
+of Leslie Standing was body and soul part of
+their enemy's armament of offence. It was all too crazy.
+It was all too devilish for calm contemplation.</p>
+
+<p>The sight of the girl's pathetic eyes, so weary, so
+troubled, had been sufficient. Bat could not have remained
+in that room another minute. No. Down at the
+mill were the things he understood. They were the things
+he was bred to, and could deal with. These others were
+something that left him hopeless and helpless. So he
+went, determined to lay the ghost of the thing behind him
+in the tremendous effort the necessities of the mill demanded
+he should put forth.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Bull's emotions were deeply stirred. He gazed into
+the tired eyes of the girl, so beautiful for all their complete
+dejection. He marked the cold pallor of her cheeks,
+and realised the dishevelled condition of her glorious
+masses of hair. An intense pity left him gravely troubled.</p>
+
+<p>As Nancy stood gazing up at the man, complete hopelessness
+oppressed her. She remembered well enough
+the declaration of war between them. She remembered,
+too, that it had meant nothing personal when it was made.
+At the time she had had no inkling of the terrible thing it
+
+could mean, or how nearly it could bring them into real,
+personal conflict.</p>
+
+<p>She had been wholly unprepared for the demand that
+had been thrust upon her by the man, Peterman. It had
+frightened her at first. She had shrunk from it. Then,
+finally, she had accepted it as her duty, under pressure.
+Peterman had made it appear so trifling. A journey, a
+trying journey, perhaps, but one to be made with all the
+comfort he could provide. And then to preach to those
+ignorant forest-men the disaster towards which their
+employers were heading. As Peterman had put it, it had
+almost seemed a legitimate thing to do. Convinced as
+she had been of the disaster about to fall on Sachigo, it
+had seemed as if she were even doing them a service.</p>
+
+<p>Had she been able to search Peterman's mind she would
+never have taken part in the dastardly thing he had
+planned. Had she been able to read him she would have
+quickly discovered the real motive he had in sending her.
+She would have discovered the furious jealousy and
+wounded vanity which meant her to be a prime instrument
+in the wrecking of Bull Sternford and his mills. She
+would have realised the devilish ingenuity with which he
+intended to wreck her friendship with another man so that
+he might the more truly claim her for himself. But she
+had no suspicion, and had blindly yielded herself to the
+duty she believed to be hers.</p>
+
+<p>After Bat's hurried departure Bull cast about in his
+mind for the thing to say to her. And somehow, without
+realising it, the right words sprang to his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"We won!" he said. And the smile accompanying
+his words was one of gentle raillery, and suggested nothing
+of the real tragedy of the thing that had happened.</p>
+
+<p>The girl's eyes widened. She strove to understand the
+dreadful lightness with which Bull spoke. Victory?
+Defeat? At that moment they were the two things
+furthest from her mind.</p>
+
+
+<p>Bull drew forward a chair, and gently insisted. And
+Nancy, accepting it, realised in a dull sort of way that
+it was the chair she had occupied at the time of her first
+visit, which now seemed so far, far back in her memory.
+Bull sat again in his rocker. He leant forward.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," he went on, "we've won out. Your Skandinavia's
+beaten. Beaten a mile. We've won, too, at less
+cost than I hoped. Does it grieve you?"</p>
+
+<p>There was no softness or yielding in his tone. It was
+as he intended; the tone of a man who cares only that
+victory has been won. Nancy shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm&mdash;I'm glad," she said desperately.</p>
+
+<p>"Glad?" Bull was startled.</p>
+
+<p>The girl made a little involuntary movement. She
+averted her gaze to the window through which the wintry
+sunlight was pouring.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, don't you understand? Can't you? Is the victory
+so much to you that you have no thought, no feeling, for
+the suffering it has brought? Are you so hard set on your
+purpose of achievement that nothing else matters? Oh,
+it's all dreadful. I used to feel that way. I counted no cost.
+Achievement? It was everything to me. And now, now
+that I know the thing it means I feel I&mdash;I want to die."</p>
+
+<p>Bull took a strong hold upon himself.</p>
+
+<p>"I know," he said slowly. "You see, Nancy, you're
+just a woman. You're just as tender and gentle&mdash;and&mdash;womanly,
+as God made you to be. He gave you a beautiful
+woman's heart, and a courage that was quite wonderful
+till it came into conflict with your heart. You had no
+right to be flung into this thing. And only a man of
+Peterman's lack of scruple could have done such a thing.
+Well, I'm not going to preach a long sermon, but I want
+to tell you some of the things I've got in my mind before
+I get the sleep I need. God knows that none of this thing
+you're blaming yourself for lies at your door. It would
+all have happened without you. Peterman designed it,
+
+and put it through for all he was worth. Now I want to
+say I'm glad&mdash;glad of it all. I've no pity for the Bolshevic
+dregs of Europe he employed. They were out for loot,
+they were out to grab the things and the power that other
+folks set up. Any old death that hit them they amply
+deserved. As for our folk who've gone under&mdash;well, we
+mustn't think too deeply that way. We all took our
+chances, and some had to go. I was ready to go. So was
+Bat. So were we all. We wanted victory, and we
+wanted it for those who survived. We honour our dead,
+but our lives must not be clouded by their going. It's
+war&mdash;human war. And just as long as the world lasts
+that war will always be. Good and bad men will die, and
+good and bad women will suffer at the sight. But for
+God's sake have done with the notion that you&mdash;you have
+anything to take to yourself, except that you've fought a
+good fight, and&mdash;lost. It sounds like the devil talking,
+doesn't it? Maybe you'll think me a monster of heartlessness.
+I'm not."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I wish I could feel all that," Nancy exclaimed
+with an impulse which a few moments before must have
+been impossible.</p>
+
+<p>"You can." Bull nodded. "You will."</p>
+
+<p>"You think so?" Nancy sighed. "I wish I could."
+Suddenly she spread out her hands in a little pathetic
+gesture. "Oh, it all seems wrong. Everything. What
+am I to do? What can I do? I&mdash;I can't even think.
+Whichever way I look it all seems so black and hopeless.
+You think I can&mdash;will?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull's sympathy would no longer be denied. He rose
+from his chair and moved to the window. His face
+was hidden from the troubled eyes that watched him.
+But his voice came back infinite in its gentleness.</p>
+
+<p>"You want to do something," he said. "You want to
+give expression to the woman in you. And when that
+has happened it'll make you feel&mdash;better. I know."</p>
+
+
+<p>He nodded. Suddenly he turned back to her, and stood
+smiling down into her anxious eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me," he went on, "what is it you want to do?
+You're no prisoner now. The war's finished. You're
+just as free as air to come and go as you please. You
+can return to Quebec the moment you desire, and the <em>Myra</em>
+comes along up. And everything I can possibly arrange
+shall be done for your happiness and comfort. When
+would you like to go?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"I wasn't thinking of that."</p>
+
+<p>"I knew that," Bull smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Father Adam. He's in the house there sick and
+wounded," Nancy hurried on. "I know him. I&mdash;may I
+nurse him back to health and strength. May I try that
+way to teach myself I'm not the thing I think and feel.
+Oh, let me be of use. Let me help to undo the thing I've
+done so much to bring about."</p>
+
+<p>The girl's hands were thrust out, and her eyes were
+shining. Never in his life had Bull experienced such an
+appeal. Never in his life had he been so near to reckless
+disregard for all restraint. He came nearer to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Surely you may do that," he said. "And I just want
+to thank you from the bottom of my unfeeling heart for
+the thought that prompts you. We haven't a soul here
+to do it right&mdash;to do it as you can. And Father Adam is
+a mighty precious life to us all&mdash;in Sachigo."</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_33"></a>
+<h3>Chapter XXIV&mdash;The Coming Of Spring</h3>
+
+
+<p>It had been a hard day. Bull Sternford had spent it
+dealing with complicated financial schedules, an amazing,
+turbulent sea of figures, until his powers and patience
+had temporarily exhausted themselves.</p>
+
+
+<p>In a final fit of irritation he had flung his work aside,
+and risen from his desk. The insufferable heat of the
+room, and the reek of his own pipe disgusted him. So
+he had moved over to the window where the cold air of
+early spring drifted in through the open ventilating slot
+in the storm sash.</p>
+
+<p>His gaze was on the Cove below, where the snow-laden
+ice was discoloured by the moist slush of thaw, and
+the open waters, far down towards the distant headlands,
+had so deeply encroached upon the claims of winter.</p>
+
+<p>A great, premature thaw had set in. It was the real
+spring thaw a month or more early. Skert Lawton, who
+controlled the water power of the mill, had warned him
+of its coming. Bat too had spoken out of his years of
+experience of the moods of Labrador's seasons. But
+somehow the sight of it all gave him none of the joy with
+which it had inspired the others.</p>
+
+<p>The evil night of threatened disaster had become only
+a memory. Nearly six weeks had passed since Nancy
+McDonald had craved the privilege of caring for the man
+who had so nearly given his life in the saving of the mill
+and all the great purpose it represented. Now he was
+mercifully returned to health and strength under the devoted
+care that had been bestowed upon him. The mill
+was again in full work. And the human army it employed
+had returned to their peace-time labours in the full determination
+to undo the grievous hurt which the mischief of
+the Skandinavia's agents and their own folly had inflicted.
+In the relief of reaction, they, no less than their employers,
+had redoubled their efforts.</p>
+
+<p>All outward sign of the trouble through which the
+mill had passed had long since been cleared away under
+the driving power of the forceful Bat Harker. The scars
+of fire remained here and there. But they were no more
+than a reminder for those who were ready to forget the
+folly they had once committed.</p>
+
+
+<p>Everything was moving on now as Bull and his comrades
+would have had it. Only that morning word had
+come through that Ray Birchall was on his way from
+London for the purpose of his report, and expected to
+reach Sachigo in three weeks' time. Could anything,
+then, be better than this early thaw? It was a veritable
+act of Providence that the London man's inspection of
+the mills, and all the property involved would take place
+under the most active conditions.</p>
+
+<p>It should have been a time of rejoicing and mental
+ease. It should have been a time of stirring hope. A
+moment for complaisant contemplation of a great purpose
+achieved. But the man at the window regarded the
+thing he looked upon without any display of pleasurable
+feeling. The sight of it literally seemed to deepen the
+unease which looked out of his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of Bull's pre-occupation the door from
+the outer office was thrust open, and Bat Harker's harsh
+voice jarred the silence of the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Gettin' a peek at things," he cried, stumping heavily
+across the thick carpet. "Well, it looks good to me, too.
+Say, if this lasts just one week we'll be as clear of snow
+as hell's sidewalks." Then he flung open his rough pea-jacket
+and pushed his cap back from his lined forehead.
+"Gee, it's hot!"</p>
+
+<p>The lumberman was standing at Bull's side, and his
+deep-set eyes were following the other's gaze with twinkling
+satisfaction. Bull nodded and moved away.</p>
+
+<p>"Yep," he ejaculated. "It should be good for us."</p>
+
+<p>He passed over to the radiators and shut them off.
+Then he went over to the wood-stove and closed down the
+dampers. Then, with a curious absent-mindedness, he
+stood up and held out his hands to the warmth radiating
+from the stove.</p>
+
+<p>Bat was watching him interestedly. And at sight of
+
+his final attitude he broke into one of his infrequent
+chuckles and flung himself into a chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, what in&mdash;? Feeling cold?" he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>Bull's hands were promptly withdrawn, and, in spite
+of his mood, a half smile at his own expense lit his troubled
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right," he said. "It's on me, sure. I
+guess my head must be full of those figures still."</p>
+
+<p>He returned to the window and stood with his back
+to his companion. Bat watched him for some moments.</p>
+
+<p>Bull had changed considerably in the last few weeks.
+The lumberman had been swift to observe it. Somehow
+the old enthusiasm had faded out. The keen fighting
+nature he had become accustomed to, with its tendency to
+swift, almost reckless action, had become less marked.
+The man was altogether less buoyant.</p>
+
+<p>At first it had seemed to Bat's searching mind as if
+the effects of that desperate trip through the forests,
+and the subsequent battle down at the mill, had left its
+mark upon him, had somehow wrought one of those
+curious, weakening changes in the spirit of the man
+which seemed so unaccountable. Later, however, he dismissed
+the idea for a shrewder and better understanding.</p>
+
+<p>He helped himself to a chew of tobacco and kicked a
+cuspidore within his reach.</p>
+
+<p>"The fire-bugs are out," he said. "The last of 'em.
+I jest got word through. It's the seventh. An' it's the
+tally."</p>
+
+<p>It was a sharp, matter-of-fact statement. He was
+telling of a human killing, and there was no softening.</p>
+
+<p>Bull nodded. He glanced over his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>"They shot five of 'em to death. The last two they
+hanged." A grim set of the jaws, as Bat made the
+announcement, was his only expression of feeling.</p>
+
+<p>"Makes you wonder," he went on, after a pause.
+
+"Makes you think of the days when locomotives didn't
+run. Makes you think of the days when life was just a
+pretty mean gamble with most of the odds dead against
+you. It don't sound like these Sunday School days
+when the world sits around, framed in a fancy-coloured
+halo, that couldn't stand for any wash-tub, talkin' brotherhood
+an' human sympathy. It's tough when you think
+of the bunch that sent those boys to fire our limits. They
+knew the full crime of it, and knew the thing it would
+mean if we got hands on 'em. Well, there it is. We
+got 'em. An' now ther' ain't a mother's son of 'em left
+alive to tell the yarn of it all. It's been just cold, bloody
+murder. An' the murder ain't on us. No, I guess the darn
+savage eatin' hashed missioner ain't as bad a proposition
+as the civilised guys who paid the price to get those
+toughs killed up in our forests. I can't feel no sort of
+regret. It won't hand me a half-hour nightmare. But
+it makes me wonder. It surely does."</p>
+
+<p>He spat accurately into the cuspidore.</p>
+
+<p>"Does the report hand you anything else?" Bull asked,
+without turning. The other noticed the complete lack
+of real interest. He shrugged.</p>
+
+<p>"The camps are all in full cut. They're not a cord
+behind."</p>
+
+<p>Bat looked for a word, the lighting of an eye. There
+was none. And he stirred in his chair, and exasperation
+drove him.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't it make you feel good?" he demanded sharply.
+"It's the last guess answered, unless there's a guess when
+that boy, Birchall, comes along. Anyway, you don't figger
+ther's much guess to that, with the mill runnin' full, an'
+
+every boom crashed full of logs. No. Here, Bull!"
+he cried, with sudden vehemence. "Turn around, man.
+Turn right around an' get a grip on it all. The game's
+won to the last detail. Can't you feel good? Can't you
+feel like a feller gettin' out into the light after years of
+
+the darkest hell? Don't it make you want to holler?
+Ain't there a thing I can say to boost you? The boys
+down at the mill are hoggin' work. The groundwood's
+on the quays like mountains. The mills are roaring like
+blast furnaces. Can you beat it? Spring. The flies an'
+skitters, an' shipping. Why, in a week I guess Father
+Adam'll be hittin the trail for the forests, an'&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Nancy McDonald will be sailing for Quebec."</p>
+
+<p>Bat was no longer gazing on the other's broad back
+and the mane of hair which did its best to conceal his
+massive neck. Bull had turned. His strong face was
+flushed. His fine eyes were hot. There could be no mistaking
+the passionate emotion which the other had stirred.</p>
+
+<p>The two men gazed into each other's eyes. Then with
+a curiously expressive gesture of his great hands Bull
+turned to the chair standing near, and flung himself into it.</p>
+
+<p>The lumberman's eyes twinkled. He had done the
+thing he desired. "An' you don't want her to?" he said
+deliberately.</p>
+
+<p>Just for a moment it looked as though a headlong
+outburst was about to reply to him. Then, quite suddenly,
+the hot light in Bull's eyes died out and he smiled.
+He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said in simple denial. "If she goes it means
+the end of Sachigo for me."</p>
+
+<p>"You reckon you'll quit?"</p>
+
+<p>In a moment the lumberman remembered a scene which
+had been enacted years ago on the high ground on the
+north shore of the Cove. He would never forget it. It
+had been the final decision of another to quit Sachigo.
+And the reason had been not dissimilar.</p>
+
+<p>There was no reply. Bull sat staring blankly in front
+of him. His eyes were on the wintry sky which was still
+broad with the light of day beyond the window.</p>
+
+<p>Presently his gaze lost its abstraction and came again
+to the strong, lined face of the older man.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Yes, Bat," he said calmly, almost coldly, "I'd have
+to quit. I just couldn't stand for it. Nancy's got right
+into my life. She's the only thing I can see&mdash;now."</p>
+
+<p>"Fer all she's a kind of prisoner right here, caught
+red-hand doin' the damnedest she knows to break us in
+favour of the outfit that pays her?"</p>
+
+<p>Bat smiled as he flung his challenge. But his tone,
+his words, were no indication of his mood, or of the rapid
+thought passing behind his shrewd eyes. A great sense
+of pleasure was asurge within him. He wanted to tell
+of it. He wanted to reach out and grip the other's hand,
+and tell him all that his words meant to him. But he
+refrained. Another man's secret was involved, and that
+was sufficient. His lips were sealed.</p>
+
+<p>Bull stirred restlessly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, psha!" he cried at last, with a force that displayed
+the tremendous feeling he could no longer deny.
+"I know what you think, Bat. I'm crazy. Well, maybe
+I am. Most men get crazy one time in their lives when
+a woman gets around. It's no use. I just can't help it.
+I know all you're thinking. Nancy McDonald belongs to
+our enemies. As you say she's done her damnedest to
+break us. Maybe you reckon I ought to feel for her like
+the devil does about holy water. Well, I don't. I'm
+plumb crazy for her, and when spring clears up the waters
+of the Cove, and the <em>Myra</em> comes alongside, she's going
+right aboard, and will pass out of Labrador and out of
+my life. I'm never going to get another sight of her.
+I'm never going to get another sound of her dandy voice,
+or a sight of her pretty eyes, and&mdash;Hell! What's the use.
+Oh, I know it all. You've no need to tell me. We've
+made good. We've fought and won out. My contract's
+complete, and everything's looking just as good for us
+as it knows how&mdash;now. This mill. It's ours. Yours, and
+mine, and that other's, who I don't know about. All I've
+to do is to sit around with the plums lying in my lap.
+
+Well, I don't want those plums without Nancy. That's
+all. I don't want a thing&mdash;without Nancy. All the dollars
+in America can burn in hell for all I care, and as for
+groundwood pulp it's a damp mess of fool stuff that
+don't signify to me if it finds its way to the bottom of the
+North Atlantic. An added month of open season? What
+does it mean to me? Work. Only work, and flies, and
+skitters. An added month of 'em. Father Adam's a
+whole man again now, thanks to that dandy child. He'll
+pull right out to the forests again, and&mdash;she'll pull out
+too. I&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right," Bat broke in drily. "I get all that.
+But why not marry the gal? Marry her an' quit all this
+darn argument. I guess this mill's goin' to hand you all
+you need to keep a wife on. That seems to me the
+natural answer to the stuff that's worryin' you."</p>
+
+<p>His eyes twinkled as he regarded the other's troubled
+face.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it?"</p>
+
+<p>Bull was on his feet. Hot, desperate irritation lay behind
+the retort which Bat's gentle sarcasm had drawn
+forth. His eyes were alight, and he passed an unsteady
+hand across his forehead in a superlatively impatient
+gesture.</p>
+
+<p>"Marry her?" he exploded. "Say, are you every sort
+of darn fool on God's earth, man? How can I hope to
+marry her? What sort of use can a girl like that have for
+the man who's beat her right out of everything she ever
+hoped to achieve? I've had to treat her like any old
+criminal, and hold her prisoner. I've brought her right
+down here leaving her in a man's household without
+another woman in sight. Say, these cursed mills have
+made it so I've had to commit every sort of rotten act a
+man can commit against a high-spirited girl. And you ask
+me why I don't marry her? You've been too long in the
+forests, Bat. Guess you've lost your perspective. Nancy
+
+McDonald's no sort of chattel to be dealt with any way we
+fancy. Get sense, man, an' talk it."</p>
+
+<p>Bat's regard was unwavering before the other's angry
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Sense is a hell of a good thing to have an' talk," he
+said quietly. "I most generally notice the feller yearnin'
+for someone else to get it an' talk that way, mostly has
+least use for the thing he's preachin'. Maybe Nancy
+feels the way you reckon. But that don't seem to me
+to worry a deal. Still, maybe things have changed around
+since the days when I hadn't sense to keep out of gunshot
+of a pair of dandy eyes. And anyway I don't seem to
+remember the boys bein' worried with the sort of argument
+you're handing out. If my memory's as good as I
+reckon, the boys most gener'ly married the gal first, an'
+
+got busy wonderin' about things after. All of which
+seems like so much hoss sense, seem' the natur' of things
+is that most gals needs their minds made up for 'em. You
+see, Bull, I kind o' fancy womenfolk ain't just ord'nary.
+They got a bug that makes 'em think queer wher' men are
+concerned. Now Nancy's all sorts of a gal, an' that bein'
+
+so I don't reckon she sees the hell-fire crimes you've committed
+against her just the way you see 'em. I allow
+they're pretty darn tough. Shootin' up her outfit an'
+dumpin' her into a snowdrift up on Labrador's mighty
+hard sort of courtin'. Grabbin' her up an' settin' her
+hospital nurse to her enemies, in a house full of a bunch
+of tough men don't seem the surest way to make her smile
+on the feller that did it. Then most generally beatin' the
+game she set out to play looks like makin' fer trouble
+plenty. It sure seems that way. But you never can tell
+with a woman, Bull. You just can't."</p>
+
+<p>Bat shook his grizzled head in solemn denial, but his
+eyes were laughing. Bull smothered his resentment. He,
+too, shook his head, and somehow caught the infection
+of the other's smile.</p>
+
+
+<p>"But she's ambitious," he said. "And she isn't the
+sort of girl to take that easily. No."</p>
+
+<p>Bat nodded and rose from his chair. Something of
+his purpose had been achieved and he was satisfied. He
+felt he had said all that was needed for the moment. So
+he prepared to take his departure.</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe that's so, boy," he agreed readily. "But ambition's
+a thing that changes with most every wind. That
+don't worry me a thing. Say, you've sort of opened out
+about this thing to me, an' I ain't sure why. But I kind
+of feel good about it. You're younger than me by years
+I don't fancy reckonin'. I feel like I was an elder brother,
+an' I'm glad. Well, that bein' so, I'd like to say right here
+ther's just one ambition in a woman's life that counts.
+And she mostly gits it when she hits up against the feller
+that's got the guts to make her think his way. When that
+happens I guess you can roll up every other old schedule,
+an' pass it into the beater to make new paper. It's the only
+use for it. See? But I 'low I don't know women like I
+do groundwood, which was the stuff that fetched me here
+right now. You see, I was feelin' good about things, an'
+
+I fancied handin' you the news of them 'fire-bugs' myself.
+Guess it hasn't handed you any sort of delirium so far,
+Bull, but it will later. I allow ther' ain't room for two
+fevers at the same time in a man's body. When you've
+set Nancy McDonald figgerin' your way, your temperature's
+liable to go up on the other. So long, boy."</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_34"></a>
+<h3>Chapter XXV&mdash;Nancy's Decision</h3>
+
+
+<p>With the lengthening days the world of Labrador was
+already donning its brief, annual smile. But the passing
+of winter was no easy thing. There had been rain and
+"freeze-up," and rain again. And the whole countryside
+
+was a dripping, melting sea of wintry slush. The
+sun was rising higher in the steely heavens with each
+passing day, but winter was still reluctant. It passed on
+to its dissolution only under irresistible pressure.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy, no less than Father Adam and those others, to
+whom the early thaw meant so much, watched the passing
+of winter with the closest interest. But her interest owed
+its origin to a far different inspiration. She knew it
+meant that her time at Sachigo was nearing its end, and
+the future with all its barrenness was staring at her.</p>
+
+<p>She moved restlessly about the large kitchen while
+the Chinaman, Won-Li, was preparing toast over the
+cook stove. She stood awhile at the window and watched
+the winging of a seemingly endless flight of early geese
+passing up from the South. Then she turned away and
+glanced about the scrupulously clean and neat apartment.
+It was so very different from the place she had first
+discovered weeks ago.</p>
+
+<p>After awhile she took up her position against the kitchen
+table, and stood there with her gaze upon the bent figure
+of the cook in its long, blue blouse. But she was scarcely
+interested in the man's labours. She was not even waiting
+for him to complete them. She was just thinking,
+filled with apprehension and without confidence. Her
+mind was made up to a definite purpose whose seeming
+immensity left her staggered.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy was no longer the distraught creature who had
+witnessed the terrible night of fire and battle down at
+the mill. Many weeks had passed since then. Weeks
+full of mental, bodily, and spiritual effort. From the
+first dark moments when she had begged the privilege
+of nursing the wounded missionary, broken in spirit, a
+beautiful creature well-nigh demented with the horror of
+the thing she believed herself to be, the woman soul of her
+had found a measure of peace.</p>
+
+<p>It had been slow in coming. There had been moments
+
+when she had nearly broken under the burden of conscience.
+There had been moments when the weight of
+unutterable depression, and the sense of guilt, had come
+near to robbing her of her last shred of mental balance.
+But the woman's mission of nursing had saved her in the
+end. That, and the physical effort to which she had
+applied herself.</p>
+
+<p>It was all so single-minded and simple. It was all so
+beautifully pathetic. Nancy had found a careless household
+rapidly decaying through mannish indifference to
+comfort. She understood. These men were completely
+absorbed in the service of the great mills, and nothing
+else mattered to them. Oh, yes, that was understandable.
+She knew the feeling. She knew how it robbed its victim
+of every other consideration in life. So she had flung
+herself into the task of re-ordering the household of which
+she had been forced to become a part, that she might yield
+them comfort in their labours and help herself in her own
+effort to obtain peace of mind.</p>
+
+<p>She had transformed an untidy, uncared-for bachelor
+habitation into a wholesome, clean establishment of well-ordered
+life. She had lifted a lazy Chinaman into a
+reasonable specimen of comparative energy, and saw to
+it that meals were well and carefully served, and partaken
+of at regular hours by men who quickly discovered the
+futility of protest.</p>
+
+<p>But her work by no means ended there. From one
+end to the other the house was swept and garnished, and
+the neglect of years disposed of. Bedrooms were transformed
+from mere sleeping places to luxury. Linen was
+duly laundered, and clothing was brushed, and folded, and
+mended in a fashion such as its owners had never thought
+possible. She was utterly untiring in her labours, and
+in the process of them she steadily moved on towards the
+thing she craved for herself.</p>
+
+<p>The men realised the tremendous effort of it all. And
+
+Bull Sternford, for all his absorption in his work, had
+watched with troubled feelings. His love for Nancy had
+perhaps robbed him of that vision which should have
+told him of the necessity, in her own interests, for that
+which the girl was doing. So there were times when
+he had protested, times when he felt that simple humanity
+demanded that she should not be permitted to submit
+herself to so rough a slavery. But Nancy had countered
+every protest with an irresistible appeal.</p>
+
+<p>"Please, please don't stop me," she had cried, almost
+tearfully. "It's just all I can do. It's my only hope.
+Always, till now, I've lived for myself and ambitions.
+You know where they have led me&mdash;Ah, no. Let me
+go on in my own way. Let me nurse him back to health.
+Let me do these things. However little I'm able to do
+there's some measure of peace in the doing of it."</p>
+
+<p>So the days and weeks had dragged on, and now the
+time of Nancy's imprisonment was drawing to its inevitable
+close. With Spring, and the coming of the
+<em>Myra</em>, she would have to accept her freedom and all it
+meant. She would be expected to return to her home in
+Quebec, and to those who had employed her and sent her
+on her godless mission. She understood that. But she
+had no intention of returning to Quebec. She had no
+intention of returning to the Skandinavia.</p>
+
+<p>During the long hours of her labours she had searched
+deeply for the thing the future must hold for her. It
+was the old process over again. That great searching
+she had once done at Marypoint. But now it was all
+different. There had been no sense of guilt then, and
+the only man who had been concerned in her life had
+been that unknown stepfather, whom, in her child's
+heart, she had learned to hate. It had been simple
+enough then. Now&mdash;now&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>But she had faced the task with all the splendid, impetuous
+courage that was hers. There was no shrinking.
+
+Her mind was swiftly and irrevocably made up. She
+would abandon the Skandinavia for ever. She would
+abandon everything and follow those dictates which had
+prompted her so often in the past. Father Adam's self-sacrificing
+example was always before her. The forests.
+Those submerged legions which peopled them. Was there
+not some means by which she could join in the work of
+rescue? She would talk to Father Adam. She felt he
+would help her. She wanted nothing for herself. If only
+the rest of her life could be translated into some small
+imitation of the life of that good man, then, indeed, she
+felt her atonement might be counted as something commensurate.</p>
+
+<p>It was not until her decision had been taken that she
+permitted herself to seek beyond it. But once it was
+taken the crushing sense of added desolation well-nigh
+paralysed her. Somehow, never before had she understood.
+But now&mdash;now the sacrifice of it all swept upon
+her with an overwhelming rush. Bull Sternford. Bull
+Sternford, the man whom with all her power she had
+striven to defeat, the man whose strength and force of
+character had so appealed to her, the man who must hate
+her as any clean-minded man must hate a loathsome reptile,
+she would never see him again.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, she knew now. She made no attempt at denial.
+It would have been quite useless. She loved him. From
+the moment she had looked into his honest eyes, and
+realised his kindly purpose on her behalf at their first
+meeting, she had loved him. She must cut him out of
+her life. It was the penalty she must pay for her crimes.</p>
+
+<p>And now the moment had arrived when she must put
+her plans into operation. Time was pressing. The season
+was advancing. So she had chosen the hour at which she
+served tea to Father Adam as the best in which to seek
+his advice and support.</p>
+
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>The light tap on Father Adam's door was answered
+instantly. Nancy passed into the room with trepidation
+in her heart, but the hand bearing the tea tray was
+without a tremor.</p>
+
+<p>The man whose life belonged to the twilight of the
+northern forests was seated in a deep rocker-chair under
+the window through which the setting sun was pouring
+its pleasant spring light. He had been reading. But
+his book was laid aside instantly, and he stood up and
+smiled the thanks which his words hastily poured forth.</p>
+
+<p>"You know, Nancy, you're completely spoiling me,"
+he said. "I'm going to hate my forest coffee out of a
+rusty pannikin. I don't know how I'm going on when I
+pull my freight out of here."</p>
+
+<p>The girl's responsive smile faded abruptly as she set
+the tray on the table beside the chair.</p>
+
+<p>"When are you going to&mdash;pull your freight?" she
+asked, with a curious, nervous abruptness.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment the man's eyes were averted. Then he
+straightened up his tall, somewhat stooping figure. He
+flung his lean shoulders back, and opened his arms wide.
+And as he did so he laughed in the pleasant fashion which
+Nancy had grown accustomed to.</p>
+
+<p>He was the picture of complete health. His dark face
+was pale. His black hair and sparse beard were untouched
+by any sign of the passage of years. There
+was not an ounce of superfluous flesh under the curiously
+clerical garments he lived in.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, right away, child," he said, with simple confidence.
+"I'll just need to wait for a brief 'freeze-up'
+to get through the mud around Sachigo. Once on the
+highlands inside there'll be snow and ice for six weeks or
+more. I told Sternford this morning I was ready to
+pull out. You see, thanks to you I've cheated the folk
+who reckoned to silence me. I'm well, and strong, and
+the boys of the forest are&mdash;needing me. Every day I
+
+remain now I'll be getting soft under the unfailing kindness
+of my nurse."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy poured out the tea. There were two cups on
+the tray and the man was swift to notice it. She smiled
+up at him.</p>
+
+<p>"Won't you sit down?" she urged. "You see, I've
+brought a cup for myself. I&mdash;I want to have a long
+talk with you. I, too, have got to 'pull my freight.'"</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam obeyed. His dark eyes were deeply
+observant as he surveyed the pretty face with its red
+glory of hair. That which was passing in his mind
+found no betrayal. But his thought had suddenly leapt,
+and he waited.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy passed him his cup and set the toast within
+his reach. Then she pulled up a chair for herself and
+sat down before the tea tray.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she went on, "that's why I brought my cup. I
+must get away." She smiled a little wistfully. "My
+imprisonment is over. Mr. Sternford set me free long
+ago, but&mdash;well, anyway I'm going now, and that's why
+I wanted to talk to you."</p>
+
+<p>She seemed to find the whole thing an effort. But as
+the man's dark eyes remained regarding her, and no
+word of his came to help her, she was forced to go on.</p>
+
+<p>"You know my story," she said. "You've heard
+it all from Mr. Sternford. I know that. You told me
+so, didn't you?"</p>
+
+<p>The man inclined his dark head.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said. "I know your story&mdash;all of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes." The girl's tea remained untouched. Suddenly
+she raised one delicate hand and passed her finger
+tips across her forehead. It was a gesture of uncertainty.
+Then, quite suddenly, it fell back into her
+lap, and, in a moment, her hands were tightly clasped.
+"Oh, I best tell you at once. Never, never, never as
+long as I live can I go back to the Skandinavia. All the
+
+years I've been with them I've just been lost in a sort
+of dream world of ambition. I haven't seen a thing
+outside it. I've just been a blind, selfish woman who
+believed in everybody, and most of all in herself and her
+selfish aims. Can you understand? Will you? Oh,
+now I know all it meant. Now I know the crime of it.
+And the horror of the thing I've done, and been, has
+well-nigh broken my heart. Oh, I'm not really bad,
+indeed I'm not. I didn't know. I didn't understand.
+I can never forgive myself. Never, never! And when
+I think of the blood that has been shed as the result of
+my work&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No." The man's voice broke in sharply. "Put
+that right out of your mind, child. None of the blood
+shed is your doing. None of it lies at your door. It
+lies at the door of others. It lies at the door of two men
+only. The man who first set up this great mill at Sachigo,
+and the man whose hate of him desired its destruction.
+The rest, you, those others, Bull Sternford and Harker,
+here, are simply the pawns in the battle which owes
+its inception to those things that happened years ago.
+I tell you solemnly, child, no living soul but those two, and
+chiefly the first of the two, are to blame for the things
+that have happened to-day. Set your mind easy. No
+one blames you. No one ever will blame you. Not even
+the great God to whom we all have to answer. I know
+the whole story of it. It is my life to know the story of
+these forests. Set your mind at rest."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I wish I could think so. I wish I could believe.
+I feel, I feel you are telling me this to comfort me. But
+you wouldn't just do that?"</p>
+
+<p>The man shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"It's the simple truth," he said. Then he reached
+for his tea and drank it quickly. "But tell me. You
+will never go back to the Skandinavia? I&mdash;am glad.
+What will you do?"</p>
+
+
+<p>"That's why I've come to you now."</p>
+
+<p>The tension had eased. Nancy's distress gave way
+before the man's strong words of comfort. She, too,
+drank her tea. Then she went on.</p>
+
+<p>"You know, Father&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The man stirred in his chair. It was a movement of
+sudden restlessness as if that appellation on her lips
+disturbed him.</p>
+
+<p>"&mdash;I want to&mdash;I want to&mdash;Oh, how can I tell you?
+You are doing the thing I want to help in. All my life
+I felt the time would come when I must devote myself
+to the service and welfare of others. I think it's bred
+in me. My father, my real father, he, too, gave up his
+life to those who could not help themselves. Well,
+I want to do the same in however humble fashion. These
+men, these wonderful men of the forests whom you
+spend your life in succouring. Can I not serve them,
+too? Is there no place for me under your leadership?
+Can I not go out into the forests? I am strong. I am
+strong to face anything, any hardship. I have no fear.
+The call of these forests has got right into my blood.
+Don't deny me," she appealed. "Don't tell me I'm
+just a woman with no strength to withstand the rigours
+of the winter. I couldn't stand that. I have the strength,
+and I have the will. Can you? Will you help me?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl's appeal was spoken with all the ardour of
+youthful passion. There was no sham in it. No hysterical
+impulse. It was irresistibly real.</p>
+
+<p>The man's eyes were deeply regarding her. But he
+was thinking far less of her words than of the girl herself.
+Her amazing beauty, the passionate youth and strength.
+The perfection of her splendid womanhood. These
+things held him, and his mind travelled swiftly back over
+years to other scenes and other emotions.</p>
+
+<p>When at last he spoke his words came slowly and were
+carefully considered.</p>
+
+
+<p>"I think, perhaps, I can help you," he said. "You
+are determined? You want to help those who need
+help? The men of the forests?" He shook his head.
+"I don't see why you shouldn't help the men of these
+forests who&mdash;need your help."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy drew a deep breath. A wonderful smile sprang
+into her pretty eyes. It was a glad smile of thanks such
+as no words of hers could have expressed.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, thank you, Father&mdash;thank you."</p>
+
+<p>Again came the man's restless movement at the word
+"Father." He abruptly leant forward and held his
+cup out for replenishment.</p>
+
+<p>"May I?" he asked. Then his smile broke out again.
+"But tell me," he went on. "What have you done about
+the Skandinavia?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy returned him his cup with an unsteady hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing? But you must communicate with them.
+You should write and tell them of your decision. You
+should tell them you don't intend to return to them."</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam sipped his tea. He was watching intently
+but unobtrusively the transparent display of
+emotions which his words had conjured.</p>
+
+<p>"I hadn't thought about it," Nancy said at last, not
+without some disappointment. "Do you really think
+I should write? But it will take so long to reach them.
+I can't wait for that. It&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Wire."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I suppose I could&mdash;wire."</p>
+
+<p>"Sternford will have it sent for you."</p>
+
+<p>In a moment the light of hope died out of the girl's
+eyes. The excited flush on her cheeks paled. And the
+man saw, and read the sign he beheld.</p>
+
+<p>He waited. But Nancy remained silent, crushed
+under the feeling of utter desolation to which the mention
+of Bull Sternford's name had reduced her.</p>
+
+
+<p>Father Adam set his cup down.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't let the sending of that message worry, child,"
+he said quickly. "These people deserve no better treatment
+after the thing they've done to you. All you need
+say is, 'You will accept my resignation forthwith.'"
+Write that out on a piece of paper, and sign it. Then
+take it along to Mr. Sternford. Tell him of your decision,
+and ask him to have it sent by the wireless. He'll do it,
+my dear. And after that&mdash;why, after that, if you still
+feel the same about things, and want to turn missionary
+in the lumber camps, come right back to me here, and
+I'll do for you as you ask. It's a great thought, Nancy,
+and I honour you for it. It's a hard, desperate sort of
+life, without comfort or earthly reward. Once the twilight
+of the forest claims you, and its people know you,
+there's nothing to do but to go on and on to the end.
+Will you go&mdash;and send just that message?"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy inclined her head.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I'll go right away, just as soon as I've taken
+this tray back."</p>
+
+<p>She rose abruptly. She gathered the remains of the
+meal on to the tray and picked it up. And the manner
+of her movements betrayed her. She stood for a moment,
+and the man saw the struggle for composure that was
+going on behind her pretty eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Father," she said at last, and the man abruptly
+rose from his chair and moved away, "I just can't thank
+you&mdash;for this. It's given me fresh hope. A hope I never
+thought would be mine. Some day&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Her voice broke and the man turned at once. He was
+smiling again.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't say a word, my dear. Not a word. Go and
+write that message, and take it to Sternford. And then&mdash;why&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He moved over to the door and held it open for her.
+As she passed out he nodded kindly, and looked after
+
+her till she vanished into the kitchen at the end of the
+passage.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam was alone again in the room that had
+been his for so many weeks. The door was closed and
+he stood at the window gazing out at the dreary world
+beyond. But he saw nothing of it. He was thinking
+with the speed of a mind chafing at delay. He was
+wondering and hoping, and&mdash;fearing.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_35"></a>
+<h3>Chapter XXVI&mdash;The Message</h3>
+
+
+<p>It was a woman of desperately fortified resolve who
+turned the handle of the office door in response to Bull
+Sternford's peremptory summons. The thought of the
+coming interview terrified Nancy, and her terror had
+nothing whatever to do with the sending of her message.</p>
+
+<p>Bull failed to look up from the mass of papers that
+littered his desk. His sharp "Well," as Nancy approached
+him, was utterly impatient at the interruption. And its
+effect was crushing upon the girl in her present dispirited
+mood. She felt like headlong flight. She stood her
+ground, however, and the sound of her little nervous
+clearing of the throat came to the man at the table.</p>
+
+<p>Bull looked up. In an instant his whole attitude
+underwent a complete change. His eyes lit, and he
+sprang from his seat behind the desk. He came towards
+the shrinking girl, eager and smiling with the
+welcome his love inspired.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, say, Nancy," he cried. "I just hadn't a
+notion it was you. I was up to my neck in all this stuff,"
+he said, indicating the litter on his desk, "and I hadn't
+a thought but it was the darn Chink come to worry
+with food." He laughed. "You certainly have handed
+
+me some scare since you got a grip on our crazy household.
+I've got a nightmare all the time I've got to eat.
+And the trouble is I'd hate to miss any of it. Will
+you come right over to the window and sit? There's
+daylight enough still. We don't need to use Skert's
+electric juice till we have to. I'm real glad you came
+along."</p>
+
+<p>The man's delight was transparent. Nancy remained
+unresponsive, however. She was blind to everything
+but the thing she had come to do, and the hopelessness
+that weighed so heavily upon her.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry," she said simply, accepting the chair he
+set for her. "I didn't think you'd&mdash;you see, I waited
+till I guessed you'd be through. But I won't keep you.
+It's just a small favour, that's all."</p>
+
+<p>Bull observed her closely. She was so amazingly and
+completely charming. She was no longer clad in the rough,
+warm garments of the trail. Even the cotton overall
+she used in the work of the house had been removed.
+Now a dainty frock, that had no relation to the rigours
+of Labrador, displayed the delicate beauty of her figure,
+and perfectly harmonised with the colouring of her
+wonderful hair. Somehow it seemed to the man her beauty
+had intensified in its appeal since the day of her
+supreme confidence in the cause for which she had so
+devotedly fought.</p>
+
+<p>"A favour?" he laughed. "Why, I'm just glad."</p>
+
+<p>Even while he spoke Bull remembered his talk with
+Bat Harker when he had listened to a wealth of pitying
+comment upon the feelings and opinions he had then
+laid bare. The girl's unsmiling eyes troubled him.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the favour?" he asked simply, as Nancy
+remained silent.</p>
+
+<p>The girl started. She had turned to the evening
+light pouring in through the window. Her thought had
+wandered to that grim, dark future when the twilit forests
+
+would close about her, and the strong tones of this man's
+voice would never again be able to reach her.</p>
+
+<p>She drew a folded paper from the bosom of her frock.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you let them send it for me&mdash;wireless?" she
+asked timidly. "It's&mdash;it's to Mr. Peterman."</p>
+
+<p>All Bull's desire to smile had passed. He nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said. "If you wish it. It shall be sent
+right off."</p>
+
+<p>His tone had suddenly lost its warmth. It seemed as
+if the mention of Peterman's name had destroyed his
+goodwill.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy searched his face anxiously. The man's brows
+had depressed and his strong jaws had become set. She
+knew that expression. Usually it was the prelude to
+uncompromising action.</p>
+
+<p>She drew a deep breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I know," she cried. "I know the thing you're
+thinking. You're reminding yourself of all I've done,
+and of the injury I've striven to inflict on you. You're
+wondering at my temerity in asking you to help me communicate
+with your enemies. But please, please don't
+think worse of me than you can help. I'm not just
+trying to use you. It's not that. Will you read the
+message? Maybe it'll tell you better than any words
+of mine."</p>
+
+<p>The paper was held out to him in an unsteady hand.
+Bull ignored it. He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy sprang to her feet.</p>
+
+<p>"But you must read it," she cried. "If you don't I&mdash;oh,
+I won't send it. I couldn't. Don't make me sorry
+I asked this favour. It is so little to you, and&mdash;and
+it means so much to me."</p>
+
+<p>She stood waiting, but Bull showed no sign of yielding.
+He was thinking of the man, Peterman. He remembered
+his good-looking Teutonic face, and the favour
+
+with which Nancy had seemed to regard him. A
+smouldering jealousy had suddenly blazed up within him.</p>
+
+<p>Nancy turned away in desperation. She moved to
+depart.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry," she said. And even in her trouble there
+was a coldness in her tone no less than his.</p>
+
+<p>Bull choked down his feelings.</p>
+
+<p>"Please don't go," he cried, urgently. "It would
+please me very much to have that message sent. Say,
+I wasn't thinking the way you reckoned. I wasn't
+thinking of the message at all."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you will read it?" The girl came back readily.</p>
+
+<p>"Why should I?" Bull asked smilingly. "Say, a
+friend asking me to send a message for him, a message
+no concern of mine, what would you think, what would
+he feel, if I demanded to read its contents?"</p>
+
+<p>He ran the fingers of one hand through his mane of
+hair and stood smiling down into the girl's pretty eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"You know this thing makes me want to talk. I've
+just got to talk. The position's sort of impossible as
+it stands. Maybe you don't guess the thing I'm feeling,
+and maybe I don't just know how it is with you. We've
+got to talk right out and show down our hands. If we
+don't&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He turned away and glanced out of window. Then
+his eyes came back claimed by the magnetism which the
+girl exercised.</p>
+
+<p>"You know, Nancy, our war is over. The war between
+you and me. We declared war, didn't we? We
+declared it in Quebec, and we both promised to do our
+best, or&mdash;worst. It was a sort of compact. We made
+it meaning it, and understanding the meaning of it.
+If you got the drop on me you were to use it. The
+same with me. It was one of those friendly things,
+between friends, which might easily mean life or death.
+We knew that, and were ready to stand just for whatever
+
+came along. Well, we fought our battle. It's over.
+It's done. Now for God's sake let's forget it. It's
+easy for me. You see, I'm a rough, hard sort of product
+of these forests that doesn't worry with scruples and
+things. I'm not a woman who's full of the notions
+belonging to her sex. I can wipe the whole thing out
+of my mind. I can feel glad for the scrap you put up.
+I can think one hell of a great piece of you for it. Maybe
+it's different with you, being a woman. I guess it's
+not going to be easy forgiving the way I had to handle
+you back out there on the trail. Or the way you were
+forced to live our camp life on the way down here. Or
+how I've had to hold you prisoner in a rough household
+of rougher men. I get all that. I know the thing it
+is to a woman. All it means. Still, it must have been
+plain to you the chances of that sort of thing before you
+started in. That is if I was worth my salt as a fighter.
+Well, can you kind of forgive it? Can't you try to
+forget? Can't you figger the whole darn thing's past
+and done with, and we're back at where we were in those
+days in Quebec, when you didn't hate me to death, and
+felt good taking dinner in my company? Say, do you
+remember the old <em>Myra</em> you'll soon be boarding again?
+You remember our talk on the deck, when the howling
+gale hit us? We were talking of the sense of things
+in Nature, and how she mussed them up. And how
+we'd have done a heap better if the job had been ours.
+Well?" His smile deepened. "Here we are standing
+in the sort of fool position of&mdash;what'll I call it? Antagonism?
+Anyway we agreed to fight, and stand for all
+it meant to us, and we're both feeling all broken up at
+the way we had to act to hurt each other most." He
+shook his head. "Where's our boasted sense of things?
+We ought to be sitting right here talking it over, and
+laughing to beat the band, that I had to treat you like
+a dangerous bunch of goods li'ble to get me by the
+
+throat, and choke the life out of me, while you were
+chasing every old notion folks could stuff into your
+dandy head to set me broke and busted so I wouldn't
+know where to collect a square feed once a week. That's
+what we ought to be doing, if we had the sense we guess.
+Instead of that you're feeling badly at me for the things
+I had to do to you. And I'm worried to death I'll
+never get a laugh from you for the fool talk I don't know
+better than to make. You need me to send that message
+to Peterman. Why, sure I'll send it, even if it's to tell
+him how mighty glad you are to be quitting the prison
+I'd condemned you to, and the joy it's going to hand
+you to see his darnation Teuton face again. Sure I'll
+send it. It's the least I can do to make up to you for
+those things I've done to you. But&mdash;but for God's sake
+don't ask me to read it."</p>
+
+<p>The man concluded with a gesture that betrayed his
+real feelings. He was in desperate earnest for all his
+attempt at lightness. His words came swiftly, in that
+headlong fashion so characteristic of his most earnest
+mood. And Nancy listening to him, caught something
+of that which lay behind them. The faintest shadow
+of a smile struggled into her eyes. She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't a thought in my head about you&mdash;that
+way," she said. "It's not been that way with me. No."
+She averted her gaze from the eager eyes before her.
+"It's the thing I've done and been. It's the thing you,
+and every other honest creature, must feel about me.
+Oh, don't you see? The killing, the bloodshed and
+suffering&mdash;But I can't talk about it even now. It's
+all too dreadful still. I'm quitting when Father Adam
+goes, and&mdash;and&mdash;But believe me no judgment you
+can pass on me can begin to express the thing I feel
+about myself. Please don't think I bear one single hard
+thought against you."</p>
+
+<p>The man laughed outright. The buoyancy of that
+
+moment was supreme. Bat Harker was again in his
+mind. Bat, with all his quaint, crude philosophy.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, that beats everything," Bull cried. "My judgment
+of you. And all this time I've been guessing&mdash;Oh,
+hell! Say, do you know, it gets me bad when I
+think of you going back to Peterman and his crew?
+It sets me well-nigh crazy. Oh, I know. I've no right.
+None at all. But it don't make me feel any better.
+Here, I'll tell you about it. I'm not going to take to
+myself virtues I don't possess, and have no right to
+anyway. I wanted to win out in the fight against the
+Skandinavia because I'm a bit of a fighting machine.
+I wanted to win out for the dollars I'm going to help
+myself to. But I also wanted to win out because of the
+great big purpose that lies behind these mills of Sachigo.
+I want you to get right inside my mind on that thing so
+you'll know one of the reasons why I hate that you're
+sending word to Peterman. You'll maybe understand
+then the thing that made me fight you, a woman, as well
+as the others, and treat you in a fashion that's made me
+hate myself ever since. I'm going to say it as bluntly
+as I know how. It'll be like beating you, a helpless
+victim, right over the head with a club. I've acted the
+brute right along to you, an' I s'pose I best finish up
+that way. You were doing your best to sell your birthright,
+my birthright, to the foreigner. You were helping
+the alien, Peterman, and his gang, to snatch the wealth
+of our forests. Why? You didn't think. You didn't
+know. There was no one to tell you. You simply didn't
+know the thing you were doing.</p>
+
+<p>"This man Peterman was good to you. He held out
+prospects that glittered. It was good enough. And all
+the time he was looking to steal your birthright. The
+birthright of every Canadian. That makes you feel
+bad. Sure it does. I can see it. But I got to tell it
+that way, because&mdash;Here, I'm on the other side. It
+
+was chance, not virtue set me there. But once there
+the notion got me good. Sachigo was built to defend
+the great Canadian forests against the foreigner. That
+slogan got a grip on me. Yes, it got me good. I could
+scrap with every breath in my body for that. Well,
+now we've got the Skandinavia beat, and in a year or
+so they'll be on the scrap heap, ready to sell at scrap
+price. That's so. I know. Sachigo will be the biggest
+thing of its kind in the world next year, and there won't
+be any room for the Skandinavia. That's a reason I
+hate for you to go back to Peterman&mdash;one reason."</p>
+
+<p>"But I'm not going back," Nancy cried vehemently.</p>
+
+<p>Bull stared wide-eyed.</p>
+
+<p>"You're not going back?" he echoed stupidly. Then
+of a sudden he held out his hand. "Say, pass that
+message right over. Why in&mdash;Guess I'm crazy to
+read it&mdash;now."</p>
+
+<p>Nancy held the paper out to him. There was something
+so amazingly headlong in his manner. All the
+girl's apprehensions, all her depression, were swept
+away, and a rising excitement replaced them. A surge of
+thankfulness rose up in her. At least he would learn
+that she had no intention of further treachery to the
+land of her birth.</p>
+
+<p>"Accept my resignation forthwith."</p>
+
+<p>Bull read the brief message aloud. It was addressed to
+Peterman, and it was signed "Nancy McDonald." The
+force, the coldness of the words were implacable. He
+revelled in the phrasing. He revelled in the thing they
+conveyed. He looked up. The girl was smiling. She
+had forgotten everything but the approval she saw
+shining in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he reached out and his great hands came
+gently down upon her softly rounded shoulders. It was
+a wonderful caress. They held her firmly while he
+gazed into her eyes.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Say, Nancy," he cried, in a voice that was deep with
+emotion. "You mean that? Those words? You've
+quit the Skandinavia? What&mdash;what are you going to
+do?"</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I'm going to the forests with Father Adam. I'm
+going to help the boys we've so often talked about.
+I'm&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Not on your life!"</p>
+
+<p>The man's denial rang out with all the force of his
+virile nature.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, listen right here. You've quit them. You've
+quit Peterman. And you reckon from one fool play
+you're going right over to another. No, sir, not on
+your life. It's my chance now, and by God I don't
+pass it. I'm kind of a rough citizen and don't know
+the way a feller should say this sort of stuff. But I'm
+crazy to marry you and have been that way ever since
+you came along, and sat right in this office, and invited
+me to take tea in the parlour of that darnation bug,
+Peterman. Do you know all that means, Nancy? It
+means I'm just daft with love for you, and have been
+ever since I set eyes on you, for all I had to treat you
+worse than a 'hold-up.' Say, my dear, will you give
+me the chance to show you? Can you forget it all?
+Can you? I'll raise every sort of hell to fix you good
+and happy. And you and me, together, we'll just send
+this great Sachigo of ours booming sky high, and in a
+year I promise to hand you the wreckage that was once
+the Skandinavia. Marry me, dear, and I'll show you
+the thing a man can be and do. And I'll make you forget
+the ruffian I've had to act towards you. Will you let
+me help you to forget? Will you&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>Nancy's eyes were frankly raised to the passionate
+gaze which revealed the depths of the man's great heart.</p>
+
+<p>"I have," she said in a low voice. "I've forgotten
+everything but&mdash;but&mdash;you."</p>
+
+
+<p>She moved as she spoke. There was no hesitation.
+All her soul was shining in her eyes, and she yielded to
+the impulse she was powerless to deny. She came to
+him, releasing herself from the great hands that held
+her shoulders. She reached up and placed her soft arms
+about the neck that rose trunk-like above his shoulders.
+In a moment she was caught and crushed in his arms.</p>
+
+<p>"Why&mdash;that's just fine!"</p>
+
+<p>The exclamation broke from the man out of sheer
+delight and happiness. And the while he bent down
+and kissed the smiling upturned face, and permitted one
+hand to wander caressingly over the girl's wealth of
+beautiful hair.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<a name="toc_36"></a>
+<h3>Chapter XXVII&mdash;Lost In The Twilight</h3>
+
+
+<p>A fierce wind swept down off the hills. So it had
+blown all night and all the day before. The sky was
+overcast, and the thermometer had dropped below zero.
+It was one of those brief "freeze-ups" such as Father
+Adam had awaited, and it might last two or three days.
+Then would come prompt reaction, and the rapidity of
+the thaw would be an hundred-fold increased.</p>
+
+<p>The sun was hidden, and the sky looked to be heavily
+burdened with snow. The earth was frozen solid, and
+the wide flung forests were white with the hoar frosts of
+Spring.</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam was standing beside the crouching team
+of dogs. There were five of them; great huskies,
+shaggy of coat and fiercely wolfish. They were fat
+and soft from idleness. But they would serve, for
+the sled was light, and a few days' run would swiftly
+harden them.</p>
+
+<p>The outfit was waiting just beyond the kitchen door
+
+of the house on the hill, and the view of the busy Cove
+below was completely shut out. The position for the
+waiting sled had not been calculated by the man who
+owned it, but by the shrewd, troubled mind of Bat
+Harker.</p>
+
+<p>He was standing beside the tall figure of the missionary
+now, squat and sturdy, looking on with half-angry,
+wholly anxious eyes. His expression was characteristic
+of the man when he was disturbed. Father Adam's dark
+eyes were surveying his outfit. There was no emotion
+in them. They were calm, and simply searching, in
+the fashion of the practised trail man.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, Les, this is just the craziest thing of all your
+crazy life," Bat said at last, in a tone kept low for all the
+feeling that lay behind it. "I tell you they're waiting
+on you. They've got you set. Just as sure as God
+this'll be your last trip. It's kind of useless talkin' it
+again out here, I know. We've talked an' talked it in
+that darn sick room of yours till I'm sick to death trying
+to git sense into you. We know the game from A to the
+hindmost letter of the darn alphabet. We haven't shouted
+it, you an' me, because there wasn't need. But Idepski's
+been right here since ever he got his nose on your trail.
+It was his gun that took you weeks back, an' sent you
+sick. If I know a thing he meant just to wing you,
+and leave you kind of helpless, so he could get hands
+on you when he fancied. He wants you alive, and he's
+goin' to git you. Ther's word got round you're pulling
+out. It's clear to me. A bunch of boys hit the trail
+out of here three nights gone, and I've a notion Idepski
+went with 'em. Are they wise you're pulling out?
+Sure they are. Why, in God's name, don't you quit it?"</p>
+
+<p>The man whom the forest world knew as Father Adam,
+but whom Bat knew as Leslie Standing, shrugged his
+shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Why should I?" he said, his dark eyes mildly enquiring,
+
+"you can't tell me a thing I don't know about
+Idepski. I knew it was he who dropped me. I saw
+him that night down there and knew him right away.
+Maybe he can fool you with his disguises. He can't
+fool me. I'd been watching him days before that."</p>
+
+<p>"Why didn't you show yourself? Why didn't you
+say?"</p>
+
+<p>Bat spoke fiercely in his exasperation.</p>
+
+<p>The missionary smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"You'd have had him shot up," he said. "I know.
+No. If you'd known I was around it would have queered
+the hand I was playing. Here, Bat, let's get this thing
+right. You could shoot up a dozen Idepskis, and there'd
+be others to replace 'em. Hellbeam's dogs'll never let
+up." He shook his head. "It's a play that'll go on to
+the&mdash;end. I know that. I tell you I've got past caring
+a curse about things. When the end comes, what does
+it matter! Not a thing. It's useless talking, old friend,"
+he said, as Bat attempted to break in, "quite useless.
+But don't reckon I'm a willing quitter. I'll play the
+game till it can't be played longer. And when I've got to
+I'll throw my hands up. Not before. But Idepski can't
+follow my trail."</p>
+
+<p>"But he ken cut it," Bat cried, desperation finding
+expression in a clenched, out-held fist.</p>
+
+<p>"Can he?"</p>
+
+<p>The missionary smiled confidently. And Bat suddenly
+flung out both hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, Les," he cried, "do you think I want to see my
+partner, and best friend, hounded to a life of hell by that
+swine, Hellbeam? It breaks me to death the thought
+of it. Man, man, it sets me nigh crazed thinking that
+way. Don't I count with you? Don't the others you
+came along to help count? That dandy gal I've heard
+you wish was your own daughter? Don't she count?
+Say, we're all for you, Bull an' Nancy, an' me, just the
+
+same as the rest of the folk of the forest. Stop right
+here, man. Take your place again, an' we'll fight Hellbeam
+as we've fought his Skandinavia. Say, we'll fight
+for you as we've never fought before. We'll fight him,
+and beat him, and keep you safe from that hell he's got
+waitin' for you. Just say the word, and stop right
+here. And I'll swear before God&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Leslie Standing raised a protesting hand. His eyes
+were unsmiling.</p>
+
+<p>"It's useless, old friend," he said with irrevocable
+decision. "You don't know the thing you're trying to
+pledge yourself to. You think me a crazy man. You
+think I'm just asking for the trouble Hellbeam figures
+to hand out to me. I'm not. I've got the full measure
+of the whole thing. And I know the thing I'm doing
+doesn't matter. I'm not going to change the plan of
+life I've laid down. I've learnt happiness in the forests.
+The twilight of it all has been my salvation. Time was
+when I had other desires, other delights. They've long
+since passed. Now there's only one appeal to me in life.
+It's the boys, the scallawags, who haunt the forest like
+I do. I love them. And my life's theirs as long as Hellbeam
+leaves it to me. Get just that into your thick,
+old head, Bat, and for our last five minutes together
+we can talk of things more pleasant than Hellbeam."</p>
+
+<p>The missionary smiled down into the strong face of
+his companion. And the lumberman realised the uselessness
+of further protest. He yielded grudgingly. He
+yielded because he knew and loved the man. By a great
+effort he turned his mind from the dread haunting it.</p>
+
+<p>"You've got me beat, Les," he growled. Then he
+spat in his disgust.</p>
+
+<p>The missionary nodded, and, with a gesture of the
+hand, he indicated the hidden mills below them.</p>
+
+<p>"It's queer the way the whole thing's completed itself
+as I hoped and dreamed so long ago," he said thoughtfully.
+
+"You know, Bat, that yellow streak in me was a better
+thing than either of us knew. If I hadn't had it I'd have
+stood my ground. I'd have fought to the end, and I'd
+have been beaten, and Sachigo would have crashed. Do
+you see that? No. That's because you look at things
+with the obstinate eyes of great courage. While I,
+through fear, see things as they are. We won't debate
+it now. The accomplished fact is the thing. You've
+set Sachigo on top. Sachigo will rule the Canadian forest
+industry. The foreigner is on the scrap heap. We've
+helped to build something for this great old Empire of
+ours, and so our lives haven't been wholly wasted. It's
+good to feel that when the time comes to pay our debts.
+That boy Sternford's a great feller. I'm glad about
+him. Say, I felt I could cry last night when he and
+Nancy came along like two school-kids to tell me of the
+thing they'd fixed. I felt like handing them my story
+and claiming my place as Nancy's stepfather. But I
+didn't. You see, she's glad about me as Father Adam,
+a dopey missionary. But I can see her eyes blaze up
+red-hot with anger at the man who took her mother
+from her, and denied her existence. No, it's best that
+way. She's found the man I could have chosen for her,
+and I'm glad. She's a great lass. She's all her mother&mdash;and
+more."</p>
+
+<p>Bat inclined his stubborn head. He was still thinking
+of the dogs, and the sled, and all they meant to him just
+now.</p>
+
+<p>"Does she know about her share in the mills?" he
+asked brusquely.</p>
+
+<p>The other shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet. But I've sent word to Charlie Nisson. He'll
+be along up on the <em>Myra</em>. And when he comes she'll
+know." He laughed quietly. "Say, I'd be glad to see
+them when they know about it&mdash;she and Bull. They're
+going to be married right after Birchall's been along and
+
+finally fixed things. It'll be a great day. I wonder.
+You know, Bat, I'd like to think Nancy&mdash;my Nancy&mdash;knows
+all about this. I wonder if she does. Do you
+think so?"</p>
+
+<p>Bat turned away. His eyes were on the surrounding
+forest, and the white gossamer of the hoar-frost clinging
+to the dark foliage. He dared not trust himself to reply.</p>
+
+<p>Again came the missionary's quiet laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder," he said. Then, in a moment, a curious
+flicker marred the calm of his eyes. "Bat, old friend,"
+he went on, after a pause, "there's just one thing I'm
+going to ask you before I pull out. It's a promise I
+want. When the time comes for me to pay, will you
+tell her? Will you tell them both? If I'm gone will
+you tell them the thing you know&mdash;all of it? Don't
+make me out to be any old angel I guess you'd like to
+paint me. Just hand 'em the story of the white-livered
+creature I am, without the nerve of a jack-rabbit. Will
+you do that?"</p>
+
+<p>He held out a hand from which he removed his fur
+mitt. Bat turned. He saw the hand, and disregarded
+it in a surge of feeling.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell 'em? Tell 'em?" he cried. "Say, Les, for God
+Almighty's sake don't you pull out. You're my friend.
+You're the one feller in the world that matters a curse
+to me. Quit boy. Stop right here, an'&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Will you tell 'em?"</p>
+
+<p>The hand was thrust further towards the lumberman
+so that he could no longer ignore it.</p>
+
+<p>"Hell! Yes!" he cried, in fierce mental anguish.
+I'll tell 'em&mdash;if I have to." He seized the outstretched
+hand in both of his and gripped it with crushing force.
+"You're goin'&mdash;now?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure."</p>
+
+<p>Their hands fell apart. Bat's dropped to his side
+like leaden weights.</p>
+
+
+<p>"So long," he said dully, as the other took his place
+in the sled. Then he added, "So long, Les."</p>
+
+<p>The sled needed breaking out, and the lumberman
+watched the operation of it without a word. His emotions
+were too real, to deep for anything more. He
+looked on while the first sharp order was flung at the
+dogs. He watched them leap to their feet and stand
+ready, great, powerful, untamed souls eager for their,
+task. Then the man in the sled looked round as he
+strung out the long lash of his short-stocked whip.</p>
+
+<p>"So long, Bat," he cried smilingly. And his farewell
+was instantly followed by the sharp command to "mush."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Far out on the desolate highlands the dogs broke trail
+over a waste of virgin snow. The cold had abated, and
+the flurry of snow that rose up under their feet was wet
+and melting. The way lay through the maze of woodland
+bluffs which lined the upper slopes of the course
+of the Beaver River. Beyond them, northward, lay the
+windswept barrens of the highlands.</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam knew the trail by heart. The maze of
+bluffs through which he was passing afforded him no
+difficulties or anxieties. He read them with the certainty
+of wide and long experience. There was nothing new that
+Labrador had to show him. He knew it all, and revelled
+in the wide freedom its fierce territory afforded. The
+moods of the country concerned him not at all. Furious
+or gentle, tearful or hard with the bitterness of desperate
+winter, it was all one to him. He loved the twilight of
+its mysterious, fickle heart. It was as much his home as
+any place on earth.</p>
+
+<p>The dogs swept on at a steady gait. The cruel whip
+played over furry backs, a never-ceasing threat. And so
+the miles were hungrily devoured. It was the first day
+of freedom for dogs and man alike, and each moment of
+it yielded a sense of almost fierce joy.</p>
+
+
+<p>The bluffs narrowed in, and the softer snow slowed
+the going. Instantly a sharp command hurled the leading
+dog heading for the open where the surface was hard and
+dry. The team swung away behind him and the sled
+pursued. Then the silence broke.</p>
+
+<p>A shot rang out. It came from the shelter of a bluff
+directly ahead. The leading dog floundered. Then the
+brute fell with a fierce yelp, and sprawled in the snow
+while the others swept over his inert body. The man
+in the sled strove to brake the sled with the "gee-pole"
+which he snatched to his aid. There was a moment of
+desperate struggle. Then the sled flung tail up in the air
+and the man was hurled headlong amidst his dogs.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam stood with mitted hands thrust up above
+his head. He was gazing into the smiling eyes of a man
+no less dark than himself. There were three others confronting
+him, and each was armed with a stubby, automatic
+pistol which covered his body.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess Hellbeam's waiting for you over the other side,
+Mr. Leslie Martin, or Standing, or Father Adam, as you
+choose to call yourself. He's waited a long time. But
+you ain't tired him out. Guess your game's up."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes?"</p>
+
+<p>The missionary smiled back into Idepski's derisive
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"You can drop your hands," the agent went on.
+"We've got your gun. And I guess you'll be kind of
+tired before we get you to the coast. You're going to
+find things a heap tougher than No. 10 Camp&mdash;where
+you sent me. You surely are."</p>
+
+<p>"The coast?"</p>
+
+<p>The missionary was startled.</p>
+
+<p>"Yep. There's going to be no play game this time.
+Hellbeam's yacht's waiting on you. You'll take the sea
+trip. It's safer that way."</p>
+
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>The mitted hands had dropped to the missionary's
+sides. He moistened his lips, which seemed to have
+become curiously dry. Once, and once only, there was
+a flicker of the eyes as he looked into the face of his
+captor. Otherwise he gave no sign. His time had come.
+He knew that. He had always known it would come.
+There was neither heat nor resentment in him against
+these men who had finally hunted him down.</p>
+
+<p>"How do we travel?" he asked quietly. "You've shot
+up my leader."</p>
+
+<p>The other nodded. He understood the tone of complaint
+and regret in which the trail man spoke of his dog.
+He grinned maliciously.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll shoot up the rest for you. They'd only feed
+the wolves if we left 'em. We've two dog trains with us.
+Don't let that worry. You best get your kit loosed from
+your sled."</p>
+
+<p>The prisoner turned to obey, but the agent changed
+his mind. He laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"No. Guess the boys can fix that. It's safer that
+way. You move right on into yonder bluff. And you
+best not try making any break. There ain't only Hellbeam
+in this. I haven't forgotten&mdash;No. 10 Camp. Your
+game's plumb up."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, plumb up."</p>
+
+<p>Father Adam obeyed. He moved away, followed
+closely by the man who had hunted him for so many years.
+There was no escape. He knew that. The reckoning
+he had always foreseen had overtaken him. So, without
+a word of protest, he passed for the last time into
+the twilight of the woods.</p>
+
+
+<p>THE END</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="doublepage">
+
+<div>
+<h2>The Heart of Unaga</h2>
+
+<p>By</p>
+
+<p>Ridgwell Cullum</p>
+
+<p>Author of "The Way of the Strong," etc.</p>
+
+
+<p>Many a stalwart deed has been done and many a
+brave tale told of the forbidding but romantic North-land,
+but seldom has an author so combined a tale of
+love, adventure, and strong swift action with mystery.</p>
+
+<p>The terrible fires of Unaga crimsoning the white
+silent wastes are so vividly portrayed, that the reader
+must feel authenticity. The strange "sleeper" Indians
+are real Indians, the big-souled Northwest policeman
+is not a superman, but a real human being, the girl is
+bonafide, the villain is not fictional, but an actual
+personality, brave and base alike&mdash;all the characters
+are living and breathing folk, that you feel are there
+in far-off Unaga, and that you know you would find
+there, were you hardy enough to visit that remorseless
+country.</p>
+
+<p>G, P. Putnam's Sons</p>
+
+<p>New York</p>
+
+<p>London</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page">
+
+<div>
+<h2>Snowdrift</h2>
+
+<p>BY</p>
+
+<p>James B. Hendryx</p>
+
+
+<p>A Romance of the barrens&mdash;"straight north&mdash;between
+the Mackenzie and the Bay," where
+Snowdrift, waif of the Arctic, Indian bred, bearing
+a false but heavy burden of shame, and Carter
+Brent, Southerner, find their great happiness
+among the icy wastes.</p>
+
+<p>Swept to the Klondike by the first wave of the
+great gold rush, Brent plunges, with the enthusiasm
+of youth, into the whirl of Dawson, the city
+of men gone mad. How luck sat upon his shoulder,
+and how his recklessness and daring won him the
+admiration of those wild times, until the raw red
+liquor of Alaska downed him "for the count," is
+but the beginning of the tale; for with him, we
+are carried into the Northern night and fight the
+long fight back to manhood till purged by the
+cleansing cruelty of the Arctic.</p>
+
+<p>G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS</p>
+
+<p>NEW YORK</p>
+<p>LONDON</p>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="back">
+</div>
+
+</div>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full">
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MAN IN THE TWILIGHT***</p>
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diff --git a/old/14756.txt b/old/14756.txt
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+++ b/old/14756.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Man in the Twilight, by Ridgwell Cullum
+
+
+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 Man in the Twilight
+
+Author: Ridgwell Cullum
+
+Release Date: January 22, 2005 [eBook #14756]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MAN IN THE TWILIGHT***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Wallace McLean, Josephine Paolucci, Joshua Hutchinson,
+and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+THE MAN IN THE TWILIGHT
+
+by
+
+RIDGWELL CULLUM
+
+G.P. Putnam's Sons
+New York and London
+The Knickerbocker Press
+
+1922
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BY RIDGWELL CULLUM
+
+ THE DEVIL'S KEG
+ THE HOUND FROM THE NORTH
+ THE BROODING WILD
+ THE NIGHT RIDERS
+ THE WATCHERS OF THE PLAINS
+ THE COMPACT
+ THE TRAIL OF THE AXE
+ THE ONE WAY TRAIL
+ THE SHERIFF OF DYKE HOLE
+ TWINS OF SUFFERING CREEK
+ THE GOLDEN WOMAN
+ THE WAY OF THE STRONG
+ THE LAW BREAKERS
+ THE SON OF HIS FATHER
+ THE MEN WHO WROUGHT
+ THE PURCHASE PRICE
+ THE TRIUMPH OF JOHN KARS
+ THE LAW OF THE GUN
+ THE HEART OF UNAGA
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO MY NEPHEW
+GEOFFREY FREDERICK BURGHARD
+THIS BOOK IS AFFECTIONATELY
+DEDICATED
+
+
+
+
+THE AUTHOR TO THE READER
+
+
+The story of the Sachigo wood-pulp mills, told in this book, is entirely
+a work of imagination. But as I have had to draw very largely on my
+knowledge of the wood-pulp trade of Eastern Canada, and the conditions
+under which it is carried on, I desire it to be clearly understood that
+this story contains no portraiture of any person or persons, living or
+dead, and contains no representation of any business organisation
+connected with the trade.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+PART ONE
+
+ I.--THE CRISIS
+ II.--THE MAN WITH THE MAIL
+ III.--IDEPSKI
+ IV.--THE "YELLOW STREAK"
+ V.--NANCY MCDONALD
+ VI.--NATHANIEL HELLBEAM
+
+
+PART TWO
+
+EIGHT YEARS LATER
+
+ I.--BULL STERNFORD
+ II.--FATHER ADAM
+ III.--BULL LEARNS CONDITIONS
+ IV.--DRAWING THE NET
+ V.--THE PROGRESS OF NANCY
+ VI.--THE LONELY FIGURE
+ VII.--THE SKANDINAVIA MOVES
+ VIII.--AN AFFAIR OF OUTPOSTS
+ IX.--ON THE OPEN SEA
+ X.--IN QUEBEC
+ XI.--DRAWN SWORDS
+ XII.--AT THE CHATEAU
+ XIII.--DEEPENING WATERS
+ XIV.--THE PLANNING OF CAMPAIGN
+ XV.--THE SAILING OF THE _Empress_
+ XVI.--ON BOARD THE _Empress_
+ XVII.--THE LONELY FIGURE AGAIN
+ XVIII.--BULL STERNFORD'S VISION OF SUCCESS
+ XIX.--THE HOLD-UP
+ XX.--ON THE HOME TRAIL
+ XXI.--THE MAN IN THE TWILIGHT
+ XXII.--DAWN
+ XXIII.--NANCY
+ XXIV.--THE COMING OF SPRING
+ XXV.--NANCY'S DECISION
+ XXVI.--THE MESSAGE
+ XXVII.--LOST IN THE TWILIGHT
+
+
+
+
+THE MAN IN THE TWILIGHT
+
+PART I
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE CRISIS
+
+
+They sat squarely gazing into each other's eyes. Bat Marker had only one
+mood to express. It was a mood that suggested determination to fight to
+a finish, to fight with the last ounce of strength, the last gasp of
+breath. He was sitting at the desk, opposite his friend and employer,
+Leslie Standing, and his small grey eyes were shining coldly under his
+shaggy, black brows. His broad shoulders were squared aggressively.
+
+There was far less display in the eyes of Leslie Standing. They were
+wide with a deep pre-occupation. But then Standing was of very different
+type. His pale face, his longish black hair, brushed straight back from
+an abnormally high forehead, suggested the face of a student, even a
+priest. Harker was something of the roused bull-dog, strong, rugged,
+furious; a product of earth's rough places.
+
+"Give us that last bit again."
+
+Bat's tone matched his attitude. It was abrupt, forceful, and he thrust
+out a hand pointing at the letter from which the other had been reading.
+
+Standing's eyes lit with a shadow of a smile as he turned again to the
+letter.
+
+ "There's just one thing more. It's less pleasant, so I've kept
+ it till the last. Hellbeam is in Quebec. So is his agent--the
+ man Idepski. My informant tells me he saw the latter leaving the
+ steam-packet office. It suggests things are on the move your way
+ again. However, my man is keeping tab. I'll get warning through
+ at the first sign of danger."
+
+Standing looked up. His half smile had gone. There was doubt in his
+eyes, and the hand grasping the letter was not quite steady. But when he
+spoke his tone was a flat denial of the physical sign that Bat had been
+quick to observe.
+
+"Charlie Nisson's as keen as a needle," Standing said. "His whisper's a
+sight more than another fellow's shout."
+
+Bat regarded the letter. He watched the other lay it aside on a pile of
+papers. He was thinking, thinking hard. And his thought was mostly of
+the man whose shaking hand betrayed him. Suddenly an explosive movement
+brought his clenched fist down on the table with a thud.
+
+"Hell!" he cried, in a fury of impatience. "What's the use? The danger
+sign's hoisted. I know it. You know it. Nisson knows it. Well? Say,
+Hellbeam's been in Quebec a score of times since--since--. That don't
+worry a thing. No. He's got big finance in the Skandinavia bunch in
+Quebec. We know all about that. It's Idepski. Idepski ain't visiting the
+packet office for his health. He ain't figgerin' on a joy trip up the
+Labrador coast. No. That's the signal, sure. Idepski at the packet
+office. Their darn mud-scow mostly runs here, to Sachigo, and there
+ain't a thing along the way to interest Idepski--but Sachigo. We'll be
+getting word from Charlie Nisson in some hurry."
+
+"Yes, we'll get it in a hurry."
+
+Standing nodded. He was transparently perturbed. Bat watched him
+closely. Then, in a moment, his mind was made up.
+
+"See right here, Les," he cried, in a tone he vainly endeavoured to
+restrain. "I've figgered right along this thing would need to happen
+sometime. You can't beat a feller like Hellbeam all the time and leave
+him without a kick. It don't need me to tell you that. But I want to get
+a square eye on the whole darn game. Maybe you don't get all you did to
+that guy when you cleaned him out of ten million dollars on Wall Street
+seven years ago.
+
+"Say, you were a mathematical professor at a Scottish University before
+you reckoned to buck the game on Wall Street, weren't you?" he went on,
+more moderately. He forced a grin into eyes that were scarcely
+accustomed. "One of those guys who mostly make two and two into four,
+and by no sort of imagination can cypher 'em into five. I know. You
+figgered out that Persian Oil gamble to suit yourself, and forgot to
+figger that Hellbeam was at the other end of it. No. The other feller
+don't cut any ice with you while you're playing around with figgers.
+It's only afterwards you find that figgers ain't the whole game, and
+wrostling ten million dollars out of one of the biggest railroad kings
+and bank presidents in America has something to it liable to hand you
+nightmare. Well, you got that nightmare. So did I. You've had it for
+most the whole of the last seven years. But it ain't a nightmare now.
+It's dead real, which is only a way of sayin' Hellbeam's set his dogs on
+a hot trail, and we're the poor darn gophers huntin' our holes right up
+here on the Labrador coast.
+
+"Oh, yes. I know what you'd say. You've said it all before. Hellbeam
+hasn't a kick comin'. You were both operators on Wall Street. You were
+both playing the financial game as all the world knows it. You beat him
+on a straight financial fight. It was just a matter of the figgers which
+it's your job to play around with.
+
+"Now I'm just going to say the thing that's in my mind," he went on, his
+tone changing again to something clumsily persuasive. "You can take it
+easy from me. You see, you picked me up when I was down and out. You
+passed me a hand when there wasn't a hope left me but a stretch of
+penitentiary. I fought that darn lumber-jack to a finish, which is
+mostly my way in things. And it was plumb bad luck that he went out by
+accident. Well, it don't matter. It was you who got me clear away when
+they'd got the penitentiary gates wide open waiting for me, and it's a
+thing I can't never forget. I'm out for you all the time, and I want you
+to know it when I'm telling you the things in my mind. Hellbeam's got a
+mighty big kick coming. It's the biggest kick any feller of his sort can
+have. He's the money power of Sweden. He's one of the big money powers
+of the States. He lives for money and the power it hands him. Well? This
+is how I figger. Just how you played him up I can't say. But it's his
+job to juggle around with figgers same as it's yours, and if you beat
+him out of ten million dollars you must have played a slicker hand than
+him. All of which says you must have got more to windward of the law
+than him--and he knows it. Why, it's easy. The feller who has the money
+power to hold the crown jewels of Sweden from falling into the hands of
+yahoo politicians out to grab the things they haven't the brains to come
+by honestly, is mostly powerful enough to buy up the justice he needs,
+or any other old thing. Hellbeam means to get his hands on you. He's
+going to get you across the darn American border. And when he's got you
+there he's going to send you down, by hook or crook, to the worst hell
+an American penitentiary can show you. It's seven years since you hurt
+him. But that ain't a circumstance. If it takes him seventy-seven he'll
+never quit your trail."
+
+Bat paused, and, for a moment, turned from the wide black eyes he had
+held seemingly fascinated while he was talking. It almost seemed that
+the emotions stirring in his broad bosom were too overpowering for him,
+and he needed respite from their pressure. But he came again. He was
+bound to. It was his nature to drive to the end at whatever cost to
+himself.
+
+"I'm handing you this stuff, Les, because I got to," he went on. "It
+ain't because I'm liking it. No, sir. And if you've the horse sense I
+reckon you have, you'll locate my object easy. Those words of Nisson's
+have told us plain we got to fight. We got to fight like hell. And the
+time's right now. Oh, yes, we're going to fight. You an' me, just the
+same as we've fought a heap of times before. There ain't a feller I know
+who's got more fight in him than you--when you feel that way.
+But--well, say, you just need a boost to make you feel like it. You
+ain't like me who wants to fight most all the time. No. Well--I'm going
+to hand you that boost."
+
+"How?"
+
+Standing's unruffled interrogation was in sharp contrast with the
+other's earnestness. There was a calm tolerance in it. The tolerance of
+a temperament given to philosophy rather than passion. Perhaps it was a
+mask. Perhaps it was real. Whatever it was, Bat's next words sent the
+hot fire of a man's soul leaping into his eyes.
+
+"When your boy's born, what then?"
+
+"Ah!"
+
+Bat's fists clenched at the sound of the other's ejaculation. It was the
+nervous clenching at a sound that threatened danger. Swift as a shot he
+followed up his challenge.
+
+"Your pore gal's down there in Quebec hopin' and prayin' to hand you
+that boy child you reckon Providence is going to send you. Well, when he
+gets along, and Hellbeam's around--and--"
+
+Bat broke off. Standing had risen from his chair. He had moved swiftly,
+his lean figure propelled towards the window by long, nervous strides.
+His voice came back to the man at the table, while his eyes gazed down
+upon the waters of Farewell Cove, over the widespread roofs of the great
+groundwood mill, the building of which was the result of his seven
+years' sojourn on the Labrador coast.
+
+"You've handed it me, Bat," he said, in a quick, nervous way. "I'll
+fight. I know. You guess I'm scared at Nisson's news. Maybe I am, I
+don't know. I'm not a man of iron guts. Maybe I never shall be. It's
+hell to me to feel a shadow dogging my every step. Yes, you're right.
+It's been a nightmare, and now--why, now it's real. But get your mind at
+rest. I'm going to fight Hellbeam all I know. And with the thought of
+Nancy, and the boy she's going to give me, I don't need a thing else.
+No."
+
+"That's how I figgered."
+
+Bat's delight softened his hard eyes for the moment, and his attitude
+relaxed as Standing went on.
+
+"You reckon I've no imagination," he said. "You reckon I'm just a
+calculating machine that can juggle figures better than any other
+machine." He shook his dark head. "I guess you don't do me full justice.
+When I quit the university on the other side it was because I had built
+myself up a big dream. I crossed to the United States with my
+imagination full of the things I hoped to do. It was the chance I looked
+for. And I found it in Hellbeam, and the Persian Oils it was his hobby
+to manipulate. I jumped in and grabbed it with both hands. And, as you
+say, I beat him at his own game. But that was only part of my dream. The
+next part you also know, though you choose to think it was only as a
+refuge from Hellbeam that I came here to Sachigo. I admit circumstances
+have modified my original dream, but then I dreamed my first dream as a
+man unmarried. Now I have added to it in the thought of the son my
+wife's going to present me with. After beating Hellbeam and making the
+fortune I desired, I didn't flee here to the coast of Labrador as a mere
+refuge from the man you tell me I robbed. No. This place served its
+purpose that way, it's true. But it was the place I selected long since
+for the fulfilment of the second part of my dream.
+
+"Bat--Bat, old friend. It isn't I who lack imagination. It's you, with
+your bull-dog, fighting nature. Years ago, way back there in my rooms at
+the university, I took up a study that interested me mightily. It was
+when the European war was on, and was doing its best to unship the
+brains of half the world. I took it up to relieve myself of the strain
+of things. And it inspired me with a desire to achieve something that
+looked well-nigh impossible. I was watching the Swedes, the
+Skandinavians generally, and I saw them getting fat and rich by holding
+the rest of the world to ransom for paper and wood pulp--the stuff we
+call here groundwood. It was then that my dream was born. Oh, yes, it's
+changed a bit since then. But not so much. All I learned at that time
+told me there was only one country in the world that was due to hold the
+world's paper industry, and that country was yours--Canada. The
+illimitable forests of the country are one of the most amazing features
+of it. The water power--yes, and even the climate. But I saw all
+Skandinavia's advantage. Hitherto they've had a complete monopoly.
+Geographically they were in the thick of the world. The whole darn thing
+was in their lap. But they have a weakness which you could never find in
+this country. Their forests are being eaten into. Their lumber is
+receding farther and farther from their mills. Their labour is
+difficult. Well, I set to work with a map and those figures which you
+guess are my strong point. I played around with all the information of
+Quebec and Labrador I could get hold of. Then, after worrying around
+awhile, I realised that, with only eighteen hundred sea miles dividing
+Britain from Labrador, given the cheapness of power, sufficiently
+extensive plant and forest limits and adequate shipping, I could put
+groundwood on the European market in favourable competition with
+Skandinavia. By this means I could build up an industry which means the
+wealth of Canada for the Canadians, and establish the paper industry of
+the world within the heart of our British Empire. So it was Farewell
+Cove and Sachigo on the coast of Labrador for me. And the locality had
+nothing to do with the man who guesses I robbed him."
+
+It was Bat who was held silent now. He nodded his head at the narrow
+back that remained turned on him.
+
+"Well, since then," Standing went on, "seven years have passed.
+Circumstances have forced modifications on my plans. Hellbeam is the
+circumstance. You say we are the gophers hunting our holes. Maybe you're
+right. Anyway Hellbeam's shadow is haunting me. It's haunting me in that
+I know--_I_ feel--that the fulfilment of this dream is not for me. Why?"
+
+He turned abruptly from the window. His pale face was even paler under
+the excitement burning in his dark eyes. He thrust out a hand, a
+delicate, long-fingered hand pointing at his friend and faithful
+servant.
+
+"Say, you reckon I've no imagination. Listen. I see the time coming when
+all you say of Hellbeam's purpose will be fulfilled, and my dream
+shattered and tumbling about my head. If Hellbeam succeeds, can I let
+this thing happen? Can I sacrifice this great purpose in such a personal
+disaster? No. My hope is in my little wife, that dear woman who's given
+herself to me with the full knowledge of the threat hanging over my
+future. She and I have dreamed a fresh dream. And she's even now
+fulfilling her part of that dream. Yes, you're right. I'm going to fight
+for our dream with every ounce that's in me. I know my failings. I'm at
+heart a coward. But I'm out to fight though the gates of hell are agape
+waiting for me. And when I'm beaten, and Hellbeam's satisfied his kick,
+my boy, my little son, will step into my shoes and carry on the work
+till it's complete. Oh, yes, I say 'my son.' Nancy will see to it that
+she gives me a son. And, by God, how I will fight for him!"
+
+Bat was silent before the tide of his friend's passion. He listened to
+the strange mixture of clear thinking and unreasoning faith with a
+feeling of something like awe of a man whom he had long since given up
+attempting to fathom. He was a rough lumberman, a mill-boss, who, by
+sheer force, had raised himself from the dregs of a lumber camp to a
+position where his skill and capacity had full play. And in his utter
+lack of education it was impossible that he should be able to fathom a
+nature so complex, so far removed from his sphere of culture.
+
+His devotion to the ex-university professor was based on a splendid
+gratitude such as only the native generosity of his temper could bestow.
+The man had once served him in his extremity. Even to this day he never
+quite realised how the thing had come about, and Leslie Standing refused
+to talk of it. All he knew was that as mill-boss of an obscure mill, far
+in the interior of Quebec, away down south of Sachigo, he had fought one
+of those sudden battles with a lumber-jack which seem to spring up
+without any apparent reason. And in the desperateness of it, in the
+fierce height to which his battling temper had arisen, he had killed his
+man. Even so, these things were sufficiently common for little notice of
+the matter to have been taken. But it so happened that the dead man was
+the hero of the workers of the mill, and Bat Harker was their well-hated
+boss. Forthwith, in their numbers, the workers at once determined that
+Bat should pay the penalty. They seized and imprisoned him, while they
+sent down country to get him duly tried and condemned. It was then the
+miracle happened.
+
+It happened in the night, with the appearance of a lean, tall man, with
+a high forehead, and smooth black hair, and the clothes of civilisation
+to which Bat Harker was little enough accustomed. He entered his prison
+room seemingly without question. He told Bat that if he cared to get
+away he had the means awaiting him outside. And the prisoner who had
+visions of hanging, or at best, a long term of imprisonment, snatched at
+the helping hand held out. And Leslie Standing had brought him in safety
+straight to Farewell Cove, where together, with the vast capital which
+the former had wrung from the Swedish financier, Nathaniel Hellbeam,
+they had undertaken the creation of the great mill of Sachigo.
+
+Bat, in his wonder at the apparent ease of his rescue, had sought
+information. But little enough had been forthcoming. Leslie Standing had
+only smiled in his pensive fashion.
+
+"Money," he had said calmly. "Just money. It can do most things."
+
+That was all. And thenceforward the subject had been taboo. Even after
+seven years of intimate relations, Bat was still mystified on the
+subject, he was still guessing.
+
+Now, as he listened to his friend's expressions of faith, so strangely
+jumbled with calculated purpose, he sat at the table groping helplessly.
+Suppose--suppose that faith were to be shattered. What then? His mind
+was concerned, deeply concerned. And he dared not put his fears into
+words.
+
+Standing came back to his chair.
+
+"Here, we've talked these things enough," he said. "You've got my word.
+Just don't worry a thing. If Hellbeam's dogs get around, well--we're
+here first. All I want is news of Nancy. And that'll be along any old
+time now. When I get that--."
+
+The door of the office was thrust open, and an olive-hued face appeared.
+It was the clerk who worked in direct contact with the owner of the
+Sachigo mill. He was one-third nigger, another French Canadian, and the
+rest of him was Indian. It was a combination that appealed to the man
+who employed him.
+
+"They've 'phoned it through from the wireless at the headland, Boss,"
+the man said without preamble, pushing a sheet of paper into Leslie
+Standing's hand.
+
+He had gone as swiftly and silently as he came, and the door was closed
+softly behind him.
+
+Standing was gazing across at Bat. He had not even glanced at the
+message.
+
+"I'd like to bet," he cried, his eyes alight with a smiling excitement.
+Then he shook his head. "No. I wouldn't bet on it. It's too sacred.
+Nancy--my Nancy--."
+
+He broke off, and glanced down at the paper. In a moment the smile fell
+from his eyes. When he looked up it was to flash a keen glance at the
+rugged face beyond the desk.
+
+"Here, listen," he cried, with a sharp intake of breath.
+
+"Watch _Lizzie_ for U.G.P. Signed--Nisson."
+
+Bat nodded.
+
+"U.G.P. That's Union Great Peninsular Railroad. That's Hellbeam's. It
+means--."
+
+"It means Hellbeam's men are aboard. The packet _Lizzie_ is due at our
+quay in less than an hour."
+
+Standing tore the message into small fragments and dropped them into the
+wastepaper basket beside him. Only was his emotion displayed in the
+deliberate care with which he reduced the paper to the smallest possible
+fragments.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE MAN WITH THE MAIL
+
+
+The calm waters of Farewell Cove lay a-shimmer under the slanting rays
+of the sun. A wealth of racing white cloud filled the dome of the summer
+sky, speeding under the pressure of a strong top wind. Even the harsh
+world of Labrador was smiling under the beneficence of the brief summer
+season.
+
+Leslie Standing stood for a moment before passing down the winding
+woodland trail on his way to the water-front below. The view of it all
+was irresistible to him in his present mood, and he feasted his eyes
+hungrily while the resolve he had taken yielded an inflexible hardening.
+
+Bat Harker was less affected by the things spread out before him. He was
+concerned only for the mood of the man beside him. So he waited with
+such patience as his hasty nature could summon.
+
+"It's all good, Bat, old friend," Standing said, after a moment's silent
+contemplation. "It's too good to lose. It's too good for us to stand for
+interference from--Nathaniel Hellbeam."
+
+Bat grunted some sort of acquiescence. He was gazing steadily out over
+the spruce belt which covered the lower slopes of the hillside. His keen
+deep-set eyes were on the shipping lying out in the cove, watching the
+fussy approach of the bluff packet boat.
+
+It was a scene of amazing natural splendour which the works of man had
+no power to destroy. Farewell Cove was a perfect natural harbour,
+deep-set amidst surrounding, lofty, forest-clad hills. It was wide and
+deep, a veritable sea-lake, backing inland some fifteen miles behind the
+wide headland gateway to the East, which guarded its entrance from the
+storming Atlantic. Its shores were of virgin forest, peopled with the
+delicate-hued spruce, and all the many other varieties of soft, white,
+long-fibred timber demanded in the manufacture of the groundwood pulp
+needed for the world's paper industry.
+
+Far as the eye could see, in every direction, it was the same; forest
+and hill. And, in the heart of it all, the great watercourse of the
+Beaver River debouched upon the cove which linked it with the ocean
+beyond. It was a world of forest, seeming of limitless extent.
+
+But the feast that had inspired Leslie Standing's words was less the
+banquet which Nature had spread than the things which expressed the
+labours he and his companion had expended during the past seven years.
+He was concerned for the endless forests. He appreciated the great
+waterfall to the west, where the Beaver River fell off the highlands of
+the interior and precipitated itself into the cove below. These were the
+two things in Nature he had demanded to make his work possible. For the
+rest, the rugged immensity of scenery, the mighty contours of the aged
+land about him, the vastness of the harsh primordial world, so
+inhospitable, so forbidding under the fierce climate which Nature had
+imposed, made no appeal. It served, and so it was sufficient. The lights
+and shades under the summer sunlight were full of splendour. No artist
+eye could have gazed upon it all and missed its appeal. But these men
+lived amidst it the year round, and they had learned something of the
+fear which the ruthless northland inspires. To them the beauty of the
+open season was a mockery, a sham, the cruel trap of a heartless
+mistress.
+
+It was on the wide southern foreshore, just below where the falls of the
+Beaver River thundered into the chasm which the centuries of its flood
+had hewn in the granite rock, that Standing had founded his great mill.
+It lay there, in full view from the hillside, amidst a tangle of stoutly
+made roads, where seven years ago not even a game track had existed. He
+had set it up beside his water-power, and had given it the name which
+belonged to the ruined trading post he had found on the southern
+headland of the cove when first he had explored the region. Sachigo. A
+native, Labrador word which meant "Storm." The trading post had since
+been re-built into a modern wireless station, and so had become no
+longer the landmark it once had been. But Standing's whim had demanded
+the necessity for preserving the name, if only for the sake of its
+meaning.
+
+In seven years the translation of the wilderness had been well-nigh
+complete. Its vast desolation remained. That could never change under
+human effort. It was one of the oldest regions of the earth's land,
+driven and beaten and desolated under a climate beyond words in its
+merciless severity. But now the place was peopled. Now human dwellings
+dotted the forest foreshore of the cove. And the latter were the homes
+of the workers who had come at the mill-owner's call to share in his
+great adventure.
+
+Then there was shipping in the cove. A fleet of merchant shipping
+awaiting cargoes. There was a built inner harbour, with quays, and
+warehouses. There were travelling cranes, and every appliance for the
+loading of the great freighters with all possible dispatch. There were
+light railways running in every direction. There were sheltering "booms"
+in the river mouth crammed with logs, and dealt with by an army of river
+men equipped with their amazing peavys with which they thrust, and
+rolled, and shepherded the vast mass of hewn timber towards the
+slaughterhouse of saws. Then, immediately surrounding the mill, there
+was a veritable town of storehouses and offices and machine shops of
+every description. There were power-houses, there were buildings in the
+process of construction, and the laid foundations of others projected.
+It was a world of active human purpose lost in the heart of an immense
+solitude which it was nevertheless powerless to disturb.
+
+"Yes, it's all too good to have things happen, Bat," Standing went on
+presently. "Hark at the roar of the falls. What is it? Five hundred
+thousand horsepower of water, summer and winter. Listen to the drone of
+the grinders." He shook his head. "It's a great song, boy, and they
+never get tired of singing it. There's only thirty-six of 'em at
+present. Thirty-six. We'll have a hundred and thirty-six some day. Look
+down there at the booms." He stood pointing, a tall, lean figure on the
+hillside. "Tens of thousands of logs, and hundreds of men. We'll
+multiply those again and again--one day. It's fine. The freighters lying
+at anchor awaiting their cargoes. Some day we'll have our own ships--a
+big fleet of 'em. See the smoke pennants floating from our smoke stacks.
+They're the triumphant pennants of successful industry, eh? We can't
+have too many such flags flying. One day we'll have trolley cars running
+along the shores of the cove to bring the workers in to the mill. It'll
+be like a veritable Atlantic City. Oh, it's a great big dream. There's
+nothing amiss. No."
+
+"Only the _Lizzie_ getting in."
+
+Bat was without apparent appreciation. He was thinking only of the
+message they had received, and the threat it contained.
+
+Standing glanced round at the sturdy figure beside him. A half smile lit
+his sallow features. Then he turned again and sought out the tubby
+vessel approaching the wharf below. But it was only for a moment. Some
+subtle thought impelled him, and he glanced back at the house on the
+hillside he had just left, the house he had erected for the woman whose
+devotion had taught him the real meaning of life.
+
+It was a long, low, rambling, gabled building. It was an extensive
+timber-built home with a wide verandah and those many vanities and
+conceits of building that would never have been permitted had it been
+intended for bachelordom. He remembered how Nancy and he had designed it
+together. He remembered the delight with which they had looked forward
+to its completion, and ultimately their boundless joy in the task of
+its furnishing. He remembered how Nancy had insisted that it should
+contain not only their home, but his own private office, from which he
+could control the great work he had set his hand to. It had been her
+ardent desire to be always near him, always there to support him under
+the burden of his immense labours. And remembering these things a fierce
+desire leapt within him, and he turned again to the man at his side.
+
+"Yes, she's getting in, Bat," he said. "But I just wanted to get a peek
+at things. Well, I've seen all I want, old friend. Now I'm ready. Fight?
+Oh, yes, I'm ready to fight. Come on." And he laughed as he hurried down
+the woodland trail to the water-side.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The two men had reached the quay-side, which was lined with bales of
+wood-pulp stacked ready for shipment. Farther down its length the cranes
+were rattling their chains, swinging their burdens out over the holds of
+the vessel taking in its moist cargo. The stevedores were vociferously
+busy, working against time. For, in the brief open season, time was the
+very essence of the success demanded for the mills. The noise, the babel
+of it all was usually the choicest music to Standing and his manager.
+
+But just now they were less heeding. Their eyes were turned upon the
+small steamer plugging its deliberate way over the water towards them.
+It was a small, heavily-built tub of a vessel calculated to survive the
+worst Atlantic storms.
+
+Bat's face was without any expression of undue emotion. But the hard
+lines about his clean-shaven mouth were sharply set. Standing was asurge
+with an excitement that fired his dark eyes. His wide-brimmed hat was
+thrust back from his forehead, and he stood with his hands thrust deeply
+in the pockets of his moleskin trousers. His nervous fingers were
+playing with loose coins and keys which they found irresistible.
+
+The _Lizzie_ came steadily on.
+
+"We'll know the whole game in minutes now."
+
+Standing could keep silent no longer. Bat nodded.
+
+"Yep."
+
+Orders from the bridge of the packet boat rang out over the water. Then
+Standing went on.
+
+"I want to find Idepski aboard," he said. He was scarcely addressing his
+companion. "It would be good to get Master Walter here, fifty-three
+degrees north." A short, hard laugh punctuated his words. Then he turned
+abruptly. "Who's running No. 10 camp?"
+
+Just for an instant Bat withdrew his gaze from the approaching vessel.
+He flashed a keen look of enquiry into the eyes of the questioner.
+
+"Ole Porson," he said.
+
+"I thought so. He's a good boy. He'll do."
+
+Standing nodded. The cold significance of his tone was not lost on his
+companion. Maybe Bat understood the thing that was passing in the
+other's mind. At any rate he turned again to the broad-beamed tub
+steaming so busily towards them.
+
+"I see old Hardy on the bridge," Standing went on a moment later. Then
+he added: "Fancy navigating the Labrador coast for forty years. No, I
+couldn't do it. I wouldn't have the--guts."
+
+Bat still remained silent. He understood. The other was talking because
+it was impossible for him to refrain.
+
+"They're standing ready to make fast," Standing said sharply. He drew a
+quick breath. Then his manner changed and his words came pensively.
+"Say, it's a queer life--a hell of a life. The sea folk, I mean. It's
+about the worst on earth. Think of it, cooped within those timbers that
+are never easy till they lie at anchor in the shelter of a harbour. I'd
+just hate it. Their life? What is it? It's not life at all. Hard work,
+hard food, hard times, and hard drinking--when they're ashore--most of
+them. I think I can understand. They surely need something to drown the
+memory of the threat they're always living under. No, they don't live.
+They exist. Here, let's stand clear. They're coming right in."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The bustle of landing was in full swing. Even with so small a craft as
+the _Lizzie_ there was commotion. Orders flew from lip to lip. Creaking
+cables strained at unyielding bollards. Gangways clattered out from
+deck, and ran down on to the quay with a crash. Hatches were flung open
+and the steam winches rattled incessantly.
+
+Standing and Harker were looking on from a vantage point well clear of
+the work of unloading. The captain of the vessel, "Old Man" Hardy, was
+with them. The seaman was beaming with that satisfaction which belongs
+to the master when his vessel is safely in port.
+
+"Oh, I guess it ain't been too bad a trip," he was saying. "Takin' the
+'ins' with the 'outs,' I'd say it was a fairish passage, which is mostly
+as it should be, seein' it's my last voyage in the old barge. Y'see, you
+folks are kind of robbing me of this blessed old kettle," he explained,
+with a grin that lit up the whole of his mahogany features. "Y'see we're
+loaded well-nigh rail under with stuff for your mill, which don't leave
+a dog's chance for the other folks along the coast. The Company guesses
+they got to put on a two thousand tonner. The _Myra_. I haven't a kick
+comin'. She's all a seaboat. Still, I'm kind of sorry, don't you know.
+I've known the _Lizzie_ since she came off the stocks, which is mostly
+forty years, and we're mighty good friends, which ain't allus the way.
+I'd say, too, I'm getting old for a change. Still--."
+
+Standing shook his head.
+
+"What do they say? 'Hardy' by name, 'Hardy' by nature. The toughest and
+best sailorman on the Labrador coast! Well, I'm sorry you don't feel
+good about it. But," he added with a smile, "it means a good deal to us
+getting a bigger packet."
+
+Captain Hardy nodded.
+
+"Thankee kindly. It's good to know folks reckon a fellow something more
+than just part of a kettle of scrap like this old packet. But I'd have
+been glad to finish my job with her. Still, times don't stand around
+even in Labrador." He finished up with something in the nature of a
+sigh.
+
+The work going forward was full of interest. But it was not the work
+that held Standing, or the watchful eyes of Bat Harker. Their sole
+interest was in the personality of the crew and the five passengers,
+mostly "drummers," from the great business houses of Quebec and
+Montreal, who were struggling to land their trunks of samples and get
+them off to the offices of the mill so as to complete their trade before
+the _Lizzie_ put to sea again. Not one of these escaped their
+observation.
+
+"You seem to keep much the same crew right along, Hardy," Standing said
+pleasantly. "I suppose they like shipping with a good skipper. I seem to
+recognise most of their faces."
+
+"Oh, yes. They're mostly the same boys," Hardy agreed, obviously
+appreciating the compliment. "But I guess I lost four boys this trip.
+They skipped half an hour before putting to sea. It happens that way now
+and then, if they're only soused enough when they get aboard. They're a
+crazy lot with rye under their belts. I just had to replace 'em with
+some dockside loafers, or lie alongside another day."
+
+Standing nodded. A man was moving down the gangway bearing a large,
+grey, official-looking sack on his shoulders. He was a slight, dark man
+with a curiously foreign cast about his features.
+
+"The mail?" he enquired. And a curious sharpness flavoured his demand.
+Then he added, with studied indifference. "One of your--dockside
+loafers?"
+
+Captain Hardy laughed. He continued to laugh as he watched the
+unhandiness of the man staggering down the gangway under his burden.
+
+"Yep. The mail," he said. "And I'd hate to set that feller to work on a
+seaman's job. He's about as unhandy as a doped Chinaman. I'd say Masters
+is playing safe keeping him from messing up the running gear while we're
+discharging. Say, get a look at it."
+
+A great laugh accompanied the old man's words as the foreign-looking
+creature tripped on the gangway, and only saved himself from a bad fall
+by precipitating his burden upon the quay. There was no responsive
+laughter in Standing. And Bat Harker's features remained rigidly
+unsmiling. Standing turned sharply.
+
+"Maybe you can spare that boy to run those mails up to my office," he
+said. "It's a good healthy pull up the hill for him, and my folks are
+full to the neck with things. I'd be glad."
+
+"Sure he can." Captain Hardy was only too delighted to be able to oblige
+so important a customer of his company. He promptly shouted at the
+landing officer.
+
+"Ho, you! Masters! Just let that darn Dago tote them mails right up to
+Mr. Standing's office. He ain't no sort of use out of hell down
+here--anyway."
+
+The mate's reply came back with an appreciative grin.
+
+"Ay, sir," he cried, and forthwith hurled the order at the mail carrier
+with a plentiful accompaniment of appropriate adjectives.
+
+"Thanks," Standing turned away. His smiling luminous eyes were shining.
+"I'll get right along up, Captain. There's liable to be things need
+seeing to in that mail before you pull out. You'd best come along, too,
+Bat," he added pointedly.
+
+Standing hurried away. A sudden fierce passion was surging through his
+veins. Nisson was right. He knew it--now. And in a fever of impatience
+he was yearning to come to grips with those who would rob him of the
+hopes in which his whole being was bound up.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+IDEPSKI
+
+
+The two men reached the office on the hillside minutes before the mail
+carrier. They took the hill direct, passing hurriedly through the aisles
+of scented woods which shadowed its face. The other, the stranger, was
+left with no alternative but the roadway, zigzagging at an easier
+incline.
+
+Standing passed into the house. His confidential man of many races
+looked up from his work. The quick, black eyes were questioning. He was
+perhaps startled at the swift return of the man whom he regarded above
+all others.
+
+Standing spoke coldly, emphatically.
+
+"There's a man coming along up. He's a sailorman, and he's dressed in
+dirty dungaree, and he's carrying a sack of mail. Now see and get this
+clearly, Loale. It's important. It's so important I can't stand for any
+sort of mistake. When he comes you've got to send him right into my room
+with the mail-bag. I want him to take it in _himself_. You get that?"
+
+The half-breed's eyes blinked. It was rather the curious attitude of an
+attentive dog. But that was always his way when the master of the
+Sachigo Mill spoke to him.
+
+Pete Loale was quite an unusual creature. He looked unkempt and unclean,
+with his yellow, pock-marked skin, and his clothes that would have
+disgraced a second-hand dealer's stores of waste. But for all his lack
+in these directions there was that in the man which was more than worth
+while. Out of his black eyes looked a world of intelligence. There was
+also a resource and initiative in him that Standing fully appreciated.
+
+"Sure I get that," he said simply. Then he repeated in the manner of a
+child determined to make no mistake. "He's to take that mail-bag right
+into your office--_himself_."
+
+"That's it. Don't knock on my door. Don't let him think there's a soul
+inside that room. Just boost him right in. You get that?"
+
+The half-breed nodded.
+
+"I'll just say: 'Here you! Just push that darn truck right inside that
+room, an' don't worry me with it, I'm busy.' That how?" The man hunched
+his slim shoulders into a shrug.
+
+"See you do it--just that way," Standing said. Then he turned to Bat.
+"We'll get inside," he went on. "He'll be right along."
+
+They passed into the office. The door closed behind them and Standing
+moved over to his seat at the crowded desk.
+
+"Wal?"
+
+Bat was still standing. He failed to grasp his friend's purpose. His wit
+was unequal to the rapid process of the other's swiftly calculating
+mind.
+
+Standing littered his writing-pad with papers. He picked up a pen and
+jabbed it in the inkwell. Then he flung it aside and adopted a
+fountain-pen which he drew from his waistcoat pocket. His eyes lit with
+a half-smile as he finally raised them to the rugged face before him.
+
+"You sit right over there by that window, Bat," he said easily. "If you
+get a look out of it you'll be amazed at the number of things to
+interest you." He nodded as Bat moved away with a grin and took the
+chair indicated. "That's it. Just sit around, and you won't see or even
+hear the fellow with the mail fall in through the door. And maybe,
+sitting there, you'll want to smoke your foul old pipe. Sort of pipe of
+peaceful meditation. Yes, I'd smoke that pipe, old friend, but you can
+cut out the peaceful meditation. You need to be ready to act quick when
+I pass the word. It's going to be easy. So easy I almost feel sorry
+for--Idepski."
+
+"It _is_--Idepski?" Bat filled and lit his pipe.
+
+"It surely is. No other. And--I'm glad. Now we'll quit talk, old friend.
+Just smoke, and look out of that window, and--think like hell."
+
+Bat's understanding of his friend was well founded. The extreme nervous
+tension in Standing was obvious. It was in the wide, dark eyes. It was
+in the constant shifting of the feet which the table revealed. For the
+time, at least, the cowardice Standing claimed for himself was entirely
+swamped. He was stirred by the headlong excitement of battle in a manner
+that left Bat more than satisfied.
+
+Once Bat turned from his contemplation of the piled-up country beyond
+the valley. It was at the sound of Standing's fiercely scratching pen.
+And his quick gaze took in the luxury of the setting for the little
+drama he felt was about to be enacted.
+
+It was a wide, pleasant room, built wholly of red pine, and polished as
+only red pine will polish. There was a thick oriental carpet on the
+floor, and all the mahogany furniture was upholstered in red morocco.
+There were a few carefully selected pictures upon the walls, hung with
+an eye to the light upon each. But it was not an extravagant room. It
+suggested the homeland of Scotland, from which the owner of it all
+hailed. The Canadian atmosphere only found expression in the great steel
+stove which stood in one corner, and the splendid timber of which the
+walls of the room were built.
+
+But Bat's eyes swiftly returned to their allotted task, and his reeking
+pipe did its duty with hearty goodwill. There was the sound of strident
+voices in the outer room, and the rattle of the door handle turning with
+a wrench.
+
+The door swung open. The next moment there was the sound of a sack
+pitched upon the soft pile of the carpet. And through the open doorway
+the harsh voice of Loale pursued the intruder in sharp protest.
+
+"Say, do you think you're stowing cargo in your darn, crazy old barge?"
+he cried. "If you fancy throwing things around you best get out an' do
+it. Guess you ain't used to a gent's office, you darn sailorman--"
+
+But the door was closed with a slam and the rest of the protest was cut
+off. Bat swung about in his chair to discover a picture not easily to be
+forgotten.
+
+Standing had left his desk. He was there with his back against the
+closed door, and his lean figure towered over the shorter sailorman in
+dungaree, who stood gazing up at him questioningly. The sight appealed
+to the grim humour of the manager. He wanted to laugh. But he refrained,
+though his eyes lit responsively as he watched the smile of irony that
+gleamed in the mill-owner's eyes.
+
+"Well, well." Standing's tone lost none of the aggravation of his smile.
+"Say, I'd never have recognised you, Idepski, if it hadn't been that I
+was warned you'd shipped on the _Lizzie_." He laughed outright. "I can't
+help it. You wouldn't blame me laughing if you could see yourself. Last
+time I had the pleasure of encountering you was in Detroit. That's years
+ago. How many? Nearly seven. It seems to me I remember a bright-looking
+'sleuth,' neat, clean, spruce, with a crease to his pant-legs like a
+razor edge, a fellow more concerned for his bath than his religion. Say,
+where did you raise all that junk? From old man Hardy's slop-chest?
+Hellbeam makes you work for your money when you're driven to wallowing
+in a muck-hole like the _Lizzie_. It isn't worth it. You see, you've run
+into the worst failure you've made in years. But I only wish you could
+see the sorry sort of sailorman you look."
+
+Standing's right hand was behind him, and Bat heard the key turn in the
+lock of the door. He waited. But the trapped agent never opened his
+lips.
+
+Idepski had seen Standing and the other down at the quay-side. He had
+left them there when he started up the hill. Yet--A bitter fury was
+driving him. He realised the trap that had been laid. He realised
+something of the deadly purpose lying behind it. So he remained silent
+under the scourge that was intended to hurt.
+
+For all the filthy dungarees tucked into the clumsy legs of high leather
+sea boots, the dirty-coloured handkerchief knotted about his neck, the
+curious napless cloth cap with its peak pulled down over one eye, that
+curious cap which seems to be worn by no one else in the world but
+seafaring men, it was easy enough for Bat to visualise the dapper
+picture, that other picture of Walter Idepski that Standing had
+described. The man possessed a well-knit, sinuous figure which his
+dungarees could not disguise. His alert eyes were good-looking. And,
+cleaned of the black, stubbly growth of beard and whisker, an amazing
+transformation in his looks would surely have been achieved. But Bat's
+interest was less with these things than with the possible reaction the
+man might contemplate.
+
+For the moment, however, the situation was entirely dominated by
+Standing, who displayed no sign of relaxing his hold upon it. He flung
+out a pointing hand, and Bat saw it was grasping the door key.
+
+"You'd best take that chair, Idepski," he ordered. "You've opened war on
+me, but there's no need to keep you standing for it. You'll take that
+seat against my writing table. But first, Bat, here, is going to relieve
+you of the useless weapons I see you've got on you. Get those, Bat!
+There's a gun and a sheath knife, and they're clumsily showing their
+shape under his dungarees."
+
+It was the word the mill-manager had awaited. He was on his feet in an
+instant. Idepski stirred to action. He turned to meet him.
+
+"Keep your darn hands off!" he cried fiercely. "By--"
+
+His hand had flown to his hip. But he was given no time. Bat was on him
+like an avalanche, an avalanche of furious purpose. The fighting spirit
+in him yearned, and in a moment his victim was caught up in a crushing
+embrace. There was a short, fierce struggle. But Idepski was no match
+for the super lumber-jack.
+
+While Bat held on, the tenacious hands of Standing tore the weapons he
+had discovered from their hiding places. Then in a moment Idepski found
+himself sprawling in the chair he had been invited to take.
+
+Standing's appreciation was evident as he watched the man draw a gold
+cigarette case from the breast pocket of his overalls as though nothing
+had occurred. It was an act of studied coolness that did not for a
+moment deceive, but it pleased. However, his next effrontery pleased the
+mill-owner still more.
+
+"Say, boys," Idepski observed quietly, as he opened the case and
+extracted a cigarette. "I guess I'm kind o' glad you left me this. But I
+don't figger you're out for loot, anyway." Then he glanced up at the man
+watching him so interestedly. "Maybe you'll oblige me with a light," he
+demanded, and cocked up the cigarette he had thrust between his lips
+with an exaggerated impertinence.
+
+The action was quite irresistible and Standing nodded.
+
+"Sure," he said smilingly, and picked up the matchbox lying on his
+table.
+
+He struck a match and held it while the other obtained the required
+light. Then he passed round the desk to the seat he had originally
+occupied.
+
+Idepski leant back in his chair, and luxuriated in a deep inhalation of
+smoke. Bat watched him from his place at the window. Standing placed the
+revolver and sheath knife he had taken possession of in a drawer in the
+desk, and closed it carefully.
+
+"Well, what's the play?" Idepski addressed himself solely to Standing.
+"I guess you've said a deal calculated to rile, and your pardner's done
+more," he went on. "Still--anyway we're mostly men and not school-kids.
+What's the play?"
+
+Standing, too, was leaning back in his chair.
+
+"It's easy," he said, after a moment's thoughtful regard. Suddenly he
+drew his chair up to the table, and, leaning forward, folded his arms
+upon the littered blotting pad in front of him. "It's seven years since
+Hellbeam--blazed the war trail," he said deliberately. "I know he's
+persistent. He's angry. And he's the sort of man who doesn't cool down
+easily. But it's taken him seven years to locate me here. And during all
+that time I've been looking on, watching his every move." He shook his
+head. "He's badly served, for all his wealth. He was badly served from
+the start. You should never have let me beat you in that first race
+across the border. I got away with every cent of the stuff, and--you
+shouldn't have let me. You certainly were at fault. However, it doesn't
+matter."
+
+Idepski removed his cigarette from his lips and dropped the ash of it in
+the waste basket.
+
+"No. It doesn't matter, because I'll get you--in the end," he retorted
+coldly.
+
+"Perhaps."
+
+Standing shrugged. But there was no indifference in his eyes. The acid
+sharpness of Idepski's retort had driven straight home. If the agent
+failed to detect it, the watchful eyes of Bat missed nothing. To him the
+danger signal lay in the curious flicker of his friend's eyelids. The
+sight impelled him. He jumped in and took up the challenge in the blunt
+fashion he best understood.
+
+"Guess you've got nightmare, boy," he said, with a sneering laugh. "I
+ain't much at figgers, but it seems to me if it's taken you seven years
+to locate us here, it's going to take you seventy-seven gettin' Standing
+back across that border. Work it out."
+
+Idepski had no intention of being drawn. He replied without turning.
+
+"You think that?" he said easily. "Say, don't worry a thing; I'm
+satisfied. Just as sure as the sun'll rise to-morrow, Hellbeam'll get
+Leslie Martin, or Standing as he chooses to call himself now, just where
+he needs him. And if I know Hellbeam that'll be in the worst
+penitentiary the United States can produce. Guess you're going to wish
+you hadn't, Mister--Standing."
+
+Perhaps Idepski knew his man, and understood the weakness of which Bat
+was so painfully aware. Perhaps he was just fencing, or even putting up
+a bluff in view of his own position. Whatever his purpose the effect of
+his added threat was instant.
+
+Standing's luminous eyes hardened. The muscles of his jaws gripped. He
+sat up, and his whole attitude expressed again that fighting mood in
+which Bat rejoiced.
+
+"That's all right," he said sharply. "That's just talk. You've come a
+hell of a long way with those boys of yours down at the _Lizzie_ to
+worry out some body-snatching. That's all right. I don't just see how
+you've figgered to do it. But that's your affair. The point is, I'm
+going to do the body-snatching instead of you. And it's quite clear to
+me how I intend doing it. You're going a trip--right off. And it's a
+trip from which you won't get a chance of getting back to Quebec under
+this time next year. You see, winter's closing down in a month, and
+Labrador and Northern Quebec aren't wholesome territory for any man to
+set out to beat the trail in winter, especially with folks around
+anxious to stop him. You reckon I'm to pass a while in a States
+penitentiary. Well, meanwhile you're going to try what this country can
+show you in the way of a--prison ground. And you're going to try it for
+at least a year. You'll be treated white. But you'll need to work for
+your grub like other folks, and if you don't feel like working you won't
+eat. We're fifty-three degrees north here, and our ways are the tough
+ways of the tough country we live in. There's no sort of mercy in this
+country. Bat, here, is going to see you on your trip, and, if you take
+my advice, you won't rile Bat. He's got it in him, and in his hands, to
+make things darn unpleasant for you. You've a goodish nerve, and maybe
+you've goodish sense. You'll need 'em both for the next twelve months.
+After that it's up to you. But if you try kicking between now and then,
+why--God help you."
+
+Standing beckoned Bat from his seat at the window. He held up the door
+key.
+
+"You best take this," he said. "No. 10. And he starts out right away. He
+needs to be well on the road before the _Lizzie_ puts to sea."
+
+Bat took the key. He moved away and unlocked the door, and remained
+beside it grimly regarding the man who had listened without comment to
+the sentence passed on him, without the smallest display of emotion.
+Idepski was smoking his second cigarette.
+
+"No. 10. I s'pose that's one of your lumber camps." Idepski looked up
+from his contemplation of the cigarette. His dark eyes were levelled at
+the man across the writing table. "A tough place, eh? or you wouldn't be
+sending me there." He laughed in a fashion that left his eyes coldly
+enquiring.
+
+Standing inclined his head. He was without mercy, without pity.
+
+"It's a tough camp in a tough country," he said deliberately. "It's a
+camp where you'll get just as good a time as you choose to earn. The boy
+who runs it learnt his job in the forests of Quebec, and you'll likely
+understand what that means. Well, you're going right off now. But
+there's this I want to tell you before I see the last of you--for a
+year. I know you, Idepski. I know you for all you are, and all you're
+ever likely to be. You're an unscrupulous blackmailer and crook. You're
+a parasite battening yourself on the weakness of human nature, taking
+your toll from whichever side of a dispute will pay you best. You're
+taking Hellbeam's money in the dispute between him and me, and you'll go
+on taking it till you pull off the play he's asking, or get broken in
+the work of it. That's all right as far as I'm concerned. You've nerve,
+you've courage, or you wouldn't be the crook you are. I guess you'll go
+on because I've no intention of competing with Hellbeam for your
+services. But I want you to understand clearly you've jumped into a
+mighty big fight. This is a country where a fight can go on without the
+prying eyes of the laws of civilisation peeking into things. And by that
+I take it you'll understand I reckon to make war to the knife. You came
+here prepared to use force. That's all right. We shan't hesitate to use
+force on our side. And we're going to use it to the limit. If peace is
+only to be gained at the cost of your life you're going to pay that
+cost--if it suits me. That's all I've to say at the moment. For the
+present, for a year, you'll be safely muzzled. You see, I don't need to
+worry with those boys you brought with you. You best go along with Bat
+now. He'll fix things ready for your trip."
+
+The dismissal was complete, and Bat was prompt to accept his cue. He
+moved towards the man smoking at the table, much in the fashion of a
+warder advancing to take possession of his prisoner after sentence of
+the court.
+
+It was at that moment that the cold mask of indifference fell from the
+agent. Hardy as he was, the contemplation of his momentary failure,
+which was about to cost him twelve months of hardship in one of the
+roughest lumber camps in Labrador, robbed him of something of that nerve
+which was his chief asset. He glanced for the first time at the burly
+figure of Bat. He contemplated the rugged features of the man whose
+battling instinct was his strongest characteristic. He read the purpose
+in the grim set of the square jaws, and in the unyielding light of the
+grey eyes peering out from under shaggy brows. And that which he read
+reduced him to a feeling of impotence. He flung a look of fury and hate
+at the man behind the desk.
+
+"Maybe that's all you've to say," he cried, his jaws snapping viciously
+over his words, his eyes fiercely alight. "You think you've won when
+you've only gained a moment's respite. You can't win. You don't know.
+Oh, yes. I guess you can send me along out of the way. You can do just
+all you reckon. And if it suits you, you can shoot me up or any other
+old thing. You forget Hellbeam. You tell me I'm a crook and a
+blackmailer, you give me credit for nerve and courage. That's all right.
+You think these things, and I don't have to worry. But you've robbed
+Hellbeam. You've robbed him like any common 'hold-up'--of millions. It's
+not for you to talk of crooks and blackmailers. The laws of the States
+are going to find you the crook, and Hellbeam'll see they don't err for
+leniency. Hellbeam'll get you as sure as God. You've got months to think
+it over, and when you've done I reckon you won't fancy shouting. Well,
+I'm ready for this joy spot you call No. 10. I'm not going to kick. I've
+sense enough to know when the drop's on me. But you'll see me again. Oh,
+yes, you'll see me again because you're not going to shoot me up. For
+all your talk you haven't the nerve. You'll see me again, and when you
+do--well, don't forget Hellbeam's at the other end of this business.
+Guess I'm ready."
+
+The man stood up. And as he stood his eyes looked squarely into those of
+Bat.
+
+"Get on with it," he cried, and flung the remains of his lighted
+cigarette on the pile of the carpet, and trod it viciously underfoot
+with his heavy sea boot.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Standing was alone. He was alone with the thoughts his encounter with
+Idepski had inspired. Judging by the expression of his reflective eyes
+they were scarcely those of a man confident of victory. Had Bat been
+there to witness, the task he was at that moment engaged upon would
+surely have been robbed of half its satisfaction.
+
+But Bat had gone. And with him had gone the man who was to learn the
+rigours of a Labrador winter under conditions of hardship he had not yet
+realised. Meanwhile Standing was free to think as his emotions guided
+him, with no watchful eyes to observe.
+
+"You'll see me again, and when you do--well, don't forget Hellbeam's at
+the other end of this business."
+
+The words haunted. The threat of them appealed to an imagination that
+was a-riot.
+
+After a time Standing stirred restlessly. He sat up and brushed the
+litter of paper aside. Then he leant back in his chair and his fine eyes
+were lit with an agony of doubt and disquiet. The poisonous seed of the
+agent's retort had fallen upon fruitful soil.
+
+But after awhile the tension seemed to relax, and his gaze wandered from
+the grey daylight beyond the window and was suddenly caught and held by
+the mail bag, still lying where the man had flung it. It was like the
+swift passing of a summer storm. The man's whole expression underwent a
+complete transformation. The mail! The mail from Quebec--unopened!
+
+He sprang to his feet. For the moment Idepski, Hellbeam, everything was
+forgotten. His thought had bridged the miles between Farewell Cove and
+the ancient city of the early French, Nancy! That woman--that devoted
+wife who was striving with all the power of a frail body to serve him.
+There would be a letter in that mail from Nisson, telling him--Yes.
+There might even be a letter from Nancy herself.
+
+The sack was in his hands. He had broken the seals. He shook out the
+contents upon the floor. A packet of less than half a hundred letters,
+and the rest was an assortment of parcels of all shapes and sizes. It
+was the letter packet that interested him, and he untied the string that
+held it.
+
+A swift search produced the expected. Standing looked for the
+handwriting of Charles Nisson, the shrewd, obscure lawyer in the country
+town of Abercrombie. He had never yet failed him. He would not be likely
+to. A bulky letter remained in his hand. The others lay scattered
+broadcast upon the desk.
+
+For some moments he held the letter unopened. The lean fingers felt the
+bulk of the envelope, while feverish eyes surveyed, and read over and
+over the address in the familiar small, cramped handwriting. The impulse
+of the moment was to tear open the letter forthwith, to snatch at the
+tidings he felt it to contain. But something deterred. Something left
+him doubting, hesitating. It was what Bat had called his "yellow
+streak." Suppose--suppose--But with all his might he thrust his fears
+aside. He tore off the outer cover and unfolded the closely written
+pages.
+
+Long, silent moments passed, broken only by the shuffling of the sheets
+of the letter as he turned them. Not once did he look up from his
+reading. Right through to the end, the dreadful, bitter end, he read the
+hideous news his loyal friend had to impart. Twice, during the reading,
+the sharp intake of breath, that almost whistled in the silence of the
+room, told of an emotion he had no power to repress, and at the finish
+of it all the mechanically re-folded page's fell from shaking, nerveless
+fingers upon the littered desk.
+
+His eyes remained lowered gazing at the fallen letter. His hands
+remained poised where the letter had fallen from them. His face had lost
+its healthful hue. It was grey, and drawn, and the lips that parted as
+he muttered had completely blanched.
+
+"Dead!" he whispered without consciousness of articulation. "Dead!
+Nancy! My boy! Both! Oh, God!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE "YELLOW STREAK"
+
+
+The grey, evening light was significant of the passing season. A chilly
+breeze whipped about the faces of the men at the fringe of the woods.
+They were resting after a long tramp of inspection through the virgin
+forests. It was on a ledge, high up on the hillside of the northern
+shore of the cove, where the ground dropped away in front of them
+several hundreds of feet to the waters below. Behind them was a backing
+of standing timber which sheltered them from the full force of the
+biting wind.
+
+It was nearly a week since Bat Harker had returned from his mission to
+No. 10 Camp. He had returned full of satisfaction at the completion of
+his task, and comforted by the knowledge that the horizon of the mill
+had been cleared of threatening clouds for at least the period of a
+year. Then he encountered the ricochet of the blow which Fate had dealt
+his friend and employer.
+
+It had been within half an hour of his return, while yet the stains and
+dust of his journey remained upon him, while yet he was yearning for
+that rest for his body to which it was entitled.
+
+Bat had concluded the report of his journey, and the two men were
+closeted together in the office on the hillside. The lumberman had had
+no suspicion of the thing that had happened in his absence, and Standing
+had given no indication. Standing seemed unchanged. There had been the
+customary smile of welcome in his eyes. There had been the cordial
+handshake of friendship. Maybe Standing had talked less, and the
+searching questions usual in him had not been forthcoming. Maybe there
+was a curiously tired, strained look in his eyes. But that was all.
+
+At the conclusion of his report Bat had bent eagerly forward over the
+desk which stood between them. His hard eyes were smiling. His whole
+manner was that of a man anticipating something pleasant.
+
+"Say, Les," he cried, "guess you've maybe some news for me, too. It's
+more than a month since--and you were expecting--Things all right?"
+
+Standing reached towards the drawer beside him, and as he did so there
+was a sound. It was a curious, inarticulate sound that Bat interpreted
+into a laugh. The other opened the drawer and drew out the folded pages
+of a letter. These he passed across the table, and his eyes were without
+a shadow of the laugh which Bat thought he had heard.
+
+"Best read it," he said. "Take your time. I'll just finish these figures
+I'm working on."
+
+It was the curious, cold tone that stirred Bat to his first misgiving.
+
+He took the letter. There were pages of it. He set them in order and
+commenced to read. And meanwhile Standing remained apparently engrossed
+in his figures.
+
+He read the letter through. He read it slowly, carefully. Then, like
+the other had done, the man to whom it was addressed, he read it a
+second time. And as he read every vestige of his previous satisfaction
+passed from him. A cold constriction seemed to fasten upon his strong
+heart. And a terrible realisation of the tragedy of it all took
+possession of him. At the end of his second reading he handed the letter
+back to its owner without comment of any sort, without a word, but with
+a hand that, for once in his life, was unsteady.
+
+"That was in the mail Idepski brought," Standing said, as he returned
+the letter to its place, and shut and locked the drawer.
+
+"You remember?" he went on, pointing. "He flung it down there. Just by
+the door. Yes, it was just there, because I stood against the door, and
+was only just clear of it."
+
+He paused and his hand remained pointing at the spot where the mail bag
+had lain. It was as if the spot held him fascinated. Then his arm
+lowered slowly, and his hand came to rest on the edge of the table,
+gripping it with unnecessary force.
+
+"Seems queer," he went on, after a while. Then he shook his head. "Think
+of it. Nancy--my Nancy. Dead! She died giving birth to my boy. And
+he--he was stillborn. Why? I--I can't seem to realize it. I--don't--" He
+paused, and a strained, hunted look grew in his eyes. "No. It's easy.
+It's just Fate. That's it. There's no escape."
+
+He drew a deep breath and one lean hand smoothed back his shining black
+hair. Then his eyes came back to the face of the man opposite, and the
+agony in them was beyond words. After a moment their terrible expression
+became lost as he bent over his work. "I'm glad you're back, Bat," he
+said, without looking up.
+
+"There's a hell of a lot of orders to get out. We're running close up
+to winter."
+
+The lumberman understood. At a single blow this man's every hope had
+been smashed and ground under the heel of an iron fate. The wife, the
+woman he had worshipped, had given her life to serve him, and with her
+had gone the man-child, about whom had been woven the entire network of
+a father's hopes and desires.
+
+A week had passed since Bat had witnessed the voiceless agony of his
+friend. A week of endless labour and unspoken fears. He knew Standing as
+it is given to few to know the heart of another. His sympathy was real.
+It was of that quality which made him desire above all things to render
+the heartbroken man real physical and moral help. But no opening had
+been given him, and he feared to probe the wound that had been
+inflicted. During those first seven days Standing seemed to be obsessed
+with a desire to work, to work all day and every night, as though he
+dared not pause lest his disaster should overwhelm him.
+
+Now it was Sunday. Night and day the work had gone on. No less than ten
+freighters had been loaded and dispatched since Bat's return, and only
+that morning two vessels had cast off, laden to the water-line, and
+passed down on the tide for the mouth of the cove. At the finish of the
+midday meal Standing had announced his intentions for the afternoon.
+
+"We need to get a look into the lumber on the north side, Bat," he said.
+"You'd best come along with me. How do you think?"
+
+And Bat had agreed on the instant.
+
+"Sure," he said. "There's a heap to be done that way if we're to start
+layin' the penstocks down on that side next year."
+
+So they had spent the hours before dusk in a prolonged tramp through
+the forests of the Northern shore. And never for one moment was their
+talk and apparent interest allowed to drift from the wealth of
+long-fibred timber they were inspecting.
+
+But somehow to Bat the whole thing was unreal. It meant nothing. It
+could mean nothing. He felt like a man walking towards a precipice he
+could not avoid. He felt disaster, added disaster, was in the air and
+was closing in upon them. He knew in his heart that this long, weary
+inspection, all the stuff they talked, all the future plans they were
+making for the mill was the merest excuse. And he wondered when Standing
+would abandon it and reveal his actual purpose. The man, he knew, was
+consumed by a voiceless grief. His soul was tortured beyond endurance.
+And there was that "yellow streak," which Bat so feared. When, when
+would it reveal itself? How?
+
+Now, at last, as they rested on the ledge overlooking the mill and the
+waters of the cove, he felt the moment of its revelation had arrived. He
+was propped against the stump of a storm-thrown tamarack. Standing was
+stretched prone upon the fallen trunk itself. Neither had spoken for
+some minutes. But the trend of thought was apparent in each. Bat's
+deep-set, troubled eyes were regarding the life and movement going on
+down at the mill, whose future was the greatest concern of his life.
+Standing, too, was gazing out over the waters. But his darkly brooding
+eyes were on the splendid house he had set up on the opposite hillside.
+It was the home about which his every earthly hope had centred. And even
+now, in his despair, it remained a magnet for his hopeless gaze.
+
+Winter was already in the bite of the air and in the absence of the
+legions of flies and mosquitoes as well as in the chilly grey of the
+lapping waters below them. It was doubtless, too, searching the heart of
+these men whose faces gave no indication of the sunlight of summer
+shining within.
+
+"Bat!"
+
+The lumberman turned sharply. He spat out a stream of tobacco juice and
+waited.
+
+"Bat, old friend, it's no use." Standing had swung himself into a
+sitting posture. He was leaning forward on the tree-trunk with his
+forearms folded across his knees. "We've done a lot of talk, and we've
+searched these forests good. And it's all no use. None at all. There's
+going to be no penstocks set up this side of the water next year--as far
+as I'm concerned. I've done. Finished. Plumb finished. I'm quitting.
+Quitting it all."
+
+The lumberman ejected a masticated chew and took a fresh one.
+
+"You see, old friend, I'll go crazy if I stop around," Standing went on.
+"I've been hit a pretty desperate punch, and I haven't the guts to stand
+up to it. When it came I set my teeth. I wanted to keep sane. I reminded
+myself of all I owed to the folks working for us. I thought of you. And
+I tried to bolster myself with the schemes we had for beating the
+Skandinavians out of this country's pulp-wood trade. Yes, I tried. God,
+how I tried! But my guts are weak, and I know what lies ahead. For
+nearly six weeks I've been working things out, and for a week I've been
+wondering how I should tell you. I brought you here to tell you.
+
+"I want you to understand it good," he went on, after the briefest
+pause. "I can't stand to live on in the house that Nancy and I built up.
+Every room is haunted by her. By her happy laugh, and by memories of the
+hours we sat and talked of the boy-child we'd both set our hearts on. I
+just can't do it without going stark, staring, raving mad. I can't."
+
+"That's how I figgered. I've watched it in you, Les. Tell me the rest."
+
+Bat chewed steadily. It was a safety-valve for his feelings.
+
+"The rest?" Standing turned to gaze out at the house across the water.
+"If it weren't for you, Bat, I'd close right down. I'd leave everything
+standing and--get out," he went on slowly. "The whole thing's a
+nightmare. Look at it. Look around. The forests of soft wood. The
+township we've set up. The harnessed water power. That--that house of
+mine. It's all nightmare, and I don't want it. I'm afraid. I'm scared to
+death of it."
+
+Bat moved away from the stump he had been propped against. He passed
+across to the edge of the ledge and stood gazing down on the scenes
+below.
+
+"You needn't worry for me," he said. "It don't matter a cuss where or
+how I hustle my dry hash. I was born that way. Fix things the way you
+feel. Cut me right out."
+
+The man's generosity was a simple expression of his rugged nature. His
+love of that great work below him, in the creation of which he had taken
+so great a part, was nothing to him at that moment. He was concerned
+only for the man, who had held out a succouring hand, and led him, in
+his darkest moments, to safety and prosperity.
+
+Standing shook his head at the broad back squared against the grey,
+wintry sky.
+
+"I didn't mean it that way, old friend," he said.
+
+Bat swung around. His grey eyes were wide. His face seemed to have
+softened out of its usual harsh cast.
+
+"But I do, Les," he cried. "You don't need to figger a thing about me.
+You're hurt, boy. You're hurt mighty sore. Cut me right out of your
+figgers, and do the things that's goin' to heal that sore. If there's a
+thing I can do to help you, why, I guess I'd be glad to know it."
+
+For a few moments Standing remained silent. Perhaps he was pondering
+upon what he had to say. Perhaps he was simply gaining time to suppress
+the emotions which the selflessness of the other had inspired.
+
+"Here," he cried at last, "I best tell you the whole story that's in my
+mind. I told you I've been figuring it out. Well, it's figured to the
+last decimal. You think you know me. Maybe you do. Maybe you know only
+part of the things I know about myself. If you knew them all I'd hate to
+think of the contempt you'd have to hand me. You see, Bat, I'm a coward,
+a terrible moral coward. Oh, I'm not scared of any man living when it
+comes to a fight. But my mind's full of ghosts and nightmares ready to
+jump at me with every doubt, every new effort where I can't figure the
+end. Years ago, when I was a youngster, I yearned for fortune. And I
+realised that I had it in me to get it quick by means of that crazy
+talent for figures you reckon is so wonderful. I got the chance and
+jumped, for it. But every step I took left me scared to the verge of
+craziness. When I hit up against Hellbeam I got a desire to beat him
+that was irresistible, and I jumped into the fight with my heart in my
+mouth. It was easy--so easy. Hellbeam was a babe in my hands. I could
+play with him as a spider plays with its victim, and when, like a
+spider, I'd bound him with my figures, hand and foot, I was free to suck
+his blood till I was satiated. I did all that, and then my nightmare
+descended upon me again. You know how I fled with Hellbeam's hounds on
+my heels. I was terrified at the enormity of the thing I'd done. I could
+have stood my ground and beaten him--and them. But moral cowardice
+overwhelmed me and drove me to these outlands. God, what I suffered! And
+after all I haven't the certainty that I deserved it."
+
+Bat came back to his stump and stood against it while Standing passed a
+weary hand across his forehead.
+
+"The happenings since then you know as well as I do. I don't need to
+talk of them. I mean, how I met and married Nancy, when she was widow of
+that no-account McDonald feller, the editor of _The Abercrombie
+Herald!_"
+
+Bat nodded.
+
+"Yes, sure, I know, Les. When you married Nancy an' made her
+thirteen-year-old daughter--your daughter."
+
+"Yes. I'd almost forgotten. Yes, there's her girl, Nancy. She's still at
+school. Well, anyway, you know, these things, all of 'em. But what you
+don't know is that you--you Bat, old friend, are solely responsible for
+all the work that's being done here. You, old friend, are responsible
+that I've enjoyed seven years of something approaching peace of mind.
+You, you with your bulldog fighting spirit, you with your hell-may-care
+manner of shouldering responsibility, and facing every threat, have been
+the staunch pillar on which I have always leant. Without you I'd have
+gone under years ago, a victim of my own mental ghosts. No, no, Bat," he
+went on quickly, as the lumberman shook his head in sharp denial, "it's
+useless. I know. Leaning on you I've built up around me the reality of
+that original dream, with the other things I've now lost, and with every
+ounce in me I've worked for its fulfilment.
+
+"Well, what's the logic of it all?" he continued, after a moment's
+pause. "Yes, it is the logic of it. You may argue that for seven years
+I've been doing a big work and there's no reason, in spite of what's
+happened, that I should now abandon it all. But there is. And in your
+strong old heart you'll know the thing I say is true--if cowardly.
+During seven years, or part of them, I've known a happiness that's
+compensated for every terror I've endured. Nancy's been my guardian
+angel, and the boy, that was to be born, was the beacon light of my
+life. My poor little wife has gone, and that beacon light, the son we
+yearned for, has been snuffed right out. And in the shadows left I see
+only the groping hand of Hellbeam reaching out towards me. In the end
+that hand will get me, and crush the remains of my miserable life out. I
+know. Just as sure as God, Hellbeam's going to get me."
+
+The sweat of terror stood on the man's high forehead, and he wiped it
+away.
+
+Bat flung a clenched fist down upon the tree stump.
+
+"You're wrong, Les. You're plumb wrong. If it means murder I swear
+before God Hellbeam'll never lay hands on you. Hellbeam? Gee! Let him
+set his nose north of 'fifty' and I'll promise him a welcome so hot
+that'll leave hell like a glacier. As for his darn agents? Why, say, I
+want to feel sorry for 'em 'fore they start. Idepski's hating himself
+right--"
+
+"I know," cried Standing impatiently. "I know it all. Everything you've
+said you mean, but--it won't save me. But we can leave all that. There's
+the other things. Why should I go on living here, working, slaving,
+haunted by the terror of Hellbeam? With my boy, my wife, to fight for it
+was worth all the agony. But without them--why? Why in the name of
+sanity should I go on? To beat the Skandinavians out of Canada's trade,
+and claim it all for a country that doesn't care a curse? To build up a
+great name that in the end must be dragged in the mire of public
+estimation? Not on your life, Bat. No, no. I'm going to cut adrift. I'm
+going to quit. I'm going to lose myself in these forests, and live the
+remaining years of my life free to run to earth at the first shot of the
+hunter's gun. It's all that's left me--as I see it."
+
+"And all this?" Bat said, reaching out one great hand in the direction
+of the Cove. "An' that school gal 'way down at Abercrombie, learning her
+knitting, an' letters, an' crying her dandy eyes out for the mother who
+had to leave her there when she passed over to you? Say, Les, you best
+go on. Jest go right on an' I'll say my piece after."
+
+Standing sat up. A deep earnestness was in the dark eyes that looked
+fearlessly into Bat's. He took the other at his word and went on. He had
+nothing to conceal.
+
+"The mill? Why, I want to pass it over to your care, Bat," he said,
+permitting one swift regretful glance in the direction of the grey
+waters below them. Then he spoke almost feverishly. "Here's the
+proposition. I'm going to hand you full powers--through Charles Nisson.
+You'll run this thing on the lines laid down. If you fancy carrying on
+the original proposition of extension, well and good. If not, just carry
+on and leave the rest for--later. You'll be manager for me through
+Nisson. I shan't remove one cent of capital. I don't want Hellbeam's
+money beyond the barest grub stake. It'll remain under Nisson's
+guardianship for your use in running this mill. You'll simply satisfy
+Nisson. For the rest I shan't interfere. You're drawing a big salary
+now. Well, seeing I go out of the work, that salary will be doubled.
+That's for the immediate. Then there's the future. I've a notion. Maybe
+it's a crazy notion. But it's mine and I mean to test it. Here. We
+reckon to build up this enterprise for one great, big purpose. It was my
+dream to break the Skandinavian ring governing the groundwood trade of
+this country. It was work that appealed to my imagination. I wanted to
+build this great thing and pass it on to my boy. It seemed to me fine.
+Worth while. It was a man's work, and it seemed to me a life well spent.
+I had the guts then--with your support, and the support the thought of
+my son gave me. I haven't the guts now. The notion fired you, too. It
+fired you, and it'll grieve you desperately to see it abandoned. It
+shan't be abandoned. Once in the woods of this queer country I found a
+man--such a man as is rarely found. He was a man into whose hands I
+could put my life. And I guess there's no greater trust one man can have
+in another. He was a man of immense capacity. A man of intellect for all
+he had no schooling but the schooling of Quebec's rough woods. That man
+was you, Bat. I'd like to say to you: 'Here's the property. You know the
+scheme. Go on. Carry it through.' But I can't. I can't because one man
+can't do it. Well, the woods gave me one man, and they're going to give
+me another to take the place of the weak-gutted creature who intends to
+'rat.' I'm going to find you a partner, a man with brain and force like
+yourself. A man of iron guts. And when I've found him I'm going to send
+him on to you. And if you approve him he shall be full partner with you
+in this concern the day that sees the Canadian Groundwood Trust
+completed, and the breaking of the Skandinavian ring. Do you follow it
+all? You and this man will be equal partners in the mill, and every
+available cent of its capital--the capital I made Hellbeam provide.
+It'll be yours and his, solely and alone. I--I shall pass right out of
+it. Hellbeam has no score against you. He has no penitentiary preparing
+for you. You are not concerned with him. Whatever he may have in store
+for me he can do nothing to you, and the money I beat him out of will
+have passed beyond his reach."
+
+"And this man you figger to locate? You reckon to take a chance on your
+judgment?"
+
+Bat's challenge came on the instant.
+
+"On mine, and--yours." Standing's eyes were full of a keen confidence.
+And Bat realised something of the sanity lying behind a seemingly mad
+proposition. "He'll own nothing until he and you have completed the work
+as we see it. To own his share in the thing he must prove his capacity.
+He'll be held by the tightest and strongest contract Charles Nisson can
+draw up."
+
+Bat spat out his chew. He replaced it with a pipe, and prepared to flake
+off its filling from a plug of tobacco. Standing watched him with the
+anxious eyes of a prisoner awaiting sentence. With the cutting of the
+first flakes of tobacco, Bat looked up.
+
+"And this little gal-child, with the same name as the mother who just
+meant the whole of everything life could hand you? This kiddie with her
+mother's blood running in innocent veins? She's your Nancy's daughter
+and I guess your marriage made her yours."
+
+"She's another man's child."
+
+Standing's retort was instant. And the tone of it cut like a knife.
+
+Bat regarded him keenly. His knife had ceased from its work on the plug.
+
+"That's so," he said after a while. Then his gaze drifted in the
+direction of the house across the water, and the expression in the grey
+depths of his eyes became lost to the man who could not forget that the
+remaining child of his wife was the offspring of another man. "It seems
+queer," he went on reflectively. "That woman, your Nancy, was about the
+best loved wife, a fellow could think of. She was all sorts of a woman
+to you. Guess she was mostly the sun, moon, an' stars of your life. Yet
+her kiddie, a pore, lonesome kiddie, was toted right off to school so
+she couldn't butt in on you. You've never seen her, have you? And she
+was blood of the woman that set you nigh crazy. Only her father was
+another feller. No, Les." He shook his head, and went on filling his
+pipe. "No, Les, this mill and all about it can go hang if that pore,
+lone kiddie is wiped out of your reckoning. Maybe I'm queer about
+things. Maybe I'm no account anyway when it comes to the things of life
+mostly belonging to Sunday School. But I'd as lief go back to the woods
+I came from, as handle a proposition for you that don't figger that
+little gal in it. You best take that as all I've to say. There's a heap
+more I could say. But it don't matter. You're feelin' bad. Things have
+hit you bad. And you reckon they're going to hit you worse. Maybe you're
+right. Maybe you're wrong. Anyway these things are for you, though I'd
+be mighty thankful to help you. You want to go out of it all. You want
+to follow up some queer notion you got. You reckon it's going to give
+you peace. I hope so. I do sure. The thing you've said goes with me
+without shouting one way or the other. It grieves me bad. But that's no
+account anyway. But there's that gal standing between us, and she's
+going to stand right there till you've finished the things you're maybe
+going to say."
+
+For a moment the men looked into each other's eyes. It was a tense
+moment of sudden crisis between them.
+
+"Well?"
+
+Bat's unyielding interrogation came sharply. Standing nodded.
+
+"I hadn't thought, Bat," he said. Then he drew a deep breath. "I surely
+hadn't, but I guess you're right. She's my stepdaughter. And I've a
+right to do the thing you say. Yes. It's queer when I think of it," he
+went on musingly. "When I married her mother the girl didn't seem to
+come into our reckoning. She was at school, and I never even saw her.
+Then her mother wanted her left there, anyway till her schooling was
+through. Everything was paid. I saw to that. But--yes, I guess you're
+right. It's up to me, and I'll fix it."
+
+"The mill?"
+
+"She shall have equal share when the time comes."
+
+"When the whole work's put through?"
+
+"Yes. And meanwhile she'll be amply provided for." Standing spread out
+his hands deprecatingly. "You see, we did things in a hurry, Bat. There
+was always Hellbeam. And my Nancy understood that. I wonder--"
+
+Bat smoked on thoughtfully, and presently the other roused himself from
+the pre-occupation into which he had fallen.
+
+"Does that satisfy?" he demanded.
+
+Bat nodded.
+
+"I'll do the darnedest I know, Les," he said in his sturdy fashion. "Fix
+that pore gal right. Hand her the share she's a right to--when the time
+comes along. Do that an' I'll not rest till the Skandinavians are left
+hollerin'. That kid's your daughter, for all she ain't flesh and blood
+of yours, an' you ain't ever see her. And anyway she's flesh of your
+Nancy, which seems to me hands her even a bigger claim."
+
+He moved away from his leaning post and his back was turned to hide that
+which looked out of his eyes.
+
+"I'm grieved," he went on, in his simple fashion, "I'm so grieved about
+things I can't tell you, Les. I always guessed to drive this thing
+through with you. I always reckoned to make good to you for that thing
+you did by me. Well, there's no use in talkin'. You reckon this notion
+of yours'll make you feel better, it's goin' to hand you--peace. That
+goes with me. Oh, yes, all the time, seein' you feel that way. But--say,
+we best get right home--or I'll cry like a darn-fool kid."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+NANCY MCDONALD
+
+
+Charles Nisson was standing at the window. His eyes were deeply
+reflective as he watched the gently falling snow outside. He was a
+sturdy creature in his well-cut, well-cared-for black suit. For all he
+was past middle life there was little about him to emphasise the fact
+unless it were his trim, well-brushed snow-white hair, and the light
+covering of whisker and beard of a similar hue. He looked to be full of
+strength of purpose and physical energy.
+
+His back was turned on the pleasant dining-room of his home in
+Abercrombie, a remote town in Ontario, where he and his wife had only
+just finished breakfast. Sarah Nisson was sitting beside the anthracite
+stove which radiated its pleasant warmth against the bitter chill of
+winter reigning outside. She was still consuming the pages of her bulky
+mail.
+
+A clock chimed the hour, and the wife looked up from her letter. She
+turned a face that was still pretty for all her fifty odd years, in the
+direction of the man at the window.
+
+"Ten o'clock, Charles," she reminded him. Then her enquiring look melted
+into a gentle smile. "The office has less attraction with the snow
+falling."
+
+"It has less attraction to-day, anyway," the lawyer responded without
+turning. A short laugh punctuated his prompt reply.
+
+"You mean the Nancy McDonald business?"
+
+Sarah Nisson laid her mail aside.
+
+"Yes." The lawyer sighed and turned from his contemplation of the snow.
+He moved across to the stove. "I'm a bit of a coward, Sally," he went
+on, holding out his hands to the warmth. "The lives of other people are
+nearly as interesting as they are exasperating. They seem just as
+foolishly ordered as we believe our own to be well and truly ordered. I
+don't know who it was said 'all men are fools,' or liars, or something,
+but I guess he was right. Yes, we're all fools. I really don't know how
+we manage to get through a day, let alone a lifetime, without absolute
+disaster. We spend most of our time abusing Providence for the result of
+our own shortcomings, when really we ought to be mighty polite and
+thankful to the blind good fortune that lets us dodge the results of our
+follies."
+
+"All of which I suppose has to do with the way Leslie Martin, or Leslie
+Standing, as he calls himself now, is acting."
+
+"Well, most of it."
+
+The man's eyes had become seriously reflective again.
+
+Sarah Nisson nodded her pretty head. She leant her ample proportions
+towards the stove and emulated her husband's attitude, warming her plump
+hands. Her brown eyes were twinkling, and her broad, unlined brow was
+calmly serene. Her iron-grey hair was as carefully dressed as though she
+were still in the twenties, moreover it was utterly untouched by any of
+the shams so beloved of the modern woman of advancing years.
+
+"The death of his poor wife almost seems to have unhinged him," she
+said, with a troubled pucker of her brows. "But--but I don't wonder, I
+really don't. She was the sweetest girl. Poor soul. And that bonny wee
+boy. But there, I can't bear to think of it all. You mustn't blame him
+too much, Charles. I guess you don't in your heart. It's just as his
+attorney you feel mad about things. It's best to remember you were his
+friend first, and only his adviser, and man of business, after. The
+whole thing makes me feel I want to cry. And that poor girl coming to
+see you to-day. The other Nancy, I mean. I don't think I'd feel so bad
+about things if it wasn't for her. You know, I like Leslie. And I was as
+fond of his wife as I just could be, for all she made a fool of herself
+when she married that hateful James McDonald, who was no better than a
+revolutionary. Thank goodness he died and got out before he could do any
+harm. But I do think Leslie and poor Nancy were selfish about her
+child. I don't believe it was so much him as Nancy. From the moment
+Leslie came on the scene it was she who kept the poor child at college.
+She never even let him see her. And she's such a bonny girl, too. Do you
+know, I believe Nancy's death, and even the death of the baby boy,
+wouldn't have meant half so much to Leslie if he'd had Nancy's own girl
+with him. She'd have got herself right into his heart with her bonny
+ways, and her hazel eyes that look like great, big smiling flowers. Then
+her hair. She's a lovely, lovely child. I wish she was mine. I'd like to
+have her right here always. Couldn't you fix it that way?"
+
+The man shook his head.
+
+"I'd like to--but--"
+
+"But what?"
+
+"You see there's a whole lot to think about," the lawyer went on
+seriously. "Why, I don't even know how to get through my interview with
+her to-day without lying to her like a politician. Now just get a look
+at the position. Here's a girl, a beautiful, high-spirited girl of
+sixteen, straight out from college, at the beginning of life, with her,
+head full of 'whys,' and 'wherefores.' Sixteen's well-nigh grown up
+these days, mind you. Her mother's dead, and curiously the fact didn't
+seem to break her up as you'd have expected it to. Why?" The man
+shrugged. "It's not because she lacks feeling. Oh, no. Maybe it's
+because of the strength of those feelings. Remember her mother married
+Leslie when the child was thirteen. A good understanding age. She was
+never allowed to see her father. No. She was packed off to school and
+kept there--"
+
+"Yes, I know," Sarah broke in, with impatient warmth. "And just at the
+time a girl most needs she never even saw her mother for over three
+years. God doesn't give us women our babies to treat them as if they
+weren't our own flesh and blood. Young Nancy was left to those maiden
+dames at college, who don't know more about a child than is laid down by
+highbrow officials in the text books they need to study to qualify for
+their posts. They haven't a notion beyond stuffing her poor wee head
+with the sort of view of life set down in fool history books. They say
+she's clever and bright. Well, that's all they care about. When they've
+done with her they'll have knocked all the girl out of her, and turned
+her adrift on the world behind a pair of disfiguring spectacles, with
+her beautiful hair all scratched back off her pretty face, and maybe
+'bobbed,' and they'll fill her grips with pamphlets and literature
+enough to stock a patent med'cine factory, instead of the lawn, and
+lace, and silk a girl should think about, and leave her with as much
+chance of getting happily married as a queen mummy of the Egyptians.
+It's a shame, just a real shame. Why, if that poor, lonesome child came
+right along to me, I'd--"
+
+"Teach her all the bright tricks of hunting down a husband and--hooking
+him." The lawyer shook his head and smiled. "You know, Sally, you're
+almost an outrage on the subject of marriage. Sometimes I wonder the
+sort of tricks I was up against when I--"
+
+A plump warning finger and smiling threat interrupted the laughing
+charge.
+
+"You were due at the office long ago, Charles," his wife admonished. "If
+you aren't careful I'll have to pack you off right away."
+
+"That's all right, Sally," the man demurred. "I won't go further with
+that. I'll get back to the things I was saying before you interrupted."
+His pale blue eyes became serious again. "Do you think Nancy didn't
+understand why she was packed off to school--and kept there? Of course
+she did. She knew she wasn't wanted. She knew she was in the way. She
+must not be permitted to intrude on this stepfather, or her mother's
+new life. It was all a bit heartless, and if I know anything of the
+child, she understands it that way. I felt that when she came to see her
+mother, and went to her funeral. Now then, Nancy's coming to see me
+to-day. Remember she's sixteen. She's got to learn from me the
+settlement Leslie's made on her. She's got to learn further that she
+isn't likely to ever see her stepfather. She knows I'm his business man.
+She knows I'm his friend. Well, when she's financially independent, do
+you think she'll feel like rushing into our arms, here, for a home,
+feeling the way I believe she does about her parent? It's going to be
+difficult, and--damned unpleasant. And for all I'm ready to help Leslie
+anyway I know, I'd rather see anybody on his behalf than that kiddie,
+with her wide, honest, angry eyes and red hair. I'm not going to press
+our home on her, Sally, because, sooner or later, if she accepted it,
+which I don't believe she would, she'd have to learn things of Leslie,
+and--well, the affairs you know about. That must not be. She's not going
+to learn these things from us. I'm going to do the best I know for the
+child, and when it comes to the matter of a home she must choose for
+herself. There's always her mother's folk, or even James McDonald's
+folk--"
+
+"God forbid! No. Oh, no." The woman's instant denial was horrified. "Not
+the McDonald lot. They're all revolutionaries. All of them. It's--it's
+unthinkable. It certainly is."
+
+The man moved away.
+
+"That's so," he agreed. "Well, anyway, I'll do the best I know for the
+child, Sally. You can trust me."
+
+The woman's anxiety abated, and she rose from her chair.
+
+"I know that, Charles," she said. "But the McDonalds! They're--"
+
+"Sure they are." The man laughed. "Well, good-bye, my dear. I'll tell
+you all about it when I've fixed things. Thank goodness it's quit
+snowing and the sun's shining again. I wish I felt as good as it looks
+outside here."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Charles Nisson had become a lawyer without any marked inclination or
+enthusiasm for his profession. It had been simply a matter of following
+the father before him. It would have been much the same if his father
+had been a farmer, or a politician, or anything else. The son was
+patient, temperate, and of no great ambition. But he was also keenly
+intelligent. Without impulse, or striking originality, but with a
+tremendous capacity for hard work, he was bound to be moderately
+successful in any career. In his father's profession his temperament was
+particularly suited, and in spite of lacking enthusiasm he had become
+unquestionably a better lawyer than the country attorney he had
+succeeded.
+
+Just now his mind was filled with unease. The matter of his forthcoming
+interview with a child of sixteen years had only small place in the
+affairs which disturbed him. His real concern was for his friend, Leslie
+Standing, and the disaster, which, in a seemingly overwhelming rush had
+befallen at far-off Sachigo. Again his trouble had no relation to these
+things as they affected his own worldly affairs. It was of the man
+himself he was thinking.
+
+He knew it all now. He had painfully learned the complete story of
+disaster. And, to his sturdy mind, it was a deplorable example of almost
+unbelievable human weakness.
+
+Standing had conveyed his final determination to abandon his Labrador
+enterprise in the correspondence which had passed between them during
+the three months which had elapsed since the funeral of his wife and
+stillborn child. And during that time their friendship had been sorely
+tested. There had been times when the lawyer's native patience had been
+unequal to the strain. There had been times when his temper had leapt
+from under the bonds which so strongly held it. But for all the ordeals
+of that prolonged correspondence, for all he deplored the pitiful
+weakness in the other, his friendship remained, and he finally accepted
+his instructions. But the whole thing left him very troubled.
+
+As the hour of noon approached, his trouble showed no sign of abatement.
+It was the reverse. There were moments, as he sat in the generously
+upholstered chair before his desk, in the comfortable down-town office
+which overlooked Abercrombie's principal thoroughfare, that he felt like
+abandoning all responsibility in the chaos of his friend's affairs. But
+this was only the result of irritation, and had no relation to his
+intentions. He knew well enough that everything in his power would be
+done for the man who never so surely needed his help as now.
+
+He refreshed his memory with the details of the deed of settlement for
+the abandoned stepdaughter. Then, as the hands of the clock approached
+the hour of his appointment, he sat back yielding his whole
+concentration upon those many problems confronting him.
+
+What, he asked himself, was going to become of Standing now that he had
+cut himself adrift from that anchorage which had held him safe for the
+past seven years? He strove to follow the driving of the man's curiously
+haunted mind. He had declared his intention of going away. Where?
+Definite information had been withheld. He was going to devote himself
+to some purpose he claimed to have always lain at the back of his mind.
+What was that purpose? Again there had been no information forthcoming.
+Was it good, or--bad? The man who was endeavouring to solve the riddle
+of it all dared not trust himself to a decision. He felt that his
+friend's unstable soul might drive him in almost any direction after the
+shock it had sustained.
+
+No. Speculation was useless. The crude facts were like a brick wall he
+had to face. Standing's wealth and the great mill at Sachigo were left
+to his administration with the trusting confidence of a child. The
+responsibility for the neglected stepdaughter had similarly been flung
+upon his shoulders. And, satisfied with this manner of disposing of his
+worldly concerns, Standing intended to fare forth, shorn of any
+possession but a bare pittance for his daily needs, to lose himself, and
+all the shadows of a haunted mind, in the dim, remote interior of the
+unexplored forests of Northern Quebec. The whole thing was
+mad--utterly--
+
+The muffled electric bell on his table drubbed out its summons. One
+swift glance at the clock and the lawyer yielded to professional
+instinct. He became absorbed in the papers neatly spread out on his
+table as a bespectacled clerk thrust open the door.
+
+"Miss McDonald to see you," he announced, in the modulated tone which
+was part of his professional make-up.
+
+The lawyer rose at once. He moved toward the door with a smiling
+welcome. The sex and personality of his visitor demanded this departure
+from his custom.
+
+Nancy McDonald stood just inside the doorway through which the clerk had
+departed. She was tall, beautifully tall, for all she was only sixteen.
+In her simple college girl's overcoat, with its muffling of fur about
+the neck, it was impossible to detect the graces of the youthful figure
+concealed. Her carriage was upright, and her bearing full of that
+confidence which is so earnestly taught in the schools of the newer
+countries.
+
+But these things passed unnoticed by the white-haired lawyer. He was
+smiling into the radiant face under the low-pressed fur cap. It was the
+wide, hazel eyes, so deeply fringed with a wealth of curling, dark
+lashes, that inspired his smiling interest. It was the level brows, so
+delicately pencilled, and dark as were the eyelashes. It was the perfect
+nose, and lips, and chin, and the chiselled beauty of oval cheeks, all
+in such classic harmony with the girl's wealth of vivid hair.
+
+Nancy returned his gaze without the shadow of a smile. She had come at
+this man's call from the coldly correct halls of Marypoint College,
+which was also the soulless home she had been condemned to for the three
+or four most impressionable years of her life. And she knew the purpose
+of the summons.
+
+There was a deep abiding resentment in her heart. It was not against
+this man or his wife. From these two she had received only kindness and
+affection. It was directed against the stepfather whom she believed to
+be the cause of the banishment she had had to endure. Furthermore, she
+could never forget that her banishment was only terminated that she
+might gaze at last upon the dead features of her dearly loved mother
+before the cold earth hid them from view forever.
+
+The lawyer understood. He had understood from her reply to his letter
+summoning her. There was no need for the confirmation he read now in her
+unsmiling eyes.
+
+"You sent for me?" she said.
+
+Nancy's voice was deep and rich for all her youth. Then with a display
+of some slight confusion, she suddenly realised the welcoming hand
+outheld. She took it hurriedly, and the brief hand clasp completely
+broke down the barrier she had deliberately set up.
+
+"Oh, it's a shame, Uncle Charles," she cried, almost tearfully.
+"It's--it's a shame. I know. I'm just a kid--a fool kid who hasn't a
+notion, or a feeling, or--or anything. I'm to be treated that way. When
+he says 'listen,' why, I've just got to listen. And when he says 'obey,'
+I've got to obey, because the law says he's my stepfather. He's robbed
+me of my mother. Oh, it's cruel. Now he's going to rob me of everything
+else I s'pose. Who is he? What is he that he has the power to--to make
+me a sort of slave to his wishes? I've never seen him. I hate him, and
+he hates me, and yet--oh--I'm kind of sorry," she said, in swift
+contrition at the sight of the old man's evident distress. "I--I--didn't
+think. I--oh, I know it's not your fault, uncle. It's just nothing to do
+with you. You've always been so kind and good to me--you and Aunt Sally.
+You've got to send for me and tell me the things he says, because--"
+
+"Because I'm his 'hired man.' But also because I'm his friend."
+
+The lawyer spoke kindly, but very firmly. He knew the impulsive nature
+of this passionate child. He knew her unusual mentality. He realised,
+none better, that he was dealing with a strong woman's mind in a girl of
+childhood's years. He knew that Nancy had inherited largely from her
+father, that headstrong, headlong creature whose mentality had driven
+him to every length in a wild endeavour to upset civilisation that he
+might witness the birth of a millennium in the ashes of a world
+saturated with the blood of countless, helpless creatures. So he checked
+the impulsive flow of the child's protest. He held out his hands.
+
+"You'd best let me take your coat, my dear," he said, with a smile the
+girl found it impossible to resist. "Maybe you'd like to remove your
+overshoes, too. There's a big talk to make, and I want to get things
+fixed so you can come right along up home and take food with us before
+you go back to Marypoint."
+
+The child capitulated. But she needed no assistance. Her coat was
+removed in a moment and flung across a chair, and she stood before him,
+the slim, slightly angular schoolgirl she really was.
+
+"Guess I'll keep my rubbers on," she said. Then she added with a laugh
+which a moment before must have been impossible. "That way I'll feel I
+can run away when I want to. What next?"
+
+"Why, just sit right here."
+
+The lawyer drew up a chair and set it beside his desk. His movements
+were swift now. He had no desire to lose the girl's change of mood.
+
+And Nancy submitted. She took the chair set for her while the man she
+loved to call "Uncle Charlie" passed round to his. He gave her no time
+for further reflection, but plunged into his talk at once.
+
+"Now, my dear," he said earnestly, "you came here feeling pretty bad
+about things, and maybe I don't blame you. But there isn't the sort of
+thing waiting on you you're guessing. Before we get to the real business
+I just want to tell you the things in my mind. Of course, as you say,
+you're a 'kid' yet--a school-kid, eh? That's all right. But I know you
+can get a grip of things that many much older girls could never hope to.
+That's why I want to tell you the things I'm going to. Now you've worked
+it out in your mind that your stepfather is just a heartless, selfish
+creature who has no sort of use for you, and just wants to forget your
+existence. He married your mother, but had no idea of taking on her
+burdens--that's you. It isn't so. It wasn't so. I know, because this man
+is my friend, and I know all there is to know about him. The whole thing
+has been deplorable. You've been the victim of circumstances that I may
+not explain even to you. But I promise you this, your stepfather is not
+the man to have desired to cut you out of your mother's life."
+
+"Who did then? Mother?"
+
+The girl's beautiful face flushed under her stirring emotions. The man
+shook his head.
+
+"Circumstances. Yes, those circumstances I told you of. Those
+circumstances I can't explain." Charles Nisson picked up a typescript
+and held it out to the child.
+
+"I want you to take this. It's not the deed, but a true copy. I want you
+to read it over and think about it, and when you get back to Marypoint,
+and feel like talking to those teachers you trust there, you can tell
+them what it contains, and hear what they have to say about it, and see
+if they won't think better of your stepfather than you do. You needn't
+read it now," as the girl turned the pages and glanced down the
+confusion of legal phraseology. "I'm going to tell you what it contains
+in plain words. But I want you to have it, and read it, and think over
+it, because I want you to try and get a real understanding of the man
+whose signature is set to the original deed."
+
+"Yes," he went on, meditatively, and in a tone of real regret. "I'd be
+pretty glad to have you think better of him. I think just now he needs
+the kind thought of anyone who belongs to him. He's in pretty bad
+trouble--someways."
+
+The girl looked up. A curious anxiety was shining in her eyes.
+
+"Trouble?" she demanded. "You mean he's done wrong? What d'you mean?
+What sort of--trouble?"
+
+The man shook his head.
+
+"No. It's not that. It's--your mother. You know, Nancy, he loved your
+mother in a way that leaves a good man broken to pieces when he loses
+the object of his love. Every good thought he ever had was bound up in
+your mother. And your mother was his strong support, and literally his
+guiding star. You've lost your mother. You know how you felt. Well, I
+can't tell you, but think, try and think what it would be if you'd lost
+just every hope in life, too--the same as he has."
+
+"I'd--I'd want to die," the girl cried impulsively.
+
+"Yes. So would anyone. So does he. Just as far as the world's concerned
+he's dead now. You'll never see him, or hear from him. Nor will anyone
+else--except me. He'll never come into your life after this. He'll never
+claim his legal guardianship of you, beyond that document. To you he's
+dead, leaving you heir to what is contained in that deed. He's just a
+poor devil of a man hunted and haunted through the rest of his existence
+by the memory of a love that was more than life to him. Try and think
+better of him, Nancy, my dear. He's got enough to bear. I think he
+deserves far better than he's ever likely to get handed to him. I tell
+you solemnly, my dear, whatever sins he may have committed, and most of
+us have committed plenty," he added, with a gentle smile, "he's done you
+no real hurt. And now he's only doing that good by you I would expect
+from him."
+
+Nancy sighed deeply, and it needed no words of hers to tell the man of
+law how well he had fought his friend's battle. A deep wave of childish
+pity had swept away the last of a resentment which had seemed so bitter,
+so implacable. It was the generous heart of the child, shorn, for the
+moment, of its inheritance from her father. Her even brows had puckered,
+and the man knew that tears, real tears of sympathy, were not far off.
+
+"Tell me," she said, in a low voice. "Tell me some more."
+
+But the man shook his head. "I can't tell you more," he said gently.
+"Where your stepfather is, or where he will be to-morrow, I may not tell
+you. Even when your mother was alive you were not permitted to know
+these things. That was due to the 'circumstances' I told you of. It just
+remains for me to tell you the contents of that document. They're as
+generous as only your stepfather knows how to make them. He's appointed
+me your trustee. And he's settled on you a life annuity of $10,000.
+There are a few simple conditions. You will remain at college till your
+education is complete, and, until you are twenty-one I shall have
+control of your income. That is," he explained, "I shall see that you
+don't handle it recklessly. During that time, subject to my approval,
+you can make your home with whom you like. After you've passed your
+twenty-first birthday you are as free as air to go or come, to live
+where you choose, and how you choose. And your income will be
+forthcoming from this office--every quarter. Do you understand all that,
+my dear? It's so very simple. Your stepfather has gone to the limit to
+show you how well he desires for you, and how free of his authority he
+wants you to be. There is another generous act of his that will be made
+clear to you when the time comes. But that is for the future--not now.
+His last word to me," he went on, picking up a letter, "when he sent me
+the deed duly signed, was: 'Tell this little girl when you hand her
+these things, it isn't my wish to trouble her with an authority which
+can have little enough appeal for her. Tell her that her mother was my
+whole world, and it is my earnest desire that her daughter should have
+all the good and comfort this world can bestow. If ever she needs
+further help she can have it without question, and that she only has to
+appeal to my friend and adviser, Charles Nisson, for anything she
+requires.'"
+
+The man laid the letter aside and looked up.
+
+"That's the last paragraph of the last communication I had from him. And
+they're not the words of a monstrous tyrant who is utterly heartless,
+eh?"
+
+The girl made no answer. Her emotion was too strong for her. Two great
+tears rolled slowly down her beautiful cheeks.
+
+The lawyer rose from his chair. He came round the desk and laid a gentle
+hand on the heaving shoulder, while Nancy strove to wipe her tears away
+with a wholly inadequate handkerchief.
+
+"That's right, my dear," he said very gently. "Wipe them away. There's
+no need to cry. Leslie's done all a man in his peculiar position can do
+for you. You've got the whole wide world before you, and everything you
+can need for comfort--thanks to him. Now let's forget about it all. Just
+take that paper back to school with you. And maybe you'll write, or come
+and let me know what you think about it. If you feel like making your
+home with us, why, that way you'll just complete our happiness. If you
+feel like going to your mother's sister, Anna Scholes, I shan't refuse
+you. Anyway, think about it all. That's my big talk and it's finished.
+Just get your overcoat on, and we'll get right along home to food."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+NATHANIEL HELLBEAM
+
+
+The room was furnished with extreme modern luxury. The man standing over
+against the window with his broad back turned, somehow looked to be in
+perfect keeping with the setting his personal tastes had inspired. He
+was broad, squat, fat. His head and neck were set low upon his
+shoulders, and the hair oil was obvious on the longish dark hair which
+seemed to grow low down under his shirt collar.
+
+The other man, seated in one of the many easy chairs, was in strong
+contrast. His was the familiar face of the agent, Idepski, dark, keen,
+watchful. He was smoking the cigarette to which he had helped himself
+from the gold box standing near him on the ornate desk.
+
+"You seem to have made a bad mess of things."
+
+Nathaniel Hellbeam turned from the window and came back to his desk with
+quick, short, energetic strides.
+
+He presented a picture of inflamed wrath. His fleshy, square face was
+flushed and almost purple. His small eyes were hot with anger. They
+snapped as he launched his harshly spoken verdict. His whole manner
+bristled with merciless intolerance.
+
+He was enormously fat, and breathed heavily through clean shaven lips
+that protruded sensually. His age was doubtful, but suggested something
+under middle life. It was the gross bulk of the man that made it almost
+impossible to estimate closely. The only real youth about him was his
+dark, well oiled hair which possessed not a sign of greying in it.
+
+He flung himself into the wide chair which gaped to receive him, and
+glared at the dark face of his visitor.
+
+"What in the hell do I pay you for?" he cried brutally, lapsing, in his
+anger, into that gutteral Teutonic accent which it was his life's object
+to avoid. "A wild cat's scheme it was I tell you from the first. You go
+to this Sachigo with your men. You think to get this 'sharp' asleep, or
+what? You find him wide awake waiting for you to arrive. What then? He
+jumps quick. So quick you can't think. You a prisoner are. You go where
+he sends you. You live like a swine in the woods. You are made to work
+for your food. And a year is gone. A year! Serve you darn right. Oh,
+yes. Bah! You quit. You understand? I pay you no more. You are a fool, a
+blundering fool. I wash my hands with you."
+
+Idepski sat still, patient, as once before he had sat under the whip
+lash of a man's tongue. And he continued smoking till the great banker's
+last word was spoken.
+
+Then he stirred, and removed his cigarette from his thin lips.
+
+"That's all right, Mr. Hellbeam," he said coldly. "It seems like you've
+a right to all you've said. It seems, I said. But the 'fool' talk." He
+shook his head. "My best enemies don't reckon me that--generally. The
+game I'm playing has room enough for things that look like blunders. I
+allow that. It doesn't matter. You see, I know more of this feller
+Martin maybe than you do. I guess he's a mighty big coward, except when
+he's got the drop on a feller. I've given him the scare of a lifetime,
+and I've unshipped him from his safe anchorage on that darn Labrador
+coast. Do you know what's happened? I'll tell you. He's quit Sachigo.
+From what I can learn he's sold out his mill to that uncouth hoodlum,
+Harker, who was sort of his partner, and quit. Where? I don't know yet.
+Why has he quit? Why, because he knows we've located his hiding, and
+will get him if he remains. You reckon I've mussed things up." He shook
+his head. "He was well-nigh safe up there on Labrador--and I knew it. We
+had to get him out of it. Well, I've got him out. He's bolted like a
+gopher, and it's up to me to locate him. I shall locate him. I'm glad
+he's quit that hellish country. I've had a year of it, and it's put the
+fear of God into me. You needn't worry. I'm quite ready to quit your
+pay. But I'm going on with this thing, sure. You see, I owe him quite a
+piece for myself--now. I've been through the hell he intended me to go
+through when he sent me along up to be held prisoner by that skunk, Ole
+Porson. I'm going to pay him for that--good. I don't want your pay--now.
+One day I'll hand that feller over to you--and when you've doped him
+plenty--you'll have paid me." He rose leisurely from his comfortable
+chair. "May I take another of your good cigarettes?" he went on, with a
+half smile in his cold eyes. "You see, I won't get another, seeing I'm
+quitting you."
+
+He deliberately helped himself without waiting for permission, while his
+eyes dwelt on the gold box containing them.
+
+But the financier's mood had changed. The keen mind was busy behind his
+narrow eyes. Perhaps Idepski understood the man. Perhaps the coolness of
+the agent appealed to the implacable nature of the Swede. Whatever it
+was the hot eyes had cooled, and the fleshy cheeks had returned to
+their normal pasty hue. He raised a hand pointing.
+
+"Sit down and smoke all you need," he said, in the sharp, autocratic
+fashion that was his habit. "We aren't through yet." Then, for a few
+moments, he regarded the slim figure as it lay back once more in the
+armchair. "Say," he began, abruptly, "you reckon to go on for--yourself?
+Yes? You're a good hater."
+
+He went on as the other inclined his head.
+
+"I like a good hater. Yes. Well, just cut out all I said. We'll go on. I
+guess you'll need to blunder some before we get this swine. You're bound
+to. But I want him. I want him bad. If it's good for you to go on for
+yourself, that's good for me. There's a lifetime ahead yet, and I don't
+care so I see him down--right down where I need him. Maybe I won't get
+the money, but we'll get him, and that'll do. Yes, cut out what I said,
+and go ahead. Tell me about it."
+
+Idepski displayed neither enthusiasm nor added interest. He accepted the
+position with seeming indifference. Hellbeam to him was just an
+employer. A means to those ends which he had in view. If Hellbeam turned
+him down it would mean a setback, but not a disaster, and Idepski
+appraised setbacks at their simple value, without exaggeration. Besides,
+he knew that this Swede, powerful, wealthy as he was, could not afford
+to do without him in this matter. His intolerant, hectic temper mattered
+nothing at all. He paid for the privilege of its display, and he paid
+well. So--
+
+"There's nothing much to tell," the agent returned, with a shrug. "I'm
+going to get him--that's all. See here, Mr. Hellbeam," he went on after
+a pause, with a sudden change to keen energy, "you're a mighty big power
+in the financial world, and to be that I guess you've had to be some
+judge of the other feller. That's so. You most generally know when he's
+beat before you begin. And when he squeals it don't come as a surprise.
+Well, that's how it is with me, only it's a bigger thing to me because
+it sometimes happens to mean the difference between life and death. Say,
+when you put up your bluff at a feller, and watch him square in the
+eyes, and you see 'em flicker and shift, do you reckon you've lit on the
+'yellow streak,' that lies somewhere in most folk? I guess so. Well,
+that's how I know my man. I've seen it in this bum, Leslie Standing as
+he calls himself now. And when I saw it I knew he was beat, for all he'd
+the drop on me. Since then my notion's proved itself. He's lit out. He's
+cut from his gopher hole at Sachigo. An' when a gopher gets away from
+his hole, the man with the gun has him dead set. But say, that muss up
+you reckon I made doesn't look that way when you know the things it's
+taught me. While I was way up at that penitentiary camp on the Beaver
+River I kept all my ears and eyes wide, and I learned most of the things
+a feller's liable to learn in this world when he acts that way. I
+learned something of the notions lying back of this feller's work up
+there. Say, he hadn't finished with you when he took that ten millions
+out of you." An ironical smile lit the man's dark eyes as he thrust home
+his retaliation for the financier's insults. "Not by a lot," he went on,
+with a smiling display of teeth that conveyed nothing pleasant. "They've
+a slogan up there that means a whole heap, and it comes from him, and
+runs through the whole work going on, right down to the Chink camp
+cooks. Guess that mill is only beginning. It's the ground work of a
+mighty big notion. And the notion is to drive the Skandinavians out of
+Canada's pulp trade, and very particularly the Swedes, as represented by
+the interests of Nathaniel Hellbeam. Guess you sit right here in New
+York, but up there they've got you measured up to the last pant's
+button."
+
+"They that think?"
+
+The financier's bloated cheeks purpled as he put his clumsy
+interrogation.
+
+"Oh, yes. This feller Standing reckons he's made a big start, and there
+are mighty big plans out. When he and that clownish partner of his,
+Harker, are through, Sachigo'll be the biggest proposition in the way of
+groundwood pulp in the world. They've forests such as you in Skandinavia
+dream about when your digestion's feeling good. They've a water power
+that leaves Niagara a summer trickle. They've got it all with a sea
+journey of less than eighteen hundred miles to Europe. But there's more
+than that. When Sachigo's complete it's to be the parent company of a
+mighty combine that's going to take in all the mills of Canada outside
+Nathaniel Hellbeam's group. And then--then, sir, the squeeze'll start
+right in. And it isn't going to stop till the sponge--that's Nathaniel
+Hellbeam--is wrung dry."
+
+"You heard all this--when you were held prisoner and working like a
+swine in Martin's forests?"
+
+The smile in Hellbeam's eyes was no less ironical than the agent's.
+
+"When I was working like a swine."
+
+"These lumber-jacks. They knew all that in Standing's mind is?"
+
+"No. But I learned it all."
+
+"How?"
+
+The demand was instant, and a surge of force lay behind it.
+
+"Because some I saw. Some I picked up from general talk. And the rest I
+pieced together because it's my job to think hard when the game's
+against me. But it don't matter. You know that the things I've told you
+are right. It's news to you, but you know it's right, because you're
+thinking hard, and the game's against--you."
+
+"Yes."
+
+The financier's admission was the act of a man who has no hesitation in
+looking facts in the face and acknowledging them. Idepski's deductions
+were irrefutable, because the Swede was a shrewd business man with a
+full appreciation of the man who had lightened his finances by ten
+million dollars.
+
+For some moments the fleshy face was turned towards the window which
+yielded the hum of busy traffic many stories below them. His narrow eyes
+were earnestly reflective, but there was no concern in them. To the
+waiting man he was simply measuring the threat against him, and probing
+its possibilities for mischief.
+
+"Yet this fellow. He on the run is--Yes?"
+
+The eyes were smiling as they came back again to Idepski's face. The
+agent nodded, flinging his cigarette end into the porcelain cuspidore
+beside the desk.
+
+"Which makes me all the more sure of the game," he said confidently.
+"He's rattled. He's so scared to death for himself, and for his purpose,
+he's getting out. It's as clear as daylight to me. He feels he's plumb
+against it if he stops around. He knows we've located him. He knows what
+he's done to me. He knows all he wants to know of you. Well, he reckons
+there's no sort of chance for him at Sachigo. And if he stops there's no
+sort of chance for this purpose of his. He reckons to call off the
+hounds on his own trail, while the feller Harker carries on the good
+work of squeezing the Swedes. That's how I see it. And I guess I'm
+right. Remember I had a year of hell up there to think in, and when I
+finally got clear away I had two months' solitary chasing of those woods
+to think in, and then, when I made the coast, I had the trip down with
+the folks on the boat to listen to. He's scared for his life, and of
+anything you hope to hand him. But he's more scared for the purpose that
+made him set up that mill at Sachigo."
+
+Hellbeam leant back in his chair. His great paunch protruded invitingly
+and he clasped his hands over it.
+
+"Maybe you're right," he said, with an air intended to conciliate.
+"Anyway you've picked up some pieces and set them together so they make
+a fancy shape. But--it isn't good. No. Here, I think, too. I see
+another, way from you. Without this fellow Sachigo is--nothing. See? I
+care nothing because of this Harker. No. The other--that's different.
+Yes. He the brain has. All this piece you make. He is capable of it. But
+he is on the run. Good. I still sleep well while he runs. Sachigo? Bah!
+It is nothing without Leslie Martin. Now, go you. Hunt this man. Maybe
+your year of the woods will help you," he said, with biting emphasis.
+"You know the woods? Well, don't quit his trail. Get him. Get him
+alive."
+
+"Oh, I shall get him. Your urging ain't needed. I'll get him as you
+say--alive. And he knows it."
+
+Idepski's cold eyes hardened with a frigid hatred as he spoke. He had
+only been paid for the work hitherto. Now he was implacable.
+
+"But it's Sachigo I mean to watch," he went on, after a brief pause. "I
+mean to play in that direction. It's the home burrow where you lay your
+traps once your quarry's on the run."
+
+Hellbeam nodded.
+
+"That's good sense."
+
+"Sure it is," retorted the agent. "I'm glad you see it that way," he
+added with a smile under which the financier grew restive once more.
+
+"Yes. Well, see you get him. Money? It doesn't matter. Get him! Get
+him!" he reiterated fiercely. "You understand me? It doesn't matter how
+you get him. I can deal with the rest."
+
+Suddenly he raised a clenched fist, fat, and strong, and white, and
+extended his thumb. He turned it downwards and pressed its extremity on
+the gold mounted blotting pad before him with a force that bent the
+knuckle backwards. "Get him so I can crush him--like that," he cried.
+"Get him alive. I want him alive. See?"
+
+"I see. I'll get him--sure. You needn't worry a thing."
+
+And as Walter Idepski rose to take his departure, for all his nerve, he
+felt glad that the passion of this Swede's hate was not directed against
+him.
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+EIGHT YEARS LATER
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+BULL STERNFORD
+
+
+A great gathering thronged the heart of the clearing. There were men of
+every shade of colour, men of well-nigh every type. They stood about in
+a wide circle, whose regularity remained definite even under the
+stirring of fierce excitement. They had gathered for a fight, a great
+fight between two creatures, full human in shape and splendid manhood,
+but bestial in the method of the battle demanded. It was a battle with
+muscles of iron, and hearts that knew no mercy, and body and mind tuned
+only to endure and conquer. It was a battle that belonged to the savage
+out-world, acknowledging only the vicious laws of "rough and tough."
+
+The rough creatures stood voiceless and well-nigh breathless. The
+combatants were well matched and redoubtable, even in a community whose
+only deity was physical might and courage and the skill of the wielded
+axe. The lust of it all was burning fiercely in every heart.
+
+The sun poured out its flood of summer upon a world of virgin forest.
+The sky was without blemish. A dome of perfect azure roofed in the
+length and breadth of Nature's kingdom. Nevertheless the fairness of the
+summer day, with its ravishing accompaniment of soft, mystery sounds
+from an unseen world and the lavish beauty of shadowed woods were fit
+setting for the pulsing of savage emotions. It was far out in the lost
+world of Northern Quebec. It was far, far beyond the widest-flung
+frontiers of civilisation. It was out there where man soon learns to
+forget his birthright, and readily yields to the animal in him.
+
+It was a scene of mighty slaughter amongst the giants of the forest.
+Hundreds sprawled in the path of man's gleaming axe. Giants they were,
+hoary with age, and gnarled with the sinews built up by Nature to resist
+her fiercest storms. They lay there, in every direction, reaching up
+with tattered arms outstretched, as though appealing for the light, the
+warmth, and the sweetness of life they would know no more.
+
+Amidst this carnage a great camp was growing up. There were huts
+completed. There were huts only in the skeleton. They were dotted about
+in a fashion apparently without order or purpose. Yet long before the
+falling of the first snow, order would reign everywhere and man's
+purpose would be achieved.
+
+The bunkhouses, the stores, the offices, the stables, they must all be
+ready before the coming of the "freeze-up." Summer is the time of
+preparation. Winter is the season when the lumber-jack's work must go
+forward without cessation or break of any sort. Not even the excuse of
+sickness can be accepted. There is no excuse. The lumber-jack must work,
+or sink to the dregs of a life that has already created in him a spirit
+of indifference to the laws of God and man. So the life of the forest is
+hard and fierce, and the battle of it all is long.
+
+But the men who seek it are more than equal to the task. They are of all
+sorts, and all races. They drift to the forest from all ranks of life by
+reason of the spirit driving them. They come from the universities of
+the world. They come straight from the gates of the penitentiary. They
+come from the land, the sea, the office. They come from all countries,
+and they come for every reason. The call of the forest is deep with
+significance. Its appeal is profound. Its life is free, and shadowed,
+and afar.
+
+For long moments the clinch of the fighting men remained unbroken. They
+lay there upon the ground locked in a deadly embrace. A spasmodic jolt,
+a violent, muscular heave. The result was changed position, while the
+clinch remained unrelaxed. There were movements of gripping hands. There
+were changes of position in the intertwined legs clad in their hard cord
+trousers. The heavily-booted feet stirred and stirred again in response
+to the impulse of the searching brains of the fighters, and every slight
+movement had deep meaning for the onlookers.
+
+Yet none of these movements revealed the inspiration of passion. They
+were calculated and full of purpose. It was devilish purpose driving
+towards the objects of the fight. The stirring fingers yearned to reach
+the eyes of the adversary to blind him, and leave his organs of vision
+gouged from their sockets. The bared, strong teeth were only awaiting
+that dire chance to close upon the enemy's flesh, whether ear, or nose,
+or throat. Then the knee and foot. They were striving under ardent will
+for that inhuman maiming which would leave the victim crippled for life.
+
+Each movement of the fighters was estimated by the onlookers at its due
+worth. They understood it all, the skill, the chance of it. Not one of
+them but had fought just such a battle in his time, and not a few
+carried the scars of it, and would continue to carry the scars of it for
+the rest of their days.
+
+The moments of quiescence yielded to a spasmodic violence. There was a
+wild rolling, and the unlocking of mighty, clinging legs. One
+dishevelled head was raised threateningly. It remained poised for a
+fraction of time over the upturned face of the man lying in a position
+of disadvantage. Then it lunged downwards. And as it descended, a sound
+like the clipping of teeth came back to the taut strung senses of the
+onlookers. A sigh escaped from a hundred throats.
+
+"Bull missed it that time."
+
+Abe Kristin whispered his comment. The two men beside him had nothing to
+add at the moment. Their eyes were intent for the next development.
+
+Suddenly the fair-haired giant who had missed his attack seemed to
+disengage himself from the under man's desperate hold. It was impossible
+to ascertain the means he employed. But he clearly released himself and
+one hammer fist swung up. It crashed sickeningly down on the upturned
+face, and a whistling breath escaped the emotional Abe.
+
+"Gee! He's takin' a chance! That ain't the play in a 'rough and tough,'"
+he muttered.
+
+"Nope. You're right, Abe," Luke Gats agreed without turning. "He's
+crazy. Gee! It's a chance. But he's maybe rattled. Bull's been fightin'
+over an hour."
+
+"Here get it!" Tug Burke was pointing with a cant-hook in his
+excitement. "Get it quick. See? He's--"
+
+The man's excitement found reflection in the whole concourse of
+onlookers. There was a furious movement in the human body crushed on the
+ground beneath the man they called Bull. Its knees came up under his
+adversary's body with a terrific jolt. The purpose of maiming was
+obvious.
+
+"Gee! I'm glad."
+
+Tug's relief found an echo in the sigh that escaped his companions. The
+intended victim had promptly swung his body clear and the threatened
+injury was averted. But his retaliation was instant. His great open hand
+spread over the man's face, smothering it; and it seemed the sought-for
+goal had been reached.
+
+"Gouge! Gouge!"
+
+The cry roared in hoarse, excited tones from every direction. Unanimity
+displayed the general feeling. The man whose face had been smothered was
+Arden Laval, the camp boss, the man they hated as only forest-men can
+hate. The other was a giant youngster, not long a member of the camp,
+the usual object for victimisation by such a man as the French Canadian
+boss.
+
+The demand remained unsatisfied. The fingers remained spread out over
+the man's eyes, but the foul act was never perpetrated. The younger
+man's efforts were directed towards a deeper, more significant purpose,
+and perhaps less cruel. He could have blinded in a twinkling. But he
+refrained. Instead, he pressed up mightily with a fore-arm crooked under
+the back of the man's neck, his smothering hand pressed down with all
+his enormous strength.
+
+"The darn fool! Why in hell don't he--?"
+
+Abe was interrupted by the excited voice of the man with the cant-hook.
+
+"God A'mighty!" Tug cried. "Do you get it? Gouge? It ain't good enough
+fer Master Bull. He's playin' bigger. He's playin' fer dollars while we
+was reck'nin' cents. Look! It'll crack sure! His gorl-darn neck! He
+means--!"
+
+"To kill!"
+
+Luke Gat's jubilation was dreadful to witness. His hard, be-whiskered
+features were alight with fiendish joy. This youngster had gone beyond
+all expectations. No less than the life of the greatest bully in the
+lumber world would satisfy him.
+
+"Say, the nerve! He'll break the life out o' the skunk," he exulted.
+"The kid means crackin' his neck, sure as God!"
+
+"Ken he do it?" Tug had thrust forward.
+
+"Laval ain't the feller he was," mused Abe. "He shouldn't a let the boy
+get that holt. It's goin' back. It certainly is."
+
+The men stood hushed before the terrible significance of what they
+beheld. In the abstract, a life-and-death struggle meant little enough
+to them. Witnessing it, however, violently stirred their deepest
+emotions. They hated the camp boss, the libertine, drunkard, bully,
+Arden Laval, who only held his position by reason of his fighting
+powers. They would be infinitely pleased to witness his end. All the
+more sure was their delight that it should come at the hands of this
+pleasant-voiced young giant, who had come amongst them out of the very
+lap of civilisation. Later on they would laugh at the thought of the
+redoubtable Laval in the hands of this "kid," as they considered him.
+But for the moment they were held enthralled by the excitement of it
+all.
+
+The moments prolonged. The thrusting hand, and the crushing arm were
+forcing, forcing slowly, in their terrible strangle hold. The face of
+the camp boss was hidden from the spectators under the smothering hand.
+But the perilous angle at which his dark head was thrust back was there
+for all to see. His struggles, in that merciless hold, were becoming
+less violent. There was despair in their impotence.
+
+The man called Bull was fighting with no less desperation. His youthful,
+resilient muscles were extended to the last ounce of their power, and an
+active, steely-tempered brain lay behind his every effort. The memory of
+months of brutal injustice and bullying, the bitterness of which had
+galled beyond endurance, supported this last mighty effort. Yes, for all
+he was bred in the gentle life of civilisation, for all ruthless cruelty
+had no place in his normal temper, his one desire now was to kill, to
+slay this brute-man who had made his life unendurable.
+
+It was an awful moment. It was terrible even to these hardy men of the
+forests. The spectacle of a slow, deliberate killing was incomparable
+with the blood feuds to which they were used. There were those whose
+nerves prompted them to shout for haste. There were some even who
+welcomed the prolonged agony of the victim. But none shouted, none
+spoke or stirred. Furthermore, not one pair of shining eyes revealed the
+quality of mercy. Bull's right was his own. If he demanded death it was
+his due. Certainly it was the due of the bully, Laval.
+
+On the far side of the circle a sudden commotion broke up the tense
+expectancy of the onlookers. Every eye responded, and the unanimity of
+the change of interest suggested the desire for relief. The commotion
+continued. There was some sort of struggle going on. Then, in a moment,
+it ceased. A tall, lean, dark-clad figure leapt into the arena and flung
+itself upon the combatants.
+
+The circle had re-formed. Again were eyes fastened upon the point of
+fascination which had held them so long. But now a buzz of talk hummed
+on the summer air.
+
+"What in hell!" demanded Luke, in the bitterness of disappointment.
+
+"Here, I'm--"
+
+Tug Burke made a move to break into the arena. But the powerful hand of
+Abe was fastened about one of his arms in a grip of iron.
+
+"Say, quit, kid!" he cried hoarsely.
+
+The man's harsh tones were stirred out of their usual quiet.
+
+"Stop right here," he went on. "There's just one feller on this earth
+has a right to butt in when Death's flappin' his wings around. That's
+Father Adam. Maybe you're feeling sick to think Laval's going to get
+clear with his life. Maybe I am. Father Adam ain't buttin' in ordinary.
+He's savin' that hothead kid the blood of a killin' on his hands. Guess
+I'm glad."
+
+The next moments were abounding with amazing incident. It seemed as
+though a flying, priestly figure had been absorbed in the life-and-death
+struggle. He seemed to become part of it. Then, with kaleidoscopic
+suddenness, the men lay apart, and the death strangle hold of Bull
+Sternford was broken. And the magic of it all lay in the fact that the
+stranger was standing over the prone combatants, his dark, bearded face,
+and wide, shining black eyes turned upon the living fury gazing up out
+of the eyes of the man who had been robbed of his prey.
+
+"There's going to be no killing, Bull." Father Adam spoke quietly,
+deliberately, but with cold decision.
+
+There was no yielding in his pale, ascetic features. One hand slipped
+quickly into a pocket of his short, black, semi-clerical coat, as he
+allowed his eyes to glance down at the still prostrate camp boss.
+
+"And you, Laval," he cried, with more urgency, "get out quick. Get right
+out to your shanty and stop there. Later I'll come along and fix up your
+hurts."
+
+Young Bull Sternford leapt to his feet. His youthful figure towered. His
+handsome blue eyes were ablaze with almost demoniac fury. His purpose
+was obvious. A voiceless passion surged as he started to rush again upon
+his victim.
+
+But the priestly figure, with purpose no less, instantly barred the way.
+
+"Quit," he cried sharply. "What I say, goes."
+
+Bull halted. He halted within a yard of the automatic pistol whose
+muzzle was covering him. He stood for a second staring stupidly. And
+something of his madness seemed to pass out of his eyes. Then, in a
+moment, his voice rang out harshly.
+
+"Get away. Let me get at him. Oh, God, I'll smash him! I'll--!"
+
+"You'll quit right now!" Father Adam still barred the way with the
+threatening gun. He raised the muzzle the least shade. "There's this gun
+says you're not going to have murder on your hands, boy; and there's a
+man behind it knows how to make it stop your mad attempt. That's
+better," he went on, as, even in his fury the younger man drew back in
+face of the threat. "Say, you've done enough, boy. You've done all you
+need. He's deserved everything he's got, the same as most of us deserve
+the bad times we get. You've licked him like the good man you are.
+You've licked him without any filthy maiming, or unnecessary cruelty.
+Now leave him his life. He'll never trouble you again. Let it go at
+that."
+
+The calm of the man, the gentleness of his tones were irresistible. The
+fury of the youth died hard, but it so lessened in face of the simple
+exhortation that it had passed below the point where insanity rules.
+
+Suddenly a great, bleeding hand was raised to his mane of fair hair, and
+he smoothed it back off his forehead helplessly.
+
+"Why? Why?" he demanded. Then spasmodically: "Why should--he--get away
+with it? He's handed me a dog's life He's--"
+
+He broke off. His emotions were overwhelming.
+
+Father Adam's dark eyes never wavered. They squarely held their grip on
+the stormy light shining in the other's. Laval had not stirred. He still
+lay sprawled on the ground. Quite abruptly the hand gripping the
+automatic pistol was thrust into the pocket of the black coat. When it
+was removed it was empty. The man took a quick step towards the
+half-dazed Bull.
+
+"Come along, boy," he said persuasively, taking him by the arm. "Come
+right over to my shanty," he went on. "You'll feel better in a while.
+You'll feel better all ways, and glad you--didn't." Then he paused,
+holding the man's unresisting arm. He looked down at Laval who displayed
+belated signs of movement. "Get up, Laval," he ordered, returning to a
+coldness that displayed his inner feeling. "Get up, and--get out. Get
+away right now, and thank God your neck's still whole."
+
+He waited for the obedience he demanded, and waiting he realised by the
+quiescence of the man beside him that all danger had passed.
+
+Laval staggered to his feet. He stood up, a giant in the prime of early
+manhood, but bowed under the weight of physical hurt, and the knowledge
+of his first defeat. He stood for a moment as though uncertain. Then he
+moved slowly towards the crowding onlookers, finally passing through
+them on his way to his quarters pursued by a hundred contemptuous,
+unpitying glances, while busy tongues expressed regret at his escape. It
+was the scowl of the wolf pack in its merciless regard for a fallen
+leader.
+
+Very different was the general attitude when Father Adam led the victor
+away. Hard faces were a-grin. The tongues that cursed the defeated camp
+boss hurled jubilant laudations at the unresponsive youth, who towered
+even amongst these great creatures. But for the presence of Father Adam,
+who seemed to exercise a miraculous restraining influence, these
+lumber-jacks would have crowded in and forcibly borne their champion to
+the suttler's store for those copious libations, which, in their
+estimate, was the only fitting conclusion to the scene they had
+witnessed. As it was they made way. They stood aside in spontaneous and
+real respect, and the two men passed on in silence leaving the crowd to
+disperse to its labours.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+FATHER ADAM
+
+
+The hush of the forest was profound. For all the proximity of the busy
+lumber camp its calm was unbroken.
+
+It was a break in the endless canopy of foliage, a narrow rift in the
+dark breadth of the shadowed woods.
+
+It was one of those infinitesimal veins through which flows the
+life-blood of the forest.
+
+A tiny streamlet trickled its way over a bed of decayed vegetation often
+meandering through a dense growth of wiry reeds in a channel set well
+below the general level. Banks of attenuated grass and rank foliage
+lined its course, and the welcome sunlight poured down upon its water in
+sharp contrast with the twilight of the forest.
+
+Clear of the crowding trees a rough shanty stood out in the sunlight. It
+was a crazy affair constructed of logs laterally laid and held in place
+by uprights, with walls that looked to be just able to hold together
+while suffering under the constant threat of collapse. The place was
+roofed with a thatch of reeds taken from the adjacent stream-bed, and
+its doorway was protected by a sheet of tattered sacking. There was also
+a window covered with cotton, and a length of iron stove-pipe protruding
+through the thatch of the roof seemed to threaten the whole place with
+fire at its first use.
+
+Inside there was no attempt to better the impression. There was no
+furnishing. A spread of blankets on a waterproof sheet laid on a bed of
+reeds formed the bed of its owner, with a canvas kit-bag stuffed with
+his limited wardrobe serving as a pillow. There were several upturned
+boxes to be used as seats, and a larger box served the purpose of a
+table and supported a tiny oil lamp. There was not even the usual wood
+stove connected up to the protruding stove-pipe. A smouldering fire was
+burning between two large sandstone blocks, which, in turn, supported a
+cooking pot. An uncultured Indian of the forests would have demanded
+greater comfort for his resting moments.
+
+But Father Adam had no concern for comfort of body. He needed his
+blankets and his fire solely to support life against the bitterness of
+the night air. For the rest the barest, hardest food kept the fire of
+life burning in his lean body.
+
+Squatting on his upturned box he gazed out upon the sunlit stream below
+him. His dark eyes were full of a pensive calm. His body was inclining
+forward, supported by arms folded across his knees. An unlit pipe thrust
+in the corner of his mouth was the one touch that defeated the efforts
+of his flowing hair and dark beard to suggest a youthful hermit
+meditating in the doorway of his retreat.
+
+Bull Sternford was seated on another box at the opposite side of the
+doorway. He, too, had a pipe thrust between his strong jaws. But he was
+smoking. Beyond the dressings applied to a few abrasions he bore no
+signs of his recent battle. But there still burned a curiously fierce
+light in his handsome blue eyes.
+
+"You shouldn't have butted in, Father," he said, in a tone which
+betrayed the emotion under which he was still labouring. "You just
+shouldn't." Then with a movement of irritation: "Oh, I'm not a feller
+yearning for homicide. No. It's not that. You know Arden Laval," he went
+on, his brows depressing. "Of course you do. You must know him a whole
+heap better than I do. Well? Say, I guess that feller hasn't a right to
+walk this earth. He boasts the boys he's smashed the life clean out of.
+He's killed more fool lumber-jacks than you could count on the fingers
+of two hands. He wanted my scalp to hang on his belt. That man's a
+murderer before God. But he's beyond the recall of law up here. And he
+stops around on the fringe looking for the poor fool suckers who don't
+know better than to get within his reach. Gee, it was tough! I'd a holt
+on him I wouldn't get in a thousand years, and I'd nearly got the life
+out of him. I'd stood for all his dirt weeks on end. He made his set at
+me because I'm green and college-bred. But he called me a
+'son-of-a-bitch!' Think of it! Oh, I can't rest with that hitting my
+brain. It's no use. I'll have to break him. God, I'll break him yet. And
+I'll see you aren't around when I do it."
+
+The man's voice had risen almost to a shout. His bandaged hands clenched
+into fists like limbs of mutton. He held them out at the man opposite,
+and in his agony of rage, it gave the impression he was threatening.
+
+Father Adam stirred. He reached down into the box under him and picked
+up a pannikin. Then he produced a flask from an inner pocket. He
+unscrewed the top and poured out some of its contents. He held it out to
+the other.
+
+"Drink it," he said quietly.
+
+The blue eyes searched the dark face before them. In a moment excitement
+had begun to pass.
+
+"What is it?" Bull demanded roughly.
+
+"It's brandy, and there's dope in it."
+
+"Dope?"
+
+"Yes. Bromide. You'll feel better after you've swallowed it. You see I
+want to make a big talk with you. That's why I brought you here. That's
+why I stopped you killing that feller--that, and other reasons. But I
+can't talk with you acting like--like I'd guess Arden Laval would act.
+Drink that right up. And you needn't be scared of it. It'll just do you
+the good you need."
+
+Father Adam watched while the other took the pannikin. He watched him
+raise it, and sniff suspiciously at its contents. And a shadowy smile
+lit his dark eyes.
+
+"It's as I said," he prompted. Then he added: "I'm not a--Caesar."
+
+The youth glanced across at him, and for the first time since his battle
+a smile broke through the angry gleam of his eyes. He put the pannikin
+to his lips and gulped down the contents.
+
+Father Adam drew a deep sigh. It was curious how this act of obedience
+and faith affected him. The weight of his responsibility seemed suddenly
+to have become enormous.
+
+It was always the same. This man accepted him as did every other
+lumber-jack throughout the forests of Quebec. He was a father whose
+patient affection for his lawless children was never failing, a man of
+healing, with something of the gentleness of a woman. An adviser and
+spiritual guide who never worried them, and yet contrived, perhaps all
+unknown to themselves, to leave them better men for their knowledge of
+him. He came, and he departed. Whence he came and whither he went no one
+enquired, no one seemed to know. He just moved through the twilight
+forests like a ghostly, beneficent shadow, supreme in his command of
+their rugged hearts.
+
+Bull set the pannikin on the ground beside him. His smile had deepened.
+
+"You needn't to tell me that, Father," he said, almost humbly. "There
+isn't a feller back there in the camp," he added with a jerk of his
+head, "that would have hesitated like me when you handed him your dope.
+Thanks. Say, that darn stuff's made me feel easier."
+
+"Good."
+
+The missionary removed his empty pipe, and Bull hastily dragged his
+pouch from a pocket in his buckskin shirt. He held it out.
+
+"Help yourself," he invited. And the other took it. For a moment Bull
+looked on at the thoughtful manner in which Father Adam filled his pipe.
+Then a curiosity he could no longer restrain prompted him.
+
+"This big talk," he said. "What's it about?"
+
+The missionary's preoccupation vanished. His eyes lit and he passed back
+the pouch.
+
+"Thanks, boy," he said in his amiable way. "Guess I'll need to smoke,
+too--you see our talk needs some hard thinking. Pass me a stick from
+that fire."
+
+Bull did as he was bid. And the missionary's eyes were on the fair head
+of the man as he leant down over the smouldering embers stewing his own
+meagre midday meal.
+
+Bull Sternford was a creature of vast stature and muscular bulk. It was
+no wonder that the redoubtable Laval had run up against defeat. The camp
+boss had lived for twenty years the hard life of the forests. His body
+was no less great than this man's. His experience in physical battle was
+well-nigh unlimited. But so, too, was his debauchery.
+
+Bull Sternford was younger. He was clean and fresh from one of the
+finest colleges of the world. He was an athlete by training and nature.
+Then, too, his mentality was of that amazing fighting quality which
+stirs youth to go out and seek the world rather than vegetate in the
+nursery of childhood. It was all there written in his keen, blue eyes,
+in the set of his jaws of even white teeth. It was all there in the
+muscular set of his great neck, and in the poise of his handsome head,
+and in the upright carriage of his breadth of shoulder. Even his walk
+was a thing to mark him out from his fellows. It was bold, perhaps even
+there was a suggestion of arrogance in it. But it was only the result of
+the military straightness of his body.
+
+Little wonder, then, a man of Arden Laval's brutal nature should mark
+him down as desired victim. This man was "green." He was educated. He
+possessed a spirit worth breaking. Later he would learn. Later he would
+become a force in the calling of the woods. Now he would be easy.
+
+The brute had sought every opportunity to bait and goad the man to his
+undoing. For months he had "camped on his trail," and Bull had endured.
+Then came that moment of the filthy epithet, and Bull's spirit broke
+through the bonds of will that held it. The insult had been hurled at
+the moment and at the spot where the battle had been fought. Bull had
+flung himself forthwith at the throat of the French Canadian almost
+before the last syllable of the insult had passed the man's lips. And
+the end of nearly a two hours' battle had been the downfall of the
+bully, with the name of Bull Sternford hailed as a fighting man in his
+place.
+
+The firebrand was passed to the waiting missionary. He sucked in the
+pleasant fumes of a lumberman's tobacco. Then the stick was flung back
+to its place in the fire.
+
+Father Adam nursed one long leg, which he flung across the other, while
+his wide, intelligent eyes gazed squarely into the eyes of the man
+opposite.
+
+"Tell me," he said. "What brought you into the life of the woods? What
+left you quitting the things I can see civilisation handed you? This is
+the life of the wastrel, the fallen, the man who knows no better. It's
+not for men starting out in possession of all those things--you have."
+
+Bull sat for a moment without replying. Father Adam's "dope" had done
+its work. His passionate moments had vanished like an ugly dream. His
+turbulent spirit had attained peace. Suddenly he looked up with a frank
+laugh.
+
+"Now, why in hell should I tell you?"
+
+It was an irresistible challenge. The missionary nodded his approval.
+
+"Yes. Why--in hell--should you?"
+
+He, too, laughed. And his laugh miraculously lit up his ascetic
+features.
+
+Instantly Bull flung out one bandaged hand in a sweeping gesture.
+
+"Why shouldn't I--anyway?" he cried, with the abandon of a man
+impatient of all subterfuge. "Guess I ought to turn right around and ask
+who the devil you are to look into my affairs? Who are you to assume the
+right of inquisitor?" He shook his head. "But I'm not going to. Now I'm
+sane again I know just how much you did for me. I meant killing Laval.
+Oh, yes, there wasn't a thing going to break my hold until he was
+dead--dead. You got me in time to save me from wrecking my whole life.
+And you got in at--the risk of your own. If I'd killed him all the
+things and purposes I've worried with since I left college would have
+been just so much junk; and I'd have drifted into the life of a bum
+lumber-jack without any sort of notion beyond rye whiskey, and the camp
+women, and a well swung axe. You saved me from that. You saved me from
+myself. Well, you're real welcome to ask me any old thing, and I'll hand
+you all the truth there is in me. I'm an 'illegitimate.' I'm one of the
+world's friendless. I'm a product of a wealthy man's licence and
+unscruple. I'm an outcast amongst the world's honest born. But it's no
+matter. I'm not on the squeal. Those who're responsible for my being did
+their best to hand me the things a man most needs. Mind, and body, and
+will. Further, they gave me all that education, books, and college can
+hand a feller. More than that, my father, who seems to have had more
+honesty than you'd expect, handed me a settlement of a hundred thousand
+dollars the day I became twenty-one. I never knew him, and I never knew
+my mother. The circumstances of my birth were simply told me on my
+twenty-first birthday. I know no more. And I care nothing to hunt out
+those spectres that don't figger to hand a feller much comfort. The rest
+is easy. I hope I'm a feller of some guts--"
+
+Father Adam nodded, and his eyes lit.
+
+"Sure," was all he commented.
+
+"Anyway, I feel like it," Bull laughed. "When I learned all these
+things I started right in to think. I thought like hell. I said to
+myself something like this: 'There's nothing to hold me where I am.
+There's no one around to care a curse. There's that feeling right inside
+the pit of my stomach makes me feel I want to make good. I want to build
+up around me all that my birth has refused me. A name, a life circle, a
+power, a--anyway, get right out and do things! Well, what was I going to
+do? It needed thinking. Then I hit the notion."
+
+He laughed again. He was gazing in at himself and laughing at the
+conceits he knew were real, and strong, and vital.
+
+"Say." He nodded at the prospect through the doorway. "There it is. This
+country's beginning. We don't know half it means to the world yet. Well,
+I hadn't enough capital to play with, so I resolved right away to start
+in and learn a trade from its first step to its topmost rung, and to
+earn my keep right through. Meanwhile my capital's lying invested
+against the time I open out. I'm going to jump right into the groundwood
+pulp business when the time comes. And out of that I mean to build a
+name that folks won't easily forget. Well, I guess you won't find much
+that's interesting in all this. It don't sound anything particularly
+bright or new. But for what it is it's my notion, and--I'm going to put
+it through. That's why I'm here. I'm learning my job from the bottom."
+
+The decision and force of the man were remarkable. The conciseness of
+his story, and his indifference to the tragedy of his birth, indicated a
+level mind under powerful control. And Father Adam knew he had made no
+mistake.
+
+"It's the best story I've heard in years," he replied, a whimsical smile
+lighting his dark eyes.
+
+"Is it?"
+
+Bull's smile was no less whimsical.
+
+"Yes. You've guts of iron, boy. And I've been looking years for just
+such a man."
+
+"That sounds--tough," Bull laughed, but he was interested. "What's the
+job you want him for? Are you yearning to hand out a killing? Is it a
+trip--a trip to some waste space of God's earth that 'ud freeze up a
+normal heart? Do you want a feller to beat the laws of God and man? Guts
+of iron! It certainly sounds tough, and I'm not sure you've found the
+feller you're needing."
+
+"I am."
+
+Father Adam was no longer smiling. The gravity of his expression gave
+emphasis to his words.
+
+Bull was impressed. His laugh died out.
+
+"I don't know I'm yearning," he said deliberately. "Anyway I don't quit
+the track I've marked out. That way there's nothing doing. It's a crank
+with me; I can't quit a notion."
+
+"You don't have to."
+
+"No?"
+
+They were regarding each other steadily.
+
+"Here, it's not my way to beat around," the missionary exclaimed
+suddenly. "When you find the thing you need you've got to act quick and
+straight. Just listen a while, while I make a talk. Ask all you need as
+I go along. And when I've done I'd thank you for a straight answer and
+quick. An answer that'll hold you, and bind you the way your own notions
+do."
+
+"That's talk."
+
+Bull nodded appreciatively. The missionary let his gaze wander to the
+pleasant sunlight through the doorway, where the flies and mosquitoes
+were basking.
+
+"There was a fellow who started up a groundwood mill 'way out on the
+Labrador coast. He was bright enough, and a mighty rich man. And he'd
+got a notion--a big notion. Well, I know him. I know him intimately. I
+don't know if he's a friend to me or not. Sometimes I think he isn't.
+Anyway, that doesn't matter to you. The thing that does matter is, he
+set out to do something big. His notions were always big. Maybe too big.
+This notion was no less than to drive the Skandinavians out of the
+groundwood trade of this country. He figured his great mill was to be
+the nucleus of an all-Canadian and British combination, embracing the
+entire groundwood industry of this country. It was to be Canadian trade
+for Canada with the British Empire."
+
+Bull emitted a low whistle.
+
+"An elegant slogan," he commented.
+
+He shifted his position. In his interest his pipe had gone out, and he
+leant forward on his upturned box.
+
+"Yes," Father Adam went on. "And, like your notion, it was something not
+easily shifted from his mind. It was planned and figured to the last
+detail. It was so planned it could not fail. So he thought. So all
+concerned thought. You see, he had ten million dollars capital of his
+own; and he was something of a genius at figures and finance--his people
+reckoned. He was a man of some purpose, and enthusiasm, and--something
+else."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+Bull's alert brain was prompt to seize upon the reservation. But denial
+was instant.
+
+"No. It wasn't drink, or women, or any foolishness of that sort," the
+missionary said. "The whole edifice of his purpose came tumbling about
+his ears from a totally unexpected cause. Something happened. Something
+happened to the man himself. It was disaster--personal disaster. And
+when it came a queer sort of weakness tripped him, a weakness he had
+always hitherto had strength to keep under, to stifle. His courage
+failed him, and the bottom of his purpose fell out like--that."
+
+Father Adam clipped his fingers in the air and his regretful eyes
+conveyed the rest. Then, after a moment, he smiled.
+
+"He'd no--iron guts," he said, with a sigh. "He had no stomach for
+battle in face of this--this disaster that hit him."
+
+"It has no relation to his--undertaking?"
+
+"None whatever. I know the whole thing. We were 'intimates.' I know his
+whole life story. It was a disaster to shake any man."
+
+The missionary sighed profoundly.
+
+"Yes, I knew him intimately," he went on. "I deplored his weakness. I
+censured it. Perhaps I went far beyond any right of mine to condemn. I
+don't know. I argued with him. I did all I could to support him. You
+see, I appreciated the splendid notion of the thing he contemplated.
+More than that, I knew it could be carried out."
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"It was useless. This taint--this yellow streak--was part of the man. He
+could no more help it than you could help fighting to the death."
+
+"Queer."
+
+A sort of pitying contempt shone in the younger man's eyes.
+
+"Queer?" Father Adam nodded. "It was--crazy."
+
+"It surely was."
+
+The missionary turned back to the prospect beyond the doorway. But it
+was only for a moment. He turned again and went on with added urgency.
+
+"But the scheme wasn't wholly to be abandoned. It was--say, here was the
+crazy proposition he put up. You see I was his most intimate friend. He
+said: 'The forests are wide. They're peopled with men of our craft.
+There must be a hundred and more men capable of doing this thing. Of
+putting it through. Well, the forests must provide the man, or the idea
+must die.' He said: 'We must find a man!' He said: 'You--you whose
+mission it is to roam the length and breadth of these forests--you may
+find such a man. If you do--when you do--if it's years hence--send him
+along here, and there's ten million dollars waiting for him, and all
+this great mill, and these timber limits inexhaustible waiting for him
+to go right ahead. It doesn't matter a thing who he is, or what he is,
+or where he comes from, so long as he gets this idea--sticks to it
+faithfully--and puts it through. I want nothing out of it for myself.
+And the day he succeeds in the great idea all that would have been mine
+shall be his.'"
+
+As Father Adam finished, he looked into the earnest, wonder-filled eyes
+of the other.
+
+"Well?" he demanded.
+
+Bull cleared his throat.
+
+"The mill? Where is it?" He demanded.
+
+"Sachigo. Farewell Cove."
+
+"Sachigo! Why it's--"
+
+"The greatest groundwood mill in the world."
+
+There was a note of pride and triumph in the missionary's tone. But it
+passed unheeded. Bull was struggling with recollection.
+
+"This man? Wasn't it Leslie Standing who built it? Didn't it break him
+or something? That's the story going round. There was something--"
+
+Father Adam shook his head.
+
+"There's ten million dollars says it didn't. Ten millions you can handle
+yourself."
+
+"Gee!"
+
+Bull drew a sharp breath. Strong, forceful as he was the figure was
+overwhelming.
+
+"This--all this you're saying--offering? It's all real, true?" Bull
+demanded at last.
+
+"All of it."
+
+"You want me to go and take possession of Sachigo, and ten--Say, where's
+the catch?"
+
+"There's no 'catch'--anywhere."
+
+The denial was cold. It was almost in the tone of affronted dignity. The
+missionary had thrust his hand in a pocket. Now he produced a large,
+sealed envelope. Bull's eyes watched the movement, but bewilderment was
+still apparent in them. Suddenly he raised a bandaged hand, and smoothed
+back his hair.
+
+Father Adam held out the sealed letter. It was addressed to "Bat
+Harker," at Sachigo Mill.
+
+"Here," he said quietly. "You're the man with iron guts Leslie Standing
+wants for his purpose. Take this. Go right off to Sachigo and take
+charge of the greatest enterprise in the world's paper industry. You're
+looking to make good. It's your set purpose to make good in the
+groundwood industry. Opportunities don't come twice in a lifetime. If
+you've the iron courage I believe, you'll grab this chance. You'll grab
+it right away. Will you? Can you do it? Have you the nerve?"
+
+There was a taunt in the challenge. It was calculated. There was
+something else. The missionary's dark eyes were almost pleading.
+
+Bull seized the letter. He almost snatched it.
+
+"Will I do it? Can I do it? Have I the nerve?" he cried, in a tone of
+fierce exulting. "If there's a feller crazy enough to hand me ten
+million dollars and trust me with a job--if it was as big as a war
+between nations--I'd never squeal. Can I? Will I? Sure I will. And
+time'll answer the other for you. Iron guts, eh! I tell you in this
+thing they're chilled steel."
+
+"Good!"
+
+Father Adam was smiling. A great relief, a great happiness stirred his
+pulses as he stood up and moved over to the miserable fire with its
+burden of stewing food.
+
+"Now we'll eat," he said. And he stooped down and stirred the contents
+of the pot.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+BULL LEARNS CONDITIONS
+
+
+The _Myra_ ploughed her leisurely way up the cove. There was dignity in
+the steadiness with which she glided through the still waters. The
+cockleshell of the Atlantic billows had become a thing of pride in the
+shelter of Farewell Cove. Her predecessor, the _Lizzie_, had never risen
+above her humble station.
+
+Her decks were wide and clean. Her smoke-stack had something purposeful
+in its proportions. The bridge was set high and possessed a spacious
+chart house. She had an air of importance not usual to the humble
+coasting packet.
+
+"Old man" Hardy was at his post now. One of his officers occupied the
+starboard side of the bridge, while he and another looked out over the
+port bow.
+
+"It's a deep water channel," the skipper said, with all a sailor's
+appreciation. "That's the merricle that makes this place. It'ud take a
+ten-thousand tonner with fathoms to spare right away up to the mooring
+berth. Guess Nature meant Sachigo for a real port, but got mussed fixing
+the climate."
+
+Bull Sternford was leaning over the rail. For all summer was at its
+height the thick pea-jacket he was wearing was welcome enough. His keen
+eyes were searching, and no detail of the prospect escaped them. He was
+filled with something akin to amazement.
+
+"It compares with the big harbours of the world," he replied. "And I'd
+say it's not without advantages many of the finest of 'em lack. Those
+headlands we passed away back. Why, the Atlantic couldn't blow a storm
+big enough to more than ripple the surface here inside." He laughed.
+"What a place to fortify. Think of this in war time, eh?"
+
+The grizzled skipper grinned responsively.
+
+"It's all you reckon," he said. "But she needs humouring. You need to
+get this place in winter when ice and snow make it tough. This cove
+freezes right around its shores. You'd maybe lay off days to get inside,
+only to find yourself snow or fog bound for weeks on end. We make it
+because we have to with mails. But you can't run cargo bottoms in
+winter. It's a coasting master's job in snow time. It's a life study.
+You can get in, and you can get out--if you've nerve. If you're short
+that way you'll pile up sure as hell."
+
+He turned away to the chart room, and a moment later the engine-room
+telegraph chimed his orders to those below.
+
+Bull was left with his busy thoughts.
+
+It was a remarkable scene. The forest slopes came right down almost to
+the water's edge on either hand. They came down from heights that rose
+mountainously. And there, all along the foreshore were dotted
+timber-built habitations sufficient to shelter hundreds of workers.
+Their quality was staunch and picturesque, and pointed much of the
+climate rigour they were called upon to endure. But they only formed a
+background to, perhaps, the most wonderful sight of all. A road and
+trolley car line skirted each foreshore, and the mind behind the
+searching eyes was filled with admiration for the skill and enterprise
+that had transplanted one of civilisation's most advanced products here
+on the desperate coast of Labrador. Many of the forest whispers of
+Sachigo had been incredible. But this left the onlooker ready to believe
+anything of it.
+
+The mill, and the township surrounding it, were already within view, a
+wide-scattered world of buildings, occupying all the lower levels of the
+territory on both sides of the mouth of the Beaver River before it rose
+to the heights from which its water power fell.
+
+Bull was amazed. And as he gazed, his wonder and admiration were
+intensified a hundredfold by his self-interest. This place was to be in
+his control, possibly his possession if he made good. He thrust back the
+fur cap pressed low on his forehead.
+
+His thought leapt back on the instant to the man who had sent him down
+to this Sachigo. Father Adam, with his thin, ascetic features, his long,
+dark hair and beard, his tall, spare figure. His patient kindliness and
+sympathy, and yet with the will and force behind it which could fling
+the muzzle of a gun into a man's face and force obedience. He had sent
+him. Why? Because--oh, it was all absurd, unreal. And yet here he was on
+the steamer; and there ahead lay the wonders of Sachigo. Well, time
+would prove the craziness of it all.
+
+"Makes you wonder, eh?" The coasting skipper was at his side again. "You
+know these folks needed big nerve to set up this enterprise. It keeps me
+guessing at the limits where man has to quit. I've spent my life on this
+darn coast, an' never guessed to see the day when trolley cars 'ud run
+on Labrador, and the working folk 'ud sit around in their dandy houses,
+with electric light making things comfortable for them, and electric
+heat takin' the place of the cordwood stove it seemed to me folk never
+could do without. Can you beat it? No. You can't. Nor anyone else."
+
+"Who is it? A corporation?" Bull asked, knowing full well the answer. He
+wanted to hear, he wanted to learn all that this man could tell him.
+
+Hardy shook his head.
+
+"Standing," he said. "That was the guy's name who started it all up.
+But," he added thoughtfully, "I never rightly knew which feller it was.
+If it was Standing, or that tough hoboe feller who calls himself Bat
+Harker. They never talk a heap. But since Leslie Standing passed out o'
+things eight years back--the time I was first handed command of this
+kettle--the mill's jumped out of all notion. Those trolleys," he pointed
+at the foreshore of the cove: "They started in to haul the 'hands' to
+their work only two years back. I'd say it's Bat Harker. But he looks
+more like a longshore tough than a--genius."
+
+He shrugged expressively. Then he shook his head.
+
+"No," he went on. "I don't know a thing but what any guy can learn who
+comes along up this coast. I've thought a heap. An', like you, I've ast
+questions all the time. But you don't learn a thing of this enterprise
+but the things you see. Bat Harker don't ever talk." He laughed in quiet
+enjoyment. "He's most like a clam mussed up in a cement bar'l. There
+don't seem any clear reason either. The only thing queer to me was
+Standing's 'get out.' There was talk then when that happened along. But
+it was jest talk. Canteen talk. Something sort of happened. No one
+seemed rightly to know. They guessed Bat was a tough guy who'd boosted
+him out--some way. Then I heard his wife had quit and he was all broke
+up. Then they said he'd made losses of millions on stock market gambles.
+But the yarns don't fit. You see, the mill's gone right ahead. The
+capital's there, sure. They've just built and built. There's more than
+twice the 'hands' there was eight years back. And get a look at the
+'bottoms' loading at the wharves. No. Say, when I came aboard the _Myra_
+and they scrapped the _Lizzie_, I never guessed to get a full cargo.
+Well, I can load right down to the water line for this place alone all
+the time. No. Sachigo's a mighty big fixture in the trade of this coast.
+It's a swell proposition for us sea folk. It keeps our propellers moving
+all the time. They're bright folk, sure."
+
+The old seaman laughed and moved off again to his telegraphs. The
+business of running in to the quayside was beginning in earnest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The hawsers creaked and strained at the bollards. The vessel yawed. Then
+she settled at her berth. The engine-room telegraph chimed its final
+order, and the vessel's busy heart came to rest. Instantly activity
+reigned upon the deck, and the discharge of cargo was in full swing.
+
+Bull Sternford was one of the first to pass down the gangway. Clad in
+the pleasant tweeds of civilisation, part hidden under a close-buttoned
+pea-jacket, he bulked enormously. His more than six feet of height was
+lost against his massive breadth of shoulder. Then, too, his keen face
+under a beaver cap, and his shapely head with its mane of hair, were
+things to deny his body that attention it might otherwise have
+attracted.
+
+For all that, at least one pair of critical eyes lost no detail of his
+personality. Bat Harker was unobtrusively standing amongst the piled
+bales of groundwood that stacked the wharf from end to end. There was
+nothing about him to single him out from those who stood on the quay.
+The rough clothing of his original calling was very dear to him, and he
+clung to it tenaciously. He seemed to have aged not one whit in the
+added eight years. His iron-grey hair was just as thick and colourful as
+before. There was no added line in his hard face. His girth was no less
+and no more. And his eyes, penetrating, steady, had the same spirit
+shining in them.
+
+He had laboured something desperately in the past eight years. With the
+passing of Leslie Standing from the life of Sachigo he had realized a
+terrible loss. His loss had more than embarrassed him. There was even a
+moment when it shook his purpose. But with him Sachigo was a religion,
+and his faith saved him. For a while, in both letter and spirit, he
+obeyed his orders, and Sachigo stood still. Then his philosophy carried
+the day. It was his dictum that no one could stand still on Labrador
+without freezing to death. He saw the application of it to his beloved
+mill. It must be "forward" or decay. So he scrapped his original orders,
+and drove with all his force.
+
+Bull stared about him for the fascination of his journey up the cove was
+still on him. His pre-occupation left him watching the hurried, orderly
+movement going on about him.
+
+"That all your baggage?"
+
+The demand was harsh, and Bull swung round with a start. He was gazing
+down into the upturned face of Bat Harker, who was pointing at the suit
+case he was carrying.
+
+"Guess I've a trunk back there in the hold somewhere," Bull replied
+indifferently, taking his interrogator for a quayside porter.
+
+"That's all right. I'll have one of the boys tote it up. Best come right
+along. It's quite a piece up to the office. You've a letter for me?"
+
+"I've a letter for Mr. Bat Harker."
+
+The doubt in Bull's tone set a genuine grin in the other's eyes.
+
+"Sure. That's me. Bat Harker. Maybe you don't guess I look it. Don't
+worry. Just pass it over."
+
+Bull groped in an inner pocket, surprise affording him some amusement.
+His interest in Sachigo had abruptly focussed itself on this man.
+
+"I'm kind of sorry," he said. "I surely took you for some sort
+of--porter."
+
+Bat laughed outright, and glanced down at his work-stained clothing.
+
+"Wal, that ain't new," he said. Then his eyes resumed their keen regard.
+"We don't need to wait around though. The skitters are mighty thick down
+here. Sachigo's gettin' a special breed I kind o' hate. That letter,
+an'--we'll get along."
+
+Bull drew out Father Adam's letter and waited while the other tore it
+open. Bat glanced at the contents and jumped to the signature. Then he
+thrust out a gnarled and powerful hand.
+
+"Shake," he cried. And there could be no doubting his good will. "Glad
+to have you around, Mr. Bull Sternford."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bull Sternford was seated in the luxurious chair that had once known
+Leslie Standing. His pea-jacket was removed and his cap was gone. The
+room was warm, and the sun beyond the window was radiant. Beyond the
+desk Bat was seated, where his wandering gaze could drift to the one
+object of which it never tired. He was at the window which looked out
+upon the mill below.
+
+He was reading Father Adam's letter. Sternford was silently regarding
+his squat figure. He was waiting and wondering, speculating as to the
+hard-faced, uncultured creature who had built up all the amazing details
+that made up an industrial city in a territory that was outlawed by
+Nature.
+
+Bat thrust the letter away and looked up.
+
+"Father Adam didn't write that letter for you? He just handed it out to
+you to bring along?"
+
+"That's how," Bull nodded.
+
+"Sure." Bat's tone became reflective. "He must have wrote that letter
+years, and held it against the time he located you. He's queer."
+
+Bull laughed.
+
+"Maybe he is," he said, "I don't know about that. But he's one hell of a
+good man," he went on warmly. "Do you know him? But of course you do.
+Say, he's just father and mother to every darn lumber-jack that haunts
+the forests of Quebec, and it don't worry him if his children are
+hellhound or honest. There's that to him sets me just crazy. I'd like to
+see his thin, tired face, always smiling." He stirred. And the warmth
+died abruptly out of his manner. "Say, you knew me--at the wharf?"
+
+"Sure. I knew you before you came along. We've a wireless out on the
+headland."
+
+"I see. Father Adam warned you I was coming. He told you--"
+
+"The whole darn yarn. Sure."
+
+Bull laughed grimly.
+
+"That he guessed to shoot me to small meat if I didn't do as he said?"
+
+"If you didn't cut out homicide from your notions of--sport."
+
+"Yes. It was tough," Bull regretted. "But I'm glad--now."
+
+"Yep. Guess any straight sort of feller would feel that way--after."
+
+The lumberman's regret was unnoticed by the other.
+
+Suddenly Bull leant forward in his chair. A smile, half whimsical, half
+incredulous, lit his eyes. He thrust his elbows on the desk and
+supported his face in his hands.
+
+"It just beats hell!" he cried. "It certainly does. Oh, I'm awake all
+right. Sure, I am. One time I wasn't sure. Two months back I was lying
+around a lousy summer camp getting ready to take a hand in the winter
+cut for the Skandinavia Corporation. I was within two seconds of
+breaking a man's life--the rotten camp boss. And now? Why, now I'm
+sitting around in dandy tweeds in the boss chair of a swell office, with
+a crazy notion back of my head I'm here to beat the game with the
+greatest groundwood mill in the world, and ten million dollars capital
+behind me. Maybe there's folks wouldn't guess I'm awake, but I allow I
+am. But the whole thing sets me thinking of the fairy stories I used to
+read when I was a kid, and never could see the horse sense in wasting
+time over."
+
+Bat helped himself to a chew from a fragment of plug tobacco.
+
+"Here, listen," Bull went on, after the briefest pause. "It's my 'show
+down.' I don't understand a thing. I'm mostly a kid from college with a
+yearning for fight. So far I've learned some of the things the forest
+can teach the feller who wants to learn. They're the rough things. And I
+like rough things. I've some grip on groundwood. And the making of
+groundwood's the main object of my life. That, and the notion of licking
+hell out of the other feller. That's me, and those are the things made
+Father Adam send me along down to Sachigo. Well, it's up to you." He
+spread out his hands, "Where do I stand? How do I stand? And why in the
+name of all that's crazy am I sitting in this boss chair--right now?"
+
+Bat swung one trunk-like leg across the other. His movement suggested an
+easing of mind and a measure of enjoyment. He pointed at the window and
+nodded in its direction.
+
+"Quite a place," he said, in a tone and with a pride that had no
+relation to the other's demands. "Makes you feel man ain't the bum sort
+of inseck in the scheme of things some highbrows ain't happy not tellin'
+you. There's folks who guess it's Nature the proposition that matters.
+It's her does it all, an' keeps on doin' it all the time. But Nature's
+most like one mighty foolish, extravagant female. That sort o' woman who
+don't care but to please the notion of the moment. And when that's done,
+goes right on to please the next. Wal, anyway I guess she's got her uses
+if it's only to hand chances to the guy that's lookin' on. Take a look
+right down there below," he went on. "That's the truck the guy lookin'
+on has sweppen up in Nature's trail. It's taken most of fifteen years
+collectin' it. We've had to push that broom hard. And now I guess you're
+going to boost your weight behind it too. There's other things to
+collect, and that's what we want from you. You got nerve. You got big
+muscle, and education, too. Well, you'll handle the biggest sweeper of
+us all. Does it scare you?"
+
+"Not a thing." Bull was smiling confidently.
+
+Bat chuckled. His eyes were sparkling as he ruthlessly masticated his
+tobacco. This man pleased him mightily.
+
+"That's all right," he said. Then he went on after a silent moment while
+he gazed thoughtfully out of the window. "It's right here," he
+exclaimed. "Here's a mill, a swell mill that don't lack for a thing to
+make it well-nigh perfect. I'll tell you about it. Its capacity. Its
+present limit is six thousand tons dry weight groundwood pulp to the
+week. That's runnin' full. There's a hundred and twenty grinders feeding
+a hundred and eighty sheetin' machines. And they're figgered to use up
+fifty-five thousand horse power of the five hundred thousand we got
+harnessed on this great little old river that falls off the highlands.
+That power is ours winter an' summer. It don't matter a shuck the
+'freeze up.' It's there for us all the darn time. Then we've forest
+limits to hand us the cordage for that output that could give us three
+times what we're needing for a thousand years. Labour? We got it
+plenty. And later, by closing in our system of foresting, I figger to
+cut out present costs on a sight bigger output. The plans for all that
+are fixed in my head. Then we come to the market for our stuff, an' I
+guess that's the syrup in the pie. The world's market's waitin' on us.
+It's ours before we start. Why? Our power don't cost us one cent a unit.
+We're able to hand our folks a standard of living through the nature of
+things that leaves wages easy. The river's wide, and full, and it's _our
+own_. Then our sea passage to Europe's just eighteen hundred miles
+instead of three thousand. An' these things mean our costs leave us
+cutting right under other folks, and Skandinavia beat. There it is," he
+cried, with a wide gesture of his knotted hands. "It's pie!"
+
+Something of the lumberman's enthusiasm found reflection in Sternford's
+eyes.
+
+"But Nature's handed us a lemon in the basket of oranges," Bat went on,
+with a shake of his head. "It's that woman in her again. Y'see, she
+gives us just four months in the year to get our stuff out. Oh, she
+don't freeze the cove right up. No. That's the tough of it. The
+channel's mostly open. But storm, and fog, and ice, beats the
+ocean-going skipper's power to navigate it with any sort o' safety. The
+headlands are desperate narrow, and--well, there it is. We've four
+months in the year to get our stuff out. It's a sum. Figger it yourself.
+Set us goin' full. Six thousand tons in the week. What is it? Three
+hundred thousand in the year. How many trips at ten thousand tons? Or
+put the average tonnage lower. Say eight thousand. Forty trips. Four
+months. A vessel making two trips on an average turn round. We need a
+fleet of twenty 'bottoms,' to do it in the time. And they'll need to be
+our own. You can't help yourself to the world's market, and fix prices,
+and all the while fight for shipping in the open market. See?"
+
+"Sure--I see."
+
+Bat nodded approval.
+
+"When we get that the rest can go through. Meanwhile there's sixty
+grinders idle, which leaves us workin' half capacity. As it stands it's
+a dandy enterprise. We're making a swell balance sheet. But profit ain't
+the whole purpose. There's the rest."
+
+The super lumber-jack turned again to the window with that fascination
+that was almost pathetic.
+
+"And the rest?"
+
+Bull Sternford urged the other sharply, and Bat turned at once.
+
+"Canada's groundwood for the Canadian, inside the Empire," he shot at
+him.
+
+The other nodded.
+
+"The world's market for the country that can and should supply it," he
+replied.
+
+"The smashing of the darn Skandinavian ring," cried Bat, his deep-set
+eyes alight.
+
+"And drive them--back over the sea."
+
+Bat suddenly leant across the table.
+
+"That's it, boy," he cried. "That's it! Hellbeam and all his gang. The
+Skandinavia Corporation. Smash 'em! Drive 'em to Hell! It ain't profit.
+It's the trade. The A'mighty made Canada an' built the Canadian. He set
+him right here to help himself to the things He gave him. It's being
+filched by these foreigners--his birthright. They're fat on it. Did we
+fight the world war for that? Not by a darn sight. We fought to hold a
+place on the map for ourselves. And that's a proposition we've all got
+to get our back teeth into."
+
+"It sure is."
+
+The mill manager sat back in his chair and chewed vigorously.
+
+"That's it," he said. "How?" he went on. "Combination. Finance--and the
+interest of the little, great old country across the water. It's all
+planned and laid out by the feller that started up this proposition.
+It's scheduled for you. Guess you'll find the last word of it writ out
+in the locked book in this desk. It's clear and straight for the feller
+with the nerve. That's you. Wal?"
+
+Bat was watching--searching. He was looking for that flicker of an
+eyelid he had learned to dread in the past. But he failed to discover
+it. The wide, clear eyes of the younger man returned his regard
+unwaveringly. The uncultured lumberman had stirred a responsive
+enthusiasm, and somehow the project no longer seemed the crazy thing it
+had once appeared to Bull Sternford.
+
+"Guess my back teeth have got it," he said, with a smile. "You needn't
+worry I'll let go."
+
+Bat drew a deep breath. He stood up and spat his mangled chew into the
+cuspidore.
+
+"I'm glad. I'm real glad," he cried. "I'm a heap more glad you told me
+those words without askin' the other things you need to know. But you
+got to know 'em right away. Say, the day that fixes up the things we
+been talkin' sees you with me and another masters of this mill an' all
+it means. And while you're playin' your hand there's one big fat salary
+for you to draw. This house and office is yours, an' me an' the mill's
+ready to do all we know all the time, just the way you need it. Down in
+Abercrombie there's the attorney, Charles Nisson, who's got the outfit
+of papers that you're goin' to sign. And when you seen him, why you'll
+get busy. Shake, boy," he cried, thrusting out one knotted hand. "Father
+Adam sent you, and I don't guess he's made any mistake."
+
+Bull had risen, and his height left him towering over the man across the
+table.
+
+"Now for the mill," he cried, as their hands fell apart. "The _Myra_
+sails sundown to-morrow and I need to get a swift look around before
+then. Say, you folk have kind of taken me on a chance--well, that's all
+right. I'm glad."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+DRAWING THE NET
+
+
+Nathaniel Hellbeam was contemplating the spiral of smoke rising from his
+long cigar. He was dreaming pleasantly. He was dreaming of those
+successful manipulations of finance it was his purpose to achieve. He
+had lunched, so his dream was of the things which most appealed.
+
+In the midst of his reflections the drub of the muffled telephone beat
+its insistent tattoo. His dream vanished, and his senses became alert.
+He leant forward in his chair and picked up the receiver.
+
+"Yes," he said shortly. And it sounded more like the Teutonic, "Ja!"
+
+Putting up the receiver again he leant his clumsy body back in his
+chair. His small eyes no longer contained their dreaming light. They
+were turned expectantly upon the polished mahogany door.
+
+The door swung silently open.
+
+"Mr. Idepski!" The announcement was made in a carefully modulated tone.
+
+The agent passed into the great man's presence, slim, dark, confident.
+Then the door closed without a sound.
+
+"Well?"
+
+There was no cordiality in the greeting. That was not Hellbeam's way
+with a paid agent.
+
+Idepski walked across to the chair always waiting to receive a visitor
+and sat down.
+
+"May I sit?" he inquired coolly, after the operation had been
+performed.
+
+Hellbeam nodded.
+
+"Well?" he repeated.
+
+The agent laid his hat on the ornate desk, and removed his gloves with
+care and deliberation.
+
+"I'm just back from Sachigo," he said.
+
+"Hah!"
+
+The financier settled himself more comfortably in his chair, and
+returned his cigar to his gross mouth.
+
+"Tell me," he demanded.
+
+"Easy. Things are moving our way."
+
+The dark eyes glanced over the table for the gold cigarette box that
+always stood there.
+
+"Help yourself," the banker ordered rather than invited.
+
+Idepski needed no second bidding.
+
+"You got all my code messages?" he asked. "Good," as the Swede nodded.
+"Then you know the position of the mill. Say, that feller Harker needs a
+sort of apology from me--also from you. The mill's a wonder. And he's
+the guy that's fixed it that way. You haven't a thing in Skandinavia
+comparable. I'd say you haven't a feller on your side capable of
+touching the fringe of that tough's genius for organisation. It's him.
+Not Martin--I mean Standing."
+
+"And Standing?"
+
+But Idepski was not to be deflected from his purpose.
+
+"That's all right," he said easily. "I'm coming to him presently. I gave
+you, at times, the whole length and breadth, and size, and capacity of
+the Sachigo of to-day. You got all that stuff. But I've saved up the
+plum. There's a new man come into it. His name's Sternford--Bull
+Sternford. Guess it's him I need to tell you about before I pass on to
+the other. It's taken me a while to locate all I needed. And I guess I
+had luck or I wouldn't have got it all yet."
+
+For once the man's smile reached his eyes.
+
+"What's his position--in Sachigo?" Hellbeam demanded.
+
+"Right on top of the business side of it."
+
+"A financial man?"
+
+The banker's interest was obviously stirred. But Idepski shook his dark
+head.
+
+"That's the queer of it," he said. "He's a youngster straight out of the
+forest with no sort of record except as a pretty tough fighting
+proposition. Here, let me hand it to you in my own way, and I'll answer
+any sort of question after. I got men chasing up the forest camps. You
+know that. Well, I get their reports right here in this city at my
+office. They're read carefully, and anything that looks good is coded,
+and sent on to me wherever I am. Well, right after I located this
+feller, Sternford, coming into Sachigo, I got word of some stuff
+reported from one of your own camps way out north-west of Lake St. Anac.
+Guess it's about the farthest north in that direction, and it's cut off
+from any other camp by a hundred miles. On the face of it the stuff
+didn't seem to need more than a single thought. It was to say my man was
+quitting the camp. He'd sifted it right through, but there wasn't a
+'jack' in the camp with any sort of story worth wasting paper on. There
+wasn't a trace of our man that way, and he proposed drawing another
+cover. At the end of his report was one of those notes these boys never
+seem able to resist mixing up with their official work. It told me of
+one of those scraps that happened in the camps, and he seemed mighty
+struck by it. It was between the camp boss, Arden Laval, and a kid
+called Sternford. Say, when I read that name I jumped. I felt like
+handing my feller promotion right away. Well, his story was good anyway.
+It seems this camp boss is about the biggest bluff in the scrap way
+known to that country. The kid licked him. They fought nearly two hours,
+'rough and tough.' And the kid would have killed his man, but for the
+interference of a missionary feller called Father Adam. He broke 'em
+loose with a gun, and when he got 'em loose he took the kid right away
+so he shouldn't hand out the homicide he reckoned to. This report was
+more than two months old when I got it. Anyway I got it after a feller
+called Bull Sternford, a queer name by the way, had jumped in on the
+Sachigo proposition."
+
+The agent flung away his cigarette and helped himself afresh.
+
+"Well," he went on, smiling, "I guess it didn't take me thinking five
+seconds. I set the wires humming asking a description of this fighting
+kid. I got it. It was my man. The feller at Sachigo. Well?"
+
+Idepski's smiling interrogation was full of satisfaction.
+
+"Go on." The watchful eyes of the financier seemed to have narrowed.
+
+"Now, by what chance does this feller, Bull Sternford, come straight
+from one hell of a scrap in a far-off camp belonging to Skandinavia to
+run the business end of Sachigo? What happened after that fool
+missionary got him away? And--"
+
+Idepski broke off, pondering. He flicked his cigarette ash without
+regard for the carpet.
+
+Hellbeam stirred in his chair impatiently. His lips seemed to become
+more prominent. His small eyes seemed to become smaller.
+
+"You ask that, yes? You?" he snorted. "A child may answer that thing.
+You think? Oh, yes, you think." The hand supporting his cigar made a
+gesture that implied everything disparaging. "Our man--this Martin--has
+gone out of Sachigo because--of you? I tell you, no! Does a man give up
+the money, the big plan he makes, at the sight of an--agent? He took you
+in his hand and sent you to the swine life of the forest where he could
+have crushed you like that." He gripped the empty air. "Then he
+goes--where? You say he fears and quits. What does he fear? You?" The
+man shook his head till his cheeks were shaken by the violence of his
+movement. "He goes somewhere. But he does not quit. That is clear. Oh,
+yes. The mill goes on. It grows and prospers. The man Harker remains.
+Where comes the money for Sachigo to grow? Trade? Yes, some. But not
+all. I know these things. The mill goes on--the same as with Martin
+there. So Martin does not quit. He--just goes. Then who sets this Bull
+Sternford in the mill? Why? He says, 'This man can do the things I
+need.' Well? Say quick to your man, 'Do not leave this camp of
+Skandinavia.' Martin is there, or near by. He must know this Father
+Adam, too. He must be in touch with him. Maybe he watches the
+Skandinavia work. Maybe he plays his game so. Maybe he goes from Sachigo
+for that reason. Yes?"
+
+The financier's undisguised contempt left the agent apparently
+undisturbed.
+
+"That's the simple horse sense of it," Idepski retorted promptly. "I get
+all that. But you're wrong when you say, Martin's playing any other game
+than lying low because of one hell of a scare. I know him. You think you
+know him because you can't get away from judging a man from your end.
+However, that don't matter a shuck. I've told that man of mine to stop
+around. Don't worry. I told him that right away. I told him to watch
+this missionary." He shook his head. "Nothing doing. The missionary has
+quit. As I said, I'm right back from Sachigo. I didn't come back just to
+hand you this stuff. I'm on my way up to this camp of yours. We've been
+hunting this guy eight years--blind. Now there's a streak of daylight.
+I'm going for that streak myself. Anyway, it's liable to be pleasanter
+work than lumbering in the booms at Sachigo, and wondering when that
+feller Bat Harker, was going to locate me through a lumber-jack's
+outfit. And while I'm up there I mean to learn all I can of this Father
+Adam. I don't look for much that way. He's just a missioner that every
+feller in the forest's got a good word for, and anyway, it don't seem to
+me the feller who jumped in on you, and touched your bank roll is the
+sort to pass his time handlin' out tracts to the bums of the forest. I
+came in on my way to pass you these things. I go north again to-night.
+I'll be away quite a while, and, shut off up there, you'll not be likely
+to get word easy. But you'll hear things when I've got anything to hand
+you."
+
+A sardonic light crept into Hellbeam's eyes as he listened to the final
+assurance.
+
+"So," he ejaculated with a nod.
+
+The agent rose to go.
+
+"Meanwhile," he said, leaning over the desk, "it might be well for you
+to get a grip on the fact that Sachigo's going right on. It's the
+greatest groundwood proposition in the world. I know enough of Harker to
+realise his capacity to make it do just what he needs. And as for that
+other--this Sternford kid--why, I gather he's a pretty live wire that's
+set there for a reason. The slogan up there's much what it was, only the
+words are changed."
+
+Hellbeam sucked his cigar and removed it from his lips.
+
+"Changed? How?" he demanded, without suspicion.
+
+"It was 'Canadian trade for the Canadians,'" Idepski said, his dark eyes
+snapping maliciously. "It's more personal since the fighting kid came
+along. It reminds me of the German slogans of the war. It's 'To hell
+with the Swedes, we'll drive 'em _into_ the sea.'"
+
+The financier nodded. His armour was impenetrable.
+
+"The Germans said much," he said.
+
+"That's all right, these folks aren't Germans," came the prompt retort,
+as Idepski picked up his hat and gloves.
+
+"No." Hellbeam remained seated. It was not his way to speed a departing
+visitor. "I'm glad. Oh, yes." He smiled into the other's face, and his
+meaning was obvious. "You go to this camp. You find this missionary.
+That's work for you. The other--" his eyes dropped to the papers on the
+desk before him--"this mill, this Sachigo is for me. It is much nearer
+to the sea than the Skandinavia. Oh, yes."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE PROGRESS OF NANCY
+
+
+The girl reached out a hand in response to the ring of the telephone. It
+was slim and white; and her finger nails displayed that care which
+suggests a healthy regard for the niceties of a woman's life.
+
+"Hullo! Yes?"
+
+She remained silently intent upon the rapidly spoken message coming down
+to her over the wire. Her deep, hazel eyes were soberly regarding the
+blotting pad, upon which an idle pencil was describing a number of
+meaningless diagrams.
+
+"Yes," she replied, after a while. "Oh, yes. All reports are in. I've
+gone through them all, and my summary is being prepared now. They're a
+pretty bad story. Yes. What's that? How? Oh, yes. Some of the camps are
+in pretty bad shape, I'd say. Output's fallen badly. Output! Yes. All
+sorts of reasons and--" she laughed, "--to me, none quite satisfactory.
+I think I've my finger on the real trouble, and fancy I've seen all this
+coming quite a while back. Very well. I'll be right up. Yes, I'll bring
+my rough notes if the summary isn't ready."
+
+Nancy McDonald thrust the receiver back in its place and sat for a
+moment gazing at it. She knew she had committed herself. She had
+intended to. She knew that she had reached one of the important
+milestones in her career. In her youth, in the springtime energy
+abounding in her, she meant to pit her opinion against the considered
+policy of those who formed the management of the great Skandinavia
+Corporation she served. She understood her temerity. A surge of nervous
+anticipation thrilled her. But she was resolved. Her ambition was great,
+and her youthful courage was no less.
+
+The brazen clack of typewriters beyond the glass partitions of her
+little private office left her unaffected. It was incessant. She would
+have missed it had it not been there. She would have lost that sense of
+rush which the tuneless chorus of modern commercialism inspired. And, to
+a woman of her temperament, that would have been a very real loss.
+
+The great offices of the Skandinavia Corporation, in the heart of the
+city of Quebec, with their machine-like precision of life, their
+soulless method, their passionless progress towards the purpose of their
+organisation, meant the open road towards the fulfilment of her desires
+for independence and achievement.
+
+All the promise of her earlier youth had been abundantly fulfilled.
+Tall, gracious of figure, her beauty had a charm and dignity which owed
+almost as much to mentality as it did to physical form. Yet, for all she
+had already passed her twenty-fourth birthday, she was amazingly
+innocent of those things which are counted as the governing factors of a
+woman's life. Certainly she knew and loved the Titian hue of her wealth
+of hair; her mirror was constantly telling her of the hazel depths of
+her wide, intelligent eyes, with their fringes of dark, curling, Celtic
+lashes. Then the almost classic moulding of her features. She could not
+escape realising these things. But they meant no more to her than the
+fact that her nose was not awry, and her lips were not misshapen, and
+her even, white teeth were perfectly competent for their proper
+function.
+
+She was a happy blending of soul and mentality. Heredity seemed to have
+done its best for her. The Gaelic fire and the brilliance and
+irresponsibility of her misguided father seemed to have been balanced
+and tempered by the gentle woman soul of her mother. And through the
+eyes of both she gazed out upon the world, inspired and supported by a
+tireless nervous energy.
+
+Since the memorable day of her interview with her appointed trustee,
+Charles Nisson, her development had been rapid. The events which had
+suddenly been flung into her life at the interview seemed to have
+unloosed a hundred latent, unguessed emotions in her child heart, and
+translated her at once into a thinking, high-spirited woman.
+
+She honestly strove to banish bitterness against the man who had
+deprived her of that mother love which had been her childhood's
+treasure, but always a shadow of it remained to colour her thought, and
+influence her impulse. She had studied the deed of settlement as she had
+promised. She had studied it coldly, dispassionately. She had looked
+upon it as a mere document aimed to benefit her, without regard for her
+feelings for the man who had made it. She had thought over it at night
+when passion was less to be controlled. She had consulted those she had
+been bidden to consult, and had listened to, and had weighed their
+kindly advice. And when all was done she took her own decision as she
+was bound to do. It was a decision that had no relation to reason, only
+to passionate impulse.
+
+She would not accept the things the deed offered her. She would not
+accept this reparation so coldly held out. She would not live a
+leisured, vegetable life, with no greater ambition than to marry and
+bear children. The simple prospect of marriage and motherhood could
+never satisfy in itself. That would be a happy incident, but not the
+whole, and acceptance of that deed would surely have robbed her of the
+rest.
+
+There were times when she felt the disabilities of her sex. She knew she
+was deprived of the physical strength which the battle of life seemed to
+demand. But to her the world was wide, and big, and, in her girl's
+imagination, teeming with appealing adventure. The world alone could not
+satisfy her.
+
+Once her decision was taken all the kindly efforts of her mentors at
+Marypoint were rallied in her support. They had advised out of their
+wisdom, but acted from their hearts. And the day on which the principal
+of the college notified her that the Skandinavia Corporation of Quebec
+had signified its willingness to absorb her into its service as typist
+and stenographer, at one hundred dollars per month, was the happiest she
+had known since her well-loved mother had been taken out of her life.
+
+Now, after three years of unwearying effort, there was still no shadow
+to mar her happiness, or temper her enthusiasm. On the contrary, there
+was much to stimulate both. In that brief period she had succeeded
+almost beyond her dreams. Was she not already the trusted, confidential
+secretary to the ruling power in the great offices of the Skandinavia
+Corporation? Had she not been taken out of the ranks of the many capable
+stenographers, and been given a private office, a doubled salary, and
+work to do which left her wide scope for the play of those gifts with
+which she was so liberally endowed? Yes. All these things had been
+showered upon her in three years. She was a figure of authority in the
+great establishment. And furthermore, the man she served--this man,
+Elas Peterman--had hinted, and even definitely talked of, further rapid
+promotion.
+
+She had worked hard for it all. Oh, yes. She had worked morning, noon,
+and night. When other girls had been content to study fashions and
+styles, and chatter "beaus" and husbands, she had given herself up to
+the study of the wood-pulp trade, and the world's market of the material
+she was interested in. She had saturated herself with the whole scheme,
+and purpose, and methods of her employers, till, as Peterman himself had
+once told her in admiration at her grasp of the business, she knew as
+much of the trade as he did himself. And even after that her mirror,
+that oracle of a woman's life, failed to yield her the real truth it is
+always ready to tell to its devotees.
+
+The pre-occupation suddenly passed out of the girl's eyes. She stirred.
+Then she stood up and collected a number of papers into a small leather
+attache case. A moment later she pressed the bell push on the desk.
+
+Her summons was promptly answered by a slim figured girl, with fair
+hair, and "jumpered" in the latest style.
+
+"I shall be away a while. See to the 'phone, Miss Webster," Nancy said,
+in a tone of quiet but definite authority. "I shall be with Mr.
+Peterman. Don't ring me unless it's something important. That summary.
+Is it ready?"
+
+"It's being checked right now."
+
+"Well, speed them up. You can send it up directly it's through. Mr.
+Peterman is needing it."
+
+Nancy passed out of the room. Her discipline was strict. Sometimes it
+approached severity. But she understood its necessity for obtaining
+results. Her orders would be carried out.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Elas Peterman set the 'phone back in its place. His dark eyes were
+smiling. They were shining, too, in a curious, not altogether wholesome
+fashion. He had just finished talking to Nancy McDonald, and he was
+thinking of the vision of red hair, of the serious hazel eyes gazing out
+of their setting of fair, almost transparent complexion.
+
+He took up his pen to continue the letter he had been writing. But he
+added no word. The girl he had been speaking with still occupied his
+thoughts to the exclusion of all else.
+
+He was a good-looking man, clean cut and youthful. His profile was
+finely chiselled. But his Teutonic origin was clearly marked. It was in
+the straight square back of his head. It was in the prominent, heavily,
+rounded chin, and the squareness of his lower jaw. Furthermore, the
+high, mathematical forehead was quite unmistakable. There was power,
+force, in the personality of the man. But there was something else. It
+lay in his mouth, in his eyes. The former was gross, and definite
+sensuality looked out of the latter.
+
+As the door opened to admit Nancy his pen promptly descended on his
+paper. But he did not write. He looked up with a smile.
+
+"Come right in, my dear," he said cordially, with the patronising
+familiarity of a man conscious of his power. "Just sit right down while
+I finish this letter." Then he added gratuitously, "It's a rude letter
+to a feller I've no use for; and I don't guess to rob myself of the
+pleasure of passing it plenty to him--in my own handwriting."
+
+Nancy smiled as she took the chair beside the desk which was usually
+assigned to her in her intercourse with her chief.
+
+"I wish I felt that way writing a bad letter," she said. "But I don't.
+It just makes me madder with folks, and I go right on thinking things,
+and--and--it worries."
+
+Elas Peterman shook his head.
+
+"Guess you'll get over that, my dear," he said easily. "Sure you will.
+You're just a dandy-minded kid, learning the things of life. You feel
+good most all the time. That's how it is. You want to laff and see
+things happy all around you. Later you'll get so you see the other
+feller mostly thinks of himself, and don't care a hoot for the folks
+sitting around. Then you'll feel different; and you'll tell folks you
+don't like the things you feel about them."
+
+He went on writing, smiling at his own cynicism.
+
+Nancy leant back in her chair. His words left her unaffected. She was
+used to him. But, for a moment, she contemplated the dark head,
+supported on his hand, without any warmth of regard.
+
+After awhile she glanced away, her gaze wandering over the luxurious
+furnishings of the room. And it occurred to her to wonder how much, if
+any, of the excellent taste of the decorations owed inception to the man
+at the desk. No. Not much. The cheque-book and the decorator's artist
+must have been responsible. This grossly Teutonic creature with his
+cynical, commercial mind, was something of an anachronism, and could
+never have inspired the perfect harmony of the palatial offices of his
+Corporation. It was rather a pity. He had been exceedingly good to her.
+She would have liked to think that he was the genius of the whole
+structure of the Skandinavia, even to the decorations of the office. But
+it was impossible.
+
+The man blotted and folded his letter. He enclosed and sealed it. He
+even addressed it himself.
+
+"I'm kind of sorry I had to break in on you while you were fixing those
+reports," he said, in his friendliest fashion. "But, you see, I'm just
+through with the Board, and we took a bunch of decisions that need
+handling right away. Tell me," he went on, an ironical light creeping
+into his smiling eyes, "you reckon you've set your finger on the real
+trouble with our dropping output. I want to know about it because the
+Board and I can't be sure we've located it right."
+
+The sarcasm hurt. It was not intended to. Elas Peterman had no desire in
+the world to hurt this girl. A cleverer man would have avoided it. But
+this man had no refinement of thought or feeling. Cynicism and sarcasm
+were his substitutes for a humour he did not possess.
+
+Nancy's cheeks flushed hotly. But she stifled her feelings. She was
+confident of herself, and despite the manner of the challenge, she knew
+the moment of her great opportunity had come.
+
+With a quick movement she crossed her knees and leant forward. She
+smiled in response.
+
+"Yet, it's easy," she said boldly, with bland retaliation. "The reports
+are not good. And the trouble stands out clear as daylight. I guess a
+big scale contour map is the key to it. We've 'hand-weeded' the
+Shagaunty Valley. It's picked bare to the bone. The folks have cleared
+the forests right away to the higher slopes of the river. We're moving
+farther and farther away from the river highway. Well, that's all right
+in its way. Ordinarily that would just mean our light railways are
+extending farther, and a few cents more are added to our transport
+costs. Owing to our concentration of organisation that wouldn't signify.
+No. It's Nature, it's the forest itself turning us down. And the map,
+and the reports show that. The camps are right out on the plateau
+surrounding the valley, which is unprotected from winter storms. The
+close, luxurious growth of the valley we have been accustomed to is
+gone. The standing cordage of lumber is no less, only in bulk, girth.
+The trees are mostly less than half the girth. The result? Why, they
+have to work farther out. Each camp cuts over four times the area.
+Instead of a proportion of, say, two trees in five, it's about one in,
+say, ten. It looks like a simple sum. I should say we've lumbered that
+valley at least one season too long."
+
+The man's smile had passed. There was no longer derision in his keen
+eyes. He had invited this girl's talk for the sake of hearing it. Now he
+was caught in admiration of her clear perception.
+
+"Do the reports bear out those facts?"
+
+His question was sharp, and Nancy realised she had done well.
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"No. They do just the thing you'd expect them to do," she said. "They
+make every sort of excuse that couldn't possibly account for the drop.
+And avoid the real cause which their writers are perfectly aware of."
+She shrugged her pretty shoulders. "You wouldn't expect it otherwise.
+You want to remember those reports are written by bosses who're more
+interested in their own comfort than in the affairs of the Skandinavia."
+
+"How?"
+
+Again the girl's expressive shrug.
+
+"To quit the Shagaunty and break new ground means the break up of those
+amenities and comforts they've accumulated in years. It means work, real
+hard work, and discomfort for at least two seasons. You see, we need to
+get into the skin of these folk. They can keep the booms full from these
+forests, and the kick only comes when the grinders get to work. Output
+falls automatically with the girth of the lumber sent down. It's a close
+calculation; but on the year it means a lot. I learned that from Mr.
+Osbert, at the mills on the Shagaunty. Well, so long as the booms are
+kept full, the camp bosses are satisfied. There's a limit below which
+the girth of logs may not go. They watch that limit, and are careful not
+to go below it. Well, our big output has been made up always, not by
+the minimum logs, but the maximum to which we have been hitherto
+accustomed. These boys know all about that; but they're satisfied with
+such bulk as doesn't fall below the minimum. And when asked, suggest
+fire, storm and sickness, anything rather than the real cause which
+drops our output. They'll not willingly face the discomfort and added
+work of opening a new territory. There's just one decision needed."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+The girl laughed. It was a low, pleasant, happy laugh. She felt glad.
+Her chief was serious. He was in deadly earnest, and it represented her
+revenge for his sarcasm.
+
+"We've five other rivers running down to the lake. The Shagaunty isn't
+even the largest. Well, these boys will have to be shaken out of their
+dream. We ought to quit the Shagaunty right away and make a break for
+fresh 'limits.' It's simple."
+
+The man had no responsive smile. He shook his head.
+
+"That's what it isn't, my dear," he said.
+
+For the time the girl's beauty, her personality were quite forgotten.
+Peterman was absorbed.
+
+"It means the complete dislocation of our forest organisation," he went
+on. "Here, I'll tell you something. We've done a very great thing in the
+past. And it's been easy. Years ago we decided by concentration of all
+our forest work on a limited area we could cut costs to the lowest. That
+way we could jump in on the market cheaper than all the rest. Our forest
+limits were the finest in Canada. We had standing stuff practically
+inexhaustible, and of a size almost unheard of. What was the result?
+Why, one by one we've absorbed competitors at our own price till the
+Skandinavia stands head and shoulders above the world's groundwood
+industry. That's all right. That's fine," he went on, after a pause.
+"But like most easy trails, you're liable to keep on 'em longer than is
+good for you. We haven't had to worry a thing up to now. You see, we'd
+stifled competition, and we'd paid a steady thirty per cent dividend.
+Which left our Board in an unholy state of dope. I've tried to wake 'em.
+Oh, yes. I tried when that guy started up his outfit on Labrador. The
+Sachigo outfit. Then he seemed to fade away, and I couldn't rouse 'em
+again." He shook his head--"Nothing doing. Well, for something like
+fifteen years those guys of Sachigo have been doing and working; and
+now, to-day, they've jumped into the market with both feet. I haven't
+the full measure of things yet. But the play's a big thing. They're out
+for the game we've been playing. Say, they're combining every old mill
+we've left over. All the derelicts and moth-bounds. Their hands are out
+grabbing all over the country. Well, that wouldn't scare me worth a
+cent, only they've never let up in fifteen years, and there's talk about
+big British finance getting behind 'em."
+
+The man broke off. His serious eyes remained steadily regarding the
+girl's interested face.
+
+"You reckon this change is easy," he went on again. "I guess it would be
+easy if these folk hadn't jumped into the market. That makes all the
+difference. While we're changing they're busy. Their stuff's coming down
+in thousands of tons. And it's _better_ groundwood than ours. If we
+change over we're going to leave the market short and these folk will
+get big contracts. You're right. We've been working the Shagaunty too
+long. But it's been by three or four seasons. Not one. The time's
+coming, if it hasn't already come, when we've got to fight these folks
+and smash 'em; or get right out of business."
+
+Something of the girl's joy had passed in face of the man's statement.
+
+"There's been talk of these Sachigo folk in the trade," she said
+thoughtfully, "but I didn't know it was as big as you say. Of course--"
+
+"Sure you didn't. You haven't had to handle our stuff on the market."
+The man laughed. And something of his seriousness passed. "But you're a
+bright kid. And the Skandinavia's looking for bright kids all the time.
+It needs 'em to counter a doped Board. It's taken you five minutes to
+locate a trouble the Board's taken years to realise. And you've been
+talking one of the bunch of decisions we've taken. I mean quitting the
+Shagaunty. We didn't have your argument, but we had the 'drop.' So the
+decision was taken. We've got to move like hell. Sachigo has our
+measure, and it's going to be a big fight. How'd you fancy a trip up
+country? I mean up the Shagaunty?"
+
+There was a change in the man's voice and manner as he put his demand.
+He was leaning forward in his chair. A hot light had suddenly leapt into
+his eyes, which left them shining unwholesomely. Nancy was startled at
+his words. And his attitude shocked her not a little out of her
+self-satisfaction.
+
+"I don't know--. How do you mean?" she demanded awkwardly.
+
+The man realised her astonishment and laughed. Then he reached out, and
+his hand patted the rounded shoulder nearest him. It was a touch that
+lingered unnecessarily, and the girl stirred restlessly under it.
+
+"Why, it's the chance of a life--for you," he said boisterously. "You'll
+go right up through the camps. You'll take your notions with you and
+investigate. I'll hand you a written commission, and the folk'll lay
+their 'hands' down for you to see. When you've seen it all you'll get
+right back here, and I'll set you before the Board to tell your story. I
+don't need to tell a bright girl like you what that means to you. You'll
+get one dandy summer trip, and I'll lose one dandy secretary. But I'm
+not kicking. No. You see, Nancy, I'm out to help you all you need.
+Well?"
+
+It was crude, clumsy. It was all so blatantly vulgar. It was not the
+thing he said. It was the manner of it and all that which was lying
+unspoken behind.
+
+For the first time Nancy experienced a curious uncertainty in dealing
+with him. But here was real opportunity. She had dreamed of such. And
+she must take it. The touch of the man's hand upon her shoulder had
+disturbed her. But she smiled her gratitude at him.
+
+"It's too good," she exclaimed, with apparent impulse. "It's just too
+good of you. Will I go? Why, yes. Surely. And I'll make good for you. I
+believe it's the best thing. Someone to go who'll bring back a dead
+right story. I'd be real glad."
+
+"That's bully!" The man beamed as he leant back in his chair more than
+satisfied with himself. "But I don't fancy losing my dandy secretary,"
+he went on. "No, sir. I'm going to hate this summer bad. I surely am.
+Still, there's next winter. Winter's not too bad with us. And a feller
+needs consolation in winter. There's theatres, and ice parties, and
+dances, and things. And I guess when the Board's fixed a big jump up for
+you, you'll feel like getting around some. Well, I'm mostly vacant. A
+feller can't live all the time at home with his wife and kids. I guess I
+could show you Quebec at night better than most--"
+
+The telephone saved Nancy the rest of the man's rendering of his account
+and she breathed deeply her relief. But the interruption was by no means
+welcome to the man. And his irritation was promptly displayed by the
+vindictive "Well?" he flung at the unyielding receiver.
+
+"Oh! What's that? Who? Hellbeam? Oh. Sure. Yes. Send him right up. Don't
+keep him waiting. Right up now. Yes."
+
+He thrust up the instrument and sat back in his chair.
+
+"Curse the man!"
+
+Nancy had risen from her chair at the mention of Hellbeam's name. She
+was glad enough of the excuse. She understood Hellbeam was the great
+outstanding figure in the concern of the Skandinavia. His was the one
+personality that dwarfed everybody. He was the moving power of the whole
+concern.
+
+"You'll let me know later?" she said. "I mean, just when I'm to start
+out. I'm ready when you like. I'll just go and see why those reports
+have not been sent up."
+
+"Oh, don't worry with the reports. You've told me the things that
+matter."
+
+The man's irritation was as swift as it was violent. But it passed as
+quickly as it came. He laughed.
+
+"That's all right, my dear. Be off now. I'll let you know about things
+this afternoon."
+
+Nancy gladly accepted her dismissal. She wanted to think. She wanted to
+get things into their proper focus. As she closed the door behind her
+her beautiful eyes had no joy in them. She had realised two things as a
+result of her interview. The opportunity she had looked forward to had
+materialised, and she had seized it with both hands. But the goodness of
+Elas Peterman to herself possessed none of that disinterested kindliness
+she had hitherto believed. Furthermore, there was dawning upon her that
+which her mirror should have told her long ago. She was beginning to
+understand that her work, her capacity, her application, counted far
+less in the favour of her chief than did those things with which nature
+had equipped her. She was shocked out of her youthful dream. And it left
+her so troubled, that, had she not been passing down the carpeted
+corridor of the Skandinavia offices, she would have burst into a flood
+of tears.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was a different Elas Peterman who confronted the squat figure of
+Nathaniel Hellbeam. The master in the younger man was completely
+submerged. He possessed all the Teutonic capacity for self-abnegation in
+the presence of the power it is necessary to woo. There was only one
+master when the great financier was present. Elas Peterman knew that his
+part was to listen and obey with just that humility which he would have
+demanded had the position been reversed.
+
+Another type than Hellbeam's would have despised the attitude. But the
+financier had no scruple. Nature had denied him qualities for inspiring
+affectionate regard, or even respect. But she had bestowed on him a lust
+for power, and a great vanity, and these he satisfied to the uttermost.
+
+The financier drove straight to the object of his visit.
+
+"I come for an important purpose," he said, in his guttural fashion.
+"There must be a special Board assemble. Skandinavia will buy the mill
+on Labrador. The Sachigo mill. I come on the night train, which is the
+worst thing I can think to do, to say this thing. If we do not buy this
+mill, then--" He broke off with an expressive gesture.
+
+Elas nodded. He was startled, but his powers of dissimulation were
+profound.
+
+"I understand," he said. "They have been approached?"
+
+Hellbeam stirred his bulk in the chair Nancy had so recently occupied.
+It was a movement of irritation.
+
+"That is for you. You represent Skandinavia. I--I say this thing. I the
+money find."
+
+The face of Peterman was a study. His eyes were serious, his manner
+calmly considering. Amazement was struggling with a desire to laugh
+outright in the face of this grossly insolent money power.
+
+"Nothing could suit us better, sir," he said, deferentially. "They've
+been handing us more trouble than I fancy talking about. And they look
+like handing us still more. These people have grown slowly, but very
+deliberately. There's something very like genius in their management.
+And seemingly they possess unlimited capital or credit. I guess I know
+something of their contemplated manoeuvres. They're assembling all the
+free mills outside our ring. I see a great big scrap coming. May I ask
+the price you're considering?"
+
+Hellbeam produced a gold cigar case. A greater man would have been
+content with a certain modesty of appointment. His case was comparable
+in vulgarity with the size of his cigars. He thrust the pierced end of
+the cigar between his gross lips and spoke with the huge thing lolling.
+
+"It does not matter. I say buy."
+
+The tone, the snapping of the man's eyes forbade further probing in this
+direction. He lit his cigar.
+
+"It will need careful handling," ventured Peterman.
+
+Hellbeam snorted.
+
+"It careful handling always needs. Eh?"
+
+"Surely. I was thinking."
+
+"So. You will think. Then you will act. You will communicate forthwith.
+See? You listen. I buy this Sachigo, yes. The price matters nothing.
+There is a reason. This fight. It is not that. Who is the head? I would
+know. I fancy this man to meet. He is what you call--bright. So."
+
+Elas shook his head--
+
+"There are two men in it we recognise. A man named Harker and another
+called Sternford--Bull Sternford. We know little of either. You see,
+it's kind of far away. Anyway, between them they're pretty--bright. I
+don't think they built the mill. I'm sure that's so. It was a man called
+Standing. But he seems to have gone out of active management. I might
+start by writing them and feel the way."
+
+"Ach no!" Hellbeam shook his head in violent protest. "You write--no.
+You have your confidential man, yes? You send him. I give you the
+outline of terms. I give you alternative terms. Big terms. He will go.
+He will talk. He will hear. Then we will later come to terms. All men
+will sell--on terms. Your man. Where is he? I must see him. Then the
+Board. It meets. I will address it. I show them how this thing will
+serve."
+
+"That's all right, sir," Elas was smiling. "You couldn't offer the Board
+a more welcome proposition than the purchase of Sachigo just now. We're
+changing our forest organisation right now, and that means temporary
+delays and drop in output. Sachigo's our worry while we're doing it. But
+with your permission I won't send a man up there. I think," he added
+deliberately, "I'd like to send a--woman."
+
+Hellbeam's face was a study. His little eyes opened to their widest
+extent. His heavy lips parted, and he snatched his cigar into the safety
+of his white fingers.
+
+"A--woman--for this thing? You crazy are!"
+
+There was no restraint or pretence of restraint. The other's smile was
+more confident than might have been expected before such an intolerant
+outburst.
+
+"Guess a woman has her limitations, sir. Maybe this one hasn't a wide
+experience. But she's clever. She's loyal to us, and she's got that
+which counts a whole heap when it comes to getting a man on her side.
+You reckon to buy Sachigo. If you send a man to deal he'll get short
+shrift. If there's anyone to put through this deal for Skandinavia it's
+the woman I'm thinking of. And she'll put it through because she's the
+woman she is, and not because of any talents. Your pardon, sir, if I
+speak frankly. But from all I know of Sachigo, if you--perhaps the king
+of financiers on this continent--went to these folk and offered them
+double what their enterprise is worth, I guess they'd chase you out of
+Labrador so quick you wouldn't have time to think the blasphemy suitable
+to the occasion."
+
+Peterman's explanation caught the humour of his countryman. The bulk of
+the visitor shook under a suppressed laugh.
+
+"Well," he retorted, "I do not go. This woman. A good-looker, eh? She is
+pleasant--to men? Where is she? Who is she?"
+
+"She's my secretary, sir." Elas jumped at the change of his visitor's
+humour. "She's not much more than a kid. But she's quite a 'looker,'
+I'll send for her, if you'll permit me. She's getting some reports for
+me. I'll ask her to bring them up. You can see her then, sir, and, if
+you'll forgive me, I won't present her to you. If I do she'll guess
+something, and it's best she knows nothing of this contemplated deal--as
+regards you."
+
+For a moment the banker made no reply. He sat, an adipose mass,
+breathing heavily, and sucking at his cigar. Then quite suddenly, he
+nodded.
+
+"Send for her," he said sharply.
+
+Elas reached the telephone and rang down.
+
+"Hello! That you? Oh, will you step up a moment, Miss McDonald? Yes. Are
+they ready? Good. That's just what I want. Please. All of them."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nancy knocked at the door and stepped into the room. She was carrying a
+large typescript of many pages. It represented many days and evenings of
+concentrated labour. It had been a labour not so much of love as of
+ambition. It was an exhaustive summary of the position of the
+Skandinavia's forestry in the Shagaunty Valley.
+
+She missed the squat figure in the chair she usually occupied. She saw
+nothing of the stare of the narrow eyes concentrated upon her. She saw
+only the tall figure of Peterman, standing waiting for her beyond his
+desk in such a position that, to reach him, she must pass herself in
+review before the devouring gaze of the great banker.
+
+She walked briskly towards him, her short skirt yielding the seductive
+rustle of the silk beneath it. Her movements were beyond words in grace.
+Her tall figure, so beautifully proportioned, and so daintily rounded,
+displayed the becoming coat-frock she usually wore in business to
+absolute perfection.
+
+The banker's searching eyes realised all this to the last detail. He
+realised much more. For his was the regard that sought beneath the
+surface of things. It was that regard which every wholesome, good woman
+resents. But ultimately it was the girl's face and hair that held him.
+The rare beauty of the latter's colour sent a surge of appreciation
+running through his sensual veins. And the perfect beauty, and delicate
+charm of her pretty features, stirred him no less. Only her eyes, those
+pretty, confident, intelligent, hazel depths he missed. But he waited.
+
+"These are the papers, Mr. Peterman."
+
+Nancy held out the typescript to the waiting man whose eyes had none of
+the smiling welcome they would have had in Hellbeam's absence.
+
+"Thank you." Elas glanced down at the neatly bound script.
+
+"It's all complete?"
+
+"Oh, yes. It's the whole story. It's in tabloid form. You will be able
+to take the whole close in half an hour."
+
+A rough clearing of the throat interrupted her, and Nancy discovered the
+banker beside the desk. In something of a hurry she promptly turned to
+depart. But Elas claimed her.
+
+"Will you come to me after lunch?" he said pleasantly.
+
+"I want to go into the details of that trip I explained to you. You must
+get away as soon as possible."
+
+"Directly after lunch?"
+
+"Yes. Say three o'clock."
+
+"Very well."
+
+The girl again turned to go, but the banker anticipated her. As she
+reached the door he stood beside it, and opened it for her to pass out.
+He was holding something in his hand. It was an exquisitely formed gold
+fountain-pen.
+
+"This yours is, I think," he said heavily, while his eyes searched those
+depths of hazel he had missed before.
+
+The girl smiled as she gazed at the beautiful pen. She shook her head.
+
+"No," she said. "I never possessed anything so beautiful in my life."
+
+"But you drop it as you come, I think, yes?" The man's eyes were
+levelled at her devouringly. Quick as thought he turned to Elas watching
+the scene. "Is it yours? I see it on the carpet, yes?"
+
+The manager was prompt to take his cue.
+
+"It's not mine," he said. "It must be yours, Miss McDonald. If it isn't
+I guess you'd best have it till we find its owner."
+
+The girl smiled from one to the other.
+
+"Thanks ever so much," she said, with frank pleasure. "I'll keep it till
+we find the owner. It's a lovely thing."
+
+She took the glittering pen from the fleshy fingers holding it. And just
+for an instant her hand encountered the banker's. It was only for an
+instant, however. A moment later the door was closed carefully behind
+her by the man who had thought Elas crazy to employ a woman.
+
+"Well?"
+
+Elas Peterman was seated behind his desk again. His challenging smile
+was directed at the heavily breathing figure of the banker who had
+hurried back to his chair.
+
+The great man laughed. It was a curious, unpleasant laugh. His heavy
+cheeks were flushed, and his eyes glittered curiously.
+
+"You're a judge, Elas, my boy," he exclaimed, with clumsy geniality.
+"Oh, yes. But you are a young man. There is power in that young woman's
+eyes." He laughed again. "Oh, no, I think of the young woman. It not her
+capability is. See you look to your place in Skandinavia. Let her go.
+She may not buy this Sachigo as I think to buy it. She will buy the men
+we would drive from our path."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE LONELY FIGURE
+
+
+The girl was leaning against the storm-ripped bole of a fallen tree. The
+great figure of her companion was silhouetted against the brilliant
+sky-line. He was contemplating the distance at the brink of a sheer-cut
+ravine, which dropped away at his feet to giddying depths.
+
+Nancy gazed out beyond him. For the moment he held no interest for her.
+She only had eyes for the splendid picture of Nature. They were on high
+ground, a great shoulder lifted them clear above their surroundings. Far
+as the eye could see was a lustreless green world of unbroken forest. It
+seemed to have neither beginning nor end. To the girl's imagination
+there could be no break in it until the eternal snows of the Arctic were
+reached.
+
+The breadth of it all was a little overwhelming. Nancy was gazing upon
+just one portion of the Skandinavia's untouched forest limits, and
+somehow it left her with a feeling of protest.
+
+She pointed with one gauntleted hand, stirred to an impulse she could
+not deny.
+
+"It's too beautiful," she said. "It isn't fair: it's not right. To think
+it's all ours, and we have the right to destroy it."
+
+The man turned. He gazed back at this unusual vision of a beautiful,
+well-gowned woman in the heart of the forests. He grinned ironically,
+this great, rough-bearded creature, in hard cord clothing, and with his
+well-worn fur cap pressed low over his lank hair that reached well-nigh
+to his shoulders.
+
+"Why not?" he demanded roughly. "Oh, yes. It's Skandinavia's, every mile
+of it. An' I guess there's hundreds an' hundreds of 'em. Ain't that what
+Canada's forests are for? To feed us the stuff we're needin'? But you
+don't need to worry any. We ain't cuttin' that stuff for years. Guess
+the waterways out there are mostly a mean outfit that wouldn't raft a
+bunch of lucifers. We need to wait permanent railroad for haulage."
+
+Nancy accepted the statement without reply. It was impossible to stir a
+man like Arden Laval to any sort of sympathy. He was hardened, crude,
+first, last and all the time. He was big and brutal. His limbs were like
+to the trees his men were accustomed to fell, and his hands reminded her
+of the hind limbs of the mutton. She felt he had a mind that matched his
+physical development.
+
+Nancy McDonald was nearing the end of her third month of forest travel.
+The Shagaunty valley lay behind her, desolated by the fierce axe of the
+men who lived by their slaughter. She had seen it all. She had studied
+the re-afforestation which followed on the heels of the axemen. And the
+seeming puerility of this effort to salve the wounds inflicted upon
+Nature had filled her with pitying contempt.
+
+She knew the whole process of the forest industry by heart now. It
+fascinated her. Oh, yes. It was picturesque, it was real, vital. The
+men on the river driving down to the booms had stirred her greatest
+admiration. These supermen with their muscles of iron, with the hearts
+of lions, and the tongues and habits of beasts of the forest. But they
+were men, wonderful men for all their savage crudity. So, too, with the
+transporters and freighters handling sixty-foot logs as though dealing
+with matchwood. But above all, and before all, the axemen made their
+appeal.
+
+There was nothing comparable with the rough skill of these creatures.
+She had watched the flash and swing of the axe, with its edge like the
+finest razor. She had seen the standing muscles like whipcord writhing
+under sunburnt flesh as they served the lethal weapon. She had noted
+every blow, how it was calculated to a hair's-breadth, and fell without
+waste of one single ounce of power. And then the amazing result. The
+fallen tree stretched out on the exact spot and in the exact direction
+ready for the hauliers to bear straight away to the final transport
+station.
+
+The summer days had been filled with vital interest. And at night, weary
+in body, Nancy still had time, lying in the amply, if crudely blanketed
+bed provided for her in some lumber-built shanty, to contemplate the
+lives of this strangely assorted race. She knew the pay of the forest
+men, from the haulier to the princely axeman and river-jack. She had
+seen their food, and their dwelling accommodation. She had heard such
+details as were possible of telling of their recreations, and had
+guessed the rest. And for all her admiration of their manhood she
+pitied, in her woman's way, and felt shame for the slavery of it all.
+
+Oh, yes. She had no illusions. She was not weakly sentimental. She
+looked at it all with wide-open eyes. It was a well-paid animal life. It
+was a life of eating well, of sleeping well, of gambling, and drinking,
+and licence. But it was a life of such labour that only perfect
+physical creatures could face.
+
+She felt that these folks were wage slaves in the crudest meaning of the
+words. There was nothing for them beyond their daily life, which was
+wholly animal. Of spirituality there was none. Of future there was none.
+Their leisure was given over to their pastimes, while ahead the future
+lay always threatening. Stiffening muscles, disease, age. The king of
+them all in his youth, in age would be abandoned and driven forth, weary
+in body, aching in limbs, a derelict in the ranks of the world's labour.
+
+She was gravely impressed by the things she saw, by the men she met.
+
+Her summer had been an education which had stirred feelings and
+sympathies almost unguessed. It was the father, she could scarcely
+remember, making himself known to her. For all the ambitions firing her,
+the long, fascinating days in the forests of the Shagaunty had taught
+her of the existence of an "underdog," who, in himself, was the
+foundation upon which the personal ambition of the more fortunate was
+achieved. Without him to support the whole edifice of civilisation must
+crash to the ground, and life would go back again to the bosom of that
+Nature from which it sprang.
+
+Her realisation inspired her with an added desire. It was a desire
+coming straight from an honest, unsophisticated heart. She registered a
+vow that whithersoever her ambitions might lead her, she would always
+remember the "underdog," and work for his betterment and greater
+happiness.
+
+"So you can only cut the stuff here within reach of our light haulage
+system?" Nancy demanded at last. "The rest's gone. The real big stuff, I
+mean, down below in the valley. We're just driven to the plateau where
+the cut looks to me more like one in twenty than any better?"
+
+Arden Laval left his position at the brink of the ravine. He came back
+to the girl in her modish costume that seemed so out of place beside the
+rough clothing that Covered his body.
+
+"Why, I guess that's so," he said. "Still, it's a deal better than one
+in twenty." He laughed. "Sure. If it wasn't the darn booms 'ud need to
+go hungry."
+
+The man's French temperament left him more than appreciative of the
+beauty he beheld. But he was wondering. He was searching his shrewd mind
+for the real explanation of Nancy's presence in these forests. To him it
+was amazing that the Skandinavia should send this girl, this
+good-looker, on a journey through their forests alone. He would
+willingly have asked the question. But he remembered her written
+commission, signed by Elas Peterman. So he was left with no alternative
+but to yield the utmost respect.
+
+"Y'see, mam," he went on easily. "I guess I could talk quite a piece on
+this thing, but maybe you won't fancy my dope. Skandinavia's been badly
+spoilt by the cut in the Shagaunty Valley. You've seen it all. Guess
+you've come right through. Well, that being so, you'll understand the
+Shagaunty cut's been far above average. Now we're down to average.
+That's all. That's how the Skandinavia's been spoilt."
+
+He thrust his cap back from his forehead. It was a movement of
+irritation. Then he produced a plug of tobacco from his hip-pocket, and
+bit off a chew.
+
+"I've been twenty odd years lumbering," he went on a moment later. "I've
+lumbered most every forest in Ontario and Quebec. There ain't more'n one
+bunch of plums like the Shagaunty. Mostly the forest's full of the sort
+of stuff we're handling here. These forests are average and I'd like to
+say to the Skandinavia, 'you've got to figger results on the average.'
+We're cutting down to the minimum because we've got to, to feed the
+booms right. Well, that's goin' on if I know my job. There's patch
+stuff better. I daresay there's new ground on our limits liable to hand
+us Shagaunty stuff. But that's just as I say, patch stuff, an' not
+average. If they want Shagaunty quality right through let 'em get out
+and get limits up on Labrador. I reckon there's a hundred years cutting
+up there that 'ud leave Shagaunty a bunch of weed grass. They say the
+folks out on the coast are worried to death there's so much stuff, an'
+so big, an' good, an' soft, an' long-fibred. The jacks out that way are
+up to the neck in a hell of a good time, sure. I get it they've time to
+sleep half the year, it's so easy. Well, it ain't that way here. We've
+no time singing hymns around this lay-out. It's hell, here, keeping the
+darn booms fed. Speakin' for my outfit I'd say they're a pretty bright
+lot of boys. What a feller can do they can do, I guess. But there are
+times I get mighty sick chasing to get even the minimum. An' it's all
+the time kick. The Skandinavia seems to have got a grouch about now you
+couldn't beat with a tank of rye whisky. You've seen it all as far as I
+can show you, mam, and I'd be glad to know if you're satisfied I've done
+the things you want. If I have, and you feel good about it, I'd be
+thankful if you'd report the way we're workin' this camp. And if you've
+a spare moment to talk other things, you might say that the boys of my
+camp are mighty hard put to get the stuff, and they're as tough a gang
+of jacks as ever heard tell of the dog's life of the forest."
+
+The man spoke with the fluency of real protest. He somehow felt he was
+on his defence in the presence of this woman representative of his
+employers. This girl was not there enduring the discomforts of the
+forests for amusement. She came with authority, and she seemed to
+possess great understanding. Arden Laval knew his own value. His record
+was one of long service with his company. Furthermore, his outfit was
+trusted with the pioneering work of the forest where judgment and
+enterprise, and great experience were needed. He felt it was the moment
+to talk, and to talk straight to this woman with the red hair who had
+invaded his domain. So he gave full rope to his feelings.
+
+It was some moments before the girl replied, and the man waited
+expectantly. He was studying the far-off gaze of the pretty hazel eyes,
+and wondering at the thought moving behind them. At length Nancy
+withdrew her gaze from the forest.
+
+"I shall certainly report the things I've seen," she said with a smile
+that found prompt response in the man's dark eyes. "You've certainly
+done your best to show me, and tell me, the exact position. I shall make
+a point of reporting all that. Yes, I've seen it all, thank you very
+much."
+
+Then her smile suddenly vanished. The shrewd gaze of commercial interest
+replaced it.
+
+"But these Labrador folk?" she demanded. "Is that stuff just--hearsay?"
+
+The man shook his head. He was feeling easier.
+
+"It's God's truth, mam." He spat out a stream of tobacco juice. "I know
+them forests. Say," his eyes had lost their smile, "I don't guess I
+figger to know the business side of things, I don't calculate to know if
+the folks on Labrador work with, or against the Skandinavia. But I do
+know that if they're up against us they've got us plumb beat before we
+start. They got the sort of lumber the jacks dream about when they got
+their bellies full on a Saturday night, and they're going to wake up to
+find it Sunday mornin'. I'm just a lumberman, and if I hadn't fifteen
+years' record with the Skandinavia, and wasn't pouching two hundred and
+fifty bucks, and what I can make besides, a month, why, it 'ud be me for
+the coast where you can jamb the rivers in a three months' cut, and
+souse rye the rest of the year till the bugs look as big as mountains.
+Guess it's the summer rose garden of the lumber-jack, for all it's under
+snow eight months in the year, when you can't tell your guts from an
+iceflow, and the skitters, in summer, mostly reach the size of a
+gasoline tank. It's a dog's life, mam, lumberin' anywhere. But they're
+lap-dogs out that way."
+
+The man's words brought the return of the girl's smile. "Yes, I spose
+it's--tough," she observed thoughtfully. Then quite suddenly she spread
+out her hands. "Oh, yes," she exclaimed, with a sudden vehemence, "it's
+worse than tough. It's hopeless. Utterly hopeless. I've seen it. I've
+watched it. I had to. I couldn't escape it. It's so desperately patent.
+But it's not the life as these folk live it. It's the future I'm
+thinking of. It's middle life and old age. These boys. They're
+wonders--now. How long does it last, and then--what happens? I'm here on
+business, hard business. But I guess this thing's got hold of me so I
+can't sometimes sleep at nights. Tell me about them."
+
+Arden Laval, one of the hardest specimens of the lumber boss, turned
+away. His understanding of women was built up out of intimacy with the
+poor creatures who peopled the camps he knew. This girl's burst of
+feeling only stirred him to a cynical humour.
+
+"Mam," he said, with a grin that was almost hateful, "if I was to start
+in to hand you the life history of a lumber-jack you'd feel like
+throwing up your kind heart, and any other old thing you hadn't use for
+in your stummick. But I guess I can say right here, a lumber-jack's a
+most disgustin' sort of vermin who hasn't more right than a louse to
+figger in your reckonin'. I guess he was born wrong, and he'll mostly
+die as he was born. And meanwhile he's lived a life that's mostly dirt,
+and no account anyway. There's a few things we ask of a lumber-jack, and
+if he fulfils 'em right he can go right on living. When he can't fulfil
+'em, why, it's up to him to hit the trail for the pay box, an' get out.
+Guess you feel good when you see a boy swingin' an axe, or handlin' a
+peavy. Sure. That sort of thing don't come your way often. Neither does
+it come your way to see the rest. He's mostly a sink of filth in mind
+and body, and if he ain't all that at the start he gets it quick. He's a
+waster of God's pure air, and is mostly in his right surroundings when
+the forest does its best to hide him up from the eyes of the rest of the
+world. Guess he's the best man I know--dead."
+
+For all his grin Arden Laval was in deadly earnest. Nancy stared at the
+broad back he had turned on her with his final word. And her indignation
+surged.
+
+"I don't believe it," she cried. "I can't believe it. You're just
+talking out of years of experience of a life you've probably learned to
+hate. Man, if that's your opinion of your fellows, then it's you who
+ought never to leave the forest you claim does its best to hide up folk
+from the eyes of the rest of the world. You're a camp boss. You're our
+head man in these forests. You're trusted, and we know your skill. Well,
+it seems to me you've a duty that goes further than just feeding the
+booms right. You've a moral duty towards these men you condemn. You can
+help them. It should surely be your pride to lift them out of the
+desperate mire you claim they are floundering in. I'll not believe you
+mean it all."
+
+The man turned away as a black-clothed figure emerged from the trees,
+and came to a stand at the brink of the ravine some hundred and more
+yards to the east of them. Nancy, too, beheld the lonely figure and she,
+too, became interested in its movements.
+
+The lumber boss laughed shortly, roughly, and raised an arm, pointing as
+he turned a grinning face to the girl.
+
+"See him, there?" he cried. "Say, mam, with all respect, I'd say to you,
+if you're feeling the way you talk, and look to get the sort of stuff
+you'd maybe fancy hearing, that's the guy you need to open out to. As
+you say, I'm the head camp-boss on the Skandinavia's limits. I've had
+nigh twenty years an' more experience of the lumber-jack. An' I'm
+tellin' you the things any camp-boss speakin' truth'll tell you. That's
+all, I don't hate the boys. I don't pity 'em. But I don't love 'em.
+They're just part of a machine to cut lumber, and it don't matter a hoot
+in hell to me what they are, or who they are, or what becomes of 'em. I
+ain't shepherdin' souls like that guy. It ain't in me, anyway. I just
+got to make good so that some day I ken quit these cursed forests and
+live easy the way I'd fancy. When that time comes maybe I'll change.
+Maybe I'll feel like that guy standin' doping over that spread of forest
+scene. I don't know. And just now I don't care--a curse."
+
+But Nancy was no longer listening. The lonely, black-coated figure Laval
+had pointed out absorbed all her interest. His allusion to the man's
+calling had created in her an irresistible desire.
+
+"Who is he? That man?" she demanded abruptly.
+
+Laval laughed.
+
+"Why, Father Adam," he replied. There was a curious softening in his
+harsh voice, which brought the girl's eyes swiftly back to him.
+
+"Father Adam? A priest?" she questioned.
+
+Laval shook his head. He had turned again, regarding the stranger. His
+face was hidden from the searching eyes of the girl.
+
+"I just can't rightly say," he demurred. "Maybe he is, an' maybe he
+ain't. But," he added reflectively "he's just one hell of a good man.
+Makes me laff sometimes. Sometimes it makes me want to cry like a kid
+when I think of the things he's up against. He's out for the boys. He's
+out to hand 'em dope to make 'em better. Oh, it ain't Sunday School
+dope. No. He's the kind o' missioner who does things. He don't tell 'em
+they're a bum lot o' toughs who oughter to be in penitentiary. But he
+makes 'em feel that way--the way he acts. He's just a lone creature,
+sort of livin' in twilight, who comes along, an' we don't know when he's
+comin'. He passes out like a shadow in the forests, an' we don't see him
+again till he fancies. He's after the boys the whole darn time. It don't
+matter if they're sick in body or mind. He helps 'em the way he knows.
+An', mam, they just love him to death. There's just one man in these
+forests I wouldn't dare blaspheme, if I felt like it--which I don't. No,
+mam, my life wouldn't be worth a two seconds buy if I blasphemed--Father
+Adam. He's one of God's good men, an' I'd be mighty thankful to be like
+him--some. Gee, and I owe him a piece myself."
+
+"How?"
+
+Nancy's interest was consuming.
+
+"Why, only he jumped in once when I was being scrapped to death. He
+jumped right in, when he looked like gettin' killed for it. And," he
+laughed cynically, "he gave me a few more years of the dog's life of the
+forest."
+
+The girl moved away from her support.
+
+"I want to thank you, Mr. Laval, for the trouble you've taken, and the
+time you've given up to me." The hazel eyes were smiling up into the
+man's hard face. "I don't agree with some of the things you've just been
+telling me; I should hate to, anyway. I don't even believe you feel the
+way you say about your men. Still, that's no account in the matters I
+came about. The things I've got to say when I get back are all to your
+credit. I'm going over now to talk to--Father Adam. And you needn't come
+along with me. You see, you've fired my curiosity. Yes, I want to hear
+the stuff I fancy about the--boys. So I'll go and talk to your--shepherd
+of souls. Good-bye."
+
+Nancy's eyes were bright and smiling as she gazed up into the lean,
+ascetic face of the man in the black, semi-clerical coat. His garments
+were worn and almost threadbare. At close quarters she realised an even
+deeper interest in the man whose presence had wrought such a magical
+change in the harsh tones of the camp-boss. He was in the heyday of
+middle life, surely. His hair was long and black. His beard was of a
+similar hue, and it covered his mouth and chin in a long, but patchy
+mass. His eyes were keen but gentle. They, too, were very dark, and the
+whole cast of his pale face was curiously reminiscent.
+
+"I just had to come along over, sir," she said. "I was with Mr. Laval,
+and he told me of the work--the great work you do in these camps. Maybe
+you'll forgive me intruding. But you see, I've come from our
+headquarters on business, and the folk of these camps interest me. I
+kind of feel the life the boys live around these forests is a pretty
+mean life. There's nothing much to it but work. And it seems to me that
+those employing them ought to be made to realise they've a greater
+responsibility than just handing them out a wage for work done. So when
+I saw you come out of the forest and stand here, and Mr. Laval told me
+about you, I made up my mind right away to come along and--speak to you.
+My name's McDonald--Nancy McDonald."
+
+It was all a little hasty, a little timidly spoken. The dark eyes
+thoughtfully regarding the wonder of red hair under the close fitting
+hat were disconcerting, for all there was cordiality in their depths.
+
+At Nancy's mention of her name, Father Adam instantly averted his gaze,
+and dropped the hand which he had taken possession of in greeting. It
+was almost as if the pronouncement had caused him to start. But the
+change, the movement, were unobserved by the girl.
+
+"And you are--Father Adam?" she asked.
+
+The man's gaze came quickly back.
+
+"That's how I'm known. It--was kind of you to come along over."
+
+In a moment all the girl's timidity was gone. If the man had been
+startled when she had announced her name, he displayed perfect ease now.
+
+"Do you know," Nancy went on, with a happy laugh, "I almost got mad with
+Laval for his cynicism at the expense of the poor boys who work under
+his orders. But I think I understand him. He's a product of a life that
+moulds in pretty harsh form. He doesn't mean half he says."
+
+"I'd say few of us do--when we let our feelings go." Father Adam smiled
+back into the eyes which seemed to hold him fascinated. "You see,
+Laval's much what we all are. He's got a tough job to put through, and
+he does his utmost. He's a big man, a brave man, a--yes, perhaps--a
+harsh man. But he couldn't do his job as he's paid to do it if he
+weren't all those things." He shook his head. "No, I guess we can't play
+with fire long without getting a heap of scars." He shrugged. "But after
+all I suppose it's just--life. We've got to eat, and we want to live. We
+don't need to judge too harshly."
+
+"No. That's how I feel about the boys--he so condemned."
+
+The girl turned away gazing pensively over the forest. Father Adam was
+free to regard her without restraint. With her turning the whole
+expression of his eyes had changed. Incredulous amazement had replaced
+his smiling ease.
+
+"Would you care to come along through the woods to my shanty, Miss
+McDonald?" he said, almost diffidently, at last. "Maybe I've a cup of
+coffee there. And I'd say coffee's the most welcome thing on earth in
+these forests. It's a pretty humble shanty but, if you feel like
+talking things, why, I guess we can sit around there awhile."
+
+The girl snatched at the invitation.
+
+"I was just hoping you'd say something that way," she laughed readily.
+"I'd give worlds for a cup of coffee, and I guess the folks in the
+forests of Quebec know more about coffee in half a second than we city
+folk know in a year. Which way?"
+
+"It's only a few yards. You'd best follow me."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The girl stood amazed. She was even horrified. She was gazing in through
+the opening of the merest shelter, a shelter built of green boughs with
+roof and sides of interlaced foliage. True it was densely interlaced,
+but no sort of distorted imagination could have translated the result
+into anything but a shelter. Habitation was out of the question. She
+stared at the primitive, less than aboriginal home, of the priestly man.
+She stared round her at the undergrowth upon which were spread his brown
+coarse blankets airing. She looked down at the smouldering fire between
+two granite stones upon which a tin of coffee was simmering and emitting
+its pleasant aroma upon the woodland air. It was too crude, too utterly
+lacking in comfort and even the bare necessites of existence.
+
+The man emerged from the interior bearing two enamelled tin cups. He
+realised the amazement with which Nancy was regarding his home, and
+shook his head with a pleasant laugh as he indicated two upturned boxes
+beside the fire.
+
+"You'd best sit, and I'll tell you about it," he said. "It's not exactly
+a swell hotel, is it? But it's sufficient."
+
+The girl silently took her seat on one of the boxes. Father Adam took
+the other. Then he poured out two cups of coffee, and passed a tin of
+preserved milk across to the girl. There was a spoon in it. After that
+he produced a small tin of sugar and offered that.
+
+"You see, it's all I need," he said, in simple explanation. "When the
+rain comes I mostly get wet, except at nights when I get under my rubber
+sheet. But, anyway, there's plenty of sun to dry me. Oh, winter's
+different. I cut out a dug-out then, and burrow like the rest of the
+forest creatures. But, you see, this thing suits me well. I'm never long
+in one place. I've been here two weeks, and I pull out to-morrow."
+
+"You pull out? Where to?"
+
+"Why, I just pass on to some other camp. The boys are pretty widely
+scattered in these forests. You'd never guess the distances I sometimes
+make. Even Labrador. But it doesn't much matter. I've a good smattering
+of physic, and the boys are always getting hurt one way and another. I'd
+hate to feel I couldn't go to them wherever they are. Maybe if I built a
+better house I'd not want to leave it. It would be hard getting on the
+move. You see, I get their call any old time. Maybe it comes along on
+the forest breezes," he said whimsically. "Then I have to be quick to
+locate it, and read it right."
+
+The girl had helped herself to milk and sugar, and sipped the steaming
+coffee. But she was listening with all her ears and thinking feverishly.
+This strange creature, with his deprecating manner, and smiling, sane
+eyes, filled her with a sense of shame at his utter selflessness.
+
+She nodded.
+
+"You mean they--always want help?"
+
+"Sure. Same as we all do."
+
+Father Adam sipped his coffee appreciatively.
+
+"But tell me," he said. "It's kind of new the Skandinavia sending a
+woman along up here. It's your first trip?"
+
+Nancy set her cup down.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"They're a great firm," Father Adam went on, reflectively. "I mean
+the--extent of their operations."
+
+Nancy smiled.
+
+"I like the distinction. Yes, they're big. You don't like
+their--methods?"
+
+It was the man's turn for a smiling retort.
+
+"Their methods?" he shook his head. "I don't know, I guess they pay
+well. And their boys are no worse treated than in other camps. They
+employ thousands. And that's all to the good."
+
+"But you don't like them," Nancy persisted. "I can hear it in your
+voice. It's in your smile. Few people like the Skandinavia," she added
+regretfully.
+
+"Do you?"
+
+Like a shot the challenge came, and Nancy found herself replying almost
+before she was aware of it.
+
+"Yes. Why shouldn't I? They've been good to me. More than good, when
+those who had a right to be completely deserted me. No. I mustn't say
+just that," she hurried on in some contrition. "They provided for me,
+but cut me out of their lives. Maybe you won't understand what that
+means to a girl. It meant so much to me that I wouldn't accept their
+charity. I wouldn't accept a thing. I'd make my own way with the small
+powers Providence handed me. So I went to the Skandinavia who have only
+shown me the best of kindness. Well, I'm frankly out for the Skandinavia
+and all their schemes and methods in consequence. It's not for me to
+look into the things that make folks hate them. That's theirs. My
+loyalty and gratitude are all for them for the thing they've done for
+me. Isn't that right?"
+
+"Surely," the man concurred. "But your coffee. It's getting cold," he
+added.
+
+Nancy hastily picked up her cup.
+
+"Why am I telling you all this?" she laughed. "We were going to talk of
+the--boys."
+
+"We surely were." Father Adam laughed responsively. "But personal
+interest I guess doesn't figure to be denied for long. We sort of get
+the notion we can shut it out. But we can't. We try to guess there's
+other things. Things more important. Things that matter a whole lot
+more." He shook his head. "It's no use. There aren't. I guess it doesn't
+matter where we look. Self's pushing out at every angle, and won't be
+denied. It would be hypocrisy to deny it, wouldn't it? It's the biggest
+thing in life. It's the whole thing."
+
+"And it's such a pity," Nancy agreed slyly. "Just think," she went on,
+"I've got a hundred notions for the good of the world. These boys for
+instance. I'd like to make their lives what they ought to be. Full of
+comfort and security and--and everything to make it worth while. Instead
+of that my first and whole concern is to make good for Nancy McDonald.
+To do all those things for her. It's dreadful when you think of it,
+isn't it?" She sighed. "I want to do good to the--the 'underdog,' and
+all the time I'm planning for myself. I want to fight all the time for
+those who hold opportunity out to me. It doesn't really matter to me why
+the Skandinavia is disliked. They give me opportunity. I reckon they've
+been good to me. So I'm their slave to fight for them, and work for
+them, whatever their methods. Yes. It's too bad," she laughed frankly.
+"I can't deny it. I'd like to, but--I can't."
+
+"No."
+
+Father Adam set down his empty cup, and sat with his arms resting on his
+parted knees. His hands were clasped.
+
+"You remind me of someone," he said, in his simple disarming fashion.
+"Queerly enough it's a man. A strong, hard, kindly, good-natured man. I
+found him without a thought but to make good. And I knew he would make
+good. Then it came my way to show him how. I offered him a notion. The
+notion was fine. Oh, yes--though I say it. It was the sort of thing if
+it were carried to success would hand the fellow working it down to
+posterity as one of his country's benefactors. The notion appealed to
+him. It stirred something in him, and set fire to his enthusiasm. He
+jumped for it. Why? Was it the thought of doing a great act for his
+country? Was it for that something that was all good stirring in him?
+No. I guess it was because he was a strong, physical, and spiritual, and
+mental force concentrated on big things, primarily inspired by Self.
+Personal achievement. It seems to me the good man always does what's
+real and worth while in the way of helping himself."
+
+"Yes. I think I understand." The girl nodded. "And this strong physical,
+and spiritual, and mental force? Have I heard of him? Is he known? Has
+he achieved?"
+
+"He's carrying on. Oh, yes." Father Adam paused. Then he went on
+quickly. "You don't know him yet. But I think you will. He's out on the
+coast of Labrador. He's driving his great purpose with all his force
+through the agency of a groundwood mill that would fill your Skandinavia
+folk with envy and alarm if they saw it. He's master of forests such as
+would break your heart when compared with these of your Skandinavia. His
+name's Sternford. Bull Sternford, of Sachigo."
+
+At the mention of Sachigo, Nancy's eyes widened. Then she laughed. It
+was a laugh of real amusement.
+
+"Why, that's queer. It's--I'm going right on there from here. I'm going
+to meet this very man, Sternford. They tell me I've just time to get
+there and pull out again for home before winter freezes them up solid.
+So he is this great man, with this great--notion. Tell me, what is he
+like?"
+
+"Oh, he's a big, strong man, as ready to laugh as to fight."
+
+Father Adam smiled, and stooped over the fire to push the attenuated
+sticks of it together.
+
+"May I ask why you're going to Sachigo?" he asked, without looking up.
+
+Just for a moment Nancy hesitated. Then she laughed happily.
+
+"I don't see why you shouldn't," she cried. "There's no secret.
+Skandinavia intends to buy him, or crush him."
+
+The man sat up.
+
+"And you--a girl--are the emissary?"
+
+Incredulity robbed the man of the even calmness of' his manner.
+
+"Yes. Why not?"
+
+The challenge in the girls's eyes was unmistakable.
+
+"You won't buy him," Father Adam said quietly. "And you certainly won't
+crush him."
+
+"Because I'm a girl?"
+
+"Oh, no. I was thinking of the Skandinavia." The man shook his head. "If
+I'm a judge of men, the crushing will be done from the other end of the
+line."
+
+"This man will crush Skandinavia?"
+
+The idea that Skandinavia could be crushed was quite unthinkable to
+Nancy. It was the great monopoly of the country. It was--but she felt
+that this lonely creature could have no real understanding of the power
+of her people.
+
+"Surely," he returned quietly. "But that," he added, with a return of
+his pleasant smile, "is just the notion of one man. I should say it's no
+real account. Yes, you go there. You see this man. The battle of your
+people with him matters little. It will be good for you to see him.
+It--may help you. Who can tell? He's a white man, and a fighter. He's
+honest and clean. It's--in the meeting of kindred spirits that the
+great events of life are brought about. It should be good for you both."
+
+"I wonder?" Nancy rose from her chair.
+
+The man rose also.
+
+"I think so," he said, very decidedly.
+
+The girl laughed.
+
+"I hope so. But--" She held out her hand. "Thank you, Father," she said.
+"I'll never be able to think of the things I'm set on achieving without
+remembering our talk--and the man I met in the forest. I wish--but
+what's the use? I've got to make good. I must. I must go on, and--do the
+thing I see. Good-bye."
+
+Father Adam was holding the small gauntleted hand, and he seemed loth to
+release it. His eyes were very gentle, very earnest.
+
+"Don't worry to remember, child. Don't ever think about--this time. It
+won't help you. You've set your goal. Make it. You will do the good
+things you fancy to do, though maybe not the way you think them. It
+seems to me that 'good' mostly has its own way all the time. You can't
+drive it. And the best of it is I don't think there's a human creature
+so bad in this world, but that in some way God's work has been furthered
+through his life. Good-bye."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For some moments the lonely figure stood gazing down the woodland
+aisles. The deep, shining light of a great hope was in his eyes. A
+wonderful tender smile had dispersed the shadows of his ascetic face. At
+length, as the girl's figure became completely swallowed up in the
+twilight of it all, he turned away and passed into the foliage shelter
+which was his home.
+
+He was squatting on his box, and the small canvas bag containing his
+belongings was open beside him. Its contents were strewn about. He was
+writing a long letter. There was several pages of it. When he had
+finished he read it over carefully. Then he carefully folded it and
+placed it in an envelope, and addressed it. It was addressed:
+
+ MR. BULL STERNFORD,
+ Sachigo, Farewell Cove,
+ Labrador.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE SKANDINAVIA MOVES
+
+
+Bat gazed up at the wooded ridge. They were standing in the marshy
+bottom of a natural hollow amidst a sparse scattering of pine and
+attenuated spruce. Beyond the ridge lay the waters of the cove. And to
+the left the broad waters of the river mouth flowed by. It was a
+desolate, damp spot, but its significance to the two men studying it was
+profound.
+
+Skert Lawton, the chief engineer of Sachigo, tall, loose-limbed,
+raw-boned, watched his superior with somewhat mournful, unsmiling eyes.
+There was something of deadly earnest in his regard, something anxious.
+But that was always his way. Bat had once said of him: "Skert Lawton's
+one hell of a good boy. But I won't get no comfort in the grave if I
+ain't ever see him grin." There was not the smallest sign of a smile in
+him now.
+
+"It's one big notion," Bat said, at last. Then he added doubtfully. "It
+comes mighty nigh being too big."
+
+Lawton emitted a curious sound like a snort. It was mainly, however, an
+ejaculation of violent impatience. Bat turned with a twinkling grin,
+surveying the queer figure. His engineer was always a source of the
+profoundest interest for him. Just now, in his hard, rough clothing, he
+might have been a lumber-jack, or casual labourer. Anything, in fact,
+rather than the college-bred, brilliant engineer he really was.
+
+Bat's doubt had been carefully calculated. He knew his man. And just now
+as he awaited the explosion he looked for, his thoughts went back to a
+scene he had once had with a half drunken machine-minder whom he had had
+to pay off. The man had epitomised the chief engineer's qualities and
+character, as those who encountered his authority understood them, in a
+few lurid, illuminating phrases. "You know," he had said, "that guy
+ain't a man. No, sir. He's the mush-fed image of a penitentiary boss. I
+guess he'd set the grease box of a driving shaft hot with a look. His
+temper 'ud burn holes in sheet iron. As for work--work? Holy Mackinaw!
+I've worked hired man to a French Canuk mossback which don't leave a
+feller the playtime of a nigger slave, but that hell-hired Scotch
+machine boss sets me yearnin' for that mossback's wage like a bull-pup
+chasin' offal. I tell you right here if that guy don't quit his notions
+there'll be murder done. Bloody murder! An' it's a God's sure thing when
+that happens he'll freeze to death in hell. It don't rile me a thing to
+be told the things he guesses my mother was. Maybe that's a matter of
+opinion, and, anyway, she's mixin' with a crop of angels who don't
+figger to have no truck with Scotch machine bosses. I guess a sight of
+his flea-bitten features 'ud set 'em seein' things so they wouldn't
+rec'nise their harps from frypans, and they'd moult feathers till you
+wouldn't know it from a snowfall on Labrador. But when he mixes his
+notions of my ma with 'lazy'! Lazy! Lazy! Gee! Why, if I signed in a
+half hour late from that bum suttler's canteen, I guess it was only the
+time it took me digestin' two quarts of the gut-wash they hand out there
+in the hope you won't know it from beer. No, sir, 'lazy son-of-a-bitch'
+from that guy is the talk no decent citizen with a bunch of guts is
+goin' to stand for."
+
+Skert Lawton was known for a red-hot "burner," a "nigger driver." No
+doubt he was all this in addition to his brilliant attainments as an
+engineer. But the methods he applied to others he applied to himself.
+And the whole of him, brain and body, was for the enterprise they were
+all engaged in. Bat had intended to goad the demon of obstinate energy
+which possessed the man, and he succeeded.
+
+Skert flung out his hand in a comprehensive gesture.
+
+"Hell!" he cried. "That's no sort of talk anyway. I've been weeks on
+this thing. And I've got it to the last fraction. Big notion? Of course
+it is. Aren't we mostly concerned with big notions? Here, what are you
+asking? An inland boom with capacity for anything over a million cords.
+Well? It's damn ridiculous talking the size of the notion. This hollow
+is fixed right. Its bed is ten feet below the bed of the river. It's
+surrounded with a natural ridge on all sides a hundred and fifty feet
+high. There's a quarter mile below the hollow and the river bank, and
+the new mill extensions are just to the east of this ridge. It's
+well-nigh child's play. Nature's fixed it that way. Two cuttings, and a
+race-way on the river. We flood this. Feed it full of lumber in the
+summer with surplus from the cut and you've got that reserve for winter,
+so you can keep every darn machine grinding its guts out. What's the use
+talking? Big notion? Of course it is. We're out for big notions all the
+time. That's the whole proposition. Well?"
+
+Bat grinned at the heated disgust in the man's tone.
+
+"Sounds like eatin' pie," he retorted aggravatingly. "The cost? The
+labour? Time? You got those things?"
+
+"It's right up at your office now." Skert's eyes widened in surprise at
+such a question. "It's not my way to play around."
+
+"No." Bat's eyes refused seriousness.
+
+"Oh, psha! This is no sort of time chewing these details. It's figgered
+to the last second, the last man, the last cent. I brought you to see
+things. Well, you've seen things. And if you're satisfied we'll quit
+right away. I've no spare play time."
+
+There was no pretence of patience in Skert Lawton. He had looked for
+appreciation and only found doubt. He moved off.
+
+Bat had done the thing intended. He had no intention of hurting the man.
+He understood the driving power of the mood he had stirred.
+
+They moved off together.
+
+"That's all right, Skert," he said kindly. "You've done one big thing.
+An' it's the thing Bull and I want--"
+
+"Then why in hell didn't you say it instead of talking--notions?"
+
+For all the sharpness of his retort, Skert was mollified. Bat shook his
+head and a shrewd light twinkled in his eyes.
+
+"You're a pretty bright boy, Skert," he said. "But you're brightest when
+you're riled."
+
+They had gained the river bank where booms lined the shore, and scores
+of men were rafting. They had left the water-logged hollow behind them,
+and debouched on the busy world of the mill. Ahead lay the new
+extensions where the saws were shrieking the song of their labours upon
+the feed for the rumbling grinders. It was a township of buildings of
+all sizes crowding about the great central machine house.
+
+They crossed the light footbridge over the "cut in" from the river, and
+moved along down the main highway of the northern shore.
+
+Both were pre-occupied. The engineer was listening to the note of his
+beloved machinery. Bat was concerned with any and every movement going
+on within the range of his vision. They walked briskly, the lean
+engineer setting a pace that kept the other stumping hurriedly beside
+him.
+
+Abreast of the mill they approached a new-looking, long, low building.
+It was single storied and lumber built, with a succession of many
+windows down its length. The hour was noon. And men were hurrying
+towards its entrance from every direction.
+
+Bat watched interestedly.
+
+"They seem mighty keen for their new playground," he said at last, with
+a quick nod in the direction of the recreation house.
+
+The engineer came out of his dream. His mournful eyes turned in the
+direction indicated and devoured the scene. Then he glanced down at the
+squat figure stumping beside him.
+
+"Guess that's so. But not the way you figgered when you got that fool
+notion of handing 'em a playhouse," he said roughly. "If you pass a hog
+a feather bed, it's a sure thing he'll work out the best way to muss it
+quick."
+
+"How? I don't get you?"
+
+There was no humour in Bat's eyes now.
+
+"They call it a 'Chapel'," Skert said dryly. "They've surely got
+preachers, but they don't talk religion. Maybe that's sort of new to
+you, here. It isn't across the water where I come from. Guess you think
+those boys are racing out to get a game of checkers, or billiards, or
+cards, or some other fool play you reckoned to hand 'em to make 'em feel
+good." He shook his head. "They're not. They've turned their 'Chapel'
+into a sort of parliament. Every dinner hour there's a feller, different
+fellers most all the time, gets up and hands 'em out an address. It's
+short, but red hot. The afternoon shift in the mill is given up to
+brightening up their fool brains on it. And when evening comes along,
+and they've their bellies full of supper and beer, they get along to the
+'Chapel' and they debate the address, handing out opinions and notions
+just as bellies guide 'em."
+
+"And the addresses. What are they mostly? On the work? The trade they're
+working at?"
+
+A world of pity looked out of Skert's eyes as he surveyed the man he
+believed to be the greatest organiser the mill industry had ever seen.
+He shook his head.
+
+"Work? Not on your life! Socialism, Communism--Revolution!"
+
+Bat spat out a stream of tobacco juice. He was startled.
+
+"But I ain't heard tell of any sort of unrest gettin' busy. We're payin'
+big money. It's bigger than the market. They got--"
+
+"Best talk to Sternford when you get back up there to your office. He's
+got the boys sized right up to the last hair of their stupid heads. But
+I'll hand you something I've reckoned to hand you a while back, only I
+wanted to be sure. There's nothing of this truck about the 'hands' of
+the old mill. It's the new hands you've been collecting from the
+forests. We've grown by two thousand hands in the past year or so. And
+they're so darn mixed I wouldn't fancy trying to sort 'em. They come
+from all parts. The world's been talking revolution since ever these
+buzzy-headed Muscovites reckoned to start in grabbing the world's goods
+for themselves. Well, it's a hell of a long piece here to Labrador, but
+it's found its way, and the mutton-brained fools who're supposed to play
+around that shanty you handed 'em are recreating themselves talking
+about it in there. Here, come right over to that window. It's open."
+
+Perhaps Skert was enjoying himself. Certainly his mournful eyes were
+less mournful as he led his chief over to the open window. Bat had had
+his innings with him. He was planning the game and hitting hard in his
+turn.
+
+"The enemy of the world, of more particularly the worker is
+the--CAPITALIST!"
+
+The words were hurled from the platform of the recreation room at the
+heads of the listening throng below and reached the open window just as
+Lawton and his chief came up to it. There was applause following this
+profound announcement, and Skert turned on his companion.
+
+"Well?" he demanded, in a tone of biting triumph.
+
+They had reached the window at the psychological moment. Nothing could
+have suited his purpose better.
+
+Bat turned away abruptly. It was as if some fierce emotion made it
+impossible for him to remain another second. His heavy brows depressed,
+and his deep-set eyes narrowed to gimlet holes. Skert pursued him. Once
+clear of the window, and beyond earshot, Bat flung his reply with all
+the passionate force of his fighting nature.
+
+"The lousy swine!" he cried. "I'll close that place sure as--hell."
+
+Skert shook his head as they walked on.
+
+"No, you won't," he said. "Guess you aren't crazy. You'll talk this over
+with Sternford. And when you've talked it some, you'll keep that place
+running, and let them talk. It's best that way. But I've got tab of most
+of the speakers, and I've located where they come from. Most of them
+have sometime worked for the Skandinavia. Maybe that's the reason of
+their talk. Maybe even Skandinavia's glad they're talking that way here
+on Labrador. I don't know. But--well, I'll have to quit you here.
+They're setting up the two big new machines, and it don't do leaving
+them long. So long. Anything else you need to know about that recreation
+room, why, I guess I can hand it to you."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bull Sternford laid the telegram aside while a shadowy smile hovered
+about his firm lips. Then he settled himself back in his chair, and gave
+himself up to the thoughtful contemplation of the brilliant sunlight,
+and the perfect, steely azure of the sky beyond the window opposite him.
+
+The change in the man was almost magical. The hot-headed, determined,
+fighting lumber-jack whom Father Adam had rescued from furious homicide
+had hidden himself under something deeper than the veneer which the
+modest suit of conventional life provides. It was the subtle change that
+comes from within which had transformed him. It was in his eyes. In the
+set of his jaws. It was in the man's whole poise. His resources of
+spiritual power; his mental force; his virility of personality. All
+these things were concentrated. They were no longer sprawling, groping,
+seeking the great purpose of his life as they had been in the lumber
+camp of the Skandinavia.
+
+A feeling akin to triumph filled the man's heart as he gazed out upon
+the pleasant light of Labrador's late summer day. In something like
+twelve months he had thrust leagues along the road he meant to travel.
+And his progress had been of a whirlwind nature. It had been work,
+desperate, strenuous work. It had been the double labour of intensive
+study combined with the necessary progress in the schemes laid down for
+the future of Sachigo. It had only been possible to a man of his amazing
+faculties, combined with the fact that Bat Harker and the mournful Skert
+Lawton had left him free from the clogging detail of the mill
+organisation and routine.
+
+In twelve months he had crystallised the dreams and projects of his
+predecessor in the chair he was now occupying. In twelve months he had
+built up the shell of the great combination of groundwood and paper
+mills which was to have such far-reaching effect upon the paper trade
+of the world. And now, ahead of him was spread out the sea of finance
+upon which he must next embark. He felt that already giant's work had
+been done. But his yearning could never be satisfied by a mere measure
+of completion. He must embrace it all, complete it all.
+
+Already he seemed to have lived with bankers and financial specialists,
+but he felt it was only the beginning of that which he had yet to do. He
+was unappalled. He was more than confident. He had discovered unguessed
+faculties for finance in himself. He had surprised himself as well as
+those others with whom he had come in contact. They had discovered in
+him all that which Father Adam had been so prompt to realise. They had
+found in him a young, untrained mind, untrained in their own calling,
+whose natural aptitude was amazing, and whose courage and confidence
+were beyond words. But greatest of all was the perception he displayed.
+They realised he never required the telling of more than half the story.
+Intuition and inspiration completed it for him without the labour of
+their words. The result of those twelve months was there for all to see.
+The lumberman had been translated into a hard, fighting, business man.
+
+The train of the man's thought was broken by the unceremonious entry of
+Bat Harker. Bull turned. One swift glance into the grizzled face warned
+him his associate's mood was by no means easy. He, like everyone who
+came into contact with Bat, had learned to appreciate the volcanic fires
+burning under the lumberman's exterior.
+
+Bull promptly fended any storm that might possibly be brewing. He held
+up his telegram and his eyes were smiling.
+
+"The Skandinavia's on the move," he cried. And Bat recognised the battle
+note in the tone.
+
+"How?"
+
+Bull flung the message across the desk.
+
+"The Skandinavia's representative is arriving on the _Myra_," he said.
+Then he added, "Elas Peterman says so."
+
+"What for?"
+
+Bat had picked up the message and stood reading it.
+
+The other searched amongst his papers.
+
+"I kind of forgot putting you wise before," he said. "There were two
+letters came along a week back. One was from Elas Peterman, of the
+Skandinavia folk, and the other from Father Adam. That message was
+'phoned on from the headland. The letters didn't just concern a deal, so
+I set 'em aside. This message is different."
+
+For the moment the affairs down at the recreation room were forgotten,
+and Bat contented himself with the interest of the moment.
+
+"How?" he demanded again in his sharp way.
+
+Bull laughed.
+
+"Here," he cried, holding out the letters he had found. "I best pass you
+these. That's from Peterman. There's not much written, but a deal lies
+under the writing. You'll see he asks permission for a representative of
+the Skandinavia to wait on us. I wirelessed back, 'I'd just love to
+death meeting him.' By the same mail came Father Adam's yarn. An' I
+guess that's where the soup thickens. He says some woman's coming along
+from the Skandinavia folk. He guesses they're going to put up some
+proposition that looks like butting in on the plans laid out for
+Sachigo. But that don't seem to worry him a thing. I guess his letter
+wasn't written to hand us warning. He seems concerned for the woman.
+You'll see. He asks me to treat her gently. Firmly, yes. But also,
+'very, very gently.' He says, 'you see, she's a woman'."
+
+Bull waited while the other perused both letters. Then, as Bat looked up
+questioningly, he went on:
+
+"That telegram got here half an hour back," he said. Then he shrugged.
+"The woman's on the _Myra_, and the vessel's been sighted off the
+headland. She'll be along in two hours."
+
+"And what're you doin' about it?"
+
+Bat's eyes were searching. Perhaps Father Adam's letter had told him
+something it had failed to tell the other.
+
+"I'll see her right away," Bull laughed. "If she feels like stopping
+around and getting a sight of the things we're doin' she's welcome. She
+can put up at the visitor's house. It 'ud do me good for her to pass the
+news on to the folk she comes from."
+
+But Bat's manner had none of the light confidence of the other. Bitter
+hatred of the Skandinavia was deeply ingrained in him. He shook his
+head.
+
+"Keep 'em guessin'," he said. "It'll worry 'em--that way."
+
+Then he passed the letters back, and dropped into the chair that was
+always his.
+
+"But this woman," he went on, in obvious puzzlement. "It's--it's kind of
+new, I guess. Then there's Father Adam's message. That don't hand us
+much."
+
+Bull's lightness passed.
+
+"No," he said, "that message is queer. He knows about it. Yet he hasn't
+given her name or said a thing. Say--I like that phrase though. What is
+it? He says, 'treat her very, very gently--you see, she's a woman.'
+That's Father Adam right thro'--sure. But--well it's a pity he don't say
+more."
+
+Bat nodded.
+
+"You'll go along down an' meet her?"
+
+"No." Bull shook his head decidedly. "You will."
+
+Bat's eyes twinkled with a better humour than they had hitherto
+displayed.
+
+"Why--me?"
+
+"She comes from the Skandinavia. Guess Skandinavia would fancy me
+meeting their representative at the quay--quite a lot."
+
+The argument met with Bat's entire approval. He pulled out a silver
+timepiece and consulted it.
+
+"That's all right," he said, "I'll quit you in ha'f an hour. Say--I'm
+kind of guessin' there's other representatives of the Skandinavia
+around. I didn't guess ther' was much to Sachigo that I wasn't wise to.
+But that boy, Skert Lawton, showed me a play I hadn't a notion about.
+It's that darn play shanty I set up for the boys. I feel that mad about
+it I got a notion closing it right down. It worried me startin' it. It
+worries me more now. You see, I guess it's come of me lappin' up the
+ha'f-baked notions you find wrote in the news-sheets. Folks seem to be
+guessin' the worker needs somethin' more than his wage. They guess he's
+gotten some sort of queer soul needin' things he can't pay for. I allow
+I hadn't seen it that way myself. It mostly seemed to me a hell of a
+good wage and a full belly was mostly the need of a lumber-jack, and a
+dead sure thing all he deserved. But I fell for the news-sheet dope, an'
+set up that cursed recreation shanty. Now we're goin' to git trouble."
+
+"How?"
+
+Bull's ejaculation was sharp.
+
+"They hold meetings there. They dope out Capital and Labour stuff there,
+instead of pushing games at each other. Guess they got the bug of
+politics an' are scratching themselves bad. It ain't the old Labrador
+guys, Skert says. It's mostly new hands passin' their stuff on. Skert
+reckons we got a whole heap of the Skandinavia 'throw-outs,' around here
+now. That don't say Skandinavia's workin' monkey tricks. Though they
+might be. You see, this sort of dope's been talked most everywhere,
+except on Labrador, years now. I guess we need to go through the bunch
+with a louse comb. But maybe the mischief's done. I'm dead crazy to
+shut that darn place down."
+
+"Don't!" Bull was emphatic. "Shut it down and you'll make it a thousand
+times worse. No, sir. Let 'em shout. Let 'em blow off any old steam they
+need. Just sit tight. If it's the usual hot air there's nothing much
+coming of it up here on Labrador. There's this to remember. We're a
+thousand miles of hell's own winter, and a pretty tough sea, from the
+politicians who spend their lives befooling a crowd of unthinking
+muttons. Pay 'em well, and feed 'em well, and they've the horse sense to
+know there ain't no electric stoves out in the Labrador forests in
+winter. That way we don't need to worry. If it's the Skandinavia tricks
+it's different. They'll play the game to the finish. It don't signify a
+curse if you close down the recreation shanty or not. We've got to meet
+it as a competition, and fight it the way we'd fight any other."
+
+Bat's eyes snapped.
+
+"That's the kind of dope Skert Lawton's handed me," he protested.
+
+"And Skert's a wise guy," came the prompt retort.
+
+Quite suddenly Bat flung out his gnarled hands.
+
+"Hell!" he cried violently. "Have we got to sit around like mush-men,
+while the rats are chawin' our vitals. Fifteen or sixteen year I've
+handled this lay-out without a growl I couldn't kick plumb out o' the
+feller who made it. Now--now, because of a fool play I made, I've got to
+set the kid gloves on my hands, sayin' 'thank you,' while the boys git
+up and plug me between the eyes. No, sir. It ain't my way. It's me for
+the shot gun in the stern of the gopher all the time. It's me to mush up
+the features of any hoboe who don't know better than to grin when I'm
+throwin' the hot air. I can't stand for the politics of labour where I
+hand out the wage. A man's a man to me, not one darn slobber of policy.
+I'm goin' to jump in on that talk. And when I'm thro'--"
+
+"You'll get all the trouble in the world plumb on your neck." Bull's
+fine eyes were alight with humour. He revelled in the fighting spirit of
+the older man. "Here, Bat," he cried, "I'm a fool kid beside you. I
+don't begin to know my job when I think of you. But I'm up sides with
+all the politics games. Politics are ideals, notions. They haven't real
+horse sense within a mile. They're just the fool thoughts of folk who
+haven't better to do than sit around and think, and talk, an' see how
+they can make other folk conform to the things they think. That's all
+right. It's human nature in its biggest conceit, or it's another way of
+helping themselves without pushing a shovel. It don't matter which it
+is. But what I want to impress on you is, it's the biggest thing in
+life. It's the whole thing in life. Get a notion and think it hard
+enough, and talk it hard enough, and you'll hypnotise a hundred brains
+bigger than your own, and sweep the crowd with you. You'll even
+hypnotise yourself into believing the truth of a thing your better sense
+knows isn't true, never was true, an' couldn't be true anyway. And when
+you're fixed that way you'll die for your notion. Oh, a politician ain't
+yearning for any old grave. He wouldn't get an audience there.
+Politicians 'ud hate to die worse than a condemned man. But that's the
+queer of it; he'd die rather than give up a notion he's built up. He'd
+hate to death to push a blue pencil through it and--try again. All of
+which means, bar the doors of this recreation room parliament, and
+you'll start up a hundred such parliaments, and worse, throughout your
+enterprise here on Labrador, and you'll finish by wrecking the whole
+blessed concern."
+
+If Bull looked for yielding he was disappointed. But he appreciated the
+twinkle that had crept into the lumberman's stern eyes. The answer he
+received was a curiously expressive grunt as the man took out his
+timepiece and consulted it. When he saw him rise abruptly from his
+chair, Bull felt that if his talk had not had the effect he desired it
+had not been wholly wasted.
+
+"Guess I'll git goin'," Bat said shortly. Then he glanced out of the
+window, where he could plainly see the stream of the _Myra's_ smoke as
+she came down the cove. "I'll bring your lady friend right up. Maybe
+she'll fancy the dope, which I 'low you can hand out good an' plenty."
+
+With this parting shot he hurried from the room, and Bull fancied he
+detected the sound of a chuckle as the man departed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+AN AFFAIR OF OUTPOSTS
+
+
+The business of making fast the vessel had no interest for Nancy
+McDonald. The thing that was about her, the thing that had leapt at her
+out of the haze hanging over the waters of Farewell Cove, as the _Myra_
+steamed to her haven, pre-occupied her to the exclusion of everything
+else. Her feelings were something of those of the explorer suddenly
+coming upon a new, unguessed world.
+
+"Old Man" Hardy was at her side, waiting for the adjustment of the
+gangway. He was quietly observing her with a sense of enjoyment at the
+obvious surprise and interest she displayed. Besides, her beauty charmed
+him for all his years. And then had she not been entrusted to his
+especial care by those people who held powerful influence in all
+concerning the coastal trade upon which he was engaged?
+
+Sachigo was not only a mill. It was a--city. This was the sum of Nancy's
+astonishing discovery. And the picture of it held her fascinated. She
+commented little, she had questioned little of the old skipper at her
+elbow. The thing she saw was too overwhelming. Besides, reticence was
+impressed upon her by the nature of her visit.
+
+"It's a mighty elegant place," the seaman said at last.
+
+The girl nodded. Then she smiled.
+
+"I've seen trolley cars on the seashore. I've seen electric standards
+for lighting. What am I to see next on--Labrador?" she asked.
+
+Captain Hardy laughed.
+
+"You've to see the folks who've done it all," he replied. "And--there's
+one of 'em."
+
+He indicated the squat figure of Bat Harker leaning against some bales
+piled on the quay. Nancy turned in that direction.
+
+She discovered the rough-clad, almost uncouth figure of Bat. She noted
+his moving jaws as he chewed vigorously. She saw that a short stubble of
+beard was growing on a normally clean-shaven face, and that the man's
+clothing might have been the clothing of any labourer. But the iron cast
+of his face left her with sudden qualms. It was so hard. To her
+imagination it suggested complete failure for her mission.
+
+"Is he the--owner? Is he--Mr. Sternford?" Her questions came in a hushed
+tone that was almost awed.
+
+"No. That's Bat--Bat Harker. He's mill-boss."
+
+"I see." There was relief in Nancy's tone. But it passed as the seaman
+continued.
+
+"Maybe he's waiting for you though. Are they wise you're coming along?
+You don't see Bat around this quay without he's lookin' for some folk to
+come along on the _Myra_."
+
+The gangway clattered out on to the quay, and the man moved toward it.
+
+"We best get ashore," he said. "You see, mam, my orders are to pass you
+over to the folks waiting for you. That'll be--Bat. He'll pass you on
+to Sternford. I take it you'll sleep aboard to-night. Your stateroom's
+booked that way. We sail to-morrow sundown, which will give you plenty
+time looking around if you fancy that way. I allow Sachigo's worth it.
+One day it'll be a big city, if I'm a judge. Will you step this way?"
+
+The seaman's deference was obvious. But Nancy remained oblivious to it.
+To her it was just kindliness, and she was more than grateful. But his
+final remark about Sachigo left her pathetically disquieted. For the
+first time in her life she doubted the all-powerful position of the
+people to whom she had sold her services.
+
+"Yes, thanks," she returned, smiling to disguise her feelings. Then she
+added, "I'm glad we don't sail till to-morrow evening. You see, I
+couldn't leave--this, without a big look around."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The ship-master had hurried away.
+
+Bat's deep-set eyes were steadily regarding the beautiful face before
+him. He was gazing into the hazel depths of Nancy's eyes without a sign.
+He had noted everything as the girl had come down the gangway. The
+height, the graceful carriage in the long plucked-beaver coat which
+terminated just above the trim ankles in their silken, almost
+transparent, hose. Not even at Captain Hardy's pronouncement of her name
+had he yielded a sign. And yet--
+
+"Miss--Nancy McDonald?"
+
+Bat's tone had lost its usual roughness. His mind had leapt back over
+many years to a time when he had been concerned for that name in a way
+that had stirred him to great warmth. He smiled. It was a baffling,
+somewhat derisive smile.
+
+"You're the lady representing the--Skandinavia?" he added.
+
+"Why, yes," Nancy cried, "and I feel I want to thank you for the
+privilege of obtaining even an outside view of your wonderful, wonderful
+place here."
+
+Bat raked thoughtfully at the stubble on his chin.
+
+"If you feel that way, Miss, it'll hand me pleasure to show you and tell
+you about things," he said. "You come right out of what the folks around
+here like to call the enemy camp, but it don't matter a little bit. Not
+a little bit. The whole of Sachigo's standin' wide open for you to walk
+through." Then he dashed his hand across his face to clear the voracious
+mosquitoes. "But if we stop around here mor'n ha'f another minute, the
+memory you'll mostly carry away with you from Labrador'll be
+skitters--an' nothing much else. Will you come right along up to Mr.
+Sternford's office? It's quite a piece up the hill, which helps to keep
+it clear of skitters an' things?"
+
+Nancy laughed. Her early impression of the super-lumberjack had passed.
+The man's smile was beyond words in its kindliness. His deep, twinkling
+eyes were full of appeal.
+
+"Why, surely," she assented. "If you'll show me the way I'll be glad.
+The flies and things are certainly thick, and as I intend leaving
+Sachigo with happy memories, well--"
+
+"Come right along. I'm here for just that purpose."
+
+As they made their way up the woodland trail they talked together with
+an easy intimacy. Nancy was young. She was full of the joy of life, full
+of real enthusiasm. And this rough creature with his ready smile
+appealed to her. His frank, open way was something so far removed from
+that which prevailed under the Skandinavia's rule.
+
+For Bat, the walk up from the quayside was one of the many milestones in
+his chequered life. He talked readily. He listened, too. But under it
+all his thought was busy. The mystery of Father Adam's letter was no
+longer a mystery. He understood. But he was also puzzled. How had this
+thing come about? How had Father Adam learned of this visit? How had
+this girl become representative of the Skandinavia? A hundred questions
+flashed through his mind, for none of which he could find a satisfactory
+answer. But he smiled to himself as he thought of that last line in
+Father Adam's letter. "Treat her gently--firmly, yes--but very gently.
+You see, she's a--woman."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was a moment likely to live with both in the years to come. For Nancy
+it was at least the final stage of her apprenticeship, the passing of
+the portal beyond which opened out the world she so completely desired
+to take her place in. Did it not mean the moment of shouldering the
+great burden of responsibility she had so steadfastly trained herself to
+bear? For Bull Sternford it had no such meaning. His powers had long
+since been tested. As a meeting with the representative of a rival
+enterprise it was merely an incident in the life to which he had become
+completely accustomed. Its significance lay in quite another direction.
+
+Bat had taken his departure. He had witnessed the meeting of Nancy with
+this protege Father Adam had sent him from the dark world of the
+forests. And his witness of it had been with twinkling eyes, and the
+happy sense of an amusement he had never looked to discover in the
+presence of a representative of the Skandinavia. In an unexpressed
+fashion he realised he was gazing upon something in the nature of a
+stage play.
+
+He had found Bull transformed. The office suit was gone. The man's hair
+was carefully brushed. He even suspected the liberal use of soap and
+water. And then, too, the heavy, rough boots had given place to shining
+patent leather. The youth and human nature of it pleased him. So he had
+departed to the workshops below with a voiceless chuckle, and a greater
+appreciation of the inevitability of the things of life.
+
+Apart from Nancy's appreciation of that meeting, the woman in her sought
+to appraise the man she beheld. Her impression was far deeper than she
+knew. The height and muscular girth she beheld left her with a feeling
+that she was gazing upon one of the pictures her school-girl mind had
+created for the great men of Greek and Roman history. The clean-shaven,
+clear-cut face, with its fine eyes and broad brow, its purposeful mouth;
+these were details that had to be there, and were there. And somehow, as
+she realised them, and the sense of the man's power and personality
+forced itself upon her, her original confidence still further lessened,
+and she wondered not a little anxiously as to the outcome of this
+interview she had sought.
+
+As for the man, his eyes had calmly smiled his spoken greeting. His
+handshake had been conventionally firm. But behind the mask of it all
+was one great surge of feeling. The vision of a beautiful, fur-coated
+figure, with the peeping lure of pretty ankles, the warm cap pressed low
+on the girl's head as though endeavouring to hide up the radiant framing
+of the sweetest, most beautiful face he felt he had ever seen, dealt all
+his preconceived purpose for the interview one final, smashing blow.
+
+"I'm real glad to welcome you to Sachigo," he had begun. Then in a
+moment, the conventional gave place to the man in him. "But say," he
+added with a pleasant laugh, "we've a big piece of talk to make. You
+best let me help you remove that coat. The stove we always need to keep
+going here on Labrador makes this shanty hot as--very hot."
+
+The manner of it sent convention, caution, business pose, scattering to
+the winds. The girl laughed and yielded.
+
+"Why, thanks," she said readily. "I'm glad you reckon we're to make a
+big talk. You see," she added slyly, "I've been looking out of the
+window, and there's quite a drop below. Up to now I felt my fur
+might--be useful."
+
+Bull laughed as he laid the coat aside. He had drawn up a comfortable
+lounging chair which Nancy was prompt to accept. For himself he stood at
+the window.
+
+"Why, yes." He smiled. "I'd say it's a wise general who looks to his
+retreat before the encounter. I'd sort of half forgotten you come from
+the--Skandinavia."
+
+"But I hadn't."
+
+"No."
+
+They both laughed. Nancy leant back in her chair. Her pose was all
+unconscious. She had toiled hard to keep pace with the sturdy gait of
+Bat in the ascent from the quay. Now she was glad of the ease the chair
+afforded.
+
+"Why did you say that?" Nancy asked a moment later.
+
+Bull spread out his great hands.
+
+"The Skandinavia don't usually let folks forget they're behind them."
+
+"Now that's just too bad. It--it isn't generous," the girl said half
+seriously.
+
+"Isn't it?"
+
+Bull left the window and took the chair that was usually Bat's. He set
+it so that he could feast his eyes on the beauty he found so
+irresistible.
+
+"You see," he went on, "I've got a right to say that all the same. It's
+not the--the challenge of a--what'll I say--competitor? I once had the
+honour of drawing a few bucks a month on the paysheets of the
+Skandinavia. And folks reckoned, and I guess I was amongst 'em, that
+Skandinavia said to its people: 'Make good or--beat it.' That being so
+it makes it a sure thing they're not liable to leave you forgetting
+who's behind you."
+
+His smile had gone. He was simply serious. This man had worked for her
+people, and Nancy felt he was entitled to his opinion.
+
+"That's going to make my talk harder," she said. "I'm sorry. But there,"
+she went on. "It doesn't really matter, does it? Anyway I want to tell
+you right away of the craze the sight of your splendid Sachigo has
+started buzzing in my head. Say, Mr. Sternford, it beats anything I ever
+dreamed, and I want to say that there's no one in the Skandinavia, from
+Mr. Peterman downwards, has the littlest notion of it. It's not a mill.
+It's a world of real, civilised enterprise. And it's set here where
+you'd look for the roughest of forest life. I just had no idea."
+
+It was all said spontaneously. And the pleasure it gave was obvious in
+the man's eyes. He nodded.
+
+"Yes," he said. "The construction of this mill, here on Labrador, isn't
+short of genius by a yard. And the genius of it lies where you won't
+guess."
+
+Nancy's pretty eyes were mildly searching.
+
+"You're the head of Sachigo," she suggested.
+
+Bull's eyes lit.
+
+"Sure," he cried, "an' I'm mighty proud that's so. But I'm not the
+genius of this great mill. No. That grizzled, tough old lumberman who
+toted you along up from the quayside is the brain of this organisation.
+He's a--wonder. There's times I want to laff when I think of it. There's
+times I'm most ready to cry. You see, you don't know that great feller.
+I'm just beginning to guess I do. He's a heart as big as a house, and
+the manner to scare a 'hold-up.' He's the grit of a reg'ment of soldiers
+and the mutton softness of a kid girl. He's the brain of a Solomon, and
+the illiteracy of a one day school kid. He's all those things, and he's
+the biggest proposition in men I've ever heard tell about. It's kind of
+tough. Don't you feel that way? He'll suck a pint of tobacco juice in
+the day, and blaspheme till your ears get on edge. And while your folks
+are guessing he'll put through a proposition that 'ud leave ha'f the
+world gasping."
+
+Nancy stirred. This man's whole-hearted appreciation of another was
+something rather fine in her simple philosophy. The last thing she had
+contemplated in approaching the head of a rival enterprise was such talk
+as this. But somehow it seemed to fit the man. Somehow as she noted the
+squarely gazing eyes, and the power in every line of his features, she
+realised that whatever lines he chose to talk on, nothing could change
+the decision lying behind it all. She liked him all the better for that,
+and found herself drawing comparison between him and Elas Peterman to
+the latter's detriment.
+
+"I like that," she cried impulsively. Then the colour rose in her cheeks
+at the thought of her temerity. "I guess he's all you say. Maybe some
+day I'll hear his side of things. I'd like to. You see--I felt I'd known
+him years when he brought me in here. Maybe you won't understand what
+that implies."
+
+"I think I do."
+
+Bull stood up from his chair and passed round his desk.
+
+"Here, say, Miss McDonald," he went on, in his keen fashion. "You come
+from Skandinavia. And I guess you come on a pretty stiff proposition.
+It's going to be difficult for you to hand it me. Maybe you're young in
+the game. Well, it doesn't matter a thing. Now we're going to start
+right in talking that proposition, and I'm going to help you. But before
+that starts I just want to say this. You, I guess, are going right back
+on the _Myra_ and she sails to-morrow, sundown. That means you'll stay a
+night in Sachigo--"
+
+"I'm stopping on the vessel. It's all fixed."
+
+Bull sat down at his desk.
+
+"I'm kind of glad," he said, with a shade of relief. "It isn't that you
+aren't welcome to all the old hospitality Sachigo can hand you. You're
+just more than welcome. But Bat hasn't built his swell hotel yet," he
+laughed. "And as for us here, why, we 'batch' it. There isn't a thing in
+skirts around this place, only a Chink cook, a half-breed secretary, and
+a clerk or two, and a bum sort of decrepit lumber-jack who does my
+chores. So you see I'm--kind of relieved. Anyway you sleeping on the
+_Myra_ makes it easy. Now there's a mighty big conceit to me, and it's
+all for this mill in our country's wilderness. And I just can't let you
+quit to-morrow night without showing you all it means. You've simply got
+to see the thing that's going to make the whole world's groundwood trade
+holler before we're through. You're my prisoner until you've seen the
+things I'm going to show you. Is it anyway agreeable?"
+
+Nancy smiled delightedly.
+
+"You couldn't drive me out of Sachigo till I've peeked into all your
+secrets down there," she said.
+
+Bull leant forward with his arms outspread across the desk.
+
+"Great!" he cried. "And," he added, "you shall see them all. The things
+I can't show you Bat will. And if I'm a judge that old rascal'll be
+tickled to death handing his dope out to you. But--let's get to
+business."
+
+Nancy sat up. In a moment all ease was banished. She knew the great
+moment had come when she must prove herself to those who had entrusted
+her with her mission.
+
+"Yes," she said, almost hurriedly. "I don't know the word Mr. Peterman
+sent you. And anyway it doesn't matter. I must put things my way. You
+are a great enterprise here. We are a great enterprise. It looks to us a
+pretty tough clash is bound to come between us in the near future,
+and--there should be no necessity for it. There's room--plenty of
+room--for both of us in our trade--"
+
+She paused. The keen eyes of Bull were closely observing. He realised
+her attitude. Her words and tone were almost mechanical, as though she
+had schooled herself and rehearsed her lesson. And her voice was not
+quite steady. He jumped in with the swift impulse of a man whose rivalry
+could not withstand that sign of a beautiful girl's distress.
+
+"Here," he cried, with that command so natural to him. "Just don't say
+another word. Let me talk. I guess I can tell you the things it's up to
+you to hand me. It'll save you a deal, and it'll hand me a chance to
+blow off the hot air that's mostly my way. This is the position.
+Peterman's wise to the things doing right here. The Skandinavia's up
+against years of cutting on the Shagaunty. The Shagaunty's played right
+out. You folks have got to open new stuff. It's my job to know all this.
+Very well. As I said, Peterman's at last got wise to us. He knows we
+look like flooding the market, and jumping right in on him. So--you're a
+mighty wealthy corporation--he figures to recognise us, and embrace
+us--with a business arrangement. That so?"
+
+"Yes. A business arrangement."
+
+The girl's relief was almost pathetic. Bull smiled.
+
+"That's so. A business arrangement. Should I entertain one, eh? That's
+the question you're right here to ask. And you want to take back my
+answer." He paused. "Well, you're going to take back my answer. And I
+kind of feel it's the answer you'll like taking back. Say, Miss
+McDonald, I'm only a youngster, myself, but I guess I know what it means
+to set out on a work hoping and yearning to make good. Will it make good
+for you to go back to Elas Peterman and say the feller at Sachigo is
+coming right along down by the _Myra_ to-morrow, and would be pleased to
+death to talk this proposition right out in the offices of the
+Skandinavia? Will it?"
+
+Nancy's eyes lit. Their hazel depths were wells of thankfulness.
+
+"Why, surely," she said. "You mean you're going to sail to-morrow?"
+
+Bull laughed and his laugh was infectious. The girl was smiling her
+delight.
+
+"That's so. I need to cross the Atlantic. I wasn't going till the
+_Myra's_ next trip. I'll go to-morrow an' stop over in Quebec to see
+your people. It just means hurrying my choreman packing my stuff while I
+show you around to-morrow. That kind of fixes things, and if you'll hand
+me that pleasure I'd just love to show you around some this afternoon.
+There's a heap to see, and I don't fancy you missing any of it." He
+passed round the desk, and picked up the girl's coat and held it out
+invitingly. "Will you come right along?"
+
+There was no denying him. Nancy looked up into his smiling eyes. She
+felt there was a lot she wanted to say, ought to say, on the business
+matter in hand. But it was impossible. And in her heart she was
+thankful.
+
+"Why, I'd just love to," she said, and stood up from her chair.
+
+Very tenderly, very carefully the man's hands helped her into her coat.
+And somehow Nancy was very glad the hands were big, and strong,
+and--yes--clumsy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+ON THE OPEN SEA
+
+
+The _Myra_ laboured heavily. With every rise and fall of her high bows a
+whipping spray lashed the faces of those on deck. The bitter
+north-easterly gale churned the ocean into a white fury, and the sky was
+a-race with leaden masses of cloud. There was no break anywhere. Sky and
+sea alike were fiercely threatening, and the wind howled through the
+vessel's top gear.
+
+Bull Sternford had been sharing the storm with the sturdy skipper on
+the bridge. He had been listening to the old man's talk of fierce
+experience on the coast of Labrador. It had all been interesting to the
+landsman in view of the present storm, but at last he could no longer
+endure the exposure of the shelterless bridge.
+
+"It's me for the deck and a sheltered corner," he finally declared,
+preparing to pass down the iron "companion."
+
+And the Captain grinned.
+
+"I don't blame you," he bellowed in the shriek of the gale. "But I guess
+I'd as lief have it this way. It's better than a flat sea an' fog, which
+is mostly the alternative this time o' year. The Atlantic don't offer
+much choice about now. She's like a shrew woman. Her smile ain't ever
+easy. An' when you get it you've most always got to pay good. She can
+blow herself sick with this homeward bound breeze for all I care."
+
+"That's all right," Bull shouted back at him. "Guess you've lost your
+sense of the ease of things working this coast so long. It 'ud be me for
+the flat sea and fog all the time. I like my chances taken standing
+square on two feet. So long."
+
+He passed below, beating his hands for warmth. And as he went he glanced
+back at the sturdy, oil-skinned figure clinging to the rail of the
+bridge. The man's far-off gaze was fixed on the storm-swept sky, reading
+every sign with the intimate knowledge of long years of experience. It
+was a reassuring figure that must have put heart into the veriest
+weakling. But Bull Sternford needed no such support. In matters of life
+and death he was without emotion.
+
+He scrambled his way to the leeward side of the engines where a certain
+warmth and shelter was to be had, and where a number of hardly tested
+deck chairs were securely lashed. It was the resting place of those few
+beset passengers who could endure no longer the indifferent, odorous
+accommodation of the _Myra's_ saloon. Only one chair was occupied. For
+the rest the deck was completely deserted.
+
+Bull's first glance at the solitary passenger was sufficient. The gleam
+of red hair under the fur cap told him all he wanted to know, and he
+groped his way along the slippery deck, and deposited his bulk safely
+into the chair beside Nancy McDonald.
+
+"Say," he cried, with a cheerful grin, as he struggled with his rug,
+"this sort of thing's just about calculated to leave a feller feeling
+sympathy with the boy who hasn't more sense than to spend his time
+trying to climb outside more Rye whisky than he was built to hold. It
+makes you wonder at the fool thing that lies back of it all. I mean the
+fuss going on out yonder."
+
+Nancy smiled round from amidst her furs.
+
+"It does seem like useless mischief," she agreed readily. Then she
+laughed outright. "But to see you crawling along the deck just now,
+grabbing any old thing for support, and often missing it, was a sight to
+leave one wondering how much dignity owes to personality, and how much
+to environment. Guess environment's an easy win."
+
+"Did I look so darn foolish?"
+
+Bull's eyes were smiling, and Nancy laughed again.
+
+"Just about as foolish as that fellow with the Rye whisky you were
+talking about."
+
+The man settled himself comfortably.
+
+"That's tough. And I guess I was doing my best, too. Say," he went on
+with a laugh, "just look at those flapping sea-gulls, or whatever they
+are out there. Makes you wonder to see 'em racing along over this fool
+waste of water. Look at 'em fighting, struggling, and using up a whole
+heap of good energy to keep level with this old tub. You know they've
+only to turn away westward to find land and shelter where they could
+build nests and make things mighty comfortable for themselves. I don't
+get it. You know it seems to me Nature got in a bad muss handing out
+ordinary sense. I'd say She never heard of a card index. Maybe Her
+bookkeeper was a drunken guy who didn't know a ledger from a scrap book.
+Now if She'd engaged you an' me to keep tab of things for Her, we'd have
+done a deal better. Those poor blamed sea-gulls, or whatever they are,
+would have been squatting around on elegant beds of moulted feathers,
+laid out on steam-heat radiators, feeding on oyster cocktails and
+things, and handing out the instructive dope of a highbrow politician
+working up a press reputation, and learning their kids the decent habits
+of folk who're yearning to keep out of penitentiary as long as the
+police'll let 'em. No. It's no use. Nature got busy. Look at the result.
+Those fool birds'll follow us till they're tired, in the hope that some
+guy'll dump the contents of the _Myra's_ swill barrel their way. Then
+they'll have one disgusting orgy on the things other folks don't fancy,
+and start right in to fly again to ease their digestions. It's a crazy
+game anyway. And it leaves me with a mighty big slump in Nature's
+stock."
+
+Nancy listened delightedly to the man's pleasant fooling.
+
+"It's worse than that," she cried, falling in with his humour. "Look at
+some of them taking a rest, swimming about in that terribly cold water.
+Ugh! No, if we'd fixed their sense we'd have made it so they'd have had
+enough to get on dry land, like any other reasonable folk yearning for a
+rest."
+
+The man studied the girl's pretty profile, and a great sense of regret
+stirred him that the Skandinavia had been able to buy her services. What
+a perfect creature to have been supported by in the work he was engaged
+on.
+
+"That sounds good," he said. "Reasonable folks!" He shook his head.
+"Nature again. Guess we're all reasonable till we're found out. No. Even
+the greatest men and women on earth are fools at heart, you know."
+
+The girl sat up as the vessel lurched more heavily and flung their
+chairs forward, straining dangerously.
+
+"How?" she questioned, glancing down anxiously at the moorings of her
+chair.
+
+"They're safe--so far," Bull reassured her. Then he leant back again,
+and produced and lit a cigar. "Guess I'll smoke," he said. "Maybe
+that'll help me tell you--'how.'"
+
+The girl watched him light his cigar and her eyes were full of laughter.
+
+"It's a real pity women can't sit themselves behind a cigar," she said
+at last, with a pretence of regret. "It's the wisest looking thing a man
+does. A cigarette kind of makes him seem pleasantly undependable. A pipe
+makes you feel he's full of just everyday notions. But a cigar! My! It
+sort of dazzles me when I see a man with a big cigar. I feel like a
+lowgrade earthworm, don't you know. Say," she cried, with an
+indescribable gesture of her gloved hands, "he handles that cigar, he
+sort of fondles it. He cocks it. He depresses it. He rolls it across his
+lips to the opposite corner of his mouth, and finally blows a thin,
+thoughtful stream of smoke gently between his pursed lips. And that
+stream is immeasurable in its suggestion of wise thought and keen
+calculation. I'd say a man's cigar is his best disguise."
+
+Bull nodded.
+
+"That's fine," he cried. "But you've forgotten the other feller. The man
+who 'chews.'"
+
+Nancy laughed happily.
+
+"Easy," she cried promptly. "When he of the bulged cheek gets around
+just watch your defences. He's mostly tough. He's on the jump, and
+hasn't much fancy for the decencies of life. The harder he chews the
+more he's figgering up his adversary. And when he spits, get your
+weapons ready. When the chewing man succeeds in life I guess he's
+dangerous. And it's because his force and character have generally
+lifted him from the bottom of things."
+
+Bull shook his head in mock despair.
+
+Nancy settled herself back in her chair.
+
+"That's fixed it. Guess you'll need to tell _me_ 'how.'"
+
+"No, sir," she cried. "You can't go back. 'The greatest men and women in
+the world are fools at heart.' That's what you said."
+
+"Yes. I seem to remember."
+
+The man stirred and sat up. He folded the rug more closely about his
+feet. Then he turned with a whimsical smile in his eyes.
+
+"Well?" he cried. "And isn't it so? What do we work, and fight, and hate
+for? What do we spend our lives worrying to beat the other feller for?
+Why do we set our noses into other folks' affairs and worry them to
+death to think, and act, and feel the way we do? And all the while it
+don't matter a thing. Of course we're fools. We'll hand over when the
+time comes, and the old world'll roll on, and it's not been shifted a
+hair's-breadth for our having lived, in spite of the obituaries the
+news-sheets hand out like a Sunday School mam at prize time. Say, here,
+it's no use fooling ourselves. Life's one great big thing that don't
+take shape by reason of our acts. What's the civilisation we love to pat
+ourselves on the back for? I'll tell you. It's just a thing we've
+invented, like--wireless telegraphy, or soap, or steam-heat; and it
+hands us a cloak to cover up the evil that man and woman'll never quit
+doing. Before we made civilisation a feller got up on to his hind legs
+and hit the other feller over the head with a club; and if he was hungry
+he used him as a lunch. Now we don't do that. We break him for his
+dollars and leave him and his poor wife and kids hungry, while we buy a
+lunch with the stuff we beat out of him. Why do we work? For one of two
+elegant notions. It's either to fill ourselves up with the things we've
+dreamt about when appetite was sharp set, and hate to death when we get,
+or it's to satisfy a conceit that leaves us hoping and believing the
+rest of the world'll hand us an epitaph like it handed no other feller
+since ever it got to be a habit burying up the garbage death produces.
+Why do we fight and hate? Because we're poor darn fools that don't know
+better, and don't know the easy thing life would be without those
+things. And as for settin' our noses into the affairs of other folk,
+that's mostly disease. But it isn't all. No, sir. There's more to it
+than that," he laughed. "If it was just disease it wouldn't matter a
+lot, but it isn't. There isn't a fool man or woman born into this world
+that doesn't reckon he or she can put right the fool notions and acts of
+other fools. And when the other feller persuades them the game's not the
+one-sided racket they guessed it was, then they get mad, and start
+groping and scheming how to boost their notions on to a world that's
+spent a whole heap of time fixing things, mostly foolish, to its own
+mighty good satisfaction. I say right here we're fools if we aren't
+crooks, which is the exception. There's a dandy world around us full of
+sun to warm us and food to eat, and birds to sing to us, and flowers and
+things to make us feel good. If we needed more I guess Providence would
+have handed it out. But it didn't. And so we got busy with our own
+notions till we've turned God's elegant creation into a home for crazes
+and cranks. I could almost fancy the Archangels hovering around, like
+those silly sea-gulls, with a bunch of straight-jackets to wrap about us
+when we jump the limit they figger we've a right to. Fools, yes? Why, I
+guess so--sure."
+
+Nancy breathed a deep sigh.
+
+"My, but that's a big say."
+
+Then she broke into a laugh which found prompt response in the other. It
+was cut short, however. A sea thundered against the staunch side of the
+vessel and left her staggering. The girl's eyes became seriously
+anxious. The straining chairs held, and presently the deck swung up to a
+comparative level.
+
+"I had visions of the--"
+
+"Scuppers?" Bull laughed. "Yes. That sea's one of the elegant things
+Providence handed out for our happiness."
+
+Nancy nodded.
+
+"So man built things like the _Myra_, which, of course, was--foolish?"
+
+"An' set out sailing around in a winter storm off Labrador, instead of
+basking in a pleasant tropical sun, which hasn't any--sense."
+
+Bull chuckled.
+
+"All because two mighty fine enterprises reckoned they'd common
+interests which were jeopardised by rivalry, which was also--foolishly?"
+
+Bull's cigar ash tumbled into his lap.
+
+"But not ha'f so foolish as the notion that a girl has to suffer the
+worries and dangers of one hell of a trip on the worst sea that God ever
+made to try and square the things between them."
+
+Nancy shook her head.
+
+"I can't grant that," she cried quickly.
+
+"No?"
+
+"I mean--oh, psha! Don't you see, or does your cynical philosophy blind
+you? We're fools, maybe. The things Providence sends us aren't the
+things we've got a notion for. Maybe we know better than Providence, and
+can't find happiness in the things it's handed us. What then? As you
+say, we start right in chasing happiness in the way we fancy. It seems
+to me the only real happiness in life is in doing. Ease, wealth, love,
+all the things folk talk and write about are just dreams of happiness
+that aren't real. Work, achievement, even if it's wrong-headed--that's
+life; that's happiness. That's why I'd say there's nothing foolish in a
+girl putting up with dangers and discomforts to bring two enterprises to
+an understanding, calculated to promote a greater achievement for both.
+It's my little notion of snatching a bunch of happiness for myself."
+
+There was no laughter in Nancy's eyes now. They were quite serious. Her
+words were alive with vehemence. Bull was watching her intently,
+probing, in his searching way, the depths which her hazel eyes hinted
+at. The things she said pleased him. Her tone thrilled him. He wanted
+more.
+
+"I wonder," he said, as he rolled the cigar across his lips in the way
+Nancy had laughingly pointed. "You reckon it's handed you
+happiness--this thing?"
+
+The girl was stirred.
+
+"Surely," she cried. "Later, when things get fixed up between the
+Skandinavia and Sachigo, I'll get a focus of my little share in the
+business of it--the achievement. Then I'll get warm all through with a
+glow of happiness because I--helped it along."
+
+Bull nodded as he watched the rising colour in the perfect cheeks. The
+girl was very, very beautiful.
+
+"Yes, I suppose you will," he said. Then he went on provocatively. "But
+do you guess it's always so? I mean that always happens? Isn't it to do
+with temperament? Now, take the forest-jacks. Do you guess they feel
+happiness in a tree dropped right? Do you guess there's happiness for
+the poor fool who don't know better than to spend his days in a forest
+risking his life boosting logs on the river jamb? Do you guess there's
+any sort of old joy for the feller turned adrift, when he's getting old
+in the tooth, and there's no room for him on the pay roll of the camp,
+in the thought that he _was_ the best axeman the forest ever bred? It
+seems like a crazy sort of happiness that way. Happiness in
+achievement's great while the achieving's going on. But at the finish
+we get right back to Nature. And when that time comes Nature doesn't do
+much to help us out."
+
+Nancy sat up.
+
+"What are you doing? That great Sachigo!" she demanded challengingly.
+"You're building, building one magnificent enterprise. Is there
+happiness in it for you?"
+
+"Sure," Bull admitted frankly. "Oh, yes. But I've no illusions," he
+said. "I don't go back on the things I said. Nature as she dopes out
+life couldn't hand me a hundredth part of the happiness I get that way.
+But when I'm through, like that lumber-jack who's struck off the pay
+roll, how's it going to be with me? A trained mind without the bodily
+ability to thrust on in the game of life. It'll be hell--just hell. The
+one hope is to die in harness. Like the forest-jack who drowns under the
+logs on the river, or who gets up against the other feller's knife in a
+drunken scrap. That way lies happiness. The rest is a sort of passing
+dream with the years of old age for regret."
+
+The girl spread out her hands.
+
+"I can't believe you feel that way," she cried, with something very like
+distress. "Oh, if I had your power, your ability. Why, I'd say there's
+no end to the things you could achieve, not only now, but right through,
+right through that time when you're old in body, but still strong in
+brain. A limited goal for achievement isn't the notion in my foolish
+head. Why, if I'd only the strength to knit socks for the folks who need
+them, there'd still be happiness and to spare. But let's keep to our own
+ground. The forest-jack. I guess you're one big man who employs
+thousands. What of those boys when they're struck off the--pay roll. Is
+there nothing to be achieved that way--nothing to last you to your last
+living moment? Think of their needs. Think of the happiness you could
+hand yourself in handing them comfort and happiness when
+they're--through. It's a thing I've promised myself, if luck ever hands
+me the chance. You've got the pity of their lives. Your words tell that.
+Well?"
+
+The man had forgotten the storm. He had forgotten everything but the
+charm of the girl's hot enthusiasm. And the picture of superlative
+beauty she made in her animation.
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"It's a bully notion," he demurred, "but it's not for me. No. You see,
+I'm just a tough sort of man who's big for a scrap. I haven't patience
+or sympathy for the feller who don't feel the same. You've seen the
+forest boys?"
+
+"I've been through the Shagaunty."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+Bull Sternford's ejaculation was sharp. The problem of Father Adam's
+letter was partially solved.
+
+"Well, I guess you're a woman," he went on. "And I'd like to say right
+here a woman's sympathy is just about the best thing on this old earth.
+That's why I'd like to cry like a kid when I see it going out to the
+things that haven't any sort of excuse for getting it. It's good to hear
+you talk for those boys. It isn't they deserve it, but--as I said,
+you're a woman. Talk it all you fancy, but leave it at talk. Don't let
+it get a holt. Don't waste one moment of your hard earned happiness on
+'em. I was a forest-jack. I know 'em. I know it--the life. And if you
+knew the thing I know you wouldn't harden all up as you listen to the
+things I'm saying:--"
+
+"But--"
+
+Bull flung his cigar away with vicious force.
+
+"Let me say this thing out," he went on. "There's a man in the forest I
+know, every jack knows. He's a feller who sort of lives in the twilight.
+You see, he sort of comes and goes; and no one knows a thing about him,
+except he haunts the forests like a shadow. Well, he's settin' the
+notion you feel into practice--in a way. He's out for the boys. To help
+'em, physically, spiritually, the whole time. They love him. We all love
+him to death. Well, ask him how far he gets. Maybe he'd tell you, and I
+guess his story 'ud break the heart of a stone image. He'll tell
+you--and he speaks the truth--there isn't a thing to be done but heal
+'em, and feed 'em, and just help 'em how you can. The rest's a dream.
+You see, these jacks come from nowhere particular. They take to the
+forests because it's far off; and it's dark, and covers most things up.
+And they go nowhere particular, except it's to the hell waiting on most
+of us if we don't live life the way that's intended for us. No. Quit
+worrying for the forest-jack. Maybe life's going to hand you all sorts
+of queer feelings as you go along. And the good heart that sees
+suffering and injustice is going to ache mighty bad. The forest wasn't
+built for daylight, and the folks living there don't fancy it. And there
+isn't a broom big enough in the world to clean up the muck you'll find
+there."
+
+"You're talking of Father Adam?"
+
+Nancy's interest had redoubled. It had instantly centred itself on the
+man she had met in the Shagaunty forests. The lumber-jacks were
+forgotten.
+
+"Yes." Bull nodded. "Do you know him?" There was eagerness in his
+question.
+
+"I met him on the Shagaunty."
+
+The man had produced a fresh cigar. But the renewed heavy rolling of the
+vessel delayed its lighting. Nancy gazed out to sea in some concern.
+
+"It's getting worse," she said.
+
+Bull struck a match and covered it with both hands.
+
+"It seems that way," he replied indifferently. Then after a moment he
+looked up. His cigar was alight. "He's a great fellow--Father Adam," he
+said reflectively.
+
+"He's just--splendid."
+
+The girl's enthusiasm told Bull something of the thing he wanted to
+know.
+
+"Yes," he said. "He's the best man I know. The world doesn't mean a
+thing to him. Why he's there I don't know, and I guess it's not my
+business anyway. But if God's mercy's to be handed to any human creature
+it seems to me it won't come amiss--Say!"
+
+He broke off, startled. He sat up with a jump. A great gust of wind
+broke down upon the vessel. It came with a shriek that rose in a fierce
+crescendo. His startled eyes were riveted upon a new development in the
+sky. An inky cloud bank was sweeping down upon them out of the
+north-east, and the wind seemed to roar its way out of its very heart.
+
+The vessel heeled over. Again the wind tore at the creaking gear. It was
+a moment of breathless suspense for those seated helplessly looking on.
+Then something crashed. A vast sea beat on the quarter and deluged the
+decks, and the chairs were torn from their moorings.
+
+Bull Sternford was sprawling in the race of water. Nancy, too, was
+hurled floundering in the scuppers. They were flung and beaten, crashing
+about in the swirling sea that swept over the vessel's submerged rail.
+
+Bull struggled furiously. Every muscle was straining with the effort of
+it. A fierce anxiety was in his eyes as he fought his way foot by foot
+towards the saloon companion. The handicap was terrible. There was
+practically no foothold, for the vessel was riding at an angle of
+something like forty-five degrees. Then, too, he had but one hand with
+which to help himself along. The other was supporting the dead-weight of
+the body of the unconscious girl.
+
+At last, breathless and nearly beaten, he reached his goal and clutched
+desperately at the door-casing of the companion. He staggered within.
+And as he did so relief found expression in one fierce exclamation.
+
+"Hell!" he cried. And clambered down, bearing his unconscious burden
+into the safety of the vessel's interior.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+IN QUEBEC
+
+
+It was the final stage of her journey. Nancy was on her way up from the
+docks, where she had left the staunch _Myra_ discharging her cargo.
+
+It was that triumphant return to which she had always looked forward,
+for which she had hoped and prayed. Her work was completed. It had been
+crowned with greater success than she had dared to believe possible. Yet
+her triumph somehow found her unelated, even a shade depressed.
+
+A belated sense of humour battled with her mood. There were moments when
+she wanted to laugh at herself. There were others when she had no such
+desire. So she sat gazing out of the limousine window, as though all her
+interest were in the drab houses lining the way, and the heavy-coated
+pedestrians moving along the sidewalks of the narrow streets through
+which they were passing.
+
+It was winter all right, for all no snow had as yet fallen, and the girl
+felt glad that it was so. It suited her mood.
+
+Once or twice she took a sidelong glance at the man seated beside her;
+but Bull Sternford's mood was no less reticent than her own. Once she
+encountered the glance of his eyes, and it was just as the vehicle
+bumped heavily over the badly paved road.
+
+"We can do better in the way of roads up at Sachigo," he said with a
+belated smile.
+
+"You surely can," Nancy admitted readily. "The roads down here in the
+old town are terrible. This old city of ours could fill pages of
+history. It's got beauties, too, you couldn't find anywhere else in the
+world. But it seems to need most of the things a city needs to make it
+the place we folk reckon it is."
+
+She went on at random.
+
+"Do you always keep an automobile in Quebec?" she asked.
+
+Bull shook his head.
+
+"Hired," he said.
+
+"I see."
+
+Bull's eyes twinkled.
+
+"Yes," he went on, "when I make this old city it's with the purpose of
+driving twenty-four hours work into twelve. An automobile helps that
+way."
+
+"And you're wasting all this time driving me up to my apartments?" Nancy
+smiled. "I'm more indebted than I guessed."
+
+The man's denial was instant.
+
+"No," he said. "Your apartments are about two blocks from the Chateau.
+But tell me, when'll you be through making your report to Peterman?"
+
+Nancy's depression passed. She was caught again in the interest of
+everything.
+
+"Why, to-day--surely," she said. "You see, I want to get word to you
+right away."
+
+Bull nodded.
+
+"That's fine," he said. "It's not my way leaving things lying around
+either. I'll be on the jump to get through before sailing time to that
+little old country across the water. But tell me. That report. After
+it's in you'll have made all the good you reckon to? And then you,
+personally, cut right out of this thing?"
+
+His manner gave no indication of the thing in his mind.
+
+"Oh, yes," Nancy replied happily. "You see, I've bearded you--only
+you've no beard--in your fierce den up in Sachigo. And I've--and you've
+come right down here to Quebec with me to discuss with my people the
+thing they want to discuss with you. They didn't think I--they didn't
+hope that. Maybe I've done better than they expected. Why, when I hand
+the news to Mr. Peterman he'll--he'll--oh, I'm just dying to see his
+face when I tell him."
+
+"You--haven't wired him already?"
+
+"No. The news was too good to send by wire."
+
+For a moment the man contemplated the simple radiant creature beside
+him. She was so transparently happy. And the sight of her happiness
+satisfied him.
+
+"It'll--astonish him, eh?"
+
+"Astonish him?" Nancy laughed. "That doesn't say a thing. I shouldn't
+wonder if he refused to believe me."
+
+"And you'll get--promotion? Promotion--in Skandinavia?"
+
+The girl's eyes sobered on the instant.
+
+"Surely. Why not?"
+
+"Yes. Why not?"
+
+Just for a moment Nancy hesitated. Then her challenge came incisively.
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+But the man smilingly shook his head.
+
+"You want promotion under Peterman--in the Skandinavia?"
+
+Nancy's eyes widened.
+
+"Why shouldn't I? The Skandinavia's everything to me. It ought to be
+everything. Isn't that so? Now, I wonder what you mean?" she went on,
+after the briefest pause. "Are you talking that way just because you are
+a rival concern?" She shook her head. "That's no affair of mine. But
+wait while I tell you. Try and think yourself a young girl without folks
+that count, with a pretty tough world laid out in front of her, and with
+a healthy desire to dress, and eat the same as any other girl of her
+age. She's given a chance in life to make good, to gather round her all
+those things she needs, by--the Skandinavia. Well, how would you feel?
+Wouldn't you want that--promotion? Yes. I want it. I want it with all my
+heart. The Skandinavia gave me my first start. They've been very, very
+good to me. I've big room in my heart for them. Their work's my work all
+the time. I've nothing but gratitude for Mr. Peterman."
+
+"Yes." Bull's smile had passed. He was thinking of Nancy's feeling of
+gratitude towards the Swede--Peterman.
+
+He turned away, and the grey wintry daylight beyond the window seemed to
+absorb him. He was possessed by a mad desire to fling prudence to the
+winds and then and there point out the wrong he felt she was committing
+against the country that had bred her in spending her life in the
+service of these foreigners. But he knew he must refrain. It was not the
+moment. And somehow he felt she was not the girl to listen patiently to
+such ethics as he preached when their force was directed against those
+who claimed her whole loyalty and gratitude.
+
+To Nancy it seemed as though some shadow had arisen between them. She
+was a little troubled at the thing she had said. But somehow she had no
+desire to withdraw a single word of it.
+
+The car had passed out of the old part of the city. And Nancy realised
+it was ascending the great hill where the Chateau Hotel looked out over
+the old citadel and the wide waters of the busy St. Lawrence river. In a
+few minutes the happy companionship of the past few days would be only a
+memory.
+
+It was only a little way to her apartments now. Such a very little way.
+Yes. The porter would be there. He would take her trunks and baggage,
+and then her door would close behind her, and--She remembered that
+moment at which she had awakened to consciousness in this man's strong
+arms in the poor little saloon of the storm-beaten _Myra_. She
+remembered the embracing strength of them, and the way she had thrilled
+under their pressure. It had been all very wonderful.
+
+"Say!"
+
+Bull Sternford had turned back from the window. He was smiling again.
+
+"Yes?" The girl was all eager attention.
+
+"I was wondering," Bull went on. "Maybe you'll' fancy hearing how things
+are fixed after I see Peterman?"
+
+"I'll be ever so glad. There's the 'phone. You can get me most any time
+after business hours. I don't go out much. I--"
+
+Nancy broke off to glance out of the window. The automobile had slowed.
+
+"Why, we're at my place," she cried. And the man fancied he detected
+disappointment in her tone.
+
+The car stopped before the apartment house, and Bull hurled himself at
+the litter of the girl's belongings strewn about their feet. A few
+moments later they were standing together on the sidewalk surrounded by
+the baggage.
+
+Bull gazed up at the building.
+
+"You live here?" he asked at random.
+
+Nancy nodded.
+
+"Yes. It isn't much. But some day, maybe, I'll be able to afford a swell
+apartment with--"
+
+"Sure you will," Bull agreed, as they passed up the steps to the
+entrance doors. "But meanwhile I mostly need your 'phone number of
+this," he added with a laugh.
+
+The baggage was left to the porter's care, and they stood together in
+the hallway. Bull's youthful stature was overshadowing for all Nancy
+was tall. Somehow the girl was glad of it. She liked his height, and the
+breadth of his great shoulders, and the power of limbs his tweed suit
+was powerless to disguise.
+
+She moved across to the porter's office and wrote down her 'phone number
+while the man looked on. But he only had eyes for the girl herself. At
+that moment her telephone number was the last thing he desired to think
+about.
+
+She stood up and offered him the paper.
+
+"You won't forget it that way," she said, with a smile.
+
+"No."
+
+Bull glanced down at it. Then he looked again into the smiling eyes.
+
+"Thanks," he said. "I'll ring up." Then he held out a hand. "So long."
+
+He was gone. The glass door had swung to behind him. Nancy watched him
+pass into the waiting automobile, and responded to his final wave of the
+hand. Then she turned to the porter, and her smile had completely
+vanished.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nathaniel Hellbeam stood up. He had been seated at Elas Peterman's desk
+studying the papers which his managing director had set out for his
+perusal. His gross body hung over the table for a moment as he reached
+towards his hat. He took his gloves from inside it and commenced to put
+them on.
+
+"The _Myra_? You say she is in?" he asked in his guttural fashion. "This
+girl? This girl who is to buy up this--this Sachigo man," he laughed.
+"Is she arrived?"
+
+The man's eyes were alight with unpleasant derision. Peterman gave no
+heed. The man's arrogance was all too familiar to him.
+
+"I've not heard--yet," he said. "She should be."
+
+"You not have heard--yet?" The challenge was superlatively offensive.
+"You a beautiful secretary have. You lose her for weeks--months. Yet you
+do not know of her return--yet? Sho! You are not the man for this
+beautiful secretary. She for me is--yes? Hah!"
+
+Peterman smiled as was his duty.
+
+"I shall be glad to get her back," he said quietly. "But I haven't heard
+from her at all. And--well, she's not the sort of woman to bombard with
+telegrams. She's out on a difficult job and I felt it best to leave her
+to it. I shall hear when she's ready, I guess she'll be right along in
+to tell me personally. Maybe--"
+
+He broke off and picked up the telephone whose buzzer was rattling
+impatiently on the desk.
+
+"Hullo!" he said softly. "Oh, yes. Oh, how are you? So glad you've got
+back. What sort of passage did--oh, bad, eh? Well, well; I'm sorry. Oh,
+you're a good sailor. That's fine. Right away? You'll be over right
+away? Wouldn't you like to rest awhile? All right, I see. Yes, surely
+I'll be glad. I just thought--oh, not at all. You see, if you were a man
+I wouldn't be concerned at all. Yes, come right along whenever you
+choose. Eh? Successful? You have been? Why, that's just fine. Well, I'm
+dying to hear your news. Splendid. I shall be here. G'bye."
+
+Peterman set the 'phone down. His smiling eyes challenged those of the
+man who a moment before had derided him.
+
+"Well?"
+
+Hellbeam's impatience was without scruple at any time.
+
+"She's got back all right, and she's succeeded far better than you
+hoped. Better than she hoped herself. But--no better than I expected."
+
+The other's eyes snapped under the quiet satisfaction of the man's
+reply.
+
+"Ah, she has. Does she say--yes?"
+
+Elas shook his dark head.
+
+"No. She's coming right over to tell me the whole story."
+
+"Now?"
+
+"In a while."
+
+Elas Peterman knew his position to the last fraction when dealing with
+Nathaniel Hellbeam. He knew it was for him to obey, almost without
+question. But somehow, for the moment, his Teutonic self-abnegation had
+become obscured. He was yielding nothing in the matter of this woman to
+anyone. Not even to Nathaniel Hellbeam whom he regarded almost as the
+master of his destiny.
+
+Perhaps the gross nature of the financier possessed a certain sympathy.
+Perhaps even there was a lurking sense of honour in him, where a woman,
+whom he regarded as another man's property, was concerned. Again it may
+simply have been that he understood the other's reticence, and it suited
+him for the moment to restrain his grosser inclinations. He laughed. And
+it was not an hilarious effort.
+
+"Oh, yes," he said. "You will see her first. That is as it should be.
+Later, we both will talk with her. Well--good luck my friend."
+
+Hellbeam thrust his hat on his great head and strutted his way across to
+the door.
+
+"These people must be bought. Or--" he said, pausing before passing
+out--
+
+"Smashed!"
+
+Hellbeam nodded.
+
+"It suits me better to--buy."
+
+"Yes. You want to come into touch with--the owner."
+
+"Yes."
+
+The gross figure disappeared through the doorway.
+
+Peterman did not return to his desk. He crossed to the window and stood
+gazing out of it. His hands were thrust deep into his pockets. And his
+fingers moved nervously, rattling the contents of them. He was a goodly
+specimen of manhood. He was tall, and squarely erect, and carried
+himself with that military bearing which seems to belong to all the
+races of Teutonic origin. It was only in the study of the man's face
+that exception could be taken. Just now there was none to observe and he
+was free from all restraint.
+
+His dark eyes were smiling, for his thoughts were streaming along the
+channel that most appealed. He was thinking of the beauty of the girl
+who was about to return to him, and it seemed to him a pity she was so
+simply honest, so very young in the world as he understood it. Then her
+ambition. It was--but he was rather glad of her ambition. Ambition might
+prove his best friend in the end. In his philosophy an ambitious woman
+could have no scruple. Anyway it seemed to him that ambition pitted
+against scruple was an easy winner. He could play on that, and he felt
+he knew how to play on it, and was in a position to do so. She had come
+back to him successful. He wondered how successful.
+
+He moved from the window and passed over to the desk, where he picked up
+his 'phone and asked for a number.
+
+"Hullo! Oh, that Bennetts? Oh, yes. This is Peterman--Elas Peterman
+speaking. Did you send that fruit, and the flowers I ordered to the
+address I gave you? Yes? Oh, you did? They were there before eleven
+o'clock. Good. Thanks--"
+
+He set the 'phone down and turned away. But in a moment he was recalled.
+It was a message from downstairs. Nancy McDonald wished to see him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Peterman was leaning back in his chair. Nancy was occupying the chair
+beside the desk which had not known her for several months.
+
+It was a moment of stirring emotions. For the girl it was that moment to
+which she had so long looked forward. To her it seemed she was about to
+vindicate this man's confidence in her, and offer him an adequate return
+such as her gratitude desired to make. And deep down in her heart, where
+the flame of ambition steadily burned, she felt she had earned the
+promised reward, all of it.
+
+The man was concerned with none of these things. He was not even
+concerned for the girl's completed mission. It was Nancy herself. It was
+the charming face with its halo of red hair, and the delightful figure
+so rounded, so full of warmth and charm, which concerned him.
+
+He had no scruple as he feasted his eyes upon her. He did nothing to
+disguise his admiration, and Nancy, full of her news and the thrilling
+joy of her success, saw nothing of that which a less absorbed woman, a
+more experienced woman, must unfailingly have observed.
+
+"You've a big story for me," Peterman said, with a light laugh. "Have
+you completed an option on--Sachigo? You look well. You're looking fine.
+Travelling in Labrador seems to have done you good."
+
+Nancy's smiling eyes were alight with delight.
+
+"Oh, yes," she said. "It's done me good. But then I've had a success I
+didn't reckon on. Maybe it's made all the difference. It was a real
+tough journey. I'm not sure you'd have seen me back at all if it hadn't
+been for Mr. Sternford."
+
+"How?"
+
+The man's smiling eyes had changed. Their dark depths were full of sharp
+enquiry. Nancy read only anxiety.
+
+"Why, we were sitting on deck, and it was storming. It was just
+terrible. We lurched heavily and shipped a great sea. Our chairs were
+flung into the scuppers by the rush of water, and I--why, I guess I was
+beaten unconscious and drowning when he got hold of me. He just fought
+his way to safety. I didn't know about it till I was safe down in the
+saloon. I woke up then, and he was carrying me--"
+
+"Sternford?"
+
+The change in the man's eyes had deepened. Then his smile came back to
+them. But that, too, was different. It was curiously fixed and hard.
+
+"You've gone a bit too fast for me," he said. "I don't get things right.
+Sternford, the man running Sachigo was with you on the _Myra_? He's
+here--in Quebec?"
+
+It was Nancy's great moment.
+
+"Yes," she said, with a restraint that failed to disguise her feelings.
+"He's come down to discuss a business arrangement between the
+Skandinavia and his enterprise. That's what you wanted--isn't it?"
+
+The man leant forward in his chair. He set his elbows on the desk and
+supported his chin in both hands. His smile was still there, and his
+eyes were steadily regarding her. But they expressed none of the
+surprise and delight Nancy looked for. They were smiling as he literally
+forced them to smile.
+
+"You brought him down with you--to meet us?" he asked slowly.
+
+The girl nodded.
+
+"You did your work so well that he entertained the notion sufficiently
+to come along down--with you?"
+
+"I--I--he's come down for that purpose."
+
+The man's eyes were searching.
+
+"Where is he?"
+
+"At the Chateau. He's waiting to hear from you for an appointment."
+
+Peterman flung himself back in his chair with a great laugh. Nancy
+missed the mirthless tone of it.
+
+"Say, my dear," he cried at last. "How did you do it? How in--You're
+just as bright and smart as I reckoned. You've done one big thing and I
+guess you've earned all the Skandinavia can hand you. But--"
+
+He broke off, and his gaze drifted away from the face with its vivid
+halo. The wintry daylight beyond the window claimed him, and Nancy
+waited.
+
+"How did you persuade him to ship down on the _Myra_ with you?" he
+asked, after a moment's thought.
+
+"I didn't persuade him. He volunteered."
+
+"Volunteered?"
+
+"Yes. He was coming down on her next trip. You see, he's making England
+right away. He guessed he'd come along down with me instead. He seemed
+keen set to discuss this thing with you."
+
+"I see. Keen set, eh? Keen set to talk with me?"
+
+The man shook his head. It was not denial. It was the questioning of
+something left unspoken.
+
+The girl became anxious. Somehow a sense of disappointment was stirring.
+
+"Is there anything wrong?" she asked at last, as the man remained
+silent.
+
+Peterman shook his head again.
+
+"Not a thing, my dear," he said. "No. You've done everything. You
+couldn't have done more if--if you'd been the most experienced woman
+schemer in big business. You went up to prepare the ground for our
+business. Well, you prepared it in a way I'd never have guessed. You've
+brought this hard business head, Bull Sternford, right down out of his
+fortress to meet us on our business proposition. Guess only you could
+have done that." He laughed. "And this man saved your life, eh? And he
+carried you in his arms to--safety. Say he was lucky. That's something
+any man would be crazy to do. Well, well, I--"
+
+He rose from his chair and passed round to the window where he stood
+with back turned. Nancy's gaze followed him. For all his praise she was
+disturbed.
+
+The man at the window saw nothing of that upon which he gazed. His eyes
+were unsmiling now that the girl could no longer observe them. They were
+the eyes of a man of unbridled jealous fury. They were burning with an
+insensate hatred for the man who had hitherto been only a stranger rival
+in business.
+
+Oh, he understood. Was it likely that this Bull Sternford was going to
+yield for a business proposition in this fashion at the request of a
+formidable rival? Was he going to change all his plans at the bidding of
+the Skandinavia, and seize the first boat to come and tell them he was
+prepared to fall for any plans they might design to beat him? Not
+likely. No. It was the girl he had fallen for. He had changed his plans
+for her, and for his nerve he had reaped a harvest such as he, Peterman,
+had never reaped. He had held this beautiful creature in his arms, this
+innocent, red-haired child, whom he, Peterman, had marked down for his
+own. For how long? And she was all unconscious. Oh, it was maddening,
+infuriating. And--
+
+Suddenly he came back to the desk. Nancy was relieved as she beheld the
+familiar smiling kindness in his eyes.
+
+"Well, my dear. I can't tell you how delighted I am to get you back," he
+said, pausing at her side. "My work's not been by any means satisfactory
+with you away. There's just no one suits me in this house like you. But
+the thing I'm most glad about is your success. That's been wonderful. I
+felt you would make good, but I didn't know how good. Now I'm going to
+ring this fellow up and fix things to see him. Meanwhile you get your
+big report of the camps ready for the Board. Then, when you're ready,
+I'm going to let them see you, and hear it all from you first hand, and
+I'm going to get them to give you the head of the forestry department
+right here. It'll be a mighty jump, but--well--"
+
+Nancy was on her feet and her eyes were shining a gratitude which words
+could never express. Impulsively she held out a hand in ardent thanks.
+
+"Why, say--" she began.
+
+The man had seized the delicate tapering fingers and held them warmly in
+the palms of both of his.
+
+"Now just don't say a thing," he said. "I know. I know just how you
+feel, and the things you want to say. But don't. You've earned the best,
+and I'm going to see you get it. I'm going to lose a smart secretary,
+but I don't care if I make one good little friend. Now, Nancy, what
+about to-night? I think we ought to celebrate your triumphant return
+with a little dinner up at the Chateau. What say? Will you--honour me?
+Eight o'clock. Thank goodness we're not a dry country yet, and it's
+still possible to enjoy our successful moments properly. Will you?"
+
+Nancy longed to withdraw the hand the man still held. It was curious.
+Every word he said expressed just those things and tributes which her
+girlish vanity had desired. There was not a word in all of it to give
+offence. But for the second time she experienced a sense of trouble
+which her woman's instinct prompted, and a feeling akin to panic
+stirred. But she resisted it, as she knew she must, and her mind was
+quite made up.
+
+"You're--very kind," she said, with all the earnestness she could
+summon, and with a gentleness that was intended to disarm. "But I'm so
+very--very tired. You don't know what it was like on the _Myra_. We were
+battered and beaten almost to death. I feel as if I needed sleep for a
+week."
+
+The man released her hand lingeringly. His disappointment was intense,
+but he smiled.
+
+"Why, sure," he said, "if you feel that way. I hadn't thought."
+
+Then he turned abruptly back to his desk. "That's all right. Guess
+we'll leave it. You go right home and get your rest."
+
+For a moment Nancy hesitated. She was fearful of giving offence. She
+felt the man's disappointment in his tone, and in the manner of his
+turning away. But she dared not yield to his request. Suddenly she
+remembered, and all hesitation passed.
+
+"I--I just want to thank you for your kind thought sending me those
+flowers and fruit," she exclaimed. "I wanted to thank you before, but I
+was too excited with my news. I--"
+
+The man cut her short.
+
+"That's all right, my dear," he said. Then he nodded and deliberately
+turned to his work. "I'm glad. Now--just run right along home
+and--rest."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+DRAWN SWORDS
+
+
+The palatial halls and public rooms of the hotel were crowded.
+Everywhere was the hum of voices, which penetrated even to the intended
+quiet of the writing rooms. Every now and then the monotony of it all
+was broken by the high-pitched, youthful voices of the messenger boys
+seeking out their victims.
+
+Bull Sternford was at work. Within an hour of his arrival he was plunged
+in the affairs connected with the great business organisation he
+projected. The earlier date of his visit to Quebec had necessitated
+considerable changes in plans already prepared. He had entailed for
+himself endless added work for the pleasure of the companionship of a
+beautiful girl on the journey down the coast, and begrudged no detail of
+it. Just now he was writing to a number of important people, bankers and
+financial men, re-arranging appointments to suit his change of plans.
+
+There was something tremendously purposeful in the poise of the man's
+body as he sat at one of the many writing tables scattered about the
+smoking lounge. There were few passers-by who did not glance a second
+time in his direction with that curiosity which is unfailing in human
+nature at sight of an unusual specimen of their kind.
+
+Twice a name was called by a uniformed boy in that unintelligible
+fashion which seems to be the habit of his species. The boy hovered
+round. Then he came up behind the chair on which Bull was seated and
+hurled his final challenge.
+
+"Sternford, sir?" he asked curtly.
+
+His victim turned.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Wanted on the 'phone, sir."
+
+The boy was gone on the run. He had hunted his quarry down. There were
+still fresh victories to be achieved.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bull was at the 'phone, and his eyes were smiling at an insurance
+advertisement set up for the edification and interest of those whose use
+of the instrument prevented their escape.
+
+"Yes. Oh, yes. Got in this morning. What's that? Oh, pretty rough. Yes.
+It's a bad sea most all the time. Why, that's good of you, Mr.
+Peterman." His smile broadened. "Yes. You sent an excellent ambassador.
+A charming girl. Well, there's no time like the present. Yes. I've
+lunched. I'm just through with my mail. Four o'clock would suit me
+admirably. Why sure I'd like to. All right. G'bye."
+
+He stood for a moment after replacing the receiver. Then, becoming aware
+of another wanting to use the instrument, he moved away.
+
+Returning to the smoking lounge he finished off his correspondence and
+took possession of one of the couches and lit a cigar.
+
+For a time the hang-over of business pre-occupied him. But it was not
+for long. His whole thought swiftly became absorbed in Nancy McDonald,
+with her wonderful halo of vivid hair. It had been the same during the
+whole of his journey down from Sachigo, in fact, from the moment he had
+first set eyes on her when she entered his office on that memorable day
+of her visit. She pre-occupied all his leisure.
+
+He had thought deeply on the meaning of her visit to him, and his
+thought had had little to do with the mission she had come upon. Swift
+decision had dealt with that. No, it was the girl herself who claimed
+him.
+
+He understood the sheer design of the Skandinavia in sending so perfect
+a creature to him. That was easy. It only helped to prove their
+desire--their urgent desire--to free themselves from the threat of his
+competition. But he wondered at their selection.
+
+Somehow he felt that the Skandinavia should have chosen, if their choice
+fell upon a woman, a clever, brilliant, unscrupulous creature who knew
+her every asset, and was capable of playing every one of them in the
+game of commercial warfare. Instead of that they had sent Nancy, with
+her sweetly beautiful face and perfect hair, to be their unthinking
+tool. He realised her simplicity, her splendid loyalty to those she
+served. He knew she was without design or subterfuge. She was just the
+most beautiful, desirable creature he had ever beheld in his life.
+
+He told himself it was all wrong. This wonderful child should never have
+been sent on such a journey, on such an errand. She was fit only for the
+shelter of a happy home life, protection from every roughness, every
+taint with which the sordid world of commerce could besmirch her. His
+chivalry was stirred to its depths, and the wrong of it all, as he saw
+it, only the more surely deepened his purpose for his dealings with an
+unscrupulous rival who could commit so egregious an outrage.
+
+Bull Sternford's existence, until now had always been a joyous
+heart-whole striving which had no more in it than the calmly conceived
+ideals of a heart undisturbed by sexual emotions. Now--now that had been
+completely changed. Perhaps he was not yet wholly aware of the thing
+that had come to him. He saw a woman, a perfect creature who had come to
+him out of the forest world in which his whole life was bound up, and a
+passionate excitement had taken possession of him. There could be no
+denial of that. But so far the full measure of his feelings had not
+revealed itself. All he wanted was to think of nothing and nobody just
+now, but this girl who had stirred him so deeply. So he stretched
+himself out on the well-sprung couch and yielded to the delight of it
+all.
+
+But the hour he had been free to dispose of thus was swiftly used up
+with his pleasant dreaming. And it was with a feeling of real irritation
+that he finally flung away his cigar and bestirred himself. His
+irritation did not last long, however, and his consolation was found in
+the fact that Elas Peterman was awaiting him, and Elas Peterman was the
+man who had so outrageously offended against his ideas of chivalry.
+
+He stood up and brushed the fallen cigar ash from his clothing. His one
+desire now was to get through with the business once and for all, to do
+the thing that should leave Nancy McDonald with the reward of her
+labours. Yes, he wanted to do that. Afterwards--well, he must leave the
+"afterwards" to itself.
+
+He hurried away in search of his heavy winter overcoat.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Elas Peterman looked up as the door opened to admit his visitor. His
+first impression startled him not a little.
+
+It was the first time he had encountered the man from Sachigo.
+
+Bull moved into the room with that large ease which big men so often
+display. And he paused and frankly gripped the carefully manicured hand
+Peterman held out to him.
+
+"I'm real glad to meet you, Mr. Peterman," he said quietly. Then he
+dropped into the chair set for him, while his eyes responded unsmilingly
+to the measuring gaze of the other.
+
+"It's queer we've never met before," Bull said, leaning back in his
+chair.
+
+Peterman laughed. He pushed a large box of cigars close to the visitor's
+hand.
+
+"It's mostly that way with the high command in--war," he said easily.
+"The opposing generals don't meet except at the--peace table. Those are
+Bolivars. Try one?"
+
+Bull helped himself with a laugh that was about as real as the other's.
+
+"The pipe of--peace, eh?" he said.
+
+"That's how I hope," Peterman replied.
+
+Bull nodded as he lit his cigar.
+
+"Most of us hope for peace, and do our best to aggravate war. That so?"
+
+"It's damn fool human nature."
+
+Peterman sat back in his chair, and laughed a little boisterously. Then
+he turned to the window while Bull silently consulted the white ash of
+his cigar.
+
+"You're projecting a big thing in pulp," the Swede said a moment later.
+"You figger to split the Canadian pulp trade into two opposing camps.
+The Skandinavia and the Labrador enterprises. It means one great, big
+prolonged battle in which one or the other is to be beaten. Guess it's
+liable to be a battle in which the public'll get temporary benefit,
+while we--who fight it--look like losing all along the line. It seems a
+pity, eh?"
+
+"War's a tough proposition, anyway," Bull replied slowly. "Its only
+excuse is it's Nature's way of wiping out the fool mistakes and crimes
+human nature spends most of its time committing. If two sets of
+criminals set out to grab, it's odds they'll do hurt to each other, and
+end by leaving the world easier when they're completely despoiled."
+
+Peterman laughed.
+
+"Sure," he said. "And these fool criminals? Is there need for them to
+fall out?"
+
+"None."
+
+"That's how we of the Skandinavia feel. That's the notion always in my
+mind. Say--"
+
+"Yep?"
+
+Bull's eyes were squarely gazing. Their clear depths looked straight
+into the dark eyes of the man at the desk. Their regard was intense. It
+was almost disconcerting.
+
+"What's the proposition?" he went on. And his firm lips closed over the
+last word and contrived to transform the simple question into a definite
+challenge.
+
+Peterman stirred uneasily. At that moment he beheld more clearly than
+ever the picture of this man with his great arms about the body of the
+woman he coveted, and feeling lent sharpness to his tone.
+
+"What's the price you set on your enterprise up at Labrador?" he said.
+
+Bull removed his cigar. He emitted a pensive stream of smoke. His eyes
+were again pre-occupied with the white ash, so firm and clean on its
+tip. Then quite suddenly he looked up.
+
+"If you'll tell me the price you set on the whole of the Skandinavia,
+I'll talk."
+
+"What d'you mean?"
+
+The Swede had less command of his feelings than the other. He had never
+learnt the methods of the forest as Bull had learned them.
+
+"Why, I can't set a price on Sachigo till I know the price you set on
+the Skandinavia," Bull's eyes were smiling. "You see I should need to
+double it for--Sachigo."
+
+The man from Labrador had driven home to the quick, and the Teutonic
+vanity of the Swede was instantly aflame. Peterman had committed the one
+offence which the younger man could not forgive. He had dared, in his
+vanity, to believe that the situation between them was a question of
+price.
+
+"I didn't invite you here to sell you--the Skandinavia," Peterman
+blustered, giving way to anger he could not restrain.
+
+"No. And I didn't accept your invitation for the purpose of
+selling--Sachigo. If there's any buying and selling going on you'd best
+understand quite clearly I am the buyer."
+
+There was a dangerous light in Bull's eyes levelled so steadily on the
+angry face of the Swede.
+
+"Then--it's war?"
+
+Bull shrugged at the challenge.
+
+"I'm quite indifferent," he said coldly.
+
+There was a moment of tense silence. Then the Swede smiled.
+
+"You're ready then to let the fool public benefit at your expense?"
+
+"No." A smile of real humor flashed in Bull's eyes. "At yours."
+
+"You mean--you think to--smash us?"
+
+"Just as sure as the sun'll rise to-morrow. Just as sure as Providence
+set up forest and water powers on Labrador such as you've never dreamed
+of since you forgot your boyhood. Just as sure as your Shagaunty's
+played out and you need to start in on fresh limits you aren't sure of
+yet. Just as sure as they're going to cost you a heap more than when you
+were busy treating the fortune that Shagaunty handed you like the worst
+fool-head spendthrift who ever broke a bank at the gambling tables."
+
+Bull rose abruptly from his chair.
+
+"I'm obliged for this interview, Mr. Peterman," he went on. "It's suited
+me. That's why I came along down in a hurry. You're fortunate in that
+lady representative. Her tact and persuasion left me feeling you had a
+real proposition that was worth considering. I guess she'll go a long
+way for you, and if there's any live person can help your ship along,
+she's that live person. But you can't buy me, and you can't smash me. I
+mean that. You see, I know your position. It's my job to know the
+position of any possible competitor, and naturally I know yours. Your
+Shagaunty's run dry, and, well, I don't need to tell you all that means
+to you." He dropped the stump of his cigar into an ash tray. "That's a
+good cigar," he went on with a derisive smile. "Thanks. Good-bye."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bull was at the telephone again. He was again smiling at the insurance
+advertisement. But now his smile was of a different quality. It was full
+of delighted anticipation.
+
+"Oh, yes," he was saying. "I spent quite a pleasant ha'f hour with him.
+I enjoyed it immensely. Yes. He seems to be the man to run an enterprise
+like yours. He certainly has both initiative and confidence. A little
+hasty in judgment, I think. But--yes, I'd like to tell you all about it.
+What are you doing this evening? Oh, resting. I suppose you eat while
+resting. Yes. It's necessary, isn't it? Anyway I find it so. Eh? Oh,
+yes. You see, I've a big frame to support. Will you help me to support
+it this evening? I mean dinner here? Will you? Oh, that's fine. I'd love
+to tell you about it all. Fine. Right. Eight o'clock then. I'll go and
+arrange it all now. It shall be a very special dinner, I promise you.
+Good-bye."
+
+He put up the receiver and turned away. His smile remained, and it had
+no relation to anything but his delight that Nancy McDonald had
+consented to dine with him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+AT THE CHATEAU
+
+Nancy was standing before the mirror which occupied the whole length of
+the door of the dress-closet with which her modest bedroom had been
+provided by a thoughtful architect.
+
+She was studying the results of her preparations. She was to dine with
+Bull Sternford, the man who had caught and held her interest for all she
+knew that they belonged to camps that were sternly opposed to each
+other. She wanted to look her best, whatever that best might be, and she
+was haunted by a fear that her best could never rank in its due place
+amongst the superlatives.
+
+However, she had arrayed herself in her newest and smartest party frock.
+She had spent hours, she believed, on her unruly masses of hair, and
+furthermore, she had assiduously applied herself to obliterating the
+weather stain which the fierce journey from Labrador had inflicted upon
+the beautiful oval of her cheeks. Now, at last, the final touches had
+been given, and she was critically surveying the result.
+
+The longer she studied her reflection the deeper grew the discontent in
+her pretty, hazel eyes. It was the same old reflection, she told
+herself. It was a bit tricked out; a bit less real. It was a tiresome
+thing which gave her no satisfaction at all. There was the red hair that
+looked so very red. There were the eyes, which, at times, she was
+convinced were really green. There was the stupid nose that always
+seemed to her to occupy too much of her face. And as for her cheeks, the
+wind and sea had left them looking more healthy, but--She sighed and
+hurriedly turned away. She felt that mirrors were an invention
+calculated to upset the conceit of any girl.
+
+She moved quickly round the little room. Her gloves, her wrap. She
+picked them up. The gloves she was painfully aware had already been
+cleaned twice, and her cloak had no greater merits than the
+modest-priced frock which had strained her limited bank roll. Then she
+consulted the clock on her bureau, and, picked up her scent-spray. This
+was the last, the final touch she could not resist.
+
+In the midst of using it she set it down with a feeling of sudden panic.
+
+She had remembered. She stood staring down at the dressing table with a
+light of trouble in her eyes. The whole incident had been forgotten till
+that moment. She remembered she had refused to dine with Elas Peterman
+that night on a plea of weariness, and without a thought had
+unhesitatingly accepted the invitation of the man whom the Skandinavia
+had marked down for its victim.
+
+For some seconds the enormity of the thing she had done overwhelmed her.
+Then a belated humour came to her rescue and a shadowy smile drove the
+trouble from her eyes.
+
+Suppose--but no. Her chief would be dining at home, as was his habit.
+Then, anyway, there could be no harm. She was concerned in this thing.
+She had a right. She even told herself it was imperative she should know
+what had transpired at the interview she had brought about. Besides, was
+there not the possibility of certain rougnnesses occurring between the
+two men which it might be within her power to smooth down? That was
+surely so. She had no right to miss any opportunity of furthering the
+ends of her own people.
+
+Then she laughed outright. Oh, it was excuse. She knew. She was looking
+forward to the evening. Of course she was. Then, just as suddenly all
+desire to laugh expired. Why? Why was she looking forward to dining with
+Bull Sternford?
+
+Bull! What a quaint name. She had thought of it before. She had thought
+of it at the time when the lonely missionary of the forest had told her
+of him.
+
+Swiftly her thought passed on to her meeting with the man himself. She
+remembered her nervousness when she had first looked into his big,
+wholesome face, with its clear, searching eyes. Yes, she had realised
+then the truth of Father Adam's description. He would as soon fight as
+laugh. There could be no doubt of it.
+
+And then those days on the _Myra_. She recalled their talk of the
+sea-gulls, and of the men of the forests, and she remembered the almost
+brutal contempt for them he had so downrightly expressed. Then the
+moment of disaster to herself. It was he who had saved her, he who had
+fought for her, although he had been in little better case himself.
+
+What was it they had told her? He must be bought or smashed. She
+wondered if they realised the man they were dealing with. She wondered
+what they would have felt and thought if they had listened to the
+confident assurance of Father Adam. If they had listened to Bull
+Sternford himself, and learned to know him as she had already learned to
+know him. The Skandinavia was powerful, but was it powerful enough to
+deal as they desired with this man who was as ready to fight as to
+laugh?
+
+She shook her head. And it was a negative movement she was unaware of.
+Well, anyway, the game had begun, and she was in it. Her duty was clear
+enough. And meanwhile she would miss no opportunity to pull her whole
+weight for her side, even when she knew that was not the whole thought
+in her mind.
+
+But somehow there were things she regretted when she remembered the
+fight ahead. She regretted the moment when this man had saved her from
+almost certain death against the iron stanchions and sides of the
+_Myra_. She regretted his fine eyes, and he had fine eyes which looked
+so squarely out of their setting. Then, too, he had been so kindly
+concerned that she should achieve the mission upon which she had
+embarked. It would have been so easy and even exacting had he been a man
+of less generous impulse. A man whom she could have thoroughly disliked.
+But he was the reverse of all those things which make it a joy to hurt.
+He was--
+
+She pulled herself up and seized the pretty beaded vanity bag lying
+ready to her hand. Then the telephone rang.
+
+It was the cab which the porter had ordered, and she hastily switched
+off the lights.
+
+On the way down in the elevator her train of thought persisted. And long
+before she reached the Chateau, a feeling that she was playing something
+of the part of Delilah took hold of her and depressed her.
+
+But she was determined. Whatever happened her service and loyalty was in
+support of her early benefactors, and no act of hers should betray them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The scene was pleasantly seductive. There was no doubt or anxiety in
+Nancy McDonald's mind now. How should there be? She was young. She was
+beautiful. The man with whom she was dining was remarkable amongst the
+well-dressed throng that filled the great dining-room. Then the dinner
+had been carefully considered.
+
+But it was the delightful surroundings, the little excitement of it all
+that left the girl's thought care-free. The shaded table lights. The
+wonderful flowers. The dark panelling of the great room constructed and
+designed in imitation of an old French Chateau. Then the throng of
+beautifully gowned women, and the men who purposed an evening of
+enjoyment. The soft music of the distant string band and--oh, it was all
+dashed with a touch of Babylonic splendour with due regard for the
+decorum required by modern civilisation, and Nancy was sufficiently
+young and unused to delight in every moment of it.
+
+The first excitement of it all had spent itself, and laughing comment
+had given place to those things with which the girl was most concerned.
+
+"Folks can't accuse us of dilatoriness," she said. "Let's see. Why, we
+made land this morning after every sort of a bad passage, battered and
+worn, and in less than how many hours?--eight?--nine?--" she laughed.
+"Why, I guess a sewing bee wouldn't have got through their preliminary
+talk in that time."
+
+"No." Bull too was in the mood for laughter. "A sewing bee's mighty well
+named. There's a big buzz mostly all the time, and the tally of work
+only needs to be figgered when the season closes. We've settled up the
+future of two enterprises liable to cut big ice in this country's
+history in record time."
+
+"You've settled with Mr. Peterman?"
+
+"Roughly."
+
+The man's eyes were shining with a smile of keen enjoyment.
+
+Nancy experienced a thrill of added excitement as she disposed of her
+last oyster.
+
+"I haven't a right to butt in asking too many questions," she suggested.
+
+Bull tasted his wine and thoughtfully set his glass down. Then he looked
+across at the eager face alight with every question woman's curiosity
+and interest could inspire. He smiled into it. And somehow his smile was
+very, very gentle.
+
+"That's pretty well why we're here now though," he said. "You can just
+ask all you fancy to know, and I'll tell you. But maybe I can save you
+worry by telling you first."
+
+"Why, yes," Nancy said eagerly. "You see, I'm only a secretary. I'm not
+one of the heads of the Skandinavia. I sort of feel this is high policy
+which doesn't really concern me. You're sure you feel like telling me?
+Was Mr. Peterman--friendly?"
+
+"As amiable as a tame--shark."
+
+"That's pretty fierce."
+
+Bull shook his head.
+
+"It's just a way of putting it. Y'see even a tame shark don't get over a
+lifetime habit of swallowing most things that come his way. Peterman
+figures to swallow me--whole."
+
+Nancy's eyes widened. But the man's tone had been undisturbed. There was
+a contented smile in his eyes, and an atmosphere of unruffled confidence
+about him that was rather inspiring. The girl felt its influence.
+
+"You mean he figures to have you join up with the Skandinavia?"
+
+Bull shook his head as the waiter set the next course on the table.
+
+"No. He guesses the Skandinavia can buy me."
+
+"I--see."
+
+Nancy waited. She remembered this man was as ready to fight as to laugh.
+Somehow she scented the battle in him now, for all the ease in his
+manner.
+
+"I told him it couldn't. I pointed out if there was any buying to be
+done I figgered to do it."
+
+"You mean you would buy up--the Skandinavia?"
+
+Bull's smile deepened. The girl's incredulity amused him. He understood.
+To her the Skandinavia Corporation was the beginning and end of all
+things. In her eyes it was the last word in power and influence and
+wealth. She knew nothing beyond--the Skandinavia. A man in her place
+would have received prompt and biting retort. But she was a girl, and
+Bull was young, and strong, and at the beginning of a great manhood. He
+shook his head.
+
+"Well, not just that," he said. "But say, let's get it right. How'd a
+woman feel if she'd an elegant baby child, thoroughbred from the crown
+of his dandy bald head to the pretty pink soles of his feet? Just a
+small bit of her, of her own creation. Then along comes some big, swell
+woman, who's only been able to raise a no account, sickly kid, an' wants
+to buy up the first mother's bit of sheer love. Wouldn't she hear the
+sort of things a woman of that sort ought to? Wouldn't she get hell
+raised with her?"
+
+"But the Skandinavia's no--sickly kid."
+
+The girl's eyes were challenging. There was warmth, too, in her retort.
+His words had stirred her as he intended them to stir her.
+
+"You think that?" he said. "You think that they have the right to demand
+my--child? You approve? That was your desire when you came to me--that
+they should buy me up?"
+
+Bull's smile still remained. There was no shadow of change in it. But
+his questions came in headlong succession.
+
+Just for an instant a feeling of helplessness surged through the girl's
+heart. Then it passed, leaving her quite firm and decided. She looked
+squarely into the smiling eyes, and hers were unsmiling but earnestly
+honest.
+
+"My approval isn't of any concern. I knew that was the Skandinavia's
+purpose when I came to you."
+
+"And you called it a business arrangement?"
+
+"No. You did."
+
+The man broke into a laugh. It was a laugh of sheer amusement.
+
+"That's so," he said. "You were going to hand me the story of your
+mission, and I--and I butted in and told it to you--myself."
+
+The girl nodded.
+
+"You were very good to me," she said. "You saw I was going to flounder,
+and you took pity on me."
+
+Bull's denial was prompt.
+
+"I just short-circuited things. That's all," he said. Then he laughed
+again. "And I'm going to do it again right now. Here, I want you to hear
+things the way they seem to me. You think the Skandinavia's no sickly
+kid. Well, I tell you it is. Anyway, in this thing. Peterman wants to
+buy me. Why? Don't you know? I think you do. The Skandinavia's got a
+mighty bad scare right now. The Shagaunty's played out. And I'm jumping
+the market. For the practical purposes of the moment the Skandinavia's
+mighty sick. So Peterman and his friends reckon to buy me. You're wise
+to it all?"
+
+Bull's eyes were levelled squarely at the girl's. There was a challenge
+in them. But there was no roughness. It was his purpose to arrive at the
+full measure of the girl's feelings and attitude, so far as this effort
+on the part of his rivals was concerned.
+
+Nancy was swift to understand. In an ordinary way her reply would have
+been prompt. There would have been no hesitation. But, somehow, there
+was reluctance in her now. She made no attempt to analyse her feelings.
+All she knew was that this man had a great appeal for her. He was so
+big, he was so strongly direct and fearless. Then, too, his manner was
+so very gentle, and his expressive eyes so kindly smiling, while all
+the while she felt the fierce resentment against her people going on
+behind them.
+
+After a moment decision came to her rescue. She was of the opposing
+camp. She could not, and would not, pretend. It was clear that war lay
+ahead, and her position must be that of an honest enemy.
+
+"Yes," she said simply. "I think I know all there is to know about the
+position."
+
+She hesitated again. Then she went on in a fashion that displayed the
+effort her words were costing.
+
+"We're out to buy you or break you, and I shall play the part they
+assign me in the game. Oh, I've nothing to hide. I've no excuse to make.
+You will fight your battle, and we shall fight ours. Maybe we shall
+learn to hate each other in the course of it. I don't know. Yet there's
+nothing personal in the fight. That's the queer thing in commercial
+warfare, isn't it? I'd be glad for our two concerns to run right along
+side by side. But they can't. They just can't. And, as I understand, one
+or the other's got to go right to the wall before we're through. Can't
+all this be saved? Must all this sort of--bloodshed--go on? We're two
+great enterprises, and, combined, we'd be just that much greater.
+Together we'd rule the whole world's markets and dictate our own terms.
+And then, and then--"
+
+"We'd be doing the thing I'm out to stop--if it costs me all I have or
+am in this world."
+
+For a moment the man's eyes forgot to smile, and Nancy was permitted to
+gaze on the great, absorbing purpose his manner had hitherto held
+concealed. She was startled at the passionate denial, and robbed of all
+desire to reply.
+
+"Here!" Bull set his elbows on the table and supported his chin on his
+hands. "Get this. Get it good, and all the time. I wouldn't work with
+the Skandinavia for all the dollars this country's presses could print.
+I'm not going to hand you the reason. Some day, maybe when your folks
+have smashed me, or I've smashed them, I'll tell you about it. But I
+tell you this now, there's no sort of business arrangement I ever
+figgered to enter into with Elas Peterman, and there's no sort of thing
+in God's world ever could, or would, induce me to come to any terms of
+his."
+
+Then his manner changed again, and his passionate moment became lost in
+a great laugh.
+
+"Maybe you'll want to know why I changed my plans so easily, and came
+along down in a hurry to see Peterman. Why I seemed ready to fall for
+his proposition. Well, I guess I won't hand you the reason of that,
+either. I'd like to, but I won't." He shook his head and his laugh had
+gone again. "Anyway, it served my purpose, and Peterman knows just how
+things stand--and are going to stand--between us."
+
+"Then it's war? Ruthless, implacable--war?" There was awe in the girl's
+tone and her lips were dry. She sipped her wine quickly to moisten them,
+and set the glass down with a hand that was not quite steady. Bull saw
+the signs of distress.
+
+"Oh, yes, it's war all right," he said quietly. "Maybe it's ruthless,
+implacable. But it's part of the game. Don't worry a thing. You're in
+the enemy lines. You've got your duty. So far you've done your duty; and
+you've made good, and will get the reward you need. Well, go right on
+doing that duty, and there isn't a just creature on God's earth that'll
+have right to blame you. I won't blame you. Go right on; and when it's
+all through, I'll be ready to sit here with you again, and talk and
+laugh over it, as we've been doing--"
+
+He broke off. A frightened look had leapt into Nancy's eyes. She was no
+longer attending to him. She was watching the tall, squarely military
+figure of a man moving down one of the aisles between the softly lit
+tables. The man's dark eyes were searching over the room, as he followed
+the head waiter conducting him to the table that had been reserved for
+him. Bull turned and followed the direction of the girl's gaze. And as
+he did so he encountered the cold, unsmiling glance of the other man's
+eyes. It was only for an instant. Then he turned back to the girl.
+
+"Friend Peterman," he said.
+
+Nancy made a pretence of eating.
+
+"Yes," she said, without raising her eyes.
+
+Nancy's emotion was painfully obvious. Bull realised it. She was afraid.
+Why? A swift thought flashed through the man's mind, to be followed by a
+feeling such as he had never known before. Hitherto Elas Peterman had
+represented only a sufficiently worthy adversary who must be encountered
+and defeated. Now, all in a moment, that was changed into something
+fiercer, more furiously human and abiding.
+
+"Does it matter?" he asked very quietly.
+
+Nancy looked up from her plate. There was a flicker of a smile in the
+eyes that a moment before had expressed only apprehension. She shook her
+head.
+
+"I don't know--yet," she said. Her smile deepened. "You see, I refused
+to dine with him here to-night. I excused myself on a plea of weariness.
+I really did want rest. But--well, I didn't want to dine with him,
+anyway. He's seen me--with you."
+
+"Do you often dine with him?"
+
+The man had no smile in response, and his question came swiftly.
+
+"I've never dined with him."
+
+Bull sat back. His eyes were smiling.
+
+"Well, I guess the answer's easy. You're here fighting for the
+Skandinavia. And I'd say you've been doing it mighty well. Maybe
+Peterman'll feel sore, but he'll see it that way after--awhile."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+DEEPENING WATERS
+
+
+Nancy thought long and earnestly over her breakfast. She thought deeply
+as she proceeded to her office. Even the business of again taking up the
+thread of her work failed to absorb her.
+
+Apprehension disturbed, and a certain sense of guilt weighed upon her.
+The vision of the tall figure of Elas Peterman as it moved down the
+dining-room at the Chateau remained with her. She had caught the glance
+of his dark eyes. She knew he had recognised her; and there had been
+neither smile nor recognition in the swift exchange that had passed
+between them.
+
+So she answered the usual morning summons of her chief without any
+pleasant anticipation. She expected a bad time, and strove to prepare
+herself for it.
+
+But alarm vanished the moment she ushered herself into the man's
+presence. He was not at his desk poring over his littered
+correspondence. She found him standing before his favourite window,
+gazing out reflectively upon the grey light of the early winter day. He
+turned at the sound of her entry, and his smile of greeting lacked
+nothing of its usual cordiality.
+
+Had she observed him a moment before it must have been different. But
+she had been spared all sight of the mood that had driven him to abandon
+urgent correspondence in favour of the drab outlook beyond the window.
+It was a bad expression. It was the expression of a man of fierce
+cruelty. It was not an expression of open, hot anger, which flares up,
+passes, and is forgotten like the fury of a summer storm. It was rather
+the slowly banking clouds of winter, piling up for a climax that should
+be devastating. And through it all he had smiled, smiled with angry eyes
+that seemed to grow colder and harder every moment.
+
+Nancy knew little of the world, and less of men and women. It could not
+have been otherwise. Vital with a youthful optimism and strong purpose,
+she had devoted herself to work to the exclusion of everything else. And
+before that there had only been the scrupulous care of the good matrons
+of Marypoint. A wider experience, a maturer mind would have yielded her
+doubt as she beheld the man's smiling greeting now. She would have
+reminded herself of her offence, and understood its enormity in the eyes
+of a man. She would have had a better appreciation of her own
+attractions, and would have long since understood this man's regard for
+her.
+
+As it was she snatched at the relief his smile inspired.
+
+The man laughingly shook his head as the girl approached.
+
+"Nancy, my dear, I hope Mr. Bull Sternford gave you as good a dinner as
+I would have given you, and--as good a time generally. You look well
+rested, anyway."
+
+There was a sting in the words that all the man's care could not quite
+shut out. But the tone was of intended good-nature. In a moment Nancy
+was explaining.
+
+"Oh, I know you must think me terribly mean," she cried impulsively.
+"You must think I was just lying to you when you asked me to dine
+yesterday. But it wasn't so. It surely wasn't. May I tell you about it?"
+
+The man came back to his desk, and indicated the empty chair beside it.
+
+"Sure, if you feel that way," he said, dropping into his seat while
+Nancy took hers. "But I'm not angry. Truth I'm not." For a moment he
+gazed smilingly into the girl's troubled eyes. "Here," he went on. "I'll
+tell you just how I think. Maybe you won't figger it flattering, but
+it's just plain truth. Now I'm a married man and you're a young girl.
+Well, the Chateau isn't the sort of place for you and me to be seen
+together in. I didn't think of it when I asked you. I just wanted to
+hand you a good time for the good work you've done. Sort of prize for a
+good girl, eh? I hadn't another thought about it. And when you refused
+me, and I thought it over, I was kind of glad--I might have compromised
+you, and I certainly would have compromised myself. You get that? You
+understand me? Of course you do. That's what I like. You're so darn
+sensible. Now you tell me--if you fancy to?"
+
+Nancy sighed her relief. Her last cloud had passed away.
+
+"Oh, yes," she began at once. "I do want to tell you. You see I think
+it's all-important."
+
+"Yes."
+
+The man's smile was unchanged. But there was a dryness in his
+monosyllable that only Nancy could have missed.
+
+"Mr. Sternford 'phoned me after his interview with you."
+
+"He had your 'phone number?"
+
+"Surely, I gave him that before he left me after driving up from the
+docks."
+
+"I see. Of course. You drove up together after landing. I forgot."
+
+Nancy laughed.
+
+"I don't think I told you," she said. "But it doesn't matter, anyway.
+Yes, he drove me up. And the whole of this affair was so interesting I
+just had to hear the result of the interview with you. So I told him my
+'phone number. Well, right after he'd seen you he rang me up. He told me
+he couldn't speak over the 'phone the things that passed, and asked me
+to dine. I just had to fall for that. You see, this thing meant so much
+to me. It was the first big thing I'd handled, and--and I was so crazy
+to make good for you. So I promised. And it wasn't till after it was all
+fixed I realised the mean way I'd acted. You'll forgive me, won't you,
+Mr. Peterman? I just hadn't a notion to be mean, and I was all tired to
+death. But I had to hear about the things you'd fixed."
+
+"And you heard?"
+
+The man was leaning on the desk with one hand supporting his head. Not
+one shadow of condemnation or resentment was permitted in voice or look.
+And the girl was completely disarmed. But her smile died out and a swift
+apprehension, that had no relation to herself, replaced it. In a moment
+her mind had gone back to the declaration of war which was to involve
+the two enterprises.
+
+"Yes. He told me."
+
+"And--?"
+
+"Oh, it's all wrong. It's all foolish, and wrong, and just terrible,"
+she broke in impulsively. Then she became calmly thoughtful, and her
+even brows drew together in an effort to straighten out the things she
+wanted to say. She shook her head. "I'm sure he can be handled," she
+went on deliberately. "Oh, yes. In spite of the things they say of him."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+"Why he's as ready to fight as to laugh."
+
+"Who says that?"
+
+"That's the way they speak of him."
+
+"Who speaks that way?"
+
+Nancy laughed.
+
+"It was just a queer sort of missionary who told me. I met him when I
+was at Arden Laval's camp. A man they call Father Adam."
+
+Peterman nodded.
+
+"And you guess he can be handled?"
+
+"I think so." Nancy spread out her hands. "Oh, it's not for me to talk
+this way to you, Mr. Peterman, but--but--"
+
+"Go on." The man was patiently reassuring as the girl hesitated. "It's
+good to hear you talk. And then it was you who got him to listen to our
+proposal at all."
+
+The compliment had prompt effect. The girl's cheeks flushed, and a light
+of something approaching delight shone in the hazel depths of her eyes.
+
+"I don't know," she cried. "But it seems to me he's sort of reasonable.
+He's kind of full of ideals and that sort of notion. He's out for a big
+purpose and all that. But I don't believe he'd turn down any business
+arrangement that would hand him the thing he wants--"
+
+"Business arrangement?" Peterman sat up. The laugh accompanying his
+words was full of amiable derision. He shook his head. "If he won't sell
+he's got to be smashed. That's the only business arrangement that suits
+us. We're far too big for compromise. No, my dear. He won't sell. He
+asked to buy us. He--this darn fool man from Sachigo. He thinks to buy
+the Skandinavia like he's buying up all the mills he can lay hands on.
+But he bit off a chunk when he handed that stuff to me. He's as ready to
+fight as to laugh. Well, I guess he's going to get all the fight he
+needs. He'll get it plenty."
+
+"Then you mean to--smash him?"
+
+"Just as sure as it's started to snow right now," the man exclaimed,
+pointing at the window.
+
+Nancy's gaze followed the pointing finger. But it was not the snow she
+was thinking of. It was the man whom she beheld staggering under the
+tremendous weight of the Skandinavia's might. She felt pity for him. And
+incautiously she permitted Elas Peterman to realise her pity.
+
+"Can't anything be done?" she ventured gently. "Have you handled him? I
+mean--Oh, I'm sure he's reasonable. Can't the offer be made--more
+suitable? More--?"
+
+Peterman's eyes suddenly hardened.
+
+"What do you mean? I haven't handled him right? I've blundered? I--" He
+laughed without any mirth. "See here, Nancy, my dear, you're a bright
+girl, but don't hand me your worry for this darn fool. You're kind of
+tender-hearted. You guess it's a pretty tough thing to see a good-looker
+boy go down in a big commercial fight. That's because you're a woman.
+This sort of thing's part of business. It's harsher, more ruthless than
+even war on the battlefield with guns, and bombs, and stinking gas.
+We're going to fight this thing just that way. There's no mercy for Mr.
+Bull Sternford. He'll get all I can hand him just the way I know best
+how to hand it. And the tougher I can make it the better it'll please
+me. See? Now you just run right along and see to those things that are
+going to make you big in the Skandinavia, and don't give a thought for
+the feller who's handed me stuff I don't stand for in any man. There's
+liable to be big work for you in this fight, and I'd say you'll make as
+good in fight as in peace. You've got my goodwill anyway, my dear, just
+for all it's worth. That's all."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The door had closed behind the girl. Elas Peterman was on his feet
+pacing the thickly carpeted floor. There was no longer any attempt at
+disguise. A surge of jealous fury was raging through his hot heart and
+drove him mercilessly.
+
+The picture of Nancy, radiantly beautiful, seated at dinner with Bull
+Sternford had lit a fire of bitter hatred in his Teutonic heart. So he
+paced the room and permitted the fierce tide to flood the channels of
+sanity and set them awash with the ready evil of his impulse.
+
+From the first moment of the girl's story of her successful effort with
+this man, Sternford, this vaunting rival, Peterman had been bitterly
+stirred. The man's change of plans at her bidding he had understood on
+the instant. The man from Labrador had not changed his plans at the
+bidding of the Skandinavia. It was the girl who had induced him. It was
+she who had attracted him. Then the boat trip, and the girl's confession
+of his having, perhaps, saved her life. What had preceded that incident?
+What had followed it? And when Elas Peterman asked himself such
+questions it was simple for him to find the answer. He had seen
+Sternford, and had judged the position. He knew what would have happened
+had he been in this man's place. Sternford wasn't the man to throw away
+such chances, either. He had fallen for the girl, and she doubtless
+had--The picture he had witnessed at the Chateau had left him without
+any doubt. The driving up together from the docks, the telephone.
+Sternford had taken her to her apartment. Oh, it was all as clear as
+daylight. Then the girl's pity for the man who was to feel the weight of
+the Skandinavia's wrathful might. She had said he was reasonable. She
+had hinted that he, Peterman, had blundered. There was only one
+reasonable interpretation to the position. And it did not leave him
+guessing for one single moment.
+
+Once he passed a fleshy hand up over his forehead and brushed back his
+dark hair. Once he came to a pause before his window and stood gazing
+out at the falling snow with hot eyes. No such fury of jealousy had ever
+entered into his life before. Never had he dreamed before of the
+tremendous hold this girl had obtained upon him. His claim on her had
+all seemed so natural, so easy. He had looked upon her as property that
+was indisputably his. He might have learned something from his feelings
+when he had paraded her before Hellbeam. But he had not done so. Now he
+knew. Now he knew the whole measure of them. And the bitterness of his
+awakening was maddening.
+
+Well, Bull Sternford should get away with no play of that sort at his
+expense. He warned himself that he was no simple fool to be played with.
+And if Nancy wanted the man--But he broke away from under the lash of
+impotent fury, and turned to a channel of thought which was bound to
+serve a nature such as his in his present mood.
+
+He returned to his desk and flung himself into the chair. And after a
+while his mind settled itself to the task his mood demanded. He sat
+staring straight ahead of him, and presently the heat passed out of his
+eyes, and they grew cold, and hard. Later, they began to smile
+again--but it was a smile of cruelty, of evil purpose. It was a smile
+more unrelenting in its cruelty than any frown could have expressed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For the first time Nancy's eyes were open to the things of life as they
+really were. She had tasted a certain bitterness in the early days of
+her girlhood. But up till now the world had seemed something of a rose
+garden in which it was a delight to labour. Up till now she had seen no
+reverse to the picture of life as youth had painted it for her. Now,
+however, it was borne in upon her that there was a reverse, a reverse
+that was ugly and painfully distressing. It was this declaration of war
+between her own people and the man from Labrador.
+
+She lay in her bed that night thinking, thinking, and without any desire
+for sleep. Strive as she would to search the position out logically, to
+estimate the true meaning of it all, to fathom the chances of this war,
+and to grasp the necessity for it, all these efforts only resulted in a
+tangle of thought revolving about the picture of a youthful man of vast
+stature, with eyes that were always clear-searching or smiling, and with
+a head of hair that reminded her of a lion's mane. And as she gazed
+upon this mental picture there were moments when it seemed to her there
+was grave trouble in the clear depths which so appealed to her. The
+smile in her eyes seemed to fade out, to be replaced by a look that
+seemed to express the hurtful knowledge of a man disheartened, defeated,
+crushed. They were in rival camps. They were at war. Each desired
+victory. And yet the sight she beheld, the signs of defeat she
+discovered in the man's eyes gave her no joy, no satisfaction.
+
+She felt that the battle could end only one way. The might of the
+Skandinavia was too great for anything but its complete victory. She was
+sure, quite sure. Oh, yes. And she knew she would not have it otherwise.
+But the pity of it. This creature of splendid manhood. To think that he
+must go down--smashed. That was the word they used--smashed.
+
+How she hated the word. The big soul of him with his ready kindliness.
+Oh, it was a pity. It was a distracting thought. And why should it be?
+For the life of her she could see no need. A little yielding on his
+part. Just a shade less iron stubbornness. The whole thing could have
+been avoided she was sure. The olive branch had been held out by the
+Skandinavia. But he had deliberately refused it.
+
+No. He had made himself their enemy. Then surely there could be no
+complaint at the disaster that would overtake him. He was clearly to
+blame. So why let the contemplation of it distract her?
+
+She strove a hundred times to dismiss the whole thing from her mind. She
+courted sleep in every conceivable way. But it was all useless. The
+man's fine eyes and great body haunted her. They pursued her to her last
+waking thought. And, at last, she fell asleep, thinking of the strong
+supporting arms that had held her safe from the fury of Atlantic waves.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE PLANNING OF CAMPAIGN
+
+
+Nathaniel Hellbeam sat ominously calm and unruffled while Elas Peterman
+told of his meeting with Bull Sternford. He gave no sign whatever. There
+was just the flicker of a smile of appreciation of Bull's effrontery
+when he heard of his response to Peterman's invitation to sell. That
+alone of the whole story seemed to afford him interest. For the rest, it
+had only been the sort of thing he expected.
+
+He waited until the other had finished. Then he stirred in his chair. It
+was an expression of relief that his long, silent sitting had ended.
+
+"So," he said. "We do not buy him. No. We smash him."
+
+There was obvious satisfaction that the more peaceful process was to be
+set aside.
+
+He sat blinking at his subordinate in the fashion of a man who is
+thinking hard, and has no interest in the object upon which he is
+gazing.
+
+"It is as I think--all the time," he said at last. "That is all right. I
+make no cry out. It is easy to fight. I would fight always with an
+enemy. It is good. Now my friend, you have acted so. You bring the man
+from Sachigo to tell you to go to hell. Eh? Well you have thought much?
+You have planned for the fight? How is it you make this fight?"
+
+Elas was standing before the desk. He had, yielded his place to this man
+who was master of the Skandinavia. Now he looked down at the
+square-headed creature with his gross, squat body. It was a figure and
+face bristling with venom and purpose; and somehow he was conscious of a
+sudden lack of his usual assurance.
+
+"Oh, yes," he replied thoughtfully. "I've planned--sure. But I guess
+I'm in the dark a bit. It's going to cost a deal. It's not going to be
+easy. You were ready to buy. It was not necessarily to be the
+Skandinavia who bought. Well, are you--going to vote the credit for this
+fight?" He smiled uncertainly. "And to what extent?"
+
+"The limit. Go on."
+
+Peterman nodded.
+
+"There's no commercial enterprise that can stand idleness. His work must
+stop. His--"
+
+"That is the A.B.C. of it."
+
+There was sharp impatience in the financier's biting tone.
+
+"Just so. It is the A.B.C. of it."
+
+Hellbeam set back in his chair. He clasped his hands across his stomach.
+
+"I will tell you," he said, a wicked smile lighting his deep-set eyes,
+his cheeks rounding themselves in his satisfaction. "His work will stop.
+His mill is far away. There is no protection from attack except that
+which he can set up himself. He is going away. He will have eighteen
+hundred miles of water between him and his mill. It should be easy with
+a good plan and all the money. Listen.
+
+"His work must stop. How? There are ways. His mill may burn. His forests
+may burn. His men may revolt. They may refuse to work for him. All, or
+any of these things may serve. There are men at all times ready to carry
+out these things. You can tell them, or you need not, the way they must
+act." He shook his head. "You say to them his work must stop; and you
+pay them more than he can pay them. So his work will stop. That is so?
+Yes? Very well. There is ha'f a million dollars that will pay for his
+work to stop. I say that."
+
+Peterman was startled. He had not been prepared for so sweeping a
+proposal. He had understood that the man had been prepared to stand at
+almost nothing in his desire to achieve some end, the nature of which
+still remained somewhat obscure to him. For all his own lack of scruple
+in his dealings with those who offended, the calm, fiendish purpose of
+this man shocked him not a little.
+
+He took the chair usually occupied by his visitors.
+
+"You will pay ha'f a million dollars for this thing?" he demanded, to
+re-assure himself.
+
+Self-satisfaction looked out of the eyes of the man behind the desk.
+
+"More--if necessary."
+
+"By God! You must hate this boy, Sternford."
+
+Peterman's feelings had broken from under his control.
+
+"Sternford? Psha! It is not Sternford. No."
+
+The smile had gone from Hellbeam's eyes. They were fiercely burning.
+They were the hot, passionate eyes of a man obsessed, of a man possessed
+of a monomania. Peterman, watching, beheld the sudden change in him. He
+shrank before the insanity he had so deeply probed.
+
+Hellbeam sat forward in his chair. His forearms were resting on the
+desk, and his hands were clenched so that the finger-nails almost cut
+into the flesh of their palms. His massive face was flushed, and the
+coarse veins at his temples stood out like cords.
+
+"Here, I tell you," he cried gutturally, returning in his fury to the
+native Teuton in him. "Can you hate--yes? Have you known hate? Eh? No.
+You the white liver have. You cannot hate. It is not in you. Oh, no. It
+is for me. Yes. It has been so for years. And I tell you it is the only
+thing in life. Woman? No. I have known them. They mean little. They are
+a pleasure that passes. Money? What is it when you play the market as
+you choose? The day comes when you can help yourself. And you no longer
+desire so to do. Hate? That lives. That feeds on body and brain. That
+consumes till there is only a dead carcase left. Ah! Hate is for the
+lifetime. It can leave all those others as nothing. In it there is joy,
+despair, all the time, every hour of life."
+
+He held up one hand and opened his fingers. Then he slowly closed them
+with a curious expressive movement of ruthless destruction.
+
+"You hate and you think. You see your vengeance in operation. You see
+him there in your hand; and you see the blood sweat as you squeeze and
+crush out the life that has offended. Man, it is a joy that never leaves
+you till you accomplish this thing. Then, after, you have the memory.
+And while you think, even though he is dead, smashed in your grip, he
+still suffers as you think. Oh, yes."
+
+"And you hate--that way?"
+
+A feeling of sudden fear had taken possession of Peterman. This gross,
+squat man had become something terrible to him.
+
+"Ja!"
+
+The Teuton leapt in the furious emphasis hurled.
+
+"Oh, ja! I hate. I tell you of it."
+
+The man with the insane eyes picked up a pen. He turned it about in his
+fingers. Then, suddenly, but slowly, the fingers began to break it. The
+wood split under their pressure, and the pieces littered the table. He
+gazed at them for a moment. Then one hand clenched and came down with a
+crash on the blotting pad. Then he sat back in his chair again, with his
+cruel eyes gazing straight out at the window opposite.
+
+"It is years now. Oh, yes." A deep breath escaped from between the man's
+coarse lips. "I ruled the markets. I ruled them so that they obeyed me.
+I was the money power of this continent. I did as I chose. So I thought.
+Then he came. This man. He did not disturb me. Oh, no. I slept good all
+the time. Then I woke. I woke to find I was beaten of ten million
+dollars; and that Wall Street, the markets of the world, were laughing
+that this schoolmaster, this fool Scotsman from over the water, had
+picked my pocket while I slept. It was not the money. It was the laugh.
+And he got away. Oh, yes. I tell it now. The market knew of it then.
+They laughed. How they laughed. So I sat and thought. I had all. There
+was nothing more to have. And then I learned to hate."
+
+The narrowed eyes came back to the face of the man beside the desk.
+There was a sharp intake of breath.
+
+"This mill, this Sachigo, was built out of my money. And the man who
+built it was the man who robbed me while I slept."
+
+A world of fierce bitterness lay in the final words, and the man
+listening realised the enormity of the offence, as this man saw it. But
+he was left puzzled.
+
+"But you would have--bought this Sachigo?" he said, said.
+
+Hellbeam's eyes were again turned to the window.
+
+"Oh, yes," he said. "I would have bought. It would bring me to meet this
+man. It is that I ask. That only. My hands would close upon him. And I
+would see the blood sweat of his heart ooze under them."
+
+Hellbeam had finished. Peterman understood that. The passion had passed
+out of his eyes and the veins of his forehead were no longer distended.
+He remained gazing at the window.
+
+For some moments the younger man made no attempt to intrude further. He
+had little desire to, anyway. Without scruple himself, he still found
+little pleasure in probing the heart of this man, who was so powerful in
+his own destiny. That which he had witnessed had served only to show him
+the delicacy of his own position. He knew that the story had been told
+for one reason only. It was to convince him, for the sake of his own
+wellbeing in the Skandinavia, that he must make no mistake in the
+warfare he must wage against the people of Sachigo. It was for him to
+wage the battle with every faculty that was in him; and any failure of
+his would mean disaster for himself. This was no commercial warfare. It
+was the insane purpose of a monomaniac.
+
+In those silent moments Elas Peterman thought with a rapidity inspired
+by the urgency he felt to be driving him. And the fertility of his
+imagination served him unfailingly. Oh yes. Necessity was driving. But
+so, too, was his own personal feelings. He saw in the position that this
+man had revealed an advantage to himself he had never looked for. With
+the necessary money forthcoming, and no directors to concern himself
+with, literally a free hand, he could employ a power which, in these
+days of unrest and hatred between capital and labour, would be well-nigh
+overwhelming. The morality of it, the ultimate consequence of it
+mattered nothing. The smashing of Sachigo would mean the smashing of
+Bull Sternford. And he saw a way whereby the smashing of Bull Sternford
+could be achieved through--
+
+His mind focused itself, as it was bound to do, upon this thing as it
+affected his own desires. He, too, was a passionate hater, for all
+Hellbeam's denial. His thought leapt at once to Nancy McDonald and the
+man who had thrust himself between him and his desires. Whatever insane
+hatred lay behind Hellbeam's purpose, it was not one whit more insensate
+than Elas Peterman's feelings against the man who had come down from
+Sachigo at Nancy's bidding.
+
+Suddenly he looked up and glanced at the man occupying the chair that
+was his. Hellbeam was still gazing at the window, pre-occupied with his
+own thoughts.
+
+"You can leave this thing in my hands, sir," he said. "Our organisation
+has been working steadily to undermine the Sachigo people for months
+past. That has always been part of our policy. I'd say the whole
+thing's going to fit very well. You say, if necessary, you'll find half
+a million dollars for the business. We shan't need a tithe of that.
+However, it's well to know it. And none of it needs to worry our
+directors. I'll set about it right away--in my own fashion--and I'll
+promise you a quick result. We'll smash these folk all right. But how
+it's to hand you the man you need I'm not wise--"
+
+"No." Hellbeam's eyes were certainly derisive as they turned back from
+the window. "This man, Martin, will show himself when he sees
+the--destruction. My people will do the rest."
+
+"Unless he leaves it--to Sternford. They tell us this man would as soon
+fight as laugh. That's how Miss McDonald said the missionary, Father
+Adam, told her."
+
+"Father Adam?" The derision in the financier's eyes had deepened.
+"That's the man that other fool talks of."
+
+Peterman shrugged. The sting in the financier's words stirred him to
+resentment.
+
+"I don't know about that. Anyway--"
+
+"How is it you say? Get busy. Yes."
+
+Hellbeam rose stiffly from his seat and picked up his hat. He was quite
+untouched by the other's change of tone.
+
+"Do it how you please. Break that mill. I care nothing for the means.
+Smash 'em, and leave the rest to me. And when you that have done you can
+do the thing you please. You will have my good will. I say that. Now I
+go."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Peterman picked up the 'phone the moment the door had closed behind the
+one man in all the world he really feared, and at the other end of it
+Nancy took the message summoning her to his presence. The man spoke with
+unusual urgency. But his tone was pleasant, and more than conciliatory.
+He wanted her at once. She could leave her reports. She could leave
+everything. He had some news for her of the pleasantest nature. Oh, yes.
+He had determined big things for her. She had earned them all. But a
+thing had happened whereby there need be no limit to her advancement if
+she would take the chance of a big work offered her. Would she kindly
+come up right away.
+
+Nancy listened to this message with a stirring of heart. What was the
+great work that was to place no limit on her advancement? It was a
+feeling rather than a thought. For a moment she stood in her
+glass-partitioned office after she had received the message and a smile
+of great happiness lit her eyes.
+
+She was desperately earnest with a singleness of purpose which had in it
+something of the recklessness of the father before her. She was a child
+in all else. A wide vision of achievement was spread out before her. She
+could see nothing beyond. She could see nothing to give her pause,
+nothing even to bestir a belated caution. So she left her office for the
+interview Peterman had demanded without suspicion, and with a heart and
+mind ready to plunge her headlong into any labours which the Skandinavia
+demanded of her.
+
+She had completely forgotten, in that moment of exultation, the squarely
+military figure that had passed down the dining-room of the Chateau, and
+the coldly unsmiling eyes with which it had regarded her as she sat with
+her companion over their memorable meal.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+THE SAILING OF THE _Empress_
+
+
+Bull Sternford was reading over the telegram he had just written. Its
+phraseology was curious. But it expressed the things he wanted to say,
+and he knew it would be understood by the man to whom it was addressed.
+
+ "HARKER, SACHIGO, LABRADOR.
+
+ "Sailing to-morrow. War. Pass mill through hair sieve. Clear all
+ refuse. Watch fireguard. Look around. Plums otherwise ripe.
+ Return earliest date.
+
+ "BULL."
+
+He smiled as he looked up from his reading. An acquaintance passed
+through the hall of the hotel. He nodded to him. Then the smile died out
+of his eyes, and it was like the passing of a gleam of sunshine. He
+passed the message across the counter to the attendant and paid for it.
+
+War! It was only an added development in the course of the ceaseless
+work of life. The thought of it disturbed him not one whit. It was the
+element in which he thrived. But for all that his mood had lost much of
+its usual equanimity.
+
+For two weeks he had applied himself assiduously to the work upon which
+he was engaged. He had travelled hundreds of miles to the other capital
+cities of the country in pursuit of his affairs. He had worked in that
+express fashion which was characteristic of him. But under it all,
+through it all, a depressing disappointment hung like a shadow over
+every successful effort he put forth. The memory of an evening at the
+Chateau haunted him. The vision of smiling hazel eyes and a radiant
+crowning of vivid hair filled every moment of his waking dreaming. He
+had not seen or heard of Nancy McDonald since that first night in
+Quebec.
+
+To-morrow he sailed for England. The thought of it afforded him none of
+the satisfaction with which he had always looked forward to that
+journey. Yet it meant no less to him now. On the contrary. It really
+meant more. It meant that his work was marching forward to the great
+completion which was to crown his labours, and the work of those others
+who had conceived the task.
+
+It should have been a wonderful moment for him. The house of Leader and
+Company of London had thrown its doors open to him in welcome. Sir Frank
+Leader with his millions, his shipping, his great power, and the
+confidence which his name inspired in British commercial circles, would
+not fail. The prospect lying ahead, for all the threatened war, should
+have stirred him to a keen enthusiasm that achievement was within his
+grasp. But none of these emotions were stirring.
+
+He felt if he could only see Nancy McDonald, that perfect creature with
+her amazing beauty and splendid courage, just to exchange a few words,
+just to receive her smiling "bon voyage," and even to hear her laughing
+declaration of her frank enmity, why--it would--But there was no chance
+now--none at all. He sailed to-morrow.
+
+He had dreamed a wonderful dream since first he had beheld the charming
+fur-clad figure enter his office at Sachigo. He had realised, even in
+those first moments, the impish act of Fate. Nancy McDonald was the one
+woman in the world who could mean life--real life to him, and they were
+definitely arrayed against each other in the battle for commercial
+supremacy in which they were both engaged.
+
+But Fate's act had only added to his desire. The whole thing had
+appealed to his combative instinct. It had left him feeling there was
+not alone the storming of the Skandinavia's stronghold to be achieved.
+There was also a captive, a fair, innocent captive held bound and
+prisoned within the citadel for him to set free. He wanted Nancy as he
+wanted nothing else in the world. Sachigo? Canada for the Canadians?
+These things were cold, meaningless words. He only thought of the
+dawning of the day that should see Nancy his wife, his everything in
+life.
+
+He betook himself out on to the Terraces overlooking the slowly freezing
+waterway of the great St. Lawrence river. It was keenly cold, and the
+white carpet of winter's first snow remained unmelted on the ground. But
+the sun was shining, and the crisp air was sparkling, and the terraces
+were filled with fur-clad folk who, like himself, had found leisure for
+a half hour of one of the finest views in the world.
+
+He paced leisurely down the great promenade towards the old Citadel with
+all its memories of great men, and the old time Buccaneers who had made
+history about its walls. He gazed upon it and wondered. Were they such
+bad old days? Were the men who lived in those times great men? Were they
+scoundrelly Buccaneers? Were their scruples and morals any more lax than
+those of to-day? Were they any different from those who walked under the
+shadow of the old walls? They were the questions doubtless asked a
+thousand times in as many minutes by those who paused to think as they
+contemplated this fine old landmark.
+
+Bull found his own prompt answers. There was no difference, he told
+himself. The men and women of to-day were doing the same things,
+enduring the same emotions, fighting the same battles, living and
+loving, and hating and dying, just as life had ordained from the
+beginning of time. And as he stood there he wondered how long this round
+of human effort and passion must continue. How long this--
+
+"Why, I hadn't an idea you were so interested in our old history as to
+be wasting precious time out here in the snow, Mr. Sternford."
+
+The challenge was full of pleasant, even delighted greeting. And Bull
+snatched his cigar from his lips and bared his head.
+
+It was the voice he had longed to hear for many days. And it rang with
+an added charm in his delighted ears. He had turned on the instant, and
+stood smiling down into eyes that had never ceased from their haunting.
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"If you'll believe me I wasn't wasting time," he said. "I came out here
+for a very definite purpose. I've done the thing I hoped. Do you know I
+guessed I'd have to sail to-morrow without seeing you again?"
+
+Nancy's eyes sobered. And without their smile Bull thought he detected a
+cloud of trouble in them.
+
+"I didn't know you were sailing to-morrow," she said. "It's just a
+chance I couldn't help that let me meet you now."
+
+"You mean you avoided me--deliberately?"
+
+Bull's smile had passed. But there was no umbrage in his manner. The
+girl's appeal for him was never so great as at that moment. She had
+never been more beautiful to him. He had first seen her in that same
+long fur coat, and had gazed into her pretty eyes under the same fur
+cap. He was glad she was so clad now. To his mind no other costume could
+have so much charm for him.
+
+"Yes."
+
+The simple downrightness of the admission might have disconcerted
+another. But its honesty and lack of subterfuge only pleased the man.
+
+"That's what I thought. It's this business standing between your folk
+and me?"
+
+Nancy nodded.
+
+"Yes. We are enemies."
+
+"That's so," Bull agreed. "That's the pity of it. If you were on my
+side--"
+
+"But I'm not. No." Nancy's denial was almost sharp. It certainly was
+hurried. "I'm kind of glad I've seen you, though," she went on. "I've
+had it in mind I wanted to say things to you." A smile came back to her
+eyes. "You see, there are enemies and enemies. There's the enemy you can
+regard well. There's the enemy you can hate and despise. Well, I just
+want to say we're enemies who don't need to hate and despise--yet. I
+don't know how things'll be later. Maybe you'll learn to hate me good
+before we're through. But that's as maybe. I'm going to do my work for
+all I know for my folks. I'm going to be in this fight right up to my
+neck. I've been warned that way. Well, that being so, I'm going to fight
+without looking for quarter, and I shall give none. That sounds tough,
+doesn't it? But I mean it. And I wanted to say it before things start.
+I'm glad I've had the chance--against my notions of things."
+
+Bull laughed. He was in the mood to laugh--now.
+
+"It sounds fine. Say--"
+
+"Are you laughing at me?"
+
+"There isn't a thing further from my thoughts." Bull's denial was
+sincere and prompt. "I'm glad you happened along. I'm glad you said
+those things. Fight this war--as I shall--with all that's in you. It
+don't matter a thing if you're right or wrong. Fight it square and hard
+for your folk, and there isn't a right man or woman, but who'll respect
+you, and think the better of you for it. A good fight's no crime when
+you're convinced you're right."
+
+The girl drew a deep breath, and, to the man, it seemed in the nature of
+relief. A great anxiety for her stirred him.
+
+"I'm glad you said that," she said. Then she gazed reflectively up at
+the old ramparts. "No. It's no crime to fight when you're convinced.
+Besides it's right, too, to fight for your side at any time. That's how
+I see it. You'll fight for yours--"
+
+"Any old how." Bull's eyes were deeply regarding. They were very gentle.
+"Here," he went on, "fight has a clear, definite meaning for me. I
+fight to win. I'll stop at nothing. It's always a game of 'rough and
+tough' with me. Gouge, chew, and all the rest of it. Frankly, there's a
+devil inside me, when it's fight. I want you to know this, so your
+scruples needn't worry you."
+
+"Yes."
+
+Nancy's gaze was turned seawards.
+
+"And you sail--to-morrow? When do you return?" she asked a moment later.
+
+Bull smilingly shook his head.
+
+"We are at war," he said.
+
+The girl's eyes came back. She, too, smiled.
+
+"I forgot." Then she added: "You go by the _Empress_?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+They had both contrived to make it difficult. The barrier was growing.
+Both realised it, and Nancy was stirred more than she knew. She had seen
+this man and hurried over to him. She had purposely denied him for two
+weeks, but the sight of him on the promenade had been irresistible.
+Now--now she hardly knew what to say; and yet there were a hundred
+things struggling in her mind to find expression. She was paralysed by
+the memory of the recent interview she had had with her employers--the
+great financial head of her house included--wherein she had learned all
+that the coming war meant personally to herself. She would have given
+worlds at that moment to have been able to blot out that memory. But she
+had no power to do so. It loomed almost tragically in its significance
+in the presence of this man.
+
+Bull found it no less difficult. He had striven to make things easy for
+her. He had no second thought. And now he realised the thing he had
+done. His words had only served to fling an irrevocable challenge, and
+thus, finally and definitely, made the longed-for approach between them
+impossible.
+
+He drew a deep breath.
+
+"Yes. I sail on the _Empress_."
+
+"And you are glad--of course?"
+
+Bull laughed.
+
+"Some ways."
+
+"You mean--?"
+
+"Why, I shouldn't be sailing if things weren't going my way," he said.
+Then he turned about and his movement was an invitation. "But let's quit
+it," he said. "Let's forget--for the moment. You don't know what this
+meeting has meant to me. I wanted to see you, if only to say 'good-bye.'
+I thought I wasn't going to."
+
+They moved down the promenade together.
+
+Nancy did her best. They talked of everything but the impending war, and
+the meaning of it. But the barrier had grown out of all proportion. And
+a great unease tugged at the heart of each. At length, as they came back
+towards the hotel, Nancy felt it impossible to go on. And with downright
+truth she said so.
+
+"It must be 'good-bye'--now," she said. "This is all unreal. It must be
+so. We're at war. We shall be at each other's throats presently. Well, I
+just can't pretend. I don't want to think about it. I hate to remember
+it. But it's there in my mind the whole time; and it worries so I don't
+know the things I'm saying. It's best to say 'good-bye' and 'bon voyage'
+right here. And whatever the future has for us I just mean that."
+
+She held out her hand. It was bare, and soft, and warm, as the man took
+possession of it.
+
+"I feel that way, too," he said. "But--" he broke off and shook his
+head. "No. It's no use. You've the right notion of this. Until this
+war's fought out there is nothing else for it. You'll go right back to
+your camp and I'll go to mine. And we'll both work out how we can best
+beat the other. But let's make a compact. We'll do the thing we know to
+hurt the other side the most we can. If need be we'll neither show the
+other mercy. And we'll promise each to take our med'cine as it comes,
+and cut out the personal hate and resentment it's likely to try and
+inspire. We'll be fighting machines without soul or feeling till peace
+comes. Then we'll be just as we are now--friends. Can you do it? I can."
+
+For all the feeling of the moment Nancy laughed.
+
+"It sounds crazy," she exclaimed.
+
+"It is crazy. But so is the whole thing."
+
+"Yes. Oh, it surely is. It's worst than crazy." Passion rang in the
+girl's voice. Then the hazel depths smiled and set the man's pulses
+hammering afresh. "But I'll make that compact, and I'll keep it. Yes.
+Now, 'good-bye,' and a happy and pleasant trip."
+
+Their hands fell apart. Bull had held that hand, so soft and warm and
+appealing to him, till he dared hold it no longer.
+
+"Thanks," he said. "Good-bye. I can set out with a good heart--now."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was again the luncheon hour. It was also the hour at which the
+_Empress_ was scheduled to sail. Nancy was again on the Terrace. But now
+she was standing on the edge of the promenade--alone. She was gazing
+down at the grey waters of the great river, searching with eager eyes,
+and listening for the "hoot" of the vessel's siren. This was the last
+departure the _Empress_ would make from Quebec for the season. By the
+time she returned across the ocean the ice would deny her approach, and
+she would make port farther seawards.
+
+Nancy had come there in her leisure just out of simple interest, she
+told herself. The man was nothing to her. Oh, no. She felt a certain
+regret that they were at war. She felt a certain pity that it was
+necessary that so brave a man's hopes must be crushed and all his plans
+broken, but that was all. She told herself these things very
+deliberately.
+
+And so she had hurried over her mid-day meal, lest she should miss the
+sight of the _Empress_ steaming out, with Bull Sternford aboard.
+
+The day was cold and grey. There was snow in the heavy clouds, and the
+north wind was bitter. But it mattered nothing. Waiting there the girl's
+feet in their overshoes grew cold. Her hands were cold. Even her slim,
+graceful body under its outer covering of fur was none too warm. But her
+whole interest was absorbed and she remained so till the appointed time.
+
+Oh, yes. It was simply interest in the departure of the vessel that held
+her. Just the same, as it was simply interest that stirred her heart and
+set it a-flutter, as the sound of the ship's siren came up to her from
+below. And surely it was only a 'God-speed' to the departing vessel that
+was conveyed in the fluttering handkerchief she held out and waved, as
+the graceful giant passed out into the distant mid-channel.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+ON BOARD THE _Empress_
+
+
+It was the second day out and the passengers on the _Empress_ had
+already settled down to their week's trip.
+
+The sea was calm, with just that pleasant, lazy swell which the Atlantic
+never really loses. The decks were thronged with a happy company of men
+and women determined not to lose one single moment of the bodily ease
+which the clemency of the weather vouchsafed to them.
+
+Bull Sternford was amongst them. Engulfed in a heavy fur overcoat, he
+stood lounging against the lee rail of the wide promenade deck,
+contemplating the oily swell of the waters. His great stature was
+somewhat magnified by his voluminous coat, with its deep, upturned
+storm-collar. There was that about him to attract considerable
+attention. But he remained unconscious of it, and his aloofness was by
+no means studied.
+
+Deep emotion was stirring. A man of iron nerve and purpose, a man of
+cool deliberation under the harshest circumstances, just now Bull was
+afflicted like the veriest weakling with alternating hope and doubt, and
+something approaching indecision. The youth in him was plunged in that
+agony of desire which maddens with delight and drives headlong to
+despair. His whole horizon of life had changed. Old scenes, old dreams,
+had been suddenly blotted out. And in their place was the wonderful
+vision of a girl with vivid hair and gentle eyes. Nancy--Nancy McDonald.
+The name was always with him now, unspoken, unwhispered even; but
+occupying every waking thought.
+
+It was a time of reckless resolve, of hot-headed planning. He knew in
+his sober moments how almost impossible was the position. But these were
+not sober moments. He told himself, in his headlong way, that if Nancy
+was chained in the heart of Hell he would seek her out, and claim her.
+She should be his even though every infernal power were arrayed against
+him. His eyes were alight with a fierce smile, as he contemplated the
+grey waters. It was a smile of conscious strength, of reckless purpose.
+Well, he was ready. He was--
+
+"Guess we'll git this sort of stuff all the way."
+
+Bull started and swung around. A fur-coated man with a dark
+close-cropped beard was leaning over the rail beside him. He was
+expensively clad. His astrachan collar was turned up about his neck to
+shut out something of the biting winter air; and a cap of similar fur
+was pressed low down over his dark head. Bull noted the man's
+appearance, and his reply was promptly forthcoming.
+
+"Maybe," he admitted without interest.
+
+"Sure we will. It's always that way with the _Empress's_ last trip of
+the season from Quebec. I most generally make it for that reason. Your
+first trip?"
+
+"No."
+
+"It's my nineteenth. You see," the stranger went on, "I can't spare
+summer time. I'm too full gettin' orders out. I'm in the lumber
+business. It's only with the freeze up I can quit my mills. Have a
+cigar?"
+
+Bull had no alternative. The man was there to talk, and his desire to do
+so was frankly displayed.
+
+"I won't smoke, thanks," Bull replied without offense. "It's too near
+dinner."
+
+"Dinner? There's a ha'f hour to the dressing bugle." The stranger
+returned the elaborate case stuffed full of large, expensive cigars to
+his pocket, and drew out a gold cigarette case instead. "Still I don't
+blame you a thing. Cigars? Me for a cigarette all the time. I don't
+guess any feller ever heard tell of tobacco, till he'd inhaled a good,
+plain Virginia Cigarette."
+
+Bull looked on while the man wasted half-a-dozen matches lighting his
+beloved cigarette. He was not without interest. There was a slightly
+Jewish caste about his face which was frankly smiling, and lit with
+shrewd, twinkling dark eyes. He conveyed, too, somewhat blatantly, an
+atmosphere of abounding prosperity.
+
+Bull laughed as the cigarette was finally lighted.
+
+"That's better," he said. "Now--you can inhale."
+
+"Sure I can." The man's smile was full of amiability. "Inhale anything.
+Say, up in the camps I've inhaled tea-leaves rolled in cracker paper
+before now. Ever hit a lumber camp?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"But not out West? British Columbia?"
+
+"No. Only Quebec."
+
+The stranger shook his head disparagingly.
+
+"Quebec! Psha! Quebec ain't a thing. It ain't a circumstance," he said
+complacently. "No, sir. The West. That's the place for lumbering. B.C.
+West of the Rockies. Man, it's the world's greatest proposition. The
+place you can spend a lifetime cutting ninety foot baulks, and lose
+track of where you cut. Quebec's mostly small stuff," he went on
+contemptuously, "pulp-wood an' that." He shook his head. "It's no place
+for capital. And, anyway, the Frenchies have got the whole darn place
+taped out. Oh, they're wise--the Frenchies. If a feller's lookin' to get
+ahead of 'em he needs to stake out the Arctic, where you'd freeze the
+ears of a brass image. The Frenchies got it all. The only big stuff lies
+on Labrador, anyway. I know. I prospected. No, it's me for the big
+hills, West. The big hills and the big waterways that 'ud leave Quebec
+rivers looking like a leak in a bone dry bar'l. My name's Aylin P.
+Cantor, Vancouver, B.C. Maybe you know the name?"
+
+Bull shook his head.
+
+"I'm not--"
+
+"Oh, it don't matter," interjected Mr. Cantor. "You see, the West's one
+hell of a long way--west. I just didn't get your--"
+
+"Oh, my name's Sternford."
+
+Mr. Cantor's face beamed.
+
+"Why I'm glad to know you, Mr. Sternford," he exclaimed. Then a quick,
+enquiring upward glance of his shrewd eyes suggested recollection. "But
+say--you ain't Sternford of Labrador? The groundwood outfit up at--up
+at--"
+
+"Sachigo?"
+
+"That's it, sure. Guess I'd lost the name a moment."
+
+Bull nodded amusedly.
+
+"Yes. That's where I hail from. And, as you say, there's big stuff up
+there, too."
+
+"Big? Why I'd say. Well, now! That's fine! I've heard tell big yarns of
+Labrador. It's just great meeting--"
+
+The man broke off at the sound of the first blast of the dressing bugle.
+
+"Why, it's later than I guessed," he said. "Anyway, you'll take a
+cocktail with me? This vessel's good and wet, thanks be to Providence,
+and the high seas being peopled with fish instead of cranks. I hadn't a
+notion I was goin' to run into a real lumberman on this trip. It's done
+me a power of good."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Aylin P. Cantor was a diverting creature for all his appearance of
+ostentatious prosperity. Good fortune had undoubtedly been his, and his
+whole being seemed to have become absorbed in the trade which had so
+generously treated him. Before the cocktail was consumed Bull had
+listened to a long story of British Columbia, and forests of
+incomparable extent. He had also learned that a country estate, miles in
+extent, outside the city of Vancouver, and the luxuries associated with
+the multi-millionaire had fallen to the lot of Aylin P. Cantor. But
+somehow there was no offence in it all. The man was just a bubbling
+fount of enthusiasm and delight that this was so. He simply had to talk
+of it.
+
+But the acquaintance was not to terminate over a cocktail. Shipboard
+offers few avenues of escape to the man seeking to avoid another. So it
+came that Bull found himself sipping a brandy, reputed to be one hundred
+years old, over his coffee after dinner, while Aylin P. Cantor told him
+the story of how it came into his possession at something far below its
+market value.
+
+Later, again, while the auction pool was being sold, he found himself
+ensconced on a lounge in a far corner of the smokeroom beside his
+fellow craftsman, still listening chiefly, and absorbing fact and
+anecdote pertaining to a successful lumberman's life. And it was nearly
+eleven o'clock, and the pool had been sold, and the bulk of the
+occupants of the smoking-room were contemplating their last rubber of
+Auction Bridge, when the busy-minded westerner consented to abandon his
+particular venue for a brief contemplation of the despised East.
+
+"Oh, I guess there's money in your territory, too," he condescended at
+last. "I ain't a word to say against the stuff I've heard tell of
+Labrador. But you're froze up more'n ha'f the year. That's your
+trouble."
+
+"Yes."
+
+Bull nodded over the latter portion of his third cigar which Mr. Cantor
+had not permitted him to escape.
+
+"Sure," the man laughed. "Oh, the stuff's there. I know that. But
+Labrador needs a mighty big nerve to exploit. I heard it all from a
+feller I met when I was prospecting Quebec. You see, I had the notion of
+playing a million dollars in the Quebec forests once. But I weakened. I
+kind of fancied my chance against the Frenchies didn't amount to cold
+water on a red hot cookstove. I cut it out and hunted my own patch,
+West, again. But I guess I'd have fallen for the stories of Labrador, if
+it hadn't been for the feller who put me wise."
+
+"Who was that?" Bull had lost interest, but the man invited the enquiry.
+
+"Oh, a sort of missionary crank," Cantor returned indifferently. "You
+know the sort. We got 'em out West, too. They hound the boys around,
+chasin' them heavenwards by a through route they guess they know about."
+He laughed. "But the boys bein' just boys, the round up don't ever seem
+to make good; and that through trip looks most like a bum sort of
+freight in the wash-out season. Outside his missioner business I guess
+the guy was pretty wise, though. And his knowledge of the lumber play
+left me without a word. He knew it all--an' I guess he told it to me."
+
+Bull laughed. But the laugh was inspired by the thought that there could
+be found in the world a man who could leave Aylin P. Cantor without a
+word on the subject of lumber.
+
+"I'd like to make a guess at that feller," he said. "There's just one
+man I know who's a missionary in Quebec who knows anything about
+Labrador. Did he call himself, 'Father Adam?'"
+
+"That's the thing he did."
+
+"Ah, I thought so." Bull's smile had passed. "Where did you meet him?"
+he went on after a moment.
+
+"On the Shagaunty. The Skandinavia Corporation territory. He told me
+he'd just come along through from Labrador."
+
+"Oh, yes?"
+
+Mr. Cantor laughed.
+
+"Why he took me to his crazy shanty and handed me coffee. And he talked.
+My, how he talked."
+
+"Did he know you were--prospecting?"
+
+There was no lack of interest in Bull now. His steady eyes were alight,
+as he watched the stewards moving amongst the tables, setting the place
+straight for the night.
+
+"Yes. I told him."
+
+Cantor's dark eyes were questioning. As Bull remained silent he went on.
+
+"Why? Is he interested for the Skandinavia to keep folk out?"
+
+Bull shook his head.
+
+"No. It isn't that. He's a queer feller. No, I'd say he's got just one
+concern in life. It's the boys. But you're right, he knows the whole
+thing--the whole game of lumbering in Eastern Canada. And if he told
+you and warned you, I'd say it was for your good as he saw it. No. He's
+no axe to grind, and though you found him on the Skandinavia's
+territory, I don't think he likes them. I'm sure he doesn't. Still, he's
+not concerned for any employer. He just comes and goes handing out his
+dope to the boys, and--You know the forest-jacks. They're a mighty tough
+proposition. Well, it's said they feel about Father Adam so if a hair of
+his head was hurt they'd get the feller who did it, and they'd cut the
+liver out of him, and pass what was left feed for the coyotes."
+
+Mr. Cantor nodded.
+
+"Yes, I sort of gathered something of that from the folks I hit up
+against. It seems queer a feller devoting his life to bumming through
+the forests and seekin' shelter where you couldn't find shelter from a
+summer dew. He's got no fixed home. Maybe he's sort of crazed."
+
+Bull was prompt in his denial.
+
+"Saner than you or me," he said. "You know I'd want to smile if I didn't
+know the man. But I know him, and--but there we all owe him a deal, we
+forest men. And maybe I owe him more than anyone."
+
+"How's that?"
+
+Mr. Cantor's question came sharply. Even Bull, tired as he was, noted
+the keenly incisive tone of it. He turned, and his steady eyes regarded
+the dark face of the lumberman speculatively. Then he smiled, and picked
+up his glass and drained the remains of his whisky and soda.
+
+"Why, he's more power for peace with the lumber-jacks of Quebec than if
+he was their trade leader," he said, setting his empty glass down on the
+table. "We employers owe him there's never any sort of trouble with the
+boys."
+
+"I see." Mr. Cantor gazed out across the nearly empty room, and a
+shadowy smile haunted his eyes. "And if there was trouble? Could you
+locate him in time?"
+
+"We shouldn't need to. He'd be there."
+
+The lumberman stirred, and persisted with curious interest.
+
+"But he must have a place where you folks can get him? This coming and
+going. It's fine--but--"
+
+Bull stood up and stretched himself.
+
+"Oh, he's got a home, all right. It's the forests."
+
+Mr. Cantor threw up his hands and laughed.
+
+"Who is he, anyway? A sort of Wandering Jew? A ghost? A spook? That sort
+of thing beats me. He's got to be one of the two things. He's either a
+crank--you say he ain't--or he's dodging daylight."
+
+But Bull had had enough. Deep in his heart was a feeling that no man had
+any right to pry into the life of Father Adam. Father Adam had changed
+the whole course of his life. It was Father Adam who had made possible
+everything he was to-day--even his association with Nancy McDonald. He
+shook his head unsmilingly.
+
+"Father Adam's one good man," he said. "And I wouldn't recommend anyone
+to hand out anything to the contrary within hearing of the men of the
+Quebec forests. Good-night."
+
+He strode away. And Mr. Cantor followed him, slight and bediamonded in
+his evening clothes. And somehow the dark eyes gazing on the broad back
+of the man from Labrador had none of the twinkling shrewdness the other
+had originally observed in them. They were quite cold and very hard. And
+there was that in them which suggested the annoyance inspired by a long
+evening of effort that had ended in complete failure.
+
+The man's dark, foreign-looking features had lost every semblance of
+their recent good-natured enthusiasm.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE LONELY FIGURE AGAIN
+
+
+The laden sled stood ready for the moment of starting on the day's long
+run. Five train dogs, lean, powerful huskies, crouched down upon the
+snow. They gave no sign beyond the alertness of their pose and the
+watchfulness of their furtive eyes. Their haunches were tucked under
+them. And their long, wolfish muzzles, so indicative of their parentage,
+were pressed down between great, outstretched forepaws.
+
+The man studied every detail of his outfit. He knew the chances, the
+desperate nature of the long winter trail. He had no desire to increase
+the hardship of it all by any act of carelessness.
+
+Behind him lay the mockery of a camping ground. It was a minute,
+isolated bluff of stunted, windswept trees, set in a white, wide
+wilderness of barren land. Perhaps there was some half a hundred of
+them. But that was all. They had served, but only by reason that their
+shelter had satisfied habit, which, even in the men of the long trail,
+will not be denied.
+
+He turned away. Everything was to his satisfaction. So his tall,
+fur-clad figure passed in amongst the dwarf trees.
+
+The dogs remained crouching, their fierce eyes gazing out over the
+desolate expanse of winter's playground. It lay at a great altitude,
+several thousands of feet above the level of the sea. The sky was drab.
+It was bitter with threat. It was unrelieved by any break in the
+menacing winter cloud. It was a snow sky which only refrained from
+releasing its burden by reason of the high, top wind that drove the
+heavy masses relentlessly. The earthly prospect was no more inviting. It
+was wide, and flat, and devoid of vegetation. There were no hills
+anywhere, and the skyline was just a vanishing point similar to the
+horizon of the open sea. One vast, wide field of snow and ice spread out
+in every direction, and made desolation complete.
+
+When the man re-appeared he was armed with a sturdy "gee-pole," and at
+his belt was coiled a heavy-thonged, short-stocked driving whip.
+
+Without a word he thrust the pole under the front of the sled runners,
+and a sharp command broke from his lips. The effect was instantaneous.
+Each dog sprang at his "tug." The man heaved on his pole. There was a
+moment of straining, then the holding ice gave up its grip, and the sled
+shot forward.
+
+The man stood for a moment beating his mitted hands. Then he took his
+place on the sled, buried his legs and feet under the heavy seal robes
+set ready, and so the long-waited command to "mush" was hurled at the
+waiting beasts.
+
+The dogs leapt at their work and the sled swept forward with a rush. A
+blinding flurry of snow dust rose in its wake, enveloping it, and the
+dogs raced on, yelping with the joy of activity. Their great muscles
+were aquiver with the eager spirit which is bred of the wild. And so
+they would continue to run, for their load was light, and the
+heavy-thonged whip was playing in skilful hands, and they knew, and
+feared, and obeyed its constant threat.
+
+The way lay across the frozen bosom of a great lake, no less than an
+inland sea, and a hundred miles must be travelled before night, or the
+snow, overtook them. It was a hard run. But it must be accomplished.
+Failure? But failure must not be considered. No man could contemplate
+failure and face the winter trail in the barren desolation of the lofty
+interior of Labrador's untracked wild.
+
+The austerity of the country was well-nigh overwhelming. The nakedness
+of it all suggested a skeleton world robbed of everything that could
+make existence possible. It suggested a world that was sick, and aged,
+and too unfruitful to harbour aught but the fierce elemental storms of
+the northern winter. And the cold of it ate into the bones of the lonely
+figure passing through the great silence like a ghost.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The night was deathly still. A thermometer would have registered
+something colder than sixty degrees below zero. Not a breath of wind
+stirred. The only sound that came was the doleful note of a prowling
+wolf in the forest belt near by, and the booming protest of the trees
+against the bitterness of winter.
+
+The sky was ablaze with a myriad jewels in a velvet setting. And a cold
+wealth of aurora lit the northern heavens. Camp had been pitched well
+wide of the nearby forests, and three men sat crouching over the fire.
+There was little enough to differentiate between them. They were white
+men, and all were clad, from their heads to the soles of their seal hide
+moccasins, in heavy furs. The dark outlines of two sleds showed up a few
+yards away, but the dogs, themselves, were not visible. Weary with their
+day's run they had betaken themselves to their nightly snow burrows to
+dream over past battles, past labours.
+
+The men were talking earnestly in the low, slow tones which the silence
+of the forests seems to inspire. Three pairs of bare hands were outheld
+to the welcome blaze of the fire. Three pairs of clear gazing eyes
+searched the heart of it. None were smoking. It would have been a burden
+to keep the pipe stem from freezing even in the vicinity of the fire,
+and none of them were in any mood to accept any added burden.
+
+A blue-eyed, beardless youth shifted his gaze to the dark face directly
+opposite him beyond the fire.
+
+"Oh, we got that guy--good," he said. There was laughter in his eyes but
+not in his tone. "We got him plumb at the game. He was chock full of
+kerosene and tinder, and he'd fired the patch in several places. We were
+on it quick. We beat the fire in seconds. As for him, why, I guess his
+Ma's going to forget him right away. Leastways I hope so. He went out
+like the snuff of a lucifer, and his body's likely handed plenty feed to
+any wolf straying around."
+
+The dark man across the fire nodded.
+
+"Did he hand a squeal before--he went?"
+
+"Not a word. Hadn't time. Peter here didn't ast a thing either."
+
+The youth laughed softly, and the man called Peter took up the story.
+
+"Tain't no use arguin' with a feller loaded with kerosene in these
+forests," he said, in a low grumbling way. Then he reached down and
+snatched a brand from the fire and flung it out on the snow. His action
+was followed swiftly by a wolfish howl of dismay. Then he again turned
+his grizzled, whiskered face to the dark man beyond the fire. "You see,
+Father, it's our job keeping these forests from fire, an' it ain't easy.
+It don't much concern us who's out to fire 'em. That's for other folks.
+The feller with kerosene in these forests is goin' to get the stuff we
+ken hand him. That's all. Bob an' me got our own way fer actin'."
+
+Bob laughed
+
+"We sure have," he said. "But we don't allers pull it off. No. We've had
+ten fires on our range in two weeks. We've beat the fires, but we ain't
+smashed the 'bugs' that set 'em."
+
+"Would they be all one feller? The feller that got it?" The dark man's
+eyes were serious. His tone was troubled.
+
+Peter shook his head.
+
+"No, sir. There's more'n one, sure. An' from the things I've heerd tell
+from the boys on the neighbourin' ranges it's happening all along
+through our limits. They tell me there's queer things doin' an' no one
+seems to locate the meaning right."
+
+"What sort of things?"
+
+The dark man spoke sharply. Peter's reply came after profound
+deliberation.
+
+"Oh, things," he said. Then he thrust a gnarled brown hand up under his
+fur hood, and scratched his head. "There's our forest 'phones. They're
+bein' cut. It's the same everywhere. There's most always things to break
+'em happenin', but a break aint a cut. No. They're cut. Who's cuttin'
+'em, and why? Fire-bugs. It ain't grouchy jacks. No. I've heerd the
+jacks are on the buck in parts, but that ain't their play. There ain't a
+jack who'd see these forests afire, or do a thing to help that way. You
+see, it's their living, it's their whole life. We got so we can't depend
+a thing on the 'phones. An' cut our forests 'phones and we're gropin'
+like blind men."
+
+"Yes."
+
+The leaping flames were dropping, and Bob moved out to the store of
+fuel. He returned laden, and packed the wood carefully to give the
+maximum blaze. Then he squatted again, and again his hands were thrust
+out to the warmth which meant luxury.
+
+Peter had no more to add. His grey eyes searched the heart of the fire
+as he reflected on the things which were agitating his mind.
+
+"I want to get word down, but I can't depend on the 'phones," he said
+presently. "If they ain't cut I can't tell who's gettin' the message
+anyway. Maybe the wires are bein' tapped."
+
+The man across the fire nodded.
+
+"I'm going down," he said.
+
+"I'm glad." Peter's acknowledgment came with an air of relief. "I'll
+hand you a written report before you pull out."
+
+"It's best that way."
+
+The fire was leaping again. Its beneficent warmth was very pleasant. Bob
+turned his eyes skyward.
+
+"You'll get a good trip, Father," he said. "That snow's cleared out of
+the sky. It 'ud ha' been hell if it had caught you out on the lake."
+
+"Yes. I wouldn't have made here. I wouldn't have made anywhere if that
+had happened." The dark man laughed.
+
+Peter shook his head.
+
+"No. You took a big chance."
+
+"I had to."
+
+"So?"
+
+"Yes. I had to get through. There's a big piece of trouble coming."
+
+"To do with these fires?"
+
+"I guess so."
+
+"I see."
+
+Peter's comment was full of understanding. After awhile the other looked
+up.
+
+"Guess I need a big sleep," he said. "I've got to pull out with
+daylight. Anything you want besides that written report passed on down?"
+
+Peter shook his head and sat on awhile blinking silently at the
+firelight. Then the dark man scrambled to his feet. He stood for a
+moment, very tall, very bulky in his fur clothing, and nodded down at
+the others.
+
+"So long," he said. And he moved off to his sleeping bag which was laid
+out to receive his tired body.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The man stood just within the shelter of the twilit forests. He was a
+powerful creature of sturdy build, hall-marked with the forest craft
+which was his life. He was clad in tough buckskin from head to foot.
+Even his hands, which he frequently beat in a desire for warmth, were
+similarly clad. His weatherbeaten face was hard set, and his eyes were
+narrowed to confront the merciless snow fog which the rage of the
+blizzard outside hurled at him.
+
+The cold was almost unendurable even here in the wooded shelter.
+Outside, where the storm raged unrestrainedly over its fierce
+playground, only blind hopelessness prevailed.
+
+There was nothing to be done. He could only wait.
+
+He could only wait, and hope, or abandon his vigil, and return to his
+camp which was far back in the heart of the forests. Away out there,
+somewhere lost in the blinding fog of the blizzard, which had only
+sprung up within the last hour, a lonely fellow creature was making for
+the shelter in which he stood. He was driving headlong towards him. Oh,
+yes. He knew that. He had seen the moving outfit far off, several miles
+away, over the snowy plains, before the storm had arisen. Now--where was
+he? He could not tell. He could not even guess at what might have
+happened. Blinded, freezing, weary, how long could the lonely traveller
+endure and retain any sense of direction?
+
+To the forest man the position was well-nigh tragic. Had he not
+experience of the terror of a northern blizzard? Had he not many a time
+had to grope his way along a life-line lest the slightest deviation in
+direction should carry him out into the storm to perish of cold, blinded
+and lost? Oh, yes. This understanding was the alphabet of his life.
+
+As he stood there watching and wiping the snow from his eyes, he
+reminded himself not only of his own experience but of every story of
+disaster in a blizzard he had ever listened to. And so he saw no hope
+for the poor wretch he had seen struggling to make the shelter.
+
+But he could not bring himself to abandon his post. How could he with a
+fellow creature out there in peril? Besides, there was other reason,
+although it needed none. He had urgent news for this man, news which
+must be imparted without delay, news which his employers must hear at
+the earliest possible moment.
+
+His trouble grew as he waited. He searched his mind for anything
+calculated to aid the doomed traveller. He could find nothing. He
+thought to call out, to burst his lungs in a series of shouts on the
+chance of being heard in the chaos of the storm. But he realised the
+uselessness of it all, and abandoned the impulse. No puny human voice
+could hope to make impression on the din of the elemental battle being
+fought out on the plain. No. His only service must be to stand there
+beating life into his numbing hands, ready to act on the instant should
+opportunity serve.
+
+He was eaten up by anxiety, and so took no cognisance of time. He had
+forgotten the passing of daylight. Therefore sudden realisation flung
+him into headlong panic. The forest about him was growing dark. The snow
+fog outside had changed to a deeper hue. Night was coming on. The man in
+the storm was beyond all aid, human or otherwise.
+
+The impulse of the moment was irresistible. He moved. He passed out from
+behind the long limbs of his leafless shelter. He went at a run shouting
+with all the power of his lungs. Again and again his prolonged cry went
+up. And with each effort he waited listening, listening, only to receive
+the mocking reply of the howling storm. But he persisted. He persisted
+for the simple human reason that his desire outran his power to serve.
+And in the end exhaustion forced him to abandon his hopeless task.
+
+It was then the miracle happened. Far away, it seemed, a sound like the
+faintest echo of his own voice came back to him, but it came from a
+direction all utterly unexpected. For a moment he hesitated, bewildered,
+uncertain. Then he sent up another shout, and waited listening. Yes.
+There it was. Again came the faintly echoing cry through the trees. It
+came not from the open battle ground of the storm, but from the shelter
+of the forests somewhere away to the north of him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A tall, fur-clad figure stood nearby to the sled which was already
+partly unloaded. A yard or two away a fire had been kindled, and it
+blazed comfortingly in the growing dusk of the forest. It was the moment
+when the forest man came up somewhat breathlessly and flung out a mitted
+hand in greeting.
+
+"I guessed you were makin' your last run for shelter, Father," he cried.
+"I just hadn't a hope you'd make through that storm. You beat it--fine."
+
+The tall man nodded. His dark eyes were smiling a cordiality no less
+than the other's.
+
+"I guessed that way, too," he said quietly. "Then I didn't." He shrugged
+his fur-clad shoulders. "No. It's not a northern trail that's going to
+see the end of me. But it's your yarn I need to hear. How is it?"
+
+"Bad."
+
+The two men looked squarely into each others eyes, and the gravity of
+the forest man was intense. The man who had just come out of the storm
+was no less serious, but presently he turned away, and for a second his
+gaze rested on the group of sprawling dogs. The beasts looked utterly
+spent as they blinked at the fire which they were never permitted to
+approach. He indicated the fire.
+
+"Let's sit," he said. "It's cold--damnably cold."
+
+The other needed no second invitation. They both moved back to the fire
+and squatted over it, and the forest man pointed at the dogs.
+
+"Beat?" he said.
+
+"Yes. But they hauled me through. They're a great outfit. I fed 'em
+right away and now they need rest. They'll be ready for the trail again
+by morning. Anyway I can't delay."
+
+"No. You've got to get through quick."
+
+Both were holding outspread hands to the fire. Both were luxuriating in
+the friendly warmth.
+
+"Well?" The tall man turned his head so that his dark eyes searched the
+other's face again. "You'd best tell it me, Jean. If the storm lets up I
+pull out with daylight. I've come through every camp, and this is the
+last. Maybe I know the stuff you've got to tell. It's been the same most
+all the way."
+
+Jean looked up from the heart of the fire.
+
+"Trouble?" he enquired.
+
+"Every sort." The tall man's eyes were smiling. "There's jacks quitting
+and pulling out, and nobody seems to know how they're getting, seeing
+it's winter. Others are going slow. There's others grumbling for things
+you never heard tell of before. There's fire-bugs at work, and the
+forest 'phones are being cut or otherwise tampered with all the time.
+We've lost hundreds of acres by fire already."
+
+"My yarn's the same." Jean nodded and turned back to the fire. "Say," he
+went on, "have you heard of the things going on? The thing that's
+happening?"
+
+"You mean the outfit working it?"
+
+"Yes. It's a political labour gang. Leastways that's the talk of 'em.
+They call 'em 'Bolshies,' whatever that means. They're chasing these
+forests through. They make the camps by night, and get hold of the boys
+right away. They throw a hurricane of hot air at them, preachin' the
+sort of dope that sets those darn fools lyin' around when they need to
+be makin' the winter cut. And when they're through, and started the bug
+the way they want it, they pull out right away before the daylight
+comes. We never get a chance at 'em. Our boys are all plumb on the buck.
+I was just crazy for you to come along, Father. Guess you're the one man
+to fix the boys right. An' when I see you caught up in that darn
+storm--"
+
+"I'll do the thing I know," the dark man replied. "I've been doing it
+right along. But it's not enough. That's why I'm chasing down to the
+coast. We've got to lay this spook that worries the boys at night. It's
+no Bolshie outfit." He shook his head. "Anyway if it is it's got another
+thing behind it. It's the Skandinavia."
+
+He sat on for a few minutes in silence. He squatted there, hugging his
+knees. He was weary. He was weary almost to death with the incessant
+travel that had already occupied him weeks.
+
+Quite abruptly his hands parted and he stood up. Jean followed his
+movements with anxious eyes.
+
+"You goin' down to talk to the boys?" he asked at last.
+
+The man nodded.
+
+"Yes. Right away. I'll do all I know."
+
+"They'll listen to you."
+
+The other smiled.
+
+"Yes. Till the spook comes back."
+
+Jean brushed the icicles from about his eyes.
+
+"That's just it," he said. "An' meanwhile the cut's right plumb down. If
+this thing don't quit the mill's going to starve when the ice breaks.
+I've lost nigh three weeks' full cut already. It's--it's hell!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+The dark man moved away, and Jean sat on over the fire. But his troubled
+eyes watched the curious figure as it passed over to its outfit. He saw
+the man stoop over the litter of his goods. He saw him disentangle some
+garment from the rest. When he came back the furs he had been clad in
+were either abandoned or hidden under fresh raiment. The man towered an
+awesome figure in the firelight. He was clad in black from head to foot,
+and his garment possessed the flowing skirts of a priest.
+
+"I'm going right down to the boys now," he said. "You best stop around
+here. Just have an eye to the dogs. It's best you not being with me."
+
+Jean nodded. He understood. Accompanied by the camp boss this man's
+influence with the boys would have been seriously affected. Alone he was
+well-nigh all powerful.
+
+"Good," he said. "For God's sake do what you can, Father," he cried.
+"I'll stop right here till you get back. So long."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+BULL STERNFORD'S VISION OF SUCCESS
+
+
+"I'd say it's best story I've listened to since--since--Say, those
+fellers are pretty big. They surely are."
+
+Bat Harker stirred. He shifted his feet on the rail of the stove, where
+the heavy leather soles of his boots were beginning to burn.
+
+Bull's shining eyes were raised to his.
+
+"Big?" he echoed. "I tell you that feller, Leader, has the widest vision
+of any man I know."
+
+He leant back in his chair and imitated his companion's luxurious
+attitude. And so they sat silent, each regarding the thing between them
+from his own angle.
+
+It was the night of Bull's return from his journey to England. He had
+completed the final stage only that afternoon. He had travelled overland
+from the south headland, where he had been forced to disembark from the
+_Myra_ under stress of weather. It was storming outside now, one of
+those fierce wind storms of Labrador's winter, liable to blow for days
+or only for a few hours.
+
+He and Harker were closeted together in the warm comfort of the office
+on the hill. Here, without fear of interruption, in the soft lamplight,
+lounging at their ease, they were free to talk of those things so dear
+to them, and upon which hung the destiny of their enterprise.
+
+Winter was more than half spent. Christmas and New Year were already
+seasons which only helped to swell the store of memory. Labrador was
+frozen to the bone, and would remain so. But there were still two months
+and more of snow and ice, and storm, to be endured before the flies and
+mosquitoes did their best to make life unendurable.
+
+Bull's return home had been a time of great looking forward. Life to him
+had become full of every alluring possibility. He saw the approaching
+fulfilment of his hopes and aims. The contemplation of the pending war
+with the Skandinavia only afforded his fighting instincts satisfaction.
+Then there was that other. That great, new sensation which stirred him
+so deeply--Nancy McDonald. So he had returned home full of enthusiasm
+and ready to tackle any and every problem that presented itself.
+
+He had just completed the telling of the story he had brought back with
+him. It was a story of success that had stirred even the cast-iron
+emotions of Bat Harker. Nor had it lost anything in the telling, for
+Bull was more deeply moved than he knew.
+
+The recounting of his dealings in London with the man, Sir Frank Leader,
+had been coloured by the enthusiasm with which the Englishman had
+inspired him. Sir Frank Leader was known as the uncrowned king of the
+world's pulp-wood trade. But Bull felt, and declared, that the
+appellation did not come within measurable distance of expressing the
+man's real genius. Then there were those others: Stanton Brothers, and
+Lord Downtree, and the virile, youthful creature, Ray Birchall. All of
+them were strong pillars of support for the ruling genius of the house
+of Leader & Company. But it was the man himself, the head of it, who
+claimed all Bull's admiration for his intensity of national spirit, and
+the wide generosity of his enterprise.
+
+The story he had had to tell was simple in its completeness. Before
+setting out on his journey he had spent months in preparation of the
+ground by means of voluminous correspondence and documentary evidence.
+It was a preparation that left it only necessary to convince through
+personal appeal on his arrival in London. This had been achieved in the
+broad fashion that appealed to the men he encountered. His "hand" had
+been laid down. Every card of it was offered for their closest scrutiny,
+even to the baring of the last reservation which his intimate knowledge
+of the merciless climate of Labrador might have inspired.
+
+The appeal of this method had been instant to Sir Frank Leader. And the
+appeal had been as much the man himself as the thing he offered. The
+result of it all was Bull's early return home with the man's whole
+organisation fathering his enterprise, and with a guarantee of his
+incomparable fleet of freighters being flung into the pool. Leader had
+swept up the whole proposition into his widely embracing arms, and taken
+it to himself. Subject to Ray Birchall's ultimate report, after personal
+inspection on the spot of the properties involved, the flotation was to
+be launched for some seventy million dollars, and thus the consummation
+of Sachigo's original inspiration would be achieved.
+
+Bat had listened to the story almost without comment. He had missed
+nothing of it. Neither had he failed to observe the man telling it. The
+story itself was all so tremendous, so far removed from the work that
+pre-occupied him that he had little desire to probe deeper into it. But
+the success of it all stirred him. Oh, yes. It had stirred him deeply,
+and his mind had immediately flown to that other who had laboured for
+just this achievement and had staggered under the burden of it all.
+
+Bull removed his pipe and gazed across the stove.
+
+"And now for your news, Bat," he said, like a man anticipating a
+pleasant continuation of his own good news.
+
+Bat shook his head decidedly.
+
+"No," he said, in his brusque fashion. "Not to-night, boy. Guess I ain't
+got a thing to tell to match your stuff. We just carried on, and we've
+worked big. We're in good shape for the darn scrap with the Skandinavia
+you told me about. Guess I'll hand you my stuff to-morrow, when I'm
+goin' to show you things. This night's your night--sure."
+
+His twinkling eyes were full of kindly regard, for all the brusqueness
+of his denial. And Bull smiled back his content.
+
+"Well, it's your 'hand' Bat," he said easily. "You'll play it your way."
+
+His eyes turned to the comforting stove again, as the howl of the storm
+outside shook the framing of the house.
+
+Presently the other raised a pair of smiling eyes.
+
+"You know, boy," the lumberman said, ejecting a worn-out chew of
+tobacco, "all this means one mighty big thing your way. You see, you got
+life before you. Maybe I've years to run, too. But it ain't the same.
+No," he shook his grizzled head, "you can't never make nuthin' of me but
+a lumber-boss. You'll never be a thing but a college-bred fighter all
+your life. There's a third share in this thing for both of us. Well,
+that's goin' to be one a' mighty pile. I was wonderin'. Shall you quit?
+Shall you cut right out with the boodle? What'll you do?"
+
+Bull sat up and laughed. And his answer came on the instant.
+
+"Why, marry," he said.
+
+Bat nodded.
+
+"That's queer," he said. "I guessed you'd answer that way."
+
+"Why?"
+
+Bat folded his arms across his broad chest.
+
+"You're young," he replied.
+
+Bull laughed again.
+
+"Better say it," he cried. "An' darn foolish."
+
+"No, I hadn't that in mind. No, Bull. If I had your years I guess I'd
+feel that way, too. I wonder--"
+
+"You're guessing to know who I'd marry, eh?" Bull's pipe was knocked out
+into the cuspidore. Then he sat up again and his eyes were full of
+reckless delight. "Here," he cried, "I guess it's mostly school-kids who
+shout the things they reckon to do--or a fool man. It doesn't matter.
+Maybe I'm both. Anyway, I'm just crazy for--for--"
+
+"Red hair, an'--an' a pair of mighty pretty eyes?"
+
+"Sure."
+
+Bat nodded. A deep satisfaction stirred him.
+
+"I reckoned that way, ever since--Say, I'm glad."
+
+But Bull's mood had sobered.
+
+"She's in the enemy camp though," he demurred.
+
+"It'll hand you another scrap--haulin' her out."
+
+"Yes."
+
+Bat rose from his chair and stretched his trunk-like body.
+
+"Well," he said, "it's me for the blankets." Then he emitted a
+deep-throated chuckle. "You get at it, boy," he went on. "An' if you're
+needin' any help I can pass, why, count on it. If you mean marryin' I'd
+sooner see you hook up team with that red-haired gal than anything in
+the world I ever set two eyes on. Guess I'll hand you my stuff in the
+morning if the storm quits."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The dynamos were revolving at terrific speed. There were some eighteen
+in all, and their dull roar was racking upon ears unused. Bat was
+regarding them without enthusiasm. All he knew was the thing they
+represented. Skert Lawton had told him. They represented the harnessing
+of five hundred thousand horse power of the Beaver River water. The
+engineer had assured him, in his unsmiling fashion, that he had secured
+enough power to supply the whole Province of Quebec with electricity.
+All of which, in Bat's estimation, seemed to be an unnecessary feat.
+
+Bull was gazing in frank wonder on the engineer's completed work. It was
+his first sight of it. The place had been long in building. But the
+sight of it in full running, the sense of enormous power, the thought
+and labour this new power-house represented, filled him with nothing but
+admiration for the author of it all.
+
+Bat hailed one of the electricians serving the machines.
+
+"Where's Mr. Lawton?" he shouted.
+
+"He went out. He ain't here," the man shouted back.
+
+Bat regarded the man for a moment without favour. Then he turned away.
+He beckoned Bull to follow, and moved over to the sound-proof door which
+shut off the engineer's office. They passed to the quiet beyond it.
+
+It was quite a small room without any elaborate pretensions. There was a
+desk supporting a drawing board, with a chair set before it. There was
+also a rocker-chair which accommodated the lean body of Skert Lawton at
+such infrequent moments as it desired repose. Beyond that there was
+little enough furniture. The place was mainly bare boards and bare
+walls. Bat sat himself at the desk and left Bull the rocker-chair.
+
+"I'd fixed it so Skert was to meet us here," he said. "All this is his
+stuff. I couldn't tell you an' amp from a buck louse."
+
+Bull nodded.
+
+"That's all right," he said. "Maybe he's held up down at the mill. He'll
+get--"
+
+"Held up--nuthin'!"
+
+The lumberman was angry. But his anger was not at the failure of his
+arrangements. Back of his head he was wondering at the thing that
+claimed the engineer. He felt that only real urgency would have kept him
+from his appointment. And he knew that urgency just now had a more or
+less ugly meaning.
+
+"Lawton's a pretty bright boy--" Bull began. But the other caught him up
+roughly.
+
+"Bright? That don't say a thing," Bat cried. "Guess he's a whole darn
+engineering college rolled into the worst shape of the ghost of a man
+it's been my misfortune ever to locate. He's a highbrow of an elegant
+natur'. He calls this thing 'co-ordination,' which is another way of
+sayin' he's beat nigh a hundred thousand dollars out of our bank roll to
+hand us more power than we could use if we took in Broadway, New York,
+at night. But it's elegant plannin' and looks good to me. Your folks
+over the water'll maybe see things in it, too. It's them blast furnaces
+we set up for him last year made this play possible. Them, and the swell
+outfit of machine shops he squeezed us for. He figgers to raise all
+sorts of hell around. An' his latest notion's to build every darn
+machine from rough-castin' to a shackle pin, so we don't have to worry
+with the world outside. He's got a long view of things. But--"
+
+He pulled out his timepiece, and the clouds of volcanic anger swept down
+again upon his rugged brow. But it was given no play. The door of the
+office was thrust open, and the lean figure of the engineer, clad in
+greasy overalls, came hurriedly into the room.
+
+Bat challenged him on the instant.
+
+"What's the trouble, boy?" he demanded in his uncompromising fashion.
+
+"Trouble?" Skert's eyes were wide, and his tone was savage. "That's just
+it. I reckoned to show Sternford all this stuff," he went on, indicating
+the machine hall with a jerk of his head. "But we'll have to let it
+pass. Say," he glanced from one to the other, his expression developing
+to something like white fury. "They started. It's business this time. I
+got a message up they were stopping the grinders. It's the 'heads' gave
+the order. Oh, they're all in it. They got a meeting on in that darn
+recreation parliament place of theirs, and every mother's son on the
+machines was called to it. They've shut down! You get that? There isn't
+even a greaser left at the machines. It's set me with a feeling I'm
+plumb crazy. I've been down, and they're right there crowding out that
+hall. And--"
+
+"I guessed something that way," Bat interrupted with ominous calm. He
+turned to Bull, who was closely regarding his lieutenants.
+
+"It's mutiny first and then a sheer strike," he said. "Here, listen.
+I'll hand you just what's happenin'. There's been Bolshie agitators
+workin' the boys months, and I guess they got a holt on 'em good. It
+started with us openin' the new mill on this north shore. We were forced
+to collect our labour just where we could. An' they got in like the
+miser'ble rats they are. Gee! It makes me hot--hot as hell! The leaders
+of this thing ain't workers. I don't guess they done a day's work with
+anything but their yahoo mouths in their dirty lives. They're part of
+the crowd that's paid from Europe to get around and heave up this
+blazin' world of ours just anyway they know. The only thing I don't get
+is their coming along here, which is outside most all the rest of the
+world. If Labrador can hand 'em loot I'd like to know the sort it is.
+And it's just loot they're out for. If I'm a judge there's one hell of a
+scrap comin,' and if we're beat it looks like leaving Sachigo a thing
+forgotten."
+
+Bull stood up. He laughed without the least mirth.
+
+"It's the Skandinavia," he said decidedly. "War's begun. I'm going right
+down to that meeting."
+
+Bat leapt to his feet.
+
+"No," he said. "This is for Skert an' me--"
+
+"Is it?"
+
+Bull brushed his protest aside almost fiercely. Then he turned as the
+door opened and a small man hurried in. The fellow snatched his cap from
+his head and his eyes settled on Skert Lawton, the man he knew best.
+
+"It ees a document," he cried, in the broken English of a French
+Canadian. "They sign him, oh, yes. You no more are the boss. They say
+the mill it ees for the 'worker.' All dis big mill, all dis big money.
+Oh, yes. Dey sign him."
+
+"Who's this?" Bull demanded.
+
+"One of my machine-minders. He's a good boy," the engineer explained.
+
+Bull nodded.
+
+"That's all right We want all we can get of his sort." He turned to Bat.
+"Are there others? I mean boys we can trust?"
+
+"Quite a bunch."
+
+"Can we get them together?"
+
+"Sure."
+
+"Right. This is going to be the real thing. The sort of thing I'd rather
+have it."
+
+He turned to Skert who stood by, watching the light of battle in his
+chief's eyes.
+
+"Here, shut down the dynamos. Set them clean out of action. Do you get
+me? Leave the machines for the time being so they're just so much scrap.
+Then, if you got the bunch you can rely on, leave 'em guard. We'll get
+on down, an' sign that damned document for 'em."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The recreation room was crowded to suffocation. Men of every degree in
+the work of the mill had foregathered. A hubbub of talk was going on.
+Voices were raised. There was anger. There was argument, harsh-voiced
+argument which mainly expressed feeling. At the far end of the hall, on
+the raised platform designed for those who fancied their vocal
+attainments, a group of men were gathered about a table upon which was
+outspread the folios of an extensive document. The men at the table were
+talking eagerly.
+
+The gathering had listened to the furious oratory of a pale-faced man,
+with long black hair and a foreign accent. It had listened, and agreed,
+and applauded. For he had talked Communism, and the overthrow of the
+Capitalists, and the possession of the wealth creating mills for those
+who operated them. It had listened to an appeal to the latent instinct
+in every human creature, freedom from everything that could be claimed
+as servitude, freedom, and possession, and independence for those who
+would once and for all rid themselves of the shackles which the pay-roll
+and time-sheet imposed upon them.
+
+They had been called together to witness the iniquity of spending their
+lives in the degrading operation of filling the pockets of those who
+laboured not, by the toil in which their lives were spent. They had been
+told every flowery fairy tale of the modern communistic doctrine, which
+possesses as much truth and sanity in it as is to be found in an asylum
+for the mentally deficient. And they had swallowed the bait whole. The
+talk had been by the tongue of a skilled fanatic, who was well paid for
+his work, and who kept in the forefront of his talk that alluring
+promise of ease, and affluence, and luxury, which never fails in its
+appeal to those who have never known it.
+
+But something approaching an impasse had been reached when the would-be
+benefactors passed over the demand that their deluded victims should
+sign the roll of Communal Brotherhood. The bait that had been offered
+had been all to the taste of these rough creatures who had never known
+better than an existence with a threat of possible unemployment
+overshadowing their lives. But in the signature to the elaborate
+document they scented the concealed poison in the honeyed potion. There
+was hesitation, reluctance. There was argument in a confusion of tongues
+well-nigh bewildering. A surge of voices filled the great building.
+
+The agents were at work, men who posed as workers to attain their ends.
+And the pale, long-haired creature and his satellites waited at the
+table. They understood. It was their business to understand. They knew
+the minds they were dealing with, and their agents were skilled in their
+craft. The process they relied on was the unthinking stupidity of the
+sheep. Every man that could be persuaded had his friends, and each
+friend had his friend. They knew friend would follow friend well-nigh
+blindly, and, having signed, native obstinacy and fear of ridicule would
+hold them fast to their pledge.
+
+Presently the signing began. It began with a burly river-jack who
+laughed stupidly to cover his doubt. He was followed by a
+machine-minder, who hurled taunts at those who still held back. Then
+came others, others whose failure to think for themselves left them
+content to follow the lead of their comrades.
+
+The stream of signatures grew. A pale youth, whose foolish grin revealed
+only his fitness for the heavy, unskilled work he was engaged upon,
+came up. The pen was handed him, and the name of Adolph Mars was
+scrawled on the sheet. The long-haired man at the table looked up at
+him. He smiled with his lips, and patted the boy's hand. Then something
+happened.
+
+It was movement. Sudden movement on the platform. The babel in the body
+of the hall went on. But the long-haired man and his supporters at the
+table turned with eyes that were concerned and anxious. A dozen men had
+entered swiftly through the door in rear of the platform. Bull Sternford
+led them. And he moved over to the table, with the swift, noiseless
+strides of a panther, and looked into the unwholesome face of the
+Bolshevist leader.
+
+It was only for the fraction of a second. The man made a movement which
+needed no interpretation. His hand went to a hip pocket. Instantly
+Bull's great hands descended. The man was picked up like a child. He was
+lifted out of his seat and raised aloft. He was borne towards the window
+where he was held while the master of the mill crashed a foot against
+its wooden sash. The next moment the black-clothed body was hurled with
+terrific force out into the snowdrift waiting to receive it. It was all
+so swiftly done. The whole thing was a matter of seconds only. Then Bull
+Sternford was back at the table, while his comrades, Bat and Lawton, and
+the men of loyalty they relied on, lined the platform.
+
+As Bull snatched up the document and held it aloft, a deathly silence
+reigned throughout the hall, and every eye was turned angrily upon the
+intruders. Bull yielded not a moment for those witless minds to recover
+from their shock. His voice rang out fiercely.
+
+"Here," he cried, "d'you know what you're doing, listening to that fool
+guy I've thrown through that window, and signing this crazy paper he's
+set out for you? No. You don't unless you're just as crazy yourselves.
+You're declaring war. You're starting a great fight to steal the
+property that hands you your living. You reckon you've got all you need
+of our brains, and your own brute force and darnation foolishness can
+run these great mills which are to hand you the big money you reckon it
+hands us. That means war. Maybe you fancy it's the one-sided war you'd
+like to have it. Maybe you fancy there's about a dozen of us, and we're
+going to be made to work for the wage you figger to hand us. You're dead
+wrong. It's going to be a hell of a war if you swallow the dope these
+fellows hand you. You've begun it, and we're taking up the challenge.
+We've fired the first shot, too. It's not gun-play yet. No. Maybe it'll
+come to that and you'll find we can hand you shot for shot. No. We're
+quicker than that. The mill's closed down! Wages have ceased! And all
+power has been cut off! There's not a spark of light or heat, for the
+whole of Sachigo. The vital parts of the power station have been
+removed, and you can't get 'em back. I've only to give the word and the
+_penstocks on the river will be cut so you can't repair them_. It's
+forty degrees below Zero out there, where I've shot that crazy Bolshie,
+and so you know just how you stand here on Labrador with no means of
+gettin' away until the thaw comes. You and your wives and kiddies'll
+have to pay in the cold for the crime of theft you reckon to put
+through. We're ready for you, whether it's gun-play or any other sort of
+war you want to start. That's the thing I've come here to tell you."
+
+He paused for a moment to watch the effect of his words. It was there on
+the instant. A furious hubbub arose. There was not a man in the room who
+did not understand the dire threat which the _coup_ of the master mind
+imposed. Power cut off! Light! Heat! Power! Forty degrees below Zero!
+The terror of the Labrador winter was in every man's mind. Life would be
+unendurable without heat. There were the forests. Oh, yes. They could
+get heat of sorts. The sort of heat which the men on a winter trail were
+accustomed to. _Their electrically-heated houses were without stoves in
+which they could burn wood_.
+
+Bull listened to the babel of tongues while his men watched for any act
+that might come. Every man on the platform was armed ready.
+
+"Here!"
+
+Bull's voice rang out again, but he was interrupted.
+
+A man shouted at him from the back of the hall.
+
+"Who the hell are you, anyway? You ain't the guy owning these mills. We
+know where you come from--"
+
+Like lightning Bull took him up.
+
+"Do you?" he shouted back. "Then we know where you come from. The man
+who knew me before I became boss here must belong to the Skandinavia.
+That's the only place any lumber-jack could have known me. Here. Come up
+here. Stand out. Show yourself. And I'll hand the boys your pedigree.
+It'll be easy. It's the trouble with us just now, we've got too many
+stiffs from the Skandinavia, and you've got our own good boys paralysed.
+They haven't the guts to stand on the notions that have handed them the
+best wages in the pulp trade these fifteen years. Guess you've persuaded
+them they ain't got swell houses, and good food, and cheap heat and
+light, and, instead are living like all sorts of swine in their hogpens.
+It's the way of the Skandinavia just now. The Skandinavia's out for our
+blood. They want to smash us. Do you know why? Because they're an alien
+firm who wants to steal these forests from the Canadians to fill their
+own pockets with our wealth. We're for the Canadians, and we've built up
+a proposition that's going to beat the foreigner right out into the sea.
+But that don't matter now. These guys, these long-haired, unwashed guys,
+that reckon to hand you boys these mills, are sent by the Skandinavia
+to wreck us. Well, go right over to 'em. Help 'em. Sign every darn
+document they hand you. They'll be your own death warrants, anyway. You
+want war. You can have it. I'm here to fight. Meanwhile you best get
+home to your cold houses, for the mills are closed down. You're locked
+out."
+
+He turned without waiting a second and passed through the back door by
+which he had entered. And his men followed on his heels.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bull was in his office. For all the storm of the morning the rest of the
+day had passed quietly. Now it was late at night. His stove was
+radiating a luxurious heat. He was quite unconcerned that the
+electrically-heated steam radiators were cold. He was alone. Harker and
+the engineer were still down at the mill. He was awaiting the report
+they would bring him later.
+
+He had passed some time in reading the pledge of Communal Brotherhood
+which he had brought away with him from the recreation room, and he had
+read the signatures that had been affixed to it. The latter were few,
+and every name inscribed was of foreign origin. But it was the document
+itself which concerned him most. If it were honest he felt that its
+authors were wild people who should be kept under restraint. If it were
+not honest, then hanging or shooting was far too lenient a fate to be
+meted out to them. It was Communism in its wildest, most unrestrained
+form.
+
+In his final disgust he flung the papers on his desk. And as he did so a
+sound reached him from the outer office, which had long since been
+closed for the night by the half-breed, Loale.
+
+He leapt to his feet. Without a second thought he moved over to the door
+and flung it wide.
+
+"What the--?" He broke off. "Good God!" he cried. "You, Father?" He
+laughed. "Why I thought it was some of the Bolshies from down at the
+mill."
+
+He withdrew the gun from his coat pocket in explanation. Then he stood
+aside.
+
+"Will you come right in?"
+
+The man Bull had discovered made no answer. But as he stood aside, tall,
+clad in heavy fur from head to foot, Father Adam strode into the room.
+
+Bull watched him with questioning eyes. Then he closed the door and his
+visitor turned confronting him in the yellow lamplight.
+
+"I've made more than a hundred miles to get you to-night," Father Adam
+said.
+
+Then he flung back the fur hood from his head, and ran a hand over his
+long black hair, smoothing it thoughtfully.
+
+"Yes?"
+
+Bull's eyes were still questioning.
+
+"Won't you shed your furs and sit?" he went on. "The Chink's abed, but
+I'll dig him out. You must get food."
+
+The other glanced round the pleasant office, and his eyes paused for a
+moment at the chair at the desk.
+
+"Food don't worry, thanks," he said, his mildly smiling eyes coming back
+to his host's face. "I've eaten--ten miles back. I rested the dogs
+there, too. I've maybe a ha'f hour to tell you the thing I came for.
+There's trouble in the woods. Bad trouble. If it's not straightened out,
+why, it looks like all work at your mills'll quit, and you're going to
+get your forest limits burnt out stark."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+THE HOLD-UP
+
+
+Ole Porson took a final glance round his shanty. The last of the
+daylight was rapidly fading. There was still sufficient penetrating the
+begrimed double window, however, to reveal the littered, unswept
+condition of the place. But he saw none of it. It was the place he knew
+and understood. It was at once his office, and his living quarters; a
+shanty with a tumbled sleeping bunk, a wood stove, and a table littered
+with the books and papers of his No. 10 camp. He was a rough creature,
+as hard of soul as he was of head, who could never have found joy in
+surroundings of better condition.
+
+He solemnly loaded the chambers of a pair of heavy guns. Then he
+bestowed them in the capacious pockets of his fur pea-jacket. He also
+dropped in beside them a handful of spare cartridges. In his lighter
+moments he was apt to say that these weapons were his only friends. And
+those who knew him best readily agreed. Drawing up the storm-collar
+about his face, he passed out into the snow which was falling in flakes
+the size of autumn leaves. There was not a breath of wind to disturb the
+deathly stillness of the winter night.
+
+Minutes later he was lounging heavily against the rough planked counter
+of Abe Risdon's store. He was talking to the suttler over a deep
+"four-fingers" of neat Rye, while his searching eyes scanned the body of
+the ill-lit room. The place was usually crowded with drinkers when the
+daylight passed, but just now it was almost empty.
+
+"Who's that guy in the tweed pea-jacket an' looks like a city man?" he
+asked his host in an undertone, pointing at one of the tables where a
+stranger sat surrounded by four of the forest men.
+
+Abe's powerful arms were folded as he leant on the counter.
+
+"Blew in about noon," he said. "Filled his belly with good hash an' sat
+around since."
+
+"He's a bunch o' the boys about him now, anyway. An' I guess he's
+talking quite a lot, an' they're doing most o' the listening. Seems
+like he's mostly enjoying hisself."
+
+Abe shrugged. But the glance he flung at the man sitting at the far-off
+table was without approval.
+
+"It's mostly that way now," he said, with an air of indifference his
+thoughtful eyes denied. "There's too many guys come along an' sell
+truck, an' set around, an' talk, an' then pass along. Things are
+changing around this lay out, an' I don't get its meanin'. Time was I
+had a bunch of boys ready most all the time to hand me the news going
+round. Time was you'd see a stranger once in a month come along in an'
+buy our food. Time was they mostly had faces we knew by heart, and we
+knew their business, and where they came from. Tain't that way now. You
+couldn't open the boys' faces fer news of the forest with a can-opener.
+These darn guys are always about now. They come, an' feed the boys'
+drink, an' talk with 'em most all the time. An' they're mostly
+strangers, an' the boys mostly sit around with their faces open like
+fool men listenin' to fairy tales. How's the cut goin'?"
+
+Porson laughed. There was no light in his hard eyes.
+
+"At a gait you couldn't change with a trail whip."
+
+The other nodded.
+
+'"That's how 'nigger' Pilling said. He guessed the cut was down by
+fifty. What is it? A buck? Wages?"
+
+Porson's hand was fingering one of the guns in his pocket. His eyes were
+snapping.
+
+"Curse 'em," he cried at last. "I just don't get it. They're goin'
+slow."
+
+He pushed his empty glass at the suttler who promptly re-filled it.
+
+"Young Pete Cust," Abe went on confidentially, "handed me a good guess
+only this mornin'. He'd had his sixth Rye before startin' out to work.
+Maybe he was rattled and didn't figger the things he said. He was astin'
+fer word up from the mills. I didn't worry to think, and just said I
+hadn't got. I ast 'why'? The boy took a quick look round, kind o'
+scared. He said, 'jest nothin'.' He reckoned he'd a dame somewhere
+around Sachigo. She'd wrote him things wer' kind of bad with the mills.
+They were beat fer dollars, and looked like a crash. He'd heard the same
+right there, an' it had him rattled. He thought of quittin' and goin'
+over to the Skandinavia. Maybe it's the sort o' talk that's got 'em all
+rattled. Maybe they're goin' slow on the cut, worryin' for their
+pay-roll. You can't tell. They don't say a thing. Seems to me we want
+Sternford right here to queer these yarns. Father Adam's around an'
+talked some. But--"
+
+Porson drank down his liquor, and his glass hit the counter with angry
+force.
+
+"They're mush-faced hoodlams anyway," he cried fiercely. "Ther' ain't a
+thing wrong with the mills. I'd bet a million on it."
+
+He stood up from the counter and thrust his hands deep in the pockets of
+his coat. He was a powerful figure with legs like the tree trunks it was
+his work to see cut. Quite abruptly he moved away, and Abe's questioning
+eyes followed him.
+
+He strode down amongst the scattered tables and came to a halt before
+the tweed-coated stranger. All the men looked up, and their talk died
+out.
+
+"Say, what's your bizness around here?"
+
+Ole Person's manner was threatening as he made his demand. The stranger
+dived at the bag lying on the floor beside his chair. He picked it up
+and flung it open.
+
+"Why, I got right here the dandiest outfit of swell jewellery," he
+cried, grinning amiably up at the man's threatening eyes. "There's just
+everything here," he went on, with irrepressible volubility, "to suit
+you gents of the forest, an' make you the envy of every jack way down
+at Sachigo. Here, there's a be-autiful Prince Albert for your watch.
+This ring. It's full o' diamonds calculated to set Kimberly hollerin'.
+Maybe you fancy a locket with it. It'll take a whole bunch of your
+dame's--"
+
+"You'll light right out of this camp with daylight to-morrow!"
+
+The tone of the camp-boss banished the last shadow of the pedlar's
+cast-iron smile.
+
+"Oh, yes?" he said, his eyes hardening.
+
+"That's wot I said. This camp's private property an' you'll light out.
+You get that? Daylight. If you don't, we've a way of dealing with Jew
+drummers that'll likely worry you. Get it. An' get it good."
+
+For a moment they looked into each other's eyes. There was not the
+flicker of an eyelid between them. Then Porson turned and strode away.
+
+He passed down the store re-fastening his coat. He paused at the door as
+a chorus of rough laughter reached him from the little gathering at the
+table. But it was only for an instant. He looked back. No face was
+turned in his direction. So he passed out.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The night outside was inky black. The heavy falling snow made progress
+almost a blind groping. But Porson knew every inch of the way. He passed
+down the lines of huts and paused outside each bunkhouse. His reason was
+obvious. There was a question in his mind as to the whereabouts of the
+crowd of his men who usually thronged the liquor store at this hour of
+the evening.
+
+It was at the last bunkhouse he paused longest. He stood for quite a
+while listening under the double glassed window. Then he passed on and
+stood beside the tightly closed storm-door. The signs and sounds he
+heard were apparently sufficient. For, after a while, he turned back and
+set out to return to his quarters.
+
+For many minutes he groped his way through the blinding snow, his mind
+completely given up to the things his secret watch had revealed. His
+brutish nature, being what it was, left him concerned only for the
+forceful manner by which he could restore that authority which he felt
+to be slipping away from him under the curious change which had come
+over the camp. His position depended on the adequate output of his
+winter's cut and on nothing else. That, he knew, was desperately
+falling, and--
+
+But in a moment, all concern was swept from his mind. A sound leapt at
+him out of the stillness of the night. It was the whimper of dogs and
+the sharp command of a man's voice. He shouted a challenge and waited.
+And presently a dog train pulled up beside him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bull Sternford was standing before the wood stove in the camp-boss's
+shanty. He had removed his snow-laden fur coat. He had kicked the damp
+snow from his moccasins. Now he was wiping the moisture out of his eyes,
+and the chill in his limbs was easing under the warmth which the stove
+radiated.
+
+Ole Porson's grim face was alight with a smile of genuine welcome, as he
+stood surveying his visitor across the roaring stove.
+
+"It's surely the best thing happened in years, Mr. Sternford," he was
+saying. "I'm more glad you made our camp this night than any other.
+Maybe I'd ha' got through someways, but I don't know just how. We're
+down over fifty on our cut, an', by the holy snakes, I can't hand you
+why."
+
+Bull put his coloured handkerchief away, and removed the pea-jacket
+which he had worn under his furs.
+
+"Don't worry," he said with apparent unconcern. "I can hand it you.
+That's why I'm here."
+
+The camp-boss waited. He eyed his chief with no little anxiety. He had
+looked for an angry outburst.
+
+Bull pulled up a chair. He flung the litter of books it supported on to
+the already crowded table and sat down. Then he filled his pipe and lit
+it with a hot coal from the stove.
+
+"Here," he said, "I'll tell you. I've been the round of four camps. I've
+been over a month on the trail, and I've heard just the same tale from
+every camp-boss we employ. I've three more camps to visit besides yours,
+and when I've made them maybe I'll get the sleep I'm about crazy for.
+Night and day I've been on the dead jump for a month following the trail
+of a red-hot gang that's going through our forests. If I come up with
+them there's going to be murder."
+
+He spoke quietly without a sign of emotion. But the light in his hot
+eyes was almost desperate.
+
+"I want to hand you the story so you'll get it all clear," he went on
+after a moment. "So I'll start by telling you how we stand at the mill.
+Get this, an' hold it tight in your head, and the rest'll come clear as
+day. Sachigo's right on top. We've boosted it sky high on to the top of
+the world's pulp trade. In less than twelve months we'll have grabbed
+well-nigh the whole of this country's pulp industry, and we'll beat the
+foreigners right back over the sea to their own country. The Skandinavia
+folk are rattled. They know all about us and they've done their best to
+buy us out of the game. We turned 'em down cold, and they're mad--mad as
+hell. It means they're in for the fight of their lives. So are we. And
+we know Peterman an' his gang well enough to know what that means. It's
+'rough an' tough.' Everything goes. If they can't gouge our eyes they'll
+do their best to chew us to small meat. But we've got 'em every way.
+This forest gang is sent by the Skandinavia. If they can't smash us by
+fire or labour trouble next year'll see us floated into a seventy
+million dollar corporation with the whole Canadian wood-pulp industry
+lying right in the palms of our hands. That's the reason for the things
+doing."
+
+He paused, and the camp-boss nodded his rough head. It was a story he
+could clearly understand. Then there were those figures. Seventy million
+dollars! They swept the last shadow of doubt from his mind.
+
+"That's the position," Bull went on. "Now for the trouble as it is in
+the forests right now. The thing that's had me travelling night an' day
+for a month. There's an outfit going right through these forests. I
+can't locate its extent. Only the way it works. There's two objects in
+view. One is to fire our limits. The other reckons to paralyse our cut.
+So far these folks have failed against the fire-guard organisation, and
+I guess they'll likely miss most of their fire-bugs when they call the
+roll. The other's different."
+
+Bull knocked out his pipe on the stove and gazed thoughtfully at the
+streak of brilliant light under the edge of the front damper.
+
+"I've a notion there's an outfit of pedlars at work, as well as others,"
+he went on presently.
+
+The camp-boss nodded.
+
+"Sure," he said.
+
+Bull looked up.
+
+"You think that way?" he asked. Then he nodded. "Yes, I guess we're
+right. They're handing the boys dope to keep 'em guessing--worrying.
+They're telling 'em we're on the edge of a big smash at Sachigo. That we
+can't see the winter through. We're cleaned out for cash, and the mill
+folk are shouting for their wages and starting in to riot. It's a swell
+yarn. It's the sort of yarn I'd tell 'em myself if I was working for the
+Skandinavia. It's the sort of dope these crazy forest-jacks are ready to
+swallow the same as if it was Rye. Do you see? These fools are being
+told they won't get their pay for their winter's cut. So, being what
+they are, the boys are going slow. They're going slow, and drawing goods
+at the store against each cord they cut. Well, do you see what's going
+to happen if the game succeeds? With our forests ablaze, and our cut
+fifty down, and the whole outfit on the buck, when spring comes,
+Skandinavia reckons our British financiers, when they come along to look
+our land over will turn the whole proposition of the flotation down, and
+quit us cold. But that's not just all. No, sir. Elas Peterman isn't the
+boy to leave it that way. He's handing out the story that when Sachigo
+smashes the Skandinavia's going to jump right in and collect the
+wreckage cheap. Then they'll start up the mill, and sign on all hands on
+their own pay-roll, only stipulating that they won't pay one single cent
+of what Sachigo owes for their cut. So, if they're such almighty fools
+as to cut, it's going to be their dead loss and the Skandinavia's gain.
+Do you get it? It's smart. I guess there's a bigger brain behind it than
+Peterman's."
+
+The camp-boss spat into the stove. It was his one expression of disgust.
+
+Bull rose from his chair.
+
+"Here, I need food. So does my boy out there with the dogs. We'll take
+it after I'm through with the men. It's snowing like hell, but I pull
+out two hours from now. You see, I'm on a hot trail, an' don't fancy
+losing a minute."
+
+"You're goin' to talk to 'em--the boys?" Porson's eyes lit with a gleam
+of satisfaction. "Can you--twist 'em?"
+
+Bull thrust a hand into his breast pocket and drew out a sealed packet.
+He held it up before the other's questioning eyes.
+
+"I haven't failed yet," he said quietly. "In nine of our camps back on
+the river the work's running full already. I've a whole big yarn for our
+boys. But right here I've got what's better. It's the only thing that'll
+clinch the yarn I'm going to hand 'em. This," he went on, indicating the
+parcel in his hand, "is the bunch of dollars representing the price of
+this camp's full winter cut, and the price of a bonus for making up all
+leeway already lost. I'm going to have the boys count it. Then I'm going
+to have them hand it right over to Abe Risdon to set in his safe, with a
+written order from me to pay out in full the moment the winter cut is
+complete. Is it good? Can the Skandinavia's junk stand in face of it?
+No, sir. And so I've proved right along. I don't hold much of a brief
+for the intelligence of the forest-jack, but his belly rules him all the
+time. You see, he's human, and no more dishonest than the rest of us.
+Have him guessing and worried and you'll get trouble right along. Show
+him the lies the Skandinavia's been doping him with, and he'll work out
+of sheer spite to beat their game. You get right out and collect the
+gang."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The snowfall had ceased. And with its passing the temperature had fallen
+to something far below its average winter level. The clouds had vanished
+miraculously, and in their place was a night sky ablaze with the light
+of myriad stars, and the soft splendour of a brilliant moon.
+
+It was a scene of frigid desolation. Away on the southern horizon lay
+the black line which marked the tremendous forest limits of the Beaver
+River. For the rest it was a world of snow that hid up the rugged
+undulations of a sterile territory.
+
+The dog train was moving at a reckless gait over the untracked,
+hardening snow. The man Gouter was driving under imperative orders such
+as he loved. Bull Sternford had told him when he left the shelter of
+No. 10 Camp: "Get there! Get there quick! There's dogs and to spare at
+all our camps, and I don't care a curse if you run the outfit to death."
+
+To a man of Gouter's breed the order was sufficient. Half Eskimo, half
+white man, he was a savage of the wild, born and bred to the fierce
+northern trail, one of Labrador's hereditary fur hunters by sea and
+land. Speed on the fiercest trail was the dream of his vanity. Relays of
+dogs, such as he could never afford, and something accomplished which he
+could tell of over the camp fire to his less fortunate brethren. So he
+accepted the white man's order and drove accordingly.
+
+Bull Sternford sat huddled in the back of the sled under the fur robes
+which alone made life possible. His work at No. 10 Camp had left him
+satisfied, but every nerve in his body was alert for the final coup he
+contemplated. He was weary in mind as well as body. And in his heart he
+knew that the need of his physical resources was not so very far off.
+But he was beyond care. He had said he was crazy for sleep, but the
+words gave no indication of his real condition. His eyes ached. His head
+throbbed. There were moments, even, when the things he beheld, the
+things he thought became distorted. But he knew that somewhere ahead a
+ghostly outfit of strangers was pursuing its evil work against him, and
+he meant to come up with it, and to wreak his vengeance in merciless,
+summary fashion. His purpose had become an obsession in the long
+sleepless days and nights he had endured.
+
+It was war. It was bitter ruthless war on the barren hinterland of
+Labrador, where civilisation was unknown. Mercy? Nature never designed
+that terrible wilderness as a setting for mercy.
+
+The dogs had been running for hours when Gouter's voice came sharply
+back over his shoulder.
+
+"Dog!" he cried, in the laconic fashion habitual to him.
+
+Bull knelt up. His movement suggested the nervous strain he was
+enduring. It was almost electrical.
+
+"Where?" he demanded, peering out into the shining night over the man's
+furry shoulder.
+
+The half-breed raised a pointing whip ahead and to the south.
+
+"Sure," he said. "I hear him."
+
+Bull had heard nothing. Nothing but the hiss of the snow under their own
+runners, and the whimper of their own dogs.
+
+"It wouldn't be a wolf or fox?" he demurred.
+
+The half-breed clucked his tongue. His vanity was outraged.
+
+Bull gazed intently in the direction the whip had pointed. He could see
+only the far-off forest line, and the soft whiteness of the world of
+snow.
+
+"Hark!"
+
+The half-breed again held up his whip. This time it was for attention.
+Bull listened. Still he could hear nothing, nothing at all but the
+sounds of their own progress.
+
+"Man! Him speak with dog. Oh, yes."
+
+Gouter had turned. His beady black eyes were shining with a smile of
+triumph into the white man's face.
+
+"By the forest?"
+
+"Oh, yes."
+
+"Then in God's name swing over and run to head them off!"
+
+Gouter obeyed with alacrity. He had impressed his white chief. It was
+good. A series of unintelligible ejaculations and the dogs swung away to
+the south. Then the whip rolled out and fell with cruel accuracy. The
+rawhide tugs strained under a mighty effort, as the great dogs were set
+racing with their lean bellies low to the ground.
+
+Bull wiped the icicles from about his mouth and nose.
+
+"Now have your guns ready," he cried. "The driver of that team is your
+man. The other's mine. If he shows fight kill him. There's five hundred
+dollars for you if you get 'em."
+
+"I get 'em."
+
+The half-breed's confidence was supreme. Bull dropped back into the
+sled. He sat with a pair of automatic pistols ready to his hand and
+gazed out over the sled rail.
+
+It was a terrific race and all feeling of weariness had passed under the
+excitement of it. The dogs were silent now. Every nerve in their
+muscular bodies were straining. The pace seemed to increase with every
+passing moment, and up out of the horizon the dark line of the forest
+leapt at them, deepening and broadening as it came.
+
+For some time the less practised white man saw and heard nothing of his
+enemies. He was forced to rely on the half-breed. He observed the man
+closely. He noted his every sign and read it as best he could. Presently
+Gouter leant forward peering. Then he straightened up and his voice came
+back triumphantly.
+
+"I see dem," he exclaimed. And pointed almost abreast. "Dogs.
+One--two--five. Yes. Two man. Now we get him sure."
+
+Down fell the whip on the racing dogs. The man shouted his jargon at
+them. The sled lurched and swayed with the added spurt, and Bull held
+fast to the rail. A glad thrill surged through his senses.
+
+It was a moment of tremendous uplift. Bull had yearned for it for weeks.
+But the short days and long nights of deferred hope had had their
+effect. He had almost come to feel that this thing that was now at hand
+was something impossible.
+
+Yes. There was the outfit growing plainer and plainer with every moment.
+He could see it clearly. He could even count its details as the other's
+sharper eyes had counted them minutes before. There were five dogs. And
+they were running hard. They, too, were being flogged, and the man
+driving them was shouting furiously in his urgency.
+
+Suddenly there was a leap of flame and a shot rang out. It came from the
+driver of the fleeing dog train. It was replied to on the instant by
+Gouter who lost not a second. His own shot sped even as the enemy's
+bullet whistled somewhere past his head. He fired again. A third shot
+split the air. And with that last shot the enemy's sled seemed to leap
+in the air. There was a moment of hideous confusion. Then the wreckage
+dropped away behind the pursuers, sprawled and still in the snow.
+
+A fierce shout from Gouter and his dogs swung round. The sled under him
+heeled over, and took a desperate chance on a single runner. But the
+half-breed's skill saved them from catastrophe. It righted itself, and
+the dogs slowed to a trot. Then they halted. And the occupants of the
+sled flung themselves prone, with their guns ready for the first sign of
+movement in the tangled mass of their adversary's outfit.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Two of the dogs lay buried under the overturned sled. Three others were
+sprawling at the end of their rawhide tugs. They were alive. They were
+unhurt. They lay there taking full advantage of the situation for rest.
+
+But for the moment interest centred round the body of a white man lying
+some yards away. A groan of pain came up to the two men standing over
+him.
+
+Bull dropped on his knees. He reached down and turned the body over. The
+eyes of the man were visible between the sides of his fur hood. But that
+was all.
+
+There was a moment of silent contemplation. Then the injured man
+struggled desperately to rise.
+
+"Sternford?" he ejaculated
+
+Gouter was on him in a moment. He heard the tone of voice, and
+interpreted the man's movement in his own savage fashion. He knew the
+man to be the driver of the team, whom his boss had told him was his
+man. So he threw him back and held him.
+
+Bull stood up. The man's voice told him all he wanted to know.
+
+"Laval, eh?" he said quietly. "A second time. I didn't expect it. No."
+
+Then he laughed and turned away. And the sound of his laugh possessed
+something terribly mocking in the night silence of the wilderness.
+
+He passed back to the sled. There had been two men in it. He had seen
+that for himself.
+
+The wreckage looked hopeless. The sled was completely overturned and its
+gleaming runners caught and reflected the white rays of the moon. It had
+been thrown by reason of the fallen bodies of the dogs which lay under
+it, pinned by its weight, and additionally held fast by their own
+tangled harness.
+
+Bull had no thought for anything but the purpose in his mind. So he
+reached out and caught the steel runners in his mitted hands and flung
+the vehicle aside.
+
+Yes, it was there in the midst of a confusion of baggage and lying cheek
+by jowl with the mangled remains of the dogs. He cleared the debris, and
+dragged the dogs aside. Then he stood and gazed down at the figure that
+remained.
+
+It was clad in a voluminous beaver coat. It was hooded, as was every man
+who faced the fierce Labrador trail. But--
+
+The figure moved. It stirred, and deliberately sat up. Bull's hands had
+been on his guns at the first movement. But he released them, as the
+hood fell back from the face which was ghastly pale in the moonlight.
+
+He flung himself on his knees, and tenderly supported the swaying
+figure.
+
+"God in Heaven!" he cried. "Nancy! You?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+ON THE HOME TRAIL
+
+
+Nancy's eyes were desperately troubled as she gazed out across the great
+valley of the Beaver River. Somewhere behind her, in the shelter of the
+woods, a mid-day camp had been pitched, and the men who had captured her
+red-hand in the work of their enemies were preparing the, rough food of
+the trail. But she was beyond all such concern.
+
+Far out on every hand lay the amazing panorama of the splendid valley,
+but she saw none of it. The mighty frozen waterway, the depths of virgin
+snow, the far-reaching woodlands its gaping lips embraced; they were
+things of frigid beauty for her eyes to gaze upon, but their meaning was
+lost upon a mind tortured with the vivid, hateful pictures it was
+powerless to escape.
+
+From the moment of that dreadful night when she had witnessed the
+ruthless climax of the work to which she had given herself she had known
+no peace. It was no thought of her failure, her capture, that inspired
+her trouble. She could have been thankful enough for that. It was the
+only mercy, she felt, that had been vouchsafed to her.
+
+No, long before her capture, a deep undermining of regret had set in.
+She had been without realisation of it, perhaps. But it had been there.
+In yielding to the demands of those she served, in her self-confidence
+she had forgotten the woman in her. She had forgotten everything but the
+crazy ambition which had blinded her to all consequences. Yes, even in
+the excitement of the work itself she had forgotten everything but the
+achievement she desired. But through it all, under it all, the woman in
+her had been slowly awakening, and an unadmitted regret at the
+destruction of work which meant the whole life of another had been
+stirring. Then, when the leading tongues of the guns had flashed out,
+and human life, even the life of dogs, had yielded to the demand of her
+cause, the last vestige of her dreaming had been swept away, and she
+told herself it was murder, _murder at her bidding_!
+
+Now her soul was afire with the bitterness of repentance, with
+passionate self-accusation. Murder had been done through her. Murder!
+The horror of it all had driven her well-nigh demented when she gazed
+from the distance while the two men disposed of Arden Laval's body under
+the snow. The dogs? They had been left where they fell. The living had
+been cut loose from their trappings to roam the forests at their will,
+while the dead had remained to satisfy the fierce hunger of the savage
+forest creatures. Even the sled had been destroyed, and its wood used to
+make fire that the living might endure on those pitiless northern
+heights. The memory of it all was days old now, but its horror showed no
+abatement. The agony was still with her. She felt that never again could
+she know peace.
+
+So she had moved away out from camp, as she had done at every stopping
+they had made on the long journey from the highlands down to Sachigo.
+Somehow it seemed to her impossible to do otherwise. She felt she must
+hide herself from the sight of those others who were her captors, and
+who, in their hearts, she felt, must deeply abhor the presence of so
+vile a creature in their camp.
+
+How long she had been standing there, while the men prepared the mid-day
+meal, she did not know. It was a matter of no sort of consequence to her
+anyway. Nothing really seemed of any consequence now. Her jaded mind
+was obsessed by a horror she could not shake off. There was nothing,
+nothing in the world to do but nurse the anguish driving her.
+
+"You'll come right along and eat, Nancy?"
+
+The girl almost jumped at the gentle tones of the man's voice, and
+glanced round at Bull Sternford in an agony of sudden terror.
+
+"I--I--" she stammered. Then composure returned to her. "If you wish
+it," she said submissively. "But I don't need food."
+
+Bull regarded the averted face for moments. Sympathy and love were in
+his clear gazing eyes. He understood something of the thing she was
+enduring, and the tone of his voice had been a real expression of his
+feelings. This girl, with the courage of twenty men, with her radiant
+beauty, and in her pitiful, heartbroken condition, was far more precious
+to him than any victory he had set himself to achieve. He knew that the
+world held nothing half so precious.
+
+He came a step nearer.
+
+"I wonder if you'll listen to me, Nancy," he said, with a hesitation and
+doubt utterly foreign, to him. "You know, for all that's happened, for
+all we're mixed up against each other in this war, I'm the same man you
+found me on the _Myra_ and in Quebec. I--"
+
+"Don't."
+
+The girl flung out her hands in a piteous appeal. And Bull recognised
+the hysteria lying behind the movement.
+
+"I know," she cried. "Oh, I know. But--don't you understand? You must
+know what I am. It's my doing that Laval has gone to his death. I'm
+responsible, just as surely as if I'd fired the gun that robbed him of
+his life. Oh, why, why didn't I refuse the work? Why did they send me?
+And those dogs. Those poor helpless dogs. They, too. I must have been
+mad--mad. How can you come near me? How can you stand there summoning
+me to eat food--with you? It's useless. It's--I who sent that man to his
+death--I who--"
+
+"Why, I thought it was Gouter."
+
+Bull's manner had suddenly changed. The danger signal in the girl's eyes
+had determined him. So he smiled, and there was laughter in his
+challenge.
+
+"Say," he went on rapidly, "if you told that to Gouter he'd be crazy
+mad. He's the boss running shot on Labrador, and if you claimed
+responsibility for the killing of Laval you'd be dead up against it with
+him." He shook his head. "No, he's sort of grieved he didn't drop him
+plumb on the instant as it is. It won't do you talking that way with him
+around."
+
+He watched for the effect of his words and realised a slight relaxing of
+the strained look in the hazel eyes. Forthwith he plunged into the thing
+he contemplated.
+
+"I'm going to make a big talk with you before we eat," he said. "You
+see, I've wanted to right along, Nancy, but--Well, I want to tell you
+you're no more responsible for Laval's life, and the lives of those
+dogs, than I am. We're each playing our little parts in the things of
+life like the puppets we are. Our hands are clean enough, but it's not
+that way with the skunks that could send you, a girl, almost a child, to
+do the work, and live the life that boys like Gouter hardly know how to
+get through. That man, Peterman, is going to get it one day from me if I
+have luck. And I won't call it murder when I get my hands on his dirty
+alien throat. But never mind that. I want to ease that poor aching head
+of yours. I want to try and get you some peace of mind. That's why I
+tell you you've nothing to chide yourself for, nothing at all. It's
+true. You've played the game like the loyal adversary you are. And, for
+the moment, I'm top dog. You've handed me a bad nightmare by the
+wonderful courage and grit you've well-nigh shamed me, as a man, with.
+True, true you haven't a thing to blame yourself with. You've fought a
+mighty big fight I'd have been pleased to fight. It's just circumstances
+pitched you into the muss up, and let you see the thing your folks have
+brought about. It's that that's worrying. Think, Nancy, think hard. This
+is their fight. Not yours. The blood of Laval is on Elas Peterman's
+head. His, and those other creatures who are ready to commit any crime
+to steal our country from us. Oh, I'm not preaching just my side. It's
+true, true. We at Sachigo were content to compete openly, honestly.
+Peterman and those others saw disaster in our competition. And so they
+got ready to murder--if necessary. It's the soulless crime of a gang of
+unscrupulous foreigners, and those hounds of hell have left you to
+suffer for it just as sure as if they'd seared your poor gentle heart
+with a red hot iron. Say, Nancy," he went on, with persuasive
+earnestness, "put it all out of your mind. Forget it all. You're out of
+the fight now. And it just hurts me to see your eyes troubled, and that
+poor tender heart of yours all broken up. Won't you?"
+
+The girl had turned away to the gaping valley again. But she answered
+him. And her tone was less dull, and it was without the dreadful passion
+of moments ago.
+
+"I--I've tried to tell myself something of that," she said, with the
+pathetic helplessness of a child.
+
+"Then try some more."
+
+Bull had drawn nearer. He laid one hand gently on her shoulder. It moved
+down and took possession of the soft arm under her furs. Nancy shook her
+head. But there was no decision in the movement.
+
+"Oh, I wish--" she began.
+
+But she could get no further. Suddenly she buried her face in her hands,
+and broke into a passion of weeping.
+
+Bull stood helplessly by. He gazed upon the shaking woman while great
+sobs racked her whole body. There was nothing he could do, nothing he
+dared do. He knew that. His impulse was to take her in his arms and
+protect her with his body against the things which gave her pain.
+But--somehow he felt that perhaps it was good for her to weep. Perhaps
+it would help her. So he waited.
+
+Slowly the violence of the girl's grief subsided. And after a while she
+turned to him and gazed at him through her tears.
+
+"I'm--I'm--"
+
+But Bull shook his head.
+
+"Come. Shall we go and eat?"
+
+He still retained his hold upon her arm. And as he spoke he led her
+unresistingly away towards the camp.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE MAN IN THE TWILIGHT
+
+
+Bat Harker passed out of the house on the hillside. Muffled in heavy
+furs he stood for a moment filling up the storm doorway, gazing out over
+a desolate prospect, a scene of grave-like, significant stillness.
+
+The mills he loved were completely idle. But that was not all. He knew
+them to be at the mercy of an army of men who had abandoned their work
+at the call of wanton political and commercial agitators. It was
+disaster, grievous disaster. And he told himself he was about to beat a
+retreat like some hard-pressed general, hastily retiring in face of the
+enemy from a position no longer tenable.
+
+There was no yielding in the lumberman. But to a man of his forcefulness
+and headstrong courage the thought of retreat was maddening. He was
+yearning to fight in any and every way that offered. He knew that he was
+going to fight this thing out, that his present retreat was purely
+strategic. He knew that the whole campaign was only just beginning. But
+it galled his spirit that his first move must be a--retreat.
+
+The late winter day was fiercely threatening, fit setting for the
+disaster that had befallen. The cold was bitterly intense, but no more
+bitter than the lumberman's present mood. There down below were the
+deserted quays with their mountains of baled wood-pulp buried deep under
+white drifts of snow. And the voiceless mills were similarly half
+buried. Look where he would the scene was dead and deserted. There was
+not one single stirring human figure to break up the desolation of it
+all.
+
+It was a sad, white, desolate world, which for over fifteen years he had
+known only as a busy hive. Roadways should have been clear. Traffic
+should have been speeding, every service, even in the depth of winter,
+should have been in full running. The mills--those wonderful
+mills--should have been droning out their chorus of human achievement in
+a world set out for Nature's fiercest battle ground.
+
+From the moment of that first encounter in the recreation hall Bat had
+known the strike to be inevitable. Bull's swift action at the outset had
+had its effect. For the moment it had checked the movement, and reduced
+it to a simmer. Heat and power had been restored, and work had been
+resumed, and outwardly there had been peace. But it was artificial, and
+the lumberman and the engineer had been aware that this was so.
+
+Brief as was the respite it was valuable time to the men in control, and
+they used it to the uttermost. The leaders of the strike had been robbed
+of the advantage they had sought from a lightning strike. But they were
+by no means defeated. It was only that they had lost a move in the game
+they had prepared.
+
+At the end of a week Bat awoke one morning to find the mills and all
+traffic at a standstill, and the workers skulking within the shelter of
+their own homes.
+
+Then it was that the benefit of a week's respite was made plain. Every
+plan that had been prepared was forthwith put into operation. Power and
+heat were again cut off. The loyalists, which included a large number of
+the engineering staff, and the staff of the executive offices, were
+equipped with such weapons as would serve, and set guard over the food
+and liquor stores, and the essentials of the mills. And the power house
+was fortified for siege.
+
+But the strikers gave no sign. There was no attempt at violence. There
+was no picketing, and no apparent attempt at coercion of the loyalists.
+It almost seemed as if the objects of the leaders had been achieved by
+the simple cessation of work.
+
+This silent condition of the strike had gone on for days with
+exasperating effect upon the defenders. Bat endeavoured by every means
+in his power to bring the leaders of the movement into the open to
+discuss the situation. But every effort ended negatively. The men would
+not contemplate the conference table, and finally, in headlong mood, the
+lumberman had committed the grave mistake of provocation. He threatened
+to cut off food supplies if the leaders continued in their refusal to
+confer.
+
+Two weeks elapsed before his threat reacted. Two weeks of continued
+silence and apparent inaction by the strike leaders. The men's first
+terror at the loss of heat and power seemed to have passed. As Bull had
+suggested they had resorted to the methods of the trail, and day and
+night mighty beacon fires burned along the fore-shores of the cove upon
+which their homes were built. The men and women came and went peaceably
+but silently between the food stores and their homes, purchasing such
+provisions as they needed. And the manner of it all, the cold silence,
+should have served a warning of the iron hand in exercise behind the
+strike.
+
+The bombshell came at the end of the third week. It came in the form of
+a message crouched in the flamboyant phraseology beloved of the
+Communist fraternity. It was conveyed by a small youth some ten years of
+age, as though its authors were fearful lest a full grown bearer should
+be made to suffer for the temerity.
+
+Bat had received it at the office, and his manner had been
+characteristic.
+
+"Fer me, laddie?" he had said, as he took possession of the
+official-looking envelope. Then he gently patted the boy's shoulder.
+"All right, sonny," he added. "You get right back to your folks. Pore
+little bit."
+
+With the boy's departure he had lost no time in reading the ultimatum
+the message contained.
+
+ "A Soviet has been formed. The Workers will not submit to
+ inteference with the food supplies of the people such as has
+ been threatened by men who have no right over the life and death
+ of their fellows. In view of this threat, the Soviet of the
+ Workers has determined to possess itself of the mills and all
+ properties pertaining thereto. The whole territories and
+ properties hither controlled under a capitalist organisation
+ will in future be administered by the Soviet or the Workers. You
+ are required, therefore, to hand over forthwith all accountings,
+ administration, and all funds, all legal documentary titles such
+ as are held by you of freeholds and forestry rights relating to
+ Sachigo. Furthermore, it is required of you to restore intact
+ the machinery of the new power station, and to hand over the
+ whole premises in full running order. One week's grace will be
+ permitted for the execution of this order. Failing absolute
+ compliance, the ruling Soviet of the Workers reserves to itself
+ the right of adopting such measures to enforce the Will of the
+ Workers as it may deem necessary.
+
+ "On behalf of the Soviet of the Workers,
+
+ "LEO MURKO,
+
+ "Chief Commissionary."
+
+At the finish of his reading Bat had looked up into the dark face of
+Pete Loale who was standing by.
+
+"Leo Murko?" he said, in an ominously restrained tone. "Ther' ain't no
+guy o' that name on our pay-roll. Guess he'll be that feller Bull
+dropped out into the snow." Then with a sudden explosive force: "In
+God's name why in hell didn't he break that skunk's neck?"
+
+The week's grace had expired. It had been a week of further hasty
+preparations. Every day had been used to the uttermost, and even far
+into the night the work had gone on. The office on the hill, as well as
+the executive offices down at the mill, had been cleared out. Documents,
+cash, books, safe. Everything of real importance had been removed to the
+citadel power house. The mining of the penstocks had been completed, and
+left ready to be blown sky high at a moment's notice. Whatever befell,
+the men who had given their lives to the building of the mills were
+determined that only a useless husk should fall into the hands of the
+strikers.
+
+Now had come the Communists' final declaration of war. The message had
+been brought less than an hour ago by the same youth, who had again
+departed with Bat's smiling expression of pity. The letter was ominously
+brief.
+
+ "The Order of the Soviet of the Workers will be enforced
+ forthwith. No mercy will be shown in the event of resistance."
+
+Bat's fury had blazed as he read the message. Again it was signed "Leo
+Murko." How he hated that name. He had been alone in the office when the
+letter came, and had seized the 'phone and called up the engineer at the
+power house, and read the message to him. Skert Lawton's reply was as
+instant as it was characteristic.
+
+"That's all right," he said. "We're fixed for the scrap. Just come right
+over."
+
+It was this last act that Bat contemplated now. And he hated it. He
+knew well enough he must go. There was no sane alternative. The power
+station was the prepared fortress. It had everything in it that must be
+guarded and fought for. But his fierce regret was none the less for the
+knowledge.
+
+Then, too, his regret was for something else. It was at the absence of
+Bull Sternford. This was no expression of weakness. It was simply he
+desired the man's companionship. They had worked together. They had
+planned and built together. And, now, in the moment of battle, it seemed
+to him they should still be together.
+
+But he knew that was impossible. When Bull's call to the forest had come
+in the night there had been no opportunity for explanation. He, Bat, had
+been engaged down at the mill, and the other had been rushed in his
+preparations. Bull had made his farewell to him in a great hurry. He had
+outlined briefly the thing happening in the forests. That had been all.
+That and a few words on the affairs of the mill.
+
+How the news had reached Bull, and who the messenger, had never
+transpired between them. Perhaps Bull had forgotten to mention it.
+Perhaps, in the hurry of it all, Bat had forgotten to ask. Perhaps,
+even, the messenger himself had impressed secrecy for his visit, which
+had been timed for the dead of night. At any rate Bat knew none of these
+things, and was in no way concerned for them. All he was concerned for
+was the absence of the man who was something more to him than a mere
+partner.
+
+Thinking of him now Bat remembered the other's final words, and the
+memory stirred him deeply.
+
+"Remember, old friend," he had said, "young Ray Birchall will be over
+from England at the break of winter. On his report to his people depends
+the whole thing we've built up. We've got to have these mills running
+full when that boy gets around. There's not a darn thing else matters."
+
+It was the final spur. The mills running full. Bat spat out his chew,
+and turned and locked the door behind him. Then he moved away hurriedly,
+gazing straight in front of him as though he dared not even think of the
+place he was leaving.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the foreshore of the Cove, out towards the guarding headlands, half a
+hundred fires were burning. They were immense beacon fires of monstrous
+proportions. Belching columns of smoke clouded the whole region till the
+water-front looked to be in the grip of a forest fire.
+
+Men, and women, and children were gathered about them. They were basking
+in a moderation of temperature such as their homes could no longer
+afford them. But it was a curious, silent gathering, indifferent to
+everything but the feeding of the fires on which they felt their very
+existence depended.
+
+The forests which supplied the fuel came down to the edge of the now
+idle trolley track. Already acres and acres had been felled to feed the
+insatiable fires. The woodland decimated, and the devastation was going
+on in every direction.
+
+About the houses there were others engaged in homely chores. There were
+men, and women, too, clad heavily in the thick sheepskin clothing which
+alone could defeat the fierce breath of winter. Here again was silence
+and gloom, and even the children refrained from their accustomed
+pastimes.
+
+A tall, fur-clad figure was moving through the settlement. His feet were
+encased in moccasins, and thick felt leggings reached up just below his
+knees. For the rest his nether garments were loose fur trousers, and his
+body was covered by a tunic reaching just below his middle, with a
+capacious hood attached to it almost completely enveloping his head.
+
+He moved slowly and without any seeming object. He passed along, and
+paused when he encountered either man, woman, or child. With the men he
+spoke longest. But the women claimed him, too. And generally he left
+behind him a change of expression for the better in those with whom he
+talked.
+
+He paused beside a small party of elderly men. They were at work upon a
+prone tree trunk of vast girth. They were cutting and splitting it,
+fresh feed for the fires which must never be permitted to die down.
+
+The men had ceased work on his approach. But they went on almost
+immediately, all except one. He was a grizzled veteran, a man just past
+middle life. His face was deeply lined, and a scrub of whisker protected
+it from the cold. He had been seated on the log, but he stood up as the
+tall man addressed him by name.
+
+"You'll be there, Michael," he said, brushing the frost from his darkly
+whiskered face, and breaking the icicles hanging from his fur hood where
+it almost closed over his mouth.
+
+The man's grey eyes were smiling as they looked into the wide black eyes
+so mildly encouraging.
+
+"Sure, Father," came his prompt reply. "We got to be ther' anyway. That
+don't matter. But we're for your lead, an' we'll stand by it, sure.
+There's going to be no sort of damn fool mistake this time."
+
+The tall man nodded.
+
+"There must be no mistake this time," he said keenly. "Say, how many
+years is it since I sent you along here with a promise of good work and
+better wages, and a square deal?"
+
+"Nigh five years, Father."
+
+"And you got all--those things?"
+
+"Sure. More."
+
+Father Adam nodded.
+
+"And those are the things a man's entitled to. Just those," he said. "If
+a man wants more it's up to him. He must earn it in competition with the
+rest of his fellows. If he can't earn it he must do without, or quit the
+honesty that entitles him to hold his head up in the world. There's no
+honesty in the things these men propose."
+
+"That's so, Father."
+
+There was decision in the man's agreement. But even as he spoke his gaze
+wandered in the direction of two small children, like bundles of fur,
+playing in the snow.
+
+"Poor little kids," he said. "Say, it's hell for them with heat cut
+off."
+
+Again the tall man nodded as he followed the other's gaze.
+
+"That's so. But I don't blame the mill-bosses. This gang is trying to
+steal from the men who've always handed out a straight deal. Do you
+blame them for defending themselves?"
+
+Michael shook his head.
+
+"I don't see I can. After all--"
+
+"No. Listen. You boys have it in your own hands. These crooks from the
+Skandinavia got a strangle holt on the youngsters of this outfit who've
+no kiddies like those. You older boys let 'em get it. You weren't awake.
+Now you find yourselves caught in the tide. We've got to make a break
+for it. There'll be heat in plenty when you break free. Seven o'clock.
+That's the time your masters ordered the meeting for. Seven o'clock.
+That's the time they intend to commit their great crime--with you
+helping them."
+
+Father Adam smiled as he drove his satire home.
+
+"Not on your life!" The man's grey eyes were fierce. "Give us the lead,
+Father," he cried. "We--we just got to have that. Ther' ain't a real
+lumber-jack in these forests won't follow it. It'll be a scrap. A hell
+of a scrap. Oh, I know. Maybe some of us'll never see the light of
+another day. But sure it's got to be. We ought to've gone over from the
+start, and stood by our jobs. But I guess none of us with wives and
+kiddies had the guts. They threatened our women and children, an' we
+weakened. But it's different now, sure. We've learned our lesson. It's
+themselves they're out for, an' we'll be their dogs to be kicked and
+bullied as they see fit. We'll follow your lead, Father, an' it don't
+matter a cuss when the scrap comes."
+
+Father Adam nodded. His dark eyes were alight with something more than
+the smile shining in them.
+
+"Good," he said. "I shall be there."
+
+He moved away and Michael rejoined his companions. They talked together
+for a moment or two while their eyes followed the receding figure. They
+saw it stop and speak to one of their wives. She had a small child with
+her. They saw it bend down into a squatting attitude and draw the child
+towards it. Then they saw a lean hand draw out of its mit and proceed to
+touch a swelling on the little mite's neck. They understood. And when
+the figure finally passed on out of sight, they returned to their work,
+each man absorbed in his own thought, each man with a surge of deep
+feeling for that lonely figure. For they were all men who knew, and
+understood the man who lived in the twilight of the forests.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The recreation room was packed to suffocation, packed from end to end
+with a human freight. The benches were crowded, and the tables groaned
+under the weight of as many rough-clad creatures as could crowd
+themselves thereon. Every inch of floor space was occupied, and even the
+recesses in the log walls which contained the windows were utilised as
+sitting places for the audience which had gathered at the imperative
+order of the Soviet of the Workers.
+
+Kerosene lamps had replaced the brilliant electric light to which the
+men were accustomed. A haze of tobacco smoke created a sort of fog
+throughout the length of the building, and contrived to soften the harsh
+lines of the sea of human faces turned towards the raised platform
+whereon sat the members of the ruling Soviet. The temperature of the
+room was cold for all the warming influence of the human gathering, and
+every man wore his fur-lined pea-jacket closely buttoned.
+
+Once, in a light moment, Bull Sternford had declared that male human
+nature in the "bunch" was the ugliest thing in the world. Had he
+witnessed that sea of faces, so intently, so anxiously turned towards
+the leaders they had presumably elected, he must have been well
+satisfied with the truth of his conviction.
+
+Such was the ascendancy and power the Bolshevist leaders had gained in
+the brief month since the first rumble of industrial war had been heard
+in Sachigo, that there were few who had failed to obey their summons.
+Not only was the hall crowded but a gathering of many hundreds waited
+outside. It was the hour of Fate for all. They understood that. It was
+the hour of that Fate which had been decreed by men, who, under the
+guise of democratic selection had usurped a power over the rest of the
+community such as no elected parliament of the world had ever been
+entrusted with.
+
+It was doubtful if the majority fully realised the significance of what
+was being done. It is certain that a feeling of deep regret stirred
+voicelessly in many hearts. But every man there was a simple wage earner
+whose horizon was bounded by that which his wage opened up. For the rest
+he was left guessing, but more often fearing. So, with his muscles of
+iron, his human desires, and his reluctance to apply such untrained
+reasoning as he possessed, he was ripe subject for fluent, unscrupulous,
+political agitators, and ready to sweep along with any tide that set in.
+
+The leaders on the platform understood this well enough. It was their
+business to understand it. The others, the leaders' immediate
+supporters, were men of fiery youth, or those whose work it was to wreck
+at all costs, and snatch to themselves, in addition to pay for their
+fell work, such loot as the wreckage afforded them.
+
+The hum of talk snuffed right out as the leader rose to address the
+meeting. It was Leo Murko, the same man, a hard-faced, foreign-looking
+Hebrew whom a month before Bull's great arms flung through the broken
+window into the snowdrift beyond. His position now, however, was far
+different from that which it had been when his endeavours had been
+concentrated upon enrolling a Communist following. All that had been
+achieved or sufficiently so. Now he was the dictator whose orders could
+be backed by an irresistible force. His whole manner had changed. The
+velvet glove of persuasion had been discarded, and he hurled his
+commands with deep-throated authority, and the smile of encouragement
+and persuasion was completely abandoned.
+
+His preliminary was brief. A phrase or two of flattery and
+acknowledgment to those on the platform supporting him dismissed that.
+Then he passed on to the objects in view. In five minutes he had
+dismissed also the ultimate destiny of the mills, and the manner in
+which the Workers were to benefit by its administration. Then he flung
+himself into a fiery denunciation of all capitalists, and particularly
+those who had dared to employ his audience on good wages for something
+like fifteen years. That completed he passed on to the plans for taking
+over the mills forthwith.
+
+During the earlier part of his address the audience listened with grave
+attention. Here and there little outbursts of applause punctuated his
+sentences. But when he came to the task which had been set for that
+night a deathly silence prevailed everywhere. The intensity was added to
+rather than broken by the harsh clearing of throats that came from
+almost every part of the hall.
+
+"The whole thing needs cleaning up before daylight," he hurled at them.
+"Our organisation is complete. Here," and he indicated the table nearby
+littered with papers and surrounded by four or five men who were members
+of the elected Soviet, "we have the lists of the names of every comrade,
+and the numbers of men to be used in every detail of the work before us.
+They have been carefully drawn up with a view to the task required to be
+put through. Some tasks will be simple. Some will be less so." A grim
+light that was almost a smile shone in his black eyes. "But we have
+carefully discriminated in our personnel. That is as it should be. There
+will be certain bloodshed. Knowing the temperament and preparations of
+your late masters this seems to be inevitable. But again we have
+provided. Our greatest and most important task is the possession of the
+power station, and for the capture of that we have machine guns which
+will quickly reduce the enemy to capitulation. The strength of the enemy
+we know to the last fraction--"
+
+"Do you?"
+
+The challenge came from the back of the hall. It came in a quiet,
+refined voice that swept through the hall with the cold cut of a knife.
+Someone had risen from a sitting position on a table. He stood up. It
+was the tall, dark figure of Father Adam clad in a garment which
+enveloped him from head to foot like the black cassock of a priest.
+
+"Do you?" he cried again, as the startled leader stared stupidly at the
+interrupter.
+
+Every eye turned to the back of the hall on the instant. The men on the
+platform looked up from their work to witness the daring of one who
+could interrupt the elected leader of the people. One man, slight,
+foreign-looking, who had been seated at the back of the platform stood
+up and leant against the wall.
+
+"You know nothing of these people you are determined to destroy with
+machine guns," Father Adam went on. "You know nothing of the men with
+whom you are dealing, either the owners of the mill, or the men who have
+found an ample livelihood under their organisation. How can you know
+them? You are dastardly agents of an alien company, sent and paid to
+wreck a wholly Canadian enterprise. This is your first object. Your
+second is even more sinister, for you are the agents of that mad
+Leninism which has destroyed a whole race of workers in a vast country
+like Russia. You are a supreme pestilence seeking to destroy such human
+nature as will listen to your vile doctrines. It is I, I, Father Adam,
+tell you so. The men here to-night, whom you are inciting to theft and
+brutal murder, know me. They know me as their servant, as their loyal
+comrade and helper, ready to answer their call when trouble overtakes
+them, ready to yield them of my best service in the day of prosperity or
+the night of their woe. And as it is with them so it is with their women
+and their babes. That's the reason I am here to-night, the black night
+of their woe. And so I ask them to listen to me now as they have
+listened many times before in the woods and the mills, which is the
+world to which we all belong. If they do that, if only reason asserts
+itself, they'll here and now turn on you, and rend you, you and your
+wretched gang. They'll cast you out of their midst, and fling off a
+foreign yoke, as they would cast out any other unclean pestilence for
+the purification of their homes. They'll pack you out into the northern
+night where no foul germs can exist. Are they to become thieves at your
+bidding? Are they to become murderers because your foreign money has
+bought them machine guns? Would they go back to their women, and their
+innocent babes, wiping their blood-stained hands to ask them to rejoice
+in the brutal crime committed in the name of brotherhood and fellowship?
+No, sir. I know them. You don't--"
+
+The Bolshevist flung out a denouncing hand and bellowed in his seething
+wrath:
+
+"Traitor! He is of the Cap--"
+
+But immediate uproar drowned his denunciation and a great voice shouted
+in the din.
+
+"Let him speak."
+
+A dozen other voices strove to make themselves heard, and a wild
+pandemonium was rising when clear and sharp Father Adam's voice rang out
+again above it.
+
+"I tell you they'll have no more of you," he cried as the leader dropped
+back to his seat, and the dark man at the back of the platform further
+bestirred himself. "Order them now to man your machine guns and murder
+the men in the power house! Give your orders here and now! Read out your
+list of names and see--"
+
+A shot rang out. The flame of a gun leapt somewhere at the back of the
+platform, to be followed by complete, utter silence.
+
+Then came a sound. It was a hardly-suppressed moan. Father Adam reeled
+slowly. He half turned about. Then he crumpled and dropped to his knees
+and fell forward into hands outstretched to catch him.
+
+Paralysis seemed to grip that dense-packed human throng. But it was only
+for a second. Then the avalanche leapt for the abyss.
+
+"Father! Father Adam!"
+
+The cry went up seemingly from a thousand throats. And with a roar the
+crowd surged forward. It hurled itself at the platform.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bull stared up at the house. He moved away and glanced over the windows.
+Then his eyes turned to the valley below, and his gaze settled itself on
+the great fires burning on the northern foreshore of the Cove.
+
+For some moments he stood contemplating the thing he beheld. Then, at
+last, he turned back to the locked door of his office. Without a word he
+raised one foot, and, with all his force, crashed its sole against the
+lock.
+
+The lock gave and the door fell back into the pitch darkness beyond. He
+passed within. After a while a light appeared in the office window. It
+passed. Then it reappeared in each window of the building in succession.
+Presently it remained stationary and fresh lights appeared in several of
+the windows. Minutes later he reappeared in the doorway.
+
+He stepped out into the snow and came over to the waiting dog train.
+
+"It's a cold sort of welcome," he said quietly. "But--will you please
+come right in, and I'll see how I can fix you up for comfort. I guess
+things have happened since I've been away. They've turned off heat.
+However--"
+
+Nancy McDonald rose from her place in the sled. She flung back the
+wealth of furs under which she had been well-nigh buried and stepped
+out. She made no reply, but stood waiting while Bull gave orders to his
+driver.
+
+"Get those dogs fixed, Gouter," he said. "Then come right along back
+here. You'll need to gather fuel and set those stoves going."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A great fire was roaring in the wood stove in the office. Nancy and Bull
+were standing before it seeking to drive out the cold which seemed to
+have eaten into their bones. Bull had drawn up his own rocker-chair for
+the girl but she had not availed herself of it.
+
+"You are not going to keep me here, prisoner in--your house?"
+
+The girl spoke in a low, hushed tone. In the indifferent lamp-light she
+looked ghastly pale and utterly weary-eyed. She had removed her furs,
+revealing herself clad in the heavy clothing which alone could have
+served on her desperate journey through the camps. It robbed her figure
+of much of its usual grace.
+
+"I'm afraid I am." Bull smiled gently, for all the decision of his
+words. "You see, Nancy, we're still at war. Still fighting the battle
+that others have forced on us."
+
+Nancy inclined her head.
+
+"I'd forgotten," she said almost humbly. "But you have no women folk
+around you," she went on urgently a moment later. "Does war mean
+that--that I must submit even--to that?"
+
+It was the woman in her that had taken alarm. Her hands were pressed
+together as she held them over the stove. The man understood. She moved
+away to the window, over which the curtains had not been drawn, and Bull
+watched her.
+
+"Every respect will be paid you," he said. "You've nothing to fear. When
+Gouter returns he'll get food, and we'll make the best preparations we
+can. I've to consider others with more at stake than even I."
+
+"Look!"
+
+The girl had turned. Her eyes were wide with terror. She was pointing at
+the window, and Bull hurried to her side.
+
+A great fire was raging on the north shore of the Cove. It was the
+recreation room, that room which Bat had so bitterly come to hate. It
+was ablaze from end to end, and lit up its neighbourhood so that the
+scene was of daylight clearness. A horde of human figures were gathered
+about it, in a struggling, seething mass, and the man realised that a
+battle was raging, a human battle, whilst the demon of fire was left to
+work its will.
+
+He stood there, held speechless by the thing he beheld.
+
+"What is it? What does it mean?"
+
+Panic drove the questions to the girl's lips. And she turned in an agony
+of appeal to the man beside her.
+
+"It means the work of the Skandinavia has been well and truly done."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+DAWN
+
+
+The hush of dawn was unbroken. The shadows of night receded slowly,
+reluctantly renouncing their long reign in favour of the brief winter
+daylight. The shores of the Cove lay hidden under a haze of fog.
+
+There were no sounds of life. The world was desperately still. No cry of
+wild fowl rose to greet the day. There was not even the doleful cry of
+belated wolf, or the snapping bark of foraging coyote to indicate those
+conditions of life which never change in the northern wilderness. It was
+as if the world of snow and ice were waking to a day of complete
+mourning, a day of bitter reckoning for the tumult of furious human
+passions, which, under the cloak of night, had been loosed to work the
+evil of men's will.
+
+With the first gleam of the rising sun a breeze leapt out of the east.
+It came with an edge like the keenest knife, and ripped the fog to
+ribbons. It churned and tangled it. Then it flung it clear of its path,
+leaving bare the scene of wreckage which the rage of battle had
+produced.
+
+It was a scene for pity and regret. Gone was the building which had
+been set up for the workers' recreation. Only a smoking ruin remained in
+its place. A dozen other buildings in the neighbourhood bore the scars
+of fire, which they would doubtless carry for all time of their service.
+The mill, however, was safe. The work of more than fifteen years
+remaining intact. But it had been so near, so very near to complete
+destruction.
+
+With the passing of the fog further disaster was revealed. It was the
+wreck of human life which the night had produced. Daylight had made it
+possible to deal with the injured and those beyond all human aid. And
+the work was going forward in the almost voiceless fashion which the
+presence of death ever imposes on the living.
+
+Viewed even from a distance there could be no mistaking the meaning, the
+hideous significance of it all. And Nancy, gazing from a window in the
+house on the hill, shrank in terror before that which she believed to be
+the result of the cruel work to which she had lent herself.
+
+It had been a dreary, heartbreaking night of sleepless watching and
+poignant feeling. Nancy was alone in her prison, a beautiful apartment,
+the best in the house. Bull Sternford had conducted her thither
+personally, and, in doing so, had told her the thing he was doing, and
+of his real desire to save her unnecessary distress.
+
+"You see," he had explained, with a gentleness which Nancy felt she had
+no right to expect, "there's just about the best of everything right
+here. It's as it was left by the feller who designed and decorated it
+for the woman he loved better than anything in life. No one's ever used
+it since. I'd be glad for you to have it. We've only a Chink servant to
+wait around on us, and a rough choreman, and I guess they don't know a
+thing about fixing things for a woman. But they've kept it clean and
+wholesome, and that's all I can say. Can you make out in it to-night?"
+
+He smiled. Then his steady eyes had turned away to the window where the
+light of the raging fire could be seen. And after a moment he went on.
+
+"You're a prisoner. I can't help that. That's got to be. But no lock or
+bolt will be set to keep you here. You're free to come and go as you
+choose. You can make the doors of the room fast against intrusion, if
+you feel that way. But there'll be none. To-night you'll just be dead
+alone in the place. You see, I've got to get out and pull my weight down
+there."
+
+So he had left her. He had left her to a punishment more desperate than
+anything he could have designed. Her windows looked out over the mill.
+And a subtle force attracted her thereto, and held her sleepless and
+despairing the whole night long. She had been forced to sit there
+watching the tragedy being enacted. A tragedy with which she knew she
+was connected, and for which, in her exaggerated self-condemnation, she
+believed herself responsible.
+
+The agony of that prolonged vigil would never be forgotten. Fascinated,
+dreading, every act of it seared the girl's soul as with a red hot
+brand. It was the Skandinavia's work. The agents of the Skandinavia. And
+she knew that she, perhaps, was their principal agent. The rattle of
+machine guns. The human slaughter. She had witnessed the terror of it
+all in the fierce light of the conflagration which looked to be
+devouring the whole world of the mills. She could never forget it. She
+could never forgive herself her share in the ghastly plans for that
+hideous destruction. But more than all she knew she could never forgive,
+or again associate herself with those who had designed the inhuman work
+of it all and plunged her into the maelstrom of its execution.
+
+Now, in the daylight, she was still at the window. There was no relief.
+On the contrary. With the smoke cleared from the smouldering ruins she
+saw the full extent of the wreckage. It was sprawling everywhere, human
+and material. An army of men, it seemed, was searching the battlefield.
+It was searching and collecting amongst the ruins. And she watched the
+bearing away on improvised stretchers, of still, helpless, human burdens
+which none could mistake. She could bear no more of it. She shut out the
+sight and fled from the window, covering her eyes with her hands.
+
+But she was recalled almost instantly. The sound of men's rough voices
+startled her. Whence came the sound she could not judge. But it seemed
+to her it was from somewhere outside. So she stealthily peered out. It
+was a small group of fur-clad figures. They were approaching the house
+over the snowy trail that came up from the mill.
+
+New terror leapt. They were supporting a prone, human body! They were
+bringing it up to the house! Who--who could they be bringing up to that
+house, which was the home and the office of the master of the mill? In
+that supreme moment all that which had gone before was completely
+forgotten. She stood clutching at the window casing, in a desperate
+effort to steady herself.
+
+She knew. Oh, yes, it could be no other. It must be Bull Sternford they
+were bringing up. Bull Sternford--the man who--The agents of the
+Skandinavia had done him to death! The agents of the Skandinavia!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bat Harker was standing at the window of the office on the hill. His
+hard, grey eyes were searching the distance below, and his square jaws
+were busy on their usual occupation. Bull was sitting in a rocker-chair.
+He was leaning forward, gazing down at the thickly carpeted floor, and
+his hands were clasped between his outspread knees. Both men were
+dishevelled. Their clothing was stained, and their hands and faces were
+begrimed as a result of the fierce work of the night.
+
+Bat suddenly turned from his silent scrutiny.
+
+"He'll pull around? You think so?" he demanded.
+
+There was an appeal in his harsh voice such as Bull had never heard in
+it before, and he looked up with a start.
+
+"That's how Jason reckoned," he said.
+
+"Oh, to hell with Jason!" Bat's retort was fiercely uncompromising.
+"Who's Jason anyway? A medical student who hadn't the guts for his job.
+Leastways he got on the crook. It's the thing you reckon I want to
+know."
+
+"I reckon he'll pull around," Bull returned quietly. Then he stirred
+wearily. "But you're hard on young Jason, Bat. He's bright enough. I
+like the way he handles his job. And anyway he's the only feller around
+this layout with any knowledge of a sick man. He's qualified you know.
+He wasn't just a student. He practised before he went down and out and
+took to the forests. We've got to rely on him till we get a man up from
+Montreal, which won't be for weeks. He'll be through along from fixing
+him in a while. Then we can hear the thing he's got to say. Maybe we'll
+be able to judge better then."
+
+"I wired Montreal," Bat said sharply.
+
+"Good."
+
+The lumberman turned again to his window, and Bull continued to regard
+the carpet which had no interest for him. Both were weary, utterly weary
+in body as well as mind.
+
+It was full, broad daylight now, with the low, northern sun gleaming
+athwart the scene which these men had so recently left. They were
+conscious of the victory gained. They rejoiced in the complete defeat of
+an enemy who had come so near to defeating all their plans. But the cost
+appalled them. They had both faced the play of machine guns. They had
+seen their men fall to the scythe-like mowing of a cruel weapon of
+which its victims had no understanding. Then, when the machine guns had
+been silenced, they had witnessed the rage with which these hard-living
+jacks had meted out their ideas of just punishment upon the murderers of
+their comrades.
+
+The wanton inhumanity of the whole thing had sickened them both. Both
+knew and were indifferent to the roughness of the fierce northland. But
+the ordeal through which they had passed was something far beyond the
+darkest vision of conflict they had ever contemplated.
+
+Neither had been present to witness the shooting of Father Adam. But
+both had been there within minutes of the beginning of the battle which
+it had started. From the power house Bat had discovered the thing
+happening, just as Bull had seen from the window of his office the
+leaping flames which had threatened the mill. It had been largely due to
+their timely leadership that ultimate victory had been snatched. But the
+work of it had been terrible.
+
+Now they had returned to their quarters, their night's work completed.
+Down below comrade was attending to comrade in such fashion as lay to
+hand, and those beyond earthly aid were being disposed to their last
+rest. Thus these men had been left free to succour the wounded creature
+whose timely lead had made possible the defeat that had been inflicted.
+
+Bat had but one concern just now. Father Adam. The man whose secret he
+held. The man who counted for everything in his rugged life. He raised
+his blood-shot eyes to his companion's face.
+
+"If--Father Adam--passes, I'm done with Sachigo, Bull," he declared
+almost desperately. "It 'ud break me to death. You can't know the thing
+that feller means to me. You know him for the sort of missioner all
+these folks guess he is. That's how he'd have you know him. And it goes
+with me all the time. But I know him just as he is."
+
+Bull nodded. He made no reply. He knew the lumberman was well-nigh
+beside himself, and he gazed back into the hot eyes and wondered.
+
+But Bat had nothing more to say. He even felt he had said more than he
+had any right to say. So he turned again to the window.
+
+A few moments later the door communicating with the house was
+unceremoniously thrust open. The two men looked round. It was a youngish
+man dressed in the overalls of an engineer who hurried in. He was alert
+and full of business; a condition which he seemed to appreciate.
+
+"It's all right, boss," he cried cheerfully, addressing himself to Bat.
+"Guess the good Father'll get away with it. He's out of his dope an'
+smiling plenty. I jerked that darn plug that holed him right out, an'
+it's a soft-nosed swine. I left it back there for you to see. The feller
+who dropped him deserves rat poison. I hope to God they got him. Anyway
+I got the wound cleaned up and fixed things. Now we just got to keep it
+clean and open, and watch his temperature. Then we don't need to worry a
+thing. I'll do that. But someone'll have to sit around and nurse him.
+I'll have to get along down. There's nigh a hundred needin' me. Gee I
+An' after all these years, too. It makes me wonder."
+
+There was a smile of keen appreciation in the eyes that looked into
+those of the lumberman. And the look deepened when Bat thrust out a
+large and dirty hand at him.
+
+"Thanks, boy," he said, in obvious relief. "I'm goin' to nurse that pore
+feller. Maybe I ain't much in that line. But I'll promise he don't lack
+a thing I can hand him. Here, shake. You'll be along to fix him again?"
+
+"Right on time," was the quick rejoinder.
+
+Jason had readily enough gripped the outstretched hand. Then he hurried
+away. And neither of the men begrudged him the obvious vanity which his
+momentary importance had inflamed.
+
+With the man's going Bull passed a hand back over his ample hair.
+
+"God!" he exclaimed wearily. "It's been a tough night."
+
+"Tough?"
+
+Bat's response spoke a whole world of feeling. He moved from his window
+and flung himself into a chair.
+
+"He saved us," he went on. "Father Adam. He saved the whole of our darn
+outfit. How he did it I don't just know. Maybe I'll never know. He don't
+talk a lot. I gathered something of it from the boys. But there wasn't
+time for talk." He shook his grizzled head. "You see, I didn't even know
+he was around. And you never told me it was him brought you word from
+the camps. He must have been at work around from the start. He must have
+got hold of a bunch of the boys he knew. And when he got 'em right,
+why--Say, I'd have given a thousand dollars to have heard him fire his
+dope at that lousy gang. It must have been pretty. But they got him. And
+I guess that was the craziest thing they did. The fool man who could
+shoot up Father Adam in face of the forest-boys could only be fit for
+the bughouse."
+
+He sighed. It was not for the man's madness in shooting, but for the
+hurt inflicted. Then a grim, vengeful smile lit his eyes.
+
+"Why, I guess there ain't a single agent of the Skandinavia down there
+left with a puff of wind in his rotten carcase. The boys were plumb
+crazed for their blood an' got right up to their necks in it. I'm glad.
+I'm--"
+
+"Oh, forget it, man." Bull spoke sharply. "There's things we can take a
+joy in remembering. But this isn't one of 'em. No. The thing for us now
+is work. Plenty of work. The mill needs to be in full work inside a
+week. We haven't an hour to lose, with young Birchall coming along
+over. Skert's promised us power in twenty-four hours. He's at it right
+now. The camps on the river'll be working full, and making up lost time.
+The rest's up to us right here. But--but," he added, passing a hand
+nervously across his forehead, "I've got to get sleep or I'll go stark
+crazy."
+
+Bat eyed the younger man seriously. It was the first time he had
+realised his condition. His sympathy found the rough expression of a
+nod.
+
+"You had a hell of a time up there," he said.
+
+Bull laughed. There was no mirth in his laugh.
+
+"It was tough all right. I wonder if you'd guess how tough." He shook
+his head. "No. You wouldn't. You reckon Father Adam's a pretty good man,
+but I tell you right here you don't know how good, or the thing he did
+for us single-handed. I know--now. He set me wise to it all, and didn't
+leave me a thing to do but make the trail he'd set for me. It was an
+easy play dealing with the fool forest-jacks who'd swallowed the
+Skandinavia's dope. Yes. That was easy," he added thoughtfully. "But
+that was just the start of the game. Father Adam had located the trail
+of the outfit the Skandinavia had sent and it was my job to come right
+up with 'em and silence 'em."
+
+He broke off and sat staring straight in front of him. His fine eyes
+were half smiling for all the weariness he complained of. He yawned.
+
+"Well, I hit that trail," he went on presently. "I hit it, and hung to
+it like a she-wolf out for offal. I just never quit. It was that way I
+forgot sleep. It wasn't till between No. 10 and 11 Camps we got sight.
+We were out in the open, up on the high land. We'd a run of fifty mile
+ahead of the dogs. When we got sight that boy Gouter was after 'em like
+a red-hot devil. Drive? Gee, how he drove!"
+
+Again came the man's mirthless laugh.
+
+"There's things in life seem mighty queer at times. It was that way
+then. There was a man I wanted to kill once bad. Guess I've never quit
+wanting to kill him, though I'm glad Father Adam saved me from doing it.
+He was Laval--Arden Laval, one of the Skandinavia's camp-bosses. Well, I
+saw him killed on that trip, and I helped bury him in the snow. Gouter
+drew on him on the dead run at fifty yards. He dropped him cold, and
+wrecked the outfit the feller was driving. There were two in the bunch
+that the Skandinavia sent there to raise trouble for us. Laval and
+another. Laval's dead, and the other we brought right along as prisoner.
+That other's here in this--"
+
+A light knock interrupted the story. Bull turned with a start. Then he
+sprang to his feet, every sign of weariness gone. He stood for a moment
+as though in doubt. And the lumberman, watching him, remarked the
+complete transformation that had taken place. He was smiling. His
+straining eyes had softened to a tenderness the onlooker failed to
+understand.
+
+He moved swiftly across the room and flung open the door.
+
+"Will you come right in?"
+
+The lumberman heard the invitation. The tone was deep with a gentleness
+he had never before discovered in it. And in his wonder he craned to see
+who it was who had inspired it.
+
+Bull moved aside.
+
+It was then that Bat started up from his chair, and a sharp ejaculation
+broke from him. Nancy McDonald was standing framed in the doorway.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+NANCY
+
+
+Bat was hurrying down the woodland trail. For once in his hard life he
+knew the meaning of rank cowardice. The sight of Nancy McDonald had
+completely robbed him of the last vestige of courage. The atmosphere of
+the office, that room so crowded with absorbing memories for him, had
+suddenly seemed to threaten suffocation. He felt he must get out. He
+must seek the cold, crisp air of the world he knew and understood. So he
+had fled.
+
+Now he was alone with a riot of thought that was almost chaotic. There
+was only one thing that stood out clearly, definitely, in his mind. It
+was the Nemesis of the thing that had happened. It was Nemesis with a
+vengeance.
+
+His busy jaws worked furiously under his emotion. He spat, and spat
+again, into the soft white snow. Once he stopped abruptly and gazed back
+over the circuitous trail. It was as though he must look again upon the
+thing that had so deeply stirred him, as though he must look upon it to
+reassure himself that he was not dreaming. That the thing had driven him
+headlong was real, and not some troublesome hallucination.
+
+Nancy McDonald! The beautiful stepdaughter of Leslie Standing, with her
+red hair and pretty eyes, was the agent of the Skandinavia, paid to
+wreck the great work he and Leslie had set up. She was paid to achieve
+the destruction at--any cost.
+
+It was amazing. It was overwhelming. It was even--terrible.
+
+He pursued his way with hurried steps. And as he went his mind leapt
+back to the time when he had made his great appeal for the poor,
+deserted child shut up in the coldly correct halls of Marypoint College.
+What an irony it all seemed now. Then he remembered her first coming to
+Sachigo, and the mystery of the letter from Father Adam heralding her
+arrival. He had understood the moment Nancy had announced her name to
+him on the quay. He had understood the thought, the hope which had
+inspired the letter.
+
+In his rugged heart he had welcomed the letter which Father Adam had
+written. He had welcomed the girl's first coming to the place he felt
+should be her inheritance. He had seen in those things the promise of
+the belated justice for which years ago he had appealed. Father Adam had
+asked Bull to receive her well. Why? There was only one answer to that
+in the lumberman's mind. Father Adam had seen her. He understood her
+beauty, and had fallen for it. What more reasonable then that Bull
+should do the same.
+
+But that was all past and done with now. All the things he had dreamed
+of, and so ardently desired, had been lost through a mischievous Fate.
+The neglected stepdaughter of Leslie Standing was body and soul part of
+their enemy's armament of offence. It was all too crazy. It was all too
+devilish for calm contemplation.
+
+The sight of the girl's pathetic eyes, so weary, so troubled, had been
+sufficient. Bat could not have remained in that room another minute. No.
+Down at the mill were the things he understood. They were the things he
+was bred to, and could deal with. These others were something that left
+him hopeless and helpless. So he went, determined to lay the ghost of
+the thing behind him in the tremendous effort the necessities of the
+mill demanded he should put forth.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bull's emotions were deeply stirred. He gazed into the tired eyes of the
+girl, so beautiful for all their complete dejection. He marked the cold
+pallor of her cheeks, and realised the dishevelled condition of her
+glorious masses of hair. An intense pity left him gravely troubled.
+
+As Nancy stood gazing up at the man, complete hopelessness oppressed
+her. She remembered well enough the declaration of war between them. She
+remembered, too, that it had meant nothing personal when it was made. At
+the time she had had no inkling of the terrible thing it could mean, or
+how nearly it could bring them into real, personal conflict.
+
+She had been wholly unprepared for the demand that had been thrust upon
+her by the man, Peterman. It had frightened her at first. She had shrunk
+from it. Then, finally, she had accepted it as her duty, under pressure.
+Peterman had made it appear so trifling. A journey, a trying journey,
+perhaps, but one to be made with all the comfort he could provide. And
+then to preach to those ignorant forest-men the disaster towards which
+their employers were heading. As Peterman had put it, it had almost
+seemed a legitimate thing to do. Convinced as she had been of the
+disaster about to fall on Sachigo, it had seemed as if she were even
+doing them a service.
+
+Had she been able to search Peterman's mind she would never have taken
+part in the dastardly thing he had planned. Had she been able to read
+him she would have quickly discovered the real motive he had in sending
+her. She would have discovered the furious jealousy and wounded vanity
+which meant her to be a prime instrument in the wrecking of Bull
+Sternford and his mills. She would have realised the devilish ingenuity
+with which he intended to wreck her friendship with another man so that
+he might the more truly claim her for himself. But she had no suspicion,
+and had blindly yielded herself to the duty she believed to be hers.
+
+After Bat's hurried departure Bull cast about in his mind for the thing
+to say to her. And somehow, without realising it, the right words sprang
+to his lips.
+
+"We won!" he said. And the smile accompanying his words was one of
+gentle raillery, and suggested nothing of the real tragedy of the thing
+that had happened.
+
+The girl's eyes widened. She strove to understand the dreadful lightness
+with which Bull spoke. Victory? Defeat? At that moment they were the two
+things furthest from her mind.
+
+Bull drew forward a chair, and gently insisted. And Nancy, accepting it,
+realised in a dull sort of way that it was the chair she had occupied at
+the time of her first visit, which now seemed so far, far back in her
+memory. Bull sat again in his rocker. He leant forward.
+
+"Sure," he went on, "we've won out. Your Skandinavia's beaten. Beaten a
+mile. We've won, too, at less cost than I hoped. Does it grieve you?"
+
+There was no softness or yielding in his tone. It was as he intended;
+the tone of a man who cares only that victory has been won. Nancy shook
+her head.
+
+"I'm--I'm glad," she said desperately.
+
+"Glad?" Bull was startled.
+
+The girl made a little involuntary movement. She averted her gaze to the
+window through which the wintry sunlight was pouring.
+
+"Oh, don't you understand? Can't you? Is the victory so much to you that
+you have no thought, no feeling, for the suffering it has brought? Are
+you so hard set on your purpose of achievement that nothing else
+matters? Oh, it's all dreadful. I used to feel that way. I counted no
+cost. Achievement? It was everything to me. And now, now that I know the
+thing it means I feel I--I want to die."
+
+Bull took a strong hold upon himself.
+
+"I know," he said slowly. "You see, Nancy, you're just a woman. You're
+just as tender and gentle--and--womanly, as God made you to be. He gave
+you a beautiful woman's heart, and a courage that was quite wonderful
+till it came into conflict with your heart. You had no right to be flung
+into this thing. And only a man of Peterman's lack of scruple could have
+done such a thing. Well, I'm not going to preach a long sermon, but I
+want to tell you some of the things I've got in my mind before I get the
+sleep I need. God knows that none of this thing you're blaming yourself
+for lies at your door. It would all have happened without you. Peterman
+designed it, and put it through for all he was worth. Now I want to say
+I'm glad--glad of it all. I've no pity for the Bolshevic dregs of Europe
+he employed. They were out for loot, they were out to grab the things
+and the power that other folks set up. Any old death that hit them they
+amply deserved. As for our folk who've gone under--well, we mustn't
+think too deeply that way. We all took our chances, and some had to go.
+I was ready to go. So was Bat. So were we all. We wanted victory, and we
+wanted it for those who survived. We honour our dead, but our lives must
+not be clouded by their going. It's war--human war. And just as long as
+the world lasts that war will always be. Good and bad men will die, and
+good and bad women will suffer at the sight. But for God's sake have
+done with the notion that you--you have anything to take to yourself,
+except that you've fought a good fight, and--lost. It sounds like the
+devil talking, doesn't it? Maybe you'll think me a monster of
+heartlessness. I'm not."
+
+"Oh, I wish I could feel all that," Nancy exclaimed with an impulse
+which a few moments before must have been impossible.
+
+"You can." Bull nodded. "You will."
+
+"You think so?" Nancy sighed. "I wish I could." Suddenly she spread out
+her hands in a little pathetic gesture. "Oh, it all seems wrong.
+Everything. What am I to do? What can I do? I--I can't even think.
+Whichever way I look it all seems so black and hopeless. You think I
+can--will?"
+
+Bull's sympathy would no longer be denied. He rose from his chair and
+moved to the window. His face was hidden from the troubled eyes that
+watched him. But his voice came back infinite in its gentleness.
+
+"You want to do something," he said. "You want to give expression to the
+woman in you. And when that has happened it'll make you feel--better. I
+know."
+
+He nodded. Suddenly he turned back to her, and stood smiling down into
+her anxious eyes.
+
+"Tell me," he went on, "what is it you want to do? You're no prisoner
+now. The war's finished. You're just as free as air to come and go as
+you please. You can return to Quebec the moment you desire, and the
+_Myra_ comes along up. And everything I can possibly arrange shall be
+done for your happiness and comfort. When would you like to go?"
+
+The girl shook her head.
+
+"I wasn't thinking of that."
+
+"I knew that," Bull smiled.
+
+"Father Adam. He's in the house there sick and wounded," Nancy hurried
+on. "I know him. I--may I nurse him back to health and strength. May I
+try that way to teach myself I'm not the thing I think and feel. Oh, let
+me be of use. Let me help to undo the thing I've done so much to bring
+about."
+
+The girl's hands were thrust out, and her eyes were shining. Never in
+his life had Bull experienced such an appeal. Never in his life had he
+been so near to reckless disregard for all restraint. He came nearer to
+her.
+
+"Surely you may do that," he said. "And I just want to thank you from
+the bottom of my unfeeling heart for the thought that prompts you. We
+haven't a soul here to do it right--to do it as you can. And Father Adam
+is a mighty precious life to us all--in Sachigo."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+THE COMING OF SPRING
+
+
+It had been a hard day. Bull Sternford had spent it dealing with
+complicated financial schedules, an amazing, turbulent sea of figures,
+until his powers and patience had temporarily exhausted themselves.
+
+In a final fit of irritation he had flung his work aside, and risen from
+his desk. The insufferable heat of the room, and the reek of his own
+pipe disgusted him. So he had moved over to the window where the cold
+air of early spring drifted in through the open ventilating slot in the
+storm sash.
+
+His gaze was on the Cove below, where the snow-laden ice was discoloured
+by the moist slush of thaw, and the open waters, far down towards the
+distant headlands, had so deeply encroached upon the claims of winter.
+
+A great, premature thaw had set in. It was the real spring thaw a month
+or more early. Skert Lawton, who controlled the water power of the mill,
+had warned him of its coming. Bat too had spoken out of his years of
+experience of the moods of Labrador's seasons. But somehow the sight of
+it all gave him none of the joy with which it had inspired the others.
+
+The evil night of threatened disaster had become only a memory. Nearly
+six weeks had passed since Nancy McDonald had craved the privilege of
+caring for the man who had so nearly given his life in the saving of the
+mill and all the great purpose it represented. Now he was mercifully
+returned to health and strength under the devoted care that had been
+bestowed upon him. The mill was again in full work. And the human army
+it employed had returned to their peace-time labours in the full
+determination to undo the grievous hurt which the mischief of the
+Skandinavia's agents and their own folly had inflicted. In the relief of
+reaction, they, no less than their employers, had redoubled their
+efforts.
+
+All outward sign of the trouble through which the mill had passed had
+long since been cleared away under the driving power of the forceful Bat
+Harker. The scars of fire remained here and there. But they were no more
+than a reminder for those who were ready to forget the folly they had
+once committed.
+
+Everything was moving on now as Bull and his comrades would have had it.
+Only that morning word had come through that Ray Birchall was on his way
+from London for the purpose of his report, and expected to reach Sachigo
+in three weeks' time. Could anything, then, be better than this early
+thaw? It was a veritable act of Providence that the London man's
+inspection of the mills, and all the property involved would take place
+under the most active conditions.
+
+It should have been a time of rejoicing and mental ease. It should have
+been a time of stirring hope. A moment for complaisant contemplation of
+a great purpose achieved. But the man at the window regarded the thing
+he looked upon without any display of pleasurable feeling. The sight of
+it literally seemed to deepen the unease which looked out of his eyes.
+
+In the midst of Bull's pre-occupation the door from the outer office was
+thrust open, and Bat Harker's harsh voice jarred the silence of the
+room.
+
+"Gettin' a peek at things," he cried, stumping heavily across the thick
+carpet. "Well, it looks good to me, too. Say, if this lasts just one
+week we'll be as clear of snow as hell's sidewalks." Then he flung open
+his rough pea-jacket and pushed his cap back from his lined forehead.
+"Gee, it's hot!"
+
+The lumberman was standing at Bull's side, and his deep-set eyes were
+following the other's gaze with twinkling satisfaction. Bull nodded and
+moved away.
+
+"Yep," he ejaculated. "It should be good for us."
+
+He passed over to the radiators and shut them off. Then he went over to
+the wood-stove and closed down the dampers. Then, with a curious
+absent-mindedness, he stood up and held out his hands to the warmth
+radiating from the stove.
+
+Bat was watching him interestedly. And at sight of his final attitude
+he broke into one of his infrequent chuckles and flung himself into a
+chair.
+
+"Say, what in--? Feeling cold?" he demanded.
+
+Bull's hands were promptly withdrawn, and, in spite of his mood, a half
+smile at his own expense lit his troubled eyes.
+
+"That's all right," he said. "It's on me, sure. I guess my head must be
+full of those figures still."
+
+He returned to the window and stood with his back to his companion. Bat
+watched him for some moments.
+
+Bull had changed considerably in the last few weeks. The lumberman had
+been swift to observe it. Somehow the old enthusiasm had faded out. The
+keen fighting nature he had become accustomed to, with its tendency to
+swift, almost reckless action, had become less marked. The man was
+altogether less buoyant.
+
+At first it had seemed to Bat's searching mind as if the effects of that
+desperate trip through the forests, and the subsequent battle down at
+the mill, had left its mark upon him, had somehow wrought one of those
+curious, weakening changes in the spirit of the man which seemed so
+unaccountable. Later, however, he dismissed the idea for a shrewder and
+better understanding.
+
+He helped himself to a chew of tobacco and kicked a cuspidore within his
+reach.
+
+"The fire-bugs are out," he said. "The last of 'em. I jest got word
+through. It's the seventh. An' it's the tally."
+
+It was a sharp, matter-of-fact statement. He was telling of a human
+killing, and there was no softening.
+
+Bull nodded. He glanced over his shoulder.
+
+"You mean--?"
+
+"They shot five of 'em to death. The last two they hanged." A grim set
+of the jaws, as Bat made the announcement, was his only expression of
+feeling.
+
+"Makes you wonder," he went on, after a pause. "Makes you think of the
+days when locomotives didn't run. Makes you think of the days when life
+was just a pretty mean gamble with most of the odds dead against you. It
+don't sound like these Sunday School days when the world sits around,
+framed in a fancy-coloured halo, that couldn't stand for any wash-tub,
+talkin' brotherhood an' human sympathy. It's tough when you think of the
+bunch that sent those boys to fire our limits. They knew the full crime
+of it, and knew the thing it would mean if we got hands on 'em. Well,
+there it is. We got 'em. An' now ther' ain't a mother's son of 'em left
+alive to tell the yarn of it all. It's been just cold, bloody murder.
+An' the murder ain't on us. No, I guess the darn savage eatin' hashed
+missioner ain't as bad a proposition as the civilised guys who paid the
+price to get those toughs killed up in our forests. I can't feel no sort
+of regret. It won't hand me a half-hour nightmare. But it makes me
+wonder. It surely does."
+
+He spat accurately into the cuspidore.
+
+"Does the report hand you anything else?" Bull asked, without turning.
+The other noticed the complete lack of real interest. He shrugged.
+
+"The camps are all in full cut. They're not a cord behind."
+
+Bat looked for a word, the lighting of an eye. There was none. And he
+stirred in his chair, and exasperation drove him.
+
+"Don't it make you feel good?" he demanded sharply. "It's the last guess
+answered, unless there's a guess when that boy, Birchall, comes along.
+Anyway, you don't figger ther's much guess to that, with the mill
+runnin' full, an' every boom crashed full of logs. No. Here, Bull!" he
+cried, with sudden vehemence. "Turn around, man. Turn right around an'
+get a grip on it all. The game's won to the last detail. Can't you feel
+good? Can't you feel like a feller gettin' out into the light after
+years of the darkest hell? Don't it make you want to holler? Ain't
+there a thing I can say to boost you? The boys down at the mill are
+hoggin' work. The groundwood's on the quays like mountains. The mills
+are roaring like blast furnaces. Can you beat it? Spring. The flies an'
+skitters, an' shipping. Why, in a week I guess Father Adam'll be hittin
+the trail for the forests, an'--"
+
+"Nancy McDonald will be sailing for Quebec."
+
+Bat was no longer gazing on the other's broad back and the mane of hair
+which did its best to conceal his massive neck. Bull had turned. His
+strong face was flushed. His fine eyes were hot. There could be no
+mistaking the passionate emotion which the other had stirred.
+
+The two men gazed into each other's eyes. Then with a curiously
+expressive gesture of his great hands Bull turned to the chair standing
+near, and flung himself into it.
+
+The lumberman's eyes twinkled. He had done the thing he desired. "An'
+you don't want her to?" he said deliberately.
+
+Just for a moment it looked as though a headlong outburst was about to
+reply to him. Then, quite suddenly, the hot light in Bull's eyes died
+out and he smiled. He shook his head.
+
+"No," he said in simple denial. "If she goes it means the end of Sachigo
+for me."
+
+"You reckon you'll quit?"
+
+In a moment the lumberman remembered a scene which had been enacted
+years ago on the high ground on the north shore of the Cove. He would
+never forget it. It had been the final decision of another to quit
+Sachigo. And the reason had been not dissimilar.
+
+There was no reply. Bull sat staring blankly in front of him. His eyes
+were on the wintry sky which was still broad with the light of day
+beyond the window.
+
+Presently his gaze lost its abstraction and came again to the strong,
+lined face of the older man. "Yes, Bat," he said calmly, almost coldly,
+"I'd have to quit. I just couldn't stand for it. Nancy's got right into
+my life. She's the only thing I can see--now."
+
+"Fer all she's a kind of prisoner right here, caught red-hand doin' the
+damnedest she knows to break us in favour of the outfit that pays her?"
+
+Bat smiled as he flung his challenge. But his tone, his words, were no
+indication of his mood, or of the rapid thought passing behind his
+shrewd eyes. A great sense of pleasure was asurge within him. He wanted
+to tell of it. He wanted to reach out and grip the other's hand, and
+tell him all that his words meant to him. But he refrained. Another
+man's secret was involved, and that was sufficient. His lips were
+sealed.
+
+Bull stirred restlessly.
+
+"Oh, psha!" he cried at last, with a force that displayed the tremendous
+feeling he could no longer deny. "I know what you think, Bat. I'm crazy.
+Well, maybe I am. Most men get crazy one time in their lives when a
+woman gets around. It's no use. I just can't help it. I know all you're
+thinking. Nancy McDonald belongs to our enemies. As you say she's done
+her damnedest to break us. Maybe you reckon I ought to feel for her like
+the devil does about holy water. Well, I don't. I'm plumb crazy for her,
+and when spring clears up the waters of the Cove, and the _Myra_ comes
+alongside, she's going right aboard, and will pass out of Labrador and
+out of my life. I'm never going to get another sight of her. I'm never
+going to get another sound of her dandy voice, or a sight of her pretty
+eyes, and--Hell! What's the use. Oh, I know it all. You've no need to
+tell me. We've made good. We've fought and won out. My contract's
+complete, and everything's looking just as good for us as it knows
+how--now. This mill. It's ours. Yours, and mine, and that other's, who I
+don't know about. All I've to do is to sit around with the plums lying
+in my lap. Well, I don't want those plums without Nancy. That's all. I
+don't want a thing--without Nancy. All the dollars in America can burn
+in hell for all I care, and as for groundwood pulp it's a damp mess of
+fool stuff that don't signify to me if it finds its way to the bottom of
+the North Atlantic. An added month of open season? What does it mean to
+me? Work. Only work, and flies, and skitters. An added month of 'em.
+Father Adam's a whole man again now, thanks to that dandy child. He'll
+pull right out to the forests again, and--she'll pull out too. I--"
+
+"That's all right," Bat broke in drily. "I get all that. But why not
+marry the gal? Marry her an' quit all this darn argument. I guess this
+mill's goin' to hand you all you need to keep a wife on. That seems to
+me the natural answer to the stuff that's worryin' you."
+
+His eyes twinkled as he regarded the other's troubled face.
+
+"Is it?"
+
+Bull was on his feet. Hot, desperate irritation lay behind the retort
+which Bat's gentle sarcasm had drawn forth. His eyes were alight, and he
+passed an unsteady hand across his forehead in a superlatively impatient
+gesture.
+
+"Marry her?" he exploded. "Say, are you every sort of darn fool on God's
+earth, man? How can I hope to marry her? What sort of use can a girl
+like that have for the man who's beat her right out of everything she
+ever hoped to achieve? I've had to treat her like any old criminal, and
+hold her prisoner. I've brought her right down here leaving her in a
+man's household without another woman in sight. Say, these cursed mills
+have made it so I've had to commit every sort of rotten act a man can
+commit against a high-spirited girl. And you ask me why I don't marry
+her? You've been too long in the forests, Bat. Guess you've lost your
+perspective. Nancy McDonald's no sort of chattel to be dealt with any
+way we fancy. Get sense, man, an' talk it."
+
+Bat's regard was unwavering before the other's angry eyes.
+
+"Sense is a hell of a good thing to have an' talk," he said quietly. "I
+most generally notice the feller yearnin' for someone else to get it an'
+talk that way, mostly has least use for the thing he's preachin'. Maybe
+Nancy feels the way you reckon. But that don't seem to me to worry a
+deal. Still, maybe things have changed around since the days when I
+hadn't sense to keep out of gunshot of a pair of dandy eyes. And anyway
+I don't seem to remember the boys bein' worried with the sort of
+argument you're handing out. If my memory's as good as I reckon, the
+boys most gener'ly married the gal first, an' got busy wonderin' about
+things after. All of which seems like so much hoss sense, seem' the
+natur' of things is that most gals needs their minds made up for 'em.
+You see, Bull, I kind o' fancy womenfolk ain't just ord'nary. They got a
+bug that makes 'em think queer wher' men are concerned. Now Nancy's all
+sorts of a gal, an' that bein' so I don't reckon she sees the hell-fire
+crimes you've committed against her just the way you see 'em. I allow
+they're pretty darn tough. Shootin' up her outfit an' dumpin' her into a
+snowdrift up on Labrador's mighty hard sort of courtin'. Grabbin' her up
+an' settin' her hospital nurse to her enemies, in a house full of a
+bunch of tough men don't seem the surest way to make her smile on the
+feller that did it. Then most generally beatin' the game she set out to
+play looks like makin' fer trouble plenty. It sure seems that way. But
+you never can tell with a woman, Bull. You just can't."
+
+Bat shook his grizzled head in solemn denial, but his eyes were
+laughing. Bull smothered his resentment. He, too, shook his head, and
+somehow caught the infection of the other's smile.
+
+"But she's ambitious," he said. "And she isn't the sort of girl to take
+that easily. No."
+
+Bat nodded and rose from his chair. Something of his purpose had been
+achieved and he was satisfied. He felt he had said all that was needed
+for the moment. So he prepared to take his departure.
+
+"Maybe that's so, boy," he agreed readily. "But ambition's a thing that
+changes with most every wind. That don't worry me a thing. Say, you've
+sort of opened out about this thing to me, an' I ain't sure why. But I
+kind of feel good about it. You're younger than me by years I don't
+fancy reckonin'. I feel like I was an elder brother, an' I'm glad. Well,
+that bein' so, I'd like to say right here ther's just one ambition in a
+woman's life that counts. And she mostly gits it when she hits up
+against the feller that's got the guts to make her think his way. When
+that happens I guess you can roll up every other old schedule, an' pass
+it into the beater to make new paper. It's the only use for it. See? But
+I 'low I don't know women like I do groundwood, which was the stuff that
+fetched me here right now. You see, I was feelin' good about things, an'
+I fancied handin' you the news of them 'fire-bugs' myself. Guess it
+hasn't handed you any sort of delirium so far, Bull, but it will later.
+I allow ther' ain't room for two fevers at the same time in a man's
+body. When you've set Nancy McDonald figgerin' your way, your
+temperature's liable to go up on the other. So long, boy."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+NANCY'S DECISION
+
+
+With the lengthening days the world of Labrador was already donning its
+brief, annual smile. But the passing of winter was no easy thing. There
+had been rain and "freeze-up," and rain again. And the whole countryside
+was a dripping, melting sea of wintry slush. The sun was rising higher
+in the steely heavens with each passing day, but winter was still
+reluctant. It passed on to its dissolution only under irresistible
+pressure.
+
+Nancy, no less than Father Adam and those others, to whom the early thaw
+meant so much, watched the passing of winter with the closest interest.
+But her interest owed its origin to a far different inspiration. She
+knew it meant that her time at Sachigo was nearing its end, and the
+future with all its barrenness was staring at her.
+
+She moved restlessly about the large kitchen while the Chinaman, Won-Li,
+was preparing toast over the cook stove. She stood awhile at the window
+and watched the winging of a seemingly endless flight of early geese
+passing up from the South. Then she turned away and glanced about the
+scrupulously clean and neat apartment. It was so very different from the
+place she had first discovered weeks ago.
+
+After awhile she took up her position against the kitchen table, and
+stood there with her gaze upon the bent figure of the cook in its long,
+blue blouse. But she was scarcely interested in the man's labours. She
+was not even waiting for him to complete them. She was just thinking,
+filled with apprehension and without confidence. Her mind was made up to
+a definite purpose whose seeming immensity left her staggered.
+
+Nancy was no longer the distraught creature who had witnessed the
+terrible night of fire and battle down at the mill. Many weeks had
+passed since then. Weeks full of mental, bodily, and spiritual effort.
+From the first dark moments when she had begged the privilege of nursing
+the wounded missionary, broken in spirit, a beautiful creature well-nigh
+demented with the horror of the thing she believed herself to be, the
+woman soul of her had found a measure of peace.
+
+It had been slow in coming. There had been moments when she had nearly
+broken under the burden of conscience. There had been moments when the
+weight of unutterable depression, and the sense of guilt, had come near
+to robbing her of her last shred of mental balance. But the woman's
+mission of nursing had saved her in the end. That, and the physical
+effort to which she had applied herself.
+
+It was all so single-minded and simple. It was all so beautifully
+pathetic. Nancy had found a careless household rapidly decaying through
+mannish indifference to comfort. She understood. These men were
+completely absorbed in the service of the great mills, and nothing else
+mattered to them. Oh, yes, that was understandable. She knew the
+feeling. She knew how it robbed its victim of every other consideration
+in life. So she had flung herself into the task of re-ordering the
+household of which she had been forced to become a part, that she might
+yield them comfort in their labours and help herself in her own effort
+to obtain peace of mind.
+
+She had transformed an untidy, uncared-for bachelor habitation into a
+wholesome, clean establishment of well-ordered life. She had lifted a
+lazy Chinaman into a reasonable specimen of comparative energy, and saw
+to it that meals were well and carefully served, and partaken of at
+regular hours by men who quickly discovered the futility of protest.
+
+But her work by no means ended there. From one end to the other the
+house was swept and garnished, and the neglect of years disposed of.
+Bedrooms were transformed from mere sleeping places to luxury. Linen was
+duly laundered, and clothing was brushed, and folded, and mended in a
+fashion such as its owners had never thought possible. She was utterly
+untiring in her labours, and in the process of them she steadily moved
+on towards the thing she craved for herself.
+
+The men realised the tremendous effort of it all. And Bull Sternford,
+for all his absorption in his work, had watched with troubled feelings.
+His love for Nancy had perhaps robbed him of that vision which should
+have told him of the necessity, in her own interests, for that which the
+girl was doing. So there were times when he had protested, times when he
+felt that simple humanity demanded that she should not be permitted to
+submit herself to so rough a slavery. But Nancy had countered every
+protest with an irresistible appeal.
+
+"Please, please don't stop me," she had cried, almost tearfully. "It's
+just all I can do. It's my only hope. Always, till now, I've lived for
+myself and ambitions. You know where they have led me--Ah, no. Let me go
+on in my own way. Let me nurse him back to health. Let me do these
+things. However little I'm able to do there's some measure of peace in
+the doing of it."
+
+So the days and weeks had dragged on, and now the time of Nancy's
+imprisonment was drawing to its inevitable close. With Spring, and the
+coming of the _Myra_, she would have to accept her freedom and all it
+meant. She would be expected to return to her home in Quebec, and to
+those who had employed her and sent her on her godless mission. She
+understood that. But she had no intention of returning to Quebec. She
+had no intention of returning to the Skandinavia.
+
+During the long hours of her labours she had searched deeply for the
+thing the future must hold for her. It was the old process over again.
+That great searching she had once done at Marypoint. But now it was all
+different. There had been no sense of guilt then, and the only man who
+had been concerned in her life had been that unknown stepfather, whom,
+in her child's heart, she had learned to hate. It had been simple enough
+then. Now--now--
+
+But she had faced the task with all the splendid, impetuous courage that
+was hers. There was no shrinking. Her mind was swiftly and irrevocably
+made up. She would abandon the Skandinavia for ever. She would abandon
+everything and follow those dictates which had prompted her so often in
+the past. Father Adam's self-sacrificing example was always before her.
+The forests. Those submerged legions which peopled them. Was there not
+some means by which she could join in the work of rescue? She would talk
+to Father Adam. She felt he would help her. She wanted nothing for
+herself. If only the rest of her life could be translated into some
+small imitation of the life of that good man, then, indeed, she felt her
+atonement might be counted as something commensurate.
+
+It was not until her decision had been taken that she permitted herself
+to seek beyond it. But once it was taken the crushing sense of added
+desolation well-nigh paralysed her. Somehow, never before had she
+understood. But now--now the sacrifice of it all swept upon her with an
+overwhelming rush. Bull Sternford. Bull Sternford, the man whom with all
+her power she had striven to defeat, the man whose strength and force of
+character had so appealed to her, the man who must hate her as any
+clean-minded man must hate a loathsome reptile, she would never see him
+again.
+
+Oh, she knew now. She made no attempt at denial. It would have been
+quite useless. She loved him. From the moment she had looked into his
+honest eyes, and realised his kindly purpose on her behalf at their
+first meeting, she had loved him. She must cut him out of her life. It
+was the penalty she must pay for her crimes.
+
+And now the moment had arrived when she must put her plans into
+operation. Time was pressing. The season was advancing. So she had
+chosen the hour at which she served tea to Father Adam as the best in
+which to seek his advice and support.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The light tap on Father Adam's door was answered instantly. Nancy passed
+into the room with trepidation in her heart, but the hand bearing the
+tea tray was without a tremor.
+
+The man whose life belonged to the twilight of the northern forests was
+seated in a deep rocker-chair under the window through which the setting
+sun was pouring its pleasant spring light. He had been reading. But his
+book was laid aside instantly, and he stood up and smiled the thanks
+which his words hastily poured forth.
+
+"You know, Nancy, you're completely spoiling me," he said. "I'm going to
+hate my forest coffee out of a rusty pannikin. I don't know how I'm
+going on when I pull my freight out of here."
+
+The girl's responsive smile faded abruptly as she set the tray on the
+table beside the chair.
+
+"When are you going to--pull your freight?" she asked, with a curious,
+nervous abruptness.
+
+For a moment the man's eyes were averted. Then he straightened up his
+tall, somewhat stooping figure. He flung his lean shoulders back, and
+opened his arms wide. And as he did so he laughed in the pleasant
+fashion which Nancy had grown accustomed to.
+
+He was the picture of complete health. His dark face was pale. His black
+hair and sparse beard were untouched by any sign of the passage of
+years. There was not an ounce of superfluous flesh under the curiously
+clerical garments he lived in.
+
+"Why, right away, child," he said, with simple confidence. "I'll just
+need to wait for a brief 'freeze-up' to get through the mud around
+Sachigo. Once on the highlands inside there'll be snow and ice for six
+weeks or more. I told Sternford this morning I was ready to pull out.
+You see, thanks to you I've cheated the folk who reckoned to silence me.
+I'm well, and strong, and the boys of the forest are--needing me. Every
+day I remain now I'll be getting soft under the unfailing kindness of
+my nurse."
+
+Nancy poured out the tea. There were two cups on the tray and the man
+was swift to notice it. She smiled up at him.
+
+"Won't you sit down?" she urged. "You see, I've brought a cup for
+myself. I--I want to have a long talk with you. I, too, have got to
+'pull my freight.'"
+
+Father Adam obeyed. His dark eyes were deeply observant as he surveyed
+the pretty face with its red glory of hair. That which was passing in
+his mind found no betrayal. But his thought had suddenly leapt, and he
+waited.
+
+Nancy passed him his cup and set the toast within his reach. Then she
+pulled up a chair for herself and sat down before the tea tray.
+
+"Yes," she went on, "that's why I brought my cup. I must get away." She
+smiled a little wistfully. "My imprisonment is over. Mr. Sternford set
+me free long ago, but--well, anyway I'm going now, and that's why I
+wanted to talk to you."
+
+She seemed to find the whole thing an effort. But as the man's dark eyes
+remained regarding her, and no word of his came to help her, she was
+forced to go on.
+
+"You know my story," she said. "You've heard it all from Mr. Sternford.
+I know that. You told me so, didn't you?"
+
+The man inclined his dark head.
+
+"Yes," he said. "I know your story--all of it."
+
+"Yes." The girl's tea remained untouched. Suddenly she raised one
+delicate hand and passed her finger tips across her forehead. It was a
+gesture of uncertainty. Then, quite suddenly, it fell back into her lap,
+and, in a moment, her hands were tightly clasped. "Oh, I best tell you
+at once. Never, never, never as long as I live can I go back to the
+Skandinavia. All the years I've been with them I've just been lost in a
+sort of dream world of ambition. I haven't seen a thing outside it. I've
+just been a blind, selfish woman who believed in everybody, and most of
+all in herself and her selfish aims. Can you understand? Will you? Oh,
+now I know all it meant. Now I know the crime of it. And the horror of
+the thing I've done, and been, has well-nigh broken my heart. Oh, I'm
+not really bad, indeed I'm not. I didn't know. I didn't understand. I
+can never forgive myself. Never, never! And when I think of the blood
+that has been shed as the result of my work--"
+
+"No." The man's voice broke in sharply. "Put that right out of your
+mind, child. None of the blood shed is your doing. None of it lies at
+your door. It lies at the door of others. It lies at the door of two men
+only. The man who first set up this great mill at Sachigo, and the man
+whose hate of him desired its destruction. The rest, you, those others,
+Bull Sternford and Harker, here, are simply the pawns in the battle
+which owes its inception to those things that happened years ago. I tell
+you solemnly, child, no living soul but those two, and chiefly the first
+of the two, are to blame for the things that have happened to-day. Set
+your mind easy. No one blames you. No one ever will blame you. Not even
+the great God to whom we all have to answer. I know the whole story of
+it. It is my life to know the story of these forests. Set your mind at
+rest."
+
+"Oh, I wish I could think so. I wish I could believe. I feel, I feel you
+are telling me this to comfort me. But you wouldn't just do that?"
+
+The man shook his head.
+
+"It's the simple truth," he said. Then he reached for his tea and drank
+it quickly. "But tell me. You will never go back to the Skandinavia?
+I--am glad. What will you do?"
+
+"That's why I've come to you now."
+
+The tension had eased. Nancy's distress gave way before the man's strong
+words of comfort. She, too, drank her tea. Then she went on.
+
+"You know, Father--"
+
+The man stirred in his chair. It was a movement of sudden restlessness
+as if that appellation on her lips disturbed him.
+
+"--I want to--I want to--Oh, how can I tell you? You are doing the thing
+I want to help in. All my life I felt the time would come when I must
+devote myself to the service and welfare of others. I think it's bred in
+me. My father, my real father, he, too, gave up his life to those who
+could not help themselves. Well, I want to do the same in however humble
+fashion. These men, these wonderful men of the forests whom you spend
+your life in succouring. Can I not serve them, too? Is there no place
+for me under your leadership? Can I not go out into the forests? I am
+strong. I am strong to face anything, any hardship. I have no fear. The
+call of these forests has got right into my blood. Don't deny me," she
+appealed. "Don't tell me I'm just a woman with no strength to withstand
+the rigours of the winter. I couldn't stand that. I have the strength,
+and I have the will. Can you? Will you help me?"
+
+The girl's appeal was spoken with all the ardour of youthful passion.
+There was no sham in it. No hysterical impulse. It was irresistibly
+real.
+
+The man's eyes were deeply regarding her. But he was thinking far less
+of her words than of the girl herself. Her amazing beauty, the
+passionate youth and strength. The perfection of her splendid womanhood.
+These things held him, and his mind travelled swiftly back over years to
+other scenes and other emotions.
+
+When at last he spoke his words came slowly and were carefully
+considered.
+
+"I think, perhaps, I can help you," he said. "You are determined? You
+want to help those who need help? The men of the forests?" He shook his
+head. "I don't see why you shouldn't help the men of these forests
+who--need your help."
+
+Nancy drew a deep breath. A wonderful smile sprang into her pretty eyes.
+It was a glad smile of thanks such as no words of hers could have
+expressed.
+
+"Oh, thank you, Father--thank you."
+
+Again came the man's restless movement at the word "Father." He abruptly
+leant forward and held his cup out for replenishment.
+
+"May I?" he asked. Then his smile broke out again. "But tell me," he
+went on. "What have you done about the Skandinavia?"
+
+"Nothing."
+
+Nancy returned him his cup with an unsteady hand.
+
+"Nothing? But you must communicate with them. You should write and tell
+them of your decision. You should tell them you don't intend to return
+to them."
+
+Father Adam sipped his tea. He was watching intently but unobtrusively
+the transparent display of emotions which his words had conjured.
+
+"I hadn't thought about it," Nancy said at last, not without some
+disappointment. "Do you really think I should write? But it will take so
+long to reach them. I can't wait for that. It--"
+
+"Wire."
+
+"Yes. I suppose I could--wire."
+
+"Sternford will have it sent for you."
+
+In a moment the light of hope died out of the girl's eyes. The excited
+flush on her cheeks paled. And the man saw, and read the sign he beheld.
+
+He waited. But Nancy remained silent, crushed under the feeling of utter
+desolation to which the mention of Bull Sternford's name had reduced
+her.
+
+Father Adam set his cup down.
+
+"Don't let the sending of that message worry, child," he said quickly.
+"These people deserve no better treatment after the thing they've done
+to you. All you need say is, 'You will accept my resignation forthwith.'
+Write that out on a piece of paper, and sign it. Then take it along to
+Mr. Sternford. Tell him of your decision, and ask him to have it sent by
+the wireless. He'll do it, my dear. And after that--why, after that, if
+you still feel the same about things, and want to turn missionary in the
+lumber camps, come right back to me here, and I'll do for you as you
+ask. It's a great thought, Nancy, and I honour you for it. It's a hard,
+desperate sort of life, without comfort or earthly reward. Once the
+twilight of the forest claims you, and its people know you, there's
+nothing to do but to go on and on to the end. Will you go--and send just
+that message?"
+
+Nancy inclined her head.
+
+"Yes. I'll go right away, just as soon as I've taken this tray back."
+
+She rose abruptly. She gathered the remains of the meal on to the tray
+and picked it up. And the manner of her movements betrayed her. She
+stood for a moment, and the man saw the struggle for composure that was
+going on behind her pretty eyes.
+
+"Father," she said at last, and the man abruptly rose from his chair and
+moved away, "I just can't thank you--for this. It's given me fresh hope.
+A hope I never thought would be mine. Some day--"
+
+Her voice broke and the man turned at once. He was smiling again.
+
+"Don't say a word, my dear. Not a word. Go and write that message, and
+take it to Sternford. And then--why--"
+
+He moved over to the door and held it open for her. As she passed out he
+nodded kindly, and looked after her till she vanished into the kitchen
+at the end of the passage.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Father Adam was alone again in the room that had been his for so many
+weeks. The door was closed and he stood at the window gazing out at the
+dreary world beyond. But he saw nothing of it. He was thinking with the
+speed of a mind chafing at delay. He was wondering and hoping,
+and--fearing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+THE MESSAGE
+
+
+It was a woman of desperately fortified resolve who turned the handle of
+the office door in response to Bull Sternford's peremptory summons. The
+thought of the coming interview terrified Nancy, and her terror had
+nothing whatever to do with the sending of her message.
+
+Bull failed to look up from the mass of papers that littered his desk.
+His sharp "Well," as Nancy approached him, was utterly impatient at the
+interruption. And its effect was crushing upon the girl in her present
+dispirited mood. She felt like headlong flight. She stood her ground,
+however, and the sound of her little nervous clearing of the throat came
+to the man at the table.
+
+Bull looked up. In an instant his whole attitude underwent a complete
+change. His eyes lit, and he sprang from his seat behind the desk. He
+came towards the shrinking girl, eager and smiling with the welcome his
+love inspired.
+
+"Why, say, Nancy," he cried. "I just hadn't a notion it was you. I was
+up to my neck in all this stuff," he said, indicating the litter on his
+desk, "and I hadn't a thought but it was the darn Chink come to worry
+with food." He laughed. "You certainly have handed me some scare since
+you got a grip on our crazy household. I've got a nightmare all the time
+I've got to eat. And the trouble is I'd hate to miss any of it. Will you
+come right over to the window and sit? There's daylight enough still. We
+don't need to use Skert's electric juice till we have to. I'm real glad
+you came along."
+
+The man's delight was transparent. Nancy remained unresponsive, however.
+She was blind to everything but the thing she had come to do, and the
+hopelessness that weighed so heavily upon her.
+
+"I'm sorry," she said simply, accepting the chair he set for her. "I
+didn't think you'd--you see, I waited till I guessed you'd be through.
+But I won't keep you. It's just a small favour, that's all."
+
+Bull observed her closely. She was so amazingly and completely charming.
+She was no longer clad in the rough, warm garments of the trail. Even
+the cotton overall she used in the work of the house had been removed.
+Now a dainty frock, that had no relation to the rigours of Labrador,
+displayed the delicate beauty of her figure, and perfectly harmonised
+with the colouring of her wonderful hair. Somehow it seemed to the man
+her beauty had intensified in its appeal since the day of her supreme
+confidence in the cause for which she had so devotedly fought.
+
+"A favour?" he laughed. "Why, I'm just glad."
+
+Even while he spoke Bull remembered his talk with Bat Harker when he had
+listened to a wealth of pitying comment upon the feelings and opinions
+he had then laid bare. The girl's unsmiling eyes troubled him.
+
+"What's the favour?" he asked simply, as Nancy remained silent.
+
+The girl started. She had turned to the evening light pouring in through
+the window. Her thought had wandered to that grim, dark future when the
+twilit forests would close about her, and the strong tones of this
+man's voice would never again be able to reach her.
+
+She drew a folded paper from the bosom of her frock.
+
+"Would you let them send it for me--wireless?" she asked timidly.
+"It's--it's to Mr. Peterman."
+
+All Bull's desire to smile had passed. He nodded.
+
+"Yes," he said. "If you wish it. It shall be sent right off."
+
+His tone had suddenly lost its warmth. It seemed as if the mention of
+Peterman's name had destroyed his goodwill.
+
+Nancy searched his face anxiously. The man's brows had depressed and his
+strong jaws had become set. She knew that expression. Usually it was the
+prelude to uncompromising action.
+
+She drew a deep breath.
+
+"Oh, I know," she cried. "I know the thing you're thinking. You're
+reminding yourself of all I've done, and of the injury I've striven to
+inflict on you. You're wondering at my temerity in asking you to help me
+communicate with your enemies. But please, please don't think worse of
+me than you can help. I'm not just trying to use you. It's not that.
+Will you read the message? Maybe it'll tell you better than any words of
+mine."
+
+The paper was held out to him in an unsteady hand. Bull ignored it. He
+shook his head.
+
+"No," he said.
+
+Nancy sprang to her feet.
+
+"But you must read it," she cried. "If you don't I--oh, I won't send it.
+I couldn't. Don't make me sorry I asked this favour. It is so little to
+you, and--and it means so much to me."
+
+She stood waiting, but Bull showed no sign of yielding. He was thinking
+of the man, Peterman. He remembered his good-looking Teutonic face, and
+the favour with which Nancy had seemed to regard him. A smouldering
+jealousy had suddenly blazed up within him.
+
+Nancy turned away in desperation. She moved to depart.
+
+"I'm sorry," she said. And even in her trouble there was a coldness in
+her tone no less than his.
+
+Bull choked down his feelings.
+
+"Please don't go," he cried, urgently. "It would please me very much to
+have that message sent. Say, I wasn't thinking the way you reckoned. I
+wasn't thinking of the message at all."
+
+"Then you will read it?" The girl came back readily.
+
+"Why should I?" Bull asked smilingly. "Say, a friend asking me to send a
+message for him, a message no concern of mine, what would you think,
+what would he feel, if I demanded to read its contents?"
+
+He ran the fingers of one hand through his mane of hair and stood
+smiling down into the girl's pretty eyes.
+
+"You know this thing makes me want to talk. I've just got to talk. The
+position's sort of impossible as it stands. Maybe you don't guess the
+thing I'm feeling, and maybe I don't just know how it is with you. We've
+got to talk right out and show down our hands. If we don't--"
+
+He turned away and glanced out of window. Then his eyes came back
+claimed by the magnetism which the girl exercised.
+
+"You know, Nancy, our war is over. The war between you and me. We
+declared war, didn't we? We declared it in Quebec, and we both promised
+to do our best, or--worst. It was a sort of compact. We made it meaning
+it, and understanding the meaning of it. If you got the drop on me you
+were to use it. The same with me. It was one of those friendly things,
+between friends, which might easily mean life or death. We knew that,
+and were ready to stand just for whatever came along. Well, we fought
+our battle. It's over. It's done. Now for God's sake let's forget it.
+It's easy for me. You see, I'm a rough, hard sort of product of these
+forests that doesn't worry with scruples and things. I'm not a woman
+who's full of the notions belonging to her sex. I can wipe the whole
+thing out of my mind. I can feel glad for the scrap you put up. I can
+think one hell of a great piece of you for it. Maybe it's different with
+you, being a woman. I guess it's not going to be easy forgiving the way
+I had to handle you back out there on the trail. Or the way you were
+forced to live our camp life on the way down here. Or how I've had to
+hold you prisoner in a rough household of rougher men. I get all that. I
+know the thing it is to a woman. All it means. Still, it must have been
+plain to you the chances of that sort of thing before you started in.
+That is if I was worth my salt as a fighter. Well, can you kind of
+forgive it? Can't you try to forget? Can't you figger the whole darn
+thing's past and done with, and we're back at where we were in those
+days in Quebec, when you didn't hate me to death, and felt good taking
+dinner in my company? Say, do you remember the old _Myra_ you'll soon be
+boarding again? You remember our talk on the deck, when the howling gale
+hit us? We were talking of the sense of things in Nature, and how she
+mussed them up. And how we'd have done a heap better if the job had been
+ours. Well?" His smile deepened. "Here we are standing in the sort of
+fool position of--what'll I call it? Antagonism? Anyway we agreed to
+fight, and stand for all it meant to us, and we're both feeling all
+broken up at the way we had to act to hurt each other most." He shook
+his head. "Where's our boasted sense of things? We ought to be sitting
+right here talking it over, and laughing to beat the band, that I had to
+treat you like a dangerous bunch of goods li'ble to get me by the
+throat, and choke the life out of me, while you were chasing every old
+notion folks could stuff into your dandy head to set me broke and busted
+so I wouldn't know where to collect a square feed once a week. That's
+what we ought to be doing, if we had the sense we guess. Instead of that
+you're feeling badly at me for the things I had to do to you. And I'm
+worried to death I'll never get a laugh from you for the fool talk I
+don't know better than to make. You need me to send that message to
+Peterman. Why, sure I'll send it, even if it's to tell him how mighty
+glad you are to be quitting the prison I'd condemned you to, and the joy
+it's going to hand you to see his darnation Teuton face again. Sure I'll
+send it. It's the least I can do to make up to you for those things I've
+done to you. But--but for God's sake don't ask me to read it."
+
+The man concluded with a gesture that betrayed his real feelings. He was
+in desperate earnest for all his attempt at lightness. His words came
+swiftly, in that headlong fashion so characteristic of his most earnest
+mood. And Nancy listening to him, caught something of that which lay
+behind them. The faintest shadow of a smile struggled into her eyes. She
+shook her head.
+
+"I haven't a thought in my head about you--that way," she said. "It's
+not been that way with me. No." She averted her gaze from the eager eyes
+before her. "It's the thing I've done and been. It's the thing you, and
+every other honest creature, must feel about me. Oh, don't you see? The
+killing, the bloodshed and suffering--But I can't talk about it even
+now. It's all too dreadful still. I'm quitting when Father Adam goes,
+and--and--But believe me no judgment you can pass on me can begin to
+express the thing I feel about myself. Please don't think I bear one
+single hard thought against you."
+
+The man laughed outright. The buoyancy of that moment was supreme. Bat
+Harker was again in his mind. Bat, with all his quaint, crude
+philosophy.
+
+"Say, that beats everything," Bull cried. "My judgment of you. And all
+this time I've been guessing--Oh, hell! Say, do you know, it gets me bad
+when I think of you going back to Peterman and his crew? It sets me
+well-nigh crazy. Oh, I know. I've no right. None at all. But it don't
+make me feel any better. Here, I'll tell you about it. I'm not going to
+take to myself virtues I don't possess, and have no right to anyway. I
+wanted to win out in the fight against the Skandinavia because I'm a bit
+of a fighting machine. I wanted to win out for the dollars I'm going to
+help myself to. But I also wanted to win out because of the great big
+purpose that lies behind these mills of Sachigo. I want you to get right
+inside my mind on that thing so you'll know one of the reasons why I
+hate that you're sending word to Peterman. You'll maybe understand then
+the thing that made me fight you, a woman, as well as the others, and
+treat you in a fashion that's made me hate myself ever since. I'm going
+to say it as bluntly as I know how. It'll be like beating you, a
+helpless victim, right over the head with a club. I've acted the brute
+right along to you, an' I s'pose I best finish up that way. You were
+doing your best to sell your birthright, my birthright, to the
+foreigner. You were helping the alien, Peterman, and his gang, to snatch
+the wealth of our forests. Why? You didn't think. You didn't know. There
+was no one to tell you. You simply didn't know the thing you were doing.
+
+"This man Peterman was good to you. He held out prospects that
+glittered. It was good enough. And all the time he was looking to steal
+your birthright. The birthright of every Canadian. That makes you feel
+bad. Sure it does. I can see it. But I got to tell it that way,
+because--Here, I'm on the other side. It was chance, not virtue set me
+there. But once there the notion got me good. Sachigo was built to
+defend the great Canadian forests against the foreigner. That slogan got
+a grip on me. Yes, it got me good. I could scrap with every breath in my
+body for that. Well, now we've got the Skandinavia beat, and in a year
+or so they'll be on the scrap heap, ready to sell at scrap price. That's
+so. I know. Sachigo will be the biggest thing of its kind in the world
+next year, and there won't be any room for the Skandinavia. That's a
+reason I hate for you to go back to Peterman--one reason."
+
+"But I'm not going back," Nancy cried vehemently.
+
+Bull stared wide-eyed.
+
+"You're not going back?" he echoed stupidly. Then of a sudden he held
+out his hand. "Say, pass that message right over. Why in--Guess I'm
+crazy to read it--now."
+
+Nancy held the paper out to him. There was something so amazingly
+headlong in his manner. All the girl's apprehensions, all her
+depression, were swept away, and a rising excitement replaced them. A
+surge of thankfulness rose up in her. At least he would learn that she
+had no intention of further treachery to the land of her birth.
+
+"Accept my resignation forthwith."
+
+Bull read the brief message aloud. It was addressed to Peterman, and it
+was signed "Nancy McDonald." The force, the coldness of the words were
+implacable. He revelled in the phrasing. He revelled in the thing they
+conveyed. He looked up. The girl was smiling. She had forgotten
+everything but the approval she saw shining in his eyes.
+
+Suddenly he reached out and his great hands came gently down upon her
+softly rounded shoulders. It was a wonderful caress. They held her
+firmly while he gazed into her eyes.
+
+"Say, Nancy," he cried, in a voice that was deep with emotion. "You mean
+that? Those words? You've quit the Skandinavia? What--what are you going
+to do?"
+
+"I--I'm going to the forests with Father Adam. I'm going to help the
+boys we've so often talked about. I'm--"
+
+"Not on your life!"
+
+The man's denial rang out with all the force of his virile nature.
+
+"Say, listen right here. You've quit them. You've quit Peterman. And you
+reckon from one fool play you're going right over to another. No, sir,
+not on your life. It's my chance now, and by God I don't pass it. I'm
+kind of a rough citizen and don't know the way a feller should say this
+sort of stuff. But I'm crazy to marry you and have been that way ever
+since you came along, and sat right in this office, and invited me to
+take tea in the parlour of that darnation bug, Peterman. Do you know all
+that means, Nancy? It means I'm just daft with love for you, and have
+been ever since I set eyes on you, for all I had to treat you worse than
+a 'hold-up.' Say, my dear, will you give me the chance to show you? Can
+you forget it all? Can you? I'll raise every sort of hell to fix you
+good and happy. And you and me, together, we'll just send this great
+Sachigo of ours booming sky high, and in a year I promise to hand you
+the wreckage that was once the Skandinavia. Marry me, dear, and I'll
+show you the thing a man can be and do. And I'll make you forget the
+ruffian I've had to act towards you. Will you let me help you to forget?
+Will you--?"
+
+Nancy's eyes were frankly raised to the passionate gaze which revealed
+the depths of the man's great heart.
+
+"I have," she said in a low voice. "I've forgotten everything
+but--but--you."
+
+She moved as she spoke. There was no hesitation. All her soul was
+shining in her eyes, and she yielded to the impulse she was powerless to
+deny. She came to him, releasing herself from the great hands that held
+her shoulders. She reached up and placed her soft arms about the neck
+that rose trunk-like above his shoulders. In a moment she was caught and
+crushed in his arms.
+
+"Why--that's just fine!"
+
+The exclamation broke from the man out of sheer delight and happiness.
+And the while he bent down and kissed the smiling upturned face, and
+permitted one hand to wander caressingly over the girl's wealth of
+beautiful hair.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+LOST IN THE TWILIGHT
+
+
+A fierce wind swept down off the hills. So it had blown all night and
+all the day before. The sky was overcast, and the thermometer had
+dropped below zero. It was one of those brief "freeze-ups" such as
+Father Adam had awaited, and it might last two or three days. Then would
+come prompt reaction, and the rapidity of the thaw would be an
+hundred-fold increased.
+
+The sun was hidden, and the sky looked to be heavily burdened with snow.
+The earth was frozen solid, and the wide flung forests were white with
+the hoar frosts of Spring.
+
+Father Adam was standing beside the crouching team of dogs. There were
+five of them; great huskies, shaggy of coat and fiercely wolfish. They
+were fat and soft from idleness. But they would serve, for the sled was
+light, and a few days' run would swiftly harden them.
+
+The outfit was waiting just beyond the kitchen door of the house on the
+hill, and the view of the busy Cove below was completely shut out. The
+position for the waiting sled had not been calculated by the man who
+owned it, but by the shrewd, troubled mind of Bat Harker.
+
+He was standing beside the tall figure of the missionary now, squat and
+sturdy, looking on with half-angry, wholly anxious eyes. His expression
+was characteristic of the man when he was disturbed. Father Adam's dark
+eyes were surveying his outfit. There was no emotion in them. They were
+calm, and simply searching, in the fashion of the practised trail man.
+
+"Say, Les, this is just the craziest thing of all your crazy life," Bat
+said at last, in a tone kept low for all the feeling that lay behind it.
+"I tell you they're waiting on you. They've got you set. Just as sure as
+God this'll be your last trip. It's kind of useless talkin' it again out
+here, I know. We've talked an' talked it in that darn sick room of yours
+till I'm sick to death trying to git sense into you. We know the game
+from A to the hindmost letter of the darn alphabet. We haven't shouted
+it, you an' me, because there wasn't need. But Idepski's been right here
+since ever he got his nose on your trail. It was his gun that took you
+weeks back, an' sent you sick. If I know a thing he meant just to wing
+you, and leave you kind of helpless, so he could get hands on you when
+he fancied. He wants you alive, and he's goin' to git you. Ther's word
+got round you're pulling out. It's clear to me. A bunch of boys hit the
+trail out of here three nights gone, and I've a notion Idepski went with
+'em. Are they wise you're pulling out? Sure they are. Why, in God's
+name, don't you quit it?"
+
+The man whom the forest world knew as Father Adam, but whom Bat knew as
+Leslie Standing, shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Why should I?" he said, his dark eyes mildly enquiring, "you can't
+tell me a thing I don't know about Idepski. I knew it was he who dropped
+me. I saw him that night down there and knew him right away. Maybe he
+can fool you with his disguises. He can't fool me. I'd been watching him
+days before that."
+
+"Why didn't you show yourself? Why didn't you say?"
+
+Bat spoke fiercely in his exasperation.
+
+The missionary smiled.
+
+"You'd have had him shot up," he said. "I know. No. If you'd known I was
+around it would have queered the hand I was playing. Here, Bat, let's
+get this thing right. You could shoot up a dozen Idepskis, and there'd
+be others to replace 'em. Hellbeam's dogs'll never let up." He shook his
+head. "It's a play that'll go on to the--end. I know that. I tell you
+I've got past caring a curse about things. When the end comes, what does
+it matter! Not a thing. It's useless talking, old friend," he said, as
+Bat attempted to break in, "quite useless. But don't reckon I'm a
+willing quitter. I'll play the game till it can't be played longer. And
+when I've got to I'll throw my hands up. Not before. But Idepski can't
+follow my trail."
+
+"But he ken cut it," Bat cried, desperation finding expression in a
+clenched, out-held fist.
+
+"Can he?"
+
+The missionary smiled confidently. And Bat suddenly flung out both
+hands.
+
+"Say, Les," he cried, "do you think I want to see my partner, and best
+friend, hounded to a life of hell by that swine, Hellbeam? It breaks me
+to death the thought of it. Man, man, it sets me nigh crazed thinking
+that way. Don't I count with you? Don't the others you came along to
+help count? That dandy gal I've heard you wish was your own daughter?
+Don't she count? Say, we're all for you, Bull an' Nancy, an' me, just
+the same as the rest of the folk of the forest. Stop right here, man.
+Take your place again, an' we'll fight Hellbeam as we've fought his
+Skandinavia. Say, we'll fight for you as we've never fought before.
+We'll fight him, and beat him, and keep you safe from that hell he's got
+waitin' for you. Just say the word, and stop right here. And I'll swear
+before God--"
+
+Leslie Standing raised a protesting hand. His eyes were unsmiling.
+
+"It's useless, old friend," he said with irrevocable decision. "You
+don't know the thing you're trying to pledge yourself to. You think me a
+crazy man. You think I'm just asking for the trouble Hellbeam figures to
+hand out to me. I'm not. I've got the full measure of the whole thing.
+And I know the thing I'm doing doesn't matter. I'm not going to change
+the plan of life I've laid down. I've learnt happiness in the forests.
+The twilight of it all has been my salvation. Time was when I had other
+desires, other delights. They've long since passed. Now there's only one
+appeal to me in life. It's the boys, the scallawags, who haunt the
+forest like I do. I love them. And my life's theirs as long as Hellbeam
+leaves it to me. Get just that into your thick, old head, Bat, and for
+our last five minutes together we can talk of things more pleasant than
+Hellbeam."
+
+The missionary smiled down into the strong face of his companion. And
+the lumberman realised the uselessness of further protest. He yielded
+grudgingly. He yielded because he knew and loved the man. By a great
+effort he turned his mind from the dread haunting it.
+
+"You've got me beat, Les," he growled. Then he spat in his disgust.
+
+The missionary nodded, and, with a gesture of the hand, he indicated the
+hidden mills below them.
+
+"It's queer the way the whole thing's completed itself as I hoped and
+dreamed so long ago," he said thoughtfully. "You know, Bat, that yellow
+streak in me was a better thing than either of us knew. If I hadn't had
+it I'd have stood my ground. I'd have fought to the end, and I'd have
+been beaten, and Sachigo would have crashed. Do you see that? No. That's
+because you look at things with the obstinate eyes of great courage.
+While I, through fear, see things as they are. We won't debate it now.
+The accomplished fact is the thing. You've set Sachigo on top. Sachigo
+will rule the Canadian forest industry. The foreigner is on the scrap
+heap. We've helped to build something for this great old Empire of ours,
+and so our lives haven't been wholly wasted. It's good to feel that when
+the time comes to pay our debts. That boy Sternford's a great feller.
+I'm glad about him. Say, I felt I could cry last night when he and Nancy
+came along like two school-kids to tell me of the thing they'd fixed. I
+felt like handing them my story and claiming my place as Nancy's
+stepfather. But I didn't. You see, she's glad about me as Father Adam, a
+dopey missionary. But I can see her eyes blaze up red-hot with anger at
+the man who took her mother from her, and denied her existence. No, it's
+best that way. She's found the man I could have chosen for her, and I'm
+glad. She's a great lass. She's all her mother--and more."
+
+Bat inclined his stubborn head. He was still thinking of the dogs, and
+the sled, and all they meant to him just now.
+
+"Does she know about her share in the mills?" he asked brusquely.
+
+The other shook his head.
+
+"Not yet. But I've sent word to Charlie Nisson. He'll be along up on the
+_Myra_. And when he comes she'll know." He laughed quietly. "Say, I'd be
+glad to see them when they know about it--she and Bull. They're going to
+be married right after Birchall's been along and finally fixed things.
+It'll be a great day. I wonder. You know, Bat, I'd like to think
+Nancy--my Nancy--knows all about this. I wonder if she does. Do you
+think so?"
+
+Bat turned away. His eyes were on the surrounding forest, and the white
+gossamer of the hoar-frost clinging to the dark foliage. He dared not
+trust himself to reply.
+
+Again came the missionary's quiet laugh.
+
+"I wonder," he said. Then, in a moment, a curious flicker marred the
+calm of his eyes. "Bat, old friend," he went on, after a pause, "there's
+just one thing I'm going to ask you before I pull out. It's a promise I
+want. When the time comes for me to pay, will you tell her? Will you
+tell them both? If I'm gone will you tell them the thing you know--all
+of it? Don't make me out to be any old angel I guess you'd like to paint
+me. Just hand 'em the story of the white-livered creature I am, without
+the nerve of a jack-rabbit. Will you do that?"
+
+He held out a hand from which he removed his fur mitt. Bat turned. He
+saw the hand, and disregarded it in a surge of feeling.
+
+"Tell 'em? Tell 'em?" he cried. "Say, Les, for God Almighty's sake don't
+you pull out. You're my friend. You're the one feller in the world that
+matters a curse to me. Quit boy. Stop right here, an'--"
+
+"Will you tell 'em?"
+
+The hand was thrust further towards the lumberman so that he could no
+longer ignore it.
+
+"Hell! Yes!" he cried, in fierce mental anguish. "I'll tell 'em--if I
+have to." He seized the outstretched hand in both of his and gripped it
+with crushing force. "You're goin'--now?"
+
+"Sure."
+
+Their hands fell apart. Bat's dropped to his side like leaden weights.
+"So long," he said dully, as the other took his place in the sled. Then
+he added, "So long, Les."
+
+The sled needed breaking out, and the lumberman watched the operation of
+it without a word. His emotions were too real, to deep for anything
+more. He looked on while the first sharp order was flung at the dogs. He
+watched them leap to their feet and stand ready, great, powerful,
+untamed souls eager for their, task. Then the man in the sled looked
+round as he strung out the long lash of his short-stocked whip.
+
+"So long, Bat," he cried smilingly. And his farewell was instantly
+followed by the sharp command to "mush."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Far out on the desolate highlands the dogs broke trail over a waste of
+virgin snow. The cold had abated, and the flurry of snow that rose up
+under their feet was wet and melting. The way lay through the maze of
+woodland bluffs which lined the upper slopes of the course of the Beaver
+River. Beyond them, northward, lay the windswept barrens of the
+highlands.
+
+Father Adam knew the trail by heart. The maze of bluffs through which he
+was passing afforded him no difficulties or anxieties. He read them with
+the certainty of wide and long experience. There was nothing new that
+Labrador had to show him. He knew it all, and revelled in the wide
+freedom its fierce territory afforded. The moods of the country
+concerned him not at all. Furious or gentle, tearful or hard with the
+bitterness of desperate winter, it was all one to him. He loved the
+twilight of its mysterious, fickle heart. It was as much his home as any
+place on earth.
+
+The dogs swept on at a steady gait. The cruel whip played over furry
+backs, a never-ceasing threat. And so the miles were hungrily devoured.
+It was the first day of freedom for dogs and man alike, and each moment
+of it yielded a sense of almost fierce joy.
+
+The bluffs narrowed in, and the softer snow slowed the going. Instantly
+a sharp command hurled the leading dog heading for the open where the
+surface was hard and dry. The team swung away behind him and the sled
+pursued. Then the silence broke.
+
+A shot rang out. It came from the shelter of a bluff directly ahead. The
+leading dog floundered. Then the brute fell with a fierce yelp, and
+sprawled in the snow while the others swept over his inert body. The man
+in the sled strove to brake the sled with the "gee-pole" which he
+snatched to his aid. There was a moment of desperate struggle. Then the
+sled flung tail up in the air and the man was hurled headlong amidst his
+dogs.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Father Adam stood with mitted hands thrust up above his head. He was
+gazing into the smiling eyes of a man no less dark than himself. There
+were three others confronting him, and each was armed with a stubby,
+automatic pistol which covered his body.
+
+"Guess Hellbeam's waiting for you over the other side, Mr. Leslie
+Martin, or Standing, or Father Adam, as you choose to call yourself.
+He's waited a long time. But you ain't tired him out. Guess your game's
+up."
+
+"Oh, yes?"
+
+The missionary smiled back into Idepski's derisive eyes.
+
+"You can drop your hands," the agent went on. "We've got your gun. And I
+guess you'll be kind of tired before we get you to the coast. You're
+going to find things a heap tougher than No. 10 Camp--where you sent me.
+You surely are."
+
+"The coast?"
+
+The missionary was startled.
+
+"Yep. There's going to be no play game this time. Hellbeam's yacht's
+waiting on you. You'll take the sea trip. It's safer that way."
+
+"Yes."
+
+The mitted hands had dropped to the missionary's sides. He moistened his
+lips, which seemed to have become curiously dry. Once, and once only,
+there was a flicker of the eyes as he looked into the face of his
+captor. Otherwise he gave no sign. His time had come. He knew that. He
+had always known it would come. There was neither heat nor resentment in
+him against these men who had finally hunted him down.
+
+"How do we travel?" he asked quietly. "You've shot up my leader."
+
+The other nodded. He understood the tone of complaint and regret in
+which the trail man spoke of his dog. He grinned maliciously.
+
+"We'll shoot up the rest for you. They'd only feed the wolves if we left
+'em. We've two dog trains with us. Don't let that worry. You best get
+your kit loosed from your sled."
+
+The prisoner turned to obey, but the agent changed his mind. He laughed.
+
+"No. Guess the boys can fix that. It's safer that way. You move right on
+into yonder bluff. And you best not try making any break. There ain't
+only Hellbeam in this. I haven't forgotten--No. 10 Camp. Your game's
+plumb up."
+
+"Yes, plumb up."
+
+Father Adam obeyed. He moved away, followed closely by the man who had
+hunted him for so many years. There was no escape. He knew that. The
+reckoning he had always foreseen had overtaken him. So, without a word
+of protest, he passed for the last time into the twilight of the woods.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+The Heart of Unaga
+
+By
+
+Ridgwell Cullum
+
+Author of "The Way of the Strong," etc.
+
+
+Many a stalwart deed has been done and many a brave tale told of the
+forbidding but romantic North-land, but seldom has an author so combined
+a tale of love, adventure, and strong swift action with mystery.
+
+The terrible fires of Unaga crimsoning the white silent wastes are so
+vividly portrayed, that the reader must feel authenticity. The strange
+"sleeper" Indians are real Indians, the big-souled Northwest policeman
+is not a superman, but a real human being, the girl is bonafide, the
+villain is not fictional, but an actual personality, brave and base
+alike--all the characters are living and breathing folk, that you feel
+are there in far-off Unaga, and that you know you would find there, were
+you hardy enough to visit that remorseless country.
+
+G, P. Putnam's Sons
+
+New York London
+
+
+
+
+SNOWDRIFT
+
+BY
+
+JAMES B. HENDRYX
+
+
+A Romance of the barrens--"straight north--between the Mackenzie and the
+Bay," where Snowdrift, waif of the Arctic, Indian bred, bearing a false
+but heavy burden of shame, and Carter Brent, Southerner, find their
+great happiness among the icy wastes.
+
+Swept to the Klondike by the first wave of the great gold rush, Brent
+plunges, with the enthusiasm of youth, into the whirl of Dawson, the
+city of men gone mad. How luck sat upon his shoulder, and how his
+recklessness and daring won him the admiration of those wild times,
+until the raw red liquor of Alaska downed him "for the count," is but
+the beginning of the tale; for with him, we are carried into the
+Northern night and fight the long fight back to manhood till purged by
+the cleansing cruelty of the Arctic.
+
+G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS
+
+NEW YORK LONDON
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MAN IN THE TWILIGHT***
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