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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Yukon Trail, by William MacLeod Raine,
+Illustrated by George Ellis Wolfe
+
+
+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 Yukon Trail
+ A Tale of the North
+
+
+Author: William MacLeod Raine
+
+
+
+Release Date: October 11, 2006 [eBook #19527]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE YUKON TRAIL***
+
+
+E-text prepared by David Garcia and the Project Gutenberg Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net/)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 19527-h.htm or 19527-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/9/5/0/19527/19527-h/19527-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/9/5/0/19527/19527-h.zip)
+
+
+ +-------------------------------------------------------+
+ | Transcriber's note: |
+ | |
+ | Inconsistent hyphenation and spelling in the original |
+ | document have been preserved. |
+ | |
+ +-------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE YUKON TRAIL
+
+A Tale of the North
+
+by
+
+WILLIAM MacLEOD RAINE
+
+Author of
+Wyoming, Bucky O'Connor, Etc.
+
+With Illustrations by George Ellis Wolfe
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: NOW HE CAUGHT HER BY THE SHOULDERS (_See page 108_)]
+
+
+
+New York
+Grosset & Dunlap
+Publishers
+Copyright, 1917, by William MacLeod Raine
+All Rights Reserved
+Published May 1917
+
+
+
+
+ TO
+ MY BROTHER
+ EDGAR C. RAINE
+
+ who knew the Lights of Dawson when they were a magnet to the feet
+ of those answering the call of Adventure, who mushed the Yukon Trail
+ from its headwaters to Bering Sea, who still finds in the Frozen
+ North the Romance of the Last Frontier.
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+
+ I. Going "In" 1
+ II. Enter a Man 10
+ III. The Girl from Drogheda 23
+ IV. The Crevasse 34
+ V. Across the Traverse 49
+ VI. Sheba sings--and Two Men listen 58
+ VII. Wally gets Orders 71
+ VIII. The End of the Passage 82
+ IX. Gid Holt goes prospecting 93
+ X. The Rah-Rah Boy functions 109
+ XI. Gordon invites himself to Dinner--and does not enjoy it 125
+ XII. Sheba says "Perhaps" 137
+ XIII. Diane and Gordon differ 144
+ XIV. Genevieve Mallory takes a Hand 156
+ XV. Gordon buys a Revolver 170
+ XVI. Ambushed 181
+ XVII. "God save you kindly" 193
+ XVIII. Gordon spends a Busy Evening 201
+ XIX. Sheba does not think so 210
+ XX. Gordon finds himself Unpopular 217
+ XXI. A New Way of leaving a House 227
+ XXII. Gid Holt comes to Kusiak 232
+ XXIII. In the Dead of Night 241
+ XXIV. Macdonald follows a Clue 247
+ XXV. In the Blizzard 256
+ XXVI. Hard Mushing 268
+ XXVII. Two on the Trail 275
+ XXVIII. A Message from the Dead 286
+ XXIX. "Don't touch him! Don't you dare touch him!" 292
+ XXX. Holt frees his Mind 301
+ XXXI. Sheba digs 308
+ XXXII. Diane changes her Mind 318
+
+
+
+
+Illustrations
+
+
+ Now he caught her by the shoulders _Frontispiece_
+ "So you think I'm a 'fraid-cat, Mr. Elliot?" 44
+ The situation was piquant, even though it was at her expense 236
+ For him the beauty of the night lay largely in her presence 322
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The Yukon Trail
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+GOING "IN"
+
+
+The midnight sun had set, but in a crotch between two snow-peaks it
+had kindled a vast caldron from which rose a mist of jewels, garnet
+and turquoise, topaz and amethyst and opal, all swimming in a sea of
+molten gold. The glow of it still clung to the face of the broad Yukon,
+as a flush does to the soft, wrinkled cheek of a girl just roused from
+deep sleep.
+
+Except for a faint murkiness in the air it was still day. There was
+light enough for the four men playing pinochle on the upper deck, though
+the women of their party, gossiping in chairs grouped near at hand, had
+at last put aside their embroidery. The girl who sat by herself at a
+little distance held a magazine still open on her lap. If she were not
+reading, her attitude suggested it was less because of the dusk than
+that she had surrendered herself to the spell of the mysterious beauty
+which for this hour at least had transfigured the North to a land all
+light and atmosphere and color.
+
+Gordon Elliot had taken the boat at Pierre's Portage, fifty miles
+farther down the river. He had come direct from the creeks, and his
+impressions of the motley pioneer life at the gold-diggings were so
+vivid that he had found an isolated corner of the deck where he could
+scribble them in a notebook while still fresh.
+
+But he had not been too busy to see that the girl in the wicker chair
+was as much of an outsider as he was. Plainly this was her first trip
+in. Gordon was a stranger in the Yukon country, one not likely to be
+over-welcome when it became known what his mission was. It may have been
+because he was out of the picture himself that he resented a little the
+exclusion of the young woman with the magazine. Certainly she herself
+gave no evidence of feeling about it. Her long-lashed eyes looked
+dreamily across the river to the glowing hills beyond. Not once did they
+turn with any show of interest to the lively party under the awning.
+
+From where he was leaning against the deckhouse Elliot could see only
+a fine, chiseled profile shading into a mass of crisp, black hair, but
+some quality in the detachment of her personality stimulated gently his
+imagination. He wondered who she could be. His work had taken him to
+frontier camps before, but he could not place her as a type. The best
+he could do was to guess that she might be the daughter of some
+territorial official on her way in to join him.
+
+A short, thick-set man who had ridden down on the stage with Elliot to
+Pierre's Portage drifted along the deck toward him. He wore the careless
+garb of a mining man in a country which looks first to comfort.
+
+"Bound for Kusiak?" he asked, by way of opening conversation.
+
+"Yes," answered Gordon.
+
+The miner nodded toward the group under the awning. "That bunch lives
+at Kusiak. They've got on at different places the last two or three
+days--except Selfridge and his wife, they've been out. Guess you can
+tell that from hearing her talk--the little woman in red with the snappy
+black eyes. She's spillin' over with talk about the styles in New York
+and the cabarets and the new shows. That pot-bellied little fellow in
+the checked suit is Selfridge. He is Colby Macdonald's man Friday."
+
+Elliot took in with a quickened interest the group bound for Kusiak. He
+had noticed that they monopolized as a matter of course the best places
+on the deck and in the dining-room. They were civil enough to outsiders,
+but their manner had the unconscious selfishness that often regulates
+social activities. It excluded from their gayety everybody that did not
+belong to the proper set.
+
+"That sort of thing gets my goat," the miner went on sourly. "Those
+women over there have elected themselves Society with a capital S. They
+put on all the airs the Four Hundred do in New York. And who the hell
+are they anyhow?--wives to a bunch of grafting politicians mostly."
+
+From the casual talk that had floated to him, with its many little
+allusions punctuating the jolly give-and-take of their repartee, Elliot
+guessed that their lives had the same background of tennis, dinners,
+hops, official gossip, and business. They evidently knew one another
+with the intimacy that comes only to the segment of a small community
+shut off largely from the world and forced into close social relations.
+No doubt they had loaned each other money occasionally, stood by in
+trouble, and gossiped back and forth about their shortcomings and family
+skeletons even as society on the outside does.
+
+"That's the way of the world, isn't it? Our civilization is built on the
+group system," suggested Elliot.
+
+"Maybeso," grumbled the miner. "But I hate to see Alaska come to it.
+Me, I saw this country first in '97--packed an outfit in over the Pass.
+Every man stood on his own hind legs then. He got there if he was
+strong--mebbe; he bogged down on the trail good and plenty if he was
+weak. We didn't have any of the artificial stuff then. A man had to have
+the guts to stand the gaff."
+
+"I suppose it was a wild country, Mr. Strong."
+
+The little miner's eyes gleamed. "Best country in the world. We
+didn't stand for anything that wasn't on the level. It was a poor
+man's country--wages fifteen dollars a day and plenty of work. Everybody
+had a chance. Anybody could stake a claim and gamble on his luck. Now
+the big corporations have slipped in and grabbed the best. It ain't
+a prospector's proposition any more. Instead of faro banks we've got
+savings banks. The wide-open dance hall has quit business in favor
+of moving pictures. And, as I said before, we've got Society."
+
+"All frontier countries have to come to it."
+
+"Hmp! In the days I'm telling you about that crowd there couldn't 'a'
+hustled meat to fill their bellies three meals. Parasites, that's what
+they are. They're living off that bunch of roughnecks down there and
+folks like 'em."
+
+With a wave of his hand Strong pointed to a group of miners who had
+boarded the boat with them at Pierre's Portage. There were about a dozen
+of the men, for the most part husky, heavy-set foreigners. They had been
+drinking, and were in a sullen humor. Elliot gathered from their talk
+that they had lost their jobs because they had tried to organize an
+incipient strike in the Frozen Gulch district.
+
+"Roughnecks and booze-fighters--that's all they are. But they earn their
+way. Not that I blame Macdonald for firing them, mind you," continued
+the miner.
+
+"Were they working for Macdonald?"
+
+"Yep. His superintendent up there was too soft. These here Swedes got
+gay. Mac hit the trail for Frozen Gulch. He hammered his big fist
+into the bread-basket of the ringleader and said, 'Git!' That fellow's
+running yet, I'll bet. Then Mac called the men together and read the
+riot act to them. He fired this bunch on the boat and was out of the
+camp before you could bat an eye. It was the cleanest hurry-up job I
+ever did see."
+
+"From what I've heard about him he must be a remarkable man."
+
+"He's the biggest man in Alaska, bar none."
+
+This was a subject that interested Gordon Elliot very much. Colby
+Macdonald and his activities had brought him to the country.
+
+"Do you mean personally--or because he represents the big corporations?"
+
+"Both. His word comes pretty near being law up here, not only because
+he stands for the Consolidated, but because he's one man from the ground
+up. I ain't any too strong for that New York bunch of capitalists back
+of Mac, but I've got to give it to him that he's all there without
+leaning on anybody."
+
+"I've heard that he's a domineering man--rides roughshod over others.
+Is that right, Mr. Strong?"
+
+"He's a bear for getting his own way," grinned the little miner. "If you
+won't get out of his road he peels your hide off and hangs it up to dry.
+But I can't help liking him. He's big every way you take him. He'll
+stand the acid, Mac will."
+
+"Do you mean that he's square--honest?"
+
+"You've said two things, my friend," answered Strong dryly. "He's
+square. If he tells you anything, don't worry because he ain't put down
+his John Hancock before a notary. He'll see it through to a finish--to
+a fighting finish if he has to. Don't waste any time looking for fat or
+yellow streaks in Mac. They ain't there. Nobody ever heard him squeal
+yet and what's more nobody ever will."
+
+"No wonder men like him."
+
+"But when you say honest--Hell, no! Not the way you define honesty
+down in the States. He's a grabber, Mac is. Better not leave anything
+valuable around unless you've got it spiked to the floor. He takes what
+he wants."
+
+"What does he look like?" asked Gordon.
+
+"Oh, I don't know." Strong hesitated, while he searched for words to
+show the picture in his mind. "Big as a house--steps out like a buck
+in the spring--blue-gray eyes that bore right through you."
+
+"How old?"
+
+"Search me. You never think of age when you're looking at him.
+Forty-five, mebbe--or fifty--I don't know."
+
+"Married?"
+
+"No-o." Hanford Strong nodded in the direction of the Kusiak circle.
+"They say he's going to marry Mrs. Mallory. She's the one with the red
+hair."
+
+It struck young Elliot that the miner was dismissing Mrs. Mallory in too
+cavalier a fashion. She was the sort of woman at whom men look twice,
+and then continue to look while she appears magnificently unaware of it.
+Her hair was not red, but of a lustrous bronze, amazingly abundant,
+and dressed in waves with the careful skill of a coiffeur. Half-shut,
+smouldering eyes had met his for an instant at dinner across the table
+and had told him she was a woman subtle and complex. Slightest shades
+of meaning she could convey with a lift of the eyebrow or an intonation
+of the musical voice. If she was already fencing with the encroaching
+years there was little evidence of it in her opulent good looks. She had
+manifestly specialized in graceful idleness and was prepared to meet
+with superb confidence the competition of débutantes. The elusive shadow
+of lost illusions, of knowledge born of experience, was the only
+betrayal of vanished youth in her equipment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+ENTER A MAN
+
+
+The whistle of the Hannah blew for the Tatlah Cache landing while Strong
+and Elliot were talking. Wally Selfridge had just bid three hundred
+seventy and found no help in the widow. He pushed toward each of the
+other players one red chip and two white ones.
+
+"Can't make it," he announced. "I needed a jack of clubs."
+
+The men counted their chips and settled up in time to reach the deck
+rail just as the gangplank was thrown out to the wharf. The crew
+transferred to the landing a pouch of mail, half a ton of sacked
+potatoes, some mining machinery, and several boxes containing provisions
+and dry goods.
+
+A man came to the end of the wharf carrying a suitcase. He was well-set,
+thick in the chest, and broad-shouldered. He came up the gangplank with
+the strong, firm tread of a man in his prime. Looking down from above,
+Gordon Elliot guessed him to be in the early thirties.
+
+Mrs. Mallory was the first to recognize him, which she did with a
+drawling little shout of welcome. "Oh you, Mr. Man. I knew you first.
+I speak for you," she cried.
+
+The man on the gangplank looked up, smiled, and lifted to her his broad
+gray Stetson in a wave of greeting.
+
+"How do you do, Mrs. Mallory? Glad to see you."
+
+The miners from Frozen Gulch were grouped together on the lower deck.
+At sight of the man with the suitcase a sullen murmur rose among them.
+Those in the rear pushed forward and closed the lane leading to the
+cabins. One of the miners was flung roughly against the new passenger.
+With a wide, powerful sweep of his arm the man who had just come aboard
+hurled the miner back among his companions.
+
+"Gangway!" he said brusquely, and as he strode forward did not even
+glance in the direction of the angry men pressing toward him.
+
+"Here. Keep back there, you fellows. None of that rough stuff goes,"
+ordered the mate sharply.
+
+The big Cornishman who had been tossed aside crouched for a spring. He
+launched himself forward with the awkward force of a bear. The suitcase
+described a whirling arc of a circle with the arm of its owner as the
+radius. The bag and the head of the miner came into swift impact. Like
+a bullock which has been pole-axed the man went to the floor. He turned
+over with a groan and lay still.
+
+The new passenger looked across the huge, sprawling body at the group
+of miners facing him. They glared in savage hate. All they needed was a
+leader to send them driving at him with the force of an avalanche. The
+man at whom they raged did not give an inch. He leaned forward slightly,
+his weight resting on the balls of his feet, alert to the finger tips.
+But in his eyes a grim little smile of derisive amusement rested.
+
+"Next," he taunted.
+
+Then the mate got busy. He hustled his stevedores forward in front of
+the miners and shook his fist in their faces as he stormed up and down.
+If they wanted trouble, by God! it was waiting for 'em, he swore in
+apoplectic fury. The Hannah was a river boat and not a dive for wharf
+rats. No bunch of roughnecks could come aboard a boat where he was mate
+and start anything. They could not assault any passengers of his and
+make it stick.
+
+The man with the suitcase did not wait to hear out his tirade. He
+followed the purser to his stateroom, dropped his baggage beside the
+berth, and joined the Kusiak group on the upper deck.
+
+They greeted him eagerly, a little effusively, as if they were anxious
+to prove themselves on good terms with him. The deference they paid and
+his assured acceptance of it showed him to be a man of importance. But
+apart from other considerations, he dominated by mental and physical
+virility the circle of which he instantly became the center. Only Mrs.
+Mallory held her own, and even she showed a quickened interest. Her
+indolent, half-disdainful manner sheathed a soft sensuousness that held
+the provocation of sex appeal.
+
+"What was the matter?" asked Selfridge. "How did the trouble start?"
+
+The big man shrugged his shoulders. "It didn't start. Some of the outfit
+thought they were looking for a row, but they balked on the job when
+Trelawney got his." Turning to Mrs. Mallory, he changed the subject
+abruptly. "Did you have a good time down the river?"
+
+Gordon, as he watched from a little distance, corrected earlier
+impressions. This man had passed the thirties. Salt and pepper sprinkled
+the temples of his strong, lean head. He had the thick neck and solid
+trunk of middle life, but he carried himself so superbly that his whole
+bearing denied that years could touch his splendid physique. The suit he
+wore was a wrinkled corduroy, with trouser legs thrust into high-laced
+boots. An outdoor tan had been painted upon his face and neck, from the
+point where the soft flannel shirt fell away to show the fine slope of
+the throat line to the shoulders.
+
+Strong had stepped to the wharf to talk with an old acquaintance, but
+when the boat threw out a warning signal he made a hurried good-bye and
+came on board. He rejoined Elliot.
+
+"Well, what d'you think of him? Was I right?"
+
+The young man had already guessed who this imperious stranger was. "I
+never saw anybody get away with a hard job as easily as he did that one.
+You could see with half an eye that those fellows meant fight. They were
+all primed for it--and he bluffed them out."
+
+"Bluffed them--huh! If that's what you call bluffing. I was where I
+could see just what happened. Colby Macdonald wasn't even looking at
+Trelawney, but you bet he saw him start. That suitcase traveled like
+a streak of light. You'd 'a' thought it weighed about two pounds. That
+ain't all either. Mac used his brains. Guess what was in that grip."
+
+"The usual thing, I suppose."
+
+"You've got another guess--packed in among his socks and underwear was
+about twenty pounds of ore samples. The purser told me. It was that
+quartz put Trelawney to sleep so thorough that he'd just begun to wake
+up when I passed a minute ago."
+
+The young man turned his eyes again upon the big Canadian Scotchman.
+He was talking with Mrs. Mallory, who was leaning back luxuriously
+in a steamer chair she had brought aboard at St. Michael's. It would
+have been hard to conceive a contrast greater than the one between
+this pampered heiress of the ages and the modern business berserk who
+looked down into her mocking eyes. He was the embodiment of the dominant
+male,--efficient to the last inch of his straight six feet. What he
+wanted he had always taken, by the sheer strength that was in him. Back
+of her smiling insolence lay a silken force to match his own. She too
+had taken what she wanted from life, but she had won it by indirection.
+Manifestly she was of those women who conceive that charm and beauty
+are tools to bend men to their wills. Was it the very width of the gulf
+between them that made the appeal of the clash in the sex duel upon
+which they had engaged?
+
+The dusky young woman with the magazine was the first of those on
+the upper deck to retire for the night. She flitted so quietly that
+Gordon did not notice until she had gone. Mrs. Selfridge and her friends
+disappeared with their men folks, calling gay good-nights to one another
+as they left.
+
+Macdonald and Mrs. Mallory still talked. After a time she too vanished.
+
+The big promoter leaned against the deck rail, where he was joined by
+Selfridge. For a long time they talked in low voices. The little man had
+most to say. His chief listened, but occasionally interrupted to ask a
+sharp, incisive question.
+
+Elliot, sitting farther forward with Strong, judged that Selfridge was
+making a report of his trip. Once he caught a fragment of their talk,
+enough to confirm this impression.
+
+"Did Winton tell you that himself?" demanded the Scotchman.
+
+The answer of his employee came in a murmur so low that the words were
+lost. But the name used told Gordon a good deal. The Commissioner of the
+General Land Office at Washington signed his letters Harold B. Winton.
+
+Strong tossed the stub of his cigarette overboard and nodded
+good-night. A glance at his watch told Elliot that it was past two
+o'clock. He rose, stretched, and sauntered back to his stateroom.
+
+The young man had just taken off his coat when there came the hurried
+rush of trampling feet upon the hurricane deck above. Almost instantly
+he heard a cry of alarm. Low voices, quick with suppressed excitement,
+drifted back to him. He could hear the shuffling of footsteps and the
+sound of heavy bodies moving.
+
+Some one lifted a frightened shout. "Help! Help!" The call had come, he
+thought, from Selfridge.
+
+Gordon flung open the door of his room, raced along the deck, and took
+the stairs three at a time. A huddle of men swayed and shifted heavily
+in front of him. So close was the pack that the motion resembled the
+writhing of some prehistoric monster rather than the movements of
+individual human beings. In that half-light tossing arms and legs looked
+like tentacles flung out in agony by the mammoth reptile. Its progress
+was jerky and convulsive, sometimes tortuous, but it traveled slowly
+toward the rail as if by the impulsion of an irresistible pressure.
+
+Even as he ran toward the mass, Elliot noticed that the only sounds were
+grunts, stertorous breathings, and the scraping of feet. The attackers
+wanted no publicity. The attacked was too busy to waste breath in futile
+cries. He was fighting for his life with all the stark energy nature and
+his ancestors had given him.
+
+Two men, separated from the crowd, lay on the deck farther aft. One was
+on top of the other, his fingers clutching the gullet of his helpless
+opponent. The agony of the man underneath found expression only in the
+drumming heels that beat a tattoo on the floor. The spasmodic feet were
+shod in Oxford tans of an ultra-fashionable cut. No doubt the owner of
+the smart footwear had been pulled down as he was escaping to shout the
+alarm.
+
+The runner hurdled the two in his stride and plunged straight at the
+struggling tangle. He caught one man by the shoulders from behind and
+flung him back. He struck hard, smashing blows as he fought his way to
+the heart of the mêlée. Heavy-fisted miners with corded muscles landed
+upon his face and head and neck. The strange excitement of the battle
+lust surged through his veins. He did not care a straw for the odds.
+
+The sudden attack of Elliot had opened the pack. The man battling
+against a dozen was Colby Macdonald. The very number of his foes had
+saved him so far from being rushed overboard or trampled down. In their
+desire to get at him they hindered each other, struck blows that found
+the wrong mark. His coat and shirt were in rags. He was bruised and
+battered and bleeding from the chest up. But he was still slogging hard.
+
+They had him pressed to the rail. A huge miner, head down, had his arms
+around the waist of the Scotchman and was trying to throw him overboard.
+Macdonald lashed out and landed flush upon the cheek of a man attempting
+to brain him with a billet of wood. He hammered home a short-arm jolt
+against the ear of the giant who was giving him the bear grip.
+
+The big miner grunted, but hung on like a football tackler. With a jerk
+he raised Macdonald from the floor just as three or four others rushed
+him again. The rail gave way, splintered like kindling wood. The
+Scotchman and the man at grips with him went over the side together.
+
+Clear and loud rang the voice of Elliot. "Man overboard!"
+
+The wheelsman had known for some minutes that there was trouble afoot.
+He signaled to the engine room to reverse and blew short, sharp shrieks
+of warning. Already deckhands and officers, scantily clad, were
+appearing from fore and aft.
+
+"Men overboard--two of 'em!" explained Elliot in a shout from the boat
+which he was trying to lower.
+
+The first mate and another man ran to help him. The three of them
+lowered and manned the boat. Gordon sat in the bow and gave directions
+while the other two put their backs into the stroke. Quite casually
+Elliot noticed that the man in the waist had a purple bruise on his left
+cheek bone. The young man himself had put it there not three minutes
+since.
+
+Across the water came a call for help. "I'm sinking--hurry!"
+
+The other man in the river was a dozen yards from the one in distress.
+With strong, swift, overhand strokes he shot through the water.
+
+"All right," he called presently. "I've got him."
+
+The oarsmen drew alongside the swimmer. With one hand Macdonald caught
+hold of the edge of the boat. The other clutched the rescued man by the
+hair of his head.
+
+"Look out. You're drowning him," the mate warned.
+
+"Am I?" Macdonald glanced with mild interest at the head that had been
+until that moment submerged. "Shows how absent-minded a man gets. I was
+thinking about how he tried to drown me, I expect."
+
+They dragged the miner aboard.
+
+"Go ahead. I'll swim down," Macdonald ordered.
+
+"Better come aboard," advised the mate.
+
+"No. I'm all right."
+
+The Scotchman pushed himself back from the boat and fell into an easy
+stroke. Nevertheless, there was power in it, for he reached the Hannah
+before the rescued miner had been helped to the deck.
+
+A dozen passengers, crowded on the lower deck, pushed forward eagerly
+to see. Among them was Selfridge, his shirt and collar torn loose at
+the neck and his immaculate checked suit dusty and disheveled. He was
+wearing a pair of up-to-date Oxford tans.
+
+The Scotch-Canadian shook himself like a Newfoundland dog. He looked
+around with sardonic amusement, a grin on his swollen and disfigured
+face.
+
+"Quite a pleasant welcome home," he said ironically, his cold eyes fixed
+on a face that looked as if it might have been kicked by a healthy mule.
+"Eh, Trelawney?"
+
+The Cornishman glared at him, and turned away with a low, savage oath.
+
+"Are you hurt, Mr. Macdonald?" asked the captain.
+
+"Hurt! Not at all, Captain. I cut myself while I was shaving this
+morning--just a scratch," was the ironic answer.
+
+"There's been some dirty work going on. I'll see the men are punished,
+sir."
+
+"Forget it, Captain. I'll attend to that little matter." His jaunty,
+almost insolent glance made the half-circle again. "Sorry you were too
+late for the party, gentlemen,--most of you. I see three or four of you
+who were 'among those present.' It was a strictly exclusive affair. And
+now, if you don't mind, I'll say good-night."
+
+He turned on his heel, went up the stairway to the deck above, and
+disappeared into his stateroom.
+
+The rescued miner, propped against the cabin wall where he had been
+placed, broke into sudden excited protest. "Ach! He tried to drown me.
+Mein head--he hold it under the water."
+
+"Ain't that just like a Swede?" retorted the mate in disgust. "Mac saves
+his life. Then the roughneck kicks because he got a belly full of Yukon.
+Sure Mac soused him some. Why shouldn't he?"
+
+"I ain't no Swede," explained the big miner sullenly.
+
+The mate did not think it worth his while to explain that "Swede" was
+merely his generic term of contempt for all foreigners.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE GIRL FROM DROGHEDA
+
+
+Gordon Elliot was too much of a night owl to be an early riser, but
+next morning he was awakened by the tramp of hurried feet along the
+deck to the accompaniment of brusque orders, together with frequent
+angry puffing and snorting of the boat. From the quiver of the walls he
+guessed that the Hannah was stuck on a sandbar. The mate's language gave
+backing to this surmise. Divided in mind between his obligation to the
+sleeping passengers and his duty to get the boat on her way, that
+officer spilled a good deal of subdued sulphurous language upon the
+situation.
+
+"All together now. Get your back into it. Why are you running around
+like a chicken without a head, Reeves?" he snapped.
+
+Evidently the deck hands were working to get the Hannah off by poling.
+
+Elliot tried to settle back to sleep, but after two or three ineffectual
+efforts gave it up. He rose and did one or two setting-up exercises to
+limber his joints. The first of these flashed the signal to his brain
+that he was stiff and sore. This brought to mind the fight on the
+hurricane deck, and he smiled. His face was about as mobile as if it
+were in a plaster cast. It hurt every time he twitched a muscle.
+
+The young man stepped to the looking-glass. Both eyes were blacked, his
+lip had been cut, and there was a purple weal well up on his left cheek.
+He stopped himself from grinning only just in time to save another
+twinge of pain.
+
+"Some party while it lasted. I never saw more willing mixers. Everybody
+seemed anxious to sit in except Mr. Wally Selfridge," he explained to
+his reflection. "But Macdonald is the class. He's there with both right
+and left. That uppercut of his is vicious. Don't ever get in the way of
+it, Gordon Elliot." He examined his injuries more closely in the glass.
+"Some one landed a peach on my right lamp and the other is in mourning
+out of sympathy. Oh, well, I ain't the only prize beauty on board this
+morning." The young man forgot and smiled. "Ouch! Don't do that, Gordon.
+Yes, son. 'There's many a black, black eye, they say, but none so bright
+as mine.' Now isn't that the truth?"
+
+He bathed, dressed, and went out on the deck.
+
+Early though he was, one passenger at least was up before him. The
+young woman he had noticed last evening with the magazine was doing a
+constitutional. A slight breeze was stirring, and as she moved against
+it the white skirt clung first to one knee and then the other, moulding
+itself to the long lines of her limbs with exquisite grace of motion.
+It was as though her walk were the expression of a gallant and buoyant
+personality.
+
+Irish he guessed her when the deep-blue eyes rested on his for an
+instant as she passed, and fortified his conjecture by the coloring of
+the clear-skinned face and the marks of the Celtic race delicately
+stamped upon it.
+
+The purser came out of his room and joined Elliot. He smiled at sight of
+the young man's face.
+
+"Your map's a little out of plumb this morning, sir," he ventured.
+
+"But you ought to see the other fellow," came back Gordon boyishly.
+
+"I've seen him--several of him. We've got the best collection of bruises
+on board I ever clapped eyes on. I've got to give it to you and Mr.
+Macdonald. You know how to hit."
+
+"Oh, I'm not in his class."
+
+Gordon Elliot meant what he said. He was himself an athlete, had played
+for three years left tackle on his college eleven. More than one critic
+had picked him for the All-America team. He could do his hundred in just
+a little worse than ten seconds. But after all he was a product of
+training and of the gymnasiums. Macdonald was what nature and a long
+line of fighting Highland ancestors had made him. His sinewy, knotted
+strength, his massive build, the breadth of shoulder and depth of
+chest--mushing on long snow trails was the gymnasium that had
+contributed to these.
+
+The purser chuckled. "He's a good un, Mac is. They say he liked to have
+drowned Northrup after he had saved him."
+
+Elliot was again following with his eyes the lilt of the girl's
+movements. Apparently he had not heard what the officer said. At least
+he gave no answer.
+
+With a grin the purser opened another attack. "Don't blame you a bit,
+Mr. Elliot. She's the prettiest colleen that ever sailed from Dublin
+Bay."
+
+The young man brought his eyes home. They answered engagingly the smile
+of the purser.
+
+"Who is she?"
+
+"The name on the books is Sheba O'Neill."
+
+"From Dublin, you say."
+
+"Oh, if you want to be literal, her baggage says Drogheda. Ireland is
+Ireland to me."
+
+"Where is she bound for?"
+
+"Kusiak."
+
+The young woman passed them with a little nod of morning greeting to the
+purser. Fine and dainty though she was, Miss O'Neill gave an impression
+of radiant strength.
+
+"Been with you all the way up the river?" asked Elliot after she had
+passed.
+
+"Yep. She came up on the Skagit from Seattle."
+
+"What is she going to do at Kusiak?"
+
+Again the purser grinned. "What do they all do--the good-looking ones?"
+
+"Get married, you mean?"
+
+"Surest thing you know. Girls coming up ask me what to bring by way of
+outfit. I used to make out a long list. Now I tell them to bring clothes
+enough for six weeks and their favorite wedding march."
+
+"Is this girl engaged?"
+
+"Can't prove it by me," said the officer lightly. "But she'll never get
+out of Alaska a spinster--not that girl. She may be going in to teach,
+or to run a millinery store, or to keep books for a trading company.
+She'll stay to bring up kiddies of her own. They all do."
+
+Three children came up the stairway, caught sight of Miss O'Neill, and
+raced pell-mell across the deck to her.
+
+The young woman's face was transformed. It was bubbling with tenderness,
+with gay and happy laughter. Flinging her arms wide, she waited for
+them. With incoherent cries of delight they flung themselves upon her.
+Her arms enveloped all three as she stooped for their hugs and kisses.
+
+The two oldest were girls. The youngest was a fat, cuddly little boy
+with dimples in his soft cheeks.
+
+"I dwessed myself, Aunt Sheba. Didn't I, Gwen?"
+
+"Not all by yourself, Billie?" inquired the Irish girl, registering a
+proper amazement.
+
+He nodded his head slowly and solemnly up and down. "Honeth to
+goodness."
+
+Sheba stooped and held him off to admire. "All by yourself--just think
+of that."
+
+"We helped just the teeniest bit on the buttons," confessed Janet, the
+oldest of the small family.
+
+"And I tied his shoes," added Gwendolen, "after he had laced them."
+
+"Billie will be such a big man Daddie won't know him." And Sheba gave
+him another hug.
+
+Gwendolen snuggled close to Miss O'Neill. "You always smell so sweet and
+clean and violety, Aunt Sheba," she whispered in confidence.
+
+"You're spoiling me, Gwen," laughed the young woman. "You've kissed the
+blarney stone. It's a good thing you're leaving the boat to-day."
+
+Miss Gwen had one more confidence to make in the ear of her friend.
+"I wish you'd come too and be our new mamma," she begged.
+
+A shell-pink tinge crept into the milky skin of the Irish girl. She was
+less sure of herself, more easily embarrassed, than the average American
+of her age and sex. Occasionally in her manner was that effect of
+shyness one finds in the British even after they have escaped from
+provincialism.
+
+"Are all your things gathered ready for packing, Janet?" she asked
+quietly.
+
+The purser gave information to Elliot. "They call her Aunt Sheba,
+but she's no relative of theirs. The kids are on their way in to their
+father, who is an engineer on one of the creeks back of Katma. Their
+mother died two months ago. Miss O'Neill met them first aboard the
+Skagit on the way up and she has mothered them ever since. Some women
+are that way, bless 'em. I know because I've been married to one myself
+six months. She's back there at St. Michael's, and she just grabs at
+every baby in the block."
+
+The eyes of Elliot rested on Miss O'Neill. "She loves children."
+
+"She sure does--no bluff about that." An imp of mischief sparkled in
+the eye of the supercargo. "Not married yourself, are you, Mr. Elliot?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Hmp!"
+
+That was all he said, but Gordon felt the blood creep into his face.
+This annoyed him, so he added brusquely,--
+
+"And not likely to be."
+
+When the call for breakfast came Miss O'Neill took her retinue of
+youngsters with her to the dining-room. Looking across from his seat at
+an adjoining table, Elliot could see her waiting upon them with a fine
+absorption in their needs. She prepared an orange for Billie and offered
+to the little girls suggestions as to ordering that were accepted by
+them as a matter of course. Unconsciously the children recognized in her
+the eternal Mother.
+
+Before they had been long in the dining-room Macdonald came in carrying
+a sheaf of business papers. He glanced around, recognized Elliot, and
+made instantly for the seat across the table from him. On his face and
+head were many marks of the recent battle.
+
+"Trade you a cauliflower ear for a pair of black eyes, Mr. Elliot," he
+laughed as he shook hands with the man whose name he had just learned
+from the purser.
+
+The grip of his brown, muscular hand was strong. It was in character
+with the steady, cool eyes set deep beneath the jutting forehead, with
+the confident carriage of the deep, broad shoulders. He looked a dynamic
+American, who trod the way of the forceful and fought for his share of
+the spoils.
+
+"You might throw in several other little souvenirs to boot and not miss
+them," suggested Elliot with a smile.
+
+Macdonald nodded indifferently. "I gave and I took, which was as it
+should be. But it's different with you, Mr. Elliot. This wasn't your
+row."
+
+"I hadn't been in a good mix-up since I left college. It did me a lot of
+good."
+
+"Much obliged, anyhow." He turned his attention to a lady entering the
+dining-room. "'Mornin', Mrs. Selfridge. How's Wally?"
+
+She threw up her hands in despair. "He's on his second bottle of
+liniment already. I expect those ruffians have ruined his singing voice.
+It's a mercy they didn't murder both him and you, Mr. Macdonald. When I
+think of how close you both came to death last night--"
+
+"I don't know about Wally, but I had no notion of dying, Mrs. Selfridge.
+They mussed us up a bit. That was all."
+
+"But they _meant_ to kill you, the cowards. And they almost did it too.
+Look at Wally--confined to his bed and speaking in a whisper. Look at
+you--a wreck, horribly beaten up, almost drowned. We must drive the
+villains out of the country or send them to prison."
+
+Mrs. Selfridge always talked in superlatives. She had an enthusiasm
+for the dramatics of conversation. Her supple hands, her shrill, eager
+voice, the snapping black eyes, all had the effect of startling
+headlines to the story she might be telling.
+
+"Am I a wreck?" the big Scotchman wanted to know. "I feel as husky as a
+well-fed malamute."
+
+"Oh, you _talk_. But we all know you--how brave and strong you are.
+That's why this outrage ought to be punished. What would Alaska do if
+anything happened to you?"
+
+"I hadn't thought of that," admitted Macdonald. "The North would have to
+go out of business, I suppose. But you're right about one thing, Mrs.
+Selfridge. I'm brave and strong enough at the breakfast table. Steward,
+will you bring me a double order of these shirred eggs--and a small
+steak?"
+
+"Well, I'm glad you can still joke, Mr. Macdonald, after such a terrible
+experience. All I can say is that I hope Wally isn't permanently
+injured. He hasn't your fine constitution, and one never can tell about
+internal injuries." Mrs. Selfridge sighed and passed to her place.
+
+The eyes of the big man twinkled. "Our little fracas has been a godsend
+to Mrs. Selfridge. Wally and I will both emerge as heroes of a desperate
+struggle. You won't even get a mention. But it's a pity about Wally's
+injuries--and his singing voice."
+
+The younger man agreed with a gravity back of which his amusement was
+apparent. The share of Selfridge in the battle had been limited to leg
+work only, but this had not been good enough to keep him from being
+overhauled and having his throat squeezed.
+
+Elliot finished breakfast first and left Macdonald looking over a
+long typewritten document. He had it propped against a water-bottle
+and was reading as he ate. The paper was a report Selfridge had brought
+in to him from a clerk in the General Land Office. The big Canadian
+and the men he represented were dealing directly with the heads of the
+Government departments, but they thought it the part of wisdom to keep
+in their employ subordinates in the capacity of secret service agents
+to spy upon the higher-ups.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE CREVASSE
+
+
+For an hour before the Hannah reached Katma Miss O'Neill was busy
+getting her little brood ready. In that last half-day she was a creature
+of moods to them. They, too, like Sheba herself, were adventuring into
+a new world. Somehow they represented to her the last tie that bound her
+to the life she was leaving. Her heart was tender as a Madonna to these
+lambs so ill-fitted to face a frigid waste. Their mother had been a good
+woman. She could tell that. But she had no way of knowing what kind of
+man their father might be.
+
+Sheba gave Janet advice about where to keep her money and when to wear
+rubbers and what to do for Billie's cold. She put up a lunch for them to
+take on the stage. When they said their sniffling good-byes at Katma she
+was suspiciously bright and merry. Soon the children were laughing again
+with her.
+
+One glance at their father, who introduced himself to Miss O'Neill
+as John Husted, relieved her mind greatly. His spontaneous delight at
+seeing them again and his choking gratitude to her for having looked
+after them were evidence enough that this kind-eyed man meant to be both
+father and mother to his recovered little folks. His emotion was too
+poignant for him to talk about his wife, but Sheba understood and liked
+him better for it.
+
+Her temporary family stood on the end of the wharf and called good-byes
+to the girl.
+
+"Tum soon and see us, Aunt Sheba," Billie shouted from his seat on the
+shoulder of his father.
+
+The children waved handkerchiefs as long as she could be distinguished
+by them. When they turned away she went directly to her room.
+
+Elliot was passing forward when Miss O'Neill opened her stateroom door
+to go in. The eyes of the young woman were blind with tears and she was
+biting her lip to keep back the emotion that welled up. He knew she was
+very fond of the motherless children, but he guessed at an additional
+reason for her sobs. She too was as untaught as a child in the life of
+this frontier land. Whatever she found here--how much of hardship or
+happiness, of grief or woe--she knew that she had left behind forever
+the safe harborage of quiet waters in which her life craft had always
+floated.
+
+It came on to rain in the afternoon. Heavy clouds swept across from the
+mountains, and the sodden sky opened like a sluice-box. The Kusiak
+contingent, driven indoors, resorted to bridge. Miss O'Neill read.
+Gordon Elliot wrote letters, dawdled over magazines, and lounged
+alternately in the ladies' parlor and the smoking-room, where Macdonald,
+Strong, a hardware merchant from Fairbanks, and a pair of sour-dough
+miners had settled themselves to a poker game that was to last all night
+and well into the next day.
+
+Of the two bridge tables all the players were old-timers except Mrs.
+Mallory. Most of them were young enough in years, but they had been of
+the North long enough to know the gossip of the country and its small
+politics intimately. They shared common hopes of the day when Alaska
+would be thrown open to industry and a large population.
+
+But Mrs. Mallory had come in over the ice for the first time last
+winter. The other women felt that she was a bird of passage, that the
+frozen Arctic could be no more than a whim to her. They deferred a
+little to her because she knew the great world--New York, Vienna,
+London, Paris. Great names fell from her lips casually and carelessly.
+She referred familiarly to princes and famous statesmen, as if she had
+gossiped with them tête-à-tête over the teacups. She was full of spicy
+little anecdotes about German royalty and the British aristocracy. It
+was no wonder, Gordon Elliot thought, that she had rather stunned the
+little social set of Kusiak.
+
+Through Northrup and Trelawney a new slant on Macdonald was given to
+Gordon. He had fallen into casual talk with them after dinner on the
+fore deck. It was still raining, but all three were equipped with
+slickers or mackintoshes. To his surprise the young man discovered that
+they bore him no grudge at all for his interference the night before.
+
+"But we ain't through with Colby Macdonald yet," Trelawney explained.
+"Mind, I don't say we're going to get him. Nothing like that. He
+knocked me cold with that loaded suitcase of his. By the looks of him
+I'm even for that. Good enough. But here's the point. We stand for
+Labor. He stands for Capital. See? Things ain't what they used to be
+in Alaska, and it's because of Colby Macdonald and his friends. They're
+grabbers--that's what they are. They want the whole works. A hell of a
+roar goes up from them when the Government stops their combines, but
+all the time they're bearing down a little harder on us workingmen.
+Understand? It's up to us to fight, ain't it?"
+
+Later Elliot put this viewpoint before Strong.
+
+"There's something in it," the miner agreed. "Wages have gone down, and
+it's partly because the big fellows are consolidating interests. Alaska
+ain't a poor man's country the way it was. But Mac ain't to blame for
+that. He has to play the game the way the cards are dealt out."
+
+The sky was clear again when the Hannah drew in to the wharf at Moose
+Head to unload freight, but the mud in the unpaved street leading to the
+business section of the little frontier town was instep deep. Many of
+the passengers hurried ashore to make the most of the five-hour stop.
+Macdonald, with Mrs. Mallory and their Kusiak friends, disappeared in
+a bus. Elliot put on a pair of heavy boots and started uptown.
+
+At the end of the wharf he passed Miss O'Neill. She wore no rubbers and
+she had come to a halt at the beginning of the mud. After a momentary
+indecision she returned slowly to the boat.
+
+The young man walked up into the town, but ten minutes later he crossed
+the gangplank of the Hannah again with a package under his arm. Miss
+O'Neill was sitting on the forward deck making a pretense to herself of
+reading. This was where Elliot had expected to find her, but now that
+the moment of attack had come he had to take his fear by the throat.
+When he had thought of it first there seemed nothing difficult about
+offering to do her a kindness, yet he found himself shrinking from the
+chance of a rebuff.
+
+He moved over to where she sat and lifted his hat. "I hope you won't
+think it a liberty, Miss O'Neill, but I've brought you some rubbers from
+a store uptown. I noticed you couldn't get ashore without them."
+
+Gordon tore the paper wrapping from his package and disclosed half a
+dozen pairs of rubbers.
+
+The girl was visibly embarrassed. She was not at all certain of the
+right thing to do. Where she had been brought up young men did not offer
+courtesies of this sort so informally.
+
+"I--I think I won't need them, thank you. I've decided not to leave the
+boat," she answered shyly.
+
+Elliot had never been accused of being a quitter. Having begun this, he
+proposed to see it out. He caught sight of the purser superintending the
+discharge of cargo and called to him by name. The officer joined them,
+a pad of paper and a pencil in his hand.
+
+"I'm trying to persuade Miss O'Neill that she ought to go ashore while
+we're lying here. What was it you told me about the waterfall back of
+the town?"
+
+"Finest thing of its kind in Alaska. They're so proud of it in this burg
+that they would like to make it against the law for any one to leave
+without seeing it. Every one takes it in. We won't get away till night.
+You've plenty of time if you want to see it."
+
+"Now, will you please introduce me to Miss O'Neill formally?"
+
+The purser went through the usual formula of presentation, adding that
+Elliot was a government official on his way to Kusiak. Having done his
+duty by the young man, the busy supercargo retired.
+
+"I'm sure it would do you good to walk up to the waterfall with me, Miss
+O'Neill," urged Elliot.
+
+She met a little dubiously the smile that would not stay quite
+extinguished on his good-looking, boyish face. Why shouldn't she go with
+him, since it was the American way for unchaperoned youth to enjoy
+itself naturally?
+
+"If they'll fit," the girl answered, eyeing the rubbers.
+
+Gordon dropped to his knee and demonstrated that they would.
+
+As they walked along the muddy street she gave him a friendly little nod
+of thanks. "Good of you to take the trouble to look out for me."
+
+He laughed. "It was myself I was looking out for. I'm a stranger in the
+country and was awfully lonesome."
+
+"Is it that this is your first time in too?" she asked shyly.
+
+"You're going to Kusiak, aren't you? Do you know anybody there?" replied
+Elliot.
+
+"My cousin lives there, but I haven't seen her since I was ten. She's an
+American. Eleven years ago she visited us in Ireland."
+
+"I'm glad you know some one," he said. "You'll not be so lonesome with
+some of your people living there. I have two friends at Kusiak--a girl I
+used to go to school with and her husband."
+
+"Are you going to live at Kusiak?"
+
+"No; but I'll be stationed in the Territory for several months. I'll be
+in and out of the town a good deal. I hope you'll let me see something
+of you."
+
+The fine Irish coloring deepened in her cheeks. He had a way of taking
+in his stride the barriers between them, but it was impossible for her
+to feel offended at this cheery, vigorous young fellow with the winning
+smile and the firm-set jaw. She liked the warmth in his honest brown
+eyes. She liked the play of muscular grace beneath his well-fitting
+clothes. The sinuous ease of his lean, wide-shouldered body stirred
+faintly some primitive instinct in her maiden heart. Sheba did not know,
+as her resilient muscles carried her forward joyfully, that she was
+answering the call of youth to youth.
+
+Gordon respected her shyness and moved warily to establish his contact.
+He let the talk drift to impersonal topics as they picked their way out
+from the town along the mossy trail. The ground was spongy with water.
+On either side of them ferns and brakes grew lush. Sheba took the porous
+path with a step elastic. To the young man following she seemed a
+miracle of supple lightness.
+
+The trail tilted up from the lowlands, led across dips, and into a draw.
+A little stream meandered down and gurgled over rocks worn smooth by
+ages of attrition. Alders brushed the stream and their foliage checkered
+the trail with sunlight and shadow.
+
+They were ascending steadily now along a pathway almost too indistinct
+to follow. The air was aromatic with pine from a grove that came
+straggling down the side of a gulch to the brook.
+
+"Do you know, I have a queer feeling that I've seen all this before,"
+the Irish girl said. "Of course I haven't--unless it was in my dreams.
+Naturally I've thought about Alaska a great deal because my father lived
+here."
+
+"I didn't know that."
+
+"Yes. He came in with the Klondike stampeders." She added quietly: "He
+died on Bonanza Creek two years later."
+
+"Was he a miner?"
+
+"Not until he came North. He had an interest in a claim. It later turned
+out worthless."
+
+A bit of stiff climbing brought them to a boulder field back of which
+rose a mountain ridge.
+
+"We've got off the trail somehow," Elliot said. "But I don't suppose it
+matters. If we keep going we're bound to come to the waterfall."
+
+Beyond the boulder field the ridge rose sharply. Gordon looked a little
+dubiously at Sheba.
+
+"Are you a good climber?"
+
+As she stood in the sunpour, her cheeks flushed with exercise, he could
+see that her spirit courted adventure.
+
+"I'm sure I must be," she answered with a smile adorable. "I believe I
+could do the Matterhorn to-day."
+
+Well up on the shoulder of the ridge they stopped to breathe. The
+distant noise of falling water came faintly to them.
+
+"We're too far to the left--must have followed the wrong spur," Elliot
+explained. "Probably we can cut across the face of the mountain."
+
+Presently they came to an impasse. The gulch between the two spurs
+terminated in a rock wall that fell almost sheer for two hundred feet.
+
+The color in the cheeks beneath the eager eyes of the girl was warm.
+"Let's try it," she begged.
+
+The young man had noticed that she was as sure-footed as a mountain goat
+and that she could stand on the edge of a precipice without dizziness.
+The surface of the wall was broken. What it might be beyond he could not
+tell, but the first fifty feet was a bit of attractive and not too
+difficult rock traverse.
+
+Now and again he made a suggestion to the young woman following him,
+but for the most part he trusted her to choose her own foot and hand
+holds. Her delicacy was silken strong. If she was slender, she was yet
+deep-bosomed. The movements of the girl were as certain as those of an
+experienced mountaineer.
+
+The way grew more difficult. They had been following a ledge that
+narrowed till it ran out. Jutting knobs of feldspar and stunted shrubs
+growing from crevices offered toe-grips instead of the even foothold of
+the rock shelf. As Gordon looked down at the dizzy fall beneath them his
+judgment told him they had better go back. He said as much to his
+companion.
+
+The smile she flashed at him was delightfully provocative. It served to
+point the figure she borrowed from Gwen. "So you think I'm a 'fraid-cat,
+Mr. Elliot?"
+
+His inclination marched with hers. It was their first adventure together
+and he did not want to spoil it by undue caution. There really was not
+much danger yet so long as they were careful.
+
+Gordon abandoned the traverse and followed an ascending crack in the
+wall. The going was hard. It called for endurance and muscle, as well
+as for a steady head and a sure foot. He looked down at the girl wedged
+between the slopes of the granite trough.
+
+She read his thought. "The old guard never surrenders, sir," was her
+quick answer as she brushed in salute with the tips of her fingers a
+stray lock of hair.
+
+The trough was worse than Elliot had expected. It had in it a good deal
+of loose rubble that started in small slides at the least pressure.
+
+"Be very careful of your footing," he called back anxiously.
+
+A small grassy platform lay above the upper end of the trough, but the
+last dozen feet of the approach was a very difficult bit. Gordon took
+advantage of every least projection. He fought his way up with his back
+against one wall and his knees pressed to the other. Three feet short of
+the platform the rock walls became absolutely smooth. The climber could
+reach within a foot of the top.
+
+"Are you stopped?" asked Sheba.
+
+"Looks that way."
+
+A small pine projected from the edge of the shelf out over the
+precipice. It might be strong enough to bear his weight. It might not.
+Gordon unbuckled his belt and threw one end over the trunk of the dwarf
+tree. Gingerly he tested it with his weight, then went up hand over hand
+and worked himself over the edge of the little plateau.
+
+"All right?" the girl called up.
+
+"All right. But you can't make it. I'm coming down again."
+
+"I'm going to try."
+
+"I wouldn't, Miss O'Neill. It's really dangerous."
+
+"I'd like to try it. I'll stop if it's too hard," she promised.
+
+The strength of her slender wrists surprised him. She struggled up the
+vertical crevasse inch by inch. His heart was full of fear, for a
+misstep now would be fatal. He lay down with his face over the ledge and
+lowered to her the buckled loop of his belt. Twice she stopped
+exhausted, her back and her hands pressed against the walls of the
+trough angle for support.
+
+"Better give it up," he advised.
+
+"I'll not then." She smiled stubbornly as she shook her head.
+
+Presently her fingers touched the belt.
+
+[Illustration: "SO YOU THINK I'M A 'FRAID-CAT, MR. ELLIOT?"]
+
+Gordon edged forward an inch or two farther. "Put your hand through the
+loop and catch hold of the leather above," he told her.
+
+She did so, and at the same instant her foot slipped. The girl swung out
+into space suspended by one wrist. The muscles of Elliot hardened into
+steel as they responded to the strain. His body began to slide very
+slowly down the incline.
+
+In a moment the acute danger was past. Sheba had found a hold with her
+feet and relieved somewhat the dead pull upon Elliot.
+
+She had not voiced a cry, but the face that looked up into his was very
+white.
+
+"Take your time," he said in a quiet, matter-of-fact way.
+
+With his help she came close enough for him to reach her hand. After
+that it was only a moment before she knelt on the plateau beside him.
+
+"Touch and go, wasn't it?" Sheba tried to smile, but the colorless lips
+told the young man she was still faint from the shock.
+
+He knew he was going to reproach himself bitterly for having led her
+into such a risk, but he could not just now afford to waste his energies
+on regrets. Nor could he let her mind dwell on past dangers so long as
+there were future ones to be faced.
+
+"You might have sprained your wrist," he said lightly as he rose to
+examine the cliff still to be negotiated.
+
+Her dark eyes looked at him with quick surprise. "So I might," she
+answered dryly.
+
+But his indifferent tone had the effect upon her of a plunge into cold
+water. It braced and stiffened her will. If he wanted to ignore the
+terrible danger through which she had passed, certainly she was not
+going to remind him of it.
+
+Between where they stood and the summit of the cliff was another rock
+traverse. A kind of rough, natural stairway led down to a point opposite
+them. But before this could be reached thirty feet of granite must be
+crossed. The wall looked hazardous enough in all faith. It lay in the
+shade, and there were spots where a thin coating of ice covered the
+smooth slabs. But there was no other way up, and if the traverse could
+be made the rest was easy.
+
+Gordon was mountaineer enough to know that the climb up is safer than
+the one back. The only possible way for them to go down the trough was
+for him to lower her by the belt until she found footing enough to go
+alone. He did not quite admit it to himself, but in his heart he doubted
+whether she could make it safely.
+
+The alternative was the cliff face.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+ACROSS THE TRAVERSE
+
+
+Elliot took off his shoes and turned toward the traverse.
+
+"Think I'll see if I can cross to that stairway. You had better wait
+here, Miss O'Neill, until we find out if it can be done."
+
+His manner was casual, his voice studiously light.
+
+Sheba looked across the cliff and down to the boulder bed two hundred
+feet below. "You can never do it in the world. Isn't there another way
+up?"
+
+"No. The wall above us slopes out. I've got to cross to the stairway. If
+I make it I'm going to get a rope."
+
+"Do you mean you're going back to town for one?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+Her eyes fastened to his in a long, unspoken question. She read the
+answer. He was afraid to have her try the trough again. To get back to
+town by way of their roundabout ascent would waste time. If he was going
+to rescue her before night, he must take the shortest cut, and that was
+across the face of the sheer cliff. For the first time she understood
+how serious was their plight.
+
+"We can go back together by the trough, can't we?" But even as she
+asked, her heart sank at the thought of facing again that dizzy height.
+The moment of horror when she had thought herself lost had shaken her
+nerve.
+
+"It would be difficult."
+
+The glance of the girl swept again the face of the wall he must cross.
+It could not be done without a rope. Her fear-filled eyes came back to
+his.
+
+"It's my fault. I made you come," she said in a low voice.
+
+"Nonsense," he answered cheerfully. "There's no harm done. If I can't
+reach the stairway I can come back and go down by the trough."
+
+Sheba assented doubtfully.
+
+It had come on to drizzle again. The rain was fine and cold, almost a
+mist, and already it was forming a film of ice on the rocks.
+
+"I can't take time to go back by the trough. The point is that I don't
+want you camped up here after night. There has been no sun on this side
+of the spur and in the chill of the evening it must get cold even in
+summer."
+
+He was making his preparations as he talked. His coat he took off and
+threw down. His shoes he tied by the laces to his belt.
+
+"I'll try not to be very long," he promised.
+
+"It's God's will then, so it is," she sighed, relapsing into the
+vernacular.
+
+Her voice was low and not very steady, for the heart of the girl was
+heavy. She knew she must not protest his decision. That was not the way
+to play the game. But somehow the salt had gone from their light-hearted
+adventure. She had become panicky from the moment when her feet had
+started the rubble in the trough and gone flying into the air. The
+gayety that had been the note of their tramp had given place to fears.
+
+Elliot took her little hand in a warm, strong grip. "You're not going to
+be afraid. We'll work out all right, you know."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"It's not just the thing to leave a lady in the rain when you take her
+for a walk, but it can't be helped. We'll laugh about it to-morrow."
+
+Would they? she wondered, answering his smile faintly. Her courage was
+sapped. She wanted to cry out that he must not try the traverse, but she
+set her will not to make it harder for him.
+
+He turned to the climb.
+
+"You've forgotten your coat," she reminded.
+
+"I'm traveling light this trip. You'd better slip it on before you get
+chilled."
+
+Sheba knew he had left it on purpose for her.
+
+Her fascinated eyes followed him while he moved out from the
+plateau across the face of the precipice. His hand had found a knob
+of projecting feldspar and he was feeling with his right foot for a
+hold in some moss that grew in a crevice. He had none of the tools for
+climbing--no rope, no hatchet, none of the support of numbers. All the
+allies he could summon were his bare hands and feet, his resilient
+muscles, and his stout heart. To make it worse, the ice film from the
+rain coated every jutting inch of quartz with danger.
+
+But he worked steadily forward, moving with the infinite caution of
+one who knows that there will be no chance to remedy later any mistake.
+A slight error in judgment, the failure in response of any one of fifty
+muscles, would send him plunging down.
+
+Occasionally he spoke to Sheba, but she volunteered no remarks. It was
+her part to wait and watch while he concentrated every faculty upon his
+task. He had come to an impasse after crossing a dozen feet of the wall
+and was working up to get around a slab of granite which protruded, a
+convex barrier, from the surface of the cliff. It struck the girl that
+from a distance he must look like a fly on a pane of glass. Even to her,
+close as she was, that smooth rock surface looked impossible.
+
+Her eye left him for an instant to sweep the gulf below. She gave a
+little cry, ran to his coat, and began to wave it. For the first time
+since Elliot had begun the traverse she took the initiative in speech.
+
+"I see some people away over to the left, Mr. Elliot. I'm going to call
+to them." Her voice throbbed with hope.
+
+But it was not her shouts or his, which would not have carried one tenth
+the distance, that reached the group in the valley. One of them caught a
+glimpse of the wildly waving coat. There was a consultation and two or
+three fluttered handkerchiefs in response. Presently they moved on.
+
+Sheba could not believe her eyes. "They're not leaving us surely?" she
+gasped.
+
+"That's what they're doing," answered Gordon grimly. "They think we're
+calling to them out of vanity to show them where we climbed."
+
+"Oh!" She strangled a sob in her throat. Her heart was weighted as with
+lead.
+
+"I'm going to make it. I think I see my way from here," her companion
+called across to her. "A fault runs to the foot of the stairway, if I
+can only do the next yard or two."
+
+He did them, by throwing caution to the winds. An icy, rounded boulder
+projected above him out of reach. He unfastened his belt again and put
+the shoes, tied by the laces, around his neck. There was one way to get
+across to the ledge of the fault. He took hold of the two ends of the
+belt, crouched, and leaned forward on tiptoes toward the knob. The loop
+of the belt slid over the ice-coated boss. There was no chance to draw
+back now, to test the hold he had gained. If the leather slipped he was
+lost. His body swung across the abyss and his feet landed on the little
+ledge beyond.
+
+His shout of success came perhaps ten minutes later. "I've reached
+the stairway, Miss O'Neill. I'll try not to be long, but you'd better
+exercise to keep up the circulation. Don't worry, please. I'll be back
+before night."
+
+"I'm so glad," she cried joyfully. "I was afraid for you. And I'll not
+worry a bit. Good-bye."
+
+Elliot made his way up to the summit and ran along a footpath which
+brought him to a bridge across the mountain stream just above the falls.
+The trail zigzagged down the turbulent little river close to the bank.
+Before he had specialized on the short distances Gordon had been a
+cross-country runner. He was in fair condition and he covered the ground
+fast.
+
+About a mile below the falls he met two men. One of them was Colby
+Macdonald. He carried a coil of rope over one shoulder. The big
+Alaskan explained that he had not been able to get it out of his
+head that perhaps the climbers who had waved at his party had been in
+difficulties. So he had got a rope from the cabin of an old miner and
+was on his way back to the falls.
+
+The three climbed to the falls, crossed the bridge, and reached the top
+of the cliff.
+
+"You know the lay of the land down there, Mr. Elliot. We'll lower you,"
+decided Macdonald, who took command as a matter of course.
+
+Gordon presently stood beside Sheba on the little plateau. She had
+quite recovered from the touch of hysteria that had attacked her courage.
+The wind and the rain had whipped the color into her soft cheeks, had
+disarranged a little the crinkly, blue-black hair, wet tendrils of which
+nestled against her temples. The health and buoyancy of the girl were in
+the live eyes that met his eagerly.
+
+"You weren't long," was all she said.
+
+"I met them coming," he answered as he dropped the loop of the rope over
+her head and arranged it under her shoulders.
+
+He showed her how to relieve part of the strain of the rope on her flesh
+by using her hands to lift.
+
+"All ready?" Macdonald called from above.
+
+"All ready," Elliot answered. To Sheba he said, "Hold tight."
+
+The girl was swung from the ledge and rose jerkily in the air. She
+laughed gayly down at her friend below.
+
+"It's fun."
+
+Gordon followed her a couple of minutes later. She was waiting to give
+him a hand over the edge of the cliff.
+
+"Miss O'Neill, this is Mr. Macdonald," he said, as soon as he had freed
+himself from the rope. "You are fellow passengers on the Hannah."
+
+Macdonald was looking at her straight and hard. "Your father's name--was
+it Farrell O'Neill?" he asked bluntly.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I knew him."
+
+The girl's eyes lit. "I'm glad, Mr. Macdonald. That's one reason I
+wanted to come to Alaska--to hear about my father's life here. Will you
+tell me?"
+
+"Sometime. We must be going now to catch the boat--after I've had a look
+at the cliff this young man crawled across."
+
+He turned away, abruptly it struck Elliot, and climbed down the natural
+stairway up which the young man had come. Presently he rejoined those
+above. Macdonald looked at Elliot with a new respect.
+
+"You're in luck, my friend, that we're not carrying you from the foot
+of the cliff," he said dryly. "I wouldn't cross that rock wall for a
+hundred thousand dollars in cold cash."
+
+"Nor I again," admitted Gordon with a laugh. "But we had either to
+homestead that plateau or vacate it. I preferred the latter."
+
+Miss O'Neill's deep eyes looked at him. She was about to speak, then
+changed her mind.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+SHEBA SINGS--AND TWO MEN LISTEN
+
+
+Elliot did not see Miss O'Neill next morning until she appeared in the
+dining-room for breakfast. He timed himself to get through so as to join
+her when she left. They strolled out to the deck together.
+
+"Did you sleep well?" he asked.
+
+"After I fell asleep. It took me a long time. I kept seeing you on the
+traverse."
+
+He came abruptly to what was on his mind. "I have an apology to make,
+Miss O'Neill. If I made light of your danger yesterday, it was because I
+was afraid you might break down. I had to seem unsympathetic rather than
+risk that."
+
+She smiled forgiveness. "All you said was that I might have sprained my
+wrist. It was true too. I might have--and I did." Sheba showed a white
+linen bandage tied tightly around her wrist.
+
+"Does it pain much?"
+
+"Not so much now. It throbbed a good deal last night."
+
+"Your whole weight came on it with a wrench. No wonder it hurt."
+
+Sheba noticed that the Hannah was drawing up to a wharf and the
+passengers were lining up with their belongings. "Is this where we
+change?"
+
+"Those of us going to Kusiak transfer here. But there's no hurry.
+We wait at this landing two hours."
+
+Gordon helped Sheba move her baggage to the other boat and joined
+her on deck. They were both strangers in the land. Their only common
+acquaintance was Macdonald and he was letting Mrs. Mallory absorb his
+attention just now. Left to their own resources the two young people
+naturally drifted together a good deal.
+
+This suited Elliot. He found his companion wholly delightful, not the
+less because she was so different from the girls he knew at home. She
+could be frank, and even shyly audacious on occasion, but she held a
+little note of reserve he felt bound to respect. Her experience of the
+world had clearly been limited. She was not at all sure of herself, of
+the proper degree of intimacy to permit herself with a strange and
+likable young man who had done her so signal a service.
+
+Macdonald left the boat twenty miles below Kusiak with Mrs. Mallory and
+the Selfridges. A chauffeur with a motor-car was waiting on the wharf to
+run them to town, but he gave the wheel to Macdonald and took the seat
+beside the driver.
+
+The little miner Strong grinned across to Elliot, who was standing
+beside Miss O'Neill at the boat rail.
+
+"That's Mac all over. He hires a fellow to run his car--brings him up
+here from Seattle--and then takes the wheel himself every time he rides.
+I don't somehow see Mac sitting back and letting another man run the
+machine."
+
+It was close to noon before the river boat turned a bend and steamed up
+to the wharf at Kusiak. The place was an undistinguished little log town
+that rambled back from the river up the hill in a hit-or-miss fashion.
+Its main street ran a tortuous course parallel to the stream.
+
+Half of the town, it seemed, was down to meet the boat.
+
+"Are you going to the hotel or direct to your cousin's?" Gordon asked
+Miss O'Neill.
+
+"To my cousin's. I fancy she's down here to meet me. It was arranged
+that I come on this boat."
+
+There was much waving of handkerchiefs and shouting back and forth as
+the steamer slowly drew close to the landing.
+
+Elliot caught a glimpse of the only people in Kusiak he had known before
+coming in, but though he waved to them he saw they did not recognize
+him. After the usual delay about getting ashore he walked down the
+gangway carrying the suitcases of the Irish girl. Sheba followed at his
+heels. On the wharf he came face to face with a slender, well-dressed
+young woman.
+
+"Diane!" he cried.
+
+She stared at him. "You! What in Heaven's name are you doing here,
+Gordon Elliot?" she demanded, and before he could answer had seized both
+hands and turned excitedly to call a stocky man near. "Peter--Peter!
+Guess who's here?"
+
+"Hello, Paget!" grinned Gordon, and he shook hands with the husband of
+Diane.
+
+Elliot turned to introduce his friend, but she anticipated him.
+
+"Cousin Diane," she said shyly. "Don't you know me?"
+
+Mrs. Paget swooped down upon the girl and smothered her in her embrace.
+
+"This is Sheba--little Sheba that I have told you so often about,
+Peter," she cried. "Glory be, I'm glad to see you, child." And Diane
+kissed her again warmly. "You two met on the boat, of course, coming
+in, I hope you didn't let her get lonesome, Gordon. Look after Sheba's
+suitcases, Peter. You'll come to dinner to-night, Gordon--at seven."
+
+"I'm in the kind hands of my countrywoman," laughed Gordon. "I'll
+certainly be on hand."
+
+"But what in the world are you doing here? You're the last man I'd have
+expected to see."
+
+"I'm in the service of the Government, and I've been sent in on
+business."
+
+"Well, I'm going to say something original, dear people," Mrs. Paget
+replied. "It's a small world, isn't it?"
+
+While he was dressing for dinner later in the day, Elliot recalled
+early memories of the Pagets. He had known Diane ever since they had
+been youngsters together at school. He remembered her as a restless,
+wiry little thing, keen as a knife-blade. She had developed into a very
+pretty girl, alive, ambitious, energetic, with a shrewd eye to the main
+chance. Always popular socially, she had surprised everybody by refusing
+the catch of the town to marry a young mining engineer without a penny.
+Gordon was in college at the time, but during the next long vacation
+he had fraternized a good deal with the Peter Pagets. The young
+married people had been very much in love with each other, but not too
+preoccupied to take the college boy into their happiness as a comrade.
+Diane always had been a manager, and she liked playing older sister
+to so nice a lad. He had been on a footing friendly enough to drop in
+unannounced whenever he took the fancy. If they were out, or about to go
+out, the freedom of the den, a magazine, and good tobacco had been his.
+Then the Arctic gold-fields had claimed Paget and his bride. That had
+been more than ten years ago, and until to-day Gordon had not seen them
+since.
+
+While Elliot was brushing his dinner coat before the open window of the
+room assigned him at the hotel, somebody came out to the porch below.
+The voice of a woman floated faintly to him.
+
+"Seen Diane's Irish beauty yet, Ned?"
+
+"Yes," a man answered.
+
+The woman laughed softly. "Mrs. Mallory came up on the same boat with
+her." The inflection suggested that the words were meant not to tell a
+fact, but some less obvious inference.
+
+"Oh, you women!" the man commented good-naturedly.
+
+"She's wonderfully pretty, and of course Diane will make the most of
+her. But Mrs. Mallory is a woman among ten thousand."
+
+"I'd choose the girl if it were me," said the man.
+
+"But it isn't you. We'll see what we'll see."
+
+They were moving up the street and Gordon heard no more. What he had
+heard was not clear to him. Why should any importance attach to the fact
+that Mrs. Mallory and Sheba O'Neill had come up the river on the same
+boat? Yet he was vaguely disturbed by the insinuation that in some way
+Diane was entering her cousin as a rival of the older woman. He resented
+the idea that the fine, young personality of the Irish girl was being
+cheapened by management on the part of Diane Paget.
+
+Elliot was not the only dinner guest at the Paget home that evening. He
+found Colby Macdonald sitting in the living-room with Sheba. She came
+quickly forward to meet the newly arrived guest.
+
+"Mr. Macdonald has been telling me about my father. He knew him on
+Frenchman Creek where they both worked claims," explained the girl.
+
+The big mining man made no comment and added nothing to what she said.
+There were times when his face was about as expressive as a stone wall.
+Except for a hard wariness in the eyes it told nothing now.
+
+The dinner went off very well. Diane and Peter had a great many
+questions to ask Gordon about old friends. By the time these had been
+answered Macdonald was chatting easily with Sheba. The man had been in
+many out-of-the-way corners of the world, had taken part in much that
+was dramatic and interesting. If the experience of the Irish girl had
+been small, her imagination had none the less gone questing beyond the
+narrow bars of her life upon amazing adventure. She listened with
+glowing eyes to the strange tales this man of magnificent horizons had
+to tell. Never before had she come into contact with any one like him.
+
+The others too succumbed to his charm. He dominated that little
+dining-room because he was a sixty-horse-power dynamo. For all his bulk
+he was as lean as a panther and as sinewy. There was virility in the
+very economy of his motions, in the reticence of his speech. Not even
+a fool could have read weakness there. When he followed Sheba into the
+living-room, power trod in his long, easy stride.
+
+Paget was superintendent of the Lucky Strike, a mine owned principally
+by Macdonald. The two talked business for a few minutes over their
+cigars, but Diane interrupted gayly to bring them back into the circle.
+Adroitly she started Macdonald on the account of a rescue of two men
+lost in a blizzard the year before. He had the gift of dramatizing his
+story, of selecting only effective details. There was no suggestion of
+boasting. If he happened to be the hero of any of his stories the fact
+was of no importance to him. It was merely a detail of the picture he
+was sketching.
+
+Gordon interrupted with a question a story he was telling of a fight he
+had seen between two bull moose.
+
+"Did you say that was while you were on the way over to inspect the
+Kamatlah coal-fields for the first time?"
+
+The eyes of the young man were quick with interest.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Four years ago last spring?"
+
+Macdonald looked at him with a wary steadiness. Some doubt had found
+lodgment in his mind. Before he could voice it, if, indeed, he had any
+such intention, Elliot broke in swiftly,--
+
+"Don't answer that question. I asked it without proper thought. I am a
+special agent of the General Land Office sent up to investigate the
+Macdonald coal claims and kindred interests."
+
+Slowly the rigor of the big Scotchman's steely eyes relaxed to a smile
+that was genial and disarming. If this news hit him hard he gave no sign
+of it. And that it was an unexpected blow there could be no doubt.
+
+"Glad you've come, Mr. Elliot. We ask nothing but fair play. Tell the
+truth, and we'll thank you. The men who own the Macdonald group of
+claims have nothing to conceal. I'll answer that question. I meant to
+say two years ago last spring."
+
+His voice was easy and his gaze unwavering as he made the correction,
+yet everybody in the room except Sheba knew he was deliberately lying
+to cover the slip. For the admission that he had inspected the Kamatlah
+field just before his dummies had filed upon it would at least tend to
+aggravate suspicion that the entries were not _bona-fide_.
+
+It was rather an awkward moment. Diane blamed herself because she had
+brought the men together socially. Why had she not asked Gordon more
+explicitly what his business was? Peter grinned a little uncomfortably.
+It was Sheba who quite unconsciously relieved the situation.
+
+"But what about the big moose, Mr. Macdonald? What did it do then?"
+
+The Alaskan went back to his story. He was talking for Sheba alone,
+for the young girl with eager, fascinated eyes which flashed with
+sympathy as they devoured selected glimpses of his wild, turbulent
+career. Her clean, brave spirit was throwing a glamour over the man.
+She saw him with other eyes than Elliot's. The Government official
+admired him tremendously. Macdonald was an empire-builder. He blazed
+trails for others to follow in safety. But Gordon could guess how
+callously his path was strewn with brutality, with the effects of an
+ethical color-blindness largely selfish, though even he did not know
+that the man's primitive jungle code of wolf eat wolf had played havoc
+with Sheba's young life many years before.
+
+Diane, satisfied that Macdonald had scored, called upon Sheba.
+
+"I want you to sing for us, dear, if you will."
+
+Sheba accompanied herself. The voice of the girl had no unusual range,
+but it was singularly sweet and full of the poignant feeling that
+expresses the haunting pathos of her race.
+
+ "It's well I know ye, Shevè Cross, ye weary, stony hill,
+ An' I'm tired, och, I'm tired to be looking on ye still.
+ For here I live the near side an' he is on the far,
+ An' all your heights and hollows are between us, so they are.
+ Och anee!"
+
+Gordon, as he listened, felt the strange hunger of that homesick cry
+steal through his blood. He saw his own emotions reflected in the face
+of the Scotch-Canadian, who was watching with a tense interest the slim,
+young figure at the piano, the girl whose eyes were soft and dewy with
+the mysticism of her people, were still luminous with the poetry of the
+child in spite of the years that heralded her a woman.
+
+Elliot intercepted the triumphant sweep of Diane's glance from Macdonald
+to her husband. In a flash it lit up for him the words he had heard on
+the hotel porch. Diane, an inveterate matchmaker, intended her cousin to
+marry Colby Macdonald. No doubt she thought she was doing a fine thing
+for the girl. He was a millionaire, the biggest figure in the Northwest.
+His iron will ran the town and district as though the people were
+chattels of his. Back of him were some of the biggest financial
+interests in the United States.
+
+But the gorge of Elliot rose. The man, after all, was a law-breaker,
+a menace to civilization. He was a survivor by reason of his strength
+from the primitive wolf-pack. Already the special agent had heard many
+strange stories of how this man of steel had risen to supremacy by
+trampling down lesser men with whom he had had dealings, of terrible
+battles from which his lean, powerful body had emerged bloody and
+battered, but victorious. The very look of his hard, gray eyes was
+dominant and masterful. He would win, no matter how. It came to Gordon's
+rebel heart that if Macdonald wanted this lovely Irish girl,--and the
+young man never doubted that the Scotchman would want her,--he would
+reach out and gather in Sheba just as if she were a coal mine or a
+placer prospect.
+
+All this surged through the mind of the young man while the singer was
+on the first line of the second stanza.
+
+ "But if 't was only Shevè Cross to climb from foot to crown,
+ I'd soon be up an' over that, I'd soon be runnin' down.
+ Then sure the great ould sea itself is there beyont the bar,
+ An' all the windy wathers are between us, so they are.
+ Och anee!"
+
+The rich, soft, young voice with its Irish brogue died away. The little
+audience paid the singer the tribute of silence. She herself was the
+first to speak.
+
+"'Divided' is the name of it. A namesake of mine, Moira O'Neill, wrote
+it," she explained.
+
+"It's a beautiful song, and I thank ye for singing it," Macdonald said
+simply. "It minds me of my own barefoot days by the Tay."
+
+Later in the evening the two dinner guests walked back to the hotel
+together. The two subjects uppermost in the minds of both were not
+mentioned by either. They discussed casually the cost of living in the
+North, the raising of strawberries at Kusiak, and the best way to treat
+the mosquito nuisance, but neither of them referred to the Macdonald
+coal claims or to Sheba O'Neill.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+WALLY GETS ORDERS
+
+
+Macdonald, from his desk, looked up at the man in the doorway. Selfridge
+had come in jauntily, a cigar in his mouth, but at sight of the grim
+face of his chief the grin fled.
+
+"Come in and shut the door," ordered the Scotchman. "I sent for you to
+congratulate you, Wally. You did fine work outside. You told me, didn't
+you, that it was all settled at last--that our claims are clear-listed
+for patent?"
+
+The tubby little man felt the edge of irony in the quiet voice. "Sure.
+That's what Winton told me," he assented nervously.
+
+"Then you'll be interested to know that a special field agent of the
+Land Department sat opposite me last night and without batting an eye
+came across with the glad news that he was here to investigate our
+claims."
+
+Selfridge bounced up like a rubber ball from the chair into which he had
+just settled. "What!"
+
+"Pleasant surprise, isn't it? I've been wondering what you were doing
+outside. Of course I know you had to take in the shows and cabarets of
+New York. But couldn't you edge in an hour or two once a week to attend
+to business?"
+
+Wally's collar began to choke him. The cool, hard words of the big
+Scotchman pelted like hail.
+
+"Must be a bluff, Mac. The muckrake magazines have raised such a row
+about the Guttenchild crowd putting over a big steal on the public that
+the party leaders are scared stiff. I couldn't pick up a newspaper
+anywhere without seeing your name in the headlines. It was fierce."
+Selfridge had found his glib tongue and was off.
+
+"I understand that, Wally. What I don't get is how you came to let them
+slip this over on you without even a guess that it was going to happen."
+
+That phase of the subject Selfridge did not want to discuss.
+
+"Bet you a hat I've guessed it right--just a grand-stand play of the
+Administration to fool the dear people. This fellow has got his orders
+to give us a clean bill of health. Sure. That must be it. I suppose it's
+this man Elliot that came up on the boat with us."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, that's easy. If he hasn't been seen we can see him."
+
+Macdonald looked his man Friday over with a scarcely veiled contempt.
+"You have a beautiful, childlike faith in every man's dishonesty, Wally.
+Did it ever occur to you that some people are straight--that they won't
+sell out?"
+
+"All he gets is a beggarly two thousand or so a year. We can fix him all
+right."
+
+"You've about as much vision as a breed trader. Unless I miss my guess
+Elliot isn't that kind. He'll go through to a finish. What I'd like to
+know is how his mind works. If he sees straight we're all right, but if
+he is a narrow conservation fanatic he might go ahead and queer the
+whole game."
+
+"You wouldn't stand for that." The quick glance of Selfridge asked a
+question.
+
+The lips of the Scotchman were like steel traps and his eyes points of
+steel. "We'll cross that bridge if we come to it. Our first move is to
+try to win him to see this thing our way. I'll have a casual talk with
+him before he leaves for Kamatlah and feel him out."
+
+"What's he doing here at all? If he's investigating the Kamatlah claims,
+why does he go hundreds of miles out of his way to come in to Kusiak?"
+asked Selfridge.
+
+Macdonald smiled sardonically. "He's doing this job right. Elliot as
+good as told me that he's on the job to look up my record thoroughly. So
+he comes to Kusiak first. In a few days he'll leave for Kamatlah. That's
+where you come in, Wally."
+
+"How do you mean?"
+
+"You're going to start for Kamatlah to-morrow. You'll arrange the stage
+before he gets there--see all the men and the foremen. Line them up so
+they'll come through with the proper talk. If you have any doubts about
+whether you can trust some one, don't take any chances. Fire him out of
+the camp. Offer Elliot the company hospitality. Load him down with
+favors. Take him everywhere. Show him everything. But don't let him get
+any proofs that the claims are being worked under the same management."
+
+"But he'll suspect it."
+
+"You can't help his suspicions. Don't let him get proof. Cover all the
+tracks that show company control."
+
+"I can fix that," he said. "But what about Holt? The old man won't do a
+thing but tell all he knows, and a lot more that he suspects. You know
+how bitter he is--and crazy. He ought to be locked away with the
+flitter-mice."
+
+"You mustn't let Elliot meet Holt."
+
+"How the deuce can I help it? No chance to keep them apart in that
+little hole. It can't be done."
+
+"Can't it?"
+
+Something in the quiet voice rang a bell of alarm in the timid heart of
+Selfridge.
+
+"You mean--"
+
+"A man who works for me as my lieutenant must have nerve, Wally. Have
+you got it? Will you take orders and go through with them?"
+
+His hard eyes searched the face of the plump little man. This was a job
+he would have liked to do himself, but he could not get away just now.
+Selfridge was the only man about him he could trust with it.
+
+Wally nodded. His lips were dry and parched. "Go to it. What am I to do?"
+
+"Get Holt out of the way while Elliot is at Kamatlah."
+
+"But, Good Lord, I can't keep the man tied up a month," protested the
+leading tenor of Kusiak.
+
+"It isn't doing Holt any good to sit tight clamped to that claim of his!
+He needs a change. Besides, I want him away so that we can contest his
+claim. Run him up into the hills. Or send him across to Siberia on a
+whaler. Or, better still, have him arrested for insanity and send him to
+Nome. I'll get Judge Landor to hold him a while."
+
+"That would give him an alibi for his absence and prevent a contest."
+
+"That's right. It would."
+
+"Leave it to me. The old man is going on a vacation, though he doesn't
+know it yet."
+
+"Good enough, Wally. I'll trust you. But remember, this fight has
+reached an acute stage. No more mistakes. The devil of it is we never
+seem to land the knockout punch. We've beaten this bunch of reform
+idiots before Winton, before the Secretary of the Interior, before the
+President, and before Congress. Now they're beginning all over again.
+Where is it to end?"
+
+"This is their last kick. Probably Guttenchild agreed to it so as to
+let the party go before the people at the next election without any
+apologies. Entirely formal investigation, I should say."
+
+This might be true, or it might not. Macdonald knew that just now the
+American people, always impulsive in its thinking, was supporting
+strongly the movement for conservation. A searchlight had been turned
+upon the Kamatlah coal-fields. Magazines and newspapers had hammered
+it home to readers that the Guttenchild and allied interests were
+engaged in a big steal from the people of coal, timber, and power-site
+lands to the value of more than a hundred million dollars.
+
+The trouble had originated in a department row, but it had spread until
+the Macdonald claims had become a party issue. The officials of the Land
+Office, as well as the National Administration, were friendly to the
+claimants. They had no desire to offend one of the two largest money
+groups in the country. But neither did they want to come to wreck on
+account of the Guttenchilds. They found it impossible to ignore the
+charge that the entries were fraudulent and if consummated would result
+in a wholesale robbery of the public domain. Superficial investigations
+had been made and the claimants whitewashed. But the clamor had
+persisted.
+
+Though he denied it officially, Macdonald made a present to the public
+of the admission that the entries were irregular. Laws, he held, were
+made for men and should be interpreted to aid progress. Bad ones ought
+to be evaded.
+
+The facts were simple enough. Macdonald was the original promoter of
+the Kamatlah coal-field. He had engaged dummy entrymen to take up one
+hundred and sixty acres each under the Homestead Act. Later he intended
+to consolidate the claims and turn them over to the Guttenchilds under
+an agreement by which he was to receive one eighth of the stock of the
+company formed to work the mines. The entries had been made, the fee
+accepted by the Land Office, and receipts issued. In course of time
+Macdonald had applied for patents.
+
+Before these were issued the magazines began to pour in their
+broadsides, and since then the papers had been held up.
+
+The conscience of Macdonald was quite clear. The pioneers in Alaska were
+building out of the Arctic waste a new empire for the United States, and
+he held that a fair Government could do no less than offer them liberal
+treatment. To lock up from present use vast resources needed by Alaskans
+would be a mistaken policy, a narrow and perverted application of the
+doctrine of conservation. The Territory should be thrown open to the
+world. If capital were invited in to do its share of the building,
+immigration would flow rapidly northward. Within the lives of the
+present generation the new empire would take shape and wealth would pour
+inevitably into the United States from its frozen treasure house.
+
+The view held by Macdonald was one common to the whole Pacific Coast.
+Seattle, Portland, San Francisco were a unit in the belief that the
+Government had no right to close the door of Alaska and then put a
+padlock upon it.
+
+Feminine voices drifted from the outer office. Macdonald opened the door
+to let in Mrs. Selfridge and Mrs. Mallory.
+
+The latter lady, Paris-shod and gloved, shook hands smilingly with the
+Scotch-Canadian. "Of course we're intruders in business hours, though
+you'll tell us we're not," she suggested.
+
+He was not a man to surrender easily to the spell of woman, but when he
+looked into her deep-lidded, smouldering eyes something sultry beat in
+his blood.
+
+"Business may fly out of the window when Mrs. Mallory comes in at the
+door," he answered.
+
+"How gallant of you, especially when I've come with an impertinent
+question." Her gay eyes mocked him as she spoke.
+
+"Then I'll probably tell you to mind your own business," he laughed.
+"Let's have your question."
+
+"I've just been reading the 'Transcontinental Magazine.' A writer there
+says that you are a highway robber and a gambler. I know you're a robber
+because all the magazines say so. But are you only a big gambler?"
+
+He met her raillery without the least embarrassment.
+
+"Sure I gamble. Every time I take a chance I'm gambling. So does
+everybody else. When you walk past the Flatiron Building you bet it
+won't fall down and crush you. We've got to take chances to live."
+
+"How true, and I never thought of it," beamed Mrs. Selfridge. "What a
+philosopher you are, Mr. Macdonald."
+
+The Scotchman went on without paying any attention to her effervescence.
+"I've gambled ever since I was a kid. I bet I could cross Death Valley
+and get out alive. That time I won. I bet it would rain once down in
+Arizona before my cattle died. I lost. Another time I took a contract
+to run a tunnel. In my bid I bet I wouldn't run into rock. My bank went
+broke that trip. When I joined the Klondike rush I was backing my luck
+to stand up. Same thing when I located the Kamatlah field. The coal
+might be a poor quality. Maybe I couldn't interest big capital in the
+proposition. Perhaps the Government would turn me down when I came to
+prove up. I was betting my last dollar against big odds. When I quit
+gambling it will be because I've quit living."
+
+"And I suppose I'm a gambler too?" Mrs. Mallory demanded with a little
+tilt of her handsome head.
+
+He looked straight at her with the keen eyes that had bored through her
+from the first day they had met, the eyes that understood the manner of
+woman she was and liked her none the less.
+
+"Of all the women I know you are the best gambler. It's born in you."
+
+"Why, Mr. Macdonald!" screamed Mrs. Selfridge in her high staccato. "I
+don't think that's a compliment."
+
+Mrs. Mallory did not often indulge in the luxury of a blush, but she
+changed color now. This big, blunt man sometimes had an uncanny
+divination. Did he, she asked herself, know what stake she was gambling
+for at Kusiak?
+
+"You are too wise," she laughed with a touch of embarrassment very
+becoming. "But I suppose you are right. I like excitement."
+
+"We all do. The only man who doesn't gamble is the convict in stripes,
+and the only reason he doesn't is that his chips are all gone. It's true
+that men on the frontier play for bigger stakes. They back their bets
+with all they have got and put their lives on top for good measure. But
+kids in the cradle all over the United States are going to live easier
+because of the gamblers at the dropping-off places. That writer fellow
+hit the nail on the head about me. My whole life is a gamble."
+
+She moved with slow grace toward the door, then over her shoulder
+flashed a sudden invitation at him. "Mrs. Selfridge and I are doing a
+little betting to-day, Big Chief Gambler. We're backing our luck that
+you two men will eat lunch with us at the Blue Bird Inn. Do we win?"
+
+Macdonald reached for his hat promptly. "You win."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE END OF THE PASSAGE
+
+
+Wally Selfridge was a reliable business subordinate, even though he had
+slipped up in the matter of the appointment of Elliot. But when it came
+to facing the physical hardships of the North he was a malingerer. The
+Kamatlah trip had to be taken because his chief had ordered it, but the
+little man shirked the journey in his heart just as he knew his soft
+muscles would shrink from the aches of the trail.
+
+His idea of work was a set of tennis on the outdoor wooden court of the
+Kusiak clubhouse, and even there his game was not a hard, smashing one,
+but an easy foursome with a girl for partner. He liked better to play
+bridge with attendants at hand to supply drinks and cigars. By nature he
+was a sybarite. The call of the frontier found no response in his
+sophisticated soul.
+
+The part of the journey to be made by water was not so bad. Left to his
+own judgment, he would have gone to St. Michael's by boat and chartered
+a small steamer for the long trip along the coast through Bering Sea.
+But this would take time, and Macdonald did not mean to let him waste
+a day. He was to leave the river boat at the big bend and pack across
+country to Kamatlah. It would be a rough, heavy trail. The mosquitoes
+would be a continual torment. The cooking would be poor. And at the end
+of the long trek there awaited him monotonous months in a wretched coal
+camp far from all the comforts of civilization. No wonder he grumbled.
+
+But though he grumbled at home and at the club and on the street about
+his coming exile, Selfridge made no complaints to Macdonald. That man of
+steel had no sympathy with the yearnings for the fleshpots. He was used
+to driving himself through discomfort to his end, and he expected as
+much of his deputies. Wherefore Wally took the boat at the time
+scheduled and waved a dismal farewell to wife and friends assembled upon
+the wharf.
+
+Elliot said good-bye to the Pagets and Miss O'Neill ten days later.
+Diane was very frank with him.
+
+"I hear you've been sleuthing around, Gordon, for facts about Colby
+Macdonald. I don't know what you have heard about him, but I hope you've
+got the sense to see how big a man he is and how much this country here
+owes him."
+
+Gordon nodded agreement. "Yes, he's a big man."
+
+"And he's good," added Sheba eagerly. "He never talks of it, but one
+finds out splendid things he has done."
+
+The young man smiled, but not at all superciliously. He liked the stanch
+faith of the girl in her friend, even though his investigations had not
+led him to accept goodness as the outstanding quality of the Scotchman.
+
+"I don't know what we would do without him," Diane went on. "Give him
+ten years and a free hand and Alaska will be fit for white people to
+live in. These attacks on him by newspapers and magazines are an
+outrage."
+
+"It's plain that you are a partisan," charged Gordon gayly.
+
+"I'm against locking up Alaska and throwing away the key, if that is
+what you mean by a partisan. We need this country opened up--the farms
+settled, the mines worked, the coal-fields developed, railroads built.
+It is one great big opportunity, the country here, and the narrow little
+conservation cranks want to shut it up tight from the people who have
+energy and foresight enough to help do the building."
+
+"The Kusiak Chamber of Commerce ought to send you out as a lecturer to
+change public opinion, Diane. You are one enthusiastic little booster
+for freedom of opportunity," laughed the young man.
+
+"Oh, well!" Diane joined in his laughter. It was one of her good points
+that she could laugh at herself. "I dare say I do sound like a real
+estate pamphlet, but it's all true anyhow."
+
+Gordon left Kusiak as reluctantly as Wally Selfridge had done, though
+his reasons for not wanting to go were quite different. They centered
+about a dusky-eyed young woman whom he had seen for the first time a
+fortnight before. He would have denied even to himself that he was in
+love, but whenever he was alone his thoughts reverted to Sheba O'Neill.
+
+At the big bend Gordon left the river boat for his cross-country trek.
+Near the roadhouse was an Indian village where he had expected to get a
+guide for the journey to Kamatlah. But the fishing season had begun, and
+the men had all gone down river to take part in it.
+
+The old Frenchman who kept the trading-post and roadhouse advised Gordon
+not to attempt the tramp alone.
+
+"The trail it ees what you call dangerous. Feefty-Mile Swamp ees a
+monster that swallows men alive, Monsieur. You wait one week--two
+week--t'ree week, and some one will turn up to take you through," he
+urged.
+
+"But I can't wait. And I have an official map of the trail. Why can't
+I follow it without a guide?" Elliot wanted to know impatiently.
+
+The post-trader shrugged. "Maybeso, Monsieur--maybe not. Feefty-Mile--it
+ees one devil of a trail. No chechakoes are safe in there without a
+guide. I, Baptiste, know."
+
+"Selfridge and his party went through a week ago. I can follow the
+tracks they left."
+
+"But if it rains, Monsieur, the tracks will vaneesh, n'est ce pas? Lose
+the way, and the little singing folk will swarm in clouds about Monsieur
+while he stumbles through the swamp."
+
+Elliot hesitated for the better part of a day, then came to an impulsive
+decision. He knew the evil fame of Fifty-Mile Swamp--that no trail in
+Alaska was held to be more difficult or dangerous. He knew too what a
+fearful pest the mosquitoes were. Peter had told him a story of how he
+and a party of engineers had come upon a man wandering in the hills,
+driven mad by mosquitoes. The traveler had lost his matches and had been
+unable to light smudge fires. Day and night the little singing devils
+had swarmed about him. He could not sleep. He could not rest. Every
+moment for forty-eight hours he had fought for his life against them.
+Within an hour of the time they found him the man had died a raving
+maniac.
+
+But Elliot was well equipped with mosquito netting and with supplies. He
+had a reliable map, and anyhow he had only to follow the tracks left by
+the Selfridge party. He turned his back upon the big river and plunged
+into the wilderness.
+
+There came a night when he looked up into the stars of the deep, still
+sky and knew that he was hundreds of miles from any other human being.
+Never in all his life had he been so much alone. He was not afraid, but
+there was something awesome in a world so empty of his kind. Sometimes
+he sang, and the sound of his voice at first startled him. It was like
+living in a world primeval, this traverse of a land so void of all the
+mechanism that man has built about him.
+
+The tracks of the Selfridge party grew fainter after a night of rain.
+More rain fell, and they were obliterated altogether.
+
+Gordon fished. He killed fresh game for his needs. Often he came on the
+tracks of moose and caribou. Sometimes, startled, they leaped into view
+quite close enough for a shot, but he used his rifle only to meet his
+wants. A huge grizzly faced him on the trail one afternoon, growled its
+menace, and went lumbering into the big rocks with awkward speed.
+
+The way led through valley and morass, across hills and mountains. It
+wandered in a sort of haphazard fashion through a sun-bathed universe
+washed clean of sordidness and meanness. Always, as he pushed forward,
+the path grew more faint and uncertain. Elk runs crossed it here and
+there, so that often Gordon went astray and had to retrace his steps.
+
+The maddening song of the mosquitoes was always with him. Only when he
+slept did he escape from it. The heavy gloves, the netting, the smudge
+fires were at best an insufficient protection.
+
+It was the seventh night out that Elliot suspected he was off the trail.
+Rain sluiced down in torrents and next day continued to pour from a dun
+sky. His own tracks were blotted out and he searched for the trail in
+vain. Before the rain stopped, he was thoroughly disturbed in mind. It
+would be a serious business if he should be lost in the bad lands of the
+bogs. Even though he knew the general direction he must follow, there
+was no certainty that he would ever emerge from this swamp into which he
+had plunged.
+
+Before he knew it he was entangled in Fifty-Mile. His map showed him the
+morass stretched for fifty miles to the south, but he knew that it had
+been charted hurriedly by a surveying party which had made no extensive
+explorations. A good deal of this country was _terra incognita_. It
+ran vaguely into a No Man's Land unknown to the prospector.
+
+The going was heavy. Gordon had to pick his way through the mossy swamp,
+leading the pack-horse by the bridle. Sometimes he was ankle-deep in
+water of a greenish slime. Again he had to drag the animal from the bog
+to a hummock of grass which gave a spongy footing. This would end in
+another quagmire of peat through which they must plough with the mud
+sucking at their feet. It was hard, wearing toil. There was nothing to
+do but keep moving. The young man staggered forward till dusk. Utterly
+exhausted, he camped for the night on a hillock of moss that rose like
+an island in the swamp.
+
+After he had eaten he fed his fire with green boughs that raised a dense
+smoke. He lay on the leeward side where the smoke drifted over him and
+fought mosquitoes till a shift of the wind lessened the plague. Toward
+midnight he rigged up a net for protection and crawled into his
+blankets. Instantly he fell sound asleep.
+
+Elliot traveled next day by the compass. He had food for three days
+more, but he knew that no living man had the strength to travel for so
+long in such a morass. It was near midday when he lost his horse. The
+animal had bogged down several times and Gordon had wasted much time and
+spent a good deal of needed energy in dragging it to firmer footing.
+This time the pony refused to answer the whip. Its master unloaded pack
+and saddle. He tried coaxing; he tried the whip.
+
+"Come, Old-Timer. One plunge, and you'll make it yet," he urged.
+
+The pack-horse turned upon him dumb eyes of reproach, struggled to free
+its limbs from the mud, and sank down helplessly. It had traveled its
+last yard on the long Alaska trails.
+
+After the sound of the shot had died away, Gordon struggled with the
+pack to the nearest hummock. He cut holes in a gunny-sack to fit his
+shoulders and packed into it his blankets, a saucepan, the beans, the
+coffee, and the diminished handful of flour. Into it went too the three
+slices of bacon that were left.
+
+He hoisted the pack to his back and slipped his arms through the slits
+he had made. Painfully he labored forward over the quivering peat. Every
+weary muscle revolted at the demands his will imposed upon it. He drew
+on the last ounce of his strength and staggered forward. Sometimes he
+stumbled and went down into the oozing mud, minded to stay there and
+be done with the struggle. But the urge of life drove him to his feet
+again. It sent him pitching forward drunkenly. It carried him for weary
+miles after he despaired of ever covering another hundred yards.
+
+With old, half-forgotten signals from the football field he spurred his
+will. Perhaps his mind was already beginning to wander, though through
+it all he held steadily to the direction that alone could save him.
+
+He clapped his hands feebly and stooped for the plunge at the line of
+the enemy. "'Attaboy, Gord--'attaboy--nine, eleven, seventeen. Hit 'er
+low, you Elliot."
+
+When at last he went down to stay it was in an exhaustion so complete
+that not even his indomitable will could lash him to his feet again.
+For an hour he lay in a stupor, never stirring even to fight the swarm
+of mosquitoes that buzzed about him.
+
+Toward evening he sat up and undid the pack from his back. The matches,
+in a tin box wrapped carefully with oilskin, were still perfectly dry.
+Soon he had a fire going and coffee boiling in the frying-pan. From
+the tin cup he carried strung on his belt he drank the coffee. It went
+through him like strong liquor. He warmed some beans and fried himself a
+slice of bacon, sopping up the grease with a cold biscuit left over from
+the day before.
+
+Again he slept for a few hours. He had wound his watch mechanically
+and it showed him four o'clock when he took up the trail once more.
+In Seattle and San Francisco people were still asleep and darkness was
+heavy over the land. Here it had been day for a long time, ever since
+the summer sun, hidden for a while behind the low, distant hills, had
+come blazing forth again in a saddle between two peaks.
+
+Gordon had reduced his pack by discarding a blanket, the frying-pan,
+and all the clothing he was not wearing. His rifle lay behind him in the
+swamp. He had cut to a minimum of safety what he was carrying, according
+to his judgment. But before long his last blanket was flung aside. He
+could not afford to carry an extra pound, for he knew he was running a
+race, the stakes of which were life and death.
+
+A cloud of mosquitoes moved with him. He carried in his hand a spruce
+bough for defense against them. His hands were gloved, his face was
+covered with netting. But in spite of the best he could do they were an
+added torture.
+
+Afternoon found him still staggering forward. The swamps were now
+behind him. He had won through at last by the narrowest margin possible.
+The ground was rising sharply toward the mountains. Across the range
+somewhere lay Kamatlah. But he was all in. With his food almost gone,
+a water supply uncertain, reserve strength exhausted, the chances of
+getting over the divide to safety were practically none.
+
+He had come, so far as he could see, to the end of the passage.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+GID HOLT GOES PROSPECTING
+
+
+As soon as Selfridge reached Kamatlah he began arranging the stage
+against the arrival of the Government agent. His preparations were
+elaborate and thorough. A young engineer named Howland had been in
+charge of the development work, but Wally rearranged his forces so as
+to let each dummy entryman handle the claim entered in his name. One or
+two men about whom he was doubtful he discharged and hurried out of the
+camp.
+
+Selfridge had been given a free hand as to expenses and he oiled his
+way by liberal treatment of the men and by a judicious expenditure.
+He let them know pretty plainly that if the agent on his way to Kamatlah
+suspected corporate ownership of the claims, the Government would close
+down all work and there would be no jobs for them.
+
+The company boarding-house became a restaurant, above which was
+suspended a newly painted sign with the legend, "San Francisco Grill,
+J. Glynn, Proprietor." The store also passed temporarily into the hands
+of its manager. Miners moved from the barracks that had been built by
+Macdonald into hastily constructed cabins on the individual claims.
+Wally had always fancied himself as a stage manager for amateur
+theatricals. Now he justified his faith by transforming Kamatlah
+outwardly from a company camp to a mushroom one settled by wandering
+prospectors.
+
+Gideon Holt alone was outside of all these activities and watched them
+with suspicion. He was an old-timer, sly but fearless, who hated Colby
+Macdonald with a bitter jealousy that could not be placated and he
+took no pains to hide the fact. He had happened to be in the vicinity
+prospecting when Macdonald had rushed his entries. Partly out of mere
+perversity and partly by reason of native shrewdness, old Holt had
+slipped in and located one of the best claims in the heart of the
+group. Nor had he been moved to a reasonable compromise by any amount
+of persuasion, threats, or tentative offers to buy a relinquishment.
+He was obstinate. He knew a good thing when he had it, and he meant to
+sit tight.
+
+The adherents of the company might charge that Holt was cracked in the
+upper story, but none of them denied he was sharp as a street Arab. He
+guessed that all this preparation was not for nothing. Kamatlah was
+being dressed up to impress somebody who would shortly arrive. The
+first thought of Holt was that a group of big capitalists might be
+coming to look over their investment. But he rejected this surmise.
+There would be no need to try any deception upon them.
+
+Mail from Seattle reached camp once a month. Holt sat down before his
+stove to read one of the newspapers he had brought from the office. It
+was the "P.-I." On the fifth page was a little boxed story that gave him
+his clue.
+
+ ELLIOT TO INVESTIGATE MACDONALD COAL CLAIMS
+
+ The reopening of the controversy as to the Macdonald claims,
+ which had been clear-listed for patent by Harold B. Winton,
+ the Commissioner of the General Land Office, takes on another
+ phase with the appointment of Gordon Elliot as special field
+ agent to examine the validity of the holdings. The new field
+ agent won a reputation by his work in unearthing the Oklahoma
+ "Gold Brick" land frauds.
+
+ Elliot leaves Seattle in the Queen City Thursday for the North,
+ where he will make a thorough investigation of the whole situation
+ with a view to clearing up the matter definitely. If his report
+ is favorable to the claimants, the patents will be granted without
+ further delay.
+
+This was too good to keep. Holt pulled on his boots and went out to twit
+such of the enemy as he might meet. It chanced that the first of them
+was Selfridge, whom he had not seen since his arrival, though he knew
+the little man was in camp.
+
+"How goes it, Holt? Fine and dandy, eh?" inquired Wally with the
+professional geniality he affected.
+
+The old miner shook his head dolefully. "I done bust my laig, Mr.
+Selfish," he groaned. It was one of his pleasant ways to affect a
+difficulty of hearing and a dullness of understanding, so that he could
+legitimately call people by distorted versions of their names. "The old
+man don't amount to much nowadays. Onct a man or a horse gits stove up
+I don't reckon either one pans out much pay dust any more."
+
+"Nothing to that, Gid. You're younger than you ever were, judging by
+your looks."
+
+"Then my looks lie to beat hell, Mr. Selfish."
+
+"My name is Selfridge," explained Wally, a trifle irritated.
+
+Holt put a cupped hand to his ear anxiously. "Shellfish, did you say?
+Tha' 's right. Howcome I to forget? The old man's going pretty fast,
+Mr. Shellfish. No more memory than a jackrabbit. Say, Mr. Shellfish,
+what's the idee of all this here back-to-the-people movement, as the
+old sayin' is?"
+
+"I don't know what you mean. And my name is Selfridge, I tell you,"
+snapped the owner of that name.
+
+"'Course I ain't got no more sense than the law allows. I'm a buzzard
+haid, but me I kinder got to millin' it over and in respect to these
+here local improvements, as you might say, I'm doggoned if I _sabe_
+the whyfor." There was an imp of malicious deviltry in the black, beady
+eyes sparkling at Selfridge from between narrowed lids.
+
+"Just some business changes we're making."
+
+Holt showed his tobacco-stained teeth in a grin splenetic. "Oh. That's
+all. I didn't know but what you might be expecting a visitor."
+
+Selfridge flashed a sharp sidelong glance at him. "What do you mean--a
+visitor?"
+
+"I just got a notion mebbe you might be looking for one, Mr. Pelfrich.
+But I don't know sic' 'em. Like as not you ain't fixing up for this
+Gordon Elliot a-tall."
+
+Wally had no come-back, unless it was one to retort in ironic
+admiration. "You're a wonder, Holt. Pity you don't start a detective
+bureau."
+
+The old man went away cackling dryly.
+
+If Selfridge had held any doubts before, he discarded them now. Holt
+would wreck the whole enterprise, were he given a chance. It would never
+do to let Elliot meet and talk with him. He knew too much, and he was
+eager to tell all he knew.
+
+Macdonald's lieutenant got busy at once with plans to abduct Holt. That
+it was very much against the law did not disturb him much so long as his
+chief stood back of him. The unsupported word of the old man would not
+stand in court, and if he became obstreperous they could always have him
+locked up as a lunatic. The very pose of the old miner--the make-believe
+pretension that he was half a fool--would lend itself to such a charge.
+
+"We'll send the old man off on a prospecting trip with some of the
+boys," explained Selfridge to Rowland. "That way we'll kill two birds.
+He's back on his assessment work. The time limit will be up before he
+returns and we'll start a contest for the claim."
+
+Howland made no comment. He was an engineer and not a politician. In his
+position it was impossible for him not to know that a good deal about
+the legal status of the Macdonald claims was irregular. But he was a
+firm believer in a wide-open Alaska, in the use of the Territory by
+those who had settled it. The men back of the big Scotchman were going
+to spend millions in development work, in building railroads. It would
+help labor and business. The whole North would feel a healthful reaction
+from the Kamatlah activities. So, on the theory that the end sometimes
+justifies doubtful means, he shut his eyes to many acts that in his own
+private affairs he would not have countenanced.
+
+"Better arrange it with Big Bill, then, but don't tell me anything about
+it. I don't want to know the details," he told Selfridge.
+
+Big Bill Macy accepted the job with a grin. There was double pay in it
+both for him and the men he chose as his assistants. He had never liked
+old Holt anyhow. Besides, they were not going to do him any harm.
+
+Holt was baking a batch of sour-dough bread that evening when there came
+a knock at the cabin door. At sight of Big Bill and his two companions
+the prospector closed the oven and straightened with alert suspicion.
+He was not on visiting terms with any of these men. Why had they come
+to see him? He asked point-blank the question in his mind.
+
+"We're going prospecting up Wild-Goose Creek, and we want you to go
+along, Gid," explained Macy. "You're an old sour-dough miner, and we-all
+agree we'd like to have you throw-in with us. What say?"
+
+The old miner's answer was direct but not flattering. "What do I want to
+go on a wild-goose mush with a bunch of bums for?" he shrilled.
+
+Bill Macy scratched his hook nose and looked reproachfully at his host.
+At least Holt thought he was looking at him. One could not be sure, for
+Bill's eyes did not exactly track.
+
+"That ain't no kind o' way to talk to a fellow when he comes at you with
+a fair proposition, Gid."
+
+"You tell Selfridge I ain't going to leave Kamatlah--not right now. I'm
+going to stay here on the job till that Land Office inspector comes--and
+then I'm going to have a nice, long, confidential chat with him. See?"
+
+"What's the use of snapping at me like a turtle? Durden says Wild-Goose
+looks fine. There's gold up there--heaps of it."
+
+"Let it stay there, then. I ain't going. That's flat." Holt turned to
+adjust the damper of his stove.
+
+"Oh, I don't know. I wouldn't say that," drawled Bill insolently.
+
+The man at the stove caught the change in tone and turned quickly. He
+was too late. Macy had thrown himself forward and the weight of his body
+flung Holt against the wall. Before the miner could recover, the other
+two men were upon him. They bore him to the floor and in spite of his
+struggles tied him hand and foot.
+
+Big Bill rose and looked down derisively at his prisoner. "Better change
+your mind and go with us, Holt. We'll spend a quiet month up at the
+headquarters of Wild-Goose. Say you'll come along."
+
+"You'll go to prison for this, Bill Macy."
+
+"Guess again, Gid, and mebbe you'll get it right this time." Macy turned
+to his companions. "George, you bring up the horses. Dud, see if that
+bread is cooked. Might as well take it along with us--save us from
+baking to-morrow."
+
+"What are you going to do with me?" demanded Holt.
+
+"I reckon you need a church to fall on you before you can take a hint.
+Didn't I mention Wild-Goose Creek three or four times?" jeered his
+captor.
+
+"Every step you take will be one toward the penitentiary. Get that into
+your cocoanut," the old miner retorted sharply.
+
+"Nothing to that idee, Gid."
+
+"I'll scream when you take me out."
+
+"Go to it. Then we'll gag you."
+
+Holt made no further protest. He was furious, but at present quite
+helpless. However it went against the grain, he might as well give in
+until rebellion would do some good.
+
+Ten minutes later the party was moving silently along the trail that led
+to the hills. The pack-horses went first, in charge of George Holway.
+The prisoner walked next, his hands tied behind him. Big Bill followed,
+and the man he had called Dud brought up the rear.
+
+They wound up a rising valley, entering from it a cañon with precipitous
+walls that shut out the late sun. It was by this time past eleven
+o'clock and dusk was gathering closer. The winding trail ran parallel
+with the creek, sometimes through thickets of young fir and sometimes
+across boulder beds that made traveling difficult and slow. They went in
+single file, each of them with a swarm of mosquitoes about his head.
+
+Macy had released the hands of his prisoner so that he might have a
+chance to fight the singing pests, but he kept a wary eye upon him and
+never let him move more than a few feet from him. The trail grew steeper
+as it neared the head of the cañon till at last it climbed the left wall
+and emerged from the gulch to an uneven mesa.
+
+The leader of the party looked at his watch. "Past midnight. We'll camp
+here, George, and see if we can't get rid of the 'skeeters."
+
+They built smudge fires of green wood and on the lee side of these
+another one of dry sticks. Dud made coffee upon this and cooked bacon
+to eat with the fresh bread they had taken from the oven of Holt. While
+George chopped wood for the fires and boughs of small firs for bedding,
+Big Bill sat with a rifle across his knees just back of the prisoner.
+
+"Gid's a shifty old cuss, and I ain't taking any chances," he explained
+aloud to Dud.
+
+Holt was beginning to take the outrage philosophically. He sat close to
+a smudge and smoked his pipe.
+
+"I wouldn't either if I were you. Sometime when you ain't watching, I'm
+liable to grab that gun and shoot a hole in the place where your brains
+would be if you had any," countered the old man.
+
+He slept peacefully while they took turns watching him. Just now there
+would be no chance to escape, but in a few days they would become
+careless. The habit of feeling that they had him securely would grow
+upon them. Then, reasoned Holt, his opportunity would come. One of the
+guards would take a chance. Perhaps he might even fall asleep on duty.
+It was not reasonable to suppose that in the next week or two he would
+not catch them napping once for a short ten seconds.
+
+There was, of course, just the possibility that they intended to murder
+him, but Holt could not associate Selfridge with anything so lawless.
+The man was too soft of fiber to carry through such a programme, and as
+yet there was need of nothing so drastic. No, this little kidnapping
+expedition would not run to murder. He would be set free in a few weeks,
+and if he told the true story of where he had been his foes would spread
+the report that he was insane in his hatred of Macdonald and imagined
+all sorts of persecutions.
+
+They followed Wild-Goose Creek all next day, getting always closer to
+its headwaters near the divide. On the third day they crossed to the
+other side of the ridge and descended into a little mountain park. They
+were in a country where prospectors never came, one deserted even by
+trappers at this season of the year.
+
+The country was so much a primeval wilderness that a big bull moose
+stalked almost upon their camp before discovering the presence of a
+strange biped. Big Bill snatched up a rifle and took a shot which sent
+the intruder scampering.
+
+From somewhere in the distance came a faint sound.
+
+"What was that?" asked George.
+
+"Sounded like a shot. Mebbe it was an echo," returned Dud.
+
+"Came too late for an echo," Big Bill said.
+
+Again faintly from some far corner of the basin the sound drifted. It
+was like the pop of a scarcely heard firecracker.
+
+The men looked at one another and at their prisoner. Their eyes
+consulted once more.
+
+"Think we better break camp and drift?" asked Dud.
+
+"No. We're in a little draw here--as good a hiding-place as we'd be
+likely to find. Drive the horses into the brush, George. We'll sit
+tight."
+
+"Got the criminals guessing," Holt contributed maliciously. "You lads
+want to take the hide offen Macy if he lands you in the pen through that
+fool shot of his. Wonder if I hadn't better yell."
+
+"I'll stop your clock right then if you do," threatened Big Bill with a
+scowl.
+
+Dud had been busy stamping out the camp-fire while Holway was driving
+the horses into the brush.
+
+"Mebbe you had better get the camp things behind them big rocks," Macy
+conceded.
+
+Even as he spoke there came the crack of a revolver almost at the
+entrance to the draw.
+
+One of the men swore softly. The gimlet eyes of the old miner fastened
+on the spot where in another moment his hoped-for rescuers would appear.
+
+A man staggered drunkenly into view. He reeled halfway across the mouth
+of the draw and stopped. His eyes, questing dully, fell upon the camp.
+He stared, as if doubtful whether they had played him false, then
+lurched toward the waiting group.
+
+"Lost, and all in," Holway said in a whisper to Dud.
+
+The other man nodded. Neither of them made a move toward the stranger,
+who stopped in front of their camp and looked with glazed eyes from one
+to another. His face was drawn and haggard and lined. Extreme exhaustion
+showed in every movement. He babbled incoherently.
+
+"Seven--eighteen--ninety-nine. 'Atta-boy," he said thickly.
+
+"Don't you see he's starving and out of his head?" snapped Holt
+brusquely. "Get him grub, _pronto_."
+
+The old man rose and moved toward the suffering man. "Come, pard. Tha'
+'s all right. Sit down right here and go to it, as the old sayin' is."
+He led the man to a place beside Big Bill and made him sit down. "Better
+light a fire, boys, and get some coffee on. Don't give him too much
+solid grub at first."
+
+The famished man ate what was given him and clamored for more.
+
+"Coming up soon, pardner," Holt told him soothingly. "Now tell us
+howcome you to get lost."
+
+The man nodded gravely. "Hit that line low, Gord. Hit 'er low. Only
+three yards to gain."
+
+"Plumb bughouse," commented Dud, chewing tobacco stolidly.
+
+"Out of his head--that's all. He'll be right enough after he's fed up
+and had a good sleep. But right now he's sure some Exhibit A. Look at
+the bones sticking through his cheeks," Big Bill commented.
+
+"Come, Old-Timer. Get down in your collar to it. Once more now. Don't
+lie down on the job. All together now." The stranger clucked to an
+imaginary horse and made a motion of lifting with his hands.
+
+"Looks like his hawss bogged down in Fifty-Mile Swamp," suggested Holt.
+
+"Looks like," agreed Dud.
+
+The old miner said no more. But his eyes narrowed to shining slits. If
+this man had come through Fifty-Mile Swamp he must have started from the
+river. That probably meant that he had come from Kusiak. He was a young
+man, talking the jargon of a college football player. Without doubt he
+was, in the old phrasing of the North, a chechako. His clothing, though
+much soiled and torn, had been good. His voice held the inflections of
+the cultured world.
+
+Gideon Holt's sly brain moved keenly to the possibility that he could
+put a name to this human derelict they had picked up. He began to see
+it as more than a possibility, as even a probability, at least as a
+fifty-fifty chance. A sardonic grin hovered about the corners of his
+grim mouth. It would be a strange freak of irony if Wally Selfridge,
+to prevent a meeting between him and the Government land agent, had
+sent him a hundred miles into the wilderness to save the life of Gordon
+Elliot and so had brought about the meeting that otherwise would never
+have taken place.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE RAH-RAH BOY FUNCTIONS
+
+
+Big Bill grumbled a good deal at the addition to the party. It would be
+decidedly awkward if this stranger should become rational and understand
+the status of the camp he had joined. The word of old Holt alone might
+be negligible, but supported by that of a disinterested party it would
+be a very different matter. Still, there was no help for it. They would
+have to take care of the man until he was able to travel. Perhaps he
+would go in with them as an additional guard. At the worst Big Bill
+could give him a letter to Selfridge explaining things and so pass the
+buck to that gentleman.
+
+Gid Holt had, with the tacit consent of his guards, appointed himself as
+a sort of nurse to the stranger. He lit a smudge fire to the windward
+side of him, fed him small quantities of food at intervals, and arranged
+a sleeping-place for him with mosquito netting for protection.
+
+Early in the evening the sick man fell into a sound sleep from
+which he did not awake until morning. George was away looking after the
+pack-horses, Dud was cooking breakfast, and Big Bill, his rifle close at
+hand, was chopping young firs fifty feet back of the camp. The cook also
+had a gun, loaded with buckshot, lying on a box beside him, so that they
+were taking no chances with their prisoner. He could not have covered
+twenty yards without being raked by a cross-fire.
+
+The old miner turned from rearranging the boughs of green fir on the
+smudge to see that his patient was awake and his mind normal. The quiet,
+steady eyes resting upon him told that the delirium had passed.
+
+"Pretty nearly all in, wasn't I?" the young man said.
+
+The answer of Gid Holt was an odd one. "Yep. Seven--eleven--fifteen.
+Take 'er easy, old man," he said in his shrill, high voice as he moved
+toward the man in the blankets. Then, in a low tone, while he pretended
+to arrange the bedding over the stranger, he asked a quick question.
+
+"Are you Elliot?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Don't tell them. Talk football lingo as if you was still out of your
+haid." Holt turned and called to Dud. "Says he wants some breakfast."
+
+"On the way," the cook answered.
+
+Holt seemed to be soothing the delirious man. What he really said was
+this. "Selfridge has arranged a plant for you at Kamatlah. The camp has
+been turned inside out to fool you. They've brought me here a prisoner
+so as to keep me from telling you the truth. Pst! Tune up now."
+
+Big Bill had put down his axe and was approaching. He was not exactly
+suspicious, but he did not believe in taking unnecessary chances.
+
+"I tell you I'm out of training. Played the last game, haven't we? Come
+through with a square meal, you four-flusher," demanded Elliot in a
+querulous voice. He turned to Macy. "Look here, Cap. Haven't I played
+the game all fall? Don't I get what I want now we're through?"
+
+The voice of the young man was excited. His eyes had lost their quiet
+steadiness and roved restlessly to and fro. If Big Bill had held any
+doubts one glance dissipated them.
+
+"Sure you do. Hustle over and help Dud with the breakfast, Holt. I'll
+look out for our friend."
+
+Elliot and Holt found no more chance to talk together that morning.
+Sometimes the young Government official lay staring straight in front
+of him. Sometimes he appeared to doze. Again he would talk in the
+disjointed way of one not clear in the head.
+
+An opportunity came in the afternoon for a moment.
+
+"Keep your eyes skinned for a chance to lay out the guard to-night and
+get his gun," Holt said quickly.
+
+Gordon nodded. "I don't know that I've got to do everything just as you
+say," he complained aloud for the benefit of George, who was passing on
+his way to the place where the horses were hobbled.
+
+"Now--now! There ain't nobody trying to boss you," Holt explained in a
+patient voice.
+
+"They'd better not," snapped the invalid.
+
+"Some scrapper--that kid," said the horse wrangler with a grin.
+
+Macy took the first watch that night. He turned in at two after he had
+roused Dud to take his place. The cook had been on duty about an hour
+when Elliot kicked Holt, who was sleeping beside him, to make sure that
+he was ready. The old man answered the kick with another.
+
+Presently Gordon got up, yawned, and strolled toward the edge of the
+camp.
+
+"Don't go and get lost, young fellow," cautioned Dud.
+
+Gordon, on his way back, passed behind the guard, who was sitting tailor
+fashion before a smudge with a muley shotgun across his knees.
+
+"This ain't no country for chechakoes to be wandering around without a
+keeper," the cook continued. "Looks like your folks would have better
+sense than to let their rah-rah boy--"
+
+He got no farther. Elliot dropped to one knee and his strong fingers
+closed on the gullet of the man so tightly that not even a groan could
+escape him. His feet thrashed to and fro as he struggled, but he could
+not shake off the grip that was strangling him. The old miner, waiting
+with every muscle ready and every nerve under tension, flung aside his
+blanket and hurled himself at the guard. It took him less time than it
+takes to tell to wrest the gun from the cook.
+
+He got to his feet just as Big Bill, his eyes and brain still fogged
+with sleep, sat up and began to take notice of the disturbance.
+
+"Don't move," warned Holt sharply. "Better throw your hands up. You
+reach for the stars, too, Holway. No monkey business, do you hear? I'd
+as lief blow a hole through you as not."
+
+Big Bill turned bitterly upon Elliot. "So you were faking all the time,
+young fellow. We save your life and you round on us. You're a pretty
+slick proposition as a double-crosser."
+
+"And that ain't all," chirped up Holt blithely. "Let me introduce our
+friend to you, Mr. Big Bill Macy. This is Gordon Elliot, the land agent
+appointed to look over the Kamatlah claims. Selfridge gave you lads this
+penitentiary job so as I wouldn't meet Elliot when he reached the camp.
+If he hadn't been so darned anxious about it, our young friend would
+have died here on the divide. But Mr. Selfridge kindly outfitted a party
+and sent us a hundred miles into the hills to rescue the perishing, as
+the old sayin' goes. Consequence is, Elliot and me meet up and have that
+nice confidential talk after all. The ways of Providence is strange, as
+you might say, Mr. Macy."
+
+"Your trick," conceded Big Bill sullenly. "Now what are you going to do
+with us?"
+
+"Not a thing--going to leave you right here to prospect Wild-Goose
+Creek," answered Holt blandly. "Durden says there's gold up here--heaps
+of it."
+
+Bill Macy condemned Durden in language profane and energetic. He didn't
+stop at Durden. Holt came in for a share of it, also Elliot and
+Selfridge.
+
+The old miner grinned at him. "You'll feel better now you've got that
+out of your system. But don't stop there if you'd like to say a few more
+well-chosen words. We got time a-plenty."
+
+"Cut it out, Bill. That line o' talk don't buy you anything," said
+Holway curtly. "What's the use of beefing?"
+
+"Now you're shouting, my friend," agreed old Gideon. "I guess, Elliot,
+you can loosen up on the chef's throat awhile. He's had persuading
+enough, don't you reckon? I'll sit here and sorter keep the boys company
+while you cut the pack-ropes and bring 'em here. But first I'd step in
+and unload all the hardware they're packing. If you don't one of them is
+likely to get anxious. I'd hate to see any of them commit suicide with
+none of their friends here to say, 'Don't he look natural?'"
+
+Elliot brought back the pack-ropes and cut them into suitable lengths.
+Holt's monologue rambled on. He was garrulous and affable. Not for a
+long time had he enjoyed himself so much.
+
+"Better begin with Chief Big Bill," he suggested. "No, I wouldn't make
+that move if I was you, Mr. Macy. This old gun is liable to go off
+accidental in your direction and she spatters like hell. That's the
+idee. Be reasonable. Not that I give a hoot, but a man hadn't ought to
+let his impulses run away with his judgment, as the old sayin' is."
+
+Gordon tied the hands of Big Bill behind him, then roped his feet
+together, after which he did the same for Holway. The old miner
+superintended the job and was not satisfied till he had added a few
+extra knots on his own behalf.
+
+"That'll hold them for awhile, I shouldn't wonder. Now if you'll just
+cover friend chef with this sawed-off gat, Elliot, I'll throw the
+diamond hitch over what supplies we'll need to get back to Kamatlah.
+I'll take one bronch and leave the other to the convicts," said Holt
+cheerfully.
+
+"Forget that convict stuff," growled Macy. "With Macdonald back of us
+and the Guttenchilds back of him, you'll have a hectic time getting
+anything on us."
+
+"That might be true if these folks were back of you. But are they?
+Course I ain't any Sherlock Holmes, but it don't look to me like they'd
+play any such fool system as this."
+
+Big Bill opened his mouth to answer--and said nothing. He had caught a
+look flashed at him by Holway, a look that warned him he was talking too
+much.
+
+After Holt had packed one of the animals he turned to Elliot.
+
+"I reckon we're ready."
+
+Under orders from Elliot, Dud fixed up the smudges and arranged the
+mosquito netting over the bound men so as to give them all the
+protection possible.
+
+"We're going to take Dud with us for a part of the trip. We'll send him
+back to you later in the day. You'll have to fast till he gets back, but
+outside of that you'll do very well if you don't roll around trying to
+get loose. Do that, and you'll jar loose the mosquito netting. You know
+what that means," explained Gordon.
+
+"It ain't likely any grizzlies will come pokin' their noses into camp.
+But you never can tell. Any last words you want sent to relatives?"
+asked Gideon Holt.
+
+The last words they heard from Big Bill as they moved down the draw were
+sulphuric.
+
+"Macy he ain't wearin' any W. J. Bryan smile this glad mo'nin'," mused
+old Holt aloud.
+
+It was three o'clock in the morning by the watch when they started.
+About nine they threw off for breakfast. By this time they were just
+across the divide and were ready to take the down trail.
+
+"I think we'll let Dud go now," Elliot told his partner in the
+adventure.
+
+"Better hold him till afternoon. Then they can't possibly reach us till
+we get to Kamatlah."
+
+"What does it matter if they do? We have both rifles and have left them
+only one revolver. Besides, I don't like to leave two bound men alone in
+so wild a district for any great time. No, we'll start Dud on the back
+trail. That grizzly you promised Big Bill might really turn up."
+
+The two men struck the headwaters of Wild-Goose Creek about noon and
+followed the stream down. They traveled steadily without haste. So long
+as they kept a good lookout there was nothing to be feared from the men
+they had left behind. They had both a long start and the advantage of
+weapons.
+
+If Elliot had advertised for a year he could not have found a man who
+knew more of Colby Macdonald's past than Gideon Holt. The old man had
+mushed on the trail with him in the Klondike days. He had worked a
+claim on Frenchman Creek with him and had by sharp practice--so at
+least he had come to believe--been lawed out of his rights by the shrewd
+Scotchman. For seventeen years he had nursed a grudge against Macdonald,
+and he was never tired of talking about him. He knew many doubtful
+things charged to the account of the big man as he had blazed a way
+to success over the failures of less fortunate people. One story in
+particular interested Gordon. It came out the second day, as they were
+getting down into the foothills.
+
+"There was Farrell O'Neill. He was a good fellow, Farrell was, but he
+had just one weakness. There was times when he liked the bottle too
+well. He'd let it alone for months and then just lap the stuff up. It
+was the time of the stampede to Bonanza Creek. Men are just like sheep.
+They wear wool on their backs like them and have their habits. You can
+start 'em any fool way for no cause a-tall. Don't you know it? Well, the
+news of the strike on Bonanza reached Dawson and we all burnt up the
+trail to get to the new ground first. O'Neill was one of the first.
+He got in about twenty below discovery, if I remember. Mac wasn't in
+Dawson, but he got there next mo'nin' and heard the news. He lit out
+for Bonanza _pronto_."
+
+The old miner stopped, took a chew of tobacco, and looked down into the
+valley far below where Kamatlah could just be seen, a little huddle of
+huts.
+
+"Well?" asked Elliot. It was occasionally necessary to prompt Holt when
+he paused for his dramatic effects. He would pretend to forget that he
+was telling a yarn which might interest his hearer.
+
+"Mac draps in and joins O'Neill at night. They knew each other, y'
+understand, so o' course it was natural Mac would put up at his camp.
+O'Neill had a partner and they had located together. Fellow named
+Strong."
+
+"Not Hanford Strong, a little, heavy-set man somewhere around fifty?"
+Gordon asked quickly.
+
+"You've tagged the right man. Know him?"
+
+"I've met him."
+
+"Well, I never heard anything against Han Strong. Anyway, he was off
+that night packing grub up while Farrell held down the claim. Mac had
+a jug of booze with him. He got Farrell tanked up. You know Mac--how he
+can put it across when he's a mind to. He's a forceful devil, and he can
+be a mighty likable one."
+
+Elliot nodded understanding. "He's always the head of the table no
+matter where he sits. And there is something wonderfully attractive
+about him."
+
+"Sure there is. But when he is friendliest you want to watch out he
+don't slip an upper cut at you that'll put you out of biz. He done that
+to Farrell--and done it a-plenty."
+
+"How?"
+
+"O'Neill got mellowed up till he thought Mac was his best friend.
+He was ready to eat out of his hand. So Mac works him up to sign a
+contract--before witnesses too; trust Mac for that--exchanging his
+half-interest in the claim for five hundred dollars in cash and Mac's
+no-'count lease on Frenchman Creek. Inside of a week Mac and Strong
+struck a big pay streak. They took over two hundred thousand from the
+spring clean-up."
+
+"It was nothing better than robbery."
+
+"Call it what you want to. Anyhow, it stuck. O'Neill kicked, and that's
+all the good it did him. He consulted lawyers at Dawson. Finally he got
+so discouraged that he plumb went to pieces--got on a long bat and
+stayed there till his money ran out. Then one bitter night he starts up
+to Bonanza to have it out with Mac. The mercury was so low it had run
+into the ground a foot. Farrell slept in a deserted cabin without a fire
+and not enough bedding. He caught pneumony. By the time he reached the
+claim he was a mighty sick man. Next week he died. That's all Mac done
+to O'Neill. Not a thing that wasn't legal either."
+
+Gordon thought of Sheba O'Neill as she sat listening to the tales of
+Macdonald in Diane's parlor and his gorge rose at the man.
+
+"But Mac had fell on his feet all right," continued Holt. "He got his
+start off that claim. Now he's a millionaire two or three times over,
+I reckon."
+
+They reached the outskirts of Kamatlah about noon of the third day.
+Gordon left Holt at his cabin after they had eaten and went in alone
+to look the ground over. He met Selfridge at the post-office. That
+gentleman was effusive in his greeting.
+
+"This _is_ a pleasant surprise, Mr. Elliot. When did you get in?
+Had no idea you were coming or I'd have asked you for the pleasure
+of your company. I'm down on business, of course. No need to tell you
+that--nobody would come to this hole for any other reason. Howland and
+his wife are the only possible people here. Hope you play bridge."
+
+Elliot played it, but he did not say so. It was his business not to be
+drawn into entangling alliances.
+
+"Of course you'll put up with me as my guest," Selfridge flowed on.
+"I've wanted to meet you again ever since we were on the Hannah
+together."
+
+This was a little too cheeky. Gordon recalled with some amusement how
+this tubby little man and his friends had ignored the existence of Sheba
+O'Neill and himself for several days.
+
+He answered genially. "Pleasant time we had on the river, didn't we?
+Thanks awfully for your invitation, but I've already made arrangements
+for putting up."
+
+"Where? There's no decent place in camp except at Howland's. He keeps
+open house for our friends."
+
+"I couldn't think of troubling him," countered Gordon.
+
+"No trouble at all. We'll send for your things. Where are they?"
+
+The land agent let him have it right between the eyes. "At Gideon
+Holt's. I'm staying with him on his claim."
+
+Wally had struck a match to light a cigarette, but this simple statement
+petrified him. His jaw dropped and his eyes bulged. Not till the flame
+burned his fingers did he come to life.
+
+"Did you say you were staying--with Gid Holt?" he floundered weakly.
+
+Gordon noticed that his florid face had lost its color. The jaunty
+cock-sureness of the man had flickered out like the flame of the charred
+match.
+
+"Yes. He offered to board me," answered the young man blandly.
+
+"But--I didn't know he was here--seems to me I had
+heard--somewhere--that he was away."
+
+"He was away. But he has come back." Gordon gave the information without
+even a flash of mirth in his steady eyes.
+
+Selfridge could not quite let the subject alone. "Seems to me I heard he
+went prospecting."
+
+"He did. Up Wild-Goose Creek, with Big Bill Macy and two other men. But
+I asked him to come back with me--and he did."
+
+Feebly Wally groped for the clue without finding it. Had Big Bill sold
+him out? And how had Elliot got into touch with him?
+
+"Just so, Mr. Elliot. But really, you know, Howland can make you a great
+deal more comfortable than Holt. His wife is a famous cook. I'll have a
+man go get your traps."
+
+"It's very good of you, but I think I won't move."
+
+"Oh, but you must. Holt's nutty--nobody at home, you know. Everybody
+knows that."
+
+"Is he? The old man struck me as being remarkably clear-headed. By the
+way, I want to thank you for sending a relief party out to find me, Mr.
+Selfridge. Except for your help I would have died in the hills."
+
+This was another facer for Wally. What the devil did the fellow mean?
+The deuce of it was that he knew all the facts and Wally did not. He
+talked as if he meant it, but behind those cool eyes there might lie
+either mockery or irony. One thing alone stood out to Selfridge like
+a sore thumb. His plans had come tumbling down like a house of cards.
+Either Big Bill had blundered amazingly, or he had played traitor.
+In either case Wally could guess pretty shrewdly whose hide Macdonald
+would tan for the failure. The chief wanted results. He did not ask of
+his subordinates how they got them. And this was the second time in
+succession that Selfridge had come to grief.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+GORDON INVITES HIMSELF TO DINNER--AND DOES NOT ENJOY IT
+
+
+Big Bill and his companions reached Kamatlah early next day. They
+reported at once to Selfridge. It had been the intention of Wally to
+vent upon them the bad temper that had been gathering ever since his
+talk with Elliot. But his first sarcastic question drew such a snarl of
+anger that he reconsidered. The men were both sullen and furious. They
+let him know roundly that if Holt made them any trouble through the
+courts, they would tell all they knew.
+
+The little man became alarmed. Instead of reproaches he gave them soft
+words and promises. The company would see them through. It would protect
+them against criminal procedure. But above all they must stand pat in
+denial. A conviction would be impossible even if the State's attorney
+filed an indictment against them. Meanwhile they would remain on the
+company pay-roll.
+
+Gordon Elliot was a trained investigator. Even without Holt at his side
+he would probably have unearthed the truth about the Kamatlah situation.
+But with the little miner by his side to tell him the facts, he found
+his task an easy one.
+
+Selfridge followed orders and let him talk with the men freely. All of
+them had been drilled till they knew their story like parrots. They were
+suspicious of the approaches of Elliot, but they had been warned that
+they must appear to talk candidly. The result was that some talked too
+much and some not enough. They contradicted themselves and one another.
+They let slip admissions under skillful examination that could be
+explained on no other basis than that of company ownership.
+
+Both Selfridge and Howland outdid themselves in efforts to establish
+close social relations. But Gordon was careful to put himself under no
+obligations. He called on the Howlands, but he laughingly explained why
+he could not accept the invitations of Mrs. Howland to dinner.
+
+"I have to tell things here as I see them, and may not have your point
+of view. How can I accept your hospitality and then report that I think
+your husband ought to be sent up for life?"
+
+She was a good, motherly woman and she laughed with him. But she did
+wish this pleasant young fellow could be made to take the proper view of
+things.
+
+Within two weeks Elliot had finished his work at Kamatlah.
+
+"Off for Kusiak to-morrow," he told Holt that night.
+
+The old miner went with him as a guide to the big bend. Gordon had no
+desire to attempt again Fifty-Mile Swamp without the help of some one
+who knew every foot of the trail. Holt had taken the trip a dozen times.
+With him to show the way the swamp became merely a hard, grueling mush
+through boggy lowlands.
+
+Weary with the trail, they reached the river at the end of a long day.
+An Indian village lay sprawled along the bank, and through this the two
+men tramped to the roadhouse where they were to put up for the night.
+
+Holt called to the younger man, who was at the time in the lead.
+
+"Wait a minute, Elliot."
+
+Gordon turned. The old Alaskan was offering a quarter to a little
+half-naked Indian boy. Shyly the four-year-old came forward, a step at
+a time, his finger in his mouth. He held out a brown hand for the coin.
+
+"What's your name, kid?" Holt flashed a look at Elliot that warned him
+to pay attention.
+
+"Colmac," the boy answered bashfully.
+
+His fist closed on the quarter, he turned, and like a startled caribou
+he fled to a comely young Indian woman standing near the trail.
+
+With gleaming eyes Holt turned to Elliot. "Take a good look at the
+squaw," he said in a low voice.
+
+Elliot glanced at the woman behind whose skirts the youngster was
+hiding. He smiled and nodded pleasantly to her.
+
+"She's not bad looking if that's what you mean," he said after they had
+taken up the trail again.
+
+"You ain't the only white man that has thought that," retorted the old
+miner significantly.
+
+"No?" Gordon had learned to let Holt tell things at his leisure. It
+usually took less time than to try to hurry him.
+
+"Name of the kid mean anything to you?"
+
+"Can't say it did."
+
+"Hm! Named for his dad. First syllable of each of his names."
+
+The land inspector stopped in his stride and wheeled upon Holt. His eyes
+asked eagerly a question. "You don't mean Colby Macdonald?"
+
+"Why don't I?"
+
+"But--Good Lord, he isn't a squawman, is he?"
+
+"Not in the usual meaning of the word. She never cooked and kept house
+for him. Just the same, little Colmac is his kid. Couldn't you see it
+sticking out all over him? He's the spit'n' image of his dad."
+
+"I see it now you've pointed it out. I was trying to think who he
+reminded me of. Of course it was Macdonald."
+
+"Mac met up with Meteetse when he first scouted this country for coal
+five years ago. So far's I know he was square enough with the girl. She
+never claimed he made any promises or anything like that. He sends a
+check down once a quarter to the trader here for her and the kid."
+
+But young Elliot was not thinking about Meteetse. His mind's eye saw
+another picture--the girl at Kusiak, listening spellbound to the tales
+of a man whose actions translated romance into life for her, a girl
+swept from the quiet backwaters of an Irish village to this land of
+the midnight sun with its amazing contrasts.
+
+And all the way up on the boat she continued to fill his mind. The
+slowness of the steamer fretted him. He paced up and down the deck for
+hours at a time worried and anxious. Sometimes the jealousy in his heart
+flamed up like a prairie fire when it comes to a brush heap. The outrage
+of it set him blazing with indignation. Diane ought to be whipped, he
+told himself, for her part in the deception. It was no less than a
+conspiracy. What could an innocent young girl like Sheba know of such
+a man as Colby Macdonald? Her imagination conceived, no doubt, an
+idealized vision of him. But the real man was clear outside her ken.
+
+Gordon set his jaw grimly. He would have it out with Diane. He would let
+her see she was not going to have it all her own way. By God, he would
+put a spoke in her wheel.
+
+Sometimes, when the cool, evening breezes blew on his bare, fevered
+head, he laughed at himself for an idiot. How did he know that Macdonald
+wanted Sheba O'Neill. All the evidence he had was that he had once seen
+the man watch her while she sang a sentimental song. Whereas it was
+common talk that he would probably marry Mrs. Mallory, that for months
+he had been her almost daily companion. If the older woman had lost
+the sweet, supple slimness of her first youth, she had won in exchange
+a sophisticated grace, a seductive allure that made her the envy of
+all the women with whom she associated. She held at command a warm,
+languorous charm which had stirred banked fires in the hearts of many
+men. Why should not Macdonald woo her? Gordon himself admitted her
+attractiveness.
+
+And why should he take it for granted that Sheba was ready to drop into
+the arms of the big Alaskan whenever he said the word? At the least he
+was twenty years older than she. Surely she might admire him without
+falling in love with the man. Was there not something almost insulting
+in the supposition that Macdonald had only to speak to her in order to
+win?
+
+But in spite of reason he was on fire to come to his journey's end.
+No sooner had he reached his hotel than he called up Mrs. Paget. Quite
+clearly she understood that he wanted an invitation to dinner. Yet she
+hesitated.
+
+"My 'phone can't be working well," Gordon told her gayly. "You must have
+asked me to dinner, but I didn't just hear it. Never mind. I'll be
+there. Seven o'clock, did you say?"
+
+Diane laughed. "You're just as much a boy as you were ten years ago,
+Gord. All right. Come along. But you're to leave at ten. Do you
+understand?"
+
+"No, I can't hear that. My 'phone has gone bad again. And if I had
+heard, I shouldn't think of doing anything so ridiculous as leaving at
+that hour. It would be an insult to your hospitality. I know when I'm
+well off."
+
+"Then I'll have to withdraw my invitation. Perhaps some other day--"
+
+"I'll leave at ten," promised Elliot meekly.
+
+He could almost hear the smile in her voice as she answered. "Very well.
+Seven sharp. I'll explain about the curfew limit sometime."
+
+Macdonald was with Miss O'Neill in the living-room when Gordon arrived
+at the Paget home.
+
+Sheba came forward to greet the new guest. The welcome in her eyes was
+very genuine.
+
+"You and Mr. Macdonald know each other, of course," she said after her
+handshake.
+
+The Scotchman nodded his lean, grizzled head, looking straight into the
+eyes of the field agent. There was always a certain deliberation about
+his manner, but it was the slowness of strength and not of weakness.
+
+"Yes, I know Mr. Elliot--now. I'm not so sure that he knows me--yet."
+
+"I'm beginning to know you rather well, Mr. Macdonald," answered Gordon
+quietly, but with a very steady look.
+
+If the Alaskan wanted to declare war he was ready for it. The field
+agent knew that Selfridge had sent reports detailing what had happened
+at Kamatlah. Up to date Macdonald had offered him the velvet glove. He
+wondered if the time had come when the fist of steel was to be doubled.
+
+Paget was frankly pleased to see Gordon again. He was a simple, honest
+man who moved always in a straight line. He had liked Elliot as a boy
+and he still liked him. So did Diane, for that matter, but she was a
+little on her guard against him. She had certain plans under way that
+she intended to put through. She was not going to let even Gordon Elliot
+frustrate them.
+
+"Did you have a successful trip, Mr. Elliot?" asked Sheba innocently.
+
+Paget grinned behind his hand. The girl's question was like a match
+to powder, and every one in the room knew it but she. The engineer's
+interests and his convictions were on the side of Macdonald, but
+he recognized that Elliot had been sent in to gather facts for the
+Government and not to give advice to it. If he played fair, he could
+only tell the truth as he saw it.
+
+The eyes of Diane held a spark of hostility as she leaned forward. The
+word had already been passed among the faithful that this young man was
+not taking the right point of view.
+
+"Did you, Gordon?" echoed his hostess.
+
+"I think so," he answered quietly.
+
+"I hear you put up with old Gideon Holt. Is he as cracked as he used to
+be?" asked Macdonald.
+
+"Was he cracked when you used to know him on Frenchman Creek?" countered
+the young man.
+
+Macdonald shot a quick, slant look at him. The old man had been talking,
+had he?
+
+"He was cracked and broke too," laughed the mine-owner hardily. "Cracked
+when he came, broke when he left."
+
+"Yes, that was one of the stories he told me." Gordon turned to Sheba.
+"You should meet the old man, Miss O'Neill. He knew your father at
+Dawson and on Bonanza."
+
+The girl was all eagerness. "I'd like to. Does he ever come to Kusiak?"
+
+"Nonsense!" cut in Diane sharply. She flashed at Gordon a look of
+annoyance. "He's nothing but a daft old idiot, my dear."
+
+The dinner had started wrong, and though Paget steered the conversation
+to safer ground, it did not go very well. At least three of those
+present were a little on edge. Even Sheba, who had missed entirely the
+point of the veiled thrusts, knew that Elliot was not in harmony with
+either Diane or Macdonald.
+
+Gordon was ashamed of himself. He could not quite have told what were
+the impulses that had moved him to carry the war into the camp of the
+enemy. Perhaps, more than anything else, it had been a certain look of
+quiet assurance in the eyes of his rival when he looked at Sheba.
+
+He rose promptly at ten.
+
+"Must you go so soon?" Diane asked. She was smiling at him with bland
+mockery.
+
+"I really must," answered Elliot.
+
+His hostess followed him into the hall. She watched him get into his
+coat before saying what was on her mind.
+
+"What did you mean by telling Sheba that old Holt knew her father?
+What is he to tell her if they meet--that her father died of pneumonia
+brought on by drink? Is that what you want?"
+
+Gordon was honestly contrite. "I didn't think of that."
+
+"No, you were too busy thinking of something mean to say to Mr.
+Macdonald."
+
+He agreed, yet could not forbear one dig more. "I suppose I wanted Holt
+to tell her that Macdonald robbed her father and indirectly was the
+cause of his death."
+
+"Absurd!" exploded Diane. "You're so simple that you accept as true the
+gossip of every crack-brained idiot--when it suits your purpose."
+
+He smiled, boyishly, engagingly, as he held out his hand. "Don't let's
+quarrel, Di. I admit I forgot myself."
+
+"All right. We won't. But don't believe all the catty talk you hear,
+Gordon."
+
+"I'll try to believe only the truth." He smiled, a little ruefully. "And
+it isn't necessary for you to explain why the curfew law applies to me
+and not to Macdonald."
+
+She was on her dignity at once. "You're quite right. It isn't necessary.
+But I'm going to tell you anyhow. Mr. Macdonald is going away to-morrow
+for two or three days and he has some business he wants to talk over
+with Sheba. He had made an appointment with her, and I didn't think it
+fair to let your coming interfere with it."
+
+Gordon took this facer with his smile still working.
+
+"I've got a little business I want to talk over with _you_, Di."
+
+She had always been a young woman of rather a hard finish. Now she met
+him fairly, eye to eye. "Any time you like, Gordon."
+
+Elliot carried away with him one very definite impression. Diane
+intended Sheba to marry Macdonald if she could bring it about. She had
+as good as served notice on him that the girl was spoken for.
+
+The young man set his square jaw. Diane was used to having her own way.
+So was Macdonald. Well, the Elliots had a will of their own too.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+SHEBA SAYS "PERHAPS"
+
+
+Obeying the orders of the general in command, Peter took himself to
+his den with the excuse that he had blue-prints to work over. Presently
+Diane said she thought she heard one of the children crying and left
+to investigate.
+
+The Scotchman strode to the fireplace and stood looking down into the
+glowing coals. He seemed in no hurry to break the silence and Sheba
+glanced at his strong, brooding face a little apprehensively. Her
+excitement showed in the color that was beating into her cheeks. She
+knew of only one subject that would call for so formal a private talk
+between her and Macdonald, and any discussion of this she would very
+much have liked to postpone.
+
+He turned from the fire to Sheba. It was characteristic of him that he
+plunged straight at what he wanted to say.
+
+"I've asked to see you alone, Miss O'Neill, because I want to make a
+confession and restitution--to begin with," he told her abruptly.
+
+She had a sense of suddenly stilled pulses. "That sounds very serious."
+The young woman smiled faintly.
+
+His face of chiseled granite masked all emotion. It kept under lock and
+key the insurgent impulses that moved him when he looked into the sloe
+eyes charged with reserve. Back of them, he felt, was the mystery of
+purity, of maidenhood. He longed to know her better, to find out and
+to appropriate for himself the woman that lay behind the fine veil of
+flesh. She seemed to him delicate as a flame and as vivid. There would
+come a day when her innocent, passional nature would respond to the love
+of a man as a waiting harp does to skillful fingers.
+
+"My story goes away back to the Klondike days. I told you that I knew
+your father on Frenchman Creek, but I didn't say much about knowing him
+on Bonanza."
+
+"Mr. Strong has told me something about the days on Bonanza, and I knew
+you would tell me more some day--when you wanted to speak about it." She
+was seated in a low chair and the white throat lifted toward him was
+round as that of a bird.
+
+"Your father was among the first of those who stampeded to Bonanza. He
+and Strong took up a claim together. I bought out the interest of your
+father."
+
+"You told me that."
+
+His masterful eyes fastened to hers. "I didn't tell you that I took
+advantage of him. He was--not well. I used that against him in the
+bargaining. He wanted ready money, and I tempted him."
+
+"Do you mean that you--wronged him?"
+
+"Yes. I cheated him." He was resolved to gloss over nothing, to offer no
+excuses. "I didn't know there was gold on his claim, but I had what we
+call a hunch. I took his claim without giving value received."
+
+It was her turn now to look into the fire and think. From the letters
+of her father, from talks with old-timers she knew how in the stampedes
+every man's hand had been for himself, how keen-edged had been the
+passion for gold, a veritable lust that corroded the souls of men.
+
+"But--I don't understand." Her brave, steady eyes looked directly into
+those of Macdonald. "If he felt you had--done him a wrong--why did he
+come to you when he was ill?"
+
+"He was coming to demand justice of me. On the way he suffered exposure
+and caught pneumonia. The word reached us, and Strong and I brought him
+to our cabin."
+
+"You faced a blizzard to bring him in. Mr. Strong told me how you risked
+your life by carrying him through the storm--how you wouldn't give up
+and leave him, though you were weak and staggering yourself. He says it
+was a miracle you ever got through."
+
+The big mine-owner brushed this aside as of no importance. "We don't
+leave sick men to die in a blizzard up North. But that's not the point."
+
+"I think it has a bearing on the matter--that you saved him from the
+blizzard--and took him in--and nursed him like a brother till he died."
+
+"I'm not heartless," said Macdonald impatiently. "Of course I did that.
+I had to do it. I couldn't do less."
+
+"Or more," she suggested. "You may have made a hard bargain with him,
+but you wiped that out later."
+
+"That's just what I didn't do. Don't think my conscience is troubling
+me. I'm not such a mush-brained fool. If it had not been for you I would
+never have thought of it again. But you are his daughter. What I cheated
+him out of belongs to you--and you are my friend."
+
+"Don't use that word about what you did, please. He wasn't a child. If
+you got the best of him in a bargain, I don't think father would think
+of it that way."
+
+The difficulty was that he could not tell her the truth about her
+father's weakness for drink and how he had played upon it. He bridged
+all explanations and passed to the thing he meant to do in reparation.
+
+"The money I cleaned up from that claim belongs to you, Miss O'Neill.
+You will oblige me by taking it."
+
+From his pocket he took a folded paper and handed it to her. Sheba
+opened it doubtfully. The paper contained a typewritten statement and
+to it was attached a check by means of a clip. The check was made out
+to her and signed by Colby Macdonald. The amount it called for was one
+hundred and eighty-three thousand four hundred and thirty-one dollars.
+
+"Oh, I couldn't take this, Mr. Macdonald--I couldn't. It doesn't belong
+to me," she cried.
+
+"It belongs to you--and you're going to take it."
+
+"I wouldn't know what to do with so much."
+
+"The bank will take care of it for you until you decide. So that's
+settled." He passed definitely from the subject. "There's something else
+I want to say to you, Miss O'Neill."
+
+Some change in his voice warned her. The girl slanted a quick, shy
+glance at him.
+
+"I want to know if you'll marry me, Miss O'Neill," he shot at her
+abruptly. Then, without giving her time to answer, he pushed on:
+"I'm older than you--by twenty-five years. Always I've lived on the
+frontiers. I've had to take the world by the throat and shake from it
+what I wanted. So I've grown hard and willful. All the sweet, fine
+things of life I've missed. But with you beside me I'm not too old to
+find them yet--if you'll show me the way, Sheba."
+
+A wave of color swept into her face, but her eyes never faltered from
+his. "I'm not quite sure," she said in a low voice.
+
+"You mean--whether you love me?"
+
+She nodded. "I--admire you more than any man I ever met. You are a great
+man, strong and powerful,--and I am so insignificant beside you. I--am
+drawn to you--so much. But--I am not sure."
+
+Afterward, when she thought of it, Sheba wondered at the direct ease of
+his proposal. In the romances she had read, men were shy and embarrassed
+and fearful of the issue. But Colby Macdonald had known what he wanted
+to say and had said it as coolly and as readily as if it had been a
+business detail. She was the one that had blushed and stammered and
+found a difficulty in expressing herself.
+
+"I'm going away for two days. Perhaps when I come back you will know,
+Sheba. Take your time. Marriage is serious business. I want you to
+remember that my life has been very different from yours. You'll hear
+all sorts of things about me. Some of them are true. There is this
+difference between a man and a good woman. He fights and falls and
+fights again and wins. But a good woman is finer. She has never known
+the failure that drags one through slime and mud. Her goodness is born
+in her; she doesn't have to fight for it."
+
+The girl smiled a little tremulously. "Doesn't she? We're not all angel,
+you know."
+
+"I hope you're not. There will need to be a lot of the human in you to
+make allowances for Colby Macdonald," he replied with an answering
+smile.
+
+When he said good-bye it was with a warm, strong handshake.
+
+"I'll be back in two days. Perhaps you'll have good news for me then,"
+he suggested.
+
+The dark, silken lashes of her eyes lifted shyly to meet his.
+
+"Perhaps," she said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+DIANE AND GORDON DIFFER
+
+
+During the absence of Macdonald the field agent saw less of Sheba than
+he had expected, and when he did see her she had an abstracted manner he
+did not quite understand. She kept to her own room a good deal, except
+when she took long walks into the hills back of the town. Diane had a
+shrewd idea that the Alaskan had put his fortune to the test, and she
+not only let her cousin alone herself, but fended Gordon from her
+adroitly.
+
+The third day after the dinner Elliot dropped around to the Pagets with
+intent to get Sheba into a set of tennis. Diane sat on the porch darning
+socks.
+
+"Sheba is out walking with Mr. Macdonald," she explained in answer to
+a question as to the whereabouts of her guest.
+
+"Oh, he's back, is he?" remarked Gordon moodily.
+
+Mrs. Paget was quite cheerful on that subject. "He came back this
+morning. Sheba has gone up with him to see the Lucky Strike."
+
+"You're going to marry her to that man if you can, aren't you?" he
+charged.
+
+"If I can, Gordon." She slipped a darning-ball into one of little
+Peter's stockings and placidly trimmed the edges of the hole.
+
+"It's what I call a conspiracy."
+
+"Is it?" Diane smiled.
+
+Gordon understood her smile to mean that he was jealous.
+
+"Maybe I am. That's not the point," he answered, just as if she had made
+her accusation in words.
+
+"Suppose you tell me what the point is," she suggested, both amused and
+annoyed.
+
+"He isn't good enough for her. You know that perfectly well."
+
+"Good enough!" She shrugged her shoulders. "What man _is_ good
+enough for a nice girl if you come to that? There are other things
+beside sugary goodness. Any man who is strong can make himself good
+enough for the woman he loves."
+
+"Generally speaking, yes. But Colby Macdonald is different."
+
+"Thank Heaven he is," she retorted impatiently. Then added after a
+moment: "He isn't a Sunday-School superintendent if that's what you
+mean."
+
+"That isn't what I mean at all. But there's such a thing as a difference
+between right and wrong, isn't there?"
+
+"Oh, yes. For instance, Mr. Macdonald is right about the need of
+developing Alaska and the way to do it, and you are wrong."
+
+He could not help smiling a little at the adroit way she tried to
+sidetrack him, even though he was angry at her. But he had no intention
+of letting her go without freeing his mind.
+
+"I'm talking about essential right and wrong. Miss O'Neill is idealizing
+Macdonald. I don't suppose you've told her, for instance, that he made
+his first money in the North running a dance hall."
+
+"No, I haven't told her any such thing, because it isn't true," she
+replied scornfully. "He owned an opera house and brought in a company of
+players. I dare say they danced. That's very different, as you'd know if
+you didn't have astigmatism of the mind."
+
+"Not the way the story was told me. But let that pass. Does she know
+that Macdonald beat her father out of one of the best claims on Bonanza
+and was indirectly responsible for his death?"
+
+"What's the use of talking nonsense, Gordon. You know you can't prove
+that," his friend told him sharply.
+
+"I think I can--if it is necessary."
+
+Diane looked across at him with an impudent little tilt of the chin.
+"I don't think I like you as well as I used to."
+
+"Sorry, because I'd like you just as well, Diane, if you would stop
+trying to manage your cousin into a marriage that will spoil her life,"
+he answered gravely.
+
+"How dare you say that! How dare you, Gordon Elliot!" she flung back,
+furious at him. "I won't have you here talking that way to me. It's an
+insult."
+
+The fearless, level eyes of her friend looked straight at her. "I say it
+because the happiness of Miss O'Neill is of very great importance to me."
+
+"Do you mean--?" Wide-eyed, she looked her question straight at him.
+
+"That's just what I mean, Diane."
+
+She darned for a minute in silence. It had occurred to Diane before that
+perhaps Gordon might be in love with Sheba, but she had put the thought
+from her because she did not want to believe it.
+
+"That's different, Gordon. It explains--and in a way excuses--your
+coming here and trying to bully me." She stopped her work to flash a
+question at him. "Don't you think that maybe it's only a fancy of yours?
+I remember you used--"
+
+He shook his head. "No chance, Diane. I'm hard hit. She's the only girl
+I ever met that suited me. Everything she does is right. Every move she
+makes is wonderful."
+
+The eyes with which she looked at him were softer, as those of women are
+wont to be for the true romance.
+
+"You poor boy," she murmured, and let her hand for a moment rest on his.
+
+"Meaning that I lose?" he asked quickly.
+
+"I think you do. I'm not sure."
+
+Elliot leaned forward impulsively. "Be a good sport, Diane. Let me have
+my chance too. Why do you make it easy for Macdonald and hard for me?
+Isn't it because the glamour of his millions blinds you?"
+
+"He's a big, splendid man, but I don't like him any the less because he
+has the power to make life easy and comfortable for Sheba," she defended
+sturdily.
+
+"Yet you turned down Arthur West, the best catch in your set, to marry
+Peter, who was the worst," he reminded her. "Have you ever been sorry
+for it?"
+
+"That's different. Peter and I fit. It was one case out of a million."
+She gave him her old, friendly smile. "But I don't want to be hard on
+you, Gord. I'll be neutral. Come and see Sheba as often as she'll let
+you."
+
+Gordon beamed as he shook hands with her. "That sounds like the Di Paget
+I used to know."
+
+She recurred to the previous question. "Sheba knows more about Mr.
+Macdonald than you think. And about how he got her father's claim, for
+instance,--she has heard all that."
+
+"You told her?"
+
+"No. Colby Macdonald told her. He said he practically robbed her father,
+and he gave her a check for nearly two hundred thousand to cover the
+clean-up from the claim and interest."
+
+"Bully for him." On the heel of this he flung a question at her. "Did
+Macdonald ask her to marry him the night of the dinner?"
+
+A flash of whimsical amusement lit her dainty face. "You'd better ask
+him that. Here he comes now."
+
+They were coming down the walk together, Macdonald and Sheba. The young
+woman was absorbed in his talk, and she did not know that her cousin and
+Elliot were on the porch until she was close upon them. But at sight of
+the young man her eyes became warm and kind.
+
+"I'm sorry I was out yesterday when you called," she told him.
+
+"And you were out again to-day. My luck isn't very good, is it?"
+
+He laughed pleasantly, but his heart was bitter. He believed Macdonald
+had won. Some hint of proprietorship in his manner, together with her
+slight confusion when she saw them on the porch, had weighted his heart
+with lead.
+
+"We've had such a good walk." Sheba went on quickly. "I wish you could
+have heard Mr. Macdonald telling me how he once had a chance to save a
+small Esquimaux tribe during a hard winter. He carried food five hundred
+miles to them. It was a thrilling experience."
+
+"Mr. Macdonald has had a lot of very interesting experiences. You must
+get him to tell you about all of them," answered Gordon quietly.
+
+The eyes of the two men met. The steel-gray ones of the older man
+answered the challenge of his rival with a long, steady look. There was
+in it something of triumph, something of scornful insolence. If this
+young fellow wanted war, he did not need to wait long for it.
+
+"Time enough for that, man. Miss O'Neill and I have the whole Arctic
+winter before us for stories."
+
+The muscles in the lean jaws of Gordon Elliot stood out like steel
+ropes. He turned to Sheba. "Am I to congratulate Mr. Macdonald?"
+
+The color in her cheeks grew warmer, but her shy glance met his fairly.
+"I think it is I that am to be congratulated, Mr. Elliot."
+
+Diane took her cousin in her arms. "My dear, I wish you all the
+happiness in the world," she said softly.
+
+The Irish girl fled into the house as soon as she could, but not before
+making an announcement.
+
+"We're to be married soon, very quietly. If you are still at Kusiak we
+want you to be one of the few friends present, Mr. Elliot."
+
+Macdonald backed her invitation with a cool, cynical smile. "Miss
+O'Neill speaks for us both, of course, Elliot."
+
+The defeated man bowed. "Thanks very much. The chances are that I'll be
+through my business here before then."
+
+As soon as his fiancée had gone into the house, the Scotchman left.
+Gordon sat down in a porch chair and stared straight in front of him.
+The suddenness of the news had brought his world tumbling about his
+ears. He felt that such a marriage would be an outrage against Sheba's
+innocence. But he was not yet far enough away from the blow to ask
+himself how much the personal hurt influenced his opinion.
+
+Though she was sorry for him, Diane did not think it best to say so yet.
+
+Presently he spoke thickly. "I suppose you have heard that he was a
+squawman."
+
+His friend joined battle promptly with him. "That's ridiculous. Don't be
+absurd, Gordon."
+
+"It's the truth. I've seen the woman. She was pointed out to me."
+
+"By old Gideon Holt, likely," she flashed.
+
+"One could get evidence and show it to Miss O'Neill," he said aloud, to
+himself rather than to her.
+
+Diane put her point of view before him with heated candor. "_You_
+couldn't. Nobody but a cad would rake up old scandals about the man who
+has beaten him fairly for a woman's love."
+
+"You beg the question. _Has_ he won fairly?"
+
+"Of course he has. Be a good sport, Gordon. Don't kick on the umpire's
+decision. Play the game."
+
+"That's all very well. But what about her? Am I to sit quiet while she
+is sacrificed to a code of honor that seems to me rooted in dishonor?"
+
+"She is not being sacrificed. I'm her cousin. I'm very fond of her. And
+I'd trust her with Colby Macdonald."
+
+"Play fair, Diane. Tell her the truth about this Indian woman and let
+your cousin decide for herself. You can't do less, can you?"
+
+Mrs. Paget was distinctly annoyed. "You ought to be ashamed of yourself,
+Gordon Elliot. You take all the gossip of a crack-brained old idiot
+for gospel truth just because you want to believe the worst about Mr.
+Macdonald. Don't you know that people will say anything about a man who
+succeeds? Colby Macdonald is too big and too aggressive not to have made
+hundreds of enemies. His life has been threatened dozens of times. But
+he pays no attention to it--goes right on building-up this country.
+Yet you'd think he had a cloven hoof to hear some people talk. I've no
+patience with them."
+
+"The woman's name is Meteetse," Gordon said in an even voice, just as
+if he were answering a question. "She is young and good-looking for an
+Indian. Her boy is four or five years old. Colmac, they call him, and
+he looks just like Macdonald."
+
+"People are always tracing resemblances. There's nothing to that. But
+suppose his life _was_ irregular--years ago. This isn't Boston. It
+used to be the fringe of civilization. Men did as they pleased in the
+early days. We don't ask a man up here what he has been, but what he is.
+You ought to know that by this time."
+
+"This wasn't in the early days. It was five years ago, when Macdonald
+was examining the Kamatlah coal-field. I'm told he sends a check down
+the river once a month for the woman."
+
+"All the more credit to him if he does." Diane rose and looked stormily
+down at her friend. "You're about as broad as a clam, Gordon. Can't you
+see that even if it's true, all that is done with? It is a part of his
+past--and it's finished--trodden under foot. It hasn't a thing to do
+with Sheba."
+
+"I don't agree with you. A man can't cut loose entirely from his past.
+It is a part of him--and Macdonald's past isn't good enough for Sheba
+O'Neill."
+
+Diane tapped her little foot impatiently on the floor. "Do you know many
+men whose pasts are good enough for their wives? Are you a plaster-cast
+saint yourself? You know perfectly well that men trample down their
+pasts and begin again when they are married. Colby Macdonald is good
+enough for any woman alive if he loves her enough."
+
+"You don't know him."
+
+"I know him far better than you do. He is the biggest man I know, and
+now that he is in love with a good woman he'll rise to his chance."
+
+"She ought to be told the truth about Meteetse and her boy," he insisted
+doggedly.
+
+"I'm not going to disturb her with a lot of old maids' gossip. That's
+flat."
+
+"But if I prove to you that it isn't gossip."
+
+Mrs. Paget lost her temper completely. "Does the Government pay you to
+mind other people's business, Gordon?" she snapped.
+
+"I wouldn't be working for the Government then, but for Sheba O'Neill."
+
+"And for Gordon Elliot. You'd be doing underhand work for him too. Don't
+forget that. You can't do it. You're not that kind of a man. It isn't in
+you to go muckraking in the past of the man Sheba is going to marry."
+
+Elliot rose and looked across at the blue-ribbed mountains. His square
+jaw was set when he turned it back toward Diane.
+
+"She isn't going to marry him if I can help it," he said quietly.
+
+He walked out of the gate and down the walk toward his hotel.
+
+A message was waiting for him there from his chief in Seattle. It called
+him down the river on business.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+GENEVIEVE MALLORY TAKES A HAND
+
+
+Inside of an hour the news of the engagement of Macdonald was all over
+Kusiak. It was through a telephone receiver that the gossip was buzzed
+to Mrs. Mallory by a friend who owed her a little stab. The voice of
+Genevieve Mallory registered faint amusement, but as soon as she had
+hung up, her face fell into haggard lines. She had staked a year of her
+waning youth on winning the big mining man of Kusiak, together with all
+the money that she had been able to scrape up for a campaign outfit.
+Moreover, she liked him.
+
+It was not in the picture that she should fall desperately in love with
+any man. A woman of the world, she was sheathed in the plate armor of
+selfishness. But she was as near to loving Macdonald as was possible for
+her. She had a great deal of admiration for his iron strength, for the
+grit of the man. No woman could twist him around her finger, yet it was
+possible to lead him a long way in the direction one wanted.
+
+Mrs. Mallory sat down in the hall beside the telephone, her fingers
+laced about one crossed knee. She knew that if Sheba O'Neill had not
+come on the scene, Macdonald would have asked her to marry him. He had
+been moving slowly toward her for months. They understood each other and
+were at ease together. Between them was a strong physical affinity. Both
+were good-tempered and were wise enough to expect human imperfection.
+
+Then Diane Paget had brought in this slim, young cousin of hers and
+Colby Macdonald had been fascinated by the mystery of her innocent
+youth. Mrs. Mallory was like steel beneath the soft and indolent
+surface. Swiftly she mapped her plan of attack. The Alaskan could not be
+moved, but it might be possible to startle the girl into breaking the
+engagement. Genevieve Mallory would have used the weapon at hand without
+scruple in any case, but she justified herself on the ground that such a
+marriage could result only in unhappiness.
+
+But before she made any move Mrs. Mallory intended to be sure of her
+facts. It was like her to go to headquarters for information. She got
+Macdonald on the wire.
+
+"I've just heard something nice about you. Do tell me it's true," she
+said, her voice warm with sympathy.
+
+Macdonald laughed with an almost boyish embarrassment. "It's true, I
+reckon."
+
+"I'm so glad. She's a lovely girl. The sweetest thing that ever lived.
+I'm sure you'll be happy. I always did think you would make a perfect
+husband. Of course, I'm simply green with envy of her."
+
+Her little ripple of laughter was gay and care-free. The man at the
+other end of the line never had liked her better. Since he was not a
+fool he had guessed pretty closely how things stood with her. She was
+a game little sport, he told himself approvingly. It appealed to him
+immensely that she could take such a facer and come up smiling.
+
+There were no signs of worry wrinkles on her face when the maid admitted
+a caller half an hour later. Oliver Dustin was the name on the card. He
+was a remittance man, a tame little parlor pet whose vocation was to
+fetch and carry for pretty women, and by some odd trick of fate he had
+been sifted into the Northland. Mrs. Mallory had tolerated him rather
+scornfully, but to-day she smiled upon him.
+
+Propped up by pillows, she reclined luxuriously on a lounge. A thin
+spiral of smoke rose like incense to the ceiling from her lips. The
+slow, regular rise and fall of her breathing beneath the filmy lace
+of her gown accented the perfect fullness of bust and throat.
+
+Dustin helped himself to a cigarette and made himself comfortable.
+
+She set herself to win him. He was immensely flattered at her awakened
+interest. When she called him by his first name, he wagged all over like
+a pleased puppy.
+
+It came to him after a time that she was considering him for a
+confidential mission. He assured her eagerly that there was no trouble
+too great for him to take if he could be of any service to her. She
+hesitated and doubted and at last as a special favor to him accepted his
+offer. Their heads were close in whispered talk for a few minutes, at
+the end of which Dustin left the room with his chin in the air. He was
+a knight errant in the employ of the most attractive woman north of
+fifty-three.
+
+When Elliot took the down-river boat he found Oliver Dustin was a fellow
+passenger. The little man smoked an occasional cigar with the land agent
+and aired his views on politics and affairs social. He left the boat at
+the big bend. Without giving him much of his thought Gordon was a little
+surprised that the voluble remittance man had not told him where he was
+going.
+
+Not till a week later did Elliot return up the river. He was asleep at
+the time the Sarah passed the big bend, but next morning he discovered
+that Selfridge and Dustin had come aboard during the night. In the
+afternoon he came upon a real surprise when he found Meteetse and her
+little boy Colmac seated upon a box on the lower deck where freight for
+local points was stored.
+
+His guess was that they were local passengers, but wharf after wharf
+slipped behind them and the two still remained on board. They appeared
+to know nobody else on the Sarah, though once Gordon met Dustin just as
+he was hurrying away from the Indian woman. The little remittance man
+took the pains to explain to Elliot later that he was trying to find out
+whether the Indians knew any English.
+
+Meteetse transferred with the other Kusiak passengers at the river
+junction. The field agent was not the only one on board who wondered
+where she was going. Selfridge was consumed with curiosity, and when
+she and the boy got off at Kusiak, he could restrain himself no longer.
+Gordon saw Wally talking with her. Meteetse showed him an envelope which
+evidently had an address written upon it, for the little man pointed out
+to her the direction in which she must go.
+
+Since leaving Kusiak nearly two weeks before, no word had reached Gordon
+of Sheba. As soon as he had finished dinner at the hotel, he walked out
+to the Paget house and sent in his card.
+
+Sheba came into the hall to meet him from the living-room where she had
+been sitting with the man she expected to marry next week. She gave a
+little murmur of pleasure at sight of him and held out both hands.
+
+"I was afraid you weren't going to get back in time. I'm so glad," she
+told him warmly.
+
+He managed to achieve a smile. "When is the great day?"
+
+"Next Thursday. Of course, we're as busy as can be, but Diane says--"
+
+A ring at the door interrupted her. Sheba stepped forward and let in an
+Indian woman with a little boy clinging to her hand.
+
+"You Miss O'Neill?" she asked.
+
+"Yes."
+
+From the folds of her shawl she drew a letter. The girl glanced at the
+address, then opened and read what was written. She looked up, puzzled,
+first at the comely, flatfooted Indian woman and afterward at the
+handsome little brown-faced papoose. She turned to Gordon.
+
+"This letter says I am to ask this woman who is the father of her boy.
+What does it mean?"
+
+Gordon knew instantly what it meant, though he could not guess who had
+dealt the blow. He hesitated for an answer, and in his embarrassment she
+felt that which began to ring a bell of warning in her heart.
+
+The impulse to spare her pain was stronger in him than the desire that
+she should know the truth.
+
+"Send her away," he urged. "Don't ask any questions. She has been sent
+to hurt you."
+
+A fawnlike fear flashed into the startled eyes. "To hurt me?"
+
+"I am afraid so."
+
+"But--why? I have done nobody any harm." She seemed to hold even her
+breathing in suspense. Only a pulse beat wildly in her white throat like
+the heart of an imprisoned thrush.
+
+"Perhaps some of Macdonald's enemies," he suggested.
+
+And at that there came a star-flash into the soft eyes and a lifted tilt
+to the chin cut fine as a cameo. She turned proudly to the Indian woman.
+
+"What is it that you have to tell me about this boy's father?"
+
+Meteetse began to speak. At the first mention of Macdonald's name
+Sheba's eyes dilated. Her smile, her sweet, glad pleasure at Gordon's
+arrival, were already gone like the flame of a blown candle. Clearly her
+heart was a-flutter, in fear of she knew not what. When the Indian woman
+told how she had first crossed the path of Macdonald, the color flamed
+into the cheeks of the Irish girl, but as the story progressed, the
+blood ebbed even from her lips.
+
+With a swift movement of her fingers she flashed on the hall light. Her
+gaze searched the brown, shiny face of the little chap. She read there
+an affidavit of the truth of his mother's tale. The boy had his father's
+trick of squinting a slant look at anything he found interesting. It was
+impossible to see him and not recognize Colby Macdonald reincarnated.
+
+"What is your name?" asked Sheba suddenly.
+
+The youngster hung back shyly among the folds of the Indian woman's
+skirt. "Colmac," he said at last softly.
+
+"Come!" Sheba flung open the door of the living-room and ushered them
+in.
+
+Macdonald, pacing restlessly up and down the room during her absence,
+pulled up in his stride. He stood frowning at the native woman, then his
+eyes passed to Elliot and fastened upon him. The face of the Scotchman
+might have been chipped from granite. It was grim as that of a hanging
+judge.
+
+Gordon started to explain, then stopped with a shrug. What was the use?
+The man would never believe him in the world.
+
+"I'll remember this," the Alaskan promised his rival. There was a cold
+glitter in his eyes, a sudden flare of the devil that was
+blood-chilling.
+
+"It's true, then," broke in Sheba. "You're a--a squawman. You belong to
+this woman."
+
+"Nothing of the kind," he cried roughly. "That's been ended for years."
+
+"Ended?" Sheba drew Colmac forward by the wrist. "Do you deny that this
+is your boy?"
+
+The big Alaskan brushed this aside as of no moment. "I dare say he is.
+Anyhow I'm paying for his keep. What of it? That's all finished and done
+with."
+
+"How can it be done with when--when she's the mother of your child, your
+wife before God?" The live eyes attacked him from the dusk that framed
+the oval of her pale face. Standing there straight as an aspen, the
+beautiful bosom rising and falling quickly while the storm waves beat
+through her blood, Sheba O'Neill had never made more appeal to the
+strong, lawless man who desired her for his wife.
+
+"You don't understand." Macdonald's big fists were clenched so savagely
+that the knuckles stood out white from the brown tan of the flesh.
+"This is a man's country. It's new--close to nature. What he wants he
+takes--if he's strong enough. I'm elemental. I--"
+
+"You wanted her--and you took her. Now you want me--and I suppose you'll
+take me too." Her scornful words had the sting of a whiplash.
+
+"I've lived as all men live who have red blood in them. This woman is an
+incident. I've been aboveboard. She can't say I ever promised more than
+I've given. I've kept her and the boy. It's been no secret. If you had
+asked, I would have told you the whole story."
+
+"Does that excuse you?"
+
+"I don't need any excuse. I'm a man. That's excuse enough. You've been
+brought up among a lot of conventions and social lies. The one big fact
+you want to set your teeth into now is that I love you, that there isn't
+another woman on God's earth for me, and that there never will be again."
+
+Her eyes flashed battle. "The one big fact I'm facing is that you have
+insulted me--that you insult me again when you mention love with that
+woman and boy in the room. You belong to them--go to them--and leave
+me alone." She had been fighting for self-control, to curb her growing
+resentment, but now it flamed passionately into words. "I hate the sight
+of you. Why don't you go--all of you--and leave me in peace?"
+
+It was a cry of bruised pride and wounded love. Elliot touched the
+Indian woman on the shoulder. Meteetse turned stolidly and walked out
+of the room, still leading Colmac by the hand. The young man followed.
+
+Macdonald closed the door behind them, then strode frowning up and down
+the room. The fear was growing on him that for all his great driving
+power he could not shake this slim girl from the view to which she
+clung. If the situation had not been so serious, it would have struck
+him as ridiculous. His relation with Meteetse had been natural enough.
+He believed that he had acted very honorably to her. Many a man would
+have left her in the lurch to take care of the youngster by herself. But
+he had acknowledged his obligation. He was paying his debt scrupulously,
+and because of it the story had risen to confront him. He felt that it
+was an unjust blow of fate. Punishment was falling upon him, not for
+what he had done, but because he had scorned to make a secret of it.
+
+He knew that he must justify himself before Sheba or lose her. As she
+stood in the dusk so tall and rigid, he knew her heart was steel to him.
+Her finely chiseled face had the look of race. Never had the spell of
+her been more upon him. He crushed back a keen-edged desire to take her
+supple young body into his arms and kiss her till the scarlet ran into
+her cheeks like splashes of wine.
+
+"You haven't the proper slant on this, Sheba. Alaska is the last
+frontier. It's the dropping-off place. You're north of fifty-three."
+
+"Am I north of the Ten Commandments?" she demanded with the inexorable
+judgment of youth. "Did you leave the moral code at home when you came
+in over the ice?"
+
+He smiled a little. "Morality is the average conduct of the average
+man at a given time and place. It is based on custom and expediency.
+The rules made for Drogheda won't fit Dawson or Nome. The laws made to
+protect young women in Ireland would be absurd if applied to half-breed
+squaws in Alaska. Meteetse does not hold herself disgraced but honored.
+She counts her boy far superior to the other youngsters of the village,
+and he is so considered by the tribe. I am told she lords it over her
+sisters."
+
+A faint flush of anger had crept into her cheeks. "Your view of morality
+puts us on a level with the animals. I will not discuss the subject, if
+you please."
+
+"We must discuss it. I must get you to see that Meteetse and what she
+stood for in my life have nothing to do with us. They belong to my past.
+She doesn't exist for either of us--isn't in any way a part of my
+present or future."
+
+"She exists for me," answered Sheba listlessly. She felt suddenly old
+and weary. "But I can't talk about it. Please go. I want to be alone."
+
+Again Macdonald paced restlessly down the room and back. He moved
+with a long, easy, tireless stride. The man was one among ten thousand,
+dominant, virile, every ounce of him strong as tested steel. But he felt
+as if all his energy were caged.
+
+"Why don't you go?" the girl pleaded. "It's no use to stay."
+
+He stopped in front of her. "I'm going to marry you, Sheba. Don't think
+I'll let that meddler interfere with our happiness. You're mine."
+
+"No. Never!" she cried. "I'll take the boat and go home first."
+
+"You've promised to marry me. You're going to keep your word and be glad
+of it all your life."
+
+She shook her head. "No."
+
+"Yes." Macdonald had always shown remarkable restraint with her. He had
+kissed her seldom, and always with a kind of awe at her young purity.
+Now he caught her by the shoulders. His eyes, deep in their sockets,
+mirrored the passionate desire of his heart.
+
+The color flamed into her face. She looked hot to the touch, an active
+volcano ready to erupt. There was an odd feeling in her mind that this
+big man was a stranger to her.
+
+"Take your hands from me," she ordered.
+
+"Do you think I'm going to give you up now--now, after I've won
+you--because of a damfool scruple in your pretty head? You don't know
+me. It's too late. I love you--and I'm going to protect both of us from
+your prudishness."
+
+His arms closed on her and he crushed her to him, looking down hungrily
+into the dark, little face.
+
+"Let me go," she cried fiercely, struggling to free herself.
+
+For answer he kissed the red lips, the flaming cheeks, the angry eyes.
+Then, coming to his senses, he pushed her from him, turned, and strode
+heavily from the room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+GORDON BUYS A REVOLVER
+
+
+Selfridge was not eager to meet his chief, but he knew he must report at
+once. He stopped at his house only long enough to get into fresh clothes
+and from there walked down to the office. Over the Paget telephone he
+had got into touch with Macdonald who told him to wait at headquarters
+until he came.
+
+It had been the intention of Macdonald to go direct from Sheba to his
+office, but the explosion brought about by Meteetse had sent him out
+into the hills for a long tramp. He was in a stress of furious emotion,
+and until he had worked off the edge of it by hard mushing, the cramped
+civilization of the town stifled him.
+
+Hours later he strode into the office of the company. He was
+dust-stained and splashed with mud. Fifteen miles of stiff heel-and-toe
+walking had been flung behind him.
+
+Wally lay asleep in a swivel chair, his fat body sagging and his head
+fallen sideways in such a way as to emphasize the plump folds of his
+double chin. His eyes opened. They took in his chief slowly. Then, in
+a small panic, he jumped to his feet.
+
+"Must 'a' been taking thirty winks," he explained. "Been up nights a
+good deal."
+
+"What doing?" demanded the Scotchman harshly.
+
+In a hurried attempt to divert the anger of Macdonald, his assistant
+made a mistake. "Say, Mac! Who do you think came up on the boat with me?
+I wondered if you knew. Meteetse and her kid--"
+
+He stopped. The big man was glaring savagely at him. But Macdonald said
+nothing. He waited, and under the compulsion of his forceful silence
+Wally stumbled on helplessly.
+
+"--They got off here. 'Course I didn't know whether you'd sent for her
+or not, so I stopped and kinder gave her the glad hand just to size
+things up."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"She had the address of Miss O'Neill, that Irish girl staying at the
+Pagets, the one that came in--"
+
+"Go on," snapped his chief.
+
+"So I directed her how she could get there and--"
+
+Wally found himself lifted from the chair and hammered down into it
+again. His soft flesh quaked like a jelly. As he stared pop-eyed at the
+furious face above him, the fat chin of the little man drooped.
+
+"My God, Mac, don't do that!" he whined.
+
+Macdonald wheeled abruptly away, crossed the room in long strides, and
+came back. He had a grip on himself again.
+
+"What's the use?" he said aloud. "You're nothing but a spineless
+putterer. Haven't you enough sense even to give me a chance to decide
+for myself? Why didn't you keep the woman with you till you could send
+for me, you daft donkey?"
+
+"I swear I never thought of that."
+
+"What have you got up there in your head instead of brains? I send you
+outside to look after things and you fall down on the job. I give you
+plain instructions what to do at Kamatlah and you let Elliot make a
+monkey of you. You see him on the boat with a woman coming to make
+trouble for me, and the best you can do is to help her on the way. Man,
+man, use your gumption."
+
+"If I had known--"
+
+"D'ye think you've got sense enough to take a plain, straight message as
+far as the hotel? Because if you have, I've got one to send."
+
+Wally caressed tenderly his bruised flesh. He had a childlike desire to
+weep, but he was afraid Macdonald would kick him out of the office.
+
+"'Course I'll do whatever you say, Mac," he answered humbly.
+
+The Scotch-Canadian brushed the swivel chair and its occupant to one
+side, drew up another chair in front of the desk, and faced Selfridge
+squarely. The eyes that blazed at the little man were the grimmest he
+had ever looked into.
+
+"Go to the hotel and see this man Elliot alone. Tell him he's gone too
+far--butted into my affairs once too often. There's not a man alive I'd
+stand it from. My orders are for him to get out on the next boat. If
+he's here after that, I'll kill him on sight."
+
+The color ebbed out of the florid face of Wally. He moistened his lips
+to speak. "Good God, Mac, you can't do that. He'll go out and
+report--"
+
+"To hell with his report. Let him say what he likes. Put this to him
+straight: that he and I can't stay in this town--_and both of us
+live_."
+
+Wally had lapped up too many highballs in the past ten years to relish
+this kind of a mission. He had depressed his nerves with overmuch
+tobacco and spurred them with liquors, had dissipated his force in many
+small riotings. His nerve was gone. He had not the punch any more.
+Yet Mac was always expecting him to help out with his rough stuff, he
+reflected fretfully. This was the third time in a month that he had been
+flung headlong into trouble. Take this message now. There was no sense
+in it. Selfridge plucked up his courage to say so.
+
+"That won't buy us anything but trouble, Mac. In the old days you could
+put over--"
+
+The little man never guessed how close he came to being flung through
+the transom over the door, but his instinct warned him to stop. His
+objection died away in a mumble.
+
+"O' course I'll do whatever you say," he added a second time.
+
+"See you do," advised his chief, an ugly look in his eyes. "Tell him he
+gets till the next boat. If he's here after that, he'd better go heeled,
+for I'll shoot on sight wherever we meet."
+
+Selfridge went on his errand with lagging feet. On the way he stopped
+at the Pay-Streak Saloon to fortify himself with a cocktail. He found
+Elliot sitting moodily alone on the porch of the hotel.
+
+In Gordon's pocket there was a note to Macdonald explaining that he had
+nothing to do with the coming of Meteetse. He had expected to send it by
+the hotel porter that evening, but the curt order to leave town filled
+him with a chill anger. The dictator of affairs at Kusiak might think
+what he pleased for all the explanation he would get from him. As for
+taking the next boat, Elliot did not even give that consideration.
+
+"Tell your master I don't take orders from him," he told Wally quietly.
+"I'll stay till my work here is done."
+
+They had moved a few yards down the street. Now Gordon turned,
+lean-loined and active, and trod with crisp, confident step back to the
+hotel. He had said all that was necessary to say.
+
+Two men standing on the porch nodded a good-evening to him. Gordon,
+about to pass, glanced at them again. They were Northrup and Trelawney,
+two of the miners who had had trouble with Macdonald on the boat.
+
+On impulse he stopped. "Found work yet?" he asked.
+
+"Found a job and lost it again," Northrup answered sullenly.
+
+"Too bad."
+
+"Macdonald passed the word along that we weren't to get work. So our
+boss fired us. The whole district is closed to us. We been blacklisted,"
+explained Trelawney.
+
+"And we're busted," added his mate.
+
+Elliot was always free-handed. Perhaps he felt just now unusually
+sympathetic towards these victims of the high-handed methods of
+Macdonald. From his pocket he took a small leather purse and gave a
+piece of gold to each of them.
+
+"Just as a loan to carry you for a couple of days till you get something
+to do," he suggested.
+
+Northrup demurred, but after a little pressure accepted the
+accommodation.
+
+"I pay you soon back," he promised.
+
+Trelawney laughed recklessly. He had been drinking.
+
+"You bet. Me too."
+
+His companion flashed a look of warning at him and explained that they
+were going down the river to look for work outside of the district.
+
+Suddenly Trelawney broke loose and began to curse Macdonald with a
+bitterness that surprised the Government agent. What struck him most,
+though, was the obvious anxiety of Northrup to quiet his partner and to
+gloss over what he had said. Thinking of it later, Gordon wondered why
+the Dane, who had as much cause to hate Macdonald as the other, should
+be at such pains to smooth down the man and explain away his threats.
+
+Elliot bought an automatic revolver next morning and a box of
+cartridges. He was not looking for trouble, but he intended to be
+prepared for it when trouble came looking for him. With a rifle he was a
+fair shot, but he lacked experience with the revolver. In the afternoon
+he walked out of town and practiced shooting at tin cans for a half an
+hour. On his way back he met Peter Paget.
+
+The engineer came straight to the subject in his mind.
+
+"Selfridge came to see me last night. He told me about the trouble
+between you and Macdonald, Gordon. You must leave town till he cools
+down. Macdonald is a bad man with a gat."
+
+"Is he?"
+
+"You can drop down the river on business for a few weeks. After a
+while--"
+
+His friend looked at him coolly. "I can, but I'm not going to. Where do
+you get this stuff about me being a quitter, Pete?"
+
+Peter laid a hand on his shoulder. "Now, look here, Gordon. Don't be a
+kid and foolhardy. Duck. I'm your friend--"
+
+"You're his, too, aren't you?"
+
+"Yes, of course, but--"
+
+"All right. Tell him to duck. There'll be no trouble of my making. But
+if he starts any I'll be there. Macdonald doesn't own the earth, you
+know. I've been sent up here by Uncle Sam on business, and you can bet
+your last dollar I'll stay on the job till I'm through."
+
+"Of course you've got to finish your job. But it doesn't all have to be
+done right here. Just for a week or two--"
+
+"Tell your friend something else while you're on the subject. If I drop
+him, I go scot free because he is interfering with me in my duty. I'll
+put Selfridge on the stand to prove it. But if he should kill me, his
+last chance for getting the Macdonald claims patented would be gone.
+The public would raise such a howl that the Administration would have to
+throw your friend and the Guttenchilds overboard to save itself. I know
+that--and Macdonald knows it. So he stands to lose either way."
+
+Paget knew this was true. He knew, too, there was no use in arguing with
+this young athlete. That close-gripped jaw and salient chin did not
+belong to a slacker. Gordon would stick and see the thing out. But Peter
+could not drop the subject without one more appeal.
+
+"He's not sore at you about the claims. You know that. It's because you
+brought the squaw up the river to see Sheba."
+
+"I didn't bring her--hadn't a thing to do with that. I don't know who
+brought her, though I could give a good guess."
+
+A gleam of hope showed in the eye of the engineer. "You didn't bring
+her? Diane said you threatened--"
+
+"Maybe I did say I would. Anyhow, I thought better of it. But I'm glad
+some one had the sense to tell Miss O'Neill the truth."
+
+"Who do you think brought her?"
+
+"I'm not thinking on that subject out loud."
+
+"But if we could show Mac--"
+
+"That's up to you. I'll not lift a finger. Your king of Kusiak has to
+learn some time that everybody isn't going to sidestep him and pussyfoot
+when he's around. I didn't start this war and I'm not making any peace
+overtures."
+
+"You're as obstinate as the devil," smiled Peter, but in his heart he
+admired the dourness of his friend.
+
+The engineer went to Macdonald and gave a deleted version of his talk
+with Elliot. The Scotchman listened, a bitter, incredulous smile on his
+face.
+
+"Says he didn't bring her, does he? Tell him from me that he lies. Your
+wife let out to me by accident that he threatened to bring her. Meteetse
+and he came up on the boat together. He was with her at your house when
+she told her story. He's trying to save his hide. No chance."
+
+"Elliot isn't a liar. When he says he didn't bring the woman, that
+satisfies me. I know he didn't do it," insisted Paget stiffly.
+
+"Different here. Who else had any interest in bringing her except him?
+Nobody. Use your brains, Peter. He takes the first boat down the river.
+He comes back on the next one. She comes back, too. They couldn't figure
+I'd be at your house when they showed up there to tell the story. That's
+where Mr. Elliot slipped up."
+
+Peter was of different stuff from Selfridge. He had something to say. So
+he said it.
+
+"Times have changed, Mac. You can't shoot down this young fellow without
+making all kinds of trouble. First thing we'd lose the claims. The
+Administration would drop you like a hot potato if you did a thing like
+that. Sheba would never speak to you again. Your friends would know in
+their hearts it was murder. You can't do it."
+
+Macdonald's jaw clamped. "Then let him get out. That's my last word to
+him."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+AMBUSHED
+
+
+Colby Macdonald, in miner's boots and corduroy working suit, stood
+beside his horse with one arm thrown carelessly across its rump. He was
+about to start for Seven-Mile Creek Camp with twenty-seven hundred
+dollars in the saddlebags to pay the men there.
+
+Diane was talking with him. "She's young and fine and spirited. Of
+course it was a great shock to her. She had been idealizing you. But I
+think she is beginning to understand things better. At any rate, she
+does not hate you any more. Give the girl time."
+
+"You think she will--be reasonable?"
+
+Mrs. Paget finished the pattern she was punching in the soft ground
+beside the board walk with the ferrule of her umbrella. Her eyes met his
+frankly.
+
+"I don't know. But I'm sure of one thing. She'll not be reasonable, as
+you call it, unless you are reasonable."
+
+"You mean--Elliot?"
+
+"Yes. She likes him very much. Do you know that when the Indian woman
+came he urged Sheba not to listen to her story?"
+
+"Sounds likely--after he had spent his good money bringing her here,"
+sneered the mine-owner.
+
+"He didn't. Gordon is a splendid fellow. He wouldn't lie," answered
+Diane hotly. "And one thing is sure--if you lay a finger on him for
+this, it will be fatal with Sheba. She will be through with you."
+
+Macdonald had thought of this before. It had been coming to him from
+several different angles that he could not afford to gratify his desire
+to wipe this meddlesome young official from his path. He made a slow,
+sulky promise.
+
+"All right. I'll let him alone. Peter can tell him."
+
+Swinging to the saddle, he spurred his horse and cantered away. With a
+little smile Diane watched his flat, muscular back and the arrogant set
+of his strong shoulders. There was not his match in the territory, she
+thought, but sometimes a clever woman could manage him.
+
+His mind was full of the problem that had come into his life. He rode
+abstractedly, so that he was at the lower ford of the creek almost
+before he knew it. A bilberry thicket straggled down to the opposite
+bank of the stream on both sides of the road.
+
+The horse splashed through the ford and took the little rise beyond with
+a rush. Just before reaching the brow of the hill, the animal stumbled
+and fell. As its rider went headlong, he caught a glimpse of a cord
+drawn taut across the path.
+
+Macdonald, shaken by the fall, began slowly to rise. From the shadows
+of the bilberry bushes two stooping figures rushed at him. He threw up
+an arm to ward off the club aimed at his head, but succeeded only in
+breaking the force of the blow. As he staggered back, stunned, a bullet
+glanced along his forehead and ridged a furrow through the thick hair.
+A second stroke of the club jarred him to the heels.
+
+Though his mind was not clear, his body answered automatically the
+instinct that told him to close with his assailants. He lurched forward
+and gripped one, wrestling with him for the revolver. Vaguely he knew
+by the sharp, jagged shoots of pain that the second man was beating his
+head with a club. The warm blood dripped through his hair and blinded
+his eyes. Dazed and shaken, he yet managed to get the revolver from the
+man who had it. But it was his last effort. He was too far gone to use
+it. A blow on the forehead brought him unconscious to the ground
+bleeding from a dozen wounds.
+
+On his way back from Seven-Mile Creek Camp Gordon Elliot rode down to
+the ford. In the dusk he was almost upon them before the robbers heard
+him. For a moment the two men stood gazing at him and he at the tragedy
+before him. One of the men moved toward his horse.
+
+"Stop there!" ordered Gordon sharply, and he reached for his revolver.
+
+The man--it was the miner Northrup--jumped for Elliot and the field
+agent fired. Another moment, and he was being dragged from the saddle.
+What happened next was never clear to him. He knew that both of the
+bandits closed in on him and that he was fighting desperately against
+odds. The revolver had been knocked from his hand and he fought with
+bare fists just as they did. Twice he emptied his lungs in a cry for
+help.
+
+They quartered over the ground, for Gordon would not let either of them
+get behind him. They were larger than he, heavy, muscle-bound giants of
+great strength, but he was far more active on his feet. He jabbed and
+sidestepped and retreated. More than once their heavy blows crashed home
+on his face. His eyes dared not wander from them for an instant, but he
+was working toward a definite plan. As he moved, his feet were searching
+for the automatic he had dropped.
+
+One of his feet, dragging over the ground, came into contact with the
+steel. With a swift side kick Gordon flung the weapon a dozen feet to
+the left. Presently, watching his chance, he made a dive for it.
+
+Trelawney, followed by Northrup, turned and ran. One of them caught
+Macdonald's horse by the bridle. He swung to the saddle and the other
+man clambered on behind. There was a clatter of hoofs and they were
+gone.
+
+Elliot stooped over the battered body that lay huddled at the edge
+of the water. The man was either dead or unconscious, he was not sure
+which. So badly had the face been beaten and hammered that it was not
+until he had washed the blood from the wounds that Gordon recognized
+Macdonald.
+
+Opening the coat of the insensible man, Gordon put his hand against the
+heart. He could not be sure whether he felt it beating or whether the
+throbbing came from the pulses in his finger tips. As well as he could
+he bound up the wounds with handkerchiefs and stanched the bleeding.
+With ice-cold water from the stream he drenched the bruised face. A
+faint sigh quivered through the slack, inert body.
+
+Gordon hoisted Macdonald across the saddle and led the horse through
+the ford. He walked beside the animal to town, and never had two miles
+seemed to him so far. With one hand he steadied the helpless body that
+lay like a sack of flour balanced in the trough of the saddle.
+
+Kusiak at last lay below him, and when he descended the hill to the
+suburbs almost the first house was the one where the Pagets lived.
+
+Elliot threw the body across his shoulder and walked up the walk to the
+porch. He kicked upon the door with his foot. Sheba answered the knock,
+and at sight of what he carried the color faded from her face.
+
+"Macdonald has been hurt--badly," he explained quickly.
+
+"This way," the girl cried, and led him to her own room, hurrying in
+advance to throw back the bedclothes.
+
+"Get Diane--and a doctor," ordered Gordon after he had laid the
+unconscious man on the white sheet.
+
+While he and Diane undressed the mine-owner Sheba got a doctor on the
+telephone. The wounded man opened his eyes after a long time, but there
+was in them the glaze of delirium. He recognized none of them. He did
+not know that he was in the house of Peter Paget, that Diane and Sheba
+and his rival were fighting with the help of the doctor to push back
+the death that was crowding close upon him. All night he raved, and
+his delirious talk went back to the wild scenes of his earlier life.
+Sometimes he swore savagely; again he made quiet deadly threats; but
+always his talk was crisp and clean and vigorous. Nothing foul or slimy
+came to the surface in those hours of unconscious babbling.
+
+The doctor had shaken his head when he first saw the wounds. He would
+make no promises.
+
+"He's a mighty sick man. The cuts are deep, and the hammering must have
+jarred his brain terribly. If it was anybody but Macdonald, I wouldn't
+give him a chance," he told Diane when he left in the morning to get
+breakfast. "But Macdonald has tremendous vitality. Of course if he lives
+it will be because Mr. Elliot brought him in so soon."
+
+Gordon walked with the doctor as far as the hotel. A brown, thin,
+leathery man undraped himself from a chair in the lobby when Elliot
+opened the door. He was officially known as the chief of police of
+Kusiak. Incidentally he constituted the whole police force. Generally he
+was referred to as Gopher Jones on account of his habit of spasmodic
+prospecting.
+
+"I got to put you under arrest, Mr. Elliot," he explained.
+
+The loafers in the hotel drew closer.
+
+"What for?" demanded Gordon, surprised.
+
+"Doc thinks it will run to murder, I reckon."
+
+The field agent was startled. "You mean--Macdonald?"
+
+The brown man chewed his quid steadily. "You done guessed it."
+
+"That's absurd, you know. What evidence have you got?"
+
+"First off, you'd had trouble with him. It was common talk that when you
+and Mac met, guns were going to pop. You bought an automatic revolver at
+the Seattle & Kusiak Emporium two days ago. You was seen practising with
+it."
+
+"He had threatened me."
+
+"You want to be careful what you say, Mr. Elliot. It will be used
+against you." Gopher shot a squirt of tobacco unerringly at the open
+door of the stove. "You was seen talking with Trelawney and Northrup.
+Money passed from you to them."
+
+"I gave them a loan of ten dollars each because they were broke. Is that
+criminal?" demanded Gordon angrily.
+
+"That's your story. You'll git a chance to tell it to the jury, I
+shouldn't wonder. Mebbe they'll believe it. You never can tell."
+
+"Believe it! Why, you muttonhead, I found him where he was bleeding to
+death and brought him in."
+
+"That's what I heard say. Kinder queer, ain't it, you happened to be the
+man that found him?"
+
+"Nothing queer about it. I was riding in from Seven-Mile Creek Camp."
+Gordon was exasperated, but not at all alarmed.
+
+"So you was. While you was out at the camp, you asked one of the boys
+how big the pay-roll would be."
+
+"Does that prove I was planning a hold-up? Isn't that the last thing I
+would have asked if I had intended robbery?"
+
+"Don't ask me. I ain't no psychologist. All I know is you took an
+interest in the bank-roll on the way."
+
+"I'm here for the Government investigating Macdonald. I was getting
+information--earning my pay. Can you understand that?"
+
+Gopher chewed his cud impassively. "Sure I can, and I been earning mine.
+By the way, howcome you to be beat up so bad, Mr. Elliot?"
+
+"I had a fight with the robbers."
+
+"Sure it wasn't with the robbed. That split lip of yours looks to me
+plumb like Mac's John Hancock."
+
+Elliot flushed angrily. "Of course if you intend to believe me
+guilty--"
+
+"Now, there ain't no manner o' use in gettin' het up, young fellow.
+Mebbe you did it; mebbe you didn't. Anyhow, you'll gimme that gat you
+been toting these last few days."
+
+Gordon's hand moved toward his hip. Then he remembered.
+
+"I haven't it. I left it--"
+
+"You left it at the ford--with one shell empty. That's where you left
+it," interrupted the officer.
+
+"Yes. I fired at Northrup as he rushed me."
+
+"Um-hu," assented Jones, impudent unbelief in his eye. "At Northrup or
+at Macdonald."
+
+"What do you think I did with the money, then? Did I eat it?"
+
+"Not so you could notice it. Since you put it to me flat-foot, you gave
+it to your pardners. You didn't want it. They did. They have got the
+horse too--and they're hitting the high spots to make their get-away."
+
+Elliot was locked up in the flimsy jail without breakfast. He was
+furious, but as he paced up and down the narrow beat beside the bed his
+anger gave way to anxiety. Surely the Pagets could not believe he had
+done such a thing. And Sheba--would she accept as true this weight of
+circumstantial evidence that was piling up against him?
+
+It could all be explained so easily. And yet--the facts fitted like
+links of a chain to condemn him. He went over them one by one. The
+babbling tongue of Selfridge that had made common gossip of the
+impending tragedy in which he and Macdonald were the principals--his
+purchase of the automatic--his public meeting with two known enemies of
+the Scotchman, during which he had been seen to give them money--his
+target practice with the new revolver--the unhappy chance that had taken
+him out to Seven-Mile Creek Camp the very day of the robbery--his casual
+questions of the miners--even the finding of the body by him. All of
+these dovetailed with the hypothesis that his partners in crime were to
+escape and bear the blame, while he was to bring the body back to town
+and assume innocence.
+
+Paget was admitted to his cell later in the morning by Gopher Jones. He
+shook hands with the prisoner. Jones retired.
+
+"Tough luck, Gordon," the engineer said.
+
+"What does Sheba think?" asked the young man quickly.
+
+"We haven't told her you have been arrested. I heard it only a little
+while ago."
+
+"And Diane?"
+
+"Yes, she knows."
+
+"Well?" demanded Gordon brusquely.
+
+Peter looked at him in questioning surprise. "Well, what?" He caught the
+meaning of his friend. "Try not to be an ass, Gordon. Of course she
+knows the charge is ridiculous."
+
+The chip dropped from the young man's shoulder. "Good old Diane. I might
+have known," he said with a new cheerfulness.
+
+"I think you might have," agreed Peter dryly. "By the way, have you had
+any breakfast?"
+
+"No. I'm hungry, come to think of it."
+
+"I'll have something sent in from the hotel."
+
+"How's Macdonald?"
+
+"He's alive--and while there's life there is hope."
+
+"Any news of the murderers?" asked Gordon.
+
+"Posses are combing the hills for them. They stole a packhorse from a
+truck gardener up the valley. It seems they bought an outfit for a month
+yesterday--said they were going prospecting."
+
+They talked for a few minutes longer, mainly on the question of a lawyer
+and the chances of getting out on bond. Peter left the prisoner in very
+much better spirits than he had found him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+"GOD SAVE YOU KINDLY"
+
+
+A nurse from the hospital had relieved Diane and Sheba at daybreak.
+They slept until the middle of the afternoon, then under orders from the
+doctor walked out to take the air. They were to divide the night watch
+between them and he said that he wanted them fit for service. The fever
+of the patient was subsiding. He slept a good deal, and in the intervals
+between had been once or twice quite rational.
+
+The thoughts of the cousins drew their steps toward the jail. Sheba
+looked at Diane.
+
+"Will they let us see him, do you think?"
+
+"Perhaps. We can try."
+
+Gopher Jones was not proof against the brisk confidence with which Mrs.
+Paget demanded admittance. He stroked his unshaven chin while he chewed
+his quid, then reluctantly got his keys.
+
+The prisoner was sitting on the bed. His heart jumped with gladness when
+he looked up.
+
+Diane shook hands cheerfully. "How is the criminal?"
+
+"Better for hearing your kind voice," he answered.
+
+His eyes strayed to the ebon-haired girl in the background. They met a
+troubled smile, grave and sweet.
+
+"Awfully good of you to come to see me," he told Sheba gratefully. "How
+is Macdonald?"
+
+"Better, we hope. He knew Diane this afternoon."
+
+Mrs. Paget did most of the talking, but Gordon contributed his share.
+Sheba did not say much, but it seemed to the young man that there was
+a new tenderness in her manner, the expression of a gentle kindness
+that went out to him because he needed it. The walk had whipped the
+color into her cheeks and she bloomed in that squalid cell like a desert
+rose. There was in the fluent grace of the slender, young body a naïve,
+virginal sweetness that took him by the throat. He knew that she
+believed in him and the trouble rolled from his heart like a cold,
+heavy wave.
+
+"We haven't talked to Mr. Macdonald yet about the attack on him,"
+Diane explained. "But he must have recognized the men. There are many
+footprints at the ford, showing how they moved over the ground as they
+fought. So he could not have been unconscious from the first blow."
+
+"Unless they were masked he must have known them. It was light enough,"
+agreed Elliot.
+
+"Peter is still trying to get the officers to accept bail, but I don't
+think he will succeed. There is a good deal of feeling in town against
+you."
+
+"Because I am supposed to be an enemy to an open Alaska, I judge."
+
+"Mainly that. Wally Selfridge has been talking a good deal. He takes it
+for granted that you are guilty. We'll have to wait in patience till Mr.
+Macdonald speaks and clears you. The doctor won't let us mention the
+subject to him until he comes to it of his own free will."
+
+Gopher stuck his head in at the door. "You'll have to go, ladies. Time's
+up."
+
+When Sheba bade the prisoner good-bye it was with a phrase of the old
+Irish vernacular. "God save you kindly."
+
+He knew the peasant's answer to the wish and gave it. "And you too."
+
+The girl left the prison with a mist in her eyes. Her cousin looked at
+her with a queer, ironic little smile of affection. To be in trouble was
+a sure passport to the sympathy of Sheba. Now both her lovers were in
+a sad way. Diane wondered which of them would gain most from this new
+twist of fate.
+
+Sheba turned to Mrs. Paget with an impulsive little burst of feminine
+ferocity. "Why do they put him in prison when they must know he didn't
+do it--that he couldn't do such a thing?"
+
+"They don't all know as well as you do how noble he is, my dear,"
+answered Diane dryly.
+
+"But it's just absurd to think that he would plan the murder of a man he
+has broken bread with for a few hundred dollars."
+
+Diane flashed another odd little glance in the direction of her cousin.
+Probably Sheba was the one woman in Kusiak who did not know that
+Macdonald had served an ultimatum on Elliot to get out or fight and that
+their rivalry over her favor was at the bottom of the difficulty between
+them.
+
+"It will work out all right," promised the older cousin.
+
+Returning from their walk, they met Wally Selfridge coming out of the
+Paget house.
+
+"Did you see Mr. Macdonald?" asked Diane.
+
+"Yes. He's quite rational now." There was a jaunty little strut of
+triumph in Wally's cock-sure manner.
+
+Mrs. Paget knew he had made himself very busy securing evidence against
+Gordon. He was probably trying to curry favor with his chief. The little
+man always had been jealous of Peter. Perhaps he was attempting to rap
+him over the shoulder of Elliot because the Government official was a
+friend of Paget. Just now his insolent voice suggested a special cause
+for exultation.
+
+The reason Wally was so pleased with himself was that he had dropped a
+hint into the ear of the wounded man not to clear Elliot of complicity
+in the attack upon him. The news that the special investigator had been
+arrested for robbery and attempted murder, flashed all over the United
+States, would go far to neutralize any report he might make against
+the validity of the Macdonald claims. If to this could be added later
+reports of an indictment, a trial, and possibly a conviction, it would
+not matter two straws what Elliot said in his official statement to the
+Land Office.
+
+Since the attack upon his chief, Selfridge had moved on the presumption
+that Elliot had been in a conspiracy to get rid of him. He accepted the
+guilt of the field agent because this theory jumped with the interest
+of Wally and his friends. As a politician he intended to play this new
+development for all it was worth.
+
+He had been shocked at the sight of Macdonald. The terrible beating and
+the loss of blood had sapped all the splendid, vital strength of the
+Scotchman. His battered head was swathed in bandages, but the white face
+was bruised and disfigured. The wounded man was weak as a kitten; only
+the steady eyes told that he was still strong and unconquered.
+
+"I want to talk business for a minute, Miss Sedgwick. Will you please
+step out?" said Macdonald to his nurse.
+
+She hesitated. "The doctor says--"
+
+"Do as I say, please."
+
+The nurse left them alone. Wally told the story of the evidence against
+Elliot in four sentences. His chief caught the point at once.
+
+After Selfridge had gone, the wounded man lay silent thinking out his
+programme. Not for a moment did he doubt that he was going to live, and
+his brain was already busy planning for the future. By some freak of
+luck the cards had been stacked by destiny in his favor. He knew now
+that in the violence of his anger against Elliot he had made a mistake.
+To have killed his rival would have been fatal to the Kamatlah coal
+claims, would have alienated his best friends, and would have prejudiced
+hopelessly his chances with Sheba. Fate had been kind to him. He had
+been in the wrong and it had put him in the right. By the same cut of
+the cards young Elliot had been thrust down from an impregnable position
+to one in which he was a discredited suspect. With all this evidence
+to show that he had conspired against Macdonald, his report to the
+Department would be labor lost.
+
+Diane came into the sick-room stripping her gloves after the walk.
+Macdonald smiled feebly at her and fired the first shot of his campaign
+to defeat the enemy.
+
+"Has Elliot been captured yet?" he asked weakly.
+
+The keen eyes of his hostess fastened upon him. "Captured! What do you
+mean? It was Gordon Elliot that brought you in and saved your life."
+
+"Brought me from where?"
+
+"From where he found you unconscious--at the ford."
+
+"That's his story, is it?"
+
+Macdonald shut his eyes wearily, but his incredulous voice had suggested
+a world of innuendo.
+
+The young woman stood with her gloves crushed tight in both hands. It
+was her nature to be always a partisan. Without any reserve she was for
+Gordon in this new fight upon him. What had Wally Selfridge been saying
+to Macdonald? She longed mightily to ask the sick man some questions,
+but the orders of the doctor were explicit. Did the mine-owner mean to
+suggest that he had identified Elliot as one of his assailants? The
+thing was preposterous.
+
+And yet--that was plainly what he had meant to imply. If he told such a
+story, things would go hard with Gordon. In court it would clinch the
+case against him by supplying the one missing link in the chain of
+circumstantial evidence.
+
+Diane, in deep thought, frowned down upon the wounded man, who seemed
+already to have fallen into a light sleep. She told herself that this
+was some of Wally Selfridge's deviltry. Anyhow, she would talk it over
+with Peter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+GORDON SPENDS A BUSY EVENING
+
+
+Paget smoked placidly, but the heart within him was troubled. It looked
+as if Selfridge had made up his mind to frame Gordon for a prison
+sentence. The worst of it was that he need not invent any evidence
+or take any chances. If Macdonald came through on the stand with an
+identification of Elliot as one of his assailants, the young man would
+go down the river to serve time. There was enough corroborative
+testimony to convict St. Peter himself.
+
+It all rested with Macdonald--and the big Scotch-Canadian was a very
+uncertain quantity. His whole interests were at one in favor of getting
+Elliot out of the way. On the other hand--how far would he go to save
+the Kamatlah claims and to remove this good-looking rival from his path?
+Peter could not think he would stoop to perjury against an innocent man.
+
+"I'm just telling you what he said," Diane explained. "And it worried
+me. His smile was cynical. I couldn't help thinking that if he wants to
+get even with Gordon--"
+
+Mrs. Paget stopped. The maid had just brought into the room a visitor.
+Diane moved forward and shook hands with him. "How do you do, Mr.
+Strong? Take this big chair."
+
+Hanford Strong accepted the chair and a cigar. Though a well-to-do
+mine-owner, he wore as always the rough clothes of a prospector. He came
+promptly to the object of his call.
+
+"I don't know whether this is where I should have come or not. Are you
+folks for young Elliot or are you for Selfridge?" he demanded.
+
+"If you put it that way, we're for Elliot," smiled Peter.
+
+"All right. Let me put it another way. You work for Mac. Are you on his
+side or on Elliot's in this matter of the coal claims?"
+
+Diane looked at Peter. He took his time to answer.
+
+"We hope the coal claimants will win, but we've got sense enough to see
+that Gordon is in here to report the facts. That's what he is paid for.
+He'll tell the truth as he sees it. If his superior officers decide on
+those facts against Macdonald, I don't see that Elliot is to blame."
+
+"That's how it looks to me," agreed Strong. "I'm for a wide-open Alaska,
+but that don't make it right to put this young fellow through for a
+crime he didn't do. Lots of folks think he did it. That's all right.
+I know he didn't. Fact is, I like him. He's square. So I've come to tell
+you something."
+
+He smoked for a minute silently before he continued.
+
+"I've got no evidence in his favor, but I bumped into something a little
+while ago that didn't look good to me. You know I room next him at the
+hotel. I heard a noise in his room, and I thought that was funny, seeing
+as he was locked up in jail. So I kinder listened and heard whispers and
+the sound of some one moving about. There's a door between his room and
+mine that is kept locked. I looked through the keyhole, and in Elliot's
+room there was Wally Selfridge and another man. They were looking
+through papers at the desk. Wally put a stack of them in his pocket and
+they went out locking the door behind them."
+
+"They had no business doing that," burst out Diane. "Wally Selfridge
+isn't an officer of the law."
+
+Strong nodded dryly to her. "Just what I thought. So I followed them.
+They went to Macdonald's offices. After awhile Wally came out and left
+the other man there. Then presently the lights went out. The man is
+camped there for the night. Will you tell me why?"
+
+"Why?" repeated Diane with her sharp eyes on the miner.
+
+"Because Wally has some papers there he don't want to get away from
+him."
+
+"Some of Gordon's papers, of course."
+
+"You've said it."
+
+"All his notes and evidence in the case of the coal claims probably,"
+contributed Peter.
+
+"Maybe. Wally has stole them, but he hasn't nerve enough to burn them
+till he gets orders from Mac. So he's holding them safe at the office,"
+guessed Strong.
+
+"It's an outrage," Diane decided promptly.
+
+"Surest thing you know. Wally has fixed it to frame him for prison and
+to play safe about his evidence on the coal claims."
+
+"What are you going to do about it?" Diane asked her husband sharply.
+
+Peter rose. "First I'm going to see Gordon and hear what he has to say.
+Come on, Strong. We may be gone quite a while, Diane. Don't wait up for
+me if you get through your stint of nursing."
+
+Roused from sleep, Gopher Jones grumbled a good deal about letting the
+men see his prisoner. "You got all day, ain't you, without traipsing
+around here nights. Don't you figure I'm entitled to any rest?"
+
+But he let them into the ramshackle building that served as a jail, and
+after three dollars had jingled in the palm of his hand he stepped
+outside and left the men alone with his prisoner. The three put their
+heads together and whispered.
+
+"I'll meet you outside the house of Selfridge in half an hour, Strong,"
+was the last thing that Gordon said before Jones came back to order out
+the visitors.
+
+As soon as the place was dark again, Gordon set to work on the flimsy
+framework of his cell window. He knew already it was so decrepit that he
+could escape any time he desired, but until now there had been no reason
+why he should. Within a quarter of an hour he lifted the iron-grilled
+sash bodily from the frame and crawled through the window.
+
+He found Paget and Strong waiting for him in the shadows of a pine
+outside the yard of Selfridge.
+
+"To begin with, you walk straight home and go to bed, Peter," the young
+man announced. "You're not in this. You're not invited to our party. I
+don't have to tell you why, do I?"
+
+The engineer understood the reason. He was an employee of Macdonald, a
+man thoroughly trusted by him. Even though Gordon intended only to right
+a wrong, it was better that Paget should not be a party to it.
+Reluctantly Peter went home.
+
+Gordon turned to Strong. "I owe you a lot already. There's no need for
+you to run a risk of getting into trouble for me. If things break right,
+I can do what I have to do without help."
+
+"And if they don't?" Strong waved an impatient hand. "Cut it out,
+Elliot. I've taken a fancy to go through with this. I never did like
+Selfridge anyhow, and I ain't got a wife and I don't work for Mac. Why
+the hell shouldn't I have some fun?"
+
+Gordon shrugged his shoulders. "All right. Might as well play ball and
+get things moving, then."
+
+The little miner knocked at the door. Wally himself opened. Elliot, from
+the shelter of the pine, saw the two men in talk. Selfridge shut the
+door and came to the edge of the porch. He gave a gasp and his hands
+went trembling into the air. The six-gun of the miner had been pressed
+hard against his fat paunch. Under curt orders he moved down the steps
+and out of the yard to the tree.
+
+At sight of Gordon the eyes of Wally stood out in amazement. Little
+sweat beads burst out on his forehead, for he remembered how busy he had
+been collecting evidence against this man.
+
+"W-w-what do you want?" he asked.
+
+"Got your keys with you?"
+
+"Y-yes."
+
+"Come with us."
+
+Wally breathed more freely. For a moment he had thought this man had
+come to take summary vengeance on him.
+
+They led him by alleys and back streets to the office of the Macdonald
+Yukon Trading Company. Under orders he knocked on the door and called
+out who he was. Gordon crouched close to the log wall, Strong behind
+him.
+
+"Let me in, Olson," ordered Selfridge again.
+
+The door opened, and a man stood on the threshold. Elliot was on top of
+him like a panther. The man went down as though his knees were oiled
+hinges. Before he could gather his slow wits, the barrel of a revolver
+was shoved against his teeth.
+
+"Take it easy, Olson," advised Gordon. "Get up--slowly. Now, step back
+into the office. Keep your hands up."
+
+Strong closed and locked the door behind them.
+
+"I want my papers, Selfridge. Dig up your keys and get them for me,"
+Elliot commanded.
+
+Wally did not need any keys. He knew the combination of the safe and
+opened it. From an inner drawer he drew a bunch of papers. Gordon looked
+them over carefully. Strong sat on a table and toyed with a revolver
+which he jammed playfully into the stomach of his fat prisoner.
+
+"All here," announced the field agent.
+
+The safe-robbers locked their prisoners in the office and disappeared
+into the night. They stopped at the house of the collector of customs, a
+genial young fellow with whom Elliot had played tennis a good deal, and
+left the papers in his hands for safe-keeping. After which they returned
+to the hotel and reached the second floor by way of the back stairs used
+by the servants.
+
+Here they parted, each going to his own room. Gordon slept like a
+schoolboy and woke only when the sun poured through the window upon his
+bed in a broad ribbon of warm gold.
+
+He got up, bathed, dressed, and went down into the hotel dining-room.
+The waiters looked at him in amazement. Presently the cook peered in
+at him from the kitchen and the clerk made an excuse to drop into the
+room. Gordon ate as if nothing were the matter, apparently unaware of
+the excitement he was causing. He paid not the least attention to the
+nudging and the whispering. After he had finished breakfast, he lit a
+cigar, leaned back in his chair, and smoked placidly.
+
+Presently an eruption of men poured into the room. At the head of them
+was Gopher Jones. Near the rear Wally Selfridge lingered modestly. He
+was not looking for hazardous adventure.
+
+"Whad you doing here?" demanded Gopher, bristling up to Elliot.
+
+The young man watched a smoke wreath float ceilingward before he turned
+his mild gaze on the chief of police.
+
+"I'm smoking."
+
+"Don't you know we just got in from hunting you--two posses of us been
+out all night?" Gopher glared savagely at the smoker.
+
+Gordon looked distressed. "That's too bad. There's a telephone in my
+room, too. Why didn't you call up? I've been there all night."
+
+"The deuce you have," exploded Jones. "And us combing the hills for you.
+Young man, you're mighty smart. But I want to tell you that you'll pay
+for this."
+
+"Did you want me for anything in particular--or just to get up a poker
+game?" asked Elliot suavely.
+
+The leader of the posse gave himself to a job of scientific profanity.
+He was spurred on to outdo himself because he had heard a titter or
+two behind him. When he had finished, he formed a procession. He, with
+Elliot hand-cuffed beside him, was at the head of it. It marched to the
+jail.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+SHEBA DOES NOT THINK SO
+
+
+The fingers of Sheba were busy with the embroidery upon which she
+worked, but her thoughts were full of the man who lay asleep on the
+lounge. His strong body lay at ease, relaxed.
+
+Already health was flowing back into his veins. Beneath the tan of the
+lean, muscular cheeks a warmer color was beginning to creep. Soon he
+would be about again, vigorous and forceful, striding over obstacles to
+the goal he had set himself.
+
+Just now she was the chief goal of his desire. Sheba did not deceive
+herself into thinking that he had for a moment accepted her dismissal
+of him.
+
+He still meant to marry her, and he had told her so in characteristic
+way the day after their break.
+
+Sheba had sent him a check for the amount he had paid her and had
+refused to see him or anybody else.
+
+Shamed and humiliated, she had kept to her room. The check had come back
+to her by mail.
+
+Across the face of it he had written in his strong handwriting:--
+
+ I don't welsh on my bets. You can't give to me what is not mine.
+
+ Do not think for an instant that I shall not marry you.
+
+Watching him now, she wondered what manner of man he was. There had
+been a day or two when she had thought she understood him. Then she had
+learned, from the story of Meteetse, how far his world of thought was
+from hers. That which to her had put a gulf between them was to him only
+an incident.
+
+She moved to adjust a window blind and when she returned found that his
+steady eyes were fixed upon her.
+
+"You're getting better fast," she said.
+
+"Yes."
+
+The girl had a favor to ask of him and lest her courage fail she plunged
+into it.
+
+"Mr. Macdonald, if you say the word Mr. Elliot will be released on bail.
+I am thinking you will be so good as to say it."
+
+His narrowed eyes held a cold glitter. "Why?"
+
+"You must know he is innocent. You must--"
+
+"I know only what the evidence shows," he cut in, warily on his guard.
+"He may or may not have been one of my attackers. From the first blow
+I was dazed. But everything points to it that he hired--"
+
+"Oh, no!" interrupted the Irish girl, her dark eyes shining softly. "The
+way of it is that he saved your life, that he fought for you, and that
+he is in prison because of it."
+
+"If that is true, why doesn't he bring some proof of it?"
+
+"Proof!" she cried scornfully. "Between friends--"
+
+"He's no friend of mine. The man is a meddler. I despise him."
+
+The scarlet flooded her cheeks. "And I am liking him very, very much,"
+she flung back stanchly.
+
+Macdonald looked up at the vivid, flushed face and found it wholly
+charming. He liked her none the less because her fine eyes were hot and
+defiant in behalf of his rival.
+
+"Very well," he smiled. "I'll get him out if you'll do me a good turn
+too."
+
+"Thank you. It's a bargain."
+
+"Then sing to me."
+
+She moved to the piano. "What shall I sing?"
+
+"Sing 'Divided.'"
+
+The long lashes veiled her soft eyes while she considered. In a way he
+had tricked her into singing for him a love-song she did not want to
+sing. But she made no protest. Swiftly she turned and slid along the
+bench. Her fingers touched the keys and she began.
+
+He watched the beauty and warmth of her dainty youth with eyes that
+mirrored the hunger of his heart. How buoyantly she carried her dusky
+little head! With what a gallant spirit she did all things! He was
+usually a frank pagan, but when he was with her it seemed to him that
+God spoke through her personality all sorts of brave, fine promises.
+
+Sheba paid her pledge in full. After the first two stanzas were finished
+she sang the last ones as well:--
+
+ "An' what about the wather when I'd have ould Paddy's boat,
+ Is it me that would be feared to grip the oars an' go afloat?
+ Oh, I could find him by the light of sun or moon or star:
+ But there's caulder things than salt waves between us, so they are.
+ Och anee!
+
+ "Sure well I know he'll never have the heart to come to me,
+ An' love is wild as any wave that wanders on the sea,
+ 'Tis the same if he is near me, 'tis the same if he is far:
+ His thoughts are hard an' ever hard between us, so they are.
+ Och anee!"
+
+Her hands dropped from the keys and she turned slowly on the end of the
+seat. The dark lashes fell to her hot cheeks. He did not speak, but she
+felt the steady insistence of his gaze. In self-defense she looked at
+him.
+
+The pallor of his face lent accent to the fire that smouldered in his
+eyes.
+
+"I'm going to marry you, Sheba. Make up your mind to that, girl," he
+said harshly.
+
+There was infinite pity in the look she gave him. "'There's caulder
+things than salt waves between us, so they are,'" she quoted.
+
+"Not if I love you and you love me. By God, I trample down everything
+that comes between us."
+
+He swung to a sitting position on the lounge. Through the steel-gray
+eyes in the brooding face his masterful spirit wrestled with hers. A
+lean-loined Samson, with broad, powerful shoulders and deep chest, he
+dominated his world ruthlessly. But this slim Irish girl with the young,
+lissom body held her own.
+
+"Must we go through that again?" she asked gently.
+
+"Again and again until you see reason."
+
+She knew the tremendous driving power of the man and she was afraid in
+her heart that he would sweep her from the moorings to which she clung.
+
+"There is something else I haven't told you." The embarrassed lashes
+lifted bravely from the flushed cheeks to meet steadily his look.
+"I don't think--that I--care for you. 'Tis I that am shamed at
+my--fickleness. But I don't--not with the full of my heart."
+
+His bold, possessive eyes yielded no fraction of all they claimed.
+"Time enough for that, Sheba. Truth is that you're afraid to let
+yourself love me. You're worried because you can't measure me by the
+little two-by-four foot-rule you brought from Ireland with you."
+
+Sheba nodded her dusky little head in naïve candor. "I think there will
+be some truth in that, Mr. Macdonald. You're lawless, you know."
+
+"I'm a law to myself, if that's what you mean. It is my business to help
+hammer out an empire in this Northland. If I let my work be cluttered up
+by all the little rules made by little men for other little ones, my
+plans would come to a standstill. I am a practical man, but I keep sight
+of the vision. No need for me to brag. What I have done speaks for me as
+a guidepost to what I mean to do."
+
+"I know," the girl admitted with the impetuous generosity of her race.
+"I hear it from everybody. You have built towns and railroads and
+developed mines and carried the twentieth century into new outposts. You
+have given work to thousands. But you go so fast I can't keep step with
+you. I am one of the little folks for whom laws were made."
+
+"Then I'll make a new code for you," he said, smiling. "Just do as I say
+and everything will come out right."
+
+Faintly her smile met his. "My grandmother might have agreed to that.
+But we live in a new world for women. They have to make their own
+decisions. I suppose that is a part of the penalty we pay for freedom."
+
+Diane came into the room and Macdonald turned to her.
+
+"I have just been telling Sheba that I am going to marry her--that there
+is no escape for her. She had better get used to the idea that I intend
+to make her happy."
+
+The older cousin glanced at Sheba and laughed with a touch of
+embarrassment. "Whether she wants to be happy or not, O Cave Man?"
+
+"I'm going to make her want to."
+
+Sheba fled, but from the door she flung back her challenge. "I don't
+think so."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+GORDON FINDS HIMSELF UNPOPULAR
+
+
+Macdonald kept his word to Sheba. He used his influence to get Elliot
+released, and with a touch of cynicism quite characteristic went on the
+bond of his rival. An information was filed against the field agent of
+the Land Department for highway robbery and attempted murder, but Gordon
+went about his business just as if he were not under a cloud.
+
+None the less, he walked the streets a marked man. Women and children
+looked at him curiously and whispered as he passed. The sullen, hostile
+eyes of miners measured him silently. He was aware that feeling had
+focused against him with surprising intensity of resentment, and he
+suspected that the whispers of Wally Selfridge were largely responsible
+for this.
+
+For Wally saw to it that in the minds of the miners Elliot in his own
+person stood for the enemies of the open-Alaska policy. He scattered
+broadcast garbled extracts from the first preliminary report of the
+field agent, and in the coal camps he spread the impression that the
+whole mining activities of the Territory would be curtailed if Elliot
+had his way.
+
+In the States the fight between the coal claimants and their foes was
+growing more bitter. The muckrakers were busy, and the sentiment outside
+had settled so definitely against granting the patents that the National
+Administration might at any time jettison Macdonald and his backers as a
+sop to public opinion.
+
+It was not hard for Gordon to guess how unpopular he was, but he did not
+let this interfere with his activities. He moved to and fro among the
+mining camps with absolute disregard of the growing hatred against him.
+
+Paget came to him at last with a warning.
+
+"What's this I hear about you being almost killed up on Bonanza?" Peter
+wanted to know.
+
+"Down in the None Such Mine, you mean? It did seem to be raining hammers
+as I went down the shaft," admitted his friend.
+
+"Were the hammers dropped on purpose?"
+
+Gordon looked at him with a grim smile. "Your guess is just as good as
+mine, Peter. What do you think?"
+
+Peter answered seriously. "I think it isn't safe for you to take the
+chances you do, Gordon. I find a wrong impression about you prevalent
+among the men. They are blaming you for stirring up all this trouble on
+the outside, and they are worried for fear the mines may close and they
+will lose their jobs. I tell you that they are in a dangerous mood."
+
+"Sorry, but I can't help that."
+
+"You can stay around town and not go out alone nights, can't you?"
+
+"I dare say I can, but I'm not going to."
+
+"Some of these men are violent. They don't think straight about you--"
+
+"Kindness of Mr. Selfridge," contributed Gordon.
+
+"Perhaps. Anyhow, there's a lot of sullen hate brewing against you.
+Don't invite an explosion. That would be just kid foolhardiness."
+
+"You think I'd better buy another automatic gat," said Elliot with a
+grin.
+
+"I think you had better use a little sense, Gordon. I dare say I am
+exaggerating the danger. But when you go around with that jaunty,
+devil-may-care way of yours, the men think you are looking for
+trouble--and you're likely to get it."
+
+"Am I?"
+
+"I know what I'm talking about. Nine out of ten of the men think you
+tried to murder Macdonald after you had robbed him and that your nerve
+weakened on the job. This seems to some of the most lawless to give
+them a moral right to put you out of the way. Anyhow, it is a kind of
+justification, according to their point of view. I'm not defending it,
+of course. I'm telling you so that you can appreciate your danger."
+
+"You have done your duty, then, Peter."
+
+"But you don't intend to take my advice?"
+
+"I'll tell you what I told you last time when you warned me. I'm going
+through with the job I've been hired to do, just as you would stick it
+out in my place. I don't think I'm in much danger. Men in general are
+law-abiding. They growl, but they don't go as far as murder."
+
+Peter gave him up. After all, the chances were that Gordon was right.
+Alaska was not a lawless country. And it might be that the best way to
+escape peril was to walk through it with a grin as if it did not exist.
+
+The next issue of the Kusiak "Sun" contained a bitter editorial attack
+upon Elliot. The occasion for it was a press dispatch from Washington to
+the effect that the pressure of public opinion had become so strong that
+Winton, Commissioner of the General Land Office, might be forced to
+resign his place. This was a blow to the coal claimants, and the "Sun"
+charged in vitriolic language that the reports of Elliot were to blame.
+He was, the newspaper claimed, an enemy to all those who had come to
+Alaska to earn an honest living there. Under indictment for attempted
+murder and for highway robbery, this man was not satisfied with having
+tried to kill from ambush the best friend Alaska had ever known. In
+every report that he sent to Washington he was dealing underhanded blows
+at the prosperity of Alaska. He was a snake in the grass, and as such
+every decent man ought to hold him in scorn.
+
+Elliot read this just as he was leaving for the Willow Creek Camp.
+He thrust the paper impatiently into his coat pocket and swung to the
+saddle. Why did they persecute him? He had told nothing but the truth,
+nothing not required of him by the simplest, elemental honesty. Yet he
+was treated as an outcast and a criminal. The injustice of it was
+beginning to rankle.
+
+He was temperamentally an optimist, but depression rode with him to the
+gold camp and did not lift from his spirits till he started back next
+day for Kusiak. The news had been flashed by wire all over the United
+States that he was a crook. His friends and relatives could give no
+adequate answer to the fact that an indictment hung over his head.
+In Alaska he was already convicted by public opinion. Even the Pagets
+were lined up as to their interests with Macdonald. Sheba liked him and
+believed in him. Her loyal heart acquitted him of all blame. But it was
+to the wooing of his enemy that she had listened rather than to his.
+The big Scotchman had run against a barrier, but his rival expected
+him to trample it down. He would wear away the scruples of Sheba by
+the pressure of his masterful will.
+
+In the late afternoon, while Gordon was still fifteen miles from Kusiak,
+his horse fell lame. He led it limping to the cabin of some miners.
+
+There were three of them, and they had been drinking heavily from a jug
+of whiskey left earlier in the day by the stage-driver. Gordon was in
+two minds whether to accept their surly permission to stay for the
+night, but the lameness of his horse decided him.
+
+Not caring to invite their hostility, he gave his name as Gordon instead
+of Elliot. He was to learn within the hour that this was mistake number
+two.
+
+From a pocket of the coat he had thrown on a bed protruded the newspaper
+Gordon had brought from Kusiak. One of the men, a big red-headed fellow,
+pulled it out and began sulkily to read.
+
+While he read the other two bickered and drank and snarled at each
+other. All three of the men were in that stage of drunkenness when a
+quarrel is likely to flare up at a moment's notice.
+
+"Listen here," demanded the man with the newspaper. "Tell you what,
+boys, I'm going to wring the neck of that pussyfooting spy Elliot if
+I ever get a chanct."
+
+He read aloud the editorial in the "Sun." After he had finished, the
+others joined him in a chorus of curses.
+
+"I always did hate a spy--and this one's a murderer too. Why don't some
+one fill his hide with lead?" one of the men wanted to know.
+
+Redhead was sitting at the table. He thumped a heavy fist down so hard
+that the tin cups jumped. "Gimme a crack at him and I'll show you, by
+God."
+
+A shadow fell across the room. In the doorway stood a newcomer. Gordon
+had a sensation as if a lump of ice had been drawn down his spine. For
+the man who had just come in was Big Bill Macy, and he was looking at
+the field agent with eyes in which amazement, anger, and triumph blazed.
+
+"I'm glad to death to meet up with you again, Mr. Elliot," he jeered.
+"Seems like old times on Wild-Goose."
+
+"Whad you say his name is?" cut in the man with the newspaper.
+
+"Hasn't he introduced himself, boys?" Macy answered with a cruel
+grin. "Now, ain't that modest of him? You lads are entertaining that
+well-known deteckative and spy Gordon Elliot, that renowned king of
+hold-ups--"
+
+The red-headed man interrupted with a howl of rage. "If you're telling
+it straight, Bill Macy, I'll learn him to spy on me."
+
+Elliot was sitting on one of the beds. He had not moved an inch since
+Macy had appeared, but the brain behind his live eyes was taking stock
+of the situation. Big Bill blocked the doorway. The table was in front
+of the window. Unless he could fight his way out, there was no escape
+for him. He was trapped.
+
+Quietly Gordon looked from one to another. He read no hope in the eyes
+of any.
+
+"I'm not spying on you. My horse is lame. You can see that for yourself.
+All I asked was a night's lodging."
+
+"Under another name than your own, you damned sneak."
+
+The field agent did not understand the fury of the man, because he
+did not know that these miners were working the claim under a defective
+title and that they had jumped to the conclusion that he had come to get
+evidence against them. But he knew that never in his life had he been
+in a tighter hole. In another minute they would attack him. Whether it
+would run to murder he could not tell. At the best he would be hammered
+helpless.
+
+But no evidence of this knowledge appeared in his manner.
+
+"I didn't give my last name because there is a prejudice against me in
+this country," he explained in an even voice.
+
+He wondered as he spoke if he had better try to fling himself through
+the window sash. There might be a remote chance that he could make it.
+
+The miner at the table killed this possibility by rising and standing
+squarely in the road.
+
+"Look out! He's got a gat," warned Macy.
+
+Gordon fervently wished he had. But he was unarmed. While his eyes
+quested for a weapon he played for time.
+
+"You can't get away with this, you know. The United States Government
+is back of me. It's known I left the Willow Creek Camp. I'll be traced
+here."
+
+Through Gordon's mind there flashed a word of advice once given him by
+a professional prize-fighter: "If you get in a rough house, don't wait
+for the other fellow to hit first."
+
+They were crouching for the attack. In another moment they would be upon
+him. Almost with one motion he stooped, snatched up by the leg a heavy
+stool, and sprang to the bed upon which he had been sitting.
+
+The four men closed with him in a rush. They came at him low, their
+heads protected by uplifted arms. His memory brought to him a picture of
+the whitewashed gridiron of a football field, and in it he saw a vision
+of safety.
+
+The stool crashed down upon Big Bill Macy's head. Gordon hurdled the
+crumpling figure, plunged between hands outstretched to seize him, and
+over the table went through the window, taking the flimsy sash with him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+A NEW WAY OF LEAVING A HOUSE
+
+
+The surge of disgust with which Sheba had broken her engagement to marry
+Macdonald ebbed away as the weeks passed. It was impossible for her to
+wait upon him in his illness and hold any repugnance toward this big,
+elemental man. The thing he had done might be wrong, but the very
+openness and frankness of his relation to Meteetse redeemed it from
+shame. He was neither a profligate nor a squawman.
+
+This was Diane's point of view, and in time it became to a certain
+extent that of Sheba. One takes on the color of one's environment, and
+the girl from Drogheda knew in her heart that Meteetse and Colmac were
+no longer the real barriers that stood between her and the Alaskan.
+She had been disillusioned, saw him more clearly; and though she still
+recognized the quality of bigness that set him apart, her spirit did not
+now do such complete homage to it. More and more her thoughts contrasted
+him with another man.
+
+Macdonald did not need to be told that he had lost ground, but with
+the dogged determination that had carried him to success he refused to
+accept the verdict. She was a woman, therefore to be won. The habit of
+victory was so strong in him that he could see no alternative.
+
+He embarrassed her with his downright attentions, hemmed her in with
+courtesies she could not evade. If she appealed to her cousin, Diane
+only laughed.
+
+"My dear, you might as well make up your mind to him. He is going to
+marry you, willy-nilly."
+
+Sheba herself began to be afraid he would. There was something dominant
+and masterful about the man that swept opposition aside. He had a way of
+getting what he wanted.
+
+The motor-car picnic to the Willow Creek Camp was a case in point. Sheba
+did not want to go, but she went. She would much rather have sat in the
+rear seat with Diane,--at least, she persuaded herself that she
+would,--yet she occupied the place beside Macdonald in front. The girl
+was a rebel. Still, in her heart, she was not wholly reluctant. He made
+a strong appeal to her imagination. She felt that it would have been
+impossible for any girl to be indifferent to the wooing of such a man.
+
+The picnic was a success. Macdonald was an outdoor man rather than a
+parlor one. He took charge of the luncheon, lit the fire, and cooked the
+coffee without the least waste of effort. In his shirt-sleeves, the neck
+open at the throat, he looked the embodiment of masculine vigor. Diane
+could not help mentioning it to her cousin.
+
+"Isn't he a splendid human animal?"
+
+Sheba nodded. "He's wonderful."
+
+"If I were a little Irish colleen and he had done me the honor to care
+for me, I'd have fallen fathoms deep in love with him."
+
+The Irish colleen's eyes grew reflective. "Not if you had seen Peter
+first, Di. There's nothing reasonable about a girl, I do believe. She
+loves--or else she just doesn't."
+
+Diane fired a question at her point-blank. "Have you met _your_
+Peter? Is that why you hang back?"
+
+The color flamed into Sheba's face. "Of course not. You do say the most
+outrageous things, Di."
+
+They had driven to Willow Creek over the river road. They returned by
+way of the hills. Macdonald drew up in front of a cabin to fill the
+radiator.
+
+He stood listening beside the car, the water bucket in his hand.
+Something unusual was going on inside the house. There came the sound
+of a thud, of a groan, and then the crash of breaking glass. The whole
+window frame seemed to leap from the side of the house. The head and
+shoulders of a man projected through the broken glass.
+
+The man swept himself free of the débris and started to run. Instantly
+he pulled up in his stride, as amazed to see those in the car as they
+were to see him.
+
+"Gordon!" cried Diane.
+
+Out of the house poured a rush of men. They too pulled up abruptly at
+sight of Macdonald and his guests.
+
+A sardonic mirth gleamed in the eyes of the Scotchman. "Do you always
+come out of a house through the wall, Mr. Elliot?" he asked.
+
+"Only when I'm in a hurry." Gordon pulled out a handkerchief and dabbed
+at some glass-cuts on his face.
+
+"Don't let us detain you," said the Alaskan satirically. "We'll excuse
+you, since you must go."
+
+"I'm not in such a hurry now. In fact, if you're going to Kusiak,
+I think I'll ask you for a lift," returned the field agent coolly.
+
+"And your friends-in-a-hurry--do they want a lift too?"
+
+Big Bill Macy came swaying forward, both hands to his bleeding head.
+"He's a spy, curse him. And he tried to kill me."
+
+"Did he?" commented Macdonald evenly. "What were you doing to him?"
+
+"He can't sneak around our claim under a false name," growled one of the
+miners. "We'll beat his damn head off."
+
+"I've had notions like that myself sometimes," assented the big
+Scotchman. "But I think we had all better leave Mr. Elliot to the law.
+He has Uncle Sam back of him in his spying, and none of us are big
+enough to buck the Government." Crisply Macdonald spoke to Gordon,
+turning upon him cold, hostile eyes. "Get in if you're going to."
+
+Elliot met him eye to eye. "I've changed my mind. I'm going to walk."
+
+"That's up to you."
+
+Gordon shook hands with Diane and Sheba, went into the house for his
+coat, and walked to the stable. He brought out his horse and turned it
+loose, then took the road himself for Kusiak.
+
+A couple of miles out the car passed him trudging townward. As they
+flashed down the road he waved a cheerful and nonchalant greeting.
+
+Sheba had been full of gayety and life, but her mood was changed. All
+the way home she was strangely silent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+GID HOLT COMES TO KUSIAK
+
+
+The days grew short. In sporting circles the talk was no longer of the
+midnight Fourth of July baseball game, but of preparation for the Alaska
+Sweepstakes, since the shadow of the cold Arctic winter had crept down
+to the Yukon and touched its waters to stillness. Men, gathered around
+warm stoves, spoke of the merits of huskies and Siberian wolf-hounds, of
+the heavy fall of snow in the hills, of the overhauling of outfits and
+the transportation of supplies to distant camps.
+
+The last river boat before the freeze-up had long since gone. A month
+earlier the same steamer had taken down in a mail sack the preliminary
+report of Elliot to his department chief. One of the passengers on that
+trip had been Selfridge, sent out to counteract the influence of the
+evidence against the claimants submitted by the field agent. An
+information had been filed against Gordon for highway robbery and
+attempted murder. Wally was to see that the damning facts against him
+were brought to the attention of officials in high places where the
+charges would do most good. The details of the story were to be held in
+reserve for publicity in case the muckrake magazines should try to make
+capital of the report of Elliot.
+
+Kusiak found much time for gossip during the long nights. It knew
+that Macdonald had gone on the bond of Elliot in spite of the scornful
+protest of the younger man. The two gave each other chilly nods of
+greeting when they met, but friends were careful not to invite them to
+the same social affairs. The case against the field agent was pending.
+Pursuit of the miners who had robbed the big mine-owner had long ago
+been dropped. Somewhere in the North the outlaws lay hidden, swallowed
+up by the great white waste of snow.
+
+The general opinion was that Mac was playing politics about the trial
+of his rival. He would not let the case come to a jury until the time
+when a conviction would have most effect in the States, the gossips
+predicted. They did not know that he was waiting for the return of
+Wally Selfridge.
+
+The whispers touched closely the personal affairs of Macdonald. The
+report of his engagement to Sheba O'Neill had been denied, but it was
+noticed that he was a constant guest at the home of the Pagets. Young
+Elliot called there too. Almost any day one or other of the two men
+could be seen with Sheba on the street. Those who wanted to take a
+sporting chance on the issue knew that odds were offered _sub rosa_
+at the Pay Streak saloon of three to one on Mac.
+
+As for Sheba, she rebelled impotently at the situation. The mine-owner
+would not take "No" for an answer. He wooed her with a steady, dominant
+persistence that shook even her strong, young will. There was something
+resistless in the way he took her for granted. Gordon Elliot had not
+mentioned love to her, though there were times when her heart fluttered
+for fear he would. She did not want any more complications. She wanted
+to be let alone. So when an invitation came from her little friends the
+Husteds, signed by all three of the children, asking her to come and
+visit them at the camp back of Katma, the Irish girl jumped at the
+chance to escape for a time from the decision being forced upon her.
+
+Sheba pledged her cousin to secrecy until after she had gone, so that
+Miss O'Neill was able to slip away on the stage unnoticed either by
+Macdonald or Elliot. The only other passenger was an elderly woman going
+up to the Katma camp to take a place as cook.
+
+Later on the same day Wally Selfridge, coming in over the ice, reached
+Kusiak with important news for his chief. He brought with him an order
+from Winton, Commissioner of the General Land Office, suspending Elliot
+pending an investigation of the charges against him. The field agent was
+to forward by mail all documents in his possession and for the time, at
+least, drop the matter of the coal claims.
+
+Oddly enough, it was to Genevieve Mallory that Macdonald went for
+consolation when he learned that Sheba had left town. He had always
+found it very pleasant to drop in for a chat with her, and she saw to
+it that he met the same friendly welcome now that a rival had annexed
+his scalp to her slender waist. For Mrs. Mallory did not concede defeat.
+If the Irish girl could be eliminated, she believed she would yet win.
+
+His hostess laced her fingers behind her beautiful, tawny head, quite
+well aware that the attitude set off the perfect modeling of the soft,
+supple body. She looked up at him with a mocking little smile.
+
+"Rumor says that she has run away, my lord. Is it true?"
+
+"Yes. Slipped away on the stage this morning."
+
+"That's a good sign. She was afraid to stay."
+
+It was a part of the fiction between them that Mrs. Mallory was to give
+him the benefit of her advice in his wooing of her rival. She seemed to
+take it for granted that he would at last marry Sheba after wearing away
+the rigid Puritanism of her resentment.
+
+Macdonald had never liked her so well as now. Her point of view was so
+sane, so reasonable. It asked for no impossible virtues in a man. There
+was something restful in her genial, derisive understanding of him. She
+had a silent divination of his moods and ministered indolently to them.
+
+"Do you think so? Ought I to follow her?" he asked.
+
+She showed a row of perfect teeth in a low ripple of amusement. The
+situation at least was piquant, even though it was at her expense.
+
+"No. Give the girl time. Catch her impulse on the rebound. She'll be
+bored to death at Katma and she will come back docile."
+
+Her scarlet lips, the long, unbroken lines of the sinuous, opulent body,
+the challenge of the smouldering eyes, the warmth of her laughter, all
+invited him to forget the charms of other women. The faint feminine
+perfume of her was wafted to his brain. He felt a besieging of the
+blood.
+
+Stepping behind the chair in which she sat, he tilted back the head of
+lustrous bronze, and very deliberately kissed her on the lips.
+
+For a moment she gave herself to his embrace, then pushed him back,
+rose, and walked across the room to a little table. With fingers that
+trembled slightly she lit a cigarette. Sheathed in her close-fitting
+gown, she made a strong carnal appeal to him, but there was between
+them, too, a close bond of the spirit. He made no apologies, no
+explanation.
+
+Presently she turned and looked at him. Only the deeper color beneath
+her eyes betrayed any excitement.
+
+"Unless I'm a bad prophet you'll get the answer you want when she comes
+back, Colby."
+
+He thought her reply to his indiscretion superb. It admitted complicity,
+reproached, warned, and at the same time ignored. Never before had she
+called him by his given name. He took it as a token of forgiveness and
+renunciation.
+
+Why was it not Genevieve Mallory that he wanted to marry? It would be
+the wise thing to do. She would ask nothing of him that he could not
+give, and she would bring to him many things that he wanted. But he was
+under the spell of Sheba's innocence, of the mystery of her youth, of
+the charm she had brought with her from the land of fairies and
+banshees. The reasonable course made just now not enough appeal to him.
+He craved the rapture of an impossible adventure into a world wonderful.
+
+The mine-owner carried with him back to his office a sense of the futile
+irony of life. A score of men would have liked to marry Mrs. Mallory.
+She had all the sophisticated graces of life and much of the natural
+charm of an unusually attractive personality. He had only to speak the
+word to win her, and his fancy had flown in pursuit of a little Puritan
+with no knowledge of the world.
+
+In front of the Seattle & Kusiak Emporium the Scotchman stopped. A
+little man who had his back to him was bargaining for a team of huskies.
+The man turned, and Macdonald recognized him.
+
+"Hello, Gid. Aren't you off your usual beat a bit?" he asked.
+
+The little miner looked him over impudently. "Well--well! If it ain't
+the Big Mogul himself--and wantin' to know if I've got permission to
+travel off the reservation."
+
+Macdonald laughed tolerantly. He had that large poise which is not
+disturbed by the sand stings of life.
+
+"I reckon you travel where you want to, Gid,--same as I do."
+
+"Maybeso. I shouldn't wonder if you'd find out quite soon enough what
+I'm doing here. You never can tell," the old man retorted with a manner
+that concealed volumes.
+
+Those who were present remembered the words and in the light of what
+took place later thought them significant.
+
+"Anyhow, it is quite a social event for Kusiak," Macdonald suggested
+with a smile of irony.
+
+[Illustration: THE SITUATION AT LEAST WAS PIQUANT, EVEN THOUGH IT WAS
+AT HER EXPENSE]
+
+Without more words Holt turned back to his bargaining. The big Scotchman
+went on his way, remembered that he wanted to see the cashier of the
+bank which he controlled, and promptly forgot that old Gid existed.
+
+The old man concluded his purchase and drove up to the hotel behind one
+of the best dog teams in Alaska. He had paid one hundred dollars down
+and was to settle the balance next day.
+
+Gideon asked a question of the porter.
+
+"Second floor. That's his room up there," the man answered, pointing to
+a window.
+
+"Oh, you, seven--eighteen--ninety-nine," the little miner shouted up.
+
+Elliot appeared at the window. "Well, I'll be hanged! What are you doing
+here, Old-Timer?"
+
+"Onct I knew a man lived to be a grandpa minding his own business,"
+grinned the little man. "Come down and I'll tell you all about it, boy."
+
+In half a minute Gordon was beside him. After the first greetings the
+young man nodded toward the dog team.
+
+"How did you persuade Tim Ryan to lend you his huskies?"
+
+"Why don't you take a paper and keep up with the news, son? These
+huskies don't belong to Tim."
+
+"Meaning that Mr. Gideon Holt is the owner?"
+
+"You've done guessed it," admitted the miner complacently.
+
+He had a right to be proud of the team. It was a famous one even in the
+North. It had run second for two years in the Alaska Sweepstakes to
+Macdonald's great Siberian wolf-hounds. The leader Butch was the hero of
+a dozen races and a hundred savage fights.
+
+"What in Halifax do you want with the team?" asked Elliot, surprised.
+"The whole outfit must have cost a small fortune."
+
+"Some dust," admitted Gideon proudly. He winked mysteriously at Gordon.
+"I got a use for this team, if any one was to ask you."
+
+"Haven't taken the Government mail contract, have you?"
+
+"Not so you could notice it. I'll tell you what I want with this team,
+as the old sayin' is." Holt lowered his voice and narrowed slyly his
+little beadlike eyes. "I'm going to put a crimp in Colby Macdonald.
+That's what I aim to do with it."
+
+"How?"
+
+The miner beckoned Elliot closer and whispered in his ear.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+IN THE DEAD OF NIGHT
+
+
+While Kusiak slept that night the wind shifted. It came roaring across
+the range and drove before it great scudding clouds heavily laden with
+sleety snow. The howling storm snuffed out the moonlight as if it had
+been a tallow dip and fought and screamed around the peaks, whirling
+down the gulches with the fury of a blizzard.
+
+From dark till dawn the roar of the wind filled the night. Before
+morning heavy drifts had wiped out the roads and sheeted the town in
+virgin white unbroken by trails or furrows.
+
+With the coming of daylight the tempest abated. Kusiak got into its
+working clothes and dug itself out from the heavy blanket of white that
+had tucked it in. By noon the business of the town was under way again.
+That which would have demoralized the activities of a Southern city made
+little difference to these Arctic Circle dwellers. Roads were cleared,
+paths shoveled, stores opened. Children in parkas and fur coats trooped
+to school and studied through the short afternoon by the aid of electric
+light.
+
+Dusk fell early and with it came a scatter of more snow. Mrs. Selfridge
+gave a dinner-dance at the club that night and her guests came in furs
+of great variety and much value. The hostess outdid herself to make
+the affair the most elaborate of the season. Wally had brought the
+favors in from Seattle and also the wines. Nobody in Kusiak of any
+social importance was omitted from the list of invited except Gordon
+Elliot. Even the grumpy old cashier of Macdonald's bank--an old bachelor
+who lived by himself in rooms behind those in which the banking was
+done--was persuaded to break his custom and appear in a rusty old dress
+suit of the vintage of '95.
+
+The grizzled cashier--his name was Robert Milton--left the clubhouse
+early for his rooms. It was snowing, but the wind had died down.
+Contrary to his custom, he had taken two or three glasses of wine. His
+brain was excited so that he knew he could not sleep. He decided to read
+"Don Quixote" by the stove for an hour or two. The heat and the reading
+together would make him drowsy.
+
+Arrived at the bank, he let himself into his rooms and locked the
+door. He stooped to open the draft of the stove when a sound stopped
+him halfway. The cashier stood rigid, still crouched, waiting for a
+repetition of the noise. It came once more--the low, dull rasping of
+a file.
+
+Shivers ran down the spine of Milton and up the back of his head to
+the roots of his hair. Somebody was in the bank--at two o'clock in the
+morning--with tools for burglary. He was a scholarly old fellow, brought
+up in New England and cast out to the uttermost frontier by the malign
+tragedy of poverty. Adventure offered no appeal to him. His soul quaked
+as he waited with slack, feeble muscles upon the discovery that only a
+locked door stood between him and violent ruffians.
+
+But though his knees trembled beneath him and the sickness of fear was
+gripping his heart, Robert Milton had in him the dynamic spark that
+makes a man. He tiptoed to his desk and with shaking fingers gripped the
+revolver that lay in a drawer.
+
+The cashier stood there for a moment, moistening his dry lips with
+his tongue and trying to swallow the lump that rose to his throat and
+threatened to stop his breathing. He braced himself for the plunge,
+then slowly trod across the room to the inner, locked door. The palsied
+fingers of his left hand could scarce turn the key.
+
+It seemed to him that the night was alive with the noise he made in
+turning the lock and opening the door. The hinges grated and the floor
+squeaked beneath the fall of his foot as he stood at the threshold.
+
+Two men were in front of the wire grating which protected the big safe
+that filled the alcove to the right. One held a file and the other a
+candle. Their blank, masked faces were turned toward Milton, and each
+of them covered him with a weapon.
+
+"W-what are you doing here?" quavered the cashier.
+
+"Drop that gun," came the low, sharp command from one of them.
+
+Under the menace of their revolvers the heart of Milton pumped water
+instead of blood. The strength oozed out of him. His body swayed and he
+shut his eyes. A hand groped for the casement of the door to steady him.
+
+"Drop it--quick."
+
+Some old ancestral instinct in the bank cashier rose out of his panic
+to destroy him. He wanted to lie down quietly in a faint. But his mind
+asserted its mastery over the weakling body. In spite of his terror, of
+his flaccid will, he had to keep the faith. He was guardian of the bank
+funds. At all costs he must protect them.
+
+His forearm came up with a jerk. Two shots rang out almost together. The
+cashier sagged back against the wall and slowly slid to the floor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The guests of Mrs. Selfridge danced well into the small hours. The
+California champagne that Wally had brought in stimulated a gayety that
+was balm to his wife's soul. She wanted her dinner-dance to be smart, to
+have the atmosphere she had found in the New York cabarets. If everybody
+talked at once, she felt they were having a good time. If nobody
+listened to anybody else, it proved that the affair was a screaming
+success.
+
+Mrs. Wally was satisfied as she bade her guests good-bye and saw them
+pass into the heavy snow that was again falling. They all assured her
+that there had not been so hilarious a party in Kusiak. One old-timer, a
+trifle lit up by reason of too much hospitality, phrased his enjoyment a
+little awkwardly.
+
+"It's been great, Mrs. Selfridge. Nothing like it since the days of the
+open dance hall."
+
+Mrs. Mallory hastily suppressed an internal smile and stepped into the
+breach. "_How_ do you do it?" she asked her hostess enviously.
+
+"My dear, if _you_ say it was a success--"
+
+"What else could one say?"
+
+Genevieve Mallory always preferred to tell the truth when it would do
+just as well. Now it did better, since it contributed to her own ironic
+sense of amusement. Macdonald had once told her that Mrs. Selfridge made
+him think of the saying, "Monkey sees, monkey does." The effervescent
+little woman had never had an original idea in her life.
+
+Most of those who had been at the dance slept late. They were oblivious
+of the fact that the storm had quickened again into a howling gale.
+Nor did they know the two bits of news that were passing up and down
+the main street and being telephoned from house to house. One of the
+items was that the stage for Katma had failed to reach the roadhouse at
+Smith's Crossing. The message had come over the long-distance telephone
+early in the morning. The keeper of the roadhouse added his private
+fears that the stage, crawling up the divide as the blizzard swept down,
+must have gone astray and its occupants perished. The second bit of news
+was local. For the first time since Robert Milton had been cashier the
+bank had failed to open on the dot. The snow had not been cleared from
+the walk in front and no smoke was pouring from the chimney of the
+building.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+MACDONALD FOLLOWS A CLUE
+
+
+Macdonald was no sluggard. It was his habit not to let the pleasure of
+the night before interfere with the business of the morning after. But
+in the darkness he overslept and let the town waken before him. He was
+roused by the sound of knocking on his door.
+
+"Who is it?" he asked.
+
+"It's me--Jones--Gopher Jones. Say, Mac, the bank ain't open and we
+can't rouse Milton. Thought I'd come to you, seeing as you're president
+of the shebang."
+
+The mine-owner got up and began to dress. "Probably overslept, same as
+I did."
+
+"That's the point. We looked through the window of his bedroom and his
+bed ain't been slept in."
+
+In three minutes Macdonald joined the marshal and walked down with him
+to the bank. He unlocked the front door and turned to the little crowd
+that had gathered.
+
+"Better wait here, boys. Gopher and I will go in. I expect everything is
+all right, but we'll let you know about that as soon as we find out."
+
+The bank president opened the door, let the officer enter, and followed
+himself.
+
+The sun had not yet risen and the blinds were down. Macdonald struck a
+match and held it up. The wood burned and the flame flickered out.
+
+"Bank's been robbed," he announced quietly.
+
+"Looks like," agreed Jones. His voice was uneven with excitement.
+
+The Scotch-Canadian lit another match. In the flare of it they saw that
+the steel grill cutting off the alcove was open and that the door had
+been blown from the safe. It lay on the floor among a litter of papers,
+silver, fragments of steel, and bits of candle.
+
+The marshal clutched at the arm of the banker. "Did you see--that?" he
+whispered.
+
+His finger pointed through the darkness to the other end of the room. In
+the faint gray light of coming day Macdonald could see a huddled mass on
+the floor.
+
+"There has been murder done. I'll get a light. Don't move from here,
+Jones. I want to look at things before we disturb them. There's no
+danger. The robbers have been gone for hours."
+
+Gopher had as much nerve as the next man--when the sun was shining and
+he could see what danger he was facing. But there was something sinister
+and nerve-racking here. He wanted to throw open the door and shout the
+news to those outside.
+
+By the light of another match the mine-owner crossed the room into
+the sitting-room of the cashier. Presently he returned with a lamp
+and let its light fall upon the figure lying slumped against the wall.
+A revolver lay close to the inert fingers. The head hung forward
+grotesquely upon the breast.
+
+The dead man was Milton. His employer saw nothing ridiculous in the
+twisted neck and sprawling limbs. The cashier had died to save the money
+entrusted to his care.
+
+Macdonald handed the lamp to the marshal and picked up the revolver.
+Every chamber was loaded.
+
+"They beat him to it. They were probably here when he reached home.
+My guess is he heard them right away, got his gun, and came in. He's
+still wearing his dress suit. That gives us the time, for he left the
+club about midnight. Soon as they saw him they dropped him. Likely they
+heard him and were ready. I wouldn't have had this happen for all the
+money in the safe."
+
+"How much was there in it?"
+
+"I don't know exactly. The books will show. I'll send Wally down to look
+them over."
+
+"Shot right spang through the heart, looks like," commented Jones,
+following with his eye the course of the wound.
+
+"Wish I'd been here instead of him," Macdonald said grimly. His eyes
+softened as he continued to look down at the employee who had paid
+with his life for his faithfulness. "It wasn't an even break. Poor old
+fellow! You weren't built for a job like this, Robert Milton, but you
+played your hand out to a finish. That's all any man can do."
+
+He turned abruptly away and began examining the safe. The silver still
+stood sacked in one large compartment. The bank-notes had escaped the
+hurried search of the robbers, but the gold was practically all gone.
+One sack had been torn by the explosion and single pieces of gold could
+be found all over the safe.
+
+Macdonald glanced over the papers rapidly. The officer picked up one
+of dozens scattered over the floor. It was a mortgage note made out to
+the bank by a miner. He collected the others. Evidently the bandits had
+torn off the rubber, glanced over one or two to see if they had any cash
+value, and tossed the package into the air as a disgusted gambler does
+a pack of cards.
+
+The bank president stepped to the door and threw it open. He explained
+the situation in three sentences.
+
+"I can't let you in now, boys, until the coroner has been here," he went
+on to tell the crowd. "But there is one way you can all help. Keep your
+eyes open. If you have seen any suspicious characters around, let me
+know. Or if any one has left town in a hurry--or been seen doing
+anything during the night that you did not understand at the time. Men
+can't do a thing like this without leaving some clue behind them even
+though the snow has wiped away their trail."
+
+A man named Fred Tague pushed to the front. He kept a feed corral near
+the edge of town. "I can tell you one man who mushed out before five
+o'clock this morning--and that's Gid Holt."
+
+The eyes of Macdonald, cold and hard as jade, fastened to the man. "How
+do you know?"
+
+"That dog team he bought from Tim Ryan--Well, he's been keeping it in my
+corral. When I got there this morning it was gone. The snow hadn't wiped
+out the tracks of the runners yet, so he couldn't have left more than
+fifteen minutes before."
+
+"What time was it when you reached the corral?"
+
+"Might have been six--maybe a little later."
+
+"You don't know that Holt took the team himself?"
+
+"Come to that, I don't. But he had a key to the barn where the sled was.
+Holt has been putting up at the hotel. I reckon it is easy to find out
+if he's still there."
+
+Macdonald's keen brain followed the facts as the nose of a bloodhound
+does a trail. Holt, an open enemy of his, had reached town only two days
+before. He had bought one of the best and swiftest dog teams in the
+North and had let slip before witnesses the remark that Macdonald would
+soon find out what he wanted with the outfit. The bank had been robbed
+after midnight. To file open the grill and to blow up the safe must
+have taken several hours. Before morning the dogs of Holt had taken the
+trail. If their owner were with them, it was a safe bet that the sled
+carried forty thousand dollars in Alaska gold dust.
+
+So far the mind of the Scotchman followed the probabilities logically,
+but at this point it made a jump. There were at least two robbers. He
+was morally sure of that, for this was not a one-man job. Now, if Holt
+had with him a companion, who of all those in Kusiak was the most likely
+man? He was a friendless, crabbed old fellow. Since coming to Kusiak old
+Gideon had been seen constantly with one man. Together they had driven
+out the day before and tried his new team. They had been with each other
+at dinner and had later left the hotel together. The name of the man who
+had been so friendly with old Holt was Gordon Elliot--and Elliot not
+only was another enemy of Macdonald, but had very good reasons for
+getting out of the country just now.
+
+The strong jaw of the mine-owner stood out saliently as he gave short,
+sharp orders to men in the crowd. One was to get the coroner, a second
+Wally Selfridge, another the United States District Attorney. He divided
+the rest into squads to guard the roads leading out of town and to see
+that nobody passed for the present.
+
+As soon as the men he had sent for arrived, Macdonald went over the
+scene of the crime with them. It was plain that the dynamiting had been
+done by an old-time miner who knew his business, but there had been
+brains in the planning of the robbery.
+
+"There is no ivory above the ears of the man who bossed this job,"
+Macdonald told the others. "He picks a night when we're all at the club,
+more than half a mile from here, a stormy night when folks are not
+wandering the streets. He knows that the wind will deaden the sound of
+the dynamite and that the snow will wipe out any tracks that might help
+to identify him and his pal or show which way they have gone."
+
+The coroner took charge of the body and Wally of the bank. The
+mine-owner and the district attorney walked up to the hotel together. As
+soon as they had explained what they wanted, the landlord got a passkey
+and took them to the room Holt had used.
+
+Apparently the bed had been slept in. In the waste-paper basket the
+district attorney found something which he held up in a significant
+silence. Macdonald stepped forward and took from him a small cloth sack.
+
+"One of those we keep our gold in at the bank," said the Scotchman after
+a close examination. "This definitely ties up Holt with the robbery. Now
+for Elliot."
+
+"He left the hotel with Holt about five this morning the porter says."
+This was the contribution of the landlord.
+
+The room of Gordon Elliot was in great disorder. Garments had been
+tossed on the bed and on every chair and had been left to lie wherever
+they had chanced to fall. Plainly their owner had been in great haste.
+
+Macdonald looked through the closet where clothes hung. "His new fur
+coat is not here--nor his trail boots. Looks to me as though Mr. Gordon
+had hit the trail with his friend Holt."
+
+This opinion was strengthened when it was learned from a store-owner in
+town that Holt and Elliot had routed him out of bed in the early morning
+to sell them two weeks' supplies. These they had packed upon the sled
+outside the store.
+
+"It's a cinch bet that Elliot took the trail with him," the lawyer
+conceded.
+
+All doubt of this was removed when a prospector reached town with the
+news that he had met Holt and Elliot traveling toward the divide as fast
+as they could drive the dogs.
+
+The big Scotchman ordered his team of Siberian wolf-hounds made ready
+for the trail. As he donned his heavy furs, Colby Macdonald smiled with
+deep satisfaction. He had Elliot on the run at last.
+
+Just as he closed the door of his room, Macdonald heard the telephone
+bell ring. He hesitated, then shrugged his shoulders and strode out into
+the storm. If he had answered the call he would have learned from Diane,
+who was at the other end of the line, that the stage upon which Sheba
+had started for Katma had not reached the roadhouse at Smith's Crossing.
+
+Five minutes later the winners of the great Alaska Sweepstakes were
+flying down the street in the teeth of the storm. Armed with a rifle
+and a revolver, their owner was mushing into the hills to bring back
+the men who had robbed his bank and killed the cashier. He traveled
+alone because he could go faster without a companion. It never occurred
+to him that he was not a match for any two men he might face.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+IN THE BLIZZARD
+
+
+"Swiftwater" Pete, the driver of the stage between Kusiak and Katma,
+did not like the look of the sky as his ponies breasted the long uphill
+climb that ended at the pass. It was his habit to grumble. He had been
+complaining ever since they had started. But as he studied the heavy
+billows of cloud banked above the peaks and in the saddle between, there
+was real anxiety in his red, apoplectic face.
+
+"Gittin' her back up for a blizzard, looks like. Doggone it, if that
+wouldn't jest be my luck," he murmured fretfully.
+
+Sheba hoped there would be one, not, of course, a really, truly blizzard
+such as Macdonald had told her about, but the tail of a make-believe
+one, enough to send her glowing with exhilaration into the roadhouse
+with the happy sense of an adventure achieved. The girl had got out to
+relieve the horses, and as her young, lissom body took the hill
+scattering flakes of snow were already flying.
+
+To-day she was buoyed up by a sense of freedom. For a time, at least,
+she was escaping Macdonald's driving energy, the appeal of Gordon
+Elliot's warm friendliness, and the unvoiced urging of Diane. Good old
+Peter and the kiddies were the only ones that let her alone.
+
+She looked back at the horses laboring up the hill. Swiftwater had got
+down and was urging them forward, his long whip crackling about the ears
+of the leaders. He waddled as he walked. His fat legs were too short for
+the round barrel body. A big roll of fat bulged out over the collar of
+his shirt. Whenever he was excited--and he always was on the least
+excuse--he puffed and snorted and grew alarmingly purple.
+
+"Fat chance," he exploded as soon as he got within hearing. "Snow in
+those clouds--tons of it. H'm! And wind. Wow! We're in for an
+honest-to-God blizzard, sure as you're a foot high."
+
+Swiftwater was worried. He would have liked to turn and run for it. But
+the last roadhouse was twenty-seven miles back. If the blizzard came
+howling down the slope they would have a sweet time of it reaching
+safety. Smith's Crossing was on the other side of the divide, only nine
+miles away. They would have to worry through somehow. Probably those
+angry clouds were half a bluff.
+
+The temperature was dropping rapidly. Already snow fell fast in big
+thick flakes. To make it worse, the wind was beginning to rise. It came
+in shrill gusts momentarily increasing in force.
+
+The stage-driver knew the signs of old and cursed the luck that had led
+him to bring the stage. It was to have been the last trip with horses
+until spring. His dogs were waiting for him at Katma for the return
+journey. He did not blame himself, for there was no reason to expect
+such a storm so early in the season. None the less, it was too bad that
+his lead dog had been ailing when he left the gold camp eight days
+before.
+
+Miss O'Neill knew that Swiftwater Pete was anxious, and though she was
+not yet afraid, the girl understood the reason for it. The road ran
+through the heart of a vast snow-field, the surface of which was being
+swept by a screaming wind. The air was full of sifted white dust, and
+the road furrow was rapidly filling. Soon it would be obliterated.
+Already the horses were panting and struggling as they ploughed forward.
+Sheba tramped behind the stage-driver and in her tracks walked Mrs.
+Olson, the other passenger.
+
+Through the muffled scream of the storm Swiftwater shouted back to
+Sheba. "You wanta keep close to me."
+
+She nodded her head. His order needed no explanation. The world was
+narrowing to a lane whose walls she could almost touch with her fingers.
+A pall of white wrapped them. Upon them beat a wind of stinging sleet.
+Nothing could be seen but the blurred outlines of the stage and the
+driver's figure.
+
+The bitter cold searched through Sheba's furs to her soft flesh and the
+blast of powdered ice beat upon her face. The snow was getting deeper
+as the road filled. Once or twice she stumbled and fell. Her strength
+ebbed, and the hinges of her knees gave unexpectedly beneath her. How
+long was it, she asked herself, that Macdonald had said men could live
+in a blizzard?
+
+Staggering blindly forward, Sheba bumped into the driver. He had drawn
+up to give the horses a moment's rest before sending them plunging at
+the snow again.
+
+"No chance," he called into the young woman's ear. "Never make Smith's
+in the world. Goin' try for miner's cabin up gulch little way."
+
+The team stuck in the drifts, fought through, and was blocked again ten
+yards beyond. A dozen times the horses gave up, answered the sting of
+the whip by diving head first at the white banks, and were stopped by
+fresh snow-combs.
+
+Pete gave up the fight. He began unhitching the horses, while Sheba and
+Mrs. Olson, clinging to each other's hands, stumbled forward to join
+him. The words he shouted across the back of a horse were almost lost in
+the roar of the shrieking wind.
+
+"... heluvatime ... ride ... gulch," Sheba made out.
+
+He flung Mrs. Olson astride one of the wheelers and helped Sheba to the
+back of the right leader. Swiftwater clambered upon its mate himself.
+
+The girl paid no attention to where they were going. The urge of life
+was so faint within her that she did not greatly care whether she lived
+or died. Her face was blue from the cold; her vitality was sapped. She
+seemed to herself to have turned to ice below the hips. Outside the
+misery of the moment her whole attention was concentrated on sticking
+to the back of the horse. Numb though her fingers were, she must keep
+them fastened tightly in the frozen mane of the animal. She recited her
+lesson to herself like a child. She must stick on--she must--she must.
+
+Whether she lost consciousness or not Sheba never knew. The next she
+realized was that Swiftwater Pete was pulling her from the horse. He
+dragged her into a cabin where Mrs. Olson lay crouched on the floor.
+
+"Got to stable the horses," he explained, and left them.
+
+After a time he came back and lit a fire in the sheet-iron stove. As the
+circulation that meant life flooded back into her chilled veins Sheba
+endured a half-hour of excruciating pain. She had to clench her teeth to
+keep back the groans that came from her throat, to walk the floor and
+nurse her tortured hands with fingers in like plight.
+
+The cabin was empty of furniture except for a home-made table, rough
+stools, and the frame of a bed. The last occupant had left a little
+firewood beside the stove, enough to last perhaps for twenty-four hours.
+Sheba did not need to be told that if the blizzard lasted long enough,
+they would starve to death. In the handbag left in the stage were a box
+of candy and an Irish plum pudding. She had brought the latter from the
+old country with her and was taking it and the chocolates to the Husted
+children. But just now the stage was as far from them as Drogheda.
+
+Like many rough frontiersmen, Swiftwater Pete was a diamond in the
+raw. He had the kindly, gentle instincts that go to the making of a
+good man. So far as could be he made a hopeless and impossible situation
+comfortable. His judgment told him that they were caught in a trap from
+which there was no escape, but for the sake of the women he put a
+cheerful face on things.
+
+"Lucky we found this cabin," he growled amiably. "By this time we'd 'a'
+been up Salt Creek if we hadn't. Seeing as our luck has stood up so far,
+I reckon we'll be all right. Mighty kind of Mr. Last Tenant to leave us
+this firewood. Comes to a showdown we've got one table, four stools, and
+a bed that will make first-class fuel. We ain't so worse off."
+
+"If we only had some food," Mrs. Olson suggested.
+
+"Food!" Pete looked at her in assumed surprise. "Huh! What about all
+that live stock I got in the stable? I've heard tell, ma'am, that
+broncho tenderloin is a favorite dish with them there French chiefs
+that do the cooking. They kinder trim it up so's it's 'most as good as
+frawgs' legs."
+
+Sheba had never before slept on bare boards with a sealskin coat for a
+sleeping-bag. But she was very tired and dropped off almost instantly.
+Twice she woke during the night, disturbed by the stiffness and the
+pain of her body. It seemed to her that the hard, whipsawed planks were
+pushing through the soft flesh to the bones. She was cold, too, and
+crept closer to the stout Swedish woman lying beside her. Presently she
+fell asleep again to the sound of the blizzard howling outside. When she
+wakened for the third time it was morning.
+
+In the afternoon the blizzard died away. As far as she could see, Sheba
+looked out upon a waste of snow. Her eyes turned from the desolation
+without to the bare and cheerless room in which they had found shelter.
+In spite of herself a little shiver ran down the spine of the girl. Had
+she come into this Arctic solitude to find her tomb?
+
+Resolutely she brushed the gloomy thought from her mind and began to
+chat with Mrs. Olson. In a corner of the cabin Sheba had found a torn
+and disreputable copy of "Vanity Fair." The covers and the first forty
+pages were gone. A splash of what appeared to be tobacco juice defiled
+the last sheet. But the fortunes of Becky and Amelia had served to make
+her forget during the morning that she was hungry and likely to be much
+hungrier before another day had passed.
+
+As soon as the storm had moderated enough to let him go out with
+safety, Swiftwater Pete had taken one of the horses for an attempt at
+trail-breaking.
+
+"Me, I'm after that plum pudding. I gotta get a feed of oats from the
+stage for my bronchs too. The scenery here is sure fine, but it ain't
+what you would call nourishing. Huh! Watch our smoke when me and old
+Baldface git to bucking them drifts."
+
+He had been gone two hours and the early dusk was already descending
+over the white waste when Sheba ventured out to see what had become of
+the stage-driver. But the cold was so bitter that she soon gave up the
+attempt to fight her way through the drifts and turned back to the
+cabin.
+
+Sometime later Swiftwater Pete came stumbling into their temporary home.
+He was fagged to exhaustion but triumphant. Upon the table he dropped
+from the crook of his numbed arm two packages.
+
+"The makings for a Christmas dinner," he said with a grin.
+
+After he had taken off his mukluks and his frozen socks they wrapped
+him in their furs while he toasted before the stove. Mrs. Olson thawed
+out the pudding and the chocolates in the oven and made a kind of mush
+out of some oats Pete had saved from the horse feed. They ate their
+one-sided meal in high spirits. The freeze had saved their lives. If it
+held clear till to-morrow they could reach Smith's Crossing on the crust
+of the snow.
+
+Swiftwater broke up the chairs for fuel and demolished the legs of the
+table, after which he lay down before the stove and fell at once into a
+sodden sleep.
+
+Presently Mrs. Olson lay down on the bed and began to snore regularly.
+Sheba could not sleep. The boards tired her bones and she was cold.
+Sometimes she slipped into cat naps that were full of bad dreams. She
+thought she was walking on the snow-comb of a precipice and that Colby
+Macdonald pushed her from her precarious footing and laughed at her as
+she slid swiftly toward the gulf below. When she wakened with a start it
+was to find that the fire had died down. She was shivering from lack of
+cover. Quietly the girl replenished the fire and lay down again.
+
+When she wakened with a start it was morning. A faint light sifted
+through the single window of the shack. Sheba whispered to the older
+woman that she was going out for a little walk.
+
+"Be careful, dearie," advised Mrs. Olson. "I wouldn't try to go too
+far."
+
+Sheba smiled to herself at the warning. It was not likely that she would
+go far enough to get lost with all these millions of tons of snow piled
+up around her in every direction.
+
+She had come out because she was restless and was tired of the dingy
+and uncomfortable room. Without any definite intentions, she naturally
+followed the trail that Swiftwater had broken the day before. No wind
+stirred and the sky was clear. But it was very cold. The sun would not
+be up for half an hour.
+
+As she worked her way down the gulch Sheba wondered whether the news of
+their loss had reached Kusiak. Were search parties out already to rescue
+them? Colby Macdonald had gone out into the blizzard years ago to save
+her father. Perhaps he might have been out all night trying to save her
+father's daughter. Peter would go, of course,--and Gordon Elliot. The
+work in the mines would stop and men would volunteer by scores. That was
+one fine thing about the North. It responded to the unwritten law that a
+man must risk his own life to save others.
+
+But if the wires had come down in the storm Kusiak would not know
+they had not got through to Smith's Crossing. Swiftwater Pete spoke
+cheerfully about mushing to the roadhouse. But Sheba knew the snow
+would not bear the horses. They would have to walk, and it was not at
+all certain that Mrs. Olson could do so long a walk with the thermometer
+at forty or fifty below zero.
+
+From a little knoll Sheba looked down upon the top of the stage three
+hundred yards below her, and while she stood there the promise of the
+new day was blazoned on the sky. It came with amazing beauty of green
+and primrose and amethyst, while the stars flickered out and the heavens
+took on the blue of sunrise. In a crotch between two peaks a faint
+golden glow heralded the sun. A circle of lovely rose-pink flushed the
+horizon.
+
+Sheba had this much of the poet in her, that every sunrise was still a
+miracle. She drew a deep, slow breath of adoration and turned away. As
+she did so her eyes dilated and her body grew rigid.
+
+Across the snow waste a man was coming. He was moving toward the cabin
+and must cross the trench close to her. The heart of the girl stopped,
+then beat wildly to make up the lost stroke. He had come through the
+blizzard to save her.
+
+At that very instant, as if the stage had been set for it, the wonderful
+Alaska sun pushed up into the crotch of the peaks and poured its radiance
+over the Arctic waste. The pink glow swept in a tide of delicate color
+over the snow and transmuted it to millions of sparkling diamonds. The
+Great Magician's wand had recreated the world instantaneously.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+HARD MUSHING
+
+
+Elliot and Holt left Kusiak in a spume of whirling, blinding snow. They
+traveled light, not more than forty pounds to the dog, for they wanted
+to make speed. It was not cold for Alaska. They packed their fur coats
+on the sled and wore waterproof parkas. On their hands were mittens
+of moosehide with duffel lining, on their feet mukluks above "German"
+socks. Holt had been a sour-dough miner too long to let his partner
+perspire from overmuch clothing. He knew the danger of pneumonia from
+a sudden cooling of the heat of the body.
+
+Old Gideon took seven of his dogs, driving them two abreast. Six were
+huskies, rangy, muscular animals with thick, dense coats. They were in
+the best of spirits and carried their tails erect like their Malemute
+leader. Butch, though a Malemute, had a strong strain of collie in him.
+It gave him a sense of responsibility. His business was to see that the
+team kept strung out on the trail, and Butch was a past-master in the
+matter of discipline. His weight was ninety-three fighting pounds, and
+he could thrash in short order any dog in the team.
+
+The snow was wet and soft. It clung to everything it touched. The dogs
+carried pounds of it in the tufts of hair that rose from their backs.
+An icy pyramid had to be knocked from the sled every half-hour. The
+snowshoes were heavy with white slush. Densely laden spruce boughs
+brushed the faces of the men and showered them with unexpected little
+avalanches.
+
+They took turns in going ahead of the team and breaking trail. It
+was heavy, muscle-grinding work. Before noon they were both utterly
+fatigued. They dragged forward through the slush, lifting their laden
+feet sluggishly. They must keep going, and they did, but it seemed to
+them that every step must be the last.
+
+Shortly after noon the storm wore itself out. The temperature had been
+steadily falling and now it took a rapid drop. They were passing through
+timber, and on a little slope they built with a good deal of difficulty
+a fire. By careful nursing they soon had a great bonfire going, in front
+of which they put their wet socks, mukluks, scarfs, and parkas to dry.
+The toes of the dogs had become packed with little ice balls. Gordon and
+Holt had to go carefully over the feet of each animal to dig these out.
+
+The old-timer thawed out a slab of dried salmon till the fat began to
+frizzle and fed each husky a pound of the fish and a lump of tallow.
+He and Gordon made a pot of tea and ate some meat sandwiches they had
+brought with them to save cooking until night.
+
+When they took the trail again it was in moccasins instead of mukluks.
+The weather was growing steadily colder and with each degree of fall in
+the thermometer the trail became easier.
+
+"Mushing at fifty below zero is all right when it is all right,"
+explained Holt in the words of the old prospector. "But when it isn't
+right it's hell."
+
+"It is not fifty below yet, is it?"
+
+"Nope. But she's on the way. When your breath makes a kinder crackling
+noise she's fifty."
+
+Travel was much easier now. There was a crust on the snow that held up
+the dogs and the sled so that trail-breaking was not necessary. The
+little party pounded steadily over the barren hills. There was no sign
+of life except what they brought with them out of the Arctic silence and
+carried with them into the greater silence beyond. A little cloud of
+steam enveloped them as they moved, the moisture from the breath of nine
+moving creatures in a waste of emptiness.
+
+Each of the men wrapped a long scarf around his mouth and nose for
+protection, and as the part in front of his face became a sheet of ice
+shifted the muffler to another place.
+
+Night fell in the middle of the afternoon, but they kept traveling. Not
+till they were well up toward the summit of the divide did they decide
+to camp. They drove into a little draw and unharnessed the weary dogs.
+It was bitterly cold, but they were forced to set up the tent and stove
+to keep from freezing. Their numbed fingers made a slow job of the camp
+preparations. At last the stove was going, the dogs fed, and they
+themselves thawed out. They fell asleep shortly to the sound of the
+mournful howling of the dogs outside.
+
+Long before daybreak they were afoot again. Holt went out to chop some
+wood for the stove while Gordon made breakfast preparations. The little
+miner brought in an armful of wood and went out to get a second supply.
+A few moments later Elliot heard a cry.
+
+He stepped out of the tent and ran to the spot where Holt was lying
+under a mass of ice and snow. The young man threw aside the broken
+blocks that had plunged down from a ledge above.
+
+"Badly hurt, Gid?" he asked.
+
+"I done bust my laig, son," the old man answered with a twisted grin.
+
+"You mean that it is broken?"
+
+"Tell you that in a minute."
+
+He felt his leg carefully and with Elliot's help tried to get up.
+Groaning, he slid back to the snow.
+
+"Yep. She's busted," he announced.
+
+Gordon carried him to the tent and laid him down carefully. The old
+miner swore softly.
+
+"Ain't this a hell of a note, boy? You'll have to get me to Smith's
+Crossing and leave me there."
+
+It was the only thing to be done. Elliot broke camp and packed the sled.
+Upon the load he put his companion, well wrapped up in furs. He
+harnessed the dogs and drove back to the road.
+
+Two miles farther up the road Gordon stopped his team sharply. He had
+turned a bend in the trail and had come upon an empty stage buried in
+the snow.
+
+The fear that had been uppermost in Elliot's mind for twenty-four hours
+clutched at his throat. Was it tragedy upon which he had come after his
+long journey?
+
+Holt guessed the truth. "They got stalled and cut loose the horses. Must
+have tried to ride the cayuses to shelter."
+
+"To Smith's Crossing?" asked Gordon.
+
+"Expect so." Then, with a whoop, the man on the sled contradicted
+himself. "No, by Moses, to Dick Fiddler's old cabin up the draw. That's
+where Swiftwater would aim for till the blizzard was over."
+
+"Where is it?" demanded his friend.
+
+"Swing over to the right and follow the little gulch. I'll wait till you
+come back."
+
+Gordon dropped the gee-pole and started on the instant. Eagerness,
+anxiety, dread fought in his heart. He knew that any moment now he might
+stumble upon the evidence of the sad story which is repeated in Alaska
+many times every winter. It rang in him like a bell that where tough,
+hardy miners succumbed a frail girl would have small chance.
+
+He cut across over the hill toward the draw, and at what he saw his
+pulse quickened. Smoke was pouring out of the chimney of a cabin and
+falling groundward, as it does in the Arctic during very cold weather.
+Had Sheba found safety there? Or was it the winter home of a prospector?
+
+As he pushed forward the rising sun flooded the earth with pink and
+struck a million sparkles of color from the snow. The wonder of it drew
+the eyes of the young man for a moment toward the hills.
+
+A tumult of joy flooded his veins. The girl who held in her soft hands
+the happiness of his life stood looking at him. It seemed to him that
+she was the core of all that lovely tide of radiance. He moved toward
+her and looked down into the trench where she waited. Swiftly he kicked
+off his snowshoes and leaped down beside her.
+
+The gleam of tears was in her eyes as she held out both hands to him.
+During the long look they gave each other something wonderful to both
+of them was born into the world.
+
+When he tried to speak his hoarse voice broke. "Sheba--little Sheba!
+Safe, after all. Thank God, you--you--" He swallowed the lump in his
+throat and tried again. "If you knew--God, how I have suffered! I was
+afraid--I dared not let myself think."
+
+A live pulse beat in her white throat. The tears brimmed over. Then,
+somehow, she was in his arms weeping. Her eyes slowly turned to his,
+and he met the touch of her surrendered lips.
+
+Nature had brought them together by one of her resistless and
+unpremeditated impulses.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+TWO ON THE TRAIL
+
+
+A stress of emotion had swept her into his arms. Now she drew away from
+him shyly. The conventions in which she had been brought up asserted
+themselves. Sheba remembered that they had been carried by the high wave
+of their emotion past all the usual preliminaries. He had not even told
+her that he loved her. An absurd little fear obtruded itself into her
+happiness. Had she rushed into his arms like a lovesick girl, taking it
+for granted that he cared for her?
+
+"You--came to look for us?" she asked, with the little shy stiffness of
+embarrassment.
+
+"For you--yes."
+
+He could not take his eyes from her. It seemed to him that a bird was
+singing in his heart the gladness he could not express. He had for many
+hours pushed from his mind pictures of her lying white and rigid on the
+snow. Instead she stood beside him, her delicate beauty vivid as the
+flush of a flame.
+
+"Did they telephone that we were lost?"
+
+"Yes. I was troubled when the storm grew. I could not sleep. So I called
+up the roadhouse by long distance. They had not heard from the stage.
+Later I called again. When I could stand it no longer, I started."
+
+"Not on foot?"
+
+"No. With Holt's dog team. He is back there. His leg is broken. A
+snow-slide crushed him this morning where we camped."
+
+"Bring him to the cabin. I will tell the others you are coming."
+
+"Have you had any food?" he asked.
+
+A tired smile lit up the shadows of weariness under her soft, dark eyes.
+"Boiled oats, plum pudding, and chocolates," she told him.
+
+"We have plenty of food on the sled. I'll bring it at once."
+
+She nodded, and turned to go to the cabin. He watched for a moment the
+lilt in her walk. An expression from his reading jumped to his mind.
+Melodious feet! Some poet had said that, hadn't he? Surely it must have
+been Sheba of whom he was thinking, this girl so virginal of body and of
+mind, free and light-footed as a caribou on the hills.
+
+Gordon returned to the sled and drove the team up the draw to the cabin.
+The three who had been marooned came to meet their rescuer.
+
+"You must 'a' come right through the storm lickitty split," Swiftwater
+said.
+
+"You're right we did. This side pardner of mine was hell-bent on
+wrestling with a blizzard," Holt answered dryly.
+
+"Sorry you broke your laig, Gid."
+
+"Then there's two of us sorry, Swiftwater. It's one of the best laigs
+I've got."
+
+Sheba turned to the old miner impulsively. "If you could be knowing what
+I am thinking of you, Mr. Holt,--how full our hearts are of the
+gratitude--" She stopped, tears in her voice.
+
+"Sho! No need of that, Miss. He dragged me along." His thumb jerked
+toward the man who was driving. "I've seen better dog punchers than
+Elliot, but he's got the world beat at routin' old-timers out of bed and
+persuadin' them to kick in with him and buck a blizzard. Me, o' course,
+I'm an old fool for comin'--"
+
+The dark eyes of the girl were like stars in a frosty night. "Then
+you're the kind of a fool I love, Mr. Holt. I think it was just fine of
+you, and I'll never forget it as long as I live."
+
+Mrs. Olson had cooked too long in lumber and mining camps not to know
+something about bone-setting. Under her direction Gordon made splints
+and helped her bandage the broken leg. Meanwhile Swiftwater Pete fed
+his horses from the grain on the sled and Sheba cooked an appetizing
+breakfast. The aroma of coffee and the smell of frying bacon stimulated
+appetites that needed no tempting.
+
+Holt, propped up by blankets, ate with the others. For a good many years
+he had taken his luck as it came with philosophic endurance. Now he
+wasted no time in mourning what could not be helped. He was lucky the
+ice slide had not hit him in the head. A broken leg would mend.
+
+While they ate, the party went into committee of the whole to decide
+what was best to be done. Gordon noticed that in all the tentative
+suggestions made by Holt and Swiftwater the comfort of Sheba was the
+first thing in mind.
+
+The girl, too, noticed it and smilingly protested, her soft hand lying
+for the moment on the gnarled one of the old miner.
+
+"It doesn't matter about me. We have to think of what will be best for
+Mr. Holt, of how to get him to the proper care. My comfort can wait."
+
+The plan at last decided upon was that Gordon should make a dash for
+Smith's Crossing on snowshoes, where he was to arrange for a relief
+party to come out for the injured man and Mrs. Olson. He was to return
+at once without waiting for the rescuers. Next morning he and Sheba
+would start with Holt's dog team for Kusiak.
+
+Macdonald had taught Sheba how to use snowshoes and she had been an
+apt pupil. From her suitcase she got out her moccasins and put them on.
+She borrowed the snowshoes of Holt, wrapped herself in her parka, and
+announced that she was going with Elliot part of the way.
+
+Gordon thought her movements a miracle of supple lightness. Her lines
+had the swelling roundness of vital youth, her eyes were alive with
+the eagerness that time dulls in most faces. They spoke little as they
+swept forward over the white snow-wastes. The spell of the great North
+was over her. Its mystery was stirring in her heart, just as it had
+been when her lips had turned to his at the sunrise. As for him, love
+ran through his veins like old wine. But he allowed his feelings no
+expression. For though she had come to him of her own accord for that
+one blessed minute at dawn, he could not be sure what had moved her so
+deeply. She was treading a world primeval, the wonder of it still in
+her soft eyes. Would she waken to love or to disillusion?
+
+He took care to see that she did not tire. Presently he stopped and held
+out his hand to say good-bye.
+
+"Will you come back this way?" she asked.
+
+"Yes. I ought to get here soon after dark. Will you meet me?"
+
+She gave him a quick, shy little nod, turned without shaking hands, and
+struck out for the cabin. All through the day happiness flooded her
+heart. While she waited on Holt or helped Mrs. Olson cook or watched
+Swiftwater while he put up the tent in the lee of the cabin, little
+snatches of song bubbled from her lips. Sometimes they were bits of old
+Irish ballads that popped into her mind. Once, while she was preparing
+some coffee for her patient, it was a stanza from Burns:--
+
+ "Till a' the seas gang dry, my dear,
+ And the rocks melt wi' the sun:
+ I will luve thee still, my dear,
+ While the sands o' life shall run."
+
+She caught old Gideon looking at her with a queer little smile on his
+weather-tanned face and she felt the color beat into her cheeks.
+
+"I haven't bought a wedding present for twenty years," he told her
+presently, apropos of nothing that had been said. "I won't know what's
+the proper thing to get, Miss Sheba."
+
+"If you talk nonsense like that I'll go out and talk to Mr. Swiftwater
+Pete," she threatened, blushing.
+
+Old Gid folded his hands meekly. "I'll be good--honest I will. Let's
+see. I got to make safe and sane conversation, have I? Hm! Wonder when
+that lazy, long-legged, good-for-nothing horsethief and holdup that
+calls himself Gordon Elliot will get back to camp."
+
+Sheba looked into his twinkling eyes suspiciously as she handed him his
+coffee. For a moment she bit her lip to keep back a smile, then said
+with mock severity,--
+
+"Now, I _am_ going to leave you to Mrs. Olson."
+
+When sunset came it found Sheba on the trail. Swiftwater Pete had
+offered to go with her, but she had been relieved of his well-meant
+kindness by the demand of Holt.
+
+"No, you don't, Pete. You ain't a-goin' off gallivantin' with no young
+lady. You're a-goin' to stay here and fix my game laig for me. What do
+you reckon Miss Sheba wants with a fat, lop-sided lummox like you along
+with her?"
+
+Pete grew purple with embarrassment. He had not intended anything more
+than civility and he wanted this understood.
+
+"Hmp! Ain't you got no sense a-tall, Gid? If Miss Sheba's hell-bent on
+goin' to meet Elliot, I allowed some one ought to go along and keep the
+dark offen her. 'Course there ain't nothin' going to harm her, unless
+she goes and gets lost--"
+
+Sheba's smile cooled the heat of the stage-driver. "Which she isn't
+going to do. Good of you to offer to go with me. Don't mind Mr. Holt.
+Everybody knows he doesn't mean half of what he says. I'd be glad to
+have you come with me, but it isn't necessary at all. So I'll not
+trouble you."
+
+Darkness fell quickly, but Sheba still held to the trail. There was no
+sign of Elliot, but she felt sure he would come soon. Meanwhile she
+followed steadily the tracks he had made earlier in the day.
+
+She stopped at last. It was getting much colder. She was miles from the
+camp. Reluctantly she decided to return. Then, out of the darkness, he
+came abruptly upon her, the man whom she had come out to meet.
+
+Under the magic of the Northern stars they found themselves again in
+each other's arms for that brief moment of joyful surprise. Then, as it
+had been in the morning, Sheba drew herself shyly away.
+
+"They are waiting supper for us," she told him irrelevantly.
+
+He did not shout out his happiness and tell her to let them wait.
+For Gordon, too, felt awed at this wonderful adventure of love that had
+befallen them. It was enough for him that they were moving side by side,
+alone in the deep snows and the biting cold, that waves of emotion
+crashed through his pulses when his swinging hand touched hers.
+
+They were acutely conscious of each other. Excitement burned in the eyes
+that turned to swift, reluctant meetings. She was a woman, and he was
+her lover. Neither of them dared quite accept the fact yet, but it
+filled the background of all their thoughts with delight.
+
+Sheba did not want to talk of this new, amazing thing that had come into
+her life. It was too sacred a subject to discuss just yet even with him.
+So she began to tell him odd fancies from childhood that lingered in her
+Celtic heart, tales of the "little folk" that were half memories and
+half imaginings, stirred to life by some odd association of sky and
+stars. She laughed softly at herself as she told them, but Gordon did
+not laugh at her.
+
+Everything she did was for him divinely done. Even when his eyes were on
+the dark trail ahead he saw only the dusky loveliness of curved cheek,
+the face luminous with a radiance some women are never privileged to
+know, the rhythm of head and body and slender legs that was part of her
+individual, heaven-sent charm.
+
+The rest had finished supper before Gordon and Sheba reached camp, but
+Mrs. Olson had a hot meal waiting for them.
+
+"I fixed up the tent for the women folks--stove, sleeping-bags, plenty
+of wood. Touch a match to the fire and it'll be snug as a bug in a rug,"
+explained Swiftwater to Gordon.
+
+Elliot and Sheba were to start early for Kusiak and later the rescue
+party would arrive to take care of Holt and Mrs. Olson.
+
+"Time to turn in," Holt advised. "You better light that stove, Elliot."
+
+The young man was still in the tent arranging the sleeping-bags when
+Sheba entered. He tried to walk out without touching her, intending to
+call back his good-night. But he could not do it. There was something
+flamey about her to-night that went to his head. Her tender, tremulous
+little smile and the turn of the buoyant little head stirred in him a
+lover's rhapsody.
+
+"It's to be a long trail we cover to-morrow, Sheba. You must sleep.
+Good-night."
+
+"Good-night--Gordon."
+
+There was a little flash of audacity in the whimsical twist of her
+mouth. It was the first time she had ever called him by his given name.
+
+Elliot threw away prudence and caught her by the hands.
+
+"My dear--my dear!" he cried.
+
+She trembled to his kiss, gave herself to his embrace with innocent
+passion. Tendrils of hair, fine as silk, brushed his cheeks and sent
+strange thrills through him.
+
+They talked the incoherent language of lovers that is compounded of
+murmurs and silences and the touch of lips and the meetings of eyes.
+There were to be other nights in their lives as rich in memories as
+this, but never another with quite the same delight.
+
+Presently Sheba reminded him with a smile of the long trail he had
+mentioned. Mrs. Olson bustled into the tent, and her presence stressed
+the point.
+
+"Good-night, neighbors," Gordon called back from outside the tent.
+
+Sheba's "Good-night" echoed softly back to him.
+
+The girl fell asleep to the sound of the light breeze slapping the tent
+and to the doleful howling of the huskies.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+A MESSAGE FROM THE DEAD
+
+
+Macdonald drove his team into the teeth of the storm. The wind came
+in gusts. Sometimes the gale was so stiff that the dogs could scarcely
+crawl forward against it; again there were moments of comparative
+stillness, followed by squalls that slapped the driver in the face like
+the whipping of a loose sail on a catboat.
+
+High drifts made the trail difficult. Not once but fifty times Macdonald
+left the gee-pole to break a way through snow-waves for the sled. The
+best he could get out of his dogs was three miles an hour, and he knew
+that there was not another team or driver in the North could have done
+so well.
+
+It was close to noon when he reached a division of the road known as the
+Fork. One trail ran down to the river and up it to the distant creeks.
+The other led across the divide, struck the Yukon, and pointed a way to
+the coast. White drifts had long since blotted out the track of the sled
+that had preceded him. Had the fugitives gone up the river to the creeks
+with intent to hole themselves up for the winter? Or was it their
+purpose to cross the divide and go out over the ice to the coast?
+
+The pursuer knew that Gid Holt was wise as a weasel. He could follow
+blindfolded the paths that led to every creek in the gold-fields.
+It might be taken as a certainty that he had not plunged into such a
+desperate venture without having a plan well worked out beforehand.
+Elliot had a high grade of intelligence. Would they try to reach the
+coast and make their get-away to Seattle? Or would they dig themselves
+in till the heavy snows were past and come back to civilization with the
+story of a lucky strike to account for the gold they brought with them?
+Neither gold-dust nor nuggets could be identified. There would be no way
+of proving the story false. The only evidence against them would be that
+they had left at Kusiak and this was merely of a corroborative kind.
+There would be no chance of convicting them upon it.
+
+But to strike for Seattle was to throw away all pretense of innocence.
+Fugitives from justice, they would have to disappear from sight in order
+to escape. The hunt for them would continue until at last they were
+unearthed.
+
+One fork of the road led to comparative safety; the other went by
+devious windings to the penitentiary and perhaps the gallows. The
+Scotchman put himself in the place of the men he was trailing. Given
+the same conditions, he knew which path he would follow.
+
+Macdonald took the trail that led down to the river, to the distant
+gold-creeks which offered a refuge from man-hunters in many a deserted
+cabin marooned by the deep snows.
+
+Even the iron frame and steel muscles of the Scotch-Canadian protested
+against the task he had set them that day. It was a time to sit snugly
+inside by a stove and listen to the howling of the wind as it hurled
+itself down from the divide. But from daylight till dark Colby Macdonald
+fought with drifts and breasted the storm. He got into the harness with
+the dogs. He broke trail for them, cheered them, soothed, comforted,
+punished. Long after night had fallen he staggered into the hut of two
+prospectors, his parka so stiff with frozen snow that it had to be
+beaten with a hammer before the coat could be removed.
+
+"How long since a dog team passed--seven huskies and two men?" was his
+first question.
+
+"No dog team has passed for four days," one of the men answered.
+
+"You mean you haven't seen one," Macdonald corrected.
+
+"I mean none has passed--unless it went by in the night while we slept.
+And even then our dogs would have warned us."
+
+Macdonald flung his ice-coated gloves to a table and stooped to take off
+his mukluks. His face was blue with the cold, but the bleak look in the
+eyes came from within. He said nothing more until he was free of his wet
+clothes. Then he sat down heavily and passed a hand over his frozen
+eyebrows.
+
+"Get me something to eat and take care of my dogs. There is food for
+them on the sled," he said.
+
+While he ate he told them of the bank robbery and the murder. Their
+resentment against the men who had done it was quite genuine. There
+could be no doubt they told the truth when they said no sled had
+preceded his. They were honest, reliable prospectors. He knew them
+both well.
+
+The weary man slept like a log. He opened his eyes next morning to find
+one of his hosts shaking him.
+
+"Six o'clock, Mr. Macdonald. Your breakfast is ready. Jim is looking out
+for the huskies."
+
+Half an hour later the Scotchman gave the order, "Mush!" He was off
+again, this time on the back trail as far as the Narrows, from which
+point he meant to strike across to intersect the fork of the road
+leading to the divide.
+
+The storm had passed and when the late sun rose it was in a blue sky.
+Fine enough the day was overhead, but the slushy snow, where it was worn
+thin on the river by the sweep of the wind, made heavy travel for the
+dogs. Macdonald was glad enough to reach the Narrows, where he could
+turn from the river and cut across to hit the trail of the men he was
+following. He had about five miles to go before he would reach the Smith
+Crossing road and every foot of it he would have to break trail for the
+dogs. This was slow business, since he had no partner at the gee-pole.
+Back and forth, back and forth he trudged, beating down the loose snow
+for the runners. It was a hill trail, and the drifts were in most places
+not very deep. But the Scotchman was doing the work of two, and at a
+killing pace.
+
+Over a ridge the team plunged down into a little park where the snow was
+deeper. Macdonald, breaking trail across the mountain valley, found his
+feet weighted with packed ice slush so that he could hardly move them.
+When at last he had beaten down a path for his dogs he stood breathing
+deep at the summit of the slope. Before him lay the main road to Smith's
+Crossing, scarce fifty yards away. He gave a deep whoop of triumph, for
+along it ran the wavering tracks left by a sled. He was on the heels of
+his enemy at last.
+
+As he turned back to his Siberian hounds, the eyes of Macdonald came to
+abrupt attention. On the hillside, not ten yards from him, something
+stuck out of the snow like a signpost. It was the foot of a man.
+
+Slowly Macdonald moved toward it. He knew well enough what he had
+stumbled across--one of the tragedies that in the North are likely
+to be found in the wake of every widespread blizzard. Some unfortunate
+traveler, blinded by the white swirl, had wandered from the trail and
+had staggered up a draw to his death.
+
+With a little digging the Alaskan uncovered a leg. The man had died
+where he had fallen, face down. Macdonald scooped away the snow and
+found a pack strapped to the back of the buried man. He cut the thongs
+and tried to ease it away. But the gunnysack had frozen to the parka.
+When he pulled, the rotten sacking gave way under the strain. The
+contents of the pack spilled out.
+
+The eyes in the grim face of Macdonald grew hard and steely. He had
+found, by some strange freak of chance, much more than he had expected,
+to find. Using his snowshoe as a shovel, he dug the body free and turned
+it over. At sight of the face he gave a cry of astonishment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+"DON'T TOUCH HIM! DON'T YOU DARE TOUCH HIM!"
+
+
+Gordon overslept. His plan had been to reach Kusiak at the end of a
+long day's travel, but that had meant getting on the trail with the
+first gleam of light. When he opened his eyes Mrs. Olson was calling
+him to rise.
+
+He dressed and stepped out into the cold, crisp morning. From the hill
+crotch the sun was already pouring down a great, fanlike shaft of light
+across the snow vista. Swiftwater Pete passed behind him on his way to
+the stable and called a cheerful good-morning in his direction.
+
+Mrs. Olson had put the stove outside the tent and Gordon lifted it to
+the spot where they did the cooking.
+
+"Good-morning, neighbor," he called to Sheba. "Sleep well?"
+
+The little rustling sounds within the tent ceased. A face appeared in
+the doorway, the flaps drawn discreetly close beneath the chin.
+
+"Never better. Is my breakfast ready yet?"
+
+"Come and help me make it. Mrs. Olson is waiting on Holt."
+
+"When I'm dressed." The smiling face disappeared. "Dublin Bay" sounded
+in her fresh young voice from the tent. Gordon joined in the song as he
+lit the fire and sliced bacon from a frozen slab of it.
+
+The howling of the huskies interrupted the song. They had evidently
+heard something that excited them. Gordon listened. Was it in his fancy
+only that the breeze carried to him the faint jingle of sleigh-bells?
+The sound, if it was one, died away. The cook turned to his job.
+
+He stopped sawing at the meat, knife and bacon both suspended in the
+air. On the hard snow there had come to him the crunch of a foot behind
+him. Whose? Sheba was in the tent, Swiftwater at the stable, Mrs. Olson
+in the house. Slowly he turned his head.
+
+What Elliot saw sent the starch through his body. He did not move an
+inch, still sat crouched by the fire, but every nerve was at tension,
+every muscle taut. For he was looking at a rifle lying negligently in
+brown, steady hands. They were very sure hands, very competent ones. He
+knew that because he had seen them in action. The owner of the hands was
+Colby Macdonald.
+
+The Scotch-Canadian stood at the edge of a willow grove. His face was
+grim as the day of judgment.
+
+"Don't move," he ordered.
+
+Elliot laughed irritably. He was both annoyed and disgusted.
+
+"What do you want?" he snapped.
+
+"You."
+
+"What's worrying you now? Do you think I'm jumping my bond?"
+
+"You're going back to Kusiak with me--to give a life for the one you
+took."
+
+"What's that?" cried Gordon, surprised.
+
+"Just as I'm telling you. I've been on your heels ever since you left
+town. You and Holt are going back with me as my prisoners."
+
+"But what for?"
+
+"For robbing the bank and murdering Robert Milton, as you know well
+enough."
+
+"Is this another plant arranged for me by you and Selfridge?" demanded
+Elliot.
+
+Macdonald ignored the question and lifted his voice. "Come out of that
+tent, Holt,--and come with your hands up unless you want your head blown
+off."
+
+"Holt isn't in that tent, you damned idiot. If you want to know--"
+
+"Come _now_, if you expect to come alive," cut in the Scotchman
+ominously. He raised the rifle to his shoulder and covered the shadow
+thrown by the sun on the figure within.
+
+Gordon flung out a wild protest and threw the frozen slab of bacon at
+the head of Macdonald. With the same motion he launched his own body
+across the stove. A fifth of a second earlier the tent flap had opened
+and Sheba had come out.
+
+The sight of her paralyzed Macdonald and saved her lover's life.
+It distracted the mine-owner long enough for him to miss his chance.
+A bullet struck the stove and went off at a tangent through the tent
+canvas not two feet from where Sheba stood. A second went speeding
+toward the sun. For Gordon had followed the football player's instinct
+and dived for the knees of his enemy.
+
+They went down together. Each squirming for the upper place, they
+rolled over and over. The rifle was forgotten. Like cave men they
+fought, crushing and twisting each other's muscles with the blind lust
+of primordials to kill. As they clinched with one arm, they struck
+savagely with the other. The impact of smashing blows on naked flesh
+sounded horribly cruel to Sheba.
+
+She ran forward, calling on each by name to stop. Probably neither knew
+she was there. Their whole attention was focused on each other. Not for
+an instant did their eyes wander, for life and death hung on the issue.
+Chance had lit the spark of their resentment, but long-banked passions
+were blazing fiercely now.
+
+They got to their feet and fought toe to toe. Sledge-hammer blows beat
+upon bleeding and disfigured faces. No thought of defense as yet was
+in the mind of either. The purpose of each was to bruise, maim, make
+helpless the other. But for the impotent little cries of Sheba no sound
+broke the stillness save the crunch of their feet on the hard snow,
+the thud of heavy fists on flesh, and the throaty snarl of their deep,
+irregular breathing.
+
+Gid Holt, from the window of the cabin, watched the battle with shining
+eyes. He exulted in every blow of Gordon; he suffered with him when the
+smashing rights and lefts of Macdonald got home. He shouted jeers,
+advice, threats, encouragement. If he had had ten thousand dollars
+wagered on the outcome he could not have been more excited.
+
+Swiftwater Pete, drawn by the cries of Sheba, came running from the
+stable. As he passed the window, Holt caught him by the arm.
+
+"What are you aimin' to do, Pete? Let 'em alone. Let 'em go to it.
+They got to have it out. Stop 'em now and they'll get at it with guns."
+
+Sheba ran up, wringing her hands. "Stop them, please. They're killing
+each other."
+
+"Nothing of the kind, girl. You let 'em alone, Pete. The kid's
+there every minute, ain't he? Gee, that's a good one, boy.
+Seven--eleven--ninety-two. 'Attaboy!"
+
+Macdonald had slipped on the snow and gone down to his hands and knees.
+Swift as a wildcat the younger man was on top of him. Hampered though he
+was by his parka, the Scotchman struggled slowly to his feet again. He
+was much the heavier man, and in spite of his years the stronger. The
+muscles stood out in knots on his shoulders and across his back, whereas
+on the body of his more slender opponent they flowed and rippled in
+rounded symmetry. Active as a heather cat, Elliot was far the quicker
+of the two.
+
+Half-blinded by the hammering he had received, Gordon changed his method
+of fighting. He broke away from the clinch and sidestepped the bull-like
+rush of his foe, covering up as well as he could from the onset.
+Macdonald pressed the attack and was beaten back by hard, straight lefts
+and rights to the unprotected face.
+
+The mine-owner shook the matted hair from his swollen eyes and rushed
+again. He caught an uppercut flush on the end of the chin. It did not
+even stop him. The weight of his body was in the blow he lashed up from
+his side.
+
+The knees of Elliot doubled up under him like the blade of a jackknife.
+He sank down slowly, turned, got to his hands and knees, and tried to
+shake off the tons of weight that seemed to be holding him down.
+
+Macdonald seized him about the waist and flung him to the ground. Upon
+the inert body the victor dropped, his knees clinching the torso of the
+unconscious man.
+
+"Now, Pete. Go to him," urged Holt wildly.
+
+But before Swiftwater could move, before the great fist of Macdonald
+could smash down upon the bleeding face upturned to his, a sharp blow
+struck the flesh of the raised forearm and for the moment stunned the
+muscles. The Scotch-Canadian lifted a countenance drunk with rage,
+passion-tossed.
+
+Slowly the light of reason came back into his eyes. Sheba was standing
+before him, his rifle in her hand. She had struck him with the butt of
+it.
+
+"Don't touch him! Don't you dare touch him!" she challenged.
+
+He looked at her long, then let his eyes fall to the battered face of
+his enemy. Drunkenly he got to his feet and leaned against a willow.
+His forces were spent, his muscles weighted as with lead. But it was not
+this alone that made his breath come short and raggedly.
+
+Sheba had flung herself down beside her lover. She had caught him
+tightly in her arms so that his disfigured face lay against her warm
+bosom. In the eyes lifted to those of the mine-owner was an
+unconquerable defiance.
+
+"He's mine--mine, you murderer," she panted fiercely. "If you kill him,
+you must kill me first."
+
+The man she had once promised to marry was looking at a different woman
+from the girl he had known. The soft, shy youth of her was gone. She was
+a forest mother of the wilds ready to fight for her young, a wife ready
+to go to the stake for the husband of her choice. An emotion primitive
+and poignant had transformed her.
+
+His eyes burned at her the question his parched lips and throat could
+scarcely utter. "So you ... love him?"
+
+But though it was in form a question he knew already the answer. For the
+first time in his life he began to taste the bitterness of defeat.
+Always he had won what he coveted by brutal force or his stark will. But
+it was beyond him to compel the love of a girl who had given her heart
+to another.
+
+"Yes," she answered.
+
+Her hair in two thick braids was flung across her shoulders, her dark
+head thrown back proudly from the rounded throat.
+
+Macdonald smiled, but there was no mirth in his savage eyes. "Do you
+know what I want with him--why I have come to get him?"
+
+"No."
+
+"I've come to take him back to Kusiak to be hanged because he murdered
+Milton, the bank cashier."
+
+The eyes of the woman blazed at him. "Are you mad?"
+
+"It's the truth." Macdonald's voice was curt and harsh. "He and Holt
+were robbing the bank when Milton came back from the dance at the club.
+The cowards shot down the old man like a dog. They'll hang for it if it
+costs me my last penny, so help me God."
+
+"You say it's the truth," she retorted scornfully. "Do you think I don't
+know you now--how you twist and distort facts to suit your ends? How
+long is it since your jackal had him arrested for assaulting you--when
+Wally Selfridge knew--and you knew--that he had risked his life for you
+and had saved yours by bringing you to Diane's after he had bandaged
+your wounds?"
+
+"That was different. It was part of the game of politics we were
+playing."
+
+"You admit that you and your friends lied then. Is it like you could
+persuade me that you're telling the truth now?"
+
+The big Alaskan shrugged. "Believe it or not as you like. Anyhow, he's
+going back with me to Kusiak--and Holt, too, if he's here."
+
+An excited cackle cut into the conversation, followed by a drawling
+announcement from the window. "Your old tillicum is right here, Mac.
+What's the use of waiting? Why don't you have your hanging-bee now?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+HOLT FREES HIS MIND
+
+
+Macdonald whirled in his tracks.
+
+Old Gid Holt was leaning on his elbow with his head out of the window.
+"You better come and beat me up first, Mac," he jeered. "I'm all stove
+up with a busted laig, so you can wollop me good. I'd come out there,
+but I'm too crippled to move."
+
+"You're not too crippled to go back to Kusiak with me. If you can't
+walk, you'll ride. But back you go."
+
+"Fine. I been worrying about how to get there. It's right good of you to
+bring one of these here taxis for me, as the old sayin' is."
+
+"Where is the rest of the gold you stole?"
+
+"I ain't seen the latest papers, Mac. What is this stuff about robbin' a
+bank and shootin' Milton?"
+
+"You're under arrest for robbery and murder."
+
+"Am I? Unload the particulars. When did I do it all?"
+
+"You know when. Just before you left town."
+
+Holt shook his head slowly. "No, sir. I can't seem to remember it. Sure
+it ain't some one else you're thinking about? Howcome you to fix on me
+as one of the bold, bad bandits?"
+
+"Because you had not sense enough to cover your tracks. You might just
+as well have left a note saying you did it. First, you come to town and
+buy one of the fastest dog teams in Alaska. Why?"
+
+"That's an easy one. I bought that team to win the Alaska Sweepstakes
+from you. And I'm goin' to do it. The team wasn't handled right or it
+would have won last time. I got to millin' it over and figured that old
+Gid Holt was the dog puncher that could land those huskies in front.
+See?"
+
+"You bought it to make your getaway after the robbery," retorted
+Macdonald.
+
+"It's a difference of opinion makes horse-races. What else have you got
+against us?"
+
+"We found in your room one of the sacks that had held the gold you took
+from the bank."
+
+"That's right. I took it from the bank in the afternoon, where I had had
+it on deposit, to pay for the team I bought. Milton's books will show
+that. But you didn't find any sack I took when your bank was robbed--if
+it was robbed," added the old man significantly.
+
+"Of course, I knew you would have an alibi. Have you got one to explain
+why you left town so suddenly the night the bank was robbed? Milton was
+killed after midnight. Before morning you and your friend Elliot routed
+out Ackroyd and bought a lot of supplies from him for a hurry-up trip.
+You slipped around to the corral and hit the trail right into the
+blizzard. Will you tell me why you were in such a hurry to get away, if
+it wasn't to escape from the town where you had murdered a decent old
+fellow who never had harmed a soul?"
+
+"Sure I'll tell you." The black eyes of the little man snapped eagerly.
+"I came so p. d. q. because that side pardner of mine Gordon Elliot
+wouldn't let me wait till mornin'. He had a reason for leavin' town that
+wouldn't wait a minute, one big enough to drive him right into the heart
+of the blizzard. Me, I tagged along."
+
+"I can guess his reason," jeered the Scotchman. "But I'd like to hear
+you put a name to it."
+
+Holt grinned maliciously and waved a hand toward the girl who was
+pillowing the head of her lover. "The name of his reason is Sheba
+O'Neill, but it's goin' to be Sheba Elliot soon, looks like."
+
+"You mean--"
+
+The little miner took the words triumphantly out of his mouth. He leaned
+forward and threw them into the face of the man he hated. "I mean that
+while you was dancin' and philanderin' with other women, Gordon Elliot
+was buckin' a blizzard to save the life of the girl you both claimed
+to love. He was mushin' into fifty miles of frozen hell while you was
+fillin' up with potted grouse and champagne. Simultaneous with the lame
+goose and the monkey singlestep you was doin,' this lad was windjammin'
+through white drifts. He beat you at your own game, man. You're a bear
+for the outdoor stuff, they tell me. You chew up a blizzard for
+breakfast and throttle a pack of wolves to work up an appetite for
+dinner. It's your specialty. All right. Take your hat off to that
+chechacko who has just whaled you blind. He has outgamed you, Colby
+Macdonald. You don't run in his class. I see he is holding his haid up
+again. Give him another half-hour and he'd be ready to go to the mat
+with you again."
+
+The big Alaskan pushed away a fear that had been lingering in his mind
+ever since he had stumbled on that body buried in the snow yesterday
+afternoon. Was his enemy going to escape him, after all? Could Holt be
+telling the true reason why they had left town so hurriedly? He would
+not let himself believe it.
+
+"You ought to work up a better story than that," he said contemptuously.
+"You can throw a husky through the holes in it. How could Elliot know,
+for instance, that Miss O'Neill was not safe?"
+
+"The same way you could' a' known it," snapped old Gideon. "He 'phoned
+to Smith's Crossin' and found the stage hadn't got in and that there was
+a hell of a storm up in the hills."
+
+Macdonald set his face. "You're lying to me. You stumbled over the stage
+while you were making your getaway. Now you're playing it for an alibi."
+
+Elliot had risen. Sheba stood beside him, her hand in his. She spoke
+quietly.
+
+"It's the truth. Believe it or not as you please. We care nothing about
+that."
+
+The stab of her eyes, the carriage of the slim, pliant figure with its
+suggestion of fine gallantry, challenged her former lover to do his
+worst.
+
+On the battered face of Gordon was a smile. So long as his Irish
+sweetheart stood by him he did not care if he were charged with high
+treason. It was worth all it cost to feel the warmth of her brave,
+impulsive trust.
+
+The deep-set eyes of Macdonald clinched with those of his rival. "You
+cached the rest of the gold, I suppose," he said doggedly.
+
+With a lift of his shoulders the younger man answered lightly. "There
+are none so blind as those who will not see, Mr. Macdonald." He turned
+to Sheba. "Come. We must make breakfast."
+
+"You're going to Kusiak with me," his enemy said bluntly.
+
+"After we have eaten, Mr. Macdonald," returned Elliot with an ironic
+bow. "Perhaps, if you have not had breakfast yet, you will join us."
+
+"We start in half an hour," announced the mine-owner curtly, and he
+turned on his heel.
+
+The rifle lay where Sheba had dropped it when she ran to gather her
+stricken lover into her arms. Macdonald picked it up and strode over the
+brow of the hill without a backward look. He was too proud to stay and
+watch them. It was impossible to escape him in the deep snow that filled
+the hill trails, and he was convinced they would attempt nothing of the
+kind.
+
+The Scotchman felt for the first time in his life old and spent. Under
+tremendous difficulty he had mushed for two days and had at last run his
+men down. The lust of vengeance had sat on his shoulders every mile of
+the way and had driven him feverishly forward. But the salt that had
+lent a savor to his passion was gone. Even though he won, he lost. For
+Sheba had gone over to the enemy.
+
+With the fierce willfulness of his temperament he tried to tread under
+foot his doubts about the guilt of Holt and Elliot. Success had made him
+arrogant and he was not a good loser. He hated the man who had robbed
+him of Sheba, but he could not escape respecting him. Elliot had fought
+until he had been hammered down into unconsciousness and he had crawled
+to his feet and stood erect with the smile of the unconquered on his
+lips. Was this the sort of man to murder in cold blood a kindly old
+gentleman who had never harmed him?
+
+The only answer Macdonald found was that Milton had taken him and his
+partners by surprise. They had been driven to shoot the cashier to cover
+up their crime. Perhaps Holt or another had fired the actual shots, but
+Elliot was none the less guilty. The heart of the Scotchman was bitter
+within him. He intended to see that his enemies paid to the last ounce.
+He would harry them to the gallows if money and influence could do it.
+
+None the less, his doubts persisted. If they had planned the bank
+robbery, why did they wait so long to buy supplies for their escape? Why
+had they not taken the river instead of the hill trail? The story that
+his enemies told hung together. It had the ring of truth. The facts
+supported it.
+
+One piece of evidence in their favor Macdonald alone knew. It lay buried
+in the deep snows of the hills. He shut his strong teeth in the firm
+resolve that it should stay there.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+SHEBA DIGS
+
+
+The weather had moderated a good deal, but the trail was a protected
+forest one. The two teams now going down had come up, so that the path
+was packed fairly hard and smooth. Holt lay propped on his own sled
+against the sleeping-bags. Sheba mushed behind Gordon. She chatted with
+them both, but ignored entirely the existence of Macdonald, who followed
+with his prize-winning Siberian dogs.
+
+Though she tried not to let her lover know it, Sheba was troubled at
+heart. Gordon was practically the prisoner of a man who hated him
+bitterly, who believed him guilty of murder, and who would go through
+fire to bring punishment home to him. She knew the power of Macdonald.
+With the money back of him, he had for two years fought against and
+almost prevailed over a strong public opinion in the United States. He
+was as masterful in his hatred as in his love. The dominant, fighting
+figure in the Northwest, he trod his sturdy way through opposition like
+a Colossus.
+
+Nor did she any longer have any illusions about him. He could be both
+ruthless and unscrupulous when it suited his purpose. As the day wore
+toward noon, her spirits drooped. She was tired physically, and this
+reacted upon her courage.
+
+The warmer weather was spoiling the trail. It became so soft and mushy
+that though snowshoes were needed, they could not be worn on account of
+the heavy snow which clung to them every time a foot was lifted. They
+wore mukluks, but Sheba was wet to the knees. The spring had gone from
+her step. Her shoulders began to sag.
+
+For some time Gordon's eye had been seeking a good place for a day camp.
+He found it in a bit of open timber above the trail, and without a word
+he swung his team from the path.
+
+"Where are you going?" demanded Macdonald.
+
+"Going to rest for an hour," was Elliot's curt answer.
+
+Macdonald's jaw clamped. He strode forward through the snow beside the
+trail. "We'll see about that."
+
+The younger man faced him angrily. "Can't you see she is done, man?
+There is not another mile of travel in her until she has rested."
+
+The hard, gray eyes of the Alaskan took in the slender, weary figure
+leaning against the sled. On a soft and mushy trail like this, where
+every footstep punched a hole in the loose snow, the dogs could not
+travel with any extra weight. A few miles farther down they would come
+to a main-traveled road and the going would be better. But till then she
+must walk. Macdonald gave way with a gesture of his hand and turned on
+his heel.
+
+At the camp-fire Sheba dried her mukluks, stockings, caribou mitts, and
+short skirts. Too tired to eat, she forced herself to swallow a few
+bites and drank eagerly some tea. Gordon had brought blankets from the
+sled and he persuaded her to lie down for a few minutes.
+
+"You'll call me soon if I should sleep," she said drowsily, and her eyes
+were closed almost before the words were off her lips.
+
+When Macdonald came to order the start half an hour later, she was still
+asleep. "Give her another thirty minutes," he said gruffly.
+
+Youth is resilient. Sheba awoke rested and ready for work.
+
+While Gordon was untangling the dogs she was left alone for a minute
+with the mine-owner.
+
+The hungry look in his eyes touched her. Impulsively she held out her
+hand.
+
+"You're going to be fair, aren't you, Mr. Macdonald? Because you--don't
+like him--you won't--?"
+
+He looked straight into the dark, appealing eyes. "I'm going to be fair
+to Robert Milton," he told her harshly. "I'm going to see his murderers
+hanged if it costs me every dollar I have in the world."
+
+"None of us object to justice," she told him proudly. "Gordon has
+nothing to fear if only the truth is told."
+
+"Then why come to me?" he demanded.
+
+She hesitated; then with a wistful little smile, spoke what was in her
+heart. "I'm afraid you won't do justice to yourself. You're good--and
+brave--and strong. But you're very willful and set. I don't want to lose
+my friend. I want to know that he is all I have believed him--a great
+man who stands for the things that are fine and clean and just."
+
+"Then it is for my sake and not for his that you want me to drop the
+case against Elliot?" he asked ironically.
+
+"For yours and for his, too. You can't hurt him. Nobody can really be
+hurt from outside--not unless he is a traitor to himself. And Gordon
+Elliot isn't that. He couldn't do such a thing as this with which you
+charge him. It is not in his nature. He can explain everything."
+
+"I don't doubt that. He and his friend Holt are great little
+explainers."
+
+In spite of his bitterness Sheba felt a change in him. She seemed to
+have a glimpse of his turbid soul engaged in battle. He turned away
+without shaking hands, but it struck her that he was not implacable.
+
+While they were at luncheon half a dozen pack-mules laden with supplies
+for a telephone construction line outfit had passed. Their small,
+sharp-shod hoofs had punched sink-holes in the trail at every step.
+Instead of a smooth bottom the dogs found a slushy bog cut to pieces.
+
+At the end of an hour of wallowing Macdonald called a halt.
+
+"There is a cutoff just below here. It will save us nearly two miles,
+but we'll have to break trail. Swing to the right just below the big
+willow," he told Elliot. "I'll join you presently and relieve you on the
+job. But first Miss O'Neill and I are going for a little side trip."
+
+All three of them looked at him in sharp surprise. Gordon opened his
+lips to answer and closed them again without speaking. Sheba had flashed
+a warning to him.
+
+"I hope this trip isn't very far off the trail," she said quietly. "I'm
+just a wee bit tired."
+
+"It's not far," the mine-owner said curtly.
+
+He was busy unpacking his sled. Presently he found the dog moccasins for
+which he had been looking, repacked his sled, and fitted the shoes to
+the bleeding feet of the team leader. Elliot, suspicious and uncertain
+what to do, watched him at work, but at a signal from Sheba turned
+reluctantly away and drove down to the cutoff.
+
+Macdonald turned his dogs out of the trail and followed a little ridge
+for perhaps a quarter of a mile. Sheba trudged behind him. She was full
+of wonder at what he meant to do, but she asked no questions. Some wise
+instinct was telling her to do exactly as he said.
+
+From the sled he took a shovel and gave it to the young woman. "Dig just
+this side of the big rock--close to the root of the tree," he told her.
+
+Sheba dug, and at the second stroke of the spade struck something hard.
+He stooped and pulled out a sack.
+
+"Open it," he said. "Rip it with this knife."
+
+She ran the knife along the coarse weave of the cloth. Fifteen or twenty
+smaller sacks lay exposed. Sheba looked up at Macdonald, a startled
+question in her eyes.
+
+He nodded. "You've guessed it. This is part of the gold for which Robert
+Milton was murdered."
+
+"But--how did it get here?"
+
+"I buried it there yesterday. Come."
+
+He led her around the rock. Back of it lay something over which was
+spread a long bit of canvas. The heart of Sheba was beating wildly.
+
+The Scotchman looked at her from a rock-bound face. "Underneath this
+canvas is the body of one of the men who murdered Milton. He died more
+miserably than the man he shot. Half the gold stolen from the bank is in
+that gunnysack you have just dug up. If you'll tell me who has the other
+half, I'll tell you who helped him rob the bank."
+
+"This man--who is he?" asked Sheba, almost in a whisper. She was
+trembling with excitement and nervousness.
+
+Macdonald drew back the cloth and showed the rough, hard face of a
+workingman.
+
+"His name was Trelawney. I kicked him out of our camps because he was a
+trouble-maker."
+
+"He was one of the men that robbed you later!" she exclaimed.
+
+"Yes. And now he has tried to rob me again and has paid for it with his
+life."
+
+Her mind flashed back over the past. "Then his partner in this last
+crime must have been the same man--what's his name?--that was with him
+last time."
+
+"Northrup." He nodded slowly. "I hate to believe it, but it is probably
+true. And he, too, is lying somewhere in this park covered with snow--if
+our guess is right."
+
+"And Gordon--you admit he didn't do it?"
+
+Again he nodded, sulkily. "No. He didn't do it."
+
+Joy lilted in her voice. "So you've brought me here to tell me. Oh, I am
+glad, my friend, that you were so good. And it is like you to do it. You
+have always been the good friend to me."
+
+The Scotchman smiled, a little wistfully. "You take a mean advantage
+of a man. You nurse him when he is ill--and are kind to him when he
+is well--and try to love him, though he is twice your age and more.
+Then, when his enemy is in his power, he finds he can't strike him down
+without striking you too. Take your young man, Sheba O'Neill, and marry
+him, and for God's sake, get him out of Alaska before I come to grips
+with him again. I'm not a patient man, and he's tried me sair. They say
+I'm a good hater, and I always thought it true. But what's the use of
+hating a man when your soft arms are round him for an armor?"
+
+The fine eyes of the girl were wells of warm light. Her gladness was
+not for herself and her lover only, but for the friend that had been so
+nearly lost and was now found. He believed he had done it for her, but
+Sheba was sure his reasons lay deeper. He was too much of a man to hide
+evidence and let his rival be falsely accused of murder. It was not in
+him to do a cheap thing like that. When it came to the pinch, he was too
+decent to stab in the back. But she was willing to take him on his own
+ground.
+
+"I'll always be thanking you for your goodness to me," she told him
+simply.
+
+He brushed that aside at once. "There's one thing more, lass. I'll
+likely not be seeing you again alone, so I'll say it now. Don't waste
+any tears on Colby Macdonald. Don't fancy any story-book foolishness
+about spoiling his life. That may be true of halfling boys, maybe, but
+a man goes his ain gait even when he gets a bit facer."
+
+"Yes," she agreed. And in a flash she saw what would happen, that in the
+reaction from his depression he would turn to Genevieve Mallory and
+marry her.
+
+"You're too young for me, anyhow,--too soft and innocent. Once you told
+me that you couldn't keep step with me. It's true. You can't. It was a
+daft dream."
+
+He took a deep breath, seemed to shake himself out of it, and smiled
+cheerfully upon her.
+
+"We'll put our treasure-trove on the sled and go back to your friends,"
+he continued briskly. "To-morrow I'll send men up to scour the hills for
+Northrup's body."
+
+Sheba drew the canvas back over the face of the dead man. As she
+followed Macdonald back to the trail, tears filled her eyes. She was
+remembering that the white, stinging death that had crept upon these men
+so swiftly had missed her by a hair's breadth. The strong, lusty life
+had been stricken out of the big Cornishman and probably of his partner
+in crime. Perhaps they had left mothers or wives or sweethearts to mourn
+them.
+
+Macdonald relieved Elliot at breaking trail and the young man went back
+to the gee-pole. They had discarded mukluks and wore moccasins and
+snowshoes. It was hard, slow work, for the trail-breaker had to fight
+his way through snow along the best route he could find. The moon was
+high when at last they reached the roadhouse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+DIANE CHANGES HER MIND
+
+
+The news of Sheba's safety had been telephoned to Diane from the
+roadhouse, so that all the family from Peter down were on the porch to
+welcome her with mingled tears and kisses. Since Gordon had to push on
+to the hospital to have Holt taken care of, it was Macdonald who brought
+the girl home. The mine-owner declined rather brusquely an invitation to
+stay to dinner on the plea that he had business at the office which
+would not wait.
+
+Impulsively Sheba held out both her hands to him. "Believe me, I am
+thanking you with the whole of my heart, my friend. And I'm praying for
+you the old Irish blessing, 'God save you kindly.'"
+
+The deep-set, rapacious eyes of the Scotchman burned into hers for an
+instant. Without a word he released her hands and turned away.
+
+Her eyes followed him, a vital, dynamic American who would do big,
+lawless things to the day of his death. She sighed. He had been a great
+figure in her life, and now he had passed out of it.
+
+[Illustration: FOR HIM THE BEAUTY OF THE NIGHT LAY LARGELY IN HER
+PRESENCE]
+
+As soon as she was alone with Diane, her Irish cousin dropped the little
+bomb she had up her sleeve.
+
+"I'm going to be married Thursday, Di."
+
+Mrs. Paget embraced her for the tenth time within the hour. She was very
+fond of Sheba, and she had been on a great strain concerning her safety.
+That out of her danger had resulted the engagement Diane had hoped for
+was surplusage of good luck.
+
+"You lucky, sensible girl."
+
+Sheba assented demurely. "I do think I'm sensible as well as lucky. It
+isn't every girl that knows the right man for her even when he wants
+her. But I know at last. He's the man for me out of ten million."
+
+"I'm sure of it, dear. Oh, I am _so_ glad." Diane hugged her again.
+She couldn't help it.
+
+"One gets to know a man pretty well on a trip like that. I wouldn't
+change mine for any one that was ever made. I like everything about him,
+Di. I am the happiest girl."
+
+"I'm so glad you see it that way at last." Diane passed to the practical
+aspect of the situation. "But Thursday. Will that give us time, my dear?
+And who are you going to have here?"
+
+"Just the family. I've invited two guests, but neither of them can come.
+One has a broken leg and the other says he doesn't want to see me
+married to another man," Sheba explained with a smile.
+
+"So Gordon won't come."
+
+"Yes. He'll have to be here. We can't get along without the bridegroom.
+It wouldn't be a legal marriage, would it?"
+
+Diane looked at her, for the moment dumb. "You little wretch!" she got
+out at last. "So it's Gordon, is it? Are you quite sure this time? Not
+likely to change your mind before Thursday?"
+
+"I suppose, to an outsider, I do seem fickle," Miss O'Neill admitted
+smilingly. "But Gordon and I both understand that."
+
+"And Colby Macdonald--does he understand it too?"
+
+"Oh, yes." Her smile grew broader. "He told me that he didn't think I
+would quite suit him, after all. Not enough experience for the place."
+
+Diane flashed a suspicious look of inquiry. "Of course that's nonsense.
+What did he tell you?"
+
+"Something like that. He will marry Mrs. Mallory, I think, though he
+doesn't know it yet."
+
+"You mean she will get him on the rebound," said Diane bluntly.
+
+"That isn't a nice way to put it. He has always liked her very much. He
+is fond of her for what she is. What attracted him in me were the things
+his imagination gave to me."
+
+"And Gordon likes you, I suppose, for what you are?"
+
+Sheba did not resent the little note of friendly sarcasm. "I suppose he
+has his fancies about me, too, but by the time he finds out what I am
+he'll have to put up with me."
+
+The arrival of Elliot interrupted confidences. He had come, he said, to
+receive congratulations.
+
+"What in the world have you been doing with your face?" demanded Diane.
+As an afterthought she added: "Mr. Macdonald is all cut up too."
+
+"We've been taking massage treatment." Gordon passed to a subject of
+more immediate interest. "Do I get my congratulations, Di?"
+
+She kissed him, too, for old sake's sake. "I do believe you'll suit
+Sheba better than Colby Macdonald would. He's a great man and you are
+not. But it isn't everybody that is fit to be the wife of a great man."
+
+"That's a double, left-handed compliment," laughed Gordon. "But you
+can't say anything that will hurt my feelings to-day, Di. Isn't that
+your baby I heap crying? What a heartless mother you are!"
+
+Diane gave him the few minutes alone with Sheba that his gay smile had
+asked for. "Get out with you," she said, laughing. "Go to the top of the
+hill and look at the lovers' moon I've ordered there expressly for you;
+and while you are there forget that there are going to be crying babies
+and nursemaids with evenings out in that golden future of yours."
+
+"Come along, Sheba. We'll start now on the golden trail," said Elliot.
+
+She walked as if she loved it. Her long, slender legs moved rhythmically
+and her arms swung true as pendulums.
+
+The moon was all that Diane had promised. Sheba drank it in happily.
+
+"I believe I must be a pagan. I love the sun and the moon and I know
+it's all true about the little folk and the pied piper and--"
+
+"If it's paganism to be in love with the world, you are a thirty-third
+degree pagan."
+
+"Well, and was there ever a more beautiful night before?"
+
+He thought not, but he had not the words to tell her that for him its
+beauty lay largely in her presence. Her passionate love of things fine
+and brave transformed the universe for him. It was enough for him to
+be near her, to hear the laughter bubbling in her throat, to touch her
+crisp, blue-black hair as he adjusted the scarf about her head.
+
+"God made the night," he replied. "So that's a Christian thought as well
+as a pagan one."
+
+They were no exception to the rule that lovers are egoists. The world
+for them to-night divided itself into two classes. One included Sheba
+O'Neill and Gordon Elliot; the other took in the uninteresting remnant
+of humanity. No matter how far afield their talk began, it always came
+back to themselves. They wanted to know all about each other, to compare
+experiences and points of view. But time fled too fast for words. They
+talked--as lovers will to the end of time--in exclamations and the
+meeting of eyes and little endearments.
+
+When Diane and Peter found them on the hilltop, Sheba protested, with
+her half-shy, half-audacious smile, that it could not be two hours since
+she and Gordon had left the living-room. Peter grinned. He remembered a
+hilltop consecrated to his own courtship of Diane.
+
+The only wedding present that Macdonald sent Sheba was a long envelope
+with two documents attached by a clip. One was from the Kusiak "Sun."
+It announced that the search party had found the body of Northrup with
+the rest of the stolen gold beside him. The other was a copy of a legal
+document. Its effect was that the district attorney had dismissed all
+charges pending against Gordon Elliot.
+
+Although Macdonald lost the coal claims at Kamatlah by reason of the
+report of Elliot, all Alaska still believes that he was right. In that
+country of strong men he stands head and shoulders above his fellows.
+He has the fortunate gift of commanding the admiration of friend and
+foe alike. The lady who is his wife is secretly the greatest of his
+slaves, but she tries not to let him know how much he has captured her
+imagination. For Genevieve Macdonald cannot quite understand, herself,
+how so elemental an emotion as love can have pierced the armor of her
+sophistication.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE YUKON TRAIL***
+
+
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+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
+<html>
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" />
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Yukon Trail, by William MacLeod Raine</title>
+<style type="text/css">
+/*<![CDATA[*/
+ <!--
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+ .poem p.i8 { margin-left: 4.5em; }
+ .quote { margin-left: 6%; margin-right: 6%; text-indent: 0em; font-size: 90%; }
+ .figure { margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; text-indent: 0em; text-align: center; font-size: 90%; font-variant: small-caps; }
+ img { border: none; }
+ .toc { margin-left: 15%; font-size: 80%; margin-bottom: 0em;}
+ .tdr { text-align: right; padding: 0em .5em 0em 1em;}
+ center { padding: 0.8em;}
+ span.pagenum {position: absolute; left: 1%; right: 91%; font-size: 8pt; color: gray; background-color: inherit;}
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+</head>
+<body>
+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Yukon Trail, by William MacLeod Raine,
+Illustrated by George Ellis Wolfe</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 = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: The Yukon Trail</p>
+<p> A Tale of the North</p>
+<p>Author: William MacLeod Raine</p>
+<p>Release Date: October 11, 2006 [eBook #19527]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE YUKON TRAIL***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>E-text prepared by David Garcia<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (http://www.pgdp.net/)</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="pg" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<a name="image-cover"><!--IMG--></a>
+<div class="figure">
+<a href="images/cover.jpg"><img src="images/cover-t.jpg" width="250"
+alt="THE YUKON TRAIL -- WILLIAM MACLEOD RAINE" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<div style="height: 6em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h1>
+ THE YUKON TRAIL
+</h1>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="pagei" name="pagei"></a>[i]</span>
+</p>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="pageii" name="pageii"></a>[ii]</span>
+</p>
+
+<a name="image-0001"><!--IMG--></a>
+<div class="figure">
+<a href="images/illus-01.jpg"><img src="images/illus-01t.jpg" width="400"
+alt="NOW HE CAUGHT HER BY THE SHOULDERS (See page 108)" /></a>
+<br />
+NOW HE CAUGHT HER BY THE SHOULDERS (<i>See page 108</i>)
+</div>
+
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="pageiii" name="pageiii"></a>[iii]</span>
+</p>
+
+<h1>
+THE
+<br />
+YUKON TRAIL
+<br />
+<small><i>A TALE OF THE NORTH</i></small>
+</h1>
+
+<h2>
+<small>BY</small>
+<br />
+<span class="sc">WILLIAM MacLEOD RAINE</span>
+</h2>
+<h3>
+AUTHOR OF
+<br />
+WYOMING, BUCKY O'CONNOR, <span class="sc">Etc.</span>
+</h3>
+
+<h4>
+WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
+<br />
+GEORGE ELLIS WOLFE
+</h4>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+NEW YORK<br />
+GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP<br />
+PUBLISHERS
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="pageiv" name="pageiv"></a>[iv]</span>
+</p>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<p class="center">
+COPYRIGHT, 1917, BY WILLIAM MACLEOD RAINE
+<br />
+ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
+<br />
+<i>Published May 1917</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagev" name="pagev"></a>[v]</span>
+</p>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3>
+ TO
+<br />
+ MY BROTHER
+<br />
+EDGAR C. RAINE
+</h3>
+
+<p class="quote" style="text-indent: 0;">
+who knew the Lights of Dawson when they were a magnet to the feet of
+those answering the call of Adventure, who mushed the Yukon Trail from
+its headwaters to Bering Sea, who still finds in the Frozen North the
+Romance of the Last Frontier.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagevi" name="pagevi"></a>[vi]</span>
+</p>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagevii" name="pagevii"></a>[vii]</span>
+</p>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ Contents
+</h2>
+
+<table border="0" align="center" summary="Table of Contents">
+
+<tr><td class="tdr"> I.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0001"><span class="sc">Going "In"</span> </a></td><td class="tdr"> 1 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> II.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0002"><span class="sc">Enter a Man</span> </a></td><td class="tdr"> 10 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> III.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0003"><span class="sc">The Girl from Drogheda</span> </a></td><td class="tdr"> 23 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> IV.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0004"><span class="sc">The Crevasse</span> </a></td><td class="tdr"> 34 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> V.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0005"><span class="sc">Across the Traverse</span> </a></td><td class="tdr"> 49 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> VI.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0006"><span class="sc">Sheba sings&mdash;and Two Men listen</span> </a></td><td class="tdr"> 58 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> VII.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0007"><span class="sc">Wally gets Orders</span> </a></td><td class="tdr"> 71 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> VIII.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0008"><span class="sc">The End of the Passage</span> </a></td><td class="tdr"> 82 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> IX.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0009"><span class="sc">Gid Holt goes prospecting</span> </a></td><td class="tdr"> 93 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> X.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0010"><span class="sc">The Rah-Rah Boy functions</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">109 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XI.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0011"><span class="sc">Gordon invites himself to Dinner&mdash;and does not enjoy it</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">125 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XII.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0012"><span class="sc">Sheba says "Perhaps"</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">137 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XIII.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0013"><span class="sc">Diane and Gordon differ</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">144 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XIV.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0014"><span class="sc">Genevieve Mallory takes a Hand</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">156 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XV.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0015"><span class="sc">Gordon buys a Revolver</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">170 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XVI.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0016"><span class="sc">Ambushed</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">181 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XVII.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0017">"<span class="sc">God save you kindly</span>" </a></td><td class="tdr">193 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XVIII.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0018"><span class="sc">Gordon spends a Busy Evening</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">201 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XIX.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0019"><span class="sc">Sheba does not think so</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">210 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XX.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0020"><span class="sc">Gordon finds himself Unpopular</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">217 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XXI.</td><td>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="pageviii" name="pageviii"></a>[viii]</span>
+ <a href="#h2HCH0021"><span class="sc">A New Way of leaving a House</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">227 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XXII.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0022"><span class="sc">Gid Holt comes to Kusiak</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">232 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XXIII.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0023"><span class="sc">In the Dead of Night</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">241 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XXIV.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0024"><span class="sc">Macdonald follows a Clue</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">247 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XXV.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0025"><span class="sc">In the Blizzard</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">256 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XXVI.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0026"><span class="sc">Hard Mushing</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">268 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XXVII.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0027"><span class="sc">Two on the Trail</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">275 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr">XXVIII.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0028"><span class="sc">A Message from the Dead</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">286 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XXIX.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0029">"<span class="sc">Don't touch him! Don't you dare touch him</span>!" </a></td><td class="tdr">292 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XXX.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0030"><span class="sc">Holt frees his Mind</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">301 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XXXI.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0031"><span class="sc">Sheba digs</span> </a></td><td class="tdr">308 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdr"> XXXII.</td><td><a href="#h2HCH0032"><span class="sc">Diane changes her Mind</span></a></td><td class="tdr">318 </td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="pageix" name="pageix"></a>[ix]</span>
+</p>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ Illustrations
+</h2>
+
+<table border="0" align="center" summary="Illustrations">
+<tr><td> <a href="#image-0001"><span class="sc">Now he caught her by the shoulders </span></a> </td><td class="tdr"><i>Frontispiece</i> </td></tr>
+<tr><td> <a href="#image-0002"><span class="sc">"So you think I'm a 'fraid-cat, Mr. Elliot?" </span></a> </td><td class="tdr"> 44 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> <a href="#image-0003"><span class="sc">The situation was piquant, even though it was at her expense </span></a> </td><td class="tdr"> 236 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> <a href="#image-0004"><span class="sc">For him the beauty of the night lay largely in her presence </span></a> </td><td class="tdr"> 322 </td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page1" name="page1"></a>[1]</span>
+</p>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h1>
+ The Yukon Trail
+</h1>
+
+<a name="h2HCH0001" id="h2HCH0001"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER I
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ GOING "IN"
+</h3>
+<p>
+The midnight sun had set, but in a crotch between two snow-peaks it
+had kindled a vast caldron from which rose a mist of jewels, garnet
+and turquoise, topaz and amethyst and opal, all swimming in a sea of
+molten gold. The glow of it still clung to the face of the broad Yukon,
+as a flush does to the soft, wrinkled cheek of a girl just roused from
+deep sleep.
+</p>
+<p>
+Except for a faint murkiness in the air it was still day. There was
+light enough for the four men playing pinochle on the upper deck, though
+the women of their party, gossiping in chairs grouped near at hand, had
+at last put aside their embroidery. The girl who sat by herself at a
+little distance held a magazine still open on her lap. If she were not
+reading, her attitude suggested it was less because of the dusk than
+that she had surrendered herself to the spell of the mysterious beauty
+which for this hour at least had transfigured the North to a land all
+light and atmosphere and color.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page2" name="page2"></a>[2]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon Elliot had taken the boat at Pierre's Portage, fifty miles
+farther down the river. He had come direct from the creeks, and his
+impressions of the motley pioneer life at the gold-diggings were so
+vivid that he had found an isolated corner of the deck where he could
+scribble them in a notebook while still fresh.
+</p>
+<p>
+But he had not been too busy to see that the girl in the wicker chair
+was as much of an outsider as he was. Plainly this was her first trip
+in. Gordon was a stranger in the Yukon country, one not likely to be
+over-welcome when it became known what his mission was. It may have been
+because he was out of the picture himself that he resented a little the
+exclusion of the young woman with the magazine. Certainly she herself
+gave no evidence of feeling about it. Her long-lashed eyes looked
+dreamily across the river to the glowing hills beyond. Not once did they
+turn with any show of interest to the lively party under the awning.
+</p>
+<p>
+From where he was leaning against the deckhouse Elliot could see only
+a fine, chiseled profile shading into a mass of crisp, black hair, but
+some quality in the detachment of her personality stimulated gently his
+imagination. He wondered who she could be. His work had taken him to
+frontier camps before, but he could not place her as a type. The best
+he could do
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page3" name="page3"></a>[3]</span>
+
+ was to guess that she might be the daughter of some territorial official
+on her way in to join him.
+</p>
+<p>
+A short, thick-set man who had ridden down on the stage with Elliot to
+Pierre's Portage drifted along the deck toward him. He wore the careless
+garb of a mining man in a country which looks first to comfort.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Bound for Kusiak?" he asked, by way of opening conversation.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes," answered Gordon.
+</p>
+<p>
+The miner nodded toward the group under the awning. "That bunch lives
+at Kusiak. They've got on at different places the last two or three
+days&mdash;except Selfridge and his wife, they've been out. Guess you can
+tell that from hearing her talk&mdash;the little woman in red with the snappy
+black eyes. She's spillin' over with talk about the styles in New York
+and the cabarets and the new shows. That pot-bellied little fellow in
+the checked suit is Selfridge. He is Colby Macdonald's man Friday."
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot took in with a quickened interest the group bound for Kusiak. He
+had noticed that they monopolized as a matter of course the best places
+on the deck and in the dining-room. They were civil enough to outsiders,
+but their manner had the unconscious selfishness that often regulates
+social activities. It excluded from their
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page4" name="page4"></a>[4]</span>
+
+ gayety everybody that did not belong to the proper set.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That sort of thing gets my goat," the miner went on sourly. "Those
+women over there have elected themselves Society with a capital S. They
+put on all the airs the Four Hundred do in New York. And who the hell
+are they anyhow?&mdash;wives to a bunch of grafting politicians mostly."
+</p>
+<p>
+From the casual talk that had floated to him, with its many little
+allusions punctuating the jolly give-and-take of their repartee, Elliot
+guessed that their lives had the same background of tennis, dinners,
+hops, official gossip, and business. They evidently knew one another
+with the intimacy that comes only to the segment of a small community
+shut off largely from the world and forced into close social relations.
+No doubt they had loaned each other money occasionally, stood by in
+trouble, and gossiped back and forth about their shortcomings and family
+skeletons even as society on the outside does.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's the way of the world, isn't it? Our civilization is built on the
+group system," suggested Elliot.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Maybeso," grumbled the miner. "But I hate to see Alaska come to it. Me,
+I saw this country first in '97&mdash;packed an outfit in over
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page5" name="page5"></a>[5]</span>
+
+ the Pass. Every man stood on his own hind legs then. He got there if he
+was strong&mdash;mebbe; he bogged down on the trail good and plenty if he was
+weak. We didn't have any of the artificial stuff then. A man had to have
+the guts to stand the gaff."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I suppose it was a wild country, Mr. Strong."
+</p>
+<p>
+The little miner's eyes gleamed. "Best country in the world. We
+didn't stand for anything that wasn't on the level. It was a poor
+man's country&mdash;wages fifteen dollars a day and plenty of work. Everybody
+had a chance. Anybody could stake a claim and gamble on his luck. Now
+the big corporations have slipped in and grabbed the best. It ain't
+a prospector's proposition any more. Instead of faro banks we've got
+savings banks. The wide-open dance hall has quit business in favor
+of moving pictures. And, as I said before, we've got Society."
+</p>
+<p>
+"All frontier countries have to come to it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hmp! In the days I'm telling you about that crowd there couldn't 'a'
+hustled meat to fill their bellies three meals. Parasites, that's what
+they are. They're living off that bunch of roughnecks down there and
+folks like 'em."
+</p>
+<p>
+With a wave of his hand Strong pointed to a group of miners who had
+boarded the boat with them at Pierre's Portage. There were about a dozen
+of the men, for the most part husky,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page6" name="page6"></a>[6]</span>
+
+ heavy-set foreigners. They had been drinking, and were in a sullen
+humor. Elliot gathered from their talk that they had lost their jobs
+because they had tried to organize an incipient strike in the Frozen
+Gulch district.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Roughnecks and booze-fighters&mdash;that's all they are. But they earn their
+way. Not that I blame Macdonald for firing them, mind you," continued
+the miner.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Were they working for Macdonald?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yep. His superintendent up there was too soft. These here Swedes got
+gay. Mac hit the trail for Frozen Gulch. He hammered his big fist
+into the bread-basket of the ringleader and said, 'Git!' That fellow's
+running yet, I'll bet. Then Mac called the men together and read the
+riot act to them. He fired this bunch on the boat and was out of the
+camp before you could bat an eye. It was the cleanest hurry-up job I
+ever did see."
+</p>
+<p>
+"From what I've heard about him he must be a remarkable man."
+</p>
+<p>
+"He's the biggest man in Alaska, bar none."
+</p>
+<p>
+This was a subject that interested Gordon Elliot very much. Colby
+Macdonald and his activities had brought him to the country.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do you mean personally&mdash;or because he represents the big corporations?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Both. His word comes pretty near being
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page7" name="page7"></a>[7]</span>
+
+ law up here, not only because he stands for the Consolidated, but
+because he's one man from the ground up. I ain't any too strong for that
+New York bunch of capitalists back of Mac, but I've got to give it to
+him that he's all there without leaning on anybody."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've heard that he's a domineering man&mdash;rides roughshod over others.
+Is that right, Mr. Strong?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"He's a bear for getting his own way," grinned the little miner. "If you
+won't get out of his road he peels your hide off and hangs it up to dry.
+But I can't help liking him. He's big every way you take him. He'll
+stand the acid, Mac will."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do you mean that he's square&mdash;honest?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You've said two things, my friend," answered Strong dryly. "He's
+square. If he tells you anything, don't worry because he ain't put down
+his John Hancock before a notary. He'll see it through to a finish&mdash;to
+a fighting finish if he has to. Don't waste any time looking for fat or
+yellow streaks in Mac. They ain't there. Nobody ever heard him squeal
+yet and what's more nobody ever will."
+</p>
+<p>
+"No wonder men like him."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But when you say honest&mdash;Hell, no! Not the way you define honesty down
+in the States. He's a grabber, Mac is. Better not leave anything
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page8" name="page8"></a>[8]</span>
+
+ valuable around unless you've got it spiked to the floor. He takes what
+he wants."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What does he look like?" asked Gordon.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, I don't know." Strong hesitated, while he searched for words to
+show the picture in his mind. "Big as a house&mdash;steps out like a buck
+in the spring&mdash;blue-gray eyes that bore right through you."
+</p>
+<p>
+"How old?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Search me. You never think of age when you're looking at him.
+Forty-five, mebbe&mdash;or fifty&mdash;I don't know."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Married?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No-o." Hanford Strong nodded in the direction of the Kusiak circle.
+"They say he's going to marry Mrs. Mallory. She's the one with the red
+hair."
+</p>
+<p>
+It struck young Elliot that the miner was dismissing Mrs. Mallory in too
+cavalier a fashion. She was the sort of woman at whom men look twice,
+and then continue to look while she appears magnificently unaware of it.
+Her hair was not red, but of a lustrous bronze, amazingly abundant,
+and dressed in waves with the careful skill of a coiffeur. Half-shut,
+smouldering eyes had met his for an instant at dinner across the table
+and had told him she was a woman subtle and complex. Slightest shades
+of meaning she could convey with a lift of the eyebrow or an intonation
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page9" name="page9"></a>[9]</span>
+
+ of the musical voice. If she was already fencing with the encroaching
+years there was little evidence of it in her opulent good looks. She had
+manifestly specialized in graceful idleness and was prepared to meet
+with superb confidence the competition of d&eacute;butantes. The elusive shadow
+of lost illusions, of knowledge born of experience, was the only
+betrayal of vanished youth in her equipment.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page10" name="page10"></a>[10]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0002" id="h2HCH0002"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER II
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ ENTER A MAN
+</h3>
+<p>
+The whistle of the Hannah blew for the Tatlah Cache landing while Strong
+and Elliot were talking. Wally Selfridge had just bid three hundred
+seventy and found no help in the widow. He pushed toward each of the
+other players one red chip and two white ones.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Can't make it," he announced. "I needed a jack of clubs."
+</p>
+<p>
+The men counted their chips and settled up in time to reach the deck
+rail just as the gangplank was thrown out to the wharf. The crew
+transferred to the landing a pouch of mail, half a ton of sacked
+potatoes, some mining machinery, and several boxes containing provisions
+and dry goods.
+</p>
+<p>
+A man came to the end of the wharf carrying a suitcase. He was well-set,
+thick in the chest, and broad-shouldered. He came up the gangplank with
+the strong, firm tread of a man in his prime. Looking down from above,
+Gordon Elliot guessed him to be in the early thirties.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Mallory was the first to recognize him, which she did with a
+drawling little shout of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page11" name="page11"></a>[11]</span>
+
+ welcome. "Oh you, Mr. Man. I knew you first. I speak for you," she
+cried.
+</p>
+<p>
+The man on the gangplank looked up, smiled, and lifted to her his broad
+gray Stetson in a wave of greeting.
+</p>
+<p>
+"How do you do, Mrs. Mallory? Glad to see you."
+</p>
+<p>
+The miners from Frozen Gulch were grouped together on the lower deck.
+At sight of the man with the suitcase a sullen murmur rose among them.
+Those in the rear pushed forward and closed the lane leading to the
+cabins. One of the miners was flung roughly against the new passenger.
+With a wide, powerful sweep of his arm the man who had just come aboard
+hurled the miner back among his companions.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Gangway!" he said brusquely, and as he strode forward did not even
+glance in the direction of the angry men pressing toward him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Here. Keep back there, you fellows. None of that rough stuff goes,"
+ordered the mate sharply.
+</p>
+<p>
+The big Cornishman who had been tossed aside crouched for a spring. He
+launched himself forward with the awkward force of a bear. The suitcase
+described a whirling arc of a circle with the arm of its owner as the
+radius. The bag and the head of the miner came into swift impact. Like
+a bullock which has been pole-axed
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page12" name="page12"></a>[12]</span>
+
+ the man went to the floor. He turned over with a groan and lay still.
+</p>
+<p>
+The new passenger looked across the huge, sprawling body at the group
+of miners facing him. They glared in savage hate. All they needed was a
+leader to send them driving at him with the force of an avalanche. The
+man at whom they raged did not give an inch. He leaned forward slightly,
+his weight resting on the balls of his feet, alert to the finger tips.
+But in his eyes a grim little smile of derisive amusement rested.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Next," he taunted.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then the mate got busy. He hustled his stevedores forward in front of
+the miners and shook his fist in their faces as he stormed up and down.
+If they wanted trouble, by God! it was waiting for 'em, he swore in
+apoplectic fury. The Hannah was a river boat and not a dive for wharf
+rats. No bunch of roughnecks could come aboard a boat where he was mate
+and start anything. They could not assault any passengers of his and
+make it stick.
+</p>
+<p>
+The man with the suitcase did not wait to hear out his tirade. He
+followed the purser to his stateroom, dropped his baggage beside the
+berth, and joined the Kusiak group on the upper deck.
+</p>
+<p>
+They greeted him eagerly, a little effusively, as if they were anxious
+to prove themselves on
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page13" name="page13"></a>[13]</span>
+
+ good terms with him. The deference they paid and his assured acceptance
+of it showed him to be a man of importance. But apart from other
+considerations, he dominated by mental and physical virility the circle
+of which he instantly became the center. Only Mrs. Mallory held her own,
+and even she showed a quickened interest. Her indolent, half-disdainful
+manner sheathed a soft sensuousness that held the provocation of sex
+appeal.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What was the matter?" asked Selfridge. "How did the trouble start?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The big man shrugged his shoulders. "It didn't start. Some of the outfit
+thought they were looking for a row, but they balked on the job when
+Trelawney got his." Turning to Mrs. Mallory, he changed the subject
+abruptly. "Did you have a good time down the river?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon, as he watched from a little distance, corrected earlier
+impressions. This man had passed the thirties. Salt and pepper sprinkled
+the temples of his strong, lean head. He had the thick neck and solid
+trunk of middle life, but he carried himself so superbly that his whole
+bearing denied that years could touch his splendid physique. The suit he
+wore was a wrinkled corduroy, with trouser legs thrust into high-laced
+boots. An outdoor tan had been painted upon his face and neck, from the
+point
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page14" name="page14"></a>[14]</span>
+
+ where the soft flannel shirt fell away to show the fine slope of the
+throat line to the shoulders.
+</p>
+<p>
+Strong had stepped to the wharf to talk with an old acquaintance, but
+when the boat threw out a warning signal he made a hurried good-bye and
+came on board. He rejoined Elliot.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, what d'you think of him? Was I right?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The young man had already guessed who this imperious stranger was. "I
+never saw anybody get away with a hard job as easily as he did that one.
+You could see with half an eye that those fellows meant fight. They were
+all primed for it&mdash;and he bluffed them out."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Bluffed them&mdash;huh! If that's what you call bluffing. I was where I
+could see just what happened. Colby Macdonald wasn't even looking at
+Trelawney, but you bet he saw him start. That suitcase traveled like
+a streak of light. You'd 'a' thought it weighed about two pounds. That
+ain't all either. Mac used his brains. Guess what was in that grip."
+</p>
+<p>
+"The usual thing, I suppose."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You've got another guess&mdash;packed in among his socks and underwear was
+about twenty pounds of ore samples. The purser told me. It was that
+quartz put Trelawney to sleep so thorough that he'd just begun to wake
+up when I passed a minute ago."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page15" name="page15"></a>[15]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The young man turned his eyes again upon the big Canadian Scotchman.
+He was talking with Mrs. Mallory, who was leaning back luxuriously
+in a steamer chair she had brought aboard at St. Michael's. It would
+have been hard to conceive a contrast greater than the one between
+this pampered heiress of the ages and the modern business berserk who
+looked down into her mocking eyes. He was the embodiment of the dominant
+male,&mdash;efficient to the last inch of his straight six feet. What he
+wanted he had always taken, by the sheer strength that was in him. Back
+of her smiling insolence lay a silken force to match his own. She too
+had taken what she wanted from life, but she had won it by indirection.
+Manifestly she was of those women who conceive that charm and beauty
+are tools to bend men to their wills. Was it the very width of the gulf
+between them that made the appeal of the clash in the sex duel upon
+which they had engaged?
+</p>
+<p>
+The dusky young woman with the magazine was the first of those on
+the upper deck to retire for the night. She flitted so quietly that
+Gordon did not notice until she had gone. Mrs. Selfridge and her friends
+disappeared with their men folks, calling gay good-nights to one another
+as they left.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald and Mrs. Mallory still talked. After a time she too vanished.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page16" name="page16"></a>[16]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The big promoter leaned against the deck rail, where he was joined by
+Selfridge. For a long time they talked in low voices. The little man had
+most to say. His chief listened, but occasionally interrupted to ask a
+sharp, incisive question.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot, sitting farther forward with Strong, judged that Selfridge was
+making a report of his trip. Once he caught a fragment of their talk,
+enough to confirm this impression.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did Winton tell you that himself?" demanded the Scotchman.
+</p>
+<p>
+The answer of his employee came in a murmur so low that the words were
+lost. But the name used told Gordon a good deal. The Commissioner of the
+General Land Office at Washington signed his letters Harold B. Winton.
+</p>
+<p>
+Strong tossed the stub of his cigarette overboard and nodded
+good-night. A glance at his watch told Elliot that it was past two
+o'clock. He rose, stretched, and sauntered back to his stateroom.
+</p>
+<p>
+The young man had just taken off his coat when there came the hurried
+rush of trampling feet upon the hurricane deck above. Almost instantly
+he heard a cry of alarm. Low voices, quick with suppressed excitement,
+drifted back to him. He could hear the shuffling of footsteps and the
+sound of heavy bodies moving.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page17" name="page17"></a>[17]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Some one lifted a frightened shout. "Help! Help!" The call had come, he
+thought, from Selfridge.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon flung open the door of his room, raced along the deck, and took
+the stairs three at a time. A huddle of men swayed and shifted heavily
+in front of him. So close was the pack that the motion resembled the
+writhing of some prehistoric monster rather than the movements of
+individual human beings. In that half-light tossing arms and legs looked
+like tentacles flung out in agony by the mammoth reptile. Its progress
+was jerky and convulsive, sometimes tortuous, but it traveled slowly
+toward the rail as if by the impulsion of an irresistible pressure.
+</p>
+<p>
+Even as he ran toward the mass, Elliot noticed that the only sounds were
+grunts, stertorous breathings, and the scraping of feet. The attackers
+wanted no publicity. The attacked was too busy to waste breath in futile
+cries. He was fighting for his life with all the stark energy nature and
+his ancestors had given him.
+</p>
+<p>
+Two men, separated from the crowd, lay on the deck farther aft. One was
+on top of the other, his fingers clutching the gullet of his helpless
+opponent. The agony of the man underneath found expression only in the
+drumming heels that beat a tattoo on the floor. The spasmodic
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page18" name="page18"></a>[18]</span>
+
+ feet were shod in Oxford tans of an ultra-fashionable cut. No doubt the
+owner of the smart footwear had been pulled down as he was escaping to
+shout the alarm.
+</p>
+<p>
+The runner hurdled the two in his stride and plunged straight at the
+struggling tangle. He caught one man by the shoulders from behind and
+flung him back. He struck hard, smashing blows as he fought his way to
+the heart of the m&ecirc;l&eacute;e. Heavy-fisted miners with corded muscles landed
+upon his face and head and neck. The strange excitement of the battle
+lust surged through his veins. He did not care a straw for the odds.
+</p>
+<p>
+The sudden attack of Elliot had opened the pack. The man battling
+against a dozen was Colby Macdonald. The very number of his foes had
+saved him so far from being rushed overboard or trampled down. In their
+desire to get at him they hindered each other, struck blows that found
+the wrong mark. His coat and shirt were in rags. He was bruised and
+battered and bleeding from the chest up. But he was still slogging hard.
+</p>
+<p>
+They had him pressed to the rail. A huge miner, head down, had his arms
+around the waist of the Scotchman and was trying to throw him overboard.
+Macdonald lashed out and landed flush upon the cheek of a man attempting
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page19" name="page19"></a>[19]</span>
+
+ to brain him with a billet of wood. He hammered home a short-arm jolt
+against the ear of the giant who was giving him the bear grip.
+</p>
+<p>
+The big miner grunted, but hung on like a football tackler. With a jerk
+he raised Macdonald from the floor just as three or four others rushed
+him again. The rail gave way, splintered like kindling wood. The
+Scotchman and the man at grips with him went over the side together.
+</p>
+<p>
+Clear and loud rang the voice of Elliot. "Man overboard!"
+</p>
+<p>
+The wheelsman had known for some minutes that there was trouble afoot.
+He signaled to the engine room to reverse and blew short, sharp shrieks
+of warning. Already deckhands and officers, scantily clad, were
+appearing from fore and aft.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Men overboard&mdash;two of 'em!" explained Elliot in a shout from the boat
+which he was trying to lower.
+</p>
+<p>
+The first mate and another man ran to help him. The three of them
+lowered and manned the boat. Gordon sat in the bow and gave directions
+while the other two put their backs into the stroke. Quite casually
+Elliot noticed that the man in the waist had a purple bruise on his left
+cheek bone. The young man himself had put it there not three minutes
+since.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page20" name="page20"></a>[20]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Across the water came a call for help. "I'm sinking&mdash;hurry!"
+</p>
+<p>
+The other man in the river was a dozen yards from the one in distress.
+With strong, swift, overhand strokes he shot through the water.
+</p>
+<p>
+"All right," he called presently. "I've got him."
+</p>
+<p>
+The oarsmen drew alongside the swimmer. With one hand Macdonald caught
+hold of the edge of the boat. The other clutched the rescued man by the
+hair of his head.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Look out. You're drowning him," the mate warned.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Am I?" Macdonald glanced with mild interest at the head that had been
+until that moment submerged. "Shows how absent-minded a man gets. I was
+thinking about how he tried to drown me, I expect."
+</p>
+<p>
+They dragged the miner aboard.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Go ahead. I'll swim down," Macdonald ordered.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Better come aboard," advised the mate.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No. I'm all right."
+</p>
+<p>
+The Scotchman pushed himself back from the boat and fell into an easy
+stroke. Nevertheless, there was power in it, for he reached the Hannah
+before the rescued miner had been helped to the deck.
+</p>
+<p>
+A dozen passengers, crowded on the lower
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page21" name="page21"></a>[21]</span>
+
+ deck, pushed forward eagerly to see. Among them was Selfridge, his shirt
+and collar torn loose at the neck and his immaculate checked suit dusty
+and disheveled. He was wearing a pair of up-to-date Oxford tans.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Scotch-Canadian shook himself like a Newfoundland dog. He looked
+around with sardonic amusement, a grin on his swollen and disfigured
+face.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Quite a pleasant welcome home," he said ironically, his cold eyes fixed
+on a face that looked as if it might have been kicked by a healthy mule.
+"Eh, Trelawney?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The Cornishman glared at him, and turned away with a low, savage oath.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Are you hurt, Mr. Macdonald?" asked the captain.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hurt! Not at all, Captain. I cut myself while I was shaving this
+morning&mdash;just a scratch," was the ironic answer.
+</p>
+<p>
+"There's been some dirty work going on. I'll see the men are punished,
+sir."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Forget it, Captain. I'll attend to that little matter." His jaunty,
+almost insolent glance made the half-circle again. "Sorry you were too
+late for the party, gentlemen,&mdash;most of you. I see three or four of you
+who were 'among those present.' It was a strictly exclusive affair. And
+now, if you don't mind, I'll say good-night."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page22" name="page22"></a>[22]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+He turned on his heel, went up the stairway to the deck above, and
+disappeared into his stateroom.
+</p>
+<p>
+The rescued miner, propped against the cabin wall where he had been
+placed, broke into sudden excited protest. "Ach! He tried to drown me.
+Mein head&mdash;he hold it under the water."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ain't that just like a Swede?" retorted the mate in disgust. "Mac saves
+his life. Then the roughneck kicks because he got a belly full of Yukon.
+Sure Mac soused him some. Why shouldn't he?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I ain't no Swede," explained the big miner sullenly.
+</p>
+<p>
+The mate did not think it worth his while to explain that "Swede" was
+merely his generic term of contempt for all foreigners.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page23" name="page23"></a>[23]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0003" id="h2HCH0003"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER III
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ THE GIRL FROM DROGHEDA
+</h3>
+<p>
+Gordon Elliot was too much of a night owl to be an early riser, but
+next morning he was awakened by the tramp of hurried feet along the
+deck to the accompaniment of brusque orders, together with frequent
+angry puffing and snorting of the boat. From the quiver of the walls he
+guessed that the Hannah was stuck on a sandbar. The mate's language gave
+backing to this surmise. Divided in mind between his obligation to the
+sleeping passengers and his duty to get the boat on her way, that
+officer spilled a good deal of subdued sulphurous language upon the
+situation.
+</p>
+<p>
+"All together now. Get your back into it. Why are you running around
+like a chicken without a head, Reeves?" he snapped.
+</p>
+<p>
+Evidently the deck hands were working to get the Hannah off by poling.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot tried to settle back to sleep, but after two or three ineffectual
+efforts gave it up. He rose and did one or two setting-up exercises to
+limber his joints. The first of these flashed the signal to his brain
+that he was stiff and sore.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page24" name="page24"></a>[24]</span>
+
+ This brought to mind the fight on the hurricane deck, and he smiled. His
+face was about as mobile as if it were in a plaster cast. It hurt every
+time he twitched a muscle.
+</p>
+<p>
+The young man stepped to the looking-glass. Both eyes were blacked, his
+lip had been cut, and there was a purple weal well up on his left cheek.
+He stopped himself from grinning only just in time to save another
+twinge of pain.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Some party while it lasted. I never saw more willing mixers. Everybody
+seemed anxious to sit in except Mr. Wally Selfridge," he explained to
+his reflection. "But Macdonald is the class. He's there with both right
+and left. That uppercut of his is vicious. Don't ever get in the way of
+it, Gordon Elliot." He examined his injuries more closely in the glass.
+"Some one landed a peach on my right lamp and the other is in mourning
+out of sympathy. Oh, well, I ain't the only prize beauty on board this
+morning." The young man forgot and smiled. "Ouch! Don't do that, Gordon.
+Yes, son. 'There's many a black, black eye, they say, but none so bright
+as mine.' Now isn't that the truth?"
+</p>
+<p>
+He bathed, dressed, and went out on the deck.
+</p>
+<p>
+Early though he was, one passenger at least was up before him. The young
+woman he had noticed last evening with the magazine was doing a
+constitutional. A slight breeze was
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page25" name="page25"></a>[25]</span>
+
+ stirring, and as she moved against it the white skirt clung first to one
+knee and then the other, moulding itself to the long lines of her limbs
+with exquisite grace of motion. It was as though her walk were the
+expression of a gallant and buoyant personality.
+</p>
+<p>
+Irish he guessed her when the deep-blue eyes rested on his for an
+instant as she passed, and fortified his conjecture by the coloring of
+the clear-skinned face and the marks of the Celtic race delicately
+stamped upon it.
+</p>
+<p>
+The purser came out of his room and joined Elliot. He smiled at sight of
+the young man's face.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Your map's a little out of plumb this morning, sir," he ventured.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But you ought to see the other fellow," came back Gordon boyishly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've seen him&mdash;several of him. We've got the best collection of bruises
+on board I ever clapped eyes on. I've got to give it to you and Mr.
+Macdonald. You know how to hit."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, I'm not in his class."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon Elliot meant what he said. He was himself an athlete, had played
+for three years left tackle on his college eleven. More than one critic
+had picked him for the All-America team. He could do his hundred in just
+a little worse than ten seconds. But after all he was a
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page26" name="page26"></a>[26]</span>
+
+ product of training and of the gymnasiums. Macdonald was what nature and
+a long line of fighting Highland ancestors had made him. His sinewy,
+knotted strength, his massive build, the breadth of shoulder and depth
+of chest&mdash;mushing on long snow trails was the gymnasium that had
+contributed to these.
+</p>
+<p>
+The purser chuckled. "He's a good un, Mac is. They say he liked to have
+drowned Northrup after he had saved him."
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot was again following with his eyes the lilt of the girl's
+movements. Apparently he had not heard what the officer said. At least
+he gave no answer.
+</p>
+<p>
+With a grin the purser opened another attack. "Don't blame you a bit,
+Mr. Elliot. She's the prettiest colleen that ever sailed from Dublin
+Bay."
+</p>
+<p>
+The young man brought his eyes home. They answered engagingly the smile
+of the purser.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Who is she?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"The name on the books is Sheba O'Neill."
+</p>
+<p>
+"From Dublin, you say."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, if you want to be literal, her baggage says Drogheda. Ireland is
+Ireland to me."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where is she bound for?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Kusiak."
+</p>
+<p>
+The young woman passed them with a little nod of morning greeting to the
+purser. Fine and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page27" name="page27"></a>[27]</span>
+
+ dainty though she was, Miss O'Neill gave an impression of radiant
+strength.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Been with you all the way up the river?" asked Elliot after she had
+passed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yep. She came up on the Skagit from Seattle."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What is she going to do at Kusiak?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Again the purser grinned. "What do they all do&mdash;the good-looking ones?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Get married, you mean?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Surest thing you know. Girls coming up ask me what to bring by way of
+outfit. I used to make out a long list. Now I tell them to bring clothes
+enough for six weeks and their favorite wedding march."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Is this girl engaged?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Can't prove it by me," said the officer lightly. "But she'll never get
+out of Alaska a spinster&mdash;not that girl. She may be going in to teach,
+or to run a millinery store, or to keep books for a trading company.
+She'll stay to bring up kiddies of her own. They all do."
+</p>
+<p>
+Three children came up the stairway, caught sight of Miss O'Neill, and
+raced pell-mell across the deck to her.
+</p>
+<p>
+The young woman's face was transformed. It was bubbling with tenderness,
+with gay and happy laughter. Flinging her arms wide, she waited for
+them. With incoherent cries of delight
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page28" name="page28"></a>[28]</span>
+
+ they flung themselves upon her. Her arms enveloped all three as she
+stooped for their hugs and kisses.
+</p>
+<p>
+The two oldest were girls. The youngest was a fat, cuddly little boy
+with dimples in his soft cheeks.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I dwessed myself, Aunt Sheba. Didn't I, Gwen?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not all by yourself, Billie?" inquired the Irish girl, registering a
+proper amazement.
+</p>
+<p>
+He nodded his head slowly and solemnly up and down. "Honeth to
+goodness."
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba stooped and held him off to admire. "All by yourself&mdash;just think
+of that."
+</p>
+<p>
+"We helped just the teeniest bit on the buttons," confessed Janet, the
+oldest of the small family.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And I tied his shoes," added Gwendolen, "after he had laced them."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Billie will be such a big man Daddie won't know him." And Sheba gave
+him another hug.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gwendolen snuggled close to Miss O'Neill. "You always smell so sweet and
+clean and violety, Aunt Sheba," she whispered in confidence.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're spoiling me, Gwen," laughed the young woman. "You've kissed the
+blarney stone. It's a good thing you're leaving the boat to-day."
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Gwen had one more confidence to make
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page29" name="page29"></a>[29]</span>
+
+ in the ear of her friend. "I wish you'd come too and be our new mamma,"
+she begged.
+</p>
+<p>
+A shell-pink tinge crept into the milky skin of the Irish girl. She was
+less sure of herself, more easily embarrassed, than the average American
+of her age and sex. Occasionally in her manner was that effect of
+shyness one finds in the British even after they have escaped from
+provincialism.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Are all your things gathered ready for packing, Janet?" she asked
+quietly.
+</p>
+<p>
+The purser gave information to Elliot. "They call her Aunt Sheba,
+but she's no relative of theirs. The kids are on their way in to their
+father, who is an engineer on one of the creeks back of Katma. Their
+mother died two months ago. Miss O'Neill met them first aboard the
+Skagit on the way up and she has mothered them ever since. Some women
+are that way, bless 'em. I know because I've been married to one myself
+six months. She's back there at St. Michael's, and she just grabs at
+every baby in the block."
+</p>
+<p>
+The eyes of Elliot rested on Miss O'Neill. "She loves children."
+</p>
+<p>
+"She sure does&mdash;no bluff about that." An imp of mischief sparkled in
+the eye of the supercargo. "Not married yourself, are you, Mr. Elliot?"
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page30" name="page30"></a>[30]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"No."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hmp!"
+</p>
+<p>
+That was all he said, but Gordon felt the blood creep into his face.
+This annoyed him, so he added brusquely,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"And not likely to be."
+</p>
+<p>
+When the call for breakfast came Miss O'Neill took her retinue of
+youngsters with her to the dining-room. Looking across from his seat at
+an adjoining table, Elliot could see her waiting upon them with a fine
+absorption in their needs. She prepared an orange for Billie and offered
+to the little girls suggestions as to ordering that were accepted by
+them as a matter of course. Unconsciously the children recognized in her
+the eternal Mother.
+</p>
+<p>
+Before they had been long in the dining-room Macdonald came in carrying
+a sheaf of business papers. He glanced around, recognized Elliot, and
+made instantly for the seat across the table from him. On his face and
+head were many marks of the recent battle.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Trade you a cauliflower ear for a pair of black eyes, Mr. Elliot," he
+laughed as he shook hands with the man whose name he had just learned
+from the purser.
+</p>
+<p>
+The grip of his brown, muscular hand was strong. It was in character
+with the steady, cool eyes set deep beneath the jutting forehead, with
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page31" name="page31"></a>[31]</span>
+
+ the confident carriage of the deep, broad shoulders. He looked a dynamic
+American, who trod the way of the forceful and fought for his share of
+the spoils.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You might throw in several other little souvenirs to boot and not miss
+them," suggested Elliot with a smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald nodded indifferently. "I gave and I took, which was as it
+should be. But it's different with you, Mr. Elliot. This wasn't your
+row."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I hadn't been in a good mix-up since I left college. It did me a lot of
+good."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Much obliged, anyhow." He turned his attention to a lady entering the
+dining-room. "'Mornin', Mrs. Selfridge. How's Wally?"
+</p>
+<p>
+She threw up her hands in despair. "He's on his second bottle of
+liniment already. I expect those ruffians have ruined his singing voice.
+It's a mercy they didn't murder both him and you, Mr. Macdonald. When I
+think of how close you both came to death last night&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I don't know about Wally, but I had no notion of dying, Mrs. Selfridge.
+They mussed us up a bit. That was all."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But they <i>meant</i> to kill you, the cowards. And they almost did it
+too. Look at Wally&mdash;confined to his bed and speaking in a whisper. Look
+at you&mdash;a wreck, horribly beaten up,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page32" name="page32"></a>[32]</span>
+
+ almost drowned. We must drive the villains out of the country or send
+them to prison."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Selfridge always talked in superlatives. She had an enthusiasm
+for the dramatics of conversation. Her supple hands, her shrill, eager
+voice, the snapping black eyes, all had the effect of startling
+headlines to the story she might be telling.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Am I a wreck?" the big Scotchman wanted to know. "I feel as husky as a
+well-fed malamute."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, you <i>talk</i>. But we all know you&mdash;how brave and strong you are.
+That's why this outrage ought to be punished. What would Alaska do if
+anything happened to you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I hadn't thought of that," admitted Macdonald. "The North would have to
+go out of business, I suppose. But you're right about one thing, Mrs.
+Selfridge. I'm brave and strong enough at the breakfast table. Steward,
+will you bring me a double order of these shirred eggs&mdash;and a small
+steak?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, I'm glad you can still joke, Mr. Macdonald, after such a terrible
+experience. All I can say is that I hope Wally isn't permanently
+injured. He hasn't your fine constitution, and one never can tell about
+internal injuries." Mrs. Selfridge sighed and passed to her place.
+</p>
+<p>
+The eyes of the big man twinkled. "Our little
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page33" name="page33"></a>[33]</span>
+
+ fracas has been a godsend to Mrs. Selfridge. Wally and I will both
+emerge as heroes of a desperate struggle. You won't even get a mention.
+But it's a pity about Wally's injuries&mdash;and his singing voice."
+</p>
+<p>
+The younger man agreed with a gravity back of which his amusement was
+apparent. The share of Selfridge in the battle had been limited to leg
+work only, but this had not been good enough to keep him from being
+overhauled and having his throat squeezed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot finished breakfast first and left Macdonald looking over a
+long typewritten document. He had it propped against a water-bottle
+and was reading as he ate. The paper was a report Selfridge had brought
+in to him from a clerk in the General Land Office. The big Canadian
+and the men he represented were dealing directly with the heads of the
+Government departments, but they thought it the part of wisdom to keep
+in their employ subordinates in the capacity of secret service agents
+to spy upon the higher-ups.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page34" name="page34"></a>[34]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0004" id="h2HCH0004"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER IV
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ THE CREVASSE
+</h3>
+<p>
+For an hour before the Hannah reached Katma Miss O'Neill was busy
+getting her little brood ready. In that last half-day she was a creature
+of moods to them. They, too, like Sheba herself, were adventuring into
+a new world. Somehow they represented to her the last tie that bound her
+to the life she was leaving. Her heart was tender as a Madonna to these
+lambs so ill-fitted to face a frigid waste. Their mother had been a good
+woman. She could tell that. But she had no way of knowing what kind of
+man their father might be.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba gave Janet advice about where to keep her money and when to wear
+rubbers and what to do for Billie's cold. She put up a lunch for them to
+take on the stage. When they said their sniffling good-byes at Katma she
+was suspiciously bright and merry. Soon the children were laughing again
+with her.
+</p>
+<p>
+One glance at their father, who introduced himself to Miss O'Neill as
+John Husted, relieved her mind greatly. His spontaneous delight at
+seeing them again and his choking gratitude
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page35" name="page35"></a>[35]</span>
+
+ to her for having looked after them were evidence enough that this
+kind-eyed man meant to be both father and mother to his recovered little
+folks. His emotion was too poignant for him to talk about his wife, but
+Sheba understood and liked him better for it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Her temporary family stood on the end of the wharf and called good-byes
+to the girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tum soon and see us, Aunt Sheba," Billie shouted from his seat on the
+shoulder of his father.
+</p>
+<p>
+The children waved handkerchiefs as long as she could be distinguished
+by them. When they turned away she went directly to her room.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot was passing forward when Miss O'Neill opened her stateroom door
+to go in. The eyes of the young woman were blind with tears and she was
+biting her lip to keep back the emotion that welled up. He knew she was
+very fond of the motherless children, but he guessed at an additional
+reason for her sobs. She too was as untaught as a child in the life of
+this frontier land. Whatever she found here&mdash;how much of hardship or
+happiness, of grief or woe&mdash;she knew that she had left behind forever
+the safe harborage of quiet waters in which her life craft had always
+floated.
+</p>
+<p>
+It came on to rain in the afternoon. Heavy clouds swept across from the
+mountains, and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page36" name="page36"></a>[36]</span>
+
+ the sodden sky opened like a sluice-box. The Kusiak contingent, driven
+indoors, resorted to bridge. Miss O'Neill read. Gordon Elliot wrote
+letters, dawdled over magazines, and lounged alternately in the ladies'
+parlor and the smoking-room, where Macdonald, Strong, a hardware
+merchant from Fairbanks, and a pair of sour-dough miners had settled
+themselves to a poker game that was to last all night and well into the
+next day.
+</p>
+<p>
+Of the two bridge tables all the players were old-timers except Mrs.
+Mallory. Most of them were young enough in years, but they had been of
+the North long enough to know the gossip of the country and its small
+politics intimately. They shared common hopes of the day when Alaska
+would be thrown open to industry and a large population.
+</p>
+<p>
+But Mrs. Mallory had come in over the ice for the first time last
+winter. The other women felt that she was a bird of passage, that the
+frozen Arctic could be no more than a whim to her. They deferred a
+little to her because she knew the great world&mdash;New York, Vienna,
+London, Paris. Great names fell from her lips casually and carelessly.
+She referred familiarly to princes and famous statesmen, as if she had
+gossiped with them t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te over the teacups. She was full of spicy
+little anecdotes about German
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page37" name="page37"></a>[37]</span>
+
+ royalty and the British aristocracy. It was no wonder, Gordon Elliot
+thought, that she had rather stunned the little social set of Kusiak.
+</p>
+<p>
+Through Northrup and Trelawney a new slant on Macdonald was given to
+Gordon. He had fallen into casual talk with them after dinner on the
+fore deck. It was still raining, but all three were equipped with
+slickers or mackintoshes. To his surprise the young man discovered that
+they bore him no grudge at all for his interference the night before.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But we ain't through with Colby Macdonald yet," Trelawney explained.
+"Mind, I don't say we're going to get him. Nothing like that. He
+knocked me cold with that loaded suitcase of his. By the looks of him
+I'm even for that. Good enough. But here's the point. We stand for
+Labor. He stands for Capital. See? Things ain't what they used to be
+in Alaska, and it's because of Colby Macdonald and his friends. They're
+grabbers&mdash;that's what they are. They want the whole works. A hell of a
+roar goes up from them when the Government stops their combines, but
+all the time they're bearing down a little harder on us workingmen.
+Understand? It's up to us to fight, ain't it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Later Elliot put this viewpoint before Strong.
+</p>
+<p>
+"There's something in it," the miner agreed. "Wages have gone down, and
+it's partly because
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page38" name="page38"></a>[38]</span>
+
+ the big fellows are consolidating interests. Alaska ain't a poor man's
+country the way it was. But Mac ain't to blame for that. He has to play
+the game the way the cards are dealt out."
+</p>
+<p>
+The sky was clear again when the Hannah drew in to the wharf at Moose
+Head to unload freight, but the mud in the unpaved street leading to the
+business section of the little frontier town was instep deep. Many of
+the passengers hurried ashore to make the most of the five-hour stop.
+Macdonald, with Mrs. Mallory and their Kusiak friends, disappeared in
+a bus. Elliot put on a pair of heavy boots and started uptown.
+</p>
+<p>
+At the end of the wharf he passed Miss O'Neill. She wore no rubbers and
+she had come to a halt at the beginning of the mud. After a momentary
+indecision she returned slowly to the boat.
+</p>
+<p>
+The young man walked up into the town, but ten minutes later he crossed
+the gangplank of the Hannah again with a package under his arm. Miss
+O'Neill was sitting on the forward deck making a pretense to herself of
+reading. This was where Elliot had expected to find her, but now that
+the moment of attack had come he had to take his fear by the throat.
+When he had thought of it first there seemed nothing difficult about
+offering to do her a kindness, yet he found himself shrinking from the
+chance of a rebuff.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page39" name="page39"></a>[39]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+He moved over to where she sat and lifted his hat. "I hope you won't
+think it a liberty, Miss O'Neill, but I've brought you some rubbers from
+a store uptown. I noticed you couldn't get ashore without them."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon tore the paper wrapping from his package and disclosed half a
+dozen pairs of rubbers.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl was visibly embarrassed. She was not at all certain of the
+right thing to do. Where she had been brought up young men did not offer
+courtesies of this sort so informally.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I&mdash;I think I won't need them, thank you. I've decided not to leave the
+boat," she answered shyly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot had never been accused of being a quitter. Having begun this, he
+proposed to see it out. He caught sight of the purser superintending the
+discharge of cargo and called to him by name. The officer joined them,
+a pad of paper and a pencil in his hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm trying to persuade Miss O'Neill that she ought to go ashore while
+we're lying here. What was it you told me about the waterfall back of
+the town?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Finest thing of its kind in Alaska. They're so proud of it in this burg
+that they would like to make it against the law for any one to leave
+without seeing it. Every one takes it in. We
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page40" name="page40"></a>[40]</span>
+
+ won't get away till night. You've plenty of time if you want to see it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now, will you please introduce me to Miss O'Neill formally?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The purser went through the usual formula of presentation, adding that
+Elliot was a government official on his way to Kusiak. Having done his
+duty by the young man, the busy supercargo retired.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm sure it would do you good to walk up to the waterfall with me, Miss
+O'Neill," urged Elliot.
+</p>
+<p>
+She met a little dubiously the smile that would not stay quite
+extinguished on his good-looking, boyish face. Why shouldn't she go with
+him, since it was the American way for unchaperoned youth to enjoy
+itself naturally?
+</p>
+<p>
+"If they'll fit," the girl answered, eyeing the rubbers.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon dropped to his knee and demonstrated that they would.
+</p>
+<p>
+As they walked along the muddy street she gave him a friendly little nod
+of thanks. "Good of you to take the trouble to look out for me."
+</p>
+<p>
+He laughed. "It was myself I was looking out for. I'm a stranger in the
+country and was awfully lonesome."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Is it that this is your first time in too?" she asked shyly.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page41" name="page41"></a>[41]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're going to Kusiak, aren't you? Do you know anybody there?" replied
+Elliot.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My cousin lives there, but I haven't seen her since I was ten. She's an
+American. Eleven years ago she visited us in Ireland."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm glad you know some one," he said. "You'll not be so lonesome with
+some of your people living there. I have two friends at Kusiak&mdash;a girl I
+used to go to school with and her husband."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Are you going to live at Kusiak?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No; but I'll be stationed in the Territory for several months. I'll be
+in and out of the town a good deal. I hope you'll let me see something
+of you."
+</p>
+<p>
+The fine Irish coloring deepened in her cheeks. He had a way of taking
+in his stride the barriers between them, but it was impossible for her
+to feel offended at this cheery, vigorous young fellow with the winning
+smile and the firm-set jaw. She liked the warmth in his honest brown
+eyes. She liked the play of muscular grace beneath his well-fitting
+clothes. The sinuous ease of his lean, wide-shouldered body stirred
+faintly some primitive instinct in her maiden heart. Sheba did not know,
+as her resilient muscles carried her forward joyfully, that she was
+answering the call of youth to youth.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon respected her shyness and moved
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page42" name="page42"></a>[42]</span>
+
+ warily to establish his contact. He let the talk drift to impersonal
+topics as they picked their way out from the town along the mossy
+trail. The ground was spongy with water. On either side of them ferns and
+brakes grew lush. Sheba took the porous path with a step elastic. To the
+young man following she seemed a miracle of supple lightness.
+</p>
+<p>
+The trail tilted up from the lowlands, led across dips, and into a draw.
+A little stream meandered down and gurgled over rocks worn smooth by
+ages of attrition. Alders brushed the stream and their foliage checkered
+the trail with sunlight and shadow.
+</p>
+<p>
+They were ascending steadily now along a pathway almost too indistinct
+to follow. The air was aromatic with pine from a grove that came
+straggling down the side of a gulch to the brook.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do you know, I have a queer feeling that I've seen all this before,"
+the Irish girl said. "Of course I haven't&mdash;unless it was in my dreams.
+Naturally I've thought about Alaska a great deal because my father lived
+here."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I didn't know that."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes. He came in with the Klondike stampeders." She added quietly: "He
+died on Bonanza Creek two years later."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Was he a miner?"
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page43" name="page43"></a>[43]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not until he came North. He had an interest in a claim. It later turned
+out worthless."
+</p>
+<p>
+A bit of stiff climbing brought them to a boulder field back of which
+rose a mountain ridge.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We've got off the trail somehow," Elliot said. "But I don't suppose it
+matters. If we keep going we're bound to come to the waterfall."
+</p>
+<p>
+Beyond the boulder field the ridge rose sharply. Gordon looked a little
+dubiously at Sheba.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Are you a good climber?"
+</p>
+<p>
+As she stood in the sunpour, her cheeks flushed with exercise, he could
+see that her spirit courted adventure.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm sure I must be," she answered with a smile adorable. "I believe I
+could do the Matterhorn to-day."
+</p>
+<p>
+Well up on the shoulder of the ridge they stopped to breathe. The
+distant noise of falling water came faintly to them.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We're too far to the left&mdash;must have followed the wrong spur," Elliot
+explained. "Probably we can cut across the face of the mountain."
+</p>
+<p>
+Presently they came to an impasse. The gulch between the two spurs
+terminated in a rock wall that fell almost sheer for two hundred feet.
+</p>
+<p>
+The color in the cheeks beneath the eager
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page44" name="page44"></a>[44]</span>
+
+ eyes of the girl was warm. "Let's try it," she begged.
+</p>
+<p>
+The young man had noticed that she was as sure-footed as a mountain goat
+and that she could stand on the edge of a precipice without dizziness.
+The surface of the wall was broken. What it might be beyond he could not
+tell, but the first fifty feet was a bit of attractive and not too
+difficult rock traverse.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now and again he made a suggestion to the young woman following him,
+but for the most part he trusted her to choose her own foot and hand
+holds. Her delicacy was silken strong. If she was slender, she was yet
+deep-bosomed. The movements of the girl were as certain as those of an
+experienced mountaineer.
+</p>
+<p>
+The way grew more difficult. They had been following a ledge that
+narrowed till it ran out. Jutting knobs of feldspar and stunted shrubs
+growing from crevices offered toe-grips instead of the even foothold of
+the rock shelf. As Gordon looked down at the dizzy fall beneath them his
+judgment told him they had better go back. He said as much to his
+companion.
+</p>
+<p>
+The smile she flashed at him was delightfully provocative. It served to
+point the figure she borrowed from Gwen. "So you think I'm a 'fraid-cat,
+Mr. Elliot?"
+</p>
+<p>
+His inclination marched with hers. It was
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page45" name="page45"></a>[45]</span>
+
+ their first adventure together and he did not want to spoil it by undue
+caution. There really was not much danger yet so long as they were
+careful.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon abandoned the traverse and followed an ascending crack in the
+wall. The going was hard. It called for endurance and muscle, as well
+as for a steady head and a sure foot. He looked down at the girl wedged
+between the slopes of the granite trough.
+</p>
+<p>
+She read his thought. "The old guard never surrenders, sir," was her
+quick answer as she brushed in salute with the tips of her fingers a
+stray lock of hair.
+</p>
+<p>
+The trough was worse than Elliot had expected. It had in it a good deal
+of loose rubble that started in small slides at the least pressure.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Be very careful of your footing," he called back anxiously.
+</p>
+<p>
+A small grassy platform lay above the upper end of the trough, but the
+last dozen feet of the approach was a very difficult bit. Gordon took
+advantage of every least projection. He fought his way up with his back
+against one wall and his knees pressed to the other. Three feet short of
+the platform the rock walls became absolutely smooth. The climber could
+reach within a foot of the top.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Are you stopped?" asked Sheba.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page46" name="page46"></a>[46]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"Looks that way."
+</p>
+<p>
+A small pine projected from the edge of the shelf out over the
+precipice. It might be strong enough to bear his weight. It might not.
+Gordon unbuckled his belt and threw one end over the trunk of the dwarf
+tree. Gingerly he tested it with his weight, then went up hand over hand
+and worked himself over the edge of the little plateau.
+</p>
+<p>
+"All right?" the girl called up.
+</p>
+<p>
+"All right. But you can't make it. I'm coming down again."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm going to try."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I wouldn't, Miss O'Neill. It's really dangerous."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'd like to try it. I'll stop if it's too hard," she promised.
+</p>
+<p>
+The strength of her slender wrists surprised him. She struggled up the
+vertical crevasse inch by inch. His heart was full of fear, for a
+misstep now would be fatal. He lay down with his face over the ledge and
+lowered to her the buckled loop of his belt. Twice she stopped
+exhausted, her back and her hands pressed against the walls of the
+trough angle for support.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Better give it up," he advised.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll not then." She smiled stubbornly as she shook her head.
+</p>
+<p>
+Presently her fingers touched the belt.
+</p>
+
+<a name="image-0002"><!--IMG--></a>
+<div class="figure">
+<a href="images/illus-02.jpg"><img src="images/illus-02t.jpg" width="400"
+alt="&quot;SO YOU THINK I'M A 'FRAID-CAT, MR. ELLIOT?&quot;" /></a>
+<br />
+"SO YOU THINK I'M A 'FRAID-CAT, MR. ELLIOT?"
+</div>
+
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page47" name="page47"></a>[47]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon edged forward an inch or two farther. "Put your hand through the
+loop and catch hold of the leather above," he told her.
+</p>
+<p>
+She did so, and at the same instant her foot slipped. The girl swung out
+into space suspended by one wrist. The muscles of Elliot hardened into
+steel as they responded to the strain. His body began to slide very
+slowly down the incline.
+</p>
+<p>
+In a moment the acute danger was past. Sheba had found a hold with her
+feet and relieved somewhat the dead pull upon Elliot.
+</p>
+<p>
+She had not voiced a cry, but the face that looked up into his was very
+white.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Take your time," he said in a quiet, matter-of-fact way.
+</p>
+<p>
+With his help she came close enough for him to reach her hand. After
+that it was only a moment before she knelt on the plateau beside him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Touch and go, wasn't it?" Sheba tried to smile, but the colorless lips
+told the young man she was still faint from the shock.
+</p>
+<p>
+He knew he was going to reproach himself bitterly for having led her
+into such a risk, but he could not just now afford to waste his energies
+on regrets. Nor could he let her mind dwell on past dangers so long as
+there were future ones to be faced.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You might have sprained your wrist," he
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page48" name="page48"></a>[48]</span>
+
+ said lightly as he rose to examine the cliff still to be negotiated.
+</p>
+<p>
+Her dark eyes looked at him with quick surprise. "So I might," she
+answered dryly.
+</p>
+<p>
+But his indifferent tone had the effect upon her of a plunge into cold
+water. It braced and stiffened her will. If he wanted to ignore the
+terrible danger through which she had passed, certainly she was not
+going to remind him of it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Between where they stood and the summit of the cliff was another rock
+traverse. A kind of rough, natural stairway led down to a point opposite
+them. But before this could be reached thirty feet of granite must be
+crossed. The wall looked hazardous enough in all faith. It lay in the
+shade, and there were spots where a thin coating of ice covered the
+smooth slabs. But there was no other way up, and if the traverse could
+be made the rest was easy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon was mountaineer enough to know that the climb up is safer than
+the one back. The only possible way for them to go down the trough was
+for him to lower her by the belt until she found footing enough to go
+alone. He did not quite admit it to himself, but in his heart he doubted
+whether she could make it safely.
+</p>
+<p>
+The alternative was the cliff face.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page49" name="page49"></a>[49]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0005" id="h2HCH0005"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER V
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ ACROSS THE TRAVERSE
+</h3>
+<p>
+Elliot took off his shoes and turned toward the traverse.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Think I'll see if I can cross to that stairway. You had better wait
+here, Miss O'Neill, until we find out if it can be done."
+</p>
+<p>
+His manner was casual, his voice studiously light.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba looked across the cliff and down to the boulder bed two hundred
+feet below. "You can never do it in the world. Isn't there another way
+up?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No. The wall above us slopes out. I've got to cross to the stairway. If
+I make it I'm going to get a rope."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do you mean you're going back to town for one?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes."
+</p>
+<p>
+Her eyes fastened to his in a long, unspoken question. She read the
+answer. He was afraid to have her try the trough again. To get back to
+town by way of their roundabout ascent would waste time. If he was going
+to rescue her before night, he must take the shortest cut, and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page50" name="page50"></a>[50]</span>
+
+ that was across the face of the sheer cliff. For the first time she
+understood how serious was their plight.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We can go back together by the trough, can't we?" But even as she
+asked, her heart sank at the thought of facing again that dizzy height.
+The moment of horror when she had thought herself lost had shaken her
+nerve.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It would be difficult."
+</p>
+<p>
+The glance of the girl swept again the face of the wall he must cross.
+It could not be done without a rope. Her fear-filled eyes came back to
+his.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's my fault. I made you come," she said in a low voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nonsense," he answered cheerfully. "There's no harm done. If I can't
+reach the stairway I can come back and go down by the trough."
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba assented doubtfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+It had come on to drizzle again. The rain was fine and cold, almost a
+mist, and already it was forming a film of ice on the rocks.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I can't take time to go back by the trough. The point is that I don't
+want you camped up here after night. There has been no sun on this side
+of the spur and in the chill of the evening it must get cold even in
+summer."
+</p>
+<p>
+He was making his preparations as he talked. His coat he took off and
+threw down. His shoes he tied by the laces to his belt.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page51" name="page51"></a>[51]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll try not to be very long," he promised.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's God's will then, so it is," she sighed, relapsing into the
+vernacular.
+</p>
+<p>
+Her voice was low and not very steady, for the heart of the girl was
+heavy. She knew she must not protest his decision. That was not the way
+to play the game. But somehow the salt had gone from their light-hearted
+adventure. She had become panicky from the moment when her feet had
+started the rubble in the trough and gone flying into the air. The
+gayety that had been the note of their tramp had given place to fears.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot took her little hand in a warm, strong grip. "You're not going to
+be afraid. We'll work out all right, you know."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's not just the thing to leave a lady in the rain when you take her
+for a walk, but it can't be helped. We'll laugh about it to-morrow."
+</p>
+<p>
+Would they? she wondered, answering his smile faintly. Her courage was
+sapped. She wanted to cry out that he must not try the traverse, but she
+set her will not to make it harder for him.
+</p>
+<p>
+He turned to the climb.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You've forgotten your coat," she reminded.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm traveling light this trip. You'd better slip it on before you get
+chilled."
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba knew he had left it on purpose for her.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page52" name="page52"></a>[52]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Her fascinated eyes followed him while he moved out from the
+plateau across the face of the precipice. His hand had found a knob
+of projecting feldspar and he was feeling with his right foot for a
+hold in some moss that grew in a crevice. He had none of the tools for
+climbing&mdash;no rope, no hatchet, none of the support of numbers. All the
+allies he could summon were his bare hands and feet, his resilient
+muscles, and his stout heart. To make it worse, the ice film from the
+rain coated every jutting inch of quartz with danger.
+</p>
+<p>
+But he worked steadily forward, moving with the infinite caution of
+one who knows that there will be no chance to remedy later any mistake.
+A slight error in judgment, the failure in response of any one of fifty
+muscles, would send him plunging down.
+</p>
+<p>
+Occasionally he spoke to Sheba, but she volunteered no remarks. It was
+her part to wait and watch while he concentrated every faculty upon his
+task. He had come to an impasse after crossing a dozen feet of the wall
+and was working up to get around a slab of granite which protruded, a
+convex barrier, from the surface of the cliff. It struck the girl that
+from a distance he must look like a fly on a pane of glass. Even to her,
+close as she was, that smooth rock surface looked impossible.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page53" name="page53"></a>[53]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Her eye left him for an instant to sweep the gulf below. She gave a
+little cry, ran to his coat, and began to wave it. For the first time
+since Elliot had begun the traverse she took the initiative in speech.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I see some people away over to the left, Mr. Elliot. I'm going to call
+to them." Her voice throbbed with hope.
+</p>
+<p>
+But it was not her shouts or his, which would not have carried one tenth
+the distance, that reached the group in the valley. One of them caught a
+glimpse of the wildly waving coat. There was a consultation and two or
+three fluttered handkerchiefs in response. Presently they moved on.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba could not believe her eyes. "They're not leaving us surely?" she
+gasped.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's what they're doing," answered Gordon grimly. "They think we're
+calling to them out of vanity to show them where we climbed."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh!" She strangled a sob in her throat. Her heart was weighted as with
+lead.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm going to make it. I think I see my way from here," her companion
+called across to her. "A fault runs to the foot of the stairway, if I
+can only do the next yard or two."
+</p>
+<p>
+He did them, by throwing caution to the winds. An icy, rounded boulder
+projected above him out of reach. He unfastened his
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page54" name="page54"></a>[54]</span>
+
+ belt again and put the shoes, tied by the laces, around his neck. There
+was one way to get across to the ledge of the fault. He took hold of the
+two ends of the belt, crouched, and leaned forward on tiptoes toward the
+knob. The loop of the belt slid over the ice-coated boss. There was no
+chance to draw back now, to test the hold he had gained. If the leather
+slipped he was lost. His body swung across the abyss and his feet landed
+on the little ledge beyond.
+</p>
+<p>
+His shout of success came perhaps ten minutes later. "I've reached
+the stairway, Miss O'Neill. I'll try not to be long, but you'd better
+exercise to keep up the circulation. Don't worry, please. I'll be back
+before night."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm so glad," she cried joyfully. "I was afraid for you. And I'll not
+worry a bit. Good-bye."
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot made his way up to the summit and ran along a footpath which
+brought him to a bridge across the mountain stream just above the falls.
+The trail zigzagged down the turbulent little river close to the bank.
+Before he had specialized on the short distances Gordon had been a
+cross-country runner. He was in fair condition and he covered the ground
+fast.
+</p>
+<p>
+About a mile below the falls he met two men. One of them was Colby
+Macdonald. He carried a coil of rope over one shoulder. The big Alaskan
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page55" name="page55"></a>[55]</span>
+
+ explained that he had not been able to get it out of his head that
+perhaps the climbers who had waved at his party had been in
+difficulties. So he had got a rope from the cabin of an old miner and
+was on his way back to the falls.
+</p>
+<p>
+The three climbed to the falls, crossed the bridge, and reached the top
+of the cliff.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You know the lay of the land down there, Mr. Elliot. We'll lower you,"
+decided Macdonald, who took command as a matter of course.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon presently stood beside Sheba on the little plateau. She had
+quite recovered from the touch of hysteria that had attacked her courage.
+The wind and the rain had whipped the color into her soft cheeks, had
+disarranged a little the crinkly, blue-black hair, wet tendrils of which
+nestled against her temples. The health and buoyancy of the girl were in
+the live eyes that met his eagerly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You weren't long," was all she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I met them coming," he answered as he dropped the loop of the rope over
+her head and arranged it under her shoulders.
+</p>
+<p>
+He showed her how to relieve part of the strain of the rope on her flesh
+by using her hands to lift.
+</p>
+<p>
+"All ready?" Macdonald called from above.
+</p>
+<p>
+"All ready," Elliot answered. To Sheba he said, "Hold tight."
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl was swung from the ledge and rose
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page56" name="page56"></a>[56]</span>
+
+ jerkily in the air. She laughed gayly down at her friend below.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's fun."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon followed her a couple of minutes later. She was waiting to give
+him a hand over the edge of the cliff.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Miss O'Neill, this is Mr. Macdonald," he said, as soon as he had freed
+himself from the rope. "You are fellow passengers on the Hannah."
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald was looking at her straight and hard. "Your father's name&mdash;was
+it Farrell O'Neill?" he asked bluntly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I knew him."
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl's eyes lit. "I'm glad, Mr. Macdonald. That's one reason I
+wanted to come to Alaska&mdash;to hear about my father's life here. Will you
+tell me?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sometime. We must be going now to catch the boat&mdash;after I've had a look
+at the cliff this young man crawled across."
+</p>
+<p>
+He turned away, abruptly it struck Elliot, and climbed down the natural
+stairway up which the young man had come. Presently he rejoined those
+above. Macdonald looked at Elliot with a new respect.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're in luck, my friend, that we're not carrying you from the foot of
+the cliff," he said
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page57" name="page57"></a>[57]</span>
+
+ dryly. "I wouldn't cross that rock wall for a hundred thousand dollars
+in cold cash."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nor I again," admitted Gordon with a laugh. "But we had either to
+homestead that plateau or vacate it. I preferred the latter."
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss O'Neill's deep eyes looked at him. She was about to speak, then
+changed her mind.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page58" name="page58"></a>[58]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0006" id="h2HCH0006"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER VI
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ SHEBA SINGS&mdash;AND TWO MEN LISTEN
+</h3>
+<p>
+Elliot did not see Miss O'Neill next morning until she appeared in the
+dining-room for breakfast. He timed himself to get through so as to join
+her when she left. They strolled out to the deck together.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did you sleep well?" he asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"After I fell asleep. It took me a long time. I kept seeing you on the
+traverse."
+</p>
+<p>
+He came abruptly to what was on his mind. "I have an apology to make,
+Miss O'Neill. If I made light of your danger yesterday, it was because I
+was afraid you might break down. I had to seem unsympathetic rather than
+risk that."
+</p>
+<p>
+She smiled forgiveness. "All you said was that I might have sprained my
+wrist. It was true too. I might have&mdash;and I did." Sheba showed a white
+linen bandage tied tightly around her wrist.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Does it pain much?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not so much now. It throbbed a good deal last night."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Your whole weight came on it with a wrench. No wonder it hurt."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page59" name="page59"></a>[59]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba noticed that the Hannah was drawing up to a wharf and the
+passengers were lining up with their belongings. "Is this where we
+change?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Those of us going to Kusiak transfer here. But there's no hurry.
+We wait at this landing two hours."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon helped Sheba move her baggage to the other boat and joined
+her on deck. They were both strangers in the land. Their only common
+acquaintance was Macdonald and he was letting Mrs. Mallory absorb his
+attention just now. Left to their own resources the two young people
+naturally drifted together a good deal.
+</p>
+<p>
+This suited Elliot. He found his companion wholly delightful, not the
+less because she was so different from the girls he knew at home. She
+could be frank, and even shyly audacious on occasion, but she held a
+little note of reserve he felt bound to respect. Her experience of the
+world had clearly been limited. She was not at all sure of herself, of
+the proper degree of intimacy to permit herself with a strange and
+likable young man who had done her so signal a service.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald left the boat twenty miles below Kusiak with Mrs. Mallory and
+the Selfridges. A chauffeur with a motor-car was waiting on the wharf to
+run them to town, but he gave the wheel to Macdonald and took the seat
+beside the driver.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page60" name="page60"></a>[60]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The little miner Strong grinned across to Elliot, who was standing
+beside Miss O'Neill at the boat rail.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's Mac all over. He hires a fellow to run his car&mdash;brings him up
+here from Seattle&mdash;and then takes the wheel himself every time he rides.
+I don't somehow see Mac sitting back and letting another man run the
+machine."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was close to noon before the river boat turned a bend and steamed up
+to the wharf at Kusiak. The place was an undistinguished little log town
+that rambled back from the river up the hill in a hit-or-miss fashion.
+Its main street ran a tortuous course parallel to the stream.
+</p>
+<p>
+Half of the town, it seemed, was down to meet the boat.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Are you going to the hotel or direct to your cousin's?" Gordon asked
+Miss O'Neill.
+</p>
+<p>
+"To my cousin's. I fancy she's down here to meet me. It was arranged
+that I come on this boat."
+</p>
+<p>
+There was much waving of handkerchiefs and shouting back and forth as
+the steamer slowly drew close to the landing.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot caught a glimpse of the only people in Kusiak he had known before
+coming in, but though he waved to them he saw they did not recognize
+him. After the usual delay about getting ashore he walked down the
+gangway carrying
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page61" name="page61"></a>[61]</span>
+
+ the suitcases of the Irish girl. Sheba followed at his heels. On the
+wharf he came face to face with a slender, well-dressed young woman.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Diane!" he cried.
+</p>
+<p>
+She stared at him. "You! What in Heaven's name are you doing here,
+Gordon Elliot?" she demanded, and before he could answer had seized both
+hands and turned excitedly to call a stocky man near. "Peter&mdash;Peter!
+Guess who's here?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hello, Paget!" grinned Gordon, and he shook hands with the husband of
+Diane.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot turned to introduce his friend, but she anticipated him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Cousin Diane," she said shyly. "Don't you know me?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Paget swooped down upon the girl and smothered her in her embrace.
+</p>
+<p>
+"This is Sheba&mdash;little Sheba that I have told you so often about,
+Peter," she cried. "Glory be, I'm glad to see you, child." And Diane
+kissed her again warmly. "You two met on the boat, of course, coming
+in, I hope you didn't let her get lonesome, Gordon. Look after Sheba's
+suitcases, Peter. You'll come to dinner to-night, Gordon&mdash;at seven."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm in the kind hands of my countrywoman," laughed Gordon. "I'll
+certainly be on hand."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But what in the world are you doing here? You're the last man I'd have
+expected to see."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page62" name="page62"></a>[62]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm in the service of the Government, and I've been sent in on
+business."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, I'm going to say something original, dear people," Mrs. Paget
+replied. "It's a small world, isn't it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+While he was dressing for dinner later in the day, Elliot recalled
+early memories of the Pagets. He had known Diane ever since they had
+been youngsters together at school. He remembered her as a restless,
+wiry little thing, keen as a knife-blade. She had developed into a very
+pretty girl, alive, ambitious, energetic, with a shrewd eye to the main
+chance. Always popular socially, she had surprised everybody by refusing
+the catch of the town to marry a young mining engineer without a penny.
+Gordon was in college at the time, but during the next long vacation
+he had fraternized a good deal with the Peter Pagets. The young
+married people had been very much in love with each other, but not too
+preoccupied to take the college boy into their happiness as a comrade.
+Diane always had been a manager, and she liked playing older sister
+to so nice a lad. He had been on a footing friendly enough to drop in
+unannounced whenever he took the fancy. If they were out, or about to go
+out, the freedom of the den, a magazine, and good tobacco had been his.
+Then the Arctic gold-fields had claimed Paget and his
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page63" name="page63"></a>[63]</span>
+
+ bride. That had been more than ten years ago, and until to-day Gordon
+had not seen them since.
+</p>
+<p>
+While Elliot was brushing his dinner coat before the open window of the
+room assigned him at the hotel, somebody came out to the porch below.
+The voice of a woman floated faintly to him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Seen Diane's Irish beauty yet, Ned?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes," a man answered.
+</p>
+<p>
+The woman laughed softly. "Mrs. Mallory came up on the same boat with
+her." The inflection suggested that the words were meant not to tell a
+fact, but some less obvious inference.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, you women!" the man commented good-naturedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"She's wonderfully pretty, and of course Diane will make the most of
+her. But Mrs. Mallory is a woman among ten thousand."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'd choose the girl if it were me," said the man.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But it isn't you. We'll see what we'll see."
+</p>
+<p>
+They were moving up the street and Gordon heard no more. What he had
+heard was not clear to him. Why should any importance attach to the fact
+that Mrs. Mallory and Sheba O'Neill had come up the river on the same
+boat? Yet he was vaguely disturbed by the insinuation that in some way
+Diane was entering her
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page64" name="page64"></a>[64]</span>
+
+ cousin as a rival of the older woman. He resented the idea that the
+fine, young personality of the Irish girl was being cheapened by
+management on the part of Diane Paget.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot was not the only dinner guest at the Paget home that evening. He
+found Colby Macdonald sitting in the living-room with Sheba. She came
+quickly forward to meet the newly arrived guest.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mr. Macdonald has been telling me about my father. He knew him on
+Frenchman Creek where they both worked claims," explained the girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+The big mining man made no comment and added nothing to what she said.
+There were times when his face was about as expressive as a stone wall.
+Except for a hard wariness in the eyes it told nothing now.
+</p>
+<p>
+The dinner went off very well. Diane and Peter had a great many
+questions to ask Gordon about old friends. By the time these had been
+answered Macdonald was chatting easily with Sheba. The man had been in
+many out-of-the-way corners of the world, had taken part in much that
+was dramatic and interesting. If the experience of the Irish girl had
+been small, her imagination had none the less gone questing beyond the
+narrow bars of her life upon amazing adventure. She listened with
+glowing eyes
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page65" name="page65"></a>[65]</span>
+
+ to the strange tales this man of magnificent horizons had to tell. Never
+before had she come into contact with any one like him.
+</p>
+<p>
+The others too succumbed to his charm. He dominated that little
+dining-room because he was a sixty-horse-power dynamo. For all his bulk
+he was as lean as a panther and as sinewy. There was virility in the
+very economy of his motions, in the reticence of his speech. Not even
+a fool could have read weakness there. When he followed Sheba into the
+living-room, power trod in his long, easy stride.
+</p>
+<p>
+Paget was superintendent of the Lucky Strike, a mine owned principally
+by Macdonald. The two talked business for a few minutes over their
+cigars, but Diane interrupted gayly to bring them back into the circle.
+Adroitly she started Macdonald on the account of a rescue of two men
+lost in a blizzard the year before. He had the gift of dramatizing his
+story, of selecting only effective details. There was no suggestion of
+boasting. If he happened to be the hero of any of his stories the fact
+was of no importance to him. It was merely a detail of the picture he
+was sketching.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon interrupted with a question a story he was telling of a fight he
+had seen between two bull moose.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did you say that was while you were on the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page66" name="page66"></a>[66]</span>
+
+ way over to inspect the Kamatlah coal-fields for the first time?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The eyes of the young man were quick with interest.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Four years ago last spring?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald looked at him with a wary steadiness. Some doubt had found
+lodgment in his mind. Before he could voice it, if, indeed, he had any
+such intention, Elliot broke in swiftly,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't answer that question. I asked it without proper thought. I am a
+special agent of the General Land Office sent up to investigate the
+Macdonald coal claims and kindred interests."
+</p>
+<p>
+Slowly the rigor of the big Scotchman's steely eyes relaxed to a smile
+that was genial and disarming. If this news hit him hard he gave no sign
+of it. And that it was an unexpected blow there could be no doubt.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Glad you've come, Mr. Elliot. We ask nothing but fair play. Tell the
+truth, and we'll thank you. The men who own the Macdonald group of
+claims have nothing to conceal. I'll answer that question. I meant to
+say two years ago last spring."
+</p>
+<p>
+His voice was easy and his gaze unwavering as he made the correction,
+yet everybody in the room except Sheba knew he was deliberately lying to
+cover the slip. For the admission that
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page67" name="page67"></a>[67]</span>
+
+ he had inspected the Kamatlah field just before his dummies had filed
+upon it would at least tend to aggravate suspicion that the entries were
+not <i>bona-fide</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was rather an awkward moment. Diane blamed herself because she had
+brought the men together socially. Why had she not asked Gordon more
+explicitly what his business was? Peter grinned a little uncomfortably.
+It was Sheba who quite unconsciously relieved the situation.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But what about the big moose, Mr. Macdonald? What did it do then?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The Alaskan went back to his story. He was talking for Sheba alone,
+for the young girl with eager, fascinated eyes which flashed with
+sympathy as they devoured selected glimpses of his wild, turbulent
+career. Her clean, brave spirit was throwing a glamour over the man.
+She saw him with other eyes than Elliot's. The Government official
+admired him tremendously. Macdonald was an empire-builder. He blazed
+trails for others to follow in safety. But Gordon could guess how
+callously his path was strewn with brutality, with the effects of an
+ethical color-blindness largely selfish, though even he did not know
+that the man's primitive jungle code of wolf eat wolf had played havoc
+with Sheba's young life many years before.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page68" name="page68"></a>[68]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Diane, satisfied that Macdonald had scored, called upon Sheba.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I want you to sing for us, dear, if you will."
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba accompanied herself. The voice of the girl had no unusual range,
+but it was singularly sweet and full of the poignant feeling that
+expresses the haunting pathos of her race.
+</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p class="i4"> "It's well I know ye, Shev&egrave; Cross, ye weary, stony hill, </p>
+<p class="i4"> An' I'm tired, och, I'm tired to be looking on ye still. </p>
+<p class="i4"> For here I live the near side an' he is on the far, </p>
+<p class="i4"> An' all your heights and hollows are between us, so they are. </p>
+<p class="i8"> Och anee!" </p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+Gordon, as he listened, felt the strange hunger of that homesick cry
+steal through his blood. He saw his own emotions reflected in the face
+of the Scotch-Canadian, who was watching with a tense interest the slim,
+young figure at the piano, the girl whose eyes were soft and dewy with
+the mysticism of her people, were still luminous with the poetry of the
+child in spite of the years that heralded her a woman.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot intercepted the triumphant sweep of Diane's glance from Macdonald
+to her husband. In a flash it lit up for him the words he had heard on
+the hotel porch. Diane, an inveterate
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page69" name="page69"></a>[69]</span>
+
+ matchmaker, intended her cousin to marry Colby Macdonald. No doubt she
+thought she was doing a fine thing for the girl. He was a millionaire,
+the biggest figure in the Northwest. His iron will ran the town and
+district as though the people were chattels of his. Back of him were
+some of the biggest financial interests in the United States.
+</p>
+<p>
+But the gorge of Elliot rose. The man, after all, was a law-breaker,
+a menace to civilization. He was a survivor by reason of his strength
+from the primitive wolf-pack. Already the special agent had heard many
+strange stories of how this man of steel had risen to supremacy by
+trampling down lesser men with whom he had had dealings, of terrible
+battles from which his lean, powerful body had emerged bloody and
+battered, but victorious. The very look of his hard, gray eyes was
+dominant and masterful. He would win, no matter how. It came to Gordon's
+rebel heart that if Macdonald wanted this lovely Irish girl,&mdash;and the
+young man never doubted that the Scotchman would want her,&mdash;he would
+reach out and gather in Sheba just as if she were a coal mine or a
+placer prospect.
+</p>
+<p>
+All this surged through the mind of the young man while the singer was
+on the first line of the second stanza.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page70" name="page70"></a>[70]</span>
+</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p class="i4"> "But if 't was only Shev&egrave; Cross to climb from foot to crown, </p>
+<p class="i4"> I'd soon be up an' over that, I'd soon be runnin' down. </p>
+<p class="i4"> Then sure the great ould sea itself is there beyont the bar, </p>
+<p class="i4"> An' all the windy wathers are between us, so they are. </p>
+<p class="i8"> Och anee!" </p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+The rich, soft, young voice with its Irish brogue died away. The little
+audience paid the singer the tribute of silence. She herself was the
+first to speak.
+</p>
+<p>
+"'Divided' is the name of it. A namesake of mine, Moira O'Neill, wrote
+it," she explained.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's a beautiful song, and I thank ye for singing it," Macdonald said
+simply. "It minds me of my own barefoot days by the Tay."
+</p>
+<p>
+Later in the evening the two dinner guests walked back to the hotel
+together. The two subjects uppermost in the minds of both were not
+mentioned by either. They discussed casually the cost of living in the
+North, the raising of strawberries at Kusiak, and the best way to treat
+the mosquito nuisance, but neither of them referred to the Macdonald
+coal claims or to Sheba O'Neill.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page71" name="page71"></a>[71]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0007" id="h2HCH0007"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER VII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ WALLY GETS ORDERS
+</h3>
+<p>
+Macdonald, from his desk, looked up at the man in the doorway. Selfridge
+had come in jauntily, a cigar in his mouth, but at sight of the grim
+face of his chief the grin fled.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Come in and shut the door," ordered the Scotchman. "I sent for you to
+congratulate you, Wally. You did fine work outside. You told me, didn't
+you, that it was all settled at last&mdash;that our claims are clear-listed
+for patent?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The tubby little man felt the edge of irony in the quiet voice. "Sure.
+That's what Winton told me," he assented nervously.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then you'll be interested to know that a special field agent of the
+Land Department sat opposite me last night and without batting an eye
+came across with the glad news that he was here to investigate our
+claims."
+</p>
+<p>
+Selfridge bounced up like a rubber ball from the chair into which he had
+just settled. "What!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Pleasant surprise, isn't it? I've been wondering what you were doing
+outside. Of course I know you had to take in the shows and cabarets of
+New York. But couldn't you edge in an hour or two once a week to attend
+to business?"
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page72" name="page72"></a>[72]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Wally's collar began to choke him. The cool, hard words of the big
+Scotchman pelted like hail.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Must be a bluff, Mac. The muckrake magazines have raised such a row
+about the Guttenchild crowd putting over a big steal on the public that
+the party leaders are scared stiff. I couldn't pick up a newspaper
+anywhere without seeing your name in the headlines. It was fierce."
+Selfridge had found his glib tongue and was off.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I understand that, Wally. What I don't get is how you came to let them
+slip this over on you without even a guess that it was going to happen."
+</p>
+<p>
+That phase of the subject Selfridge did not want to discuss.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Bet you a hat I've guessed it right&mdash;just a grand-stand play of the
+Administration to fool the dear people. This fellow has got his orders
+to give us a clean bill of health. Sure. That must be it. I suppose it's
+this man Elliot that came up on the boat with us."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, that's easy. If he hasn't been seen we can see him."
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald looked his man Friday over with a scarcely veiled contempt.
+"You have a beautiful, childlike faith in every man's dishonesty,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page73" name="page73"></a>[73]</span>
+
+ Wally. Did it ever occur to you that some people are straight&mdash;that they
+won't sell out?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"All he gets is a beggarly two thousand or so a year. We can fix him all
+right."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You've about as much vision as a breed trader. Unless I miss my guess
+Elliot isn't that kind. He'll go through to a finish. What I'd like to
+know is how his mind works. If he sees straight we're all right, but if
+he is a narrow conservation fanatic he might go ahead and queer the
+whole game."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You wouldn't stand for that." The quick glance of Selfridge asked a
+question.
+</p>
+<p>
+The lips of the Scotchman were like steel traps and his eyes points of
+steel. "We'll cross that bridge if we come to it. Our first move is to
+try to win him to see this thing our way. I'll have a casual talk with
+him before he leaves for Kamatlah and feel him out."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What's he doing here at all? If he's investigating the Kamatlah claims,
+why does he go hundreds of miles out of his way to come in to Kusiak?"
+asked Selfridge.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald smiled sardonically. "He's doing this job right. Elliot as
+good as told me that he's on the job to look up my record thoroughly. So
+he comes to Kusiak first. In a few days he'll leave for Kamatlah. That's
+where you come in, Wally."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page74" name="page74"></a>[74]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"How do you mean?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're going to start for Kamatlah to-morrow. You'll arrange the stage
+before he gets there&mdash;see all the men and the foremen. Line them up so
+they'll come through with the proper talk. If you have any doubts about
+whether you can trust some one, don't take any chances. Fire him out of
+the camp. Offer Elliot the company hospitality. Load him down with
+favors. Take him everywhere. Show him everything. But don't let him get
+any proofs that the claims are being worked under the same management."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But he'll suspect it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You can't help his suspicions. Don't let him get proof. Cover all the
+tracks that show company control."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I can fix that," he said. "But what about Holt? The old man won't do a
+thing but tell all he knows, and a lot more that he suspects. You know
+how bitter he is&mdash;and crazy. He ought to be locked away with the
+flitter-mice."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You mustn't let Elliot meet Holt."
+</p>
+<p>
+"How the deuce can I help it? No chance to keep them apart in that
+little hole. It can't be done."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Can't it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Something in the quiet voice rang a bell of alarm in the timid heart of
+Selfridge.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page75" name="page75"></a>[75]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"You mean&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"A man who works for me as my lieutenant must have nerve, Wally. Have
+you got it? Will you take orders and go through with them?"
+</p>
+<p>
+His hard eyes searched the face of the plump little man. This was a job
+he would have liked to do himself, but he could not get away just now.
+Selfridge was the only man about him he could trust with it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Wally nodded. His lips were dry and parched. "Go to it. What am I to do?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Get Holt out of the way while Elliot is at Kamatlah."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But, Good Lord, I can't keep the man tied up a month," protested the
+leading tenor of Kusiak.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It isn't doing Holt any good to sit tight clamped to that claim of his!
+He needs a change. Besides, I want him away so that we can contest his
+claim. Run him up into the hills. Or send him across to Siberia on a
+whaler. Or, better still, have him arrested for insanity and send him to
+Nome. I'll get Judge Landor to hold him a while."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That would give him an alibi for his absence and prevent a contest."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's right. It would."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Leave it to me. The old man is going on a vacation, though he doesn't
+know it yet."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page76" name="page76"></a>[76]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good enough, Wally. I'll trust you. But remember, this fight has
+reached an acute stage. No more mistakes. The devil of it is we never
+seem to land the knockout punch. We've beaten this bunch of reform
+idiots before Winton, before the Secretary of the Interior, before the
+President, and before Congress. Now they're beginning all over again.
+Where is it to end?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"This is their last kick. Probably Guttenchild agreed to it so as to
+let the party go before the people at the next election without any
+apologies. Entirely formal investigation, I should say."
+</p>
+<p>
+This might be true, or it might not. Macdonald knew that just now the
+American people, always impulsive in its thinking, was supporting
+strongly the movement for conservation. A searchlight had been turned
+upon the Kamatlah coal-fields. Magazines and newspapers had hammered
+it home to readers that the Guttenchild and allied interests were
+engaged in a big steal from the people of coal, timber, and power-site
+lands to the value of more than a hundred million dollars.
+</p>
+<p>
+The trouble had originated in a department row, but it had spread until
+the Macdonald claims had become a party issue. The officials of the Land
+Office, as well as the National Administration, were friendly to the
+claimants.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page77" name="page77"></a>[77]</span>
+
+ They had no desire to offend one of the two largest money groups in the
+country. But neither did they want to come to wreck on account of the
+Guttenchilds. They found it impossible to ignore the charge that the
+entries were fraudulent and if consummated would result in a wholesale
+robbery of the public domain. Superficial investigations had been made
+and the claimants whitewashed. But the clamor had persisted.
+</p>
+<p>
+Though he denied it officially, Macdonald made a present to the public
+of the admission that the entries were irregular. Laws, he held, were
+made for men and should be interpreted to aid progress. Bad ones ought
+to be evaded.
+</p>
+<p>
+The facts were simple enough. Macdonald was the original promoter of
+the Kamatlah coal-field. He had engaged dummy entrymen to take up one
+hundred and sixty acres each under the Homestead Act. Later he intended
+to consolidate the claims and turn them over to the Guttenchilds under
+an agreement by which he was to receive one eighth of the stock of the
+company formed to work the mines. The entries had been made, the fee
+accepted by the Land Office, and receipts issued. In course of time
+Macdonald had applied for patents.
+</p>
+<p>
+Before these were issued the magazines began to pour in their
+broadsides, and since then the papers had been held up.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page78" name="page78"></a>[78]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The conscience of Macdonald was quite clear. The pioneers in Alaska were
+building out of the Arctic waste a new empire for the United States, and
+he held that a fair Government could do no less than offer them liberal
+treatment. To lock up from present use vast resources needed by Alaskans
+would be a mistaken policy, a narrow and perverted application of the
+doctrine of conservation. The Territory should be thrown open to the
+world. If capital were invited in to do its share of the building,
+immigration would flow rapidly northward. Within the lives of the
+present generation the new empire would take shape and wealth would pour
+inevitably into the United States from its frozen treasure house.
+</p>
+<p>
+The view held by Macdonald was one common to the whole Pacific Coast.
+Seattle, Portland, San Francisco were a unit in the belief that the
+Government had no right to close the door of Alaska and then put a
+padlock upon it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Feminine voices drifted from the outer office. Macdonald opened the door
+to let in Mrs. Selfridge and Mrs. Mallory.
+</p>
+<p>
+The latter lady, Paris-shod and gloved, shook hands smilingly with the
+Scotch-Canadian. "Of course we're intruders in business hours, though
+you'll tell us we're not," she suggested.
+</p>
+<p>
+He was not a man to surrender easily to the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page79" name="page79"></a>[79]</span>
+
+ spell of woman, but when he looked into her deep-lidded, smouldering
+eyes something sultry beat in his blood.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Business may fly out of the window when Mrs. Mallory comes in at the
+door," he answered.
+</p>
+<p>
+"How gallant of you, especially when I've come with an impertinent
+question." Her gay eyes mocked him as she spoke.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then I'll probably tell you to mind your own business," he laughed.
+"Let's have your question."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've just been reading the 'Transcontinental Magazine.' A writer there
+says that you are a highway robber and a gambler. I know you're a robber
+because all the magazines say so. But are you only a big gambler?"
+</p>
+<p>
+He met her raillery without the least embarrassment.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sure I gamble. Every time I take a chance I'm gambling. So does
+everybody else. When you walk past the Flatiron Building you bet it
+won't fall down and crush you. We've got to take chances to live."
+</p>
+<p>
+"How true, and I never thought of it," beamed Mrs. Selfridge. "What a
+philosopher you are, Mr. Macdonald."
+</p>
+<p>
+The Scotchman went on without paying any attention to her effervescence.
+"I've gambled
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page80" name="page80"></a>[80]</span>
+
+ ever since I was a kid. I bet I could cross Death Valley and get out
+alive. That time I won. I bet it would rain once down in Arizona before
+my cattle died. I lost. Another time I took a contract to run a tunnel.
+In my bid I bet I wouldn't run into rock. My bank went broke that trip.
+When I joined the Klondike rush I was backing my luck to stand up. Same
+thing when I located the Kamatlah field. The coal might be a poor
+quality. Maybe I couldn't interest big capital in the proposition.
+Perhaps the Government would turn me down when I came to prove up. I was
+betting my last dollar against big odds. When I quit gambling it will be
+because I've quit living."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And I suppose I'm a gambler too?" Mrs. Mallory demanded with a little
+tilt of her handsome head.
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked straight at her with the keen eyes that had bored through her
+from the first day they had met, the eyes that understood the manner of
+woman she was and liked her none the less.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Of all the women I know you are the best gambler. It's born in you."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why, Mr. Macdonald!" screamed Mrs. Selfridge in her high staccato. "I
+don't think that's a compliment."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Mallory did not often indulge in the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page81" name="page81"></a>[81]</span>
+
+ luxury of a blush, but she changed color now. This big, blunt man
+sometimes had an uncanny divination. Did he, she asked herself, know
+what stake she was gambling for at Kusiak?
+</p>
+<p>
+"You are too wise," she laughed with a touch of embarrassment very
+becoming. "But I suppose you are right. I like excitement."
+</p>
+<p>
+"We all do. The only man who doesn't gamble is the convict in stripes,
+and the only reason he doesn't is that his chips are all gone. It's true
+that men on the frontier play for bigger stakes. They back their bets
+with all they have got and put their lives on top for good measure. But
+kids in the cradle all over the United States are going to live easier
+because of the gamblers at the dropping-off places. That writer fellow
+hit the nail on the head about me. My whole life is a gamble."
+</p>
+<p>
+She moved with slow grace toward the door, then over her shoulder
+flashed a sudden invitation at him. "Mrs. Selfridge and I are doing a
+little betting to-day, Big Chief Gambler. We're backing our luck that
+you two men will eat lunch with us at the Blue Bird Inn. Do we win?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald reached for his hat promptly. "You win."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page82" name="page82"></a>[82]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0008" id="h2HCH0008"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ THE END OF THE PASSAGE
+</h3>
+<p>
+Wally Selfridge was a reliable business subordinate, even though he had
+slipped up in the matter of the appointment of Elliot. But when it came
+to facing the physical hardships of the North he was a malingerer. The
+Kamatlah trip had to be taken because his chief had ordered it, but the
+little man shirked the journey in his heart just as he knew his soft
+muscles would shrink from the aches of the trail.
+</p>
+<p>
+His idea of work was a set of tennis on the outdoor wooden court of the
+Kusiak clubhouse, and even there his game was not a hard, smashing one,
+but an easy foursome with a girl for partner. He liked better to play
+bridge with attendants at hand to supply drinks and cigars. By nature he
+was a sybarite. The call of the frontier found no response in his
+sophisticated soul.
+</p>
+<p>
+The part of the journey to be made by water was not so bad. Left to his
+own judgment, he would have gone to St. Michael's by boat and chartered
+a small steamer for the long trip along the coast through Bering Sea.
+But this would take time, and Macdonald did not mean to let
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page83" name="page83"></a>[83]</span>
+
+ him waste a day. He was to leave the river boat at the big bend and pack
+across country to Kamatlah. It would be a rough, heavy trail. The
+mosquitoes would be a continual torment. The cooking would be poor. And
+at the end of the long trek there awaited him monotonous months in a
+wretched coal camp far from all the comforts of civilization. No wonder
+he grumbled.
+</p>
+<p>
+But though he grumbled at home and at the club and on the street about
+his coming exile, Selfridge made no complaints to Macdonald. That man of
+steel had no sympathy with the yearnings for the fleshpots. He was used
+to driving himself through discomfort to his end, and he expected as
+much of his deputies. Wherefore Wally took the boat at the time
+scheduled and waved a dismal farewell to wife and friends assembled upon
+the wharf.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot said good-bye to the Pagets and Miss O'Neill ten days later.
+Diane was very frank with him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I hear you've been sleuthing around, Gordon, for facts about Colby
+Macdonald. I don't know what you have heard about him, but I hope you've
+got the sense to see how big a man he is and how much this country here
+owes him."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon nodded agreement. "Yes, he's a big man."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page84" name="page84"></a>[84]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"And he's good," added Sheba eagerly. "He never talks of it, but one
+finds out splendid things he has done."
+</p>
+<p>
+The young man smiled, but not at all superciliously. He liked the stanch
+faith of the girl in her friend, even though his investigations had not
+led him to accept goodness as the outstanding quality of the Scotchman.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I don't know what we would do without him," Diane went on. "Give him
+ten years and a free hand and Alaska will be fit for white people to
+live in. These attacks on him by newspapers and magazines are an
+outrage."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's plain that you are a partisan," charged Gordon gayly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm against locking up Alaska and throwing away the key, if that is
+what you mean by a partisan. We need this country opened up&mdash;the farms
+settled, the mines worked, the coal-fields developed, railroads built.
+It is one great big opportunity, the country here, and the narrow little
+conservation cranks want to shut it up tight from the people who have
+energy and foresight enough to help do the building."
+</p>
+<p>
+"The Kusiak Chamber of Commerce ought to send you out as a lecturer to
+change public opinion, Diane. You are one enthusiastic little booster
+for freedom of opportunity," laughed the young man.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page85" name="page85"></a>[85]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, well!" Diane joined in his laughter. It was one of her good points
+that she could laugh at herself. "I dare say I do sound like a real
+estate pamphlet, but it's all true anyhow."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon left Kusiak as reluctantly as Wally Selfridge had done, though
+his reasons for not wanting to go were quite different. They centered
+about a dusky-eyed young woman whom he had seen for the first time a
+fortnight before. He would have denied even to himself that he was in
+love, but whenever he was alone his thoughts reverted to Sheba O'Neill.
+</p>
+<p>
+At the big bend Gordon left the river boat for his cross-country trek.
+Near the roadhouse was an Indian village where he had expected to get a
+guide for the journey to Kamatlah. But the fishing season had begun, and
+the men had all gone down river to take part in it.
+</p>
+<p>
+The old Frenchman who kept the trading-post and roadhouse advised Gordon
+not to attempt the tramp alone.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The trail it ees what you call dangerous. Feefty-Mile Swamp ees a
+monster that swallows men alive, Monsieur. You wait one week&mdash;two
+week&mdash;t'ree week, and some one will turn up to take you through," he
+urged.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But I can't wait. And I have an official map of the trail. Why can't
+I follow it without a guide?" Elliot wanted to know impatiently.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page86" name="page86"></a>[86]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The post-trader shrugged. "Maybeso, Monsieur&mdash;maybe not. Feefty-Mile&mdash;it
+ees one devil of a trail. No chechakoes are safe in there without a
+guide. I, Baptiste, know."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Selfridge and his party went through a week ago. I can follow the
+tracks they left."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But if it rains, Monsieur, the tracks will vaneesh, n'est ce pas? Lose
+the way, and the little singing folk will swarm in clouds about Monsieur
+while he stumbles through the swamp."
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot hesitated for the better part of a day, then came to an impulsive
+decision. He knew the evil fame of Fifty-Mile Swamp&mdash;that no trail in
+Alaska was held to be more difficult or dangerous. He knew too what a
+fearful pest the mosquitoes were. Peter had told him a story of how he
+and a party of engineers had come upon a man wandering in the hills,
+driven mad by mosquitoes. The traveler had lost his matches and had been
+unable to light smudge fires. Day and night the little singing devils
+had swarmed about him. He could not sleep. He could not rest. Every
+moment for forty-eight hours he had fought for his life against them.
+Within an hour of the time they found him the man had died a raving
+maniac.
+</p>
+<p>
+But Elliot was well equipped with mosquito netting and with supplies.
+He had a reliable map, and anyhow he had only to follow the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page87" name="page87"></a>[87]</span>
+
+ tracks left by the Selfridge party. He turned his back upon the big
+river and plunged into the wilderness.
+</p>
+<p>
+There came a night when he looked up into the stars of the deep, still
+sky and knew that he was hundreds of miles from any other human being.
+Never in all his life had he been so much alone. He was not afraid, but
+there was something awesome in a world so empty of his kind. Sometimes
+he sang, and the sound of his voice at first startled him. It was like
+living in a world primeval, this traverse of a land so void of all the
+mechanism that man has built about him.
+</p>
+<p>
+The tracks of the Selfridge party grew fainter after a night of rain.
+More rain fell, and they were obliterated altogether.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon fished. He killed fresh game for his needs. Often he came on the
+tracks of moose and caribou. Sometimes, startled, they leaped into view
+quite close enough for a shot, but he used his rifle only to meet his
+wants. A huge grizzly faced him on the trail one afternoon, growled its
+menace, and went lumbering into the big rocks with awkward speed.
+</p>
+<p>
+The way led through valley and morass, across hills and mountains. It
+wandered in a sort of haphazard fashion through a sun-bathed universe
+washed clean of sordidness and meanness. Always, as he pushed forward,
+the path
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page88" name="page88"></a>[88]</span>
+
+ grew more faint and uncertain. Elk runs crossed it here and there, so
+that often Gordon went astray and had to retrace his steps.
+</p>
+<p>
+The maddening song of the mosquitoes was always with him. Only when he
+slept did he escape from it. The heavy gloves, the netting, the smudge
+fires were at best an insufficient protection.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was the seventh night out that Elliot suspected he was off the trail.
+Rain sluiced down in torrents and next day continued to pour from a dun
+sky. His own tracks were blotted out and he searched for the trail in
+vain. Before the rain stopped, he was thoroughly disturbed in mind. It
+would be a serious business if he should be lost in the bad lands of the
+bogs. Even though he knew the general direction he must follow, there
+was no certainty that he would ever emerge from this swamp into which he
+had plunged.
+</p>
+<p>
+Before he knew it he was entangled in Fifty-Mile. His map showed him the
+morass stretched for fifty miles to the south, but he knew that it had
+been charted hurriedly by a surveying party which had made no extensive
+explorations. A good deal of this country was <i>terra incognita</i>. It
+ran vaguely into a No Man's Land unknown to the prospector.
+</p>
+<p>
+The going was heavy. Gordon had to pick his way through the mossy swamp,
+leading the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page89" name="page89"></a>[89]</span>
+
+ pack-horse by the bridle. Sometimes he was ankle-deep in water of a
+greenish slime. Again he had to drag the animal from the bog to a
+hummock of grass which gave a spongy footing. This would end in another
+quagmire of peat through which they must plough with the mud sucking at
+their feet. It was hard, wearing toil. There was nothing to do but keep
+moving. The young man staggered forward till dusk. Utterly exhausted, he
+camped for the night on a hillock of moss that rose like an island in
+the swamp.
+</p>
+<p>
+After he had eaten he fed his fire with green boughs that raised a dense
+smoke. He lay on the leeward side where the smoke drifted over him and
+fought mosquitoes till a shift of the wind lessened the plague. Toward
+midnight he rigged up a net for protection and crawled into his
+blankets. Instantly he fell sound asleep.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot traveled next day by the compass. He had food for three days
+more, but he knew that no living man had the strength to travel for so
+long in such a morass. It was near midday when he lost his horse. The
+animal had bogged down several times and Gordon had wasted much time and
+spent a good deal of needed energy in dragging it to firmer footing.
+This time the pony refused to answer the whip. Its master unloaded pack
+and saddle. He tried coaxing; he tried the whip.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page90" name="page90"></a>[90]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"Come, Old-Timer. One plunge, and you'll make it yet," he urged.
+</p>
+<p>
+The pack-horse turned upon him dumb eyes of reproach, struggled to free
+its limbs from the mud, and sank down helplessly. It had traveled its
+last yard on the long Alaska trails.
+</p>
+<p>
+After the sound of the shot had died away, Gordon struggled with the
+pack to the nearest hummock. He cut holes in a gunny-sack to fit his
+shoulders and packed into it his blankets, a saucepan, the beans, the
+coffee, and the diminished handful of flour. Into it went too the three
+slices of bacon that were left.
+</p>
+<p>
+He hoisted the pack to his back and slipped his arms through the slits
+he had made. Painfully he labored forward over the quivering peat. Every
+weary muscle revolted at the demands his will imposed upon it. He drew
+on the last ounce of his strength and staggered forward. Sometimes he
+stumbled and went down into the oozing mud, minded to stay there and
+be done with the struggle. But the urge of life drove him to his feet
+again. It sent him pitching forward drunkenly. It carried him for weary
+miles after he despaired of ever covering another hundred yards.
+</p>
+<p>
+With old, half-forgotten signals from the football field he spurred
+his will. Perhaps his mind was already beginning to wander, though
+through
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page91" name="page91"></a>[91]</span>
+
+ it all he held steadily to the direction that alone could save him.
+</p>
+<p>
+He clapped his hands feebly and stooped for the plunge at the line of
+the enemy. "'Attaboy, Gord&mdash;'attaboy&mdash;nine, eleven, seventeen. Hit 'er
+low, you Elliot."
+</p>
+<p>
+When at last he went down to stay it was in an exhaustion so complete
+that not even his indomitable will could lash him to his feet again.
+For an hour he lay in a stupor, never stirring even to fight the swarm
+of mosquitoes that buzzed about him.
+</p>
+<p>
+Toward evening he sat up and undid the pack from his back. The matches,
+in a tin box wrapped carefully with oilskin, were still perfectly dry.
+Soon he had a fire going and coffee boiling in the frying-pan. From
+the tin cup he carried strung on his belt he drank the coffee. It went
+through him like strong liquor. He warmed some beans and fried himself a
+slice of bacon, sopping up the grease with a cold biscuit left over from
+the day before.
+</p>
+<p>
+Again he slept for a few hours. He had wound his watch mechanically
+and it showed him four o'clock when he took up the trail once more.
+In Seattle and San Francisco people were still asleep and darkness was
+heavy over the land. Here it had been day for a long time, ever since
+the summer sun, hidden for a while behind the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page92" name="page92"></a>[92]</span>
+
+ low, distant hills, had come blazing forth again in a saddle between two
+peaks.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon had reduced his pack by discarding a blanket, the frying-pan,
+and all the clothing he was not wearing. His rifle lay behind him in the
+swamp. He had cut to a minimum of safety what he was carrying, according
+to his judgment. But before long his last blanket was flung aside. He
+could not afford to carry an extra pound, for he knew he was running a
+race, the stakes of which were life and death.
+</p>
+<p>
+A cloud of mosquitoes moved with him. He carried in his hand a spruce
+bough for defense against them. His hands were gloved, his face was
+covered with netting. But in spite of the best he could do they were an
+added torture.
+</p>
+<p>
+Afternoon found him still staggering forward. The swamps were now
+behind him. He had won through at last by the narrowest margin possible.
+The ground was rising sharply toward the mountains. Across the range
+somewhere lay Kamatlah. But he was all in. With his food almost gone,
+a water supply uncertain, reserve strength exhausted, the chances of
+getting over the divide to safety were practically none.
+</p>
+<p>
+He had come, so far as he could see, to the end of the passage.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page93" name="page93"></a>[93]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0009" id="h2HCH0009"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER IX
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ GID HOLT GOES PROSPECTING
+</h3>
+<p>
+As soon as Selfridge reached Kamatlah he began arranging the stage
+against the arrival of the Government agent. His preparations were
+elaborate and thorough. A young engineer named Howland had been in
+charge of the development work, but Wally rearranged his forces so as
+to let each dummy entryman handle the claim entered in his name. One or
+two men about whom he was doubtful he discharged and hurried out of the
+camp.
+</p>
+<p>
+Selfridge had been given a free hand as to expenses and he oiled his
+way by liberal treatment of the men and by a judicious expenditure.
+He let them know pretty plainly that if the agent on his way to Kamatlah
+suspected corporate ownership of the claims, the Government would close
+down all work and there would be no jobs for them.
+</p>
+<p>
+The company boarding-house became a restaurant, above which was
+suspended a newly painted sign with the legend, "San Francisco Grill, J.
+Glynn, Proprietor." The store also passed temporarily into the hands of
+its manager. Miners moved from the barracks that had
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page94" name="page94"></a>[94]</span>
+
+ been built by Macdonald into hastily constructed cabins on the
+individual claims. Wally had always fancied himself as a stage manager
+for amateur theatricals. Now he justified his faith by transforming
+Kamatlah outwardly from a company camp to a mushroom one settled by
+wandering prospectors.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gideon Holt alone was outside of all these activities and watched them
+with suspicion. He was an old-timer, sly but fearless, who hated Colby
+Macdonald with a bitter jealousy that could not be placated and he
+took no pains to hide the fact. He had happened to be in the vicinity
+prospecting when Macdonald had rushed his entries. Partly out of mere
+perversity and partly by reason of native shrewdness, old Holt had
+slipped in and located one of the best claims in the heart of the
+group. Nor had he been moved to a reasonable compromise by any amount
+of persuasion, threats, or tentative offers to buy a relinquishment.
+He was obstinate. He knew a good thing when he had it, and he meant to
+sit tight.
+</p>
+<p>
+The adherents of the company might charge that Holt was cracked in the
+upper story, but none of them denied he was sharp as a street Arab. He
+guessed that all this preparation was not for nothing. Kamatlah was
+being dressed up to impress somebody who would shortly arrive. The
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page95" name="page95"></a>[95]</span>
+
+ first thought of Holt was that a group of big capitalists might be
+coming to look over their investment. But he rejected this surmise.
+There would be no need to try any deception upon them.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mail from Seattle reached camp once a month. Holt sat down before his
+stove to read one of the newspapers he had brought from the office. It
+was the "P.-I." On the fifth page was a little boxed story that gave him
+his clue.
+</p>
+
+<div style="width: 70%; border: thin dotted black; margin: 0% 15% 0% 15%;">
+<p class="center">
+ <b>ELLIOT TO INVESTIGATE MACDONALD COAL CLAIMS</b>
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ The reopening of the controversy as to the Macdonald claims,
+ which had been clear-listed for patent by Harold B. Winton,
+ the Commissioner of the General Land Office, takes on another
+ phase with the appointment of Gordon Elliot as special field
+ agent to examine the validity of the holdings. The new field
+ agent won a reputation by his work in unearthing the Oklahoma
+ "Gold Brick" land frauds.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ Elliot leaves Seattle in the Queen City Thursday for the North,
+ where he will make a thorough investigation of the whole situation
+ with a view to clearing up the matter definitely. If his report
+ is favorable to the claimants, the patents will be granted without
+ further delay.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+This was too good to keep. Holt pulled on his boots and went out to twit
+such of the enemy
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page96" name="page96"></a>[96]</span>
+
+ as he might meet. It chanced that the first of them was Selfridge, whom
+he had not seen since his arrival, though he knew the little man was in
+camp.
+</p>
+<p>
+"How goes it, Holt? Fine and dandy, eh?" inquired Wally with the
+professional geniality he affected.
+</p>
+<p>
+The old miner shook his head dolefully. "I done bust my laig, Mr.
+Selfish," he groaned. It was one of his pleasant ways to affect a
+difficulty of hearing and a dullness of understanding, so that he could
+legitimately call people by distorted versions of their names. "The old
+man don't amount to much nowadays. Onct a man or a horse gits stove up
+I don't reckon either one pans out much pay dust any more."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nothing to that, Gid. You're younger than you ever were, judging by
+your looks."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then my looks lie to beat hell, Mr. Selfish."
+</p>
+<p>
+"My name is Selfridge," explained Wally, a trifle irritated.
+</p>
+<p>
+Holt put a cupped hand to his ear anxiously. "Shellfish, did you say?
+Tha' 's right. Howcome I to forget? The old man's going pretty fast,
+Mr. Shellfish. No more memory than a jackrabbit. Say, Mr. Shellfish,
+what's the idee of all this here back-to-the-people movement, as the
+old sayin' is?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I don't know what you mean. And my name
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page97" name="page97"></a>[97]</span>
+
+ is Selfridge, I tell you," snapped the owner of that name.
+</p>
+<p>
+"'Course I ain't got no more sense than the law allows. I'm a buzzard
+haid, but me I kinder got to millin' it over and in respect to these
+here local improvements, as you might say, I'm doggoned if I <i>sabe</i>
+the whyfor." There was an imp of malicious deviltry in the black, beady
+eyes sparkling at Selfridge from between narrowed lids.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Just some business changes we're making."
+</p>
+<p>
+Holt showed his tobacco-stained teeth in a grin splenetic. "Oh. That's
+all. I didn't know but what you might be expecting a visitor."
+</p>
+<p>
+Selfridge flashed a sharp sidelong glance at him. "What do you mean&mdash;a
+visitor?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I just got a notion mebbe you might be looking for one, Mr. Pelfrich.
+But I don't know sic' 'em. Like as not you ain't fixing up for this
+Gordon Elliot a-tall."
+</p>
+<p>
+Wally had no come-back, unless it was one to retort in ironic
+admiration. "You're a wonder, Holt. Pity you don't start a detective
+bureau."
+</p>
+<p>
+The old man went away cackling dryly.
+</p>
+<p>
+If Selfridge had held any doubts before, he discarded them now. Holt
+would wreck the whole enterprise, were he given a chance. It would never
+do to let Elliot meet and talk with
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page98" name="page98"></a>[98]</span>
+
+ him. He knew too much, and he was eager to tell all he knew.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald's lieutenant got busy at once with plans to abduct Holt. That
+it was very much against the law did not disturb him much so long as his
+chief stood back of him. The unsupported word of the old man would not
+stand in court, and if he became obstreperous they could always have him
+locked up as a lunatic. The very pose of the old miner&mdash;the make-believe
+pretension that he was half a fool&mdash;would lend itself to such a charge.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We'll send the old man off on a prospecting trip with some of the
+boys," explained Selfridge to Rowland. "That way we'll kill two birds.
+He's back on his assessment work. The time limit will be up before he
+returns and we'll start a contest for the claim."
+</p>
+<p>
+Howland made no comment. He was an engineer and not a politician. In his
+position it was impossible for him not to know that a good deal about
+the legal status of the Macdonald claims was irregular. But he was a
+firm believer in a wide-open Alaska, in the use of the Territory by
+those who had settled it. The men back of the big Scotchman were going
+to spend millions in development work, in building railroads. It would
+help labor and business. The whole North would feel a healthful reaction
+from the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page99" name="page99"></a>[99]</span>
+
+ Kamatlah activities. So, on the theory that the end sometimes justifies
+doubtful means, he shut his eyes to many acts that in his own private
+affairs he would not have countenanced.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Better arrange it with Big Bill, then, but don't tell me anything about
+it. I don't want to know the details," he told Selfridge.
+</p>
+<p>
+Big Bill Macy accepted the job with a grin. There was double pay in it
+both for him and the men he chose as his assistants. He had never liked
+old Holt anyhow. Besides, they were not going to do him any harm.
+</p>
+<p>
+Holt was baking a batch of sour-dough bread that evening when there came
+a knock at the cabin door. At sight of Big Bill and his two companions
+the prospector closed the oven and straightened with alert suspicion.
+He was not on visiting terms with any of these men. Why had they come
+to see him? He asked point-blank the question in his mind.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We're going prospecting up Wild-Goose Creek, and we want you to go
+along, Gid," explained Macy. "You're an old sour-dough miner, and we-all
+agree we'd like to have you throw-in with us. What say?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The old miner's answer was direct but not flattering. "What do I want to
+go on a wild-goose mush with a bunch of bums for?" he shrilled.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page100" name="page100"></a>[100]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Bill Macy scratched his hook nose and looked reproachfully at his host.
+At least Holt thought he was looking at him. One could not be sure, for
+Bill's eyes did not exactly track.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That ain't no kind o' way to talk to a fellow when he comes at you with
+a fair proposition, Gid."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You tell Selfridge I ain't going to leave Kamatlah&mdash;not right now. I'm
+going to stay here on the job till that Land Office inspector comes&mdash;and
+then I'm going to have a nice, long, confidential chat with him. See?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"What's the use of snapping at me like a turtle? Durden says Wild-Goose
+looks fine. There's gold up there&mdash;heaps of it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Let it stay there, then. I ain't going. That's flat." Holt turned to
+adjust the damper of his stove.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, I don't know. I wouldn't say that," drawled Bill insolently.
+</p>
+<p>
+The man at the stove caught the change in tone and turned quickly. He
+was too late. Macy had thrown himself forward and the weight of his body
+flung Holt against the wall. Before the miner could recover, the other
+two men were upon him. They bore him to the floor and in spite of his
+struggles tied him hand and foot.
+</p>
+<p>
+Big Bill rose and looked down derisively at his prisoner. "Better change
+your mind and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page101" name="page101"></a>[101]</span>
+
+ go with us, Holt. We'll spend a quiet month up at the headquarters of
+Wild-Goose. Say you'll come along."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You'll go to prison for this, Bill Macy."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Guess again, Gid, and mebbe you'll get it right this time." Macy turned
+to his companions. "George, you bring up the horses. Dud, see if that
+bread is cooked. Might as well take it along with us&mdash;save us from
+baking to-morrow."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What are you going to do with me?" demanded Holt.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I reckon you need a church to fall on you before you can take a hint.
+Didn't I mention Wild-Goose Creek three or four times?" jeered his
+captor.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Every step you take will be one toward the penitentiary. Get that into
+your cocoanut," the old miner retorted sharply.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nothing to that idee, Gid."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll scream when you take me out."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Go to it. Then we'll gag you."
+</p>
+<p>
+Holt made no further protest. He was furious, but at present quite
+helpless. However it went against the grain, he might as well give in
+until rebellion would do some good.
+</p>
+<p>
+Ten minutes later the party was moving silently along the trail that led
+to the hills. The pack-horses went first, in charge of George Holway.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page102" name="page102"></a>[102]</span>
+
+ The prisoner walked next, his hands tied behind him. Big Bill followed,
+and the man he had called Dud brought up the rear.
+</p>
+<p>
+They wound up a rising valley, entering from it a ca&ntilde;on with precipitous
+walls that shut out the late sun. It was by this time past eleven
+o'clock and dusk was gathering closer. The winding trail ran parallel
+with the creek, sometimes through thickets of young fir and sometimes
+across boulder beds that made traveling difficult and slow. They went in
+single file, each of them with a swarm of mosquitoes about his head.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macy had released the hands of his prisoner so that he might have a
+chance to fight the singing pests, but he kept a wary eye upon him and
+never let him move more than a few feet from him. The trail grew steeper
+as it neared the head of the ca&ntilde;on till at last it climbed the left wall
+and emerged from the gulch to an uneven mesa.
+</p>
+<p>
+The leader of the party looked at his watch. "Past midnight. We'll camp
+here, George, and see if we can't get rid of the 'skeeters."
+</p>
+<p>
+They built smudge fires of green wood and on the lee side of these
+another one of dry sticks. Dud made coffee upon this and cooked bacon to
+eat with the fresh bread they had taken from the oven of Holt. While
+George chopped
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page103" name="page103"></a>[103]</span>
+
+ wood for the fires and boughs of small firs for bedding, Big Bill sat
+with a rifle across his knees just back of the prisoner.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Gid's a shifty old cuss, and I ain't taking any chances," he explained
+aloud to Dud.
+</p>
+<p>
+Holt was beginning to take the outrage philosophically. He sat close to
+a smudge and smoked his pipe.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I wouldn't either if I were you. Sometime when you ain't watching, I'm
+liable to grab that gun and shoot a hole in the place where your brains
+would be if you had any," countered the old man.
+</p>
+<p>
+He slept peacefully while they took turns watching him. Just now there
+would be no chance to escape, but in a few days they would become
+careless. The habit of feeling that they had him securely would grow
+upon them. Then, reasoned Holt, his opportunity would come. One of the
+guards would take a chance. Perhaps he might even fall asleep on duty.
+It was not reasonable to suppose that in the next week or two he would
+not catch them napping once for a short ten seconds.
+</p>
+<p>
+There was, of course, just the possibility that they intended to murder
+him, but Holt could not associate Selfridge with anything so lawless.
+The man was too soft of fiber to carry through such a programme, and as
+yet there was need
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page104" name="page104"></a>[104]</span>
+
+ of nothing so drastic. No, this little kidnapping expedition would not
+run to murder. He would be set free in a few weeks, and if he told the
+true story of where he had been his foes would spread the report that he
+was insane in his hatred of Macdonald and imagined all sorts of
+persecutions.
+</p>
+<p>
+They followed Wild-Goose Creek all next day, getting always closer to
+its headwaters near the divide. On the third day they crossed to the
+other side of the ridge and descended into a little mountain park. They
+were in a country where prospectors never came, one deserted even by
+trappers at this season of the year.
+</p>
+<p>
+The country was so much a primeval wilderness that a big bull moose
+stalked almost upon their camp before discovering the presence of a
+strange biped. Big Bill snatched up a rifle and took a shot which sent
+the intruder scampering.
+</p>
+<p>
+From somewhere in the distance came a faint sound.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What was that?" asked George.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sounded like a shot. Mebbe it was an echo," returned Dud.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Came too late for an echo," Big Bill said.
+</p>
+<p>
+Again faintly from some far corner of the basin the sound drifted. It
+was like the pop of a scarcely heard firecracker.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page105" name="page105"></a>[105]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The men looked at one another and at their prisoner. Their eyes
+consulted once more.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Think we better break camp and drift?" asked Dud.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No. We're in a little draw here&mdash;as good a hiding-place as we'd be
+likely to find. Drive the horses into the brush, George. We'll sit
+tight."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Got the criminals guessing," Holt contributed maliciously. "You lads
+want to take the hide offen Macy if he lands you in the pen through that
+fool shot of his. Wonder if I hadn't better yell."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll stop your clock right then if you do," threatened Big Bill with a
+scowl.
+</p>
+<p>
+Dud had been busy stamping out the camp-fire while Holway was driving
+the horses into the brush.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mebbe you had better get the camp things behind them big rocks," Macy
+conceded.
+</p>
+<p>
+Even as he spoke there came the crack of a revolver almost at the
+entrance to the draw.
+</p>
+<p>
+One of the men swore softly. The gimlet eyes of the old miner fastened
+on the spot where in another moment his hoped-for rescuers would appear.
+</p>
+<p>
+A man staggered drunkenly into view. He reeled halfway across the mouth
+of the draw and stopped. His eyes, questing dully, fell upon
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page106" name="page106"></a>[106]</span>
+
+ the camp. He stared, as if doubtful whether they had played him false,
+then lurched toward the waiting group.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Lost, and all in," Holway said in a whisper to Dud.
+</p>
+<p>
+The other man nodded. Neither of them made a move toward the stranger,
+who stopped in front of their camp and looked with glazed eyes from one
+to another. His face was drawn and haggard and lined. Extreme exhaustion
+showed in every movement. He babbled incoherently.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Seven&mdash;eighteen&mdash;ninety-nine. 'Atta-boy," he said thickly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't you see he's starving and out of his head?" snapped Holt
+brusquely. "Get him grub, <i>pronto</i>."
+</p>
+<p>
+The old man rose and moved toward the suffering man. "Come, pard. Tha'
+'s all right. Sit down right here and go to it, as the old sayin' is."
+He led the man to a place beside Big Bill and made him sit down. "Better
+light a fire, boys, and get some coffee on. Don't give him too much
+solid grub at first."
+</p>
+<p>
+The famished man ate what was given him and clamored for more.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Coming up soon, pardner," Holt told him soothingly. "Now tell us
+howcome you to get lost."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page107" name="page107"></a>[107]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The man nodded gravely. "Hit that line low, Gord. Hit 'er low. Only
+three yards to gain."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Plumb bughouse," commented Dud, chewing tobacco stolidly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Out of his head&mdash;that's all. He'll be right enough after he's fed up
+and had a good sleep. But right now he's sure some Exhibit A. Look at
+the bones sticking through his cheeks," Big Bill commented.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Come, Old-Timer. Get down in your collar to it. Once more now. Don't
+lie down on the job. All together now." The stranger clucked to an
+imaginary horse and made a motion of lifting with his hands.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Looks like his hawss bogged down in Fifty-Mile Swamp," suggested Holt.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Looks like," agreed Dud.
+</p>
+<p>
+The old miner said no more. But his eyes narrowed to shining slits. If
+this man had come through Fifty-Mile Swamp he must have started from the
+river. That probably meant that he had come from Kusiak. He was a young
+man, talking the jargon of a college football player. Without doubt he
+was, in the old phrasing of the North, a chechako. His clothing, though
+much soiled and torn, had been good. His voice held the inflections of
+the cultured world.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gideon Holt's sly brain moved keenly to the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page108" name="page108"></a>[108]</span>
+
+ possibility that he could put a name to this human derelict they had
+picked up. He began to see it as more than a possibility, as even a
+probability, at least as a fifty-fifty chance. A sardonic grin hovered
+about the corners of his grim mouth. It would be a strange freak of
+irony if Wally Selfridge, to prevent a meeting between him and the
+Government land agent, had sent him a hundred miles into the wilderness
+to save the life of Gordon Elliot and so had brought about the meeting
+that otherwise would never have taken place.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page109" name="page109"></a>[109]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0010" id="h2HCH0010"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER X
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ THE RAH-RAH BOY FUNCTIONS
+</h3>
+<p>
+Big Bill grumbled a good deal at the addition to the party. It would be
+decidedly awkward if this stranger should become rational and understand
+the status of the camp he had joined. The word of old Holt alone might
+be negligible, but supported by that of a disinterested party it would
+be a very different matter. Still, there was no help for it. They would
+have to take care of the man until he was able to travel. Perhaps he
+would go in with them as an additional guard. At the worst Big Bill
+could give him a letter to Selfridge explaining things and so pass the
+buck to that gentleman.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gid Holt had, with the tacit consent of his guards, appointed himself as
+a sort of nurse to the stranger. He lit a smudge fire to the windward
+side of him, fed him small quantities of food at intervals, and arranged
+a sleeping-place for him with mosquito netting for protection.
+</p>
+<p>
+Early in the evening the sick man fell into a sound sleep from which he
+did not awake until morning. George was away looking after the
+pack-horses, Dud was cooking breakfast, and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page110" name="page110"></a>[110]</span>
+
+ Big Bill, his rifle close at hand, was chopping young firs fifty feet
+back of the camp. The cook also had a gun, loaded with buckshot, lying
+on a box beside him, so that they were taking no chances with their
+prisoner. He could not have covered twenty yards without being raked by
+a cross-fire.
+</p>
+<p>
+The old miner turned from rearranging the boughs of green fir on the
+smudge to see that his patient was awake and his mind normal. The quiet,
+steady eyes resting upon him told that the delirium had passed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Pretty nearly all in, wasn't I?" the young man said.
+</p>
+<p>
+The answer of Gid Holt was an odd one. "Yep. Seven&mdash;eleven&mdash;fifteen.
+Take 'er easy, old man," he said in his shrill, high voice as he moved
+toward the man in the blankets. Then, in a low tone, while he pretended
+to arrange the bedding over the stranger, he asked a quick question.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Are you Elliot?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't tell them. Talk football lingo as if you was still out of your
+haid." Holt turned and called to Dud. "Says he wants some breakfast."
+</p>
+<p>
+"On the way," the cook answered.
+</p>
+<p>
+Holt seemed to be soothing the delirious man. What he really said was
+this. "Selfridge has
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page111" name="page111"></a>[111]</span>
+
+ arranged a plant for you at Kamatlah. The camp has been turned inside
+out to fool you. They've brought me here a prisoner so as to keep me
+from telling you the truth. Pst! Tune up now."
+</p>
+<p>
+Big Bill had put down his axe and was approaching. He was not exactly
+suspicious, but he did not believe in taking unnecessary chances.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I tell you I'm out of training. Played the last game, haven't we? Come
+through with a square meal, you four-flusher," demanded Elliot in a
+querulous voice. He turned to Macy. "Look here, Cap. Haven't I played
+the game all fall? Don't I get what I want now we're through?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The voice of the young man was excited. His eyes had lost their quiet
+steadiness and roved restlessly to and fro. If Big Bill had held any
+doubts one glance dissipated them.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sure you do. Hustle over and help Dud with the breakfast, Holt. I'll
+look out for our friend."
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot and Holt found no more chance to talk together that morning.
+Sometimes the young Government official lay staring straight in front
+of him. Sometimes he appeared to doze. Again he would talk in the
+disjointed way of one not clear in the head.
+</p>
+<p>
+An opportunity came in the afternoon for a moment.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page112" name="page112"></a>[112]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"Keep your eyes skinned for a chance to lay out the guard to-night and
+get his gun," Holt said quickly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon nodded. "I don't know that I've got to do everything just as you
+say," he complained aloud for the benefit of George, who was passing on
+his way to the place where the horses were hobbled.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now&mdash;now! There ain't nobody trying to boss you," Holt explained in a
+patient voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+"They'd better not," snapped the invalid.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Some scrapper&mdash;that kid," said the horse wrangler with a grin.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macy took the first watch that night. He turned in at two after he had
+roused Dud to take his place. The cook had been on duty about an hour
+when Elliot kicked Holt, who was sleeping beside him, to make sure that
+he was ready. The old man answered the kick with another.
+</p>
+<p>
+Presently Gordon got up, yawned, and strolled toward the edge of the
+camp.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't go and get lost, young fellow," cautioned Dud.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon, on his way back, passed behind the guard, who was sitting tailor
+fashion before a smudge with a muley shotgun across his knees.
+</p>
+<p>
+"This ain't no country for chechakoes to be wandering around without a
+keeper," the cook
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page113" name="page113"></a>[113]</span>
+
+ continued. "Looks like your folks would have better sense than to let
+their rah-rah boy&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+He got no farther. Elliot dropped to one knee and his strong fingers
+closed on the gullet of the man so tightly that not even a groan could
+escape him. His feet thrashed to and fro as he struggled, but he could
+not shake off the grip that was strangling him. The old miner, waiting
+with every muscle ready and every nerve under tension, flung aside his
+blanket and hurled himself at the guard. It took him less time than it
+takes to tell to wrest the gun from the cook.
+</p>
+<p>
+He got to his feet just as Big Bill, his eyes and brain still fogged
+with sleep, sat up and began to take notice of the disturbance.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't move," warned Holt sharply. "Better throw your hands up. You
+reach for the stars, too, Holway. No monkey business, do you hear? I'd
+as lief blow a hole through you as not."
+</p>
+<p>
+Big Bill turned bitterly upon Elliot. "So you were faking all the time,
+young fellow. We save your life and you round on us. You're a pretty
+slick proposition as a double-crosser."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And that ain't all," chirped up Holt blithely. "Let me introduce our
+friend to you, Mr. Big Bill Macy. This is Gordon Elliot, the land agent
+appointed to look over the Kamatlah claims. Selfridge gave you lads this
+penitentiary job
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page114" name="page114"></a>[114]</span>
+
+ so as I wouldn't meet Elliot when he reached the camp. If he hadn't been
+so darned anxious about it, our young friend would have died here on the
+divide. But Mr. Selfridge kindly outfitted a party and sent us a hundred
+miles into the hills to rescue the perishing, as the old sayin' goes.
+Consequence is, Elliot and me meet up and have that nice confidential
+talk after all. The ways of Providence is strange, as you might say, Mr.
+Macy."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Your trick," conceded Big Bill sullenly. "Now what are you going to do
+with us?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not a thing&mdash;going to leave you right here to prospect Wild-Goose
+Creek," answered Holt blandly. "Durden says there's gold up here&mdash;heaps
+of it."
+</p>
+<p>
+Bill Macy condemned Durden in language profane and energetic. He didn't
+stop at Durden. Holt came in for a share of it, also Elliot and
+Selfridge.
+</p>
+<p>
+The old miner grinned at him. "You'll feel better now you've got that
+out of your system. But don't stop there if you'd like to say a few more
+well-chosen words. We got time a-plenty."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Cut it out, Bill. That line o' talk don't buy you anything," said
+Holway curtly. "What's the use of beefing?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now you're shouting, my friend," agreed old Gideon. "I guess, Elliot,
+you can loosen
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page115" name="page115"></a>[115]</span>
+
+ up on the chef's throat awhile. He's had persuading enough, don't you
+reckon? I'll sit here and sorter keep the boys company while you cut the
+pack-ropes and bring 'em here. But first I'd step in and unload all the
+hardware they're packing. If you don't one of them is likely to get
+anxious. I'd hate to see any of them commit suicide with none of their
+friends here to say, 'Don't he look natural?'"
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot brought back the pack-ropes and cut them into suitable lengths.
+Holt's monologue rambled on. He was garrulous and affable. Not for a
+long time had he enjoyed himself so much.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Better begin with Chief Big Bill," he suggested. "No, I wouldn't make
+that move if I was you, Mr. Macy. This old gun is liable to go off
+accidental in your direction and she spatters like hell. That's the
+idee. Be reasonable. Not that I give a hoot, but a man hadn't ought to
+let his impulses run away with his judgment, as the old sayin' is."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon tied the hands of Big Bill behind him, then roped his feet
+together, after which he did the same for Holway. The old miner
+superintended the job and was not satisfied till he had added a few
+extra knots on his own behalf.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That'll hold them for awhile, I shouldn't wonder. Now if you'll just
+cover friend chef
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page116" name="page116"></a>[116]</span>
+
+ with this sawed-off gat, Elliot, I'll throw the diamond hitch over what
+supplies we'll need to get back to Kamatlah. I'll take one bronch and
+leave the other to the convicts," said Holt cheerfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Forget that convict stuff," growled Macy. "With Macdonald back of us
+and the Guttenchilds back of him, you'll have a hectic time getting
+anything on us."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That might be true if these folks were back of you. But are they?
+Course I ain't any Sherlock Holmes, but it don't look to me like they'd
+play any such fool system as this."
+</p>
+<p>
+Big Bill opened his mouth to answer&mdash;and said nothing. He had caught a
+look flashed at him by Holway, a look that warned him he was talking too
+much.
+</p>
+<p>
+After Holt had packed one of the animals he turned to Elliot.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I reckon we're ready."
+</p>
+<p>
+Under orders from Elliot, Dud fixed up the smudges and arranged the
+mosquito netting over the bound men so as to give them all the
+protection possible.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We're going to take Dud with us for a part of the trip. We'll send him
+back to you later in the day. You'll have to fast till he gets back, but
+outside of that you'll do very well if you don't roll around trying to
+get loose. Do that,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page117" name="page117"></a>[117]</span>
+
+ and you'll jar loose the mosquito netting. You know what that means,"
+explained Gordon.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It ain't likely any grizzlies will come pokin' their noses into camp.
+But you never can tell. Any last words you want sent to relatives?"
+asked Gideon Holt.
+</p>
+<p>
+The last words they heard from Big Bill as they moved down the draw were
+sulphuric.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Macy he ain't wearin' any W. J. Bryan smile this glad mo'nin'," mused
+old Holt aloud.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was three o'clock in the morning by the watch when they started.
+About nine they threw off for breakfast. By this time they were just
+across the divide and were ready to take the down trail.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I think we'll let Dud go now," Elliot told his partner in the
+adventure.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Better hold him till afternoon. Then they can't possibly reach us till
+we get to Kamatlah."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What does it matter if they do? We have both rifles and have left them
+only one revolver. Besides, I don't like to leave two bound men alone in
+so wild a district for any great time. No, we'll start Dud on the back
+trail. That grizzly you promised Big Bill might really turn up."
+</p>
+<p>
+The two men struck the headwaters of Wild-Goose Creek about noon and
+followed the stream down. They traveled steadily without haste.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page118" name="page118"></a>[118]</span>
+
+ So long as they kept a good lookout there was nothing to be feared from
+the men they had left behind. They had both a long start and the
+advantage of weapons.
+</p>
+<p>
+If Elliot had advertised for a year he could not have found a man who
+knew more of Colby Macdonald's past than Gideon Holt. The old man had
+mushed on the trail with him in the Klondike days. He had worked a
+claim on Frenchman Creek with him and had by sharp practice&mdash;so at
+least he had come to believe&mdash;been lawed out of his rights by the shrewd
+Scotchman. For seventeen years he had nursed a grudge against Macdonald,
+and he was never tired of talking about him. He knew many doubtful
+things charged to the account of the big man as he had blazed a way
+to success over the failures of less fortunate people. One story in
+particular interested Gordon. It came out the second day, as they were
+getting down into the foothills.
+</p>
+<p>
+"There was Farrell O'Neill. He was a good fellow, Farrell was, but he
+had just one weakness. There was times when he liked the bottle too
+well. He'd let it alone for months and then just lap the stuff up. It
+was the time of the stampede to Bonanza Creek. Men are just like sheep.
+They wear wool on their backs like them and have their habits. You can
+start 'em any
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page119" name="page119"></a>[119]</span>
+
+ fool way for no cause a-tall. Don't you know it? Well, the news of the
+strike on Bonanza reached Dawson and we all burnt up the trail to get to
+the new ground first. O'Neill was one of the first. He got in about
+twenty below discovery, if I remember. Mac wasn't in Dawson, but he got
+there next mo'nin' and heard the news. He lit out for Bonanza
+<i>pronto</i>."
+</p>
+<p>
+The old miner stopped, took a chew of tobacco, and looked down into the
+valley far below where Kamatlah could just be seen, a little huddle of
+huts.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well?" asked Elliot. It was occasionally necessary to prompt Holt when
+he paused for his dramatic effects. He would pretend to forget that he
+was telling a yarn which might interest his hearer.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mac draps in and joins O'Neill at night. They knew each other, y'
+understand, so o' course it was natural Mac would put up at his camp.
+O'Neill had a partner and they had located together. Fellow named
+Strong."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not Hanford Strong, a little, heavy-set man somewhere around fifty?"
+Gordon asked quickly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You've tagged the right man. Know him?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've met him."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, I never heard anything against Han Strong. Anyway, he was off
+that night packing
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page120" name="page120"></a>[120]</span>
+
+ grub up while Farrell held down the claim. Mac had a jug of booze with
+him. He got Farrell tanked up. You know Mac&mdash;how he can put it across
+when he's a mind to. He's a forceful devil, and he can be a mighty
+likable one."
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot nodded understanding. "He's always the head of the table no
+matter where he sits. And there is something wonderfully attractive
+about him."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sure there is. But when he is friendliest you want to watch out he
+don't slip an upper cut at you that'll put you out of biz. He done that
+to Farrell&mdash;and done it a-plenty."
+</p>
+<p>
+"How?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"O'Neill got mellowed up till he thought Mac was his best friend.
+He was ready to eat out of his hand. So Mac works him up to sign a
+contract&mdash;before witnesses too; trust Mac for that&mdash;exchanging his
+half-interest in the claim for five hundred dollars in cash and Mac's
+no-'count lease on Frenchman Creek. Inside of a week Mac and Strong
+struck a big pay streak. They took over two hundred thousand from the
+spring clean-up."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It was nothing better than robbery."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Call it what you want to. Anyhow, it stuck. O'Neill kicked, and that's
+all the good it did him. He consulted lawyers at Dawson. Finally he got
+so discouraged that he plumb went
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page121" name="page121"></a>[121]</span>
+
+ to pieces&mdash;got on a long bat and stayed there till his money ran out.
+Then one bitter night he starts up to Bonanza to have it out with Mac.
+The mercury was so low it had run into the ground a foot. Farrell slept
+in a deserted cabin without a fire and not enough bedding. He caught
+pneumony. By the time he reached the claim he was a mighty sick man.
+Next week he died. That's all Mac done to O'Neill. Not a thing that
+wasn't legal either."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon thought of Sheba O'Neill as she sat listening to the tales of
+Macdonald in Diane's parlor and his gorge rose at the man.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But Mac had fell on his feet all right," continued Holt. "He got his
+start off that claim. Now he's a millionaire two or three times over,
+I reckon."
+</p>
+<p>
+They reached the outskirts of Kamatlah about noon of the third day.
+Gordon left Holt at his cabin after they had eaten and went in alone
+to look the ground over. He met Selfridge at the post-office. That
+gentleman was effusive in his greeting.
+</p>
+<p>
+"This <i>is</i> a pleasant surprise, Mr. Elliot. When did you get in?
+Had no idea you were coming or I'd have asked you for the pleasure of
+your company. I'm down on business, of course. No need to tell you
+that&mdash;nobody would come to this hole for any other reason.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page122" name="page122"></a>[122]</span>
+
+ Howland and his wife are the only possible people here. Hope you play
+bridge."
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot played it, but he did not say so. It was his business not to be
+drawn into entangling alliances.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Of course you'll put up with me as my guest," Selfridge flowed on.
+"I've wanted to meet you again ever since we were on the Hannah
+together."
+</p>
+<p>
+This was a little too cheeky. Gordon recalled with some amusement how
+this tubby little man and his friends had ignored the existence of Sheba
+O'Neill and himself for several days.
+</p>
+<p>
+He answered genially. "Pleasant time we had on the river, didn't we?
+Thanks awfully for your invitation, but I've already made arrangements
+for putting up."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where? There's no decent place in camp except at Howland's. He keeps
+open house for our friends."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I couldn't think of troubling him," countered Gordon.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No trouble at all. We'll send for your things. Where are they?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The land agent let him have it right between the eyes. "At Gideon
+Holt's. I'm staying with him on his claim."
+</p>
+<p>
+Wally had struck a match to light a cigarette, but this simple statement
+petrified him.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page123" name="page123"></a>[123]</span>
+
+ His jaw dropped and his eyes bulged. Not till the flame burned his
+fingers did he come to life.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did you say you were staying&mdash;with Gid Holt?" he floundered weakly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon noticed that his florid face had lost its color. The jaunty
+cock-sureness of the man had flickered out like the flame of the charred
+match.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes. He offered to board me," answered the young man blandly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But&mdash;I didn't know he was here&mdash;seems to me I had
+heard&mdash;somewhere&mdash;that he was away."
+</p>
+<p>
+"He was away. But he has come back." Gordon gave the information without
+even a flash of mirth in his steady eyes.
+</p>
+<p>
+Selfridge could not quite let the subject alone. "Seems to me I heard he
+went prospecting."
+</p>
+<p>
+"He did. Up Wild-Goose Creek, with Big Bill Macy and two other men. But
+I asked him to come back with me&mdash;and he did."
+</p>
+<p>
+Feebly Wally groped for the clue without finding it. Had Big Bill sold
+him out? And how had Elliot got into touch with him?
+</p>
+<p>
+"Just so, Mr. Elliot. But really, you know, Howland can make you a great
+deal more comfortable than Holt. His wife is a famous cook. I'll have a
+man go get your traps."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page124" name="page124"></a>[124]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's very good of you, but I think I won't move."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, but you must. Holt's nutty&mdash;nobody at home, you know. Everybody
+knows that."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Is he? The old man struck me as being remarkably clear-headed. By the
+way, I want to thank you for sending a relief party out to find me, Mr.
+Selfridge. Except for your help I would have died in the hills."
+</p>
+<p>
+This was another facer for Wally. What the devil did the fellow mean?
+The deuce of it was that he knew all the facts and Wally did not. He
+talked as if he meant it, but behind those cool eyes there might lie
+either mockery or irony. One thing alone stood out to Selfridge like
+a sore thumb. His plans had come tumbling down like a house of cards.
+Either Big Bill had blundered amazingly, or he had played traitor.
+In either case Wally could guess pretty shrewdly whose hide Macdonald
+would tan for the failure. The chief wanted results. He did not ask of
+his subordinates how they got them. And this was the second time in
+succession that Selfridge had come to grief.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page125" name="page125"></a>[125]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0011" id="h2HCH0011"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XI
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ GORDON INVITES HIMSELF TO DINNER&mdash;AND DOES NOT ENJOY IT
+</h3>
+<p>
+Big Bill and his companions reached Kamatlah early next day. They
+reported at once to Selfridge. It had been the intention of Wally to
+vent upon them the bad temper that had been gathering ever since his
+talk with Elliot. But his first sarcastic question drew such a snarl of
+anger that he reconsidered. The men were both sullen and furious. They
+let him know roundly that if Holt made them any trouble through the
+courts, they would tell all they knew.
+</p>
+<p>
+The little man became alarmed. Instead of reproaches he gave them soft
+words and promises. The company would see them through. It would protect
+them against criminal procedure. But above all they must stand pat in
+denial. A conviction would be impossible even if the State's attorney
+filed an indictment against them. Meanwhile they would remain on the
+company pay-roll.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon Elliot was a trained investigator. Even without Holt at his side
+he would probably have unearthed the truth about the Kamatlah
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page126" name="page126"></a>[126]</span>
+
+ situation. But with the little miner by his side to tell him the facts,
+he found his task an easy one.
+</p>
+<p>
+Selfridge followed orders and let him talk with the men freely. All of
+them had been drilled till they knew their story like parrots. They were
+suspicious of the approaches of Elliot, but they had been warned that
+they must appear to talk candidly. The result was that some talked too
+much and some not enough. They contradicted themselves and one another.
+They let slip admissions under skillful examination that could be
+explained on no other basis than that of company ownership.
+</p>
+<p>
+Both Selfridge and Howland outdid themselves in efforts to establish
+close social relations. But Gordon was careful to put himself under no
+obligations. He called on the Howlands, but he laughingly explained why
+he could not accept the invitations of Mrs. Howland to dinner.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I have to tell things here as I see them, and may not have your point
+of view. How can I accept your hospitality and then report that I think
+your husband ought to be sent up for life?"
+</p>
+<p>
+She was a good, motherly woman and she laughed with him. But she did
+wish this pleasant young fellow could be made to take the proper view of
+things.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page127" name="page127"></a>[127]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Within two weeks Elliot had finished his work at Kamatlah.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Off for Kusiak to-morrow," he told Holt that night.
+</p>
+<p>
+The old miner went with him as a guide to the big bend. Gordon had no
+desire to attempt again Fifty-Mile Swamp without the help of some one
+who knew every foot of the trail. Holt had taken the trip a dozen times.
+With him to show the way the swamp became merely a hard, grueling mush
+through boggy lowlands.
+</p>
+<p>
+Weary with the trail, they reached the river at the end of a long day.
+An Indian village lay sprawled along the bank, and through this the two
+men tramped to the roadhouse where they were to put up for the night.
+</p>
+<p>
+Holt called to the younger man, who was at the time in the lead.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Wait a minute, Elliot."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon turned. The old Alaskan was offering a quarter to a little
+half-naked Indian boy. Shyly the four-year-old came forward, a step at
+a time, his finger in his mouth. He held out a brown hand for the coin.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What's your name, kid?" Holt flashed a look at Elliot that warned him
+to pay attention.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Colmac," the boy answered bashfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+His fist closed on the quarter, he turned, and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page128" name="page128"></a>[128]</span>
+
+ like a startled caribou he fled to a comely young Indian woman standing
+near the trail.
+</p>
+<p>
+With gleaming eyes Holt turned to Elliot. "Take a good look at the
+squaw," he said in a low voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot glanced at the woman behind whose skirts the youngster was
+hiding. He smiled and nodded pleasantly to her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"She's not bad looking if that's what you mean," he said after they had
+taken up the trail again.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You ain't the only white man that has thought that," retorted the old
+miner significantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No?" Gordon had learned to let Holt tell things at his leisure. It
+usually took less time than to try to hurry him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Name of the kid mean anything to you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Can't say it did."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hm! Named for his dad. First syllable of each of his names."
+</p>
+<p>
+The land inspector stopped in his stride and wheeled upon Holt. His eyes
+asked eagerly a question. "You don't mean Colby Macdonald?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why don't I?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"But&mdash;Good Lord, he isn't a squawman, is he?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not in the usual meaning of the word. She never cooked and kept house
+for him. Just the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page129" name="page129"></a>[129]</span>
+
+ same, little Colmac is his kid. Couldn't you see it sticking out all
+over him? He's the spit'n' image of his dad."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I see it now you've pointed it out. I was trying to think who he
+reminded me of. Of course it was Macdonald."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mac met up with Meteetse when he first scouted this country for coal
+five years ago. So far's I know he was square enough with the girl. She
+never claimed he made any promises or anything like that. He sends a
+check down once a quarter to the trader here for her and the kid."
+</p>
+<p>
+But young Elliot was not thinking about Meteetse. His mind's eye saw
+another picture&mdash;the girl at Kusiak, listening spellbound to the tales
+of a man whose actions translated romance into life for her, a girl
+swept from the quiet backwaters of an Irish village to this land of
+the midnight sun with its amazing contrasts.
+</p>
+<p>
+And all the way up on the boat she continued to fill his mind. The
+slowness of the steamer fretted him. He paced up and down the deck for
+hours at a time worried and anxious. Sometimes the jealousy in his heart
+flamed up like a prairie fire when it comes to a brush heap. The outrage
+of it set him blazing with indignation. Diane ought to be whipped, he
+told himself, for her part in the deception. It was no less than a
+conspiracy. What could an innocent young girl
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page130" name="page130"></a>[130]</span>
+
+ like Sheba know of such a man as Colby Macdonald? Her imagination
+conceived, no doubt, an idealized vision of him. But the real man was
+clear outside her ken.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon set his jaw grimly. He would have it out with Diane. He would let
+her see she was not going to have it all her own way. By God, he would
+put a spoke in her wheel.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sometimes, when the cool, evening breezes blew on his bare, fevered
+head, he laughed at himself for an idiot. How did he know that Macdonald
+wanted Sheba O'Neill. All the evidence he had was that he had once seen
+the man watch her while she sang a sentimental song. Whereas it was
+common talk that he would probably marry Mrs. Mallory, that for months
+he had been her almost daily companion. If the older woman had lost
+the sweet, supple slimness of her first youth, she had won in exchange
+a sophisticated grace, a seductive allure that made her the envy of
+all the women with whom she associated. She held at command a warm,
+languorous charm which had stirred banked fires in the hearts of many
+men. Why should not Macdonald woo her? Gordon himself admitted her
+attractiveness.
+</p>
+<p>
+And why should he take it for granted that Sheba was ready to drop into
+the arms of the big Alaskan whenever he said the word? At the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page131" name="page131"></a>[131]</span>
+
+ least he was twenty years older than she. Surely she might admire him
+without falling in love with the man. Was there not something almost
+insulting in the supposition that Macdonald had only to speak to her in
+order to win?
+</p>
+<p>
+But in spite of reason he was on fire to come to his journey's end.
+No sooner had he reached his hotel than he called up Mrs. Paget. Quite
+clearly she understood that he wanted an invitation to dinner. Yet she
+hesitated.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My 'phone can't be working well," Gordon told her gayly. "You must have
+asked me to dinner, but I didn't just hear it. Never mind. I'll be
+there. Seven o'clock, did you say?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Diane laughed. "You're just as much a boy as you were ten years ago,
+Gord. All right. Come along. But you're to leave at ten. Do you
+understand?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, I can't hear that. My 'phone has gone bad again. And if I had
+heard, I shouldn't think of doing anything so ridiculous as leaving at
+that hour. It would be an insult to your hospitality. I know when I'm
+well off."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then I'll have to withdraw my invitation. Perhaps some other day&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll leave at ten," promised Elliot meekly.
+</p>
+<p>
+He could almost hear the smile in her voice as she answered. "Very well.
+Seven sharp. I'll explain about the curfew limit sometime."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page132" name="page132"></a>[132]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald was with Miss O'Neill in the living-room when Gordon arrived
+at the Paget home.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba came forward to greet the new guest. The welcome in her eyes was
+very genuine.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You and Mr. Macdonald know each other, of course," she said after her
+handshake.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Scotchman nodded his lean, grizzled head, looking straight into the
+eyes of the field agent. There was always a certain deliberation about
+his manner, but it was the slowness of strength and not of weakness.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes, I know Mr. Elliot&mdash;now. I'm not so sure that he knows me&mdash;yet."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm beginning to know you rather well, Mr. Macdonald," answered Gordon
+quietly, but with a very steady look.
+</p>
+<p>
+If the Alaskan wanted to declare war he was ready for it. The field
+agent knew that Selfridge had sent reports detailing what had happened
+at Kamatlah. Up to date Macdonald had offered him the velvet glove. He
+wondered if the time had come when the fist of steel was to be doubled.
+</p>
+<p>
+Paget was frankly pleased to see Gordon again. He was a simple, honest
+man who moved always in a straight line. He had liked Elliot as a boy
+and he still liked him. So did Diane, for that matter, but she was a
+little on her guard against him. She had certain plans under way that
+she
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page133" name="page133"></a>[133]</span>
+
+ intended to put through. She was not going to let even Gordon Elliot
+frustrate them.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did you have a successful trip, Mr. Elliot?" asked Sheba innocently.
+</p>
+<p>
+Paget grinned behind his hand. The girl's question was like a match
+to powder, and every one in the room knew it but she. The engineer's
+interests and his convictions were on the side of Macdonald, but
+he recognized that Elliot had been sent in to gather facts for the
+Government and not to give advice to it. If he played fair, he could
+only tell the truth as he saw it.
+</p>
+<p>
+The eyes of Diane held a spark of hostility as she leaned forward. The
+word had already been passed among the faithful that this young man was
+not taking the right point of view.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did you, Gordon?" echoed his hostess.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I think so," he answered quietly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I hear you put up with old Gideon Holt. Is he as cracked as he used to
+be?" asked Macdonald.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Was he cracked when you used to know him on Frenchman Creek?" countered
+the young man.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald shot a quick, slant look at him. The old man had been talking,
+had he?
+</p>
+<p>
+"He was cracked and broke too," laughed the mine-owner hardily. "Cracked
+when he came, broke when he left."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page134" name="page134"></a>[134]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes, that was one of the stories he told me." Gordon turned to Sheba.
+"You should meet the old man, Miss O'Neill. He knew your father at
+Dawson and on Bonanza."
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl was all eagerness. "I'd like to. Does he ever come to Kusiak?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nonsense!" cut in Diane sharply. She flashed at Gordon a look of
+annoyance. "He's nothing but a daft old idiot, my dear."
+</p>
+<p>
+The dinner had started wrong, and though Paget steered the conversation
+to safer ground, it did not go very well. At least three of those
+present were a little on edge. Even Sheba, who had missed entirely the
+point of the veiled thrusts, knew that Elliot was not in harmony with
+either Diane or Macdonald.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon was ashamed of himself. He could not quite have told what were
+the impulses that had moved him to carry the war into the camp of the
+enemy. Perhaps, more than anything else, it had been a certain look of
+quiet assurance in the eyes of his rival when he looked at Sheba.
+</p>
+<p>
+He rose promptly at ten.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Must you go so soon?" Diane asked. She was smiling at him with bland
+mockery.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I really must," answered Elliot.
+</p>
+<p>
+His hostess followed him into the hall. She watched him get into his
+coat before saying what was on her mind.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page135" name="page135"></a>[135]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"What did you mean by telling Sheba that old Holt knew her father?
+What is he to tell her if they meet&mdash;that her father died of pneumonia
+brought on by drink? Is that what you want?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon was honestly contrite. "I didn't think of that."
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, you were too busy thinking of something mean to say to Mr.
+Macdonald."
+</p>
+<p>
+He agreed, yet could not forbear one dig more. "I suppose I wanted Holt
+to tell her that Macdonald robbed her father and indirectly was the
+cause of his death."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Absurd!" exploded Diane. "You're so simple that you accept as true the
+gossip of every crack-brained idiot&mdash;when it suits your purpose."
+</p>
+<p>
+He smiled, boyishly, engagingly, as he held out his hand. "Don't let's
+quarrel, Di. I admit I forgot myself."
+</p>
+<p>
+"All right. We won't. But don't believe all the catty talk you hear,
+Gordon."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll try to believe only the truth." He smiled, a little ruefully. "And
+it isn't necessary for you to explain why the curfew law applies to me
+and not to Macdonald."
+</p>
+<p>
+She was on her dignity at once. "You're quite right. It isn't necessary.
+But I'm going to tell you anyhow. Mr. Macdonald is going away
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page136" name="page136"></a>[136]</span>
+
+ to-morrow for two or three days and he has some business he wants to
+talk over with Sheba. He had made an appointment with her, and I didn't
+think it fair to let your coming interfere with it."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon took this facer with his smile still working.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've got a little business I want to talk over with <i>you</i>, Di."
+</p>
+<p>
+She had always been a young woman of rather a hard finish. Now she met
+him fairly, eye to eye. "Any time you like, Gordon."
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot carried away with him one very definite impression. Diane
+intended Sheba to marry Macdonald if she could bring it about. She had
+as good as served notice on him that the girl was spoken for.
+</p>
+<p>
+The young man set his square jaw. Diane was used to having her own way.
+So was Macdonald. Well, the Elliots had a will of their own too.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page137" name="page137"></a>[137]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0012" id="h2HCH0012"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ SHEBA SAYS "PERHAPS"
+</h3>
+<p>
+Obeying the orders of the general in command, Peter took himself to
+his den with the excuse that he had blue-prints to work over. Presently
+Diane said she thought she heard one of the children crying and left
+to investigate.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Scotchman strode to the fireplace and stood looking down into the
+glowing coals. He seemed in no hurry to break the silence and Sheba
+glanced at his strong, brooding face a little apprehensively. Her
+excitement showed in the color that was beating into her cheeks. She
+knew of only one subject that would call for so formal a private talk
+between her and Macdonald, and any discussion of this she would very
+much have liked to postpone.
+</p>
+<p>
+He turned from the fire to Sheba. It was characteristic of him that he
+plunged straight at what he wanted to say.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've asked to see you alone, Miss O'Neill, because I want to make a
+confession and restitution&mdash;to begin with," he told her abruptly.
+</p>
+<p>
+She had a sense of suddenly stilled pulses. "That sounds very serious."
+The young woman smiled faintly.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page138" name="page138"></a>[138]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+His face of chiseled granite masked all emotion. It kept under lock and
+key the insurgent impulses that moved him when he looked into the sloe
+eyes charged with reserve. Back of them, he felt, was the mystery of
+purity, of maidenhood. He longed to know her better, to find out and
+to appropriate for himself the woman that lay behind the fine veil of
+flesh. She seemed to him delicate as a flame and as vivid. There would
+come a day when her innocent, passional nature would respond to the love
+of a man as a waiting harp does to skillful fingers.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My story goes away back to the Klondike days. I told you that I knew
+your father on Frenchman Creek, but I didn't say much about knowing him
+on Bonanza."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mr. Strong has told me something about the days on Bonanza, and I knew
+you would tell me more some day&mdash;when you wanted to speak about it." She
+was seated in a low chair and the white throat lifted toward him was
+round as that of a bird.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Your father was among the first of those who stampeded to Bonanza. He
+and Strong took up a claim together. I bought out the interest of your
+father."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You told me that."
+</p>
+<p>
+His masterful eyes fastened to hers. "I didn't tell you that I took
+advantage of him. He was&mdash;not
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page139" name="page139"></a>[139]</span>
+
+ well. I used that against him in the bargaining. He wanted ready money,
+and I tempted him."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do you mean that you&mdash;wronged him?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes. I cheated him." He was resolved to gloss over nothing, to offer no
+excuses. "I didn't know there was gold on his claim, but I had what we
+call a hunch. I took his claim without giving value received."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was her turn now to look into the fire and think. From the letters
+of her father, from talks with old-timers she knew how in the stampedes
+every man's hand had been for himself, how keen-edged had been the
+passion for gold, a veritable lust that corroded the souls of men.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But&mdash;I don't understand." Her brave, steady eyes looked directly into
+those of Macdonald. "If he felt you had&mdash;done him a wrong&mdash;why did he
+come to you when he was ill?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"He was coming to demand justice of me. On the way he suffered exposure
+and caught pneumonia. The word reached us, and Strong and I brought him
+to our cabin."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You faced a blizzard to bring him in. Mr. Strong told me how you risked
+your life by carrying him through the storm&mdash;how you wouldn't give up
+and leave him, though you were weak and staggering yourself. He says it
+was a miracle you ever got through."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page140" name="page140"></a>[140]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The big mine-owner brushed this aside as of no importance. "We don't
+leave sick men to die in a blizzard up North. But that's not the point."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I think it has a bearing on the matter&mdash;that you saved him from the
+blizzard&mdash;and took him in&mdash;and nursed him like a brother till he died."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm not heartless," said Macdonald impatiently. "Of course I did that.
+I had to do it. I couldn't do less."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Or more," she suggested. "You may have made a hard bargain with him,
+but you wiped that out later."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's just what I didn't do. Don't think my conscience is troubling
+me. I'm not such a mush-brained fool. If it had not been for you I would
+never have thought of it again. But you are his daughter. What I cheated
+him out of belongs to you&mdash;and you are my friend."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't use that word about what you did, please. He wasn't a child. If
+you got the best of him in a bargain, I don't think father would think
+of it that way."
+</p>
+<p>
+The difficulty was that he could not tell her the truth about her
+father's weakness for drink and how he had played upon it. He bridged
+all explanations and passed to the thing he meant to do in reparation.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page141" name="page141"></a>[141]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"The money I cleaned up from that claim belongs to you, Miss O'Neill.
+You will oblige me by taking it."
+</p>
+<p>
+From his pocket he took a folded paper and handed it to her. Sheba
+opened it doubtfully. The paper contained a typewritten statement and
+to it was attached a check by means of a clip. The check was made out
+to her and signed by Colby Macdonald. The amount it called for was one
+hundred and eighty-three thousand four hundred and thirty-one dollars.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, I couldn't take this, Mr. Macdonald&mdash;I couldn't. It doesn't belong
+to me," she cried.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It belongs to you&mdash;and you're going to take it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I wouldn't know what to do with so much."
+</p>
+<p>
+"The bank will take care of it for you until you decide. So that's
+settled." He passed definitely from the subject. "There's something else
+I want to say to you, Miss O'Neill."
+</p>
+<p>
+Some change in his voice warned her. The girl slanted a quick, shy
+glance at him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I want to know if you'll marry me, Miss O'Neill," he shot at her
+abruptly. Then, without giving her time to answer, he pushed on:
+"I'm older than you&mdash;by twenty-five years. Always I've lived on the
+frontiers. I've had to take the world by the throat and shake from it
+what I wanted. So I've grown hard and willful.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page142" name="page142"></a>[142]</span>
+
+ All the sweet, fine things of life I've missed. But with you beside me
+I'm not too old to find them yet&mdash;if you'll show me the way, Sheba."
+</p>
+<p>
+A wave of color swept into her face, but her eyes never faltered from
+his. "I'm not quite sure," she said in a low voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You mean&mdash;whether you love me?"
+</p>
+<p>
+She nodded. "I&mdash;admire you more than any man I ever met. You are a great
+man, strong and powerful,&mdash;and I am so insignificant beside you. I&mdash;am
+drawn to you&mdash;so much. But&mdash;I am not sure."
+</p>
+<p>
+Afterward, when she thought of it, Sheba wondered at the direct ease of
+his proposal. In the romances she had read, men were shy and embarrassed
+and fearful of the issue. But Colby Macdonald had known what he wanted
+to say and had said it as coolly and as readily as if it had been a
+business detail. She was the one that had blushed and stammered and
+found a difficulty in expressing herself.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm going away for two days. Perhaps when I come back you will know,
+Sheba. Take your time. Marriage is serious business. I want you to
+remember that my life has been very different from yours. You'll hear
+all sorts of things about me. Some of them are true. There is this
+difference between a man and a good woman. He fights and falls and
+fights again
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page143" name="page143"></a>[143]</span>
+
+ and wins. But a good woman is finer. She has never known the failure
+that drags one through slime and mud. Her goodness is born in her; she
+doesn't have to fight for it."
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl smiled a little tremulously. "Doesn't she? We're not all angel,
+you know."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I hope you're not. There will need to be a lot of the human in you to
+make allowances for Colby Macdonald," he replied with an answering
+smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+When he said good-bye it was with a warm, strong handshake.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll be back in two days. Perhaps you'll have good news for me then,"
+he suggested.
+</p>
+<p>
+The dark, silken lashes of her eyes lifted shyly to meet his.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Perhaps," she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page144" name="page144"></a>[144]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0013" id="h2HCH0013"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ DIANE AND GORDON DIFFER
+</h3>
+<p>
+During the absence of Macdonald the field agent saw less of Sheba than
+he had expected, and when he did see her she had an abstracted manner he
+did not quite understand. She kept to her own room a good deal, except
+when she took long walks into the hills back of the town. Diane had a
+shrewd idea that the Alaskan had put his fortune to the test, and she
+not only let her cousin alone herself, but fended Gordon from her
+adroitly.
+</p>
+<p>
+The third day after the dinner Elliot dropped around to the Pagets with
+intent to get Sheba into a set of tennis. Diane sat on the porch darning
+socks.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sheba is out walking with Mr. Macdonald," she explained in answer to
+a question as to the whereabouts of her guest.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, he's back, is he?" remarked Gordon moodily.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Paget was quite cheerful on that subject. "He came back this
+morning. Sheba has gone up with him to see the Lucky Strike."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're going to marry her to that man if you can, aren't you?" he
+charged.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page145" name="page145"></a>[145]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"If I can, Gordon." She slipped a darning-ball into one of little
+Peter's stockings and placidly trimmed the edges of the hole.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's what I call a conspiracy."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Is it?" Diane smiled.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon understood her smile to mean that he was jealous.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Maybe I am. That's not the point," he answered, just as if she had made
+her accusation in words.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Suppose you tell me what the point is," she suggested, both amused and
+annoyed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He isn't good enough for her. You know that perfectly well."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good enough!" She shrugged her shoulders. "What man <i>is</i> good
+enough for a nice girl if you come to that? There are other things
+beside sugary goodness. Any man who is strong can make himself good
+enough for the woman he loves."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Generally speaking, yes. But Colby Macdonald is different."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Thank Heaven he is," she retorted impatiently. Then added after a
+moment: "He isn't a Sunday-School superintendent if that's what you
+mean."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That isn't what I mean at all. But there's such a thing as a difference
+between right and wrong, isn't there?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, yes. For instance, Mr. Macdonald is
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page146" name="page146"></a>[146]</span>
+
+ right about the need of developing Alaska and the way to do it, and you
+are wrong."
+</p>
+<p>
+He could not help smiling a little at the adroit way she tried to
+sidetrack him, even though he was angry at her. But he had no intention
+of letting her go without freeing his mind.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm talking about essential right and wrong. Miss O'Neill is idealizing
+Macdonald. I don't suppose you've told her, for instance, that he made
+his first money in the North running a dance hall."
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, I haven't told her any such thing, because it isn't true," she
+replied scornfully. "He owned an opera house and brought in a company of
+players. I dare say they danced. That's very different, as you'd know if
+you didn't have astigmatism of the mind."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not the way the story was told me. But let that pass. Does she know
+that Macdonald beat her father out of one of the best claims on Bonanza
+and was indirectly responsible for his death?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"What's the use of talking nonsense, Gordon. You know you can't prove
+that," his friend told him sharply.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I think I can&mdash;if it is necessary."
+</p>
+<p>
+Diane looked across at him with an impudent little tilt of the chin. "I
+don't think I like you as well as I used to."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page147" name="page147"></a>[147]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sorry, because I'd like you just as well, Diane, if you would stop
+trying to manage your cousin into a marriage that will spoil her life,"
+he answered gravely.
+</p>
+<p>
+"How dare you say that! How dare you, Gordon Elliot!" she flung back,
+furious at him. "I won't have you here talking that way to me. It's an
+insult."
+</p>
+<p>
+The fearless, level eyes of her friend looked straight at her. "I say it
+because the happiness of Miss O'Neill is of very great importance to me."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do you mean&mdash;?" Wide-eyed, she looked her question straight at him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's just what I mean, Diane."
+</p>
+<p>
+She darned for a minute in silence. It had occurred to Diane before that
+perhaps Gordon might be in love with Sheba, but she had put the thought
+from her because she did not want to believe it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's different, Gordon. It explains&mdash;and in a way excuses&mdash;your
+coming here and trying to bully me." She stopped her work to flash a
+question at him. "Don't you think that maybe it's only a fancy of yours?
+I remember you used&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+He shook his head. "No chance, Diane. I'm hard hit. She's the only girl
+I ever met that suited me. Everything she does is right. Every move she
+makes is wonderful."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page148" name="page148"></a>[148]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The eyes with which she looked at him were softer, as those of women are
+wont to be for the true romance.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You poor boy," she murmured, and let her hand for a moment rest on his.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Meaning that I lose?" he asked quickly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I think you do. I'm not sure."
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot leaned forward impulsively. "Be a good sport, Diane. Let me have
+my chance too. Why do you make it easy for Macdonald and hard for me?
+Isn't it because the glamour of his millions blinds you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"He's a big, splendid man, but I don't like him any the less because he
+has the power to make life easy and comfortable for Sheba," she defended
+sturdily.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yet you turned down Arthur West, the best catch in your set, to marry
+Peter, who was the worst," he reminded her. "Have you ever been sorry
+for it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's different. Peter and I fit. It was one case out of a million."
+She gave him her old, friendly smile. "But I don't want to be hard on
+you, Gord. I'll be neutral. Come and see Sheba as often as she'll let
+you."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon beamed as he shook hands with her. "That sounds like the Di Paget
+I used to know."
+</p>
+<p>
+She recurred to the previous question. "Sheba knows more about Mr.
+Macdonald than you
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page149" name="page149"></a>[149]</span>
+
+ think. And about how he got her father's claim, for instance,&mdash;she has
+heard all that."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You told her?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No. Colby Macdonald told her. He said he practically robbed her father,
+and he gave her a check for nearly two hundred thousand to cover the
+clean-up from the claim and interest."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Bully for him." On the heel of this he flung a question at her. "Did
+Macdonald ask her to marry him the night of the dinner?"
+</p>
+<p>
+A flash of whimsical amusement lit her dainty face. "You'd better ask
+him that. Here he comes now."
+</p>
+<p>
+They were coming down the walk together, Macdonald and Sheba. The young
+woman was absorbed in his talk, and she did not know that her cousin and
+Elliot were on the porch until she was close upon them. But at sight of
+the young man her eyes became warm and kind.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm sorry I was out yesterday when you called," she told him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And you were out again to-day. My luck isn't very good, is it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+He laughed pleasantly, but his heart was bitter. He believed Macdonald
+had won. Some hint of proprietorship in his manner, together with her
+slight confusion when she saw them on the porch, had weighted his heart
+with lead.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We've had such a good walk." Sheba went
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page150" name="page150"></a>[150]</span>
+
+ on quickly. "I wish you could have heard Mr. Macdonald telling me how he
+once had a chance to save a small Esquimaux tribe during a hard winter.
+He carried food five hundred miles to them. It was a thrilling
+experience."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mr. Macdonald has had a lot of very interesting experiences. You must
+get him to tell you about all of them," answered Gordon quietly.
+</p>
+<p>
+The eyes of the two men met. The steel-gray ones of the older man
+answered the challenge of his rival with a long, steady look. There was
+in it something of triumph, something of scornful insolence. If this
+young fellow wanted war, he did not need to wait long for it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Time enough for that, man. Miss O'Neill and I have the whole Arctic
+winter before us for stories."
+</p>
+<p>
+The muscles in the lean jaws of Gordon Elliot stood out like steel
+ropes. He turned to Sheba. "Am I to congratulate Mr. Macdonald?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The color in her cheeks grew warmer, but her shy glance met his fairly.
+"I think it is I that am to be congratulated, Mr. Elliot."
+</p>
+<p>
+Diane took her cousin in her arms. "My dear, I wish you all the
+happiness in the world," she said softly.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Irish girl fled into the house as soon as she could, but not before
+making an announcement.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We're to be married soon, very quietly. If
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page151" name="page151"></a>[151]</span>
+
+ you are still at Kusiak we want you to be one of the few friends
+present, Mr. Elliot."
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald backed her invitation with a cool, cynical smile. "Miss
+O'Neill speaks for us both, of course, Elliot."
+</p>
+<p>
+The defeated man bowed. "Thanks very much. The chances are that I'll be
+through my business here before then."
+</p>
+<p>
+As soon as his fianc&eacute;e had gone into the house, the Scotchman left.
+Gordon sat down in a porch chair and stared straight in front of him.
+The suddenness of the news had brought his world tumbling about his
+ears. He felt that such a marriage would be an outrage against Sheba's
+innocence. But he was not yet far enough away from the blow to ask
+himself how much the personal hurt influenced his opinion.
+</p>
+<p>
+Though she was sorry for him, Diane did not think it best to say so yet.
+</p>
+<p>
+Presently he spoke thickly. "I suppose you have heard that he was a
+squawman."
+</p>
+<p>
+His friend joined battle promptly with him. "That's ridiculous. Don't be
+absurd, Gordon."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's the truth. I've seen the woman. She was pointed out to me."
+</p>
+<p>
+"By old Gideon Holt, likely," she flashed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"One could get evidence and show it to Miss O'Neill," he said aloud, to
+himself rather than to her.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page152" name="page152"></a>[152]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Diane put her point of view before him with heated candor. "<i>You</i>
+couldn't. Nobody but a cad would rake up old scandals about the man who
+has beaten him fairly for a woman's love."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You beg the question. <i>Has</i> he won fairly?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Of course he has. Be a good sport, Gordon. Don't kick on the umpire's
+decision. Play the game."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's all very well. But what about her? Am I to sit quiet while she
+is sacrificed to a code of honor that seems to me rooted in dishonor?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"She is not being sacrificed. I'm her cousin. I'm very fond of her. And
+I'd trust her with Colby Macdonald."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Play fair, Diane. Tell her the truth about this Indian woman and let
+your cousin decide for herself. You can't do less, can you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Paget was distinctly annoyed. "You ought to be ashamed of yourself,
+Gordon Elliot. You take all the gossip of a crack-brained old idiot for
+gospel truth just because you want to believe the worst about Mr.
+Macdonald. Don't you know that people will say anything about a man who
+succeeds? Colby Macdonald is too big and too aggressive not to have made
+hundreds of enemies. His life has been threatened dozens of times. But
+he pays no attention to
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page153" name="page153"></a>[153]</span>
+
+ it&mdash;goes right on building-up this country. Yet you'd think he had a
+cloven hoof to hear some people talk. I've no patience with them."
+</p>
+<p>
+"The woman's name is Meteetse," Gordon said in an even voice, just as
+if he were answering a question. "She is young and good-looking for an
+Indian. Her boy is four or five years old. Colmac, they call him, and
+he looks just like Macdonald."
+</p>
+<p>
+"People are always tracing resemblances. There's nothing to that. But
+suppose his life <i>was</i> irregular&mdash;years ago. This isn't Boston. It
+used to be the fringe of civilization. Men did as they pleased in the
+early days. We don't ask a man up here what he has been, but what he is.
+You ought to know that by this time."
+</p>
+<p>
+"This wasn't in the early days. It was five years ago, when Macdonald
+was examining the Kamatlah coal-field. I'm told he sends a check down
+the river once a month for the woman."
+</p>
+<p>
+"All the more credit to him if he does." Diane rose and looked stormily
+down at her friend. "You're about as broad as a clam, Gordon. Can't you
+see that even if it's true, all that is done with? It is a part of his
+past&mdash;and it's finished&mdash;trodden under foot. It hasn't a thing to do
+with Sheba."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I don't agree with you. A man can't cut loose entirely from his past.
+It is a part of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page154" name="page154"></a>[154]</span>
+
+ him&mdash;and Macdonald's past isn't good enough for Sheba O'Neill."
+</p>
+<p>
+Diane tapped her little foot impatiently on the floor. "Do you know many
+men whose pasts are good enough for their wives? Are you a plaster-cast
+saint yourself? You know perfectly well that men trample down their
+pasts and begin again when they are married. Colby Macdonald is good
+enough for any woman alive if he loves her enough."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You don't know him."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I know him far better than you do. He is the biggest man I know, and
+now that he is in love with a good woman he'll rise to his chance."
+</p>
+<p>
+"She ought to be told the truth about Meteetse and her boy," he insisted
+doggedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm not going to disturb her with a lot of old maids' gossip. That's
+flat."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But if I prove to you that it isn't gossip."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Paget lost her temper completely. "Does the Government pay you to
+mind other people's business, Gordon?" she snapped.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I wouldn't be working for the Government then, but for Sheba O'Neill."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And for Gordon Elliot. You'd be doing underhand work for him too. Don't
+forget that. You can't do it. You're not that kind of a man. It isn't in
+you to go muckraking in the past of the man Sheba is going to marry."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page155" name="page155"></a>[155]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot rose and looked across at the blue-ribbed mountains. His square
+jaw was set when he turned it back toward Diane.
+</p>
+<p>
+"She isn't going to marry him if I can help it," he said quietly.
+</p>
+<p>
+He walked out of the gate and down the walk toward his hotel.
+</p>
+<p>
+A message was waiting for him there from his chief in Seattle. It called
+him down the river on business.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page156" name="page156"></a>[156]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0014" id="h2HCH0014"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ GENEVIEVE MALLORY TAKES A HAND
+</h3>
+<p>
+Inside of an hour the news of the engagement of Macdonald was all over
+Kusiak. It was through a telephone receiver that the gossip was buzzed
+to Mrs. Mallory by a friend who owed her a little stab. The voice of
+Genevieve Mallory registered faint amusement, but as soon as she had
+hung up, her face fell into haggard lines. She had staked a year of her
+waning youth on winning the big mining man of Kusiak, together with all
+the money that she had been able to scrape up for a campaign outfit.
+Moreover, she liked him.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was not in the picture that she should fall desperately in love with
+any man. A woman of the world, she was sheathed in the plate armor of
+selfishness. But she was as near to loving Macdonald as was possible for
+her. She had a great deal of admiration for his iron strength, for the
+grit of the man. No woman could twist him around her finger, yet it was
+possible to lead him a long way in the direction one wanted.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Mallory sat down in the hall beside the telephone, her fingers
+laced about one crossed knee. She knew that if Sheba O'Neill had not
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page157" name="page157"></a>[157]</span>
+
+ come on the scene, Macdonald would have asked her to marry him. He had
+been moving slowly toward her for months. They understood each other and
+were at ease together. Between them was a strong physical affinity. Both
+were good-tempered and were wise enough to expect human imperfection.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then Diane Paget had brought in this slim, young cousin of hers and
+Colby Macdonald had been fascinated by the mystery of her innocent
+youth. Mrs. Mallory was like steel beneath the soft and indolent
+surface. Swiftly she mapped her plan of attack. The Alaskan could not be
+moved, but it might be possible to startle the girl into breaking the
+engagement. Genevieve Mallory would have used the weapon at hand without
+scruple in any case, but she justified herself on the ground that such a
+marriage could result only in unhappiness.
+</p>
+<p>
+But before she made any move Mrs. Mallory intended to be sure of her
+facts. It was like her to go to headquarters for information. She got
+Macdonald on the wire.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've just heard something nice about you. Do tell me it's true," she
+said, her voice warm with sympathy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald laughed with an almost boyish embarrassment. "It's true, I
+reckon."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm so glad. She's a lovely girl. The sweetest
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page158" name="page158"></a>[158]</span>
+
+ thing that ever lived. I'm sure you'll be happy. I always did think you
+would make a perfect husband. Of course, I'm simply green with envy of
+her."
+</p>
+<p>
+Her little ripple of laughter was gay and care-free. The man at the
+other end of the line never had liked her better. Since he was not a
+fool he had guessed pretty closely how things stood with her. She was
+a game little sport, he told himself approvingly. It appealed to him
+immensely that she could take such a facer and come up smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+There were no signs of worry wrinkles on her face when the maid admitted
+a caller half an hour later. Oliver Dustin was the name on the card. He
+was a remittance man, a tame little parlor pet whose vocation was to
+fetch and carry for pretty women, and by some odd trick of fate he had
+been sifted into the Northland. Mrs. Mallory had tolerated him rather
+scornfully, but to-day she smiled upon him.
+</p>
+<p>
+Propped up by pillows, she reclined luxuriously on a lounge. A thin
+spiral of smoke rose like incense to the ceiling from her lips. The
+slow, regular rise and fall of her breathing beneath the filmy lace
+of her gown accented the perfect fullness of bust and throat.
+</p>
+<p>
+Dustin helped himself to a cigarette and made himself comfortable.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page159" name="page159"></a>[159]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+She set herself to win him. He was immensely flattered at her awakened
+interest. When she called him by his first name, he wagged all over like
+a pleased puppy.
+</p>
+<p>
+It came to him after a time that she was considering him for a
+confidential mission. He assured her eagerly that there was no trouble
+too great for him to take if he could be of any service to her. She
+hesitated and doubted and at last as a special favor to him accepted his
+offer. Their heads were close in whispered talk for a few minutes, at
+the end of which Dustin left the room with his chin in the air. He was
+a knight errant in the employ of the most attractive woman north of
+fifty-three.
+</p>
+<p>
+When Elliot took the down-river boat he found Oliver Dustin was a fellow
+passenger. The little man smoked an occasional cigar with the land agent
+and aired his views on politics and affairs social. He left the boat at
+the big bend. Without giving him much of his thought Gordon was a little
+surprised that the voluble remittance man had not told him where he was
+going.
+</p>
+<p>
+Not till a week later did Elliot return up the river. He was asleep at
+the time the Sarah passed the big bend, but next morning he discovered
+that Selfridge and Dustin had come aboard during the night. In the
+afternoon he came upon a real surprise when he found Meteetse and her
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page160" name="page160"></a>[160]</span>
+
+ little boy Colmac seated upon a box on the lower deck where freight for
+local points was stored.
+</p>
+<p>
+His guess was that they were local passengers, but wharf after wharf
+slipped behind them and the two still remained on board. They appeared
+to know nobody else on the Sarah, though once Gordon met Dustin just as
+he was hurrying away from the Indian woman. The little remittance man
+took the pains to explain to Elliot later that he was trying to find out
+whether the Indians knew any English.
+</p>
+<p>
+Meteetse transferred with the other Kusiak passengers at the river
+junction. The field agent was not the only one on board who wondered
+where she was going. Selfridge was consumed with curiosity, and when
+she and the boy got off at Kusiak, he could restrain himself no longer.
+Gordon saw Wally talking with her. Meteetse showed him an envelope which
+evidently had an address written upon it, for the little man pointed out
+to her the direction in which she must go.
+</p>
+<p>
+Since leaving Kusiak nearly two weeks before, no word had reached Gordon
+of Sheba. As soon as he had finished dinner at the hotel, he walked out
+to the Paget house and sent in his card.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba came into the hall to meet him from the living-room where she had
+been sitting
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page161" name="page161"></a>[161]</span>
+
+ with the man she expected to marry next week. She gave a little murmur
+of pleasure at sight of him and held out both hands.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I was afraid you weren't going to get back in time. I'm so glad," she
+told him warmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+He managed to achieve a smile. "When is the great day?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Next Thursday. Of course, we're as busy as can be, but Diane says&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+A ring at the door interrupted her. Sheba stepped forward and let in an
+Indian woman with a little boy clinging to her hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You Miss O'Neill?" she asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes."
+</p>
+<p>
+From the folds of her shawl she drew a letter. The girl glanced at the
+address, then opened and read what was written. She looked up, puzzled,
+first at the comely, flatfooted Indian woman and afterward at the
+handsome little brown-faced papoose. She turned to Gordon.
+</p>
+<p>
+"This letter says I am to ask this woman who is the father of her boy.
+What does it mean?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon knew instantly what it meant, though he could not guess who had
+dealt the blow. He hesitated for an answer, and in his embarrassment she
+felt that which began to ring a bell of warning in her heart.
+</p>
+<p>
+The impulse to spare her pain was stronger in
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page162" name="page162"></a>[162]</span>
+
+ him than the desire that she should know the truth.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Send her away," he urged. "Don't ask any questions. She has been sent
+to hurt you."
+</p>
+<p>
+A fawnlike fear flashed into the startled eyes. "To hurt me?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I am afraid so."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But&mdash;why? I have done nobody any harm." She seemed to hold even her
+breathing in suspense. Only a pulse beat wildly in her white throat like
+the heart of an imprisoned thrush.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Perhaps some of Macdonald's enemies," he suggested.
+</p>
+<p>
+And at that there came a star-flash into the soft eyes and a lifted tilt
+to the chin cut fine as a cameo. She turned proudly to the Indian woman.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What is it that you have to tell me about this boy's father?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Meteetse began to speak. At the first mention of Macdonald's name
+Sheba's eyes dilated. Her smile, her sweet, glad pleasure at Gordon's
+arrival, were already gone like the flame of a blown candle. Clearly her
+heart was a-flutter, in fear of she knew not what. When the Indian woman
+told how she had first crossed the path of Macdonald, the color flamed
+into the cheeks of the Irish girl, but as the story progressed, the
+blood ebbed even from her lips.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page163" name="page163"></a>[163]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+With a swift movement of her fingers she flashed on the hall light. Her
+gaze searched the brown, shiny face of the little chap. She read there
+an affidavit of the truth of his mother's tale. The boy had his father's
+trick of squinting a slant look at anything he found interesting. It was
+impossible to see him and not recognize Colby Macdonald reincarnated.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What is your name?" asked Sheba suddenly.
+</p>
+<p>
+The youngster hung back shyly among the folds of the Indian woman's
+skirt. "Colmac," he said at last softly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Come!" Sheba flung open the door of the living-room and ushered them
+in.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald, pacing restlessly up and down the room during her absence,
+pulled up in his stride. He stood frowning at the native woman, then his
+eyes passed to Elliot and fastened upon him. The face of the Scotchman
+might have been chipped from granite. It was grim as that of a hanging
+judge.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon started to explain, then stopped with a shrug. What was the use?
+The man would never believe him in the world.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll remember this," the Alaskan promised his rival. There was a cold
+glitter in his eyes, a sudden flare of the devil that was
+blood-chilling.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's true, then," broke in Sheba. "You're a&mdash;a squawman. You belong to
+this woman."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page164" name="page164"></a>[164]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nothing of the kind," he cried roughly. "That's been ended for years."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ended?" Sheba drew Colmac forward by the wrist. "Do you deny that this
+is your boy?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The big Alaskan brushed this aside as of no moment. "I dare say he is.
+Anyhow I'm paying for his keep. What of it? That's all finished and done
+with."
+</p>
+<p>
+"How can it be done with when&mdash;when she's the mother of your child, your
+wife before God?" The live eyes attacked him from the dusk that framed
+the oval of her pale face. Standing there straight as an aspen, the
+beautiful bosom rising and falling quickly while the storm waves beat
+through her blood, Sheba O'Neill had never made more appeal to the
+strong, lawless man who desired her for his wife.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You don't understand." Macdonald's big fists were clenched so savagely
+that the knuckles stood out white from the brown tan of the flesh.
+"This is a man's country. It's new&mdash;close to nature. What he wants he
+takes&mdash;if he's strong enough. I'm elemental. I&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You wanted her&mdash;and you took her. Now you want me&mdash;and I suppose you'll
+take me too." Her scornful words had the sting of a whiplash.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've lived as all men live who have red blood in them. This woman is an
+incident. I've been
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page165" name="page165"></a>[165]</span>
+
+ aboveboard. She can't say I ever promised more than I've given. I've
+kept her and the boy. It's been no secret. If you had asked, I would
+have told you the whole story."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Does that excuse you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I don't need any excuse. I'm a man. That's excuse enough. You've been
+brought up among a lot of conventions and social lies. The one big fact
+you want to set your teeth into now is that I love you, that there isn't
+another woman on God's earth for me, and that there never will be again."
+</p>
+<p>
+Her eyes flashed battle. "The one big fact I'm facing is that you have
+insulted me&mdash;that you insult me again when you mention love with that
+woman and boy in the room. You belong to them&mdash;go to them&mdash;and leave
+me alone." She had been fighting for self-control, to curb her growing
+resentment, but now it flamed passionately into words. "I hate the sight
+of you. Why don't you go&mdash;all of you&mdash;and leave me in peace?"
+</p>
+<p>
+It was a cry of bruised pride and wounded love. Elliot touched the
+Indian woman on the shoulder. Meteetse turned stolidly and walked out
+of the room, still leading Colmac by the hand. The young man followed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald closed the door behind them, then strode frowning up and down
+the room. The
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page166" name="page166"></a>[166]</span>
+
+ fear was growing on him that for all his great driving power he could
+not shake this slim girl from the view to which she clung. If the
+situation had not been so serious, it would have struck him as
+ridiculous. His relation with Meteetse had been natural enough. He
+believed that he had acted very honorably to her. Many a man would have
+left her in the lurch to take care of the youngster by herself. But he
+had acknowledged his obligation. He was paying his debt scrupulously,
+and because of it the story had risen to confront him. He felt that it
+was an unjust blow of fate. Punishment was falling upon him, not for
+what he had done, but because he had scorned to make a secret of it.
+</p>
+<p>
+He knew that he must justify himself before Sheba or lose her. As she
+stood in the dusk so tall and rigid, he knew her heart was steel to him.
+Her finely chiseled face had the look of race. Never had the spell of
+her been more upon him. He crushed back a keen-edged desire to take her
+supple young body into his arms and kiss her till the scarlet ran into
+her cheeks like splashes of wine.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You haven't the proper slant on this, Sheba. Alaska is the last
+frontier. It's the dropping-off place. You're north of fifty-three."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Am I north of the Ten Commandments?" she demanded with the inexorable
+judgment of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page167" name="page167"></a>[167]</span>
+
+ youth. "Did you leave the moral code at home when you came in over the
+ice?"
+</p>
+<p>
+He smiled a little. "Morality is the average conduct of the average
+man at a given time and place. It is based on custom and expediency.
+The rules made for Drogheda won't fit Dawson or Nome. The laws made to
+protect young women in Ireland would be absurd if applied to half-breed
+squaws in Alaska. Meteetse does not hold herself disgraced but honored.
+She counts her boy far superior to the other youngsters of the village,
+and he is so considered by the tribe. I am told she lords it over her
+sisters."
+</p>
+<p>
+A faint flush of anger had crept into her cheeks. "Your view of morality
+puts us on a level with the animals. I will not discuss the subject, if
+you please."
+</p>
+<p>
+"We must discuss it. I must get you to see that Meteetse and what she
+stood for in my life have nothing to do with us. They belong to my past.
+She doesn't exist for either of us&mdash;isn't in any way a part of my
+present or future."
+</p>
+<p>
+"She exists for me," answered Sheba listlessly. She felt suddenly old
+and weary. "But I can't talk about it. Please go. I want to be alone."
+</p>
+<p>
+Again Macdonald paced restlessly down the room and back. He moved with a
+long, easy, tireless stride. The man was one among ten
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page168" name="page168"></a>[168]</span>
+
+ thousand, dominant, virile, every ounce of him strong as tested steel.
+But he felt as if all his energy were caged.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why don't you go?" the girl pleaded. "It's no use to stay."
+</p>
+<p>
+He stopped in front of her. "I'm going to marry you, Sheba. Don't think
+I'll let that meddler interfere with our happiness. You're mine."
+</p>
+<p>
+"No. Never!" she cried. "I'll take the boat and go home first."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You've promised to marry me. You're going to keep your word and be glad
+of it all your life."
+</p>
+<p>
+She shook her head. "No."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes." Macdonald had always shown remarkable restraint with her. He had
+kissed her seldom, and always with a kind of awe at her young purity.
+Now he caught her by the shoulders. His eyes, deep in their sockets,
+mirrored the passionate desire of his heart.
+</p>
+<p>
+The color flamed into her face. She looked hot to the touch, an active
+volcano ready to erupt. There was an odd feeling in her mind that this
+big man was a stranger to her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Take your hands from me," she ordered.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do you think I'm going to give you up now&mdash;now, after I've won
+you&mdash;because of a damfool scruple in your pretty head? You don't
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page169" name="page169"></a>[169]</span>
+
+ know me. It's too late. I love you&mdash;and I'm going to protect both of us
+from your prudishness."
+</p>
+<p>
+His arms closed on her and he crushed her to him, looking down hungrily
+into the dark, little face.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Let me go," she cried fiercely, struggling to free herself.
+</p>
+<p>
+For answer he kissed the red lips, the flaming cheeks, the angry eyes.
+Then, coming to his senses, he pushed her from him, turned, and strode
+heavily from the room.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page170" name="page170"></a>[170]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0015" id="h2HCH0015"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XV
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ GORDON BUYS A REVOLVER
+</h3>
+<p>
+Selfridge was not eager to meet his chief, but he knew he must report at
+once. He stopped at his house only long enough to get into fresh clothes
+and from there walked down to the office. Over the Paget telephone he
+had got into touch with Macdonald who told him to wait at headquarters
+until he came.
+</p>
+<p>
+It had been the intention of Macdonald to go direct from Sheba to his
+office, but the explosion brought about by Meteetse had sent him out
+into the hills for a long tramp. He was in a stress of furious emotion,
+and until he had worked off the edge of it by hard mushing, the cramped
+civilization of the town stifled him.
+</p>
+<p>
+Hours later he strode into the office of the company. He was
+dust-stained and splashed with mud. Fifteen miles of stiff heel-and-toe
+walking had been flung behind him.
+</p>
+<p>
+Wally lay asleep in a swivel chair, his fat body sagging and his head
+fallen sideways in such a way as to emphasize the plump folds of his
+double chin. His eyes opened. They took in his chief slowly. Then, in
+a small panic, he jumped to his feet.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page171" name="page171"></a>[171]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"Must 'a' been taking thirty winks," he explained. "Been up nights a
+good deal."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What doing?" demanded the Scotchman harshly.
+</p>
+<p>
+In a hurried attempt to divert the anger of Macdonald, his assistant
+made a mistake. "Say, Mac! Who do you think came up on the boat with me?
+I wondered if you knew. Meteetse and her kid&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+He stopped. The big man was glaring savagely at him. But Macdonald said
+nothing. He waited, and under the compulsion of his forceful silence
+Wally stumbled on helplessly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"&mdash;They got off here. 'Course I didn't know whether you'd sent for her
+or not, so I stopped and kinder gave her the glad hand just to size
+things up."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes."
+</p>
+<p>
+"She had the address of Miss O'Neill, that Irish girl staying at the
+Pagets, the one that came in&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Go on," snapped his chief.
+</p>
+<p>
+"So I directed her how she could get there and&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+Wally found himself lifted from the chair and hammered down into it
+again. His soft flesh quaked like a jelly. As he stared pop-eyed at the
+furious face above him, the fat chin of the little man drooped.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page172" name="page172"></a>[172]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"My God, Mac, don't do that!" he whined.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald wheeled abruptly away, crossed the room in long strides, and
+came back. He had a grip on himself again.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What's the use?" he said aloud. "You're nothing but a spineless
+putterer. Haven't you enough sense even to give me a chance to decide
+for myself? Why didn't you keep the woman with you till you could send
+for me, you daft donkey?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I swear I never thought of that."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What have you got up there in your head instead of brains? I send you
+outside to look after things and you fall down on the job. I give you
+plain instructions what to do at Kamatlah and you let Elliot make a
+monkey of you. You see him on the boat with a woman coming to make
+trouble for me, and the best you can do is to help her on the way. Man,
+man, use your gumption."
+</p>
+<p>
+"If I had known&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"D'ye think you've got sense enough to take a plain, straight message as
+far as the hotel? Because if you have, I've got one to send."
+</p>
+<p>
+Wally caressed tenderly his bruised flesh. He had a childlike desire to
+weep, but he was afraid Macdonald would kick him out of the office.
+</p>
+<p>
+"'Course I'll do whatever you say, Mac," he answered humbly.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page173" name="page173"></a>[173]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The Scotch-Canadian brushed the swivel chair and its occupant to one
+side, drew up another chair in front of the desk, and faced Selfridge
+squarely. The eyes that blazed at the little man were the grimmest he
+had ever looked into.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Go to the hotel and see this man Elliot alone. Tell him he's gone too
+far&mdash;butted into my affairs once too often. There's not a man alive I'd
+stand it from. My orders are for him to get out on the next boat. If
+he's here after that, I'll kill him on sight."
+</p>
+<p>
+The color ebbed out of the florid face of Wally. He moistened his lips
+to speak. "Good God, Mac, you can't do that. He'll go out and
+report&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"To hell with his report. Let him say what he likes. Put this to him
+straight: that he and I can't stay in this town&mdash;<i>and both of us
+live</i>."
+</p>
+<p>
+Wally had lapped up too many highballs in the past ten years to relish
+this kind of a mission. He had depressed his nerves with overmuch
+tobacco and spurred them with liquors, had dissipated his force in many
+small riotings. His nerve was gone. He had not the punch any more. Yet
+Mac was always expecting him to help out with his rough stuff, he
+reflected fretfully. This was the third time in a month that he had been
+flung headlong into trouble. Take this message
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page174" name="page174"></a>[174]</span>
+
+ now. There was no sense in it. Selfridge plucked up his courage to say
+so.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That won't buy us anything but trouble, Mac. In the old days you could
+put over&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+The little man never guessed how close he came to being flung through
+the transom over the door, but his instinct warned him to stop. His
+objection died away in a mumble.
+</p>
+<p>
+"O' course I'll do whatever you say," he added a second time.
+</p>
+<p>
+"See you do," advised his chief, an ugly look in his eyes. "Tell him he
+gets till the next boat. If he's here after that, he'd better go heeled,
+for I'll shoot on sight wherever we meet."
+</p>
+<p>
+Selfridge went on his errand with lagging feet. On the way he stopped
+at the Pay-Streak Saloon to fortify himself with a cocktail. He found
+Elliot sitting moodily alone on the porch of the hotel.
+</p>
+<p>
+In Gordon's pocket there was a note to Macdonald explaining that he had
+nothing to do with the coming of Meteetse. He had expected to send it by
+the hotel porter that evening, but the curt order to leave town filled
+him with a chill anger. The dictator of affairs at Kusiak might think
+what he pleased for all the explanation he would get from him. As for
+taking the next boat, Elliot did not even give that consideration.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page175" name="page175"></a>[175]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tell your master I don't take orders from him," he told Wally quietly.
+"I'll stay till my work here is done."
+</p>
+<p>
+They had moved a few yards down the street. Now Gordon turned,
+lean-loined and active, and trod with crisp, confident step back to the
+hotel. He had said all that was necessary to say.
+</p>
+<p>
+Two men standing on the porch nodded a good-evening to him. Gordon,
+about to pass, glanced at them again. They were Northrup and Trelawney,
+two of the miners who had had trouble with Macdonald on the boat.
+</p>
+<p>
+On impulse he stopped. "Found work yet?" he asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Found a job and lost it again," Northrup answered sullenly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Too bad."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Macdonald passed the word along that we weren't to get work. So our
+boss fired us. The whole district is closed to us. We been blacklisted,"
+explained Trelawney.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And we're busted," added his mate.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot was always free-handed. Perhaps he felt just now unusually
+sympathetic towards these victims of the high-handed methods of
+Macdonald. From his pocket he took a small leather purse and gave a
+piece of gold to each of them.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Just as a loan to carry you for a couple of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page176" name="page176"></a>[176]</span>
+
+ days till you get something to do," he suggested.
+</p>
+<p>
+Northrup demurred, but after a little pressure accepted the
+accommodation.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I pay you soon back," he promised.
+</p>
+<p>
+Trelawney laughed recklessly. He had been drinking.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You bet. Me too."
+</p>
+<p>
+His companion flashed a look of warning at him and explained that they
+were going down the river to look for work outside of the district.
+</p>
+<p>
+Suddenly Trelawney broke loose and began to curse Macdonald with a
+bitterness that surprised the Government agent. What struck him most,
+though, was the obvious anxiety of Northrup to quiet his partner and to
+gloss over what he had said. Thinking of it later, Gordon wondered why
+the Dane, who had as much cause to hate Macdonald as the other, should
+be at such pains to smooth down the man and explain away his threats.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot bought an automatic revolver next morning and a box of
+cartridges. He was not looking for trouble, but he intended to be
+prepared for it when trouble came looking for him. With a rifle he was a
+fair shot, but he lacked experience with the revolver. In the afternoon
+he walked out of town and practiced shooting at tin cans for a half an
+hour. On his way back he met Peter Paget.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page177" name="page177"></a>[177]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The engineer came straight to the subject in his mind.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Selfridge came to see me last night. He told me about the trouble
+between you and Macdonald, Gordon. You must leave town till he cools
+down. Macdonald is a bad man with a gat."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Is he?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You can drop down the river on business for a few weeks. After a
+while&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+His friend looked at him coolly. "I can, but I'm not going to. Where do
+you get this stuff about me being a quitter, Pete?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Peter laid a hand on his shoulder. "Now, look here, Gordon. Don't be a
+kid and foolhardy. Duck. I'm your friend&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're his, too, aren't you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes, of course, but&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"All right. Tell him to duck. There'll be no trouble of my making. But
+if he starts any I'll be there. Macdonald doesn't own the earth, you
+know. I've been sent up here by Uncle Sam on business, and you can bet
+your last dollar I'll stay on the job till I'm through."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Of course you've got to finish your job. But it doesn't all have to be
+done right here. Just for a week or two&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tell your friend something else while you're on the subject. If I drop
+him, I go scot free because
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page178" name="page178"></a>[178]</span>
+
+ he is interfering with me in my duty. I'll put Selfridge on the stand to
+prove it. But if he should kill me, his last chance for getting the
+Macdonald claims patented would be gone. The public would raise such a
+howl that the Administration would have to throw your friend and the
+Guttenchilds overboard to save itself. I know that&mdash;and Macdonald knows
+it. So he stands to lose either way."
+</p>
+<p>
+Paget knew this was true. He knew, too, there was no use in arguing with
+this young athlete. That close-gripped jaw and salient chin did not
+belong to a slacker. Gordon would stick and see the thing out. But Peter
+could not drop the subject without one more appeal.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He's not sore at you about the claims. You know that. It's because you
+brought the squaw up the river to see Sheba."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I didn't bring her&mdash;hadn't a thing to do with that. I don't know who
+brought her, though I could give a good guess."
+</p>
+<p>
+A gleam of hope showed in the eye of the engineer. "You didn't bring
+her? Diane said you threatened&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Maybe I did say I would. Anyhow, I thought better of it. But I'm glad
+some one had the sense to tell Miss O'Neill the truth."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Who do you think brought her?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm not thinking on that subject out loud."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page179" name="page179"></a>[179]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"But if we could show Mac&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's up to you. I'll not lift a finger. Your king of Kusiak has to
+learn some time that everybody isn't going to sidestep him and pussyfoot
+when he's around. I didn't start this war and I'm not making any peace
+overtures."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're as obstinate as the devil," smiled Peter, but in his heart he
+admired the dourness of his friend.
+</p>
+<p>
+The engineer went to Macdonald and gave a deleted version of his talk
+with Elliot. The Scotchman listened, a bitter, incredulous smile on his
+face.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Says he didn't bring her, does he? Tell him from me that he lies. Your
+wife let out to me by accident that he threatened to bring her. Meteetse
+and he came up on the boat together. He was with her at your house when
+she told her story. He's trying to save his hide. No chance."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Elliot isn't a liar. When he says he didn't bring the woman, that
+satisfies me. I know he didn't do it," insisted Paget stiffly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Different here. Who else had any interest in bringing her except him?
+Nobody. Use your brains, Peter. He takes the first boat down the river.
+He comes back on the next one. She comes back, too. They couldn't figure
+I'd be at your house when they showed up there to tell
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page180" name="page180"></a>[180]</span>
+
+ the story. That's where Mr. Elliot slipped up."
+</p>
+<p>
+Peter was of different stuff from Selfridge. He had something to say. So
+he said it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Times have changed, Mac. You can't shoot down this young fellow without
+making all kinds of trouble. First thing we'd lose the claims. The
+Administration would drop you like a hot potato if you did a thing like
+that. Sheba would never speak to you again. Your friends would know in
+their hearts it was murder. You can't do it."
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald's jaw clamped. "Then let him get out. That's my last word to
+him."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page181" name="page181"></a>[181]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0016" id="h2HCH0016"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ AMBUSHED
+</h3>
+<p>
+Colby Macdonald, in miner's boots and corduroy working suit, stood
+beside his horse with one arm thrown carelessly across its rump. He was
+about to start for Seven-Mile Creek Camp with twenty-seven hundred
+dollars in the saddlebags to pay the men there.
+</p>
+<p>
+Diane was talking with him. "She's young and fine and spirited. Of
+course it was a great shock to her. She had been idealizing you. But I
+think she is beginning to understand things better. At any rate, she
+does not hate you any more. Give the girl time."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You think she will&mdash;be reasonable?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Paget finished the pattern she was punching in the soft ground
+beside the board walk with the ferrule of her umbrella. Her eyes met his
+frankly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I don't know. But I'm sure of one thing. She'll not be reasonable, as
+you call it, unless you are reasonable."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You mean&mdash;Elliot?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes. She likes him very much. Do you know that when the Indian woman
+came he urged Sheba not to listen to her story?"
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page182" name="page182"></a>[182]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sounds likely&mdash;after he had spent his good money bringing her here,"
+sneered the mine-owner.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He didn't. Gordon is a splendid fellow. He wouldn't lie," answered
+Diane hotly. "And one thing is sure&mdash;if you lay a finger on him for
+this, it will be fatal with Sheba. She will be through with you."
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald had thought of this before. It had been coming to him from
+several different angles that he could not afford to gratify his desire
+to wipe this meddlesome young official from his path. He made a slow,
+sulky promise.
+</p>
+<p>
+"All right. I'll let him alone. Peter can tell him."
+</p>
+<p>
+Swinging to the saddle, he spurred his horse and cantered away. With a
+little smile Diane watched his flat, muscular back and the arrogant set
+of his strong shoulders. There was not his match in the territory, she
+thought, but sometimes a clever woman could manage him.
+</p>
+<p>
+His mind was full of the problem that had come into his life. He rode
+abstractedly, so that he was at the lower ford of the creek almost
+before he knew it. A bilberry thicket straggled down to the opposite
+bank of the stream on both sides of the road.
+</p>
+<p>
+The horse splashed through the ford and took the little rise beyond with
+a rush. Just before
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page183" name="page183"></a>[183]</span>
+
+ reaching the brow of the hill, the animal stumbled and fell. As its
+rider went headlong, he caught a glimpse of a cord drawn taut across the
+path.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald, shaken by the fall, began slowly to rise. From the shadows
+of the bilberry bushes two stooping figures rushed at him. He threw up
+an arm to ward off the club aimed at his head, but succeeded only in
+breaking the force of the blow. As he staggered back, stunned, a bullet
+glanced along his forehead and ridged a furrow through the thick hair.
+A second stroke of the club jarred him to the heels.
+</p>
+<p>
+Though his mind was not clear, his body answered automatically the
+instinct that told him to close with his assailants. He lurched forward
+and gripped one, wrestling with him for the revolver. Vaguely he knew
+by the sharp, jagged shoots of pain that the second man was beating his
+head with a club. The warm blood dripped through his hair and blinded
+his eyes. Dazed and shaken, he yet managed to get the revolver from the
+man who had it. But it was his last effort. He was too far gone to use
+it. A blow on the forehead brought him unconscious to the ground
+bleeding from a dozen wounds.
+</p>
+<p>
+On his way back from Seven-Mile Creek Camp Gordon Elliot rode down to
+the ford. In the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page184" name="page184"></a>[184]</span>
+
+ dusk he was almost upon them before the robbers heard him. For a moment
+the two men stood gazing at him and he at the tragedy before him. One of
+the men moved toward his horse.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Stop there!" ordered Gordon sharply, and he reached for his revolver.
+</p>
+<p>
+The man&mdash;it was the miner Northrup&mdash;jumped for Elliot and the field
+agent fired. Another moment, and he was being dragged from the saddle.
+What happened next was never clear to him. He knew that both of the
+bandits closed in on him and that he was fighting desperately against
+odds. The revolver had been knocked from his hand and he fought with
+bare fists just as they did. Twice he emptied his lungs in a cry for
+help.
+</p>
+<p>
+They quartered over the ground, for Gordon would not let either of them
+get behind him. They were larger than he, heavy, muscle-bound giants of
+great strength, but he was far more active on his feet. He jabbed and
+sidestepped and retreated. More than once their heavy blows crashed home
+on his face. His eyes dared not wander from them for an instant, but he
+was working toward a definite plan. As he moved, his feet were searching
+for the automatic he had dropped.
+</p>
+<p>
+One of his feet, dragging over the ground,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page185" name="page185"></a>[185]</span>
+
+ came into contact with the steel. With a swift side kick Gordon flung
+the weapon a dozen feet to the left. Presently, watching his chance, he
+made a dive for it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Trelawney, followed by Northrup, turned and ran. One of them caught
+Macdonald's horse by the bridle. He swung to the saddle and the other
+man clambered on behind. There was a clatter of hoofs and they were
+gone.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot stooped over the battered body that lay huddled at the edge
+of the water. The man was either dead or unconscious, he was not sure
+which. So badly had the face been beaten and hammered that it was not
+until he had washed the blood from the wounds that Gordon recognized
+Macdonald.
+</p>
+<p>
+Opening the coat of the insensible man, Gordon put his hand against the
+heart. He could not be sure whether he felt it beating or whether the
+throbbing came from the pulses in his finger tips. As well as he could
+he bound up the wounds with handkerchiefs and stanched the bleeding.
+With ice-cold water from the stream he drenched the bruised face. A
+faint sigh quivered through the slack, inert body.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon hoisted Macdonald across the saddle and led the horse through the
+ford. He walked beside the animal to town, and never had two miles
+seemed to him so far. With one hand he
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page186" name="page186"></a>[186]</span>
+
+ steadied the helpless body that lay like a sack of flour balanced in the
+trough of the saddle.
+</p>
+<p>
+Kusiak at last lay below him, and when he descended the hill to the
+suburbs almost the first house was the one where the Pagets lived.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot threw the body across his shoulder and walked up the walk to the
+porch. He kicked upon the door with his foot. Sheba answered the knock,
+and at sight of what he carried the color faded from her face.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Macdonald has been hurt&mdash;badly," he explained quickly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"This way," the girl cried, and led him to her own room, hurrying in
+advance to throw back the bedclothes.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Get Diane&mdash;and a doctor," ordered Gordon after he had laid the
+unconscious man on the white sheet.
+</p>
+<p>
+While he and Diane undressed the mine-owner Sheba got a doctor on the
+telephone. The wounded man opened his eyes after a long time, but there
+was in them the glaze of delirium. He recognized none of them. He did
+not know that he was in the house of Peter Paget, that Diane and Sheba
+and his rival were fighting with the help of the doctor to push back the
+death that was crowding close upon him. All night he raved, and his
+delirious talk went back to the wild scenes of his earlier life.
+Sometimes he swore savagely;
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page187" name="page187"></a>[187]</span>
+
+ again he made quiet deadly threats; but always his talk was crisp and
+clean and vigorous. Nothing foul or slimy came to the surface in those
+hours of unconscious babbling.
+</p>
+<p>
+The doctor had shaken his head when he first saw the wounds. He would
+make no promises.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He's a mighty sick man. The cuts are deep, and the hammering must have
+jarred his brain terribly. If it was anybody but Macdonald, I wouldn't
+give him a chance," he told Diane when he left in the morning to get
+breakfast. "But Macdonald has tremendous vitality. Of course if he lives
+it will be because Mr. Elliot brought him in so soon."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon walked with the doctor as far as the hotel. A brown, thin,
+leathery man undraped himself from a chair in the lobby when Elliot
+opened the door. He was officially known as the chief of police of
+Kusiak. Incidentally he constituted the whole police force. Generally he
+was referred to as Gopher Jones on account of his habit of spasmodic
+prospecting.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I got to put you under arrest, Mr. Elliot," he explained.
+</p>
+<p>
+The loafers in the hotel drew closer.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What for?" demanded Gordon, surprised.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Doc thinks it will run to murder, I reckon."
+</p>
+<p>
+The field agent was startled. "You mean&mdash;Macdonald?"
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page188" name="page188"></a>[188]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The brown man chewed his quid steadily. "You done guessed it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's absurd, you know. What evidence have you got?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"First off, you'd had trouble with him. It was common talk that when you
+and Mac met, guns were going to pop. You bought an automatic revolver at
+the Seattle &amp; Kusiak Emporium two days ago. You was seen practising with
+it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"He had threatened me."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You want to be careful what you say, Mr. Elliot. It will be used
+against you." Gopher shot a squirt of tobacco unerringly at the open
+door of the stove. "You was seen talking with Trelawney and Northrup.
+Money passed from you to them."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I gave them a loan of ten dollars each because they were broke. Is that
+criminal?" demanded Gordon angrily.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's your story. You'll git a chance to tell it to the jury, I
+shouldn't wonder. Mebbe they'll believe it. You never can tell."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Believe it! Why, you muttonhead, I found him where he was bleeding to
+death and brought him in."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's what I heard say. Kinder queer, ain't it, you happened to be the
+man that found him?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nothing queer about it. I was riding in from
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page189" name="page189"></a>[189]</span>
+
+ Seven-Mile Creek Camp." Gordon was exasperated, but not at all alarmed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"So you was. While you was out at the camp, you asked one of the boys
+how big the pay-roll would be."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Does that prove I was planning a hold-up? Isn't that the last thing I
+would have asked if I had intended robbery?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't ask me. I ain't no psychologist. All I know is you took an
+interest in the bank-roll on the way."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm here for the Government investigating Macdonald. I was getting
+information&mdash;earning my pay. Can you understand that?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Gopher chewed his cud impassively. "Sure I can, and I been earning mine.
+By the way, howcome you to be beat up so bad, Mr. Elliot?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I had a fight with the robbers."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sure it wasn't with the robbed. That split lip of yours looks to me
+plumb like Mac's John Hancock."
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot flushed angrily. "Of course if you intend to believe me
+guilty&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now, there ain't no manner o' use in gettin' het up, young fellow.
+Mebbe you did it; mebbe you didn't. Anyhow, you'll gimme that gat you
+been toting these last few days."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon's hand moved toward his hip. Then he remembered.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page190" name="page190"></a>[190]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"I haven't it. I left it&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You left it at the ford&mdash;with one shell empty. That's where you left
+it," interrupted the officer.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes. I fired at Northrup as he rushed me."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Um-hu," assented Jones, impudent unbelief in his eye. "At Northrup or
+at Macdonald."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What do you think I did with the money, then? Did I eat it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not so you could notice it. Since you put it to me flat-foot, you gave
+it to your pardners. You didn't want it. They did. They have got the
+horse too&mdash;and they're hitting the high spots to make their get-away."
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot was locked up in the flimsy jail without breakfast. He was
+furious, but as he paced up and down the narrow beat beside the bed his
+anger gave way to anxiety. Surely the Pagets could not believe he had
+done such a thing. And Sheba&mdash;would she accept as true this weight of
+circumstantial evidence that was piling up against him?
+</p>
+<p>
+It could all be explained so easily. And yet&mdash;the facts fitted like
+links of a chain to condemn him. He went over them one by one. The
+babbling tongue of Selfridge that had made common gossip of the
+impending tragedy in which he and Macdonald were the principals&mdash;his
+purchase of the automatic&mdash;his public meeting
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page191" name="page191"></a>[191]</span>
+
+ with two known enemies of the Scotchman, during which he had been seen
+to give them money&mdash;his target practice with the new revolver&mdash;the
+unhappy chance that had taken him out to Seven-Mile Creek Camp the very
+day of the robbery&mdash;his casual questions of the miners&mdash;even the finding
+of the body by him. All of these dovetailed with the hypothesis that his
+partners in crime were to escape and bear the blame, while he was to
+bring the body back to town and assume innocence.
+</p>
+<p>
+Paget was admitted to his cell later in the morning by Gopher Jones. He
+shook hands with the prisoner. Jones retired.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tough luck, Gordon," the engineer said.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What does Sheba think?" asked the young man quickly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We haven't told her you have been arrested. I heard it only a little
+while ago."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And Diane?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes, she knows."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well?" demanded Gordon brusquely.
+</p>
+<p>
+Peter looked at him in questioning surprise. "Well, what?" He caught the
+meaning of his friend. "Try not to be an ass, Gordon. Of course she
+knows the charge is ridiculous."
+</p>
+<p>
+The chip dropped from the young man's shoulder. "Good old Diane. I might
+have known," he said with a new cheerfulness.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page192" name="page192"></a>[192]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"I think you might have," agreed Peter dryly. "By the way, have you had
+any breakfast?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No. I'm hungry, come to think of it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll have something sent in from the hotel."
+</p>
+<p>
+"How's Macdonald?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"He's alive&mdash;and while there's life there is hope."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Any news of the murderers?" asked Gordon.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Posses are combing the hills for them. They stole a packhorse from a
+truck gardener up the valley. It seems they bought an outfit for a month
+yesterday&mdash;said they were going prospecting."
+</p>
+<p>
+They talked for a few minutes longer, mainly on the question of a lawyer
+and the chances of getting out on bond. Peter left the prisoner in very
+much better spirits than he had found him.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page193" name="page193"></a>[193]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0017" id="h2HCH0017"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ "GOD SAVE YOU KINDLY"
+</h3>
+<p>
+A nurse from the hospital had relieved Diane and Sheba at daybreak.
+They slept until the middle of the afternoon, then under orders from the
+doctor walked out to take the air. They were to divide the night watch
+between them and he said that he wanted them fit for service. The fever
+of the patient was subsiding. He slept a good deal, and in the intervals
+between had been once or twice quite rational.
+</p>
+<p>
+The thoughts of the cousins drew their steps toward the jail. Sheba
+looked at Diane.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Will they let us see him, do you think?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Perhaps. We can try."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gopher Jones was not proof against the brisk confidence with which Mrs.
+Paget demanded admittance. He stroked his unshaven chin while he chewed
+his quid, then reluctantly got his keys.
+</p>
+<p>
+The prisoner was sitting on the bed. His heart jumped with gladness when
+he looked up.
+</p>
+<p>
+Diane shook hands cheerfully. "How is the criminal?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Better for hearing your kind voice," he answered.
+</p>
+<p>
+His eyes strayed to the ebon-haired girl in the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page194" name="page194"></a>[194]</span>
+
+ background. They met a troubled smile, grave and sweet.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Awfully good of you to come to see me," he told Sheba gratefully. "How
+is Macdonald?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Better, we hope. He knew Diane this afternoon."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Paget did most of the talking, but Gordon contributed his share.
+Sheba did not say much, but it seemed to the young man that there was
+a new tenderness in her manner, the expression of a gentle kindness
+that went out to him because he needed it. The walk had whipped the
+color into her cheeks and she bloomed in that squalid cell like a desert
+rose. There was in the fluent grace of the slender, young body a na&iuml;ve,
+virginal sweetness that took him by the throat. He knew that she
+believed in him and the trouble rolled from his heart like a cold,
+heavy wave.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We haven't talked to Mr. Macdonald yet about the attack on him,"
+Diane explained. "But he must have recognized the men. There are many
+footprints at the ford, showing how they moved over the ground as they
+fought. So he could not have been unconscious from the first blow."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Unless they were masked he must have known them. It was light enough,"
+agreed Elliot.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Peter is still trying to get the officers to
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page195" name="page195"></a>[195]</span>
+
+ accept bail, but I don't think he will succeed. There is a good deal of
+feeling in town against you."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Because I am supposed to be an enemy to an open Alaska, I judge."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mainly that. Wally Selfridge has been talking a good deal. He takes it
+for granted that you are guilty. We'll have to wait in patience till Mr.
+Macdonald speaks and clears you. The doctor won't let us mention the
+subject to him until he comes to it of his own free will."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gopher stuck his head in at the door. "You'll have to go, ladies. Time's
+up."
+</p>
+<p>
+When Sheba bade the prisoner good-bye it was with a phrase of the old
+Irish vernacular. "God save you kindly."
+</p>
+<p>
+He knew the peasant's answer to the wish and gave it. "And you too."
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl left the prison with a mist in her eyes. Her cousin looked at
+her with a queer, ironic little smile of affection. To be in trouble was
+a sure passport to the sympathy of Sheba. Now both her lovers were in
+a sad way. Diane wondered which of them would gain most from this new
+twist of fate.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba turned to Mrs. Paget with an impulsive little burst of feminine
+ferocity. "Why do they put him in prison when they must know he didn't
+do it&mdash;that he couldn't do such a thing?"
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page196" name="page196"></a>[196]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"They don't all know as well as you do how noble he is, my dear,"
+answered Diane dryly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But it's just absurd to think that he would plan the murder of a man he
+has broken bread with for a few hundred dollars."
+</p>
+<p>
+Diane flashed another odd little glance in the direction of her cousin.
+Probably Sheba was the one woman in Kusiak who did not know that
+Macdonald had served an ultimatum on Elliot to get out or fight and that
+their rivalry over her favor was at the bottom of the difficulty between
+them.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It will work out all right," promised the older cousin.
+</p>
+<p>
+Returning from their walk, they met Wally Selfridge coming out of the
+Paget house.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did you see Mr. Macdonald?" asked Diane.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes. He's quite rational now." There was a jaunty little strut of
+triumph in Wally's cock-sure manner.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Paget knew he had made himself very busy securing evidence against
+Gordon. He was probably trying to curry favor with his chief. The little
+man always had been jealous of Peter. Perhaps he was attempting to rap
+him over the shoulder of Elliot because the Government official was a
+friend of Paget. Just now his insolent voice suggested a special cause
+for exultation.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page197" name="page197"></a>[197]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The reason Wally was so pleased with himself was that he had dropped a
+hint into the ear of the wounded man not to clear Elliot of complicity
+in the attack upon him. The news that the special investigator had been
+arrested for robbery and attempted murder, flashed all over the United
+States, would go far to neutralize any report he might make against
+the validity of the Macdonald claims. If to this could be added later
+reports of an indictment, a trial, and possibly a conviction, it would
+not matter two straws what Elliot said in his official statement to the
+Land Office.
+</p>
+<p>
+Since the attack upon his chief, Selfridge had moved on the presumption
+that Elliot had been in a conspiracy to get rid of him. He accepted the
+guilt of the field agent because this theory jumped with the interest
+of Wally and his friends. As a politician he intended to play this new
+development for all it was worth.
+</p>
+<p>
+He had been shocked at the sight of Macdonald. The terrible beating and
+the loss of blood had sapped all the splendid, vital strength of the
+Scotchman. His battered head was swathed in bandages, but the white face
+was bruised and disfigured. The wounded man was weak as a kitten; only
+the steady eyes told that he was still strong and unconquered.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I want to talk business for a minute, Miss
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page198" name="page198"></a>[198]</span>
+
+ Sedgwick. Will you please step out?" said Macdonald to his nurse.
+</p>
+<p>
+She hesitated. "The doctor says&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do as I say, please."
+</p>
+<p>
+The nurse left them alone. Wally told the story of the evidence against
+Elliot in four sentences. His chief caught the point at once.
+</p>
+<p>
+After Selfridge had gone, the wounded man lay silent thinking out his
+programme. Not for a moment did he doubt that he was going to live, and
+his brain was already busy planning for the future. By some freak of
+luck the cards had been stacked by destiny in his favor. He knew now
+that in the violence of his anger against Elliot he had made a mistake.
+To have killed his rival would have been fatal to the Kamatlah coal
+claims, would have alienated his best friends, and would have prejudiced
+hopelessly his chances with Sheba. Fate had been kind to him. He had
+been in the wrong and it had put him in the right. By the same cut of
+the cards young Elliot had been thrust down from an impregnable position
+to one in which he was a discredited suspect. With all this evidence
+to show that he had conspired against Macdonald, his report to the
+Department would be labor lost.
+</p>
+<p>
+Diane came into the sick-room stripping her gloves after the walk.
+Macdonald smiled feebly
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page199" name="page199"></a>[199]</span>
+
+ at her and fired the first shot of his campaign to defeat the enemy.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Has Elliot been captured yet?" he asked weakly.
+</p>
+<p>
+The keen eyes of his hostess fastened upon him. "Captured! What do you
+mean? It was Gordon Elliot that brought you in and saved your life."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Brought me from where?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"From where he found you unconscious&mdash;at the ford."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's his story, is it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald shut his eyes wearily, but his incredulous voice had suggested
+a world of innuendo.
+</p>
+<p>
+The young woman stood with her gloves crushed tight in both hands. It
+was her nature to be always a partisan. Without any reserve she was for
+Gordon in this new fight upon him. What had Wally Selfridge been saying
+to Macdonald? She longed mightily to ask the sick man some questions,
+but the orders of the doctor were explicit. Did the mine-owner mean to
+suggest that he had identified Elliot as one of his assailants? The
+thing was preposterous.
+</p>
+<p>
+And yet&mdash;that was plainly what he had meant to imply. If he told such
+a story, things would go hard with Gordon. In court it would clinch the
+case against him by supplying the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page200" name="page200"></a>[200]</span>
+
+ one missing link in the chain of circumstantial evidence.
+</p>
+<p>
+Diane, in deep thought, frowned down upon the wounded man, who seemed
+already to have fallen into a light sleep. She told herself that this
+was some of Wally Selfridge's deviltry. Anyhow, she would talk it over
+with Peter.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page201" name="page201"></a>[201]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0018" id="h2HCH0018"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ GORDON SPENDS A BUSY EVENING
+</h3>
+<p>
+Paget smoked placidly, but the heart within him was troubled. It looked
+as if Selfridge had made up his mind to frame Gordon for a prison
+sentence. The worst of it was that he need not invent any evidence
+or take any chances. If Macdonald came through on the stand with an
+identification of Elliot as one of his assailants, the young man would
+go down the river to serve time. There was enough corroborative
+testimony to convict St. Peter himself.
+</p>
+<p>
+It all rested with Macdonald&mdash;and the big Scotch-Canadian was a very
+uncertain quantity. His whole interests were at one in favor of getting
+Elliot out of the way. On the other hand&mdash;how far would he go to save
+the Kamatlah claims and to remove this good-looking rival from his path?
+Peter could not think he would stoop to perjury against an innocent man.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm just telling you what he said," Diane explained. "And it worried
+me. His smile was cynical. I couldn't help thinking that if he wants to
+get even with Gordon&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Paget stopped. The maid had just brought into the room a visitor.
+Diane moved
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page202" name="page202"></a>[202]</span>
+
+ forward and shook hands with him. "How do you do, Mr. Strong? Take this
+big chair."
+</p>
+<p>
+Hanford Strong accepted the chair and a cigar. Though a well-to-do
+mine-owner, he wore as always the rough clothes of a prospector. He came
+promptly to the object of his call.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I don't know whether this is where I should have come or not. Are you
+folks for young Elliot or are you for Selfridge?" he demanded.
+</p>
+<p>
+"If you put it that way, we're for Elliot," smiled Peter.
+</p>
+<p>
+"All right. Let me put it another way. You work for Mac. Are you on his
+side or on Elliot's in this matter of the coal claims?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Diane looked at Peter. He took his time to answer.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We hope the coal claimants will win, but we've got sense enough to see
+that Gordon is in here to report the facts. That's what he is paid for.
+He'll tell the truth as he sees it. If his superior officers decide on
+those facts against Macdonald, I don't see that Elliot is to blame."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's how it looks to me," agreed Strong. "I'm for a wide-open Alaska,
+but that don't make it right to put this young fellow through for a
+crime he didn't do. Lots of folks think he did it. That's all right.
+I know he didn't. Fact is, I like him. He's square. So I've come to tell
+you something."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page203" name="page203"></a>[203]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+He smoked for a minute silently before he continued.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've got no evidence in his favor, but I bumped into something a little
+while ago that didn't look good to me. You know I room next him at the
+hotel. I heard a noise in his room, and I thought that was funny, seeing
+as he was locked up in jail. So I kinder listened and heard whispers and
+the sound of some one moving about. There's a door between his room and
+mine that is kept locked. I looked through the keyhole, and in Elliot's
+room there was Wally Selfridge and another man. They were looking
+through papers at the desk. Wally put a stack of them in his pocket and
+they went out locking the door behind them."
+</p>
+<p>
+"They had no business doing that," burst out Diane. "Wally Selfridge
+isn't an officer of the law."
+</p>
+<p>
+Strong nodded dryly to her. "Just what I thought. So I followed them.
+They went to Macdonald's offices. After awhile Wally came out and left
+the other man there. Then presently the lights went out. The man is
+camped there for the night. Will you tell me why?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why?" repeated Diane with her sharp eyes on the miner.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Because Wally has some papers there he don't want to get away from
+him."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page204" name="page204"></a>[204]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"Some of Gordon's papers, of course."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You've said it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"All his notes and evidence in the case of the coal claims probably,"
+contributed Peter.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Maybe. Wally has stole them, but he hasn't nerve enough to burn them
+till he gets orders from Mac. So he's holding them safe at the office,"
+guessed Strong.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's an outrage," Diane decided promptly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Surest thing you know. Wally has fixed it to frame him for prison and
+to play safe about his evidence on the coal claims."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What are you going to do about it?" Diane asked her husband sharply.
+</p>
+<p>
+Peter rose. "First I'm going to see Gordon and hear what he has to say.
+Come on, Strong. We may be gone quite a while, Diane. Don't wait up for
+me if you get through your stint of nursing."
+</p>
+<p>
+Roused from sleep, Gopher Jones grumbled a good deal about letting the
+men see his prisoner. "You got all day, ain't you, without traipsing
+around here nights. Don't you figure I'm entitled to any rest?"
+</p>
+<p>
+But he let them into the ramshackle building that served as a jail, and
+after three dollars had jingled in the palm of his hand he stepped
+outside and left the men alone with his prisoner. The three put their
+heads together and whispered.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll meet you outside the house of Selfridge
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page205" name="page205"></a>[205]</span>
+
+ in half an hour, Strong," was the last thing that Gordon said before
+Jones came back to order out the visitors.
+</p>
+<p>
+As soon as the place was dark again, Gordon set to work on the flimsy
+framework of his cell window. He knew already it was so decrepit that he
+could escape any time he desired, but until now there had been no reason
+why he should. Within a quarter of an hour he lifted the iron-grilled
+sash bodily from the frame and crawled through the window.
+</p>
+<p>
+He found Paget and Strong waiting for him in the shadows of a pine
+outside the yard of Selfridge.
+</p>
+<p>
+"To begin with, you walk straight home and go to bed, Peter," the young
+man announced. "You're not in this. You're not invited to our party. I
+don't have to tell you why, do I?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The engineer understood the reason. He was an employee of Macdonald, a
+man thoroughly trusted by him. Even though Gordon intended only to right
+a wrong, it was better that Paget should not be a party to it.
+Reluctantly Peter went home.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon turned to Strong. "I owe you a lot already. There's no need for
+you to run a risk of getting into trouble for me. If things break right,
+I can do what I have to do without help."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And if they don't?" Strong waved an impatient
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page206" name="page206"></a>[206]</span>
+
+ hand. "Cut it out, Elliot. I've taken a fancy to go through with this. I
+never did like Selfridge anyhow, and I ain't got a wife and I don't work
+for Mac. Why the hell shouldn't I have some fun?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon shrugged his shoulders. "All right. Might as well play ball and
+get things moving, then."
+</p>
+<p>
+The little miner knocked at the door. Wally himself opened. Elliot, from
+the shelter of the pine, saw the two men in talk. Selfridge shut the
+door and came to the edge of the porch. He gave a gasp and his hands
+went trembling into the air. The six-gun of the miner had been pressed
+hard against his fat paunch. Under curt orders he moved down the steps
+and out of the yard to the tree.
+</p>
+<p>
+At sight of Gordon the eyes of Wally stood out in amazement. Little
+sweat beads burst out on his forehead, for he remembered how busy he had
+been collecting evidence against this man.
+</p>
+<p>
+"W-w-what do you want?" he asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Got your keys with you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Y-yes."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Come with us."
+</p>
+<p>
+Wally breathed more freely. For a moment he had thought this man had
+come to take summary vengeance on him.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page207" name="page207"></a>[207]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+They led him by alleys and back streets to the office of the Macdonald
+Yukon Trading Company. Under orders he knocked on the door and called
+out who he was. Gordon crouched close to the log wall, Strong behind
+him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Let me in, Olson," ordered Selfridge again.
+</p>
+<p>
+The door opened, and a man stood on the threshold. Elliot was on top of
+him like a panther. The man went down as though his knees were oiled
+hinges. Before he could gather his slow wits, the barrel of a revolver
+was shoved against his teeth.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Take it easy, Olson," advised Gordon. "Get up&mdash;slowly. Now, step back
+into the office. Keep your hands up."
+</p>
+<p>
+Strong closed and locked the door behind them.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I want my papers, Selfridge. Dig up your keys and get them for me,"
+Elliot commanded.
+</p>
+<p>
+Wally did not need any keys. He knew the combination of the safe and
+opened it. From an inner drawer he drew a bunch of papers. Gordon looked
+them over carefully. Strong sat on a table and toyed with a revolver
+which he jammed playfully into the stomach of his fat prisoner.
+</p>
+<p>
+"All here," announced the field agent.
+</p>
+<p>
+The safe-robbers locked their prisoners in the office and disappeared
+into the night. They
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page208" name="page208"></a>[208]</span>
+
+ stopped at the house of the collector of customs, a genial young fellow
+with whom Elliot had played tennis a good deal, and left the papers in
+his hands for safe-keeping. After which they returned to the hotel and
+reached the second floor by way of the back stairs used by the servants.
+</p>
+<p>
+Here they parted, each going to his own room. Gordon slept like a
+schoolboy and woke only when the sun poured through the window upon his
+bed in a broad ribbon of warm gold.
+</p>
+<p>
+He got up, bathed, dressed, and went down into the hotel dining-room.
+The waiters looked at him in amazement. Presently the cook peered in
+at him from the kitchen and the clerk made an excuse to drop into the
+room. Gordon ate as if nothing were the matter, apparently unaware of
+the excitement he was causing. He paid not the least attention to the
+nudging and the whispering. After he had finished breakfast, he lit a
+cigar, leaned back in his chair, and smoked placidly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Presently an eruption of men poured into the room. At the head of them
+was Gopher Jones. Near the rear Wally Selfridge lingered modestly. He
+was not looking for hazardous adventure.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Whad you doing here?" demanded Gopher, bristling up to Elliot.
+</p>
+<p>
+The young man watched a smoke wreath float
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page209" name="page209"></a>[209]</span>
+
+ ceilingward before he turned his mild gaze on the chief of police.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm smoking."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't you know we just got in from hunting you&mdash;two posses of us been
+out all night?" Gopher glared savagely at the smoker.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon looked distressed. "That's too bad. There's a telephone in my
+room, too. Why didn't you call up? I've been there all night."
+</p>
+<p>
+"The deuce you have," exploded Jones. "And us combing the hills for you.
+Young man, you're mighty smart. But I want to tell you that you'll pay
+for this."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did you want me for anything in particular&mdash;or just to get up a poker
+game?" asked Elliot suavely.
+</p>
+<p>
+The leader of the posse gave himself to a job of scientific profanity.
+He was spurred on to outdo himself because he had heard a titter or
+two behind him. When he had finished, he formed a procession. He, with
+Elliot hand-cuffed beside him, was at the head of it. It marched to the
+jail.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page210" name="page210"></a>[210]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0019" id="h2HCH0019"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ SHEBA DOES NOT THINK SO
+</h3>
+<p>
+The fingers of Sheba were busy with the embroidery upon which she
+worked, but her thoughts were full of the man who lay asleep on the
+lounge. His strong body lay at ease, relaxed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Already health was flowing back into his veins. Beneath the tan of the
+lean, muscular cheeks a warmer color was beginning to creep. Soon he
+would be about again, vigorous and forceful, striding over obstacles to
+the goal he had set himself.
+</p>
+<p>
+Just now she was the chief goal of his desire. Sheba did not deceive
+herself into thinking that he had for a moment accepted her dismissal
+of him.
+</p>
+<p>
+He still meant to marry her, and he had told her so in characteristic
+way the day after their break.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba had sent him a check for the amount he had paid her and had
+refused to see him or anybody else.
+</p>
+<p>
+Shamed and humiliated, she had kept to her room. The check had come back
+to her by mail.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page211" name="page211"></a>[211]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Across the face of it he had written in his strong handwriting:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+I don't welsh on my bets. You can't give to me what is not mine.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+Do not think for an instant that I shall not marry you.
+</p>
+<p>
+Watching him now, she wondered what manner of man he was. There had
+been a day or two when she had thought she understood him. Then she had
+learned, from the story of Meteetse, how far his world of thought was
+from hers. That which to her had put a gulf between them was to him only
+an incident.
+</p>
+<p>
+She moved to adjust a window blind and when she returned found that his
+steady eyes were fixed upon her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're getting better fast," she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes."
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl had a favor to ask of him and lest her courage fail she plunged
+into it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mr. Macdonald, if you say the word Mr. Elliot will be released on bail.
+I am thinking you will be so good as to say it."
+</p>
+<p>
+His narrowed eyes held a cold glitter. "Why?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You must know he is innocent. You must&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I know only what the evidence shows," he cut in, warily on his guard.
+"He may or may not have been one of my attackers. From the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page212" name="page212"></a>[212]</span>
+
+ first blow I was dazed. But everything points to it that he hired&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, no!" interrupted the Irish girl, her dark eyes shining softly. "The
+way of it is that he saved your life, that he fought for you, and that
+he is in prison because of it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"If that is true, why doesn't he bring some proof of it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Proof!" she cried scornfully. "Between friends&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"He's no friend of mine. The man is a meddler. I despise him."
+</p>
+<p>
+The scarlet flooded her cheeks. "And I am liking him very, very much,"
+she flung back stanchly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald looked up at the vivid, flushed face and found it wholly
+charming. He liked her none the less because her fine eyes were hot and
+defiant in behalf of his rival.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Very well," he smiled. "I'll get him out if you'll do me a good turn
+too."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Thank you. It's a bargain."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then sing to me."
+</p>
+<p>
+She moved to the piano. "What shall I sing?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sing 'Divided.'"
+</p>
+<p>
+The long lashes veiled her soft eyes while she considered. In a way he
+had tricked her into singing for him a love-song she did not want to
+sing. But she made no protest. Swiftly she
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page213" name="page213"></a>[213]</span>
+
+ turned and slid along the bench. Her fingers touched the keys and she
+began.
+</p>
+<p>
+He watched the beauty and warmth of her dainty youth with eyes that
+mirrored the hunger of his heart. How buoyantly she carried her dusky
+little head! With what a gallant spirit she did all things! He was
+usually a frank pagan, but when he was with her it seemed to him that
+God spoke through her personality all sorts of brave, fine promises.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba paid her pledge in full. After the first two stanzas were finished
+she sang the last ones as well:&mdash;
+</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p class="i4"> "An' what about the wather when I'd have ould Paddy's boat, </p>
+<p class="i4"> Is it me that would be feared to grip the oars an' go afloat? </p>
+<p class="i4"> Oh, I could find him by the light of sun or moon or star: </p>
+<p class="i4"> But there's caulder things than salt waves between us, so they are. </p>
+<p class="i8"> Och anee! </p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p class="i4"> "Sure well I know he'll never have the heart to come to me, </p>
+<p class="i4"> An' love is wild as any wave that wanders on the sea, </p>
+<p class="i4"> 'Tis the same if he is near me, 'tis the same if he is far: </p>
+<p class="i4"> His thoughts are hard an' ever hard between us, so they are. </p>
+<p class="i8"> Och anee!" </p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page214" name="page214"></a>[214]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Her hands dropped from the keys and she turned slowly on the end of the
+seat. The dark lashes fell to her hot cheeks. He did not speak, but she
+felt the steady insistence of his gaze. In self-defense she looked at
+him.
+</p>
+<p>
+The pallor of his face lent accent to the fire that smouldered in his
+eyes.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm going to marry you, Sheba. Make up your mind to that, girl," he
+said harshly.
+</p>
+<p>
+There was infinite pity in the look she gave him. "'There's caulder
+things than salt waves between us, so they are,'" she quoted.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not if I love you and you love me. By God, I trample down everything
+that comes between us."
+</p>
+<p>
+He swung to a sitting position on the lounge. Through the steel-gray
+eyes in the brooding face his masterful spirit wrestled with hers. A
+lean-loined Samson, with broad, powerful shoulders and deep chest, he
+dominated his world ruthlessly. But this slim Irish girl with the young,
+lissom body held her own.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Must we go through that again?" she asked gently.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Again and again until you see reason."
+</p>
+<p>
+She knew the tremendous driving power of the man and she was afraid in
+her heart that he would sweep her from the moorings to which she clung.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page215" name="page215"></a>[215]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"There is something else I haven't told you." The embarrassed lashes
+lifted bravely from the flushed cheeks to meet steadily his look.
+"I don't think&mdash;that I&mdash;care for you. 'Tis I that am shamed at
+my&mdash;fickleness. But I don't&mdash;not with the full of my heart."
+</p>
+<p>
+His bold, possessive eyes yielded no fraction of all they claimed.
+"Time enough for that, Sheba. Truth is that you're afraid to let
+yourself love me. You're worried because you can't measure me by the
+little two-by-four foot-rule you brought from Ireland with you."
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba nodded her dusky little head in na&iuml;ve candor. "I think there will
+be some truth in that, Mr. Macdonald. You're lawless, you know."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm a law to myself, if that's what you mean. It is my business to help
+hammer out an empire in this Northland. If I let my work be cluttered up
+by all the little rules made by little men for other little ones, my
+plans would come to a standstill. I am a practical man, but I keep sight
+of the vision. No need for me to brag. What I have done speaks for me as
+a guidepost to what I mean to do."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I know," the girl admitted with the impetuous generosity of her race.
+"I hear it from everybody. You have built towns and railroads and
+developed mines and carried the twentieth century into new outposts. You
+have given work
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page216" name="page216"></a>[216]</span>
+
+ to thousands. But you go so fast I can't keep step with you. I am one of
+the little folks for whom laws were made."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then I'll make a new code for you," he said, smiling. "Just do as I say
+and everything will come out right."
+</p>
+<p>
+Faintly her smile met his. "My grandmother might have agreed to that.
+But we live in a new world for women. They have to make their own
+decisions. I suppose that is a part of the penalty we pay for freedom."
+</p>
+<p>
+Diane came into the room and Macdonald turned to her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I have just been telling Sheba that I am going to marry her&mdash;that there
+is no escape for her. She had better get used to the idea that I intend
+to make her happy."
+</p>
+<p>
+The older cousin glanced at Sheba and laughed with a touch of
+embarrassment. "Whether she wants to be happy or not, O Cave Man?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm going to make her want to."
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba fled, but from the door she flung back her challenge. "I don't
+think so."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page217" name="page217"></a>[217]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0020" id="h2HCH0020"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XX
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ GORDON FINDS HIMSELF UNPOPULAR
+</h3>
+<p>
+Macdonald kept his word to Sheba. He used his influence to get Elliot
+released, and with a touch of cynicism quite characteristic went on the
+bond of his rival. An information was filed against the field agent of
+the Land Department for highway robbery and attempted murder, but Gordon
+went about his business just as if he were not under a cloud.
+</p>
+<p>
+None the less, he walked the streets a marked man. Women and children
+looked at him curiously and whispered as he passed. The sullen, hostile
+eyes of miners measured him silently. He was aware that feeling had
+focused against him with surprising intensity of resentment, and he
+suspected that the whispers of Wally Selfridge were largely responsible
+for this.
+</p>
+<p>
+For Wally saw to it that in the minds of the miners Elliot in his own
+person stood for the enemies of the open-Alaska policy. He scattered
+broadcast garbled extracts from the first preliminary report of the
+field agent, and in the coal camps he spread the impression that the
+whole mining activities of the Territory would be curtailed if Elliot
+had his way.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page218" name="page218"></a>[218]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+In the States the fight between the coal claimants and their foes was
+growing more bitter. The muckrakers were busy, and the sentiment outside
+had settled so definitely against granting the patents that the National
+Administration might at any time jettison Macdonald and his backers as a
+sop to public opinion.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was not hard for Gordon to guess how unpopular he was, but he did not
+let this interfere with his activities. He moved to and fro among the
+mining camps with absolute disregard of the growing hatred against him.
+</p>
+<p>
+Paget came to him at last with a warning.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What's this I hear about you being almost killed up on Bonanza?" Peter
+wanted to know.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Down in the None Such Mine, you mean? It did seem to be raining hammers
+as I went down the shaft," admitted his friend.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Were the hammers dropped on purpose?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon looked at him with a grim smile. "Your guess is just as good as
+mine, Peter. What do you think?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Peter answered seriously. "I think it isn't safe for you to take the
+chances you do, Gordon. I find a wrong impression about you prevalent
+among the men. They are blaming you for stirring up all this trouble on
+the outside, and they are worried for fear the mines may close
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page219" name="page219"></a>[219]</span>
+
+ and they will lose their jobs. I tell you that they are in a dangerous
+mood."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sorry, but I can't help that."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You can stay around town and not go out alone nights, can't you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I dare say I can, but I'm not going to."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Some of these men are violent. They don't think straight about you&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Kindness of Mr. Selfridge," contributed Gordon.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Perhaps. Anyhow, there's a lot of sullen hate brewing against you.
+Don't invite an explosion. That would be just kid foolhardiness."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You think I'd better buy another automatic gat," said Elliot with a
+grin.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I think you had better use a little sense, Gordon. I dare say I am
+exaggerating the danger. But when you go around with that jaunty,
+devil-may-care way of yours, the men think you are looking for
+trouble&mdash;and you're likely to get it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Am I?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I know what I'm talking about. Nine out of ten of the men think you
+tried to murder Macdonald after you had robbed him and that your nerve
+weakened on the job. This seems to some of the most lawless to give them
+a moral right to put you out of the way. Anyhow, it is a kind of
+justification, according to their point of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page220" name="page220"></a>[220]</span>
+
+ view. I'm not defending it, of course. I'm telling you so that you can
+appreciate your danger."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You have done your duty, then, Peter."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But you don't intend to take my advice?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll tell you what I told you last time when you warned me. I'm going
+through with the job I've been hired to do, just as you would stick it
+out in my place. I don't think I'm in much danger. Men in general are
+law-abiding. They growl, but they don't go as far as murder."
+</p>
+<p>
+Peter gave him up. After all, the chances were that Gordon was right.
+Alaska was not a lawless country. And it might be that the best way to
+escape peril was to walk through it with a grin as if it did not exist.
+</p>
+<p>
+The next issue of the Kusiak "Sun" contained a bitter editorial attack
+upon Elliot. The occasion for it was a press dispatch from Washington to
+the effect that the pressure of public opinion had become so strong that
+Winton, Commissioner of the General Land Office, might be forced to
+resign his place. This was a blow to the coal claimants, and the "Sun"
+charged in vitriolic language that the reports of Elliot were to blame.
+He was, the newspaper claimed, an enemy to all those who had come to
+Alaska to earn an honest living there. Under indictment for attempted
+murder and for highway robbery, this man was not satisfied with having
+tried to
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page221" name="page221"></a>[221]</span>
+
+ kill from ambush the best friend Alaska had ever known. In every report
+that he sent to Washington he was dealing underhanded blows at the
+prosperity of Alaska. He was a snake in the grass, and as such every
+decent man ought to hold him in scorn.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot read this just as he was leaving for the Willow Creek Camp.
+He thrust the paper impatiently into his coat pocket and swung to the
+saddle. Why did they persecute him? He had told nothing but the truth,
+nothing not required of him by the simplest, elemental honesty. Yet he
+was treated as an outcast and a criminal. The injustice of it was
+beginning to rankle.
+</p>
+<p>
+He was temperamentally an optimist, but depression rode with him to the
+gold camp and did not lift from his spirits till he started back next
+day for Kusiak. The news had been flashed by wire all over the United
+States that he was a crook. His friends and relatives could give no
+adequate answer to the fact that an indictment hung over his head.
+In Alaska he was already convicted by public opinion. Even the Pagets
+were lined up as to their interests with Macdonald. Sheba liked him and
+believed in him. Her loyal heart acquitted him of all blame. But it was
+to the wooing of his enemy that she had listened rather than to his.
+The big Scotchman had run against a barrier, but his rival expected
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page222" name="page222"></a>[222]</span>
+
+ him to trample it down. He would wear away the scruples of Sheba by the
+pressure of his masterful will.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the late afternoon, while Gordon was still fifteen miles from Kusiak,
+his horse fell lame. He led it limping to the cabin of some miners.
+</p>
+<p>
+There were three of them, and they had been drinking heavily from a jug
+of whiskey left earlier in the day by the stage-driver. Gordon was in
+two minds whether to accept their surly permission to stay for the
+night, but the lameness of his horse decided him.
+</p>
+<p>
+Not caring to invite their hostility, he gave his name as Gordon instead
+of Elliot. He was to learn within the hour that this was mistake number
+two.
+</p>
+<p>
+From a pocket of the coat he had thrown on a bed protruded the newspaper
+Gordon had brought from Kusiak. One of the men, a big red-headed fellow,
+pulled it out and began sulkily to read.
+</p>
+<p>
+While he read the other two bickered and drank and snarled at each
+other. All three of the men were in that stage of drunkenness when a
+quarrel is likely to flare up at a moment's notice.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Listen here," demanded the man with the newspaper. "Tell you what,
+boys, I'm going to wring the neck of that pussyfooting spy Elliot if
+I ever get a chanct."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page223" name="page223"></a>[223]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+He read aloud the editorial in the "Sun." After he had finished, the
+others joined him in a chorus of curses.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I always did hate a spy&mdash;and this one's a murderer too. Why don't some
+one fill his hide with lead?" one of the men wanted to know.
+</p>
+<p>
+Redhead was sitting at the table. He thumped a heavy fist down so hard
+that the tin cups jumped. "Gimme a crack at him and I'll show you, by
+God."
+</p>
+<p>
+A shadow fell across the room. In the doorway stood a newcomer. Gordon
+had a sensation as if a lump of ice had been drawn down his spine. For
+the man who had just come in was Big Bill Macy, and he was looking at
+the field agent with eyes in which amazement, anger, and triumph blazed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm glad to death to meet up with you again, Mr. Elliot," he jeered.
+"Seems like old times on Wild-Goose."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Whad you say his name is?" cut in the man with the newspaper.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hasn't he introduced himself, boys?" Macy answered with a cruel
+grin. "Now, ain't that modest of him? You lads are entertaining that
+well-known deteckative and spy Gordon Elliot, that renowned king of
+hold-ups&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+The red-headed man interrupted with a howl
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page224" name="page224"></a>[224]</span>
+
+ of rage. "If you're telling it straight, Bill Macy, I'll learn him to
+spy on me."
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot was sitting on one of the beds. He had not moved an inch since
+Macy had appeared, but the brain behind his live eyes was taking stock
+of the situation. Big Bill blocked the doorway. The table was in front
+of the window. Unless he could fight his way out, there was no escape
+for him. He was trapped.
+</p>
+<p>
+Quietly Gordon looked from one to another. He read no hope in the eyes
+of any.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm not spying on you. My horse is lame. You can see that for yourself.
+All I asked was a night's lodging."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Under another name than your own, you damned sneak."
+</p>
+<p>
+The field agent did not understand the fury of the man, because he
+did not know that these miners were working the claim under a defective
+title and that they had jumped to the conclusion that he had come to get
+evidence against them. But he knew that never in his life had he been
+in a tighter hole. In another minute they would attack him. Whether it
+would run to murder he could not tell. At the best he would be hammered
+helpless.
+</p>
+<p>
+But no evidence of this knowledge appeared in his manner.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I didn't give my last name because there is
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page225" name="page225"></a>[225]</span>
+
+ a prejudice against me in this country," he explained in an even voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+He wondered as he spoke if he had better try to fling himself through
+the window sash. There might be a remote chance that he could make it.
+</p>
+<p>
+The miner at the table killed this possibility by rising and standing
+squarely in the road.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Look out! He's got a gat," warned Macy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon fervently wished he had. But he was unarmed. While his eyes
+quested for a weapon he played for time.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You can't get away with this, you know. The United States Government
+is back of me. It's known I left the Willow Creek Camp. I'll be traced
+here."
+</p>
+<p>
+Through Gordon's mind there flashed a word of advice once given him by
+a professional prize-fighter: "If you get in a rough house, don't wait
+for the other fellow to hit first."
+</p>
+<p>
+They were crouching for the attack. In another moment they would be upon
+him. Almost with one motion he stooped, snatched up by the leg a heavy
+stool, and sprang to the bed upon which he had been sitting.
+</p>
+<p>
+The four men closed with him in a rush. They came at him low, their
+heads protected by uplifted arms. His memory brought to him a picture of
+the whitewashed gridiron of a football field, and in it he saw a vision
+of safety.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page226" name="page226"></a>[226]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The stool crashed down upon Big Bill Macy's head. Gordon hurdled the
+crumpling figure, plunged between hands outstretched to seize him, and
+over the table went through the window, taking the flimsy sash with him.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page227" name="page227"></a>[227]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0021" id="h2HCH0021"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ A NEW WAY OF LEAVING A HOUSE
+</h3>
+<p>
+The surge of disgust with which Sheba had broken her engagement to marry
+Macdonald ebbed away as the weeks passed. It was impossible for her to
+wait upon him in his illness and hold any repugnance toward this big,
+elemental man. The thing he had done might be wrong, but the very
+openness and frankness of his relation to Meteetse redeemed it from
+shame. He was neither a profligate nor a squawman.
+</p>
+<p>
+This was Diane's point of view, and in time it became to a certain
+extent that of Sheba. One takes on the color of one's environment, and
+the girl from Drogheda knew in her heart that Meteetse and Colmac were
+no longer the real barriers that stood between her and the Alaskan.
+She had been disillusioned, saw him more clearly; and though she still
+recognized the quality of bigness that set him apart, her spirit did not
+now do such complete homage to it. More and more her thoughts contrasted
+him with another man.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald did not need to be told that he had lost ground, but with the
+dogged determination that had carried him to success he refused to
+accept the verdict. She was a woman, therefore
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page228" name="page228"></a>[228]</span>
+
+ to be won. The habit of victory was so strong in him that he could see
+no alternative.
+</p>
+<p>
+He embarrassed her with his downright attentions, hemmed her in with
+courtesies she could not evade. If she appealed to her cousin, Diane
+only laughed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My dear, you might as well make up your mind to him. He is going to
+marry you, willy-nilly."
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba herself began to be afraid he would. There was something dominant
+and masterful about the man that swept opposition aside. He had a way of
+getting what he wanted.
+</p>
+<p>
+The motor-car picnic to the Willow Creek Camp was a case in point. Sheba
+did not want to go, but she went. She would much rather have sat in the
+rear seat with Diane,&mdash;at least, she persuaded herself that she
+would,&mdash;yet she occupied the place beside Macdonald in front. The girl
+was a rebel. Still, in her heart, she was not wholly reluctant. He made
+a strong appeal to her imagination. She felt that it would have been
+impossible for any girl to be indifferent to the wooing of such a man.
+</p>
+<p>
+The picnic was a success. Macdonald was an outdoor man rather than a
+parlor one. He took charge of the luncheon, lit the fire, and cooked the
+coffee without the least waste of effort. In his shirt-sleeves, the neck
+open at the throat, he
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page229" name="page229"></a>[229]</span>
+
+ looked the embodiment of masculine vigor. Diane could not help
+mentioning it to her cousin.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Isn't he a splendid human animal?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba nodded. "He's wonderful."
+</p>
+<p>
+"If I were a little Irish colleen and he had done me the honor to care
+for me, I'd have fallen fathoms deep in love with him."
+</p>
+<p>
+The Irish colleen's eyes grew reflective. "Not if you had seen Peter
+first, Di. There's nothing reasonable about a girl, I do believe. She
+loves&mdash;or else she just doesn't."
+</p>
+<p>
+Diane fired a question at her point-blank. "Have you met <i>your</i>
+Peter? Is that why you hang back?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The color flamed into Sheba's face. "Of course not. You do say the most
+outrageous things, Di."
+</p>
+<p>
+They had driven to Willow Creek over the river road. They returned by
+way of the hills. Macdonald drew up in front of a cabin to fill the
+radiator.
+</p>
+<p>
+He stood listening beside the car, the water bucket in his hand.
+Something unusual was going on inside the house. There came the sound
+of a thud, of a groan, and then the crash of breaking glass. The whole
+window frame seemed to leap from the side of the house. The head and
+shoulders of a man projected through the broken glass.
+</p>
+<p>
+The man swept himself free of the d&eacute;bris and started to run. Instantly
+he pulled up in his
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page230" name="page230"></a>[230]</span>
+
+ stride, as amazed to see those in the car as they were to see him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Gordon!" cried Diane.
+</p>
+<p>
+Out of the house poured a rush of men. They too pulled up abruptly at
+sight of Macdonald and his guests.
+</p>
+<p>
+A sardonic mirth gleamed in the eyes of the Scotchman. "Do you always
+come out of a house through the wall, Mr. Elliot?" he asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Only when I'm in a hurry." Gordon pulled out a handkerchief and dabbed
+at some glass-cuts on his face.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't let us detain you," said the Alaskan satirically. "We'll excuse
+you, since you must go."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm not in such a hurry now. In fact, if you're going to Kusiak,
+I think I'll ask you for a lift," returned the field agent coolly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And your friends-in-a-hurry&mdash;do they want a lift too?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Big Bill Macy came swaying forward, both hands to his bleeding head.
+"He's a spy, curse him. And he tried to kill me."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did he?" commented Macdonald evenly. "What were you doing to him?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"He can't sneak around our claim under a false name," growled one of the
+miners. "We'll beat his damn head off."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've had notions like that myself sometimes,"
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page231" name="page231"></a>[231]</span>
+
+ assented the big Scotchman. "But I think we had all better leave Mr.
+Elliot to the law. He has Uncle Sam back of him in his spying, and none
+of us are big enough to buck the Government." Crisply Macdonald spoke to
+Gordon, turning upon him cold, hostile eyes. "Get in if you're going
+to."
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot met him eye to eye. "I've changed my mind. I'm going to walk."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's up to you."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon shook hands with Diane and Sheba, went into the house for his
+coat, and walked to the stable. He brought out his horse and turned it
+loose, then took the road himself for Kusiak.
+</p>
+<p>
+A couple of miles out the car passed him trudging townward. As they
+flashed down the road he waved a cheerful and nonchalant greeting.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba had been full of gayety and life, but her mood was changed. All
+the way home she was strangely silent.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page232" name="page232"></a>[232]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0022" id="h2HCH0022"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ GID HOLT COMES TO KUSIAK
+</h3>
+<p>
+The days grew short. In sporting circles the talk was no longer of the
+midnight Fourth of July baseball game, but of preparation for the Alaska
+Sweepstakes, since the shadow of the cold Arctic winter had crept down
+to the Yukon and touched its waters to stillness. Men, gathered around
+warm stoves, spoke of the merits of huskies and Siberian wolf-hounds, of
+the heavy fall of snow in the hills, of the overhauling of outfits and
+the transportation of supplies to distant camps.
+</p>
+<p>
+The last river boat before the freeze-up had long since gone. A month
+earlier the same steamer had taken down in a mail sack the preliminary
+report of Elliot to his department chief. One of the passengers on
+that trip had been Selfridge, sent out to counteract the influence
+of the evidence against the claimants submitted by the field agent.
+An information had been filed against Gordon for highway robbery and
+attempted murder. Wally was to see that the damning facts against him
+were brought to the attention of officials in high places where the
+charges would do most good. The details of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page233" name="page233"></a>[233]</span>
+
+ the story were to be held in reserve for publicity in case the muckrake
+magazines should try to make capital of the report of Elliot.
+</p>
+<p>
+Kusiak found much time for gossip during the long nights. It knew
+that Macdonald had gone on the bond of Elliot in spite of the scornful
+protest of the younger man. The two gave each other chilly nods of
+greeting when they met, but friends were careful not to invite them to
+the same social affairs. The case against the field agent was pending.
+Pursuit of the miners who had robbed the big mine-owner had long ago
+been dropped. Somewhere in the North the outlaws lay hidden, swallowed
+up by the great white waste of snow.
+</p>
+<p>
+The general opinion was that Mac was playing politics about the trial
+of his rival. He would not let the case come to a jury until the time
+when a conviction would have most effect in the States, the gossips
+predicted. They did not know that he was waiting for the return of
+Wally Selfridge.
+</p>
+<p>
+The whispers touched closely the personal affairs of Macdonald. The
+report of his engagement to Sheba O'Neill had been denied, but it was
+noticed that he was a constant guest at the home of the Pagets. Young
+Elliot called there too. Almost any day one or other of the two men
+could be seen with Sheba on the street. Those who wanted to take a
+sporting chance on the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page234" name="page234"></a>[234]</span>
+
+ issue knew that odds were offered <i>sub rosa</i> at the Pay Streak
+saloon of three to one on Mac.
+</p>
+<p>
+As for Sheba, she rebelled impotently at the situation. The mine-owner
+would not take "No" for an answer. He wooed her with a steady, dominant
+persistence that shook even her strong, young will. There was something
+resistless in the way he took her for granted. Gordon Elliot had not
+mentioned love to her, though there were times when her heart fluttered
+for fear he would. She did not want any more complications. She wanted
+to be let alone. So when an invitation came from her little friends the
+Husteds, signed by all three of the children, asking her to come and
+visit them at the camp back of Katma, the Irish girl jumped at the
+chance to escape for a time from the decision being forced upon her.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba pledged her cousin to secrecy until after she had gone, so that
+Miss O'Neill was able to slip away on the stage unnoticed either by
+Macdonald or Elliot. The only other passenger was an elderly woman going
+up to the Katma camp to take a place as cook.
+</p>
+<p>
+Later on the same day Wally Selfridge, coming in over the ice, reached
+Kusiak with important news for his chief. He brought with him an order
+from Winton, Commissioner of the General Land Office, suspending Elliot
+pending an investigation
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page235" name="page235"></a>[235]</span>
+
+ of the charges against him. The field agent was to forward by mail all
+documents in his possession and for the time, at least, drop the matter
+of the coal claims.
+</p>
+<p>
+Oddly enough, it was to Genevieve Mallory that Macdonald went for
+consolation when he learned that Sheba had left town. He had always
+found it very pleasant to drop in for a chat with her, and she saw to
+it that he met the same friendly welcome now that a rival had annexed
+his scalp to her slender waist. For Mrs. Mallory did not concede defeat.
+If the Irish girl could be eliminated, she believed she would yet win.
+</p>
+<p>
+His hostess laced her fingers behind her beautiful, tawny head, quite
+well aware that the attitude set off the perfect modeling of the soft,
+supple body. She looked up at him with a mocking little smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Rumor says that she has run away, my lord. Is it true?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes. Slipped away on the stage this morning."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's a good sign. She was afraid to stay."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was a part of the fiction between them that Mrs. Mallory was to give
+him the benefit of her advice in his wooing of her rival. She seemed to
+take it for granted that he would at last marry Sheba after wearing away
+the rigid Puritanism of her resentment.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald had never liked her so well as now.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page236" name="page236"></a>[236]</span>
+
+ Her point of view was so sane, so reasonable. It asked for no impossible
+virtues in a man. There was something restful in her genial, derisive
+understanding of him. She had a silent divination of his moods and
+ministered indolently to them.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do you think so? Ought I to follow her?" he asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+She showed a row of perfect teeth in a low ripple of amusement. The
+situation at least was piquant, even though it was at her expense.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No. Give the girl time. Catch her impulse on the rebound. She'll be
+bored to death at Katma and she will come back docile."
+</p>
+<p>
+Her scarlet lips, the long, unbroken lines of the sinuous, opulent body,
+the challenge of the smouldering eyes, the warmth of her laughter, all
+invited him to forget the charms of other women. The faint feminine
+perfume of her was wafted to his brain. He felt a besieging of the
+blood.
+</p>
+<p>
+Stepping behind the chair in which she sat, he tilted back the head of
+lustrous bronze, and very deliberately kissed her on the lips.
+</p>
+<p>
+For a moment she gave herself to his embrace, then pushed him back,
+rose, and walked across the room to a little table. With fingers that
+trembled slightly she lit a cigarette. Sheathed in her close-fitting
+gown, she made a strong carnal appeal to him, but there was between
+them, too,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page237" name="page237"></a>[237]</span>
+
+ a close bond of the spirit. He made no apologies, no explanation.
+</p>
+<p>
+Presently she turned and looked at him. Only the deeper color beneath
+her eyes betrayed any excitement.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Unless I'm a bad prophet you'll get the answer you want when she comes
+back, Colby."
+</p>
+<p>
+He thought her reply to his indiscretion superb. It admitted complicity,
+reproached, warned, and at the same time ignored. Never before had she
+called him by his given name. He took it as a token of forgiveness and
+renunciation.
+</p>
+<p>
+Why was it not Genevieve Mallory that he wanted to marry? It would be
+the wise thing to do. She would ask nothing of him that he could not
+give, and she would bring to him many things that he wanted. But he was
+under the spell of Sheba's innocence, of the mystery of her youth, of
+the charm she had brought with her from the land of fairies and
+banshees. The reasonable course made just now not enough appeal to him.
+He craved the rapture of an impossible adventure into a world wonderful.
+</p>
+<p>
+The mine-owner carried with him back to his office a sense of the futile
+irony of life. A score of men would have liked to marry Mrs. Mallory.
+She had all the sophisticated graces of life and much of the natural
+charm of an unusually attractive personality. He had only to speak the
+word
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page238" name="page238"></a>[238]</span>
+
+ to win her, and his fancy had flown in pursuit of a little Puritan with
+no knowledge of the world.
+</p>
+<p>
+In front of the Seattle &amp; Kusiak Emporium the Scotchman stopped. A
+little man who had his back to him was bargaining for a team of huskies.
+The man turned, and Macdonald recognized him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hello, Gid. Aren't you off your usual beat a bit?" he asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+The little miner looked him over impudently. "Well&mdash;well! If it ain't
+the Big Mogul himself&mdash;and wantin' to know if I've got permission to
+travel off the reservation."
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald laughed tolerantly. He had that large poise which is not
+disturbed by the sand stings of life.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I reckon you travel where you want to, Gid,&mdash;same as I do."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Maybeso. I shouldn't wonder if you'd find out quite soon enough what
+I'm doing here. You never can tell," the old man retorted with a manner
+that concealed volumes.
+</p>
+<p>
+Those who were present remembered the words and in the light of what
+took place later thought them significant.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Anyhow, it is quite a social event for Kusiak," Macdonald suggested
+with a smile of irony.
+</p>
+
+<a name="image-0003"><!--IMG--></a>
+<div class="figure">
+<a href="images/illus-03.jpg"><img src="images/illus-03t.jpg" width="400"
+alt="THE SITUATION AT LEAST WAS PIQUANT, EVEN THOUGH IT WAS AT HER EXPENSE" /></a>
+<br />
+THE SITUATION AT LEAST WAS PIQUANT, EVEN THOUGH IT WAS AT HER EXPENSE
+</div>
+
+<p>
+Without more words Holt turned back to his bargaining. The big Scotchman
+went on his
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page239" name="page239"></a>[239]</span>
+
+ way, remembered that he wanted to see the cashier of the bank which he
+controlled, and promptly forgot that old Gid existed.
+</p>
+<p>
+The old man concluded his purchase and drove up to the hotel behind one
+of the best dog teams in Alaska. He had paid one hundred dollars down
+and was to settle the balance next day.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gideon asked a question of the porter.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Second floor. That's his room up there," the man answered, pointing to
+a window.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, you, seven&mdash;eighteen&mdash;ninety-nine," the little miner shouted up.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot appeared at the window. "Well, I'll be hanged! What are you doing
+here, Old-Timer?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Onct I knew a man lived to be a grandpa minding his own business,"
+grinned the little man. "Come down and I'll tell you all about it, boy."
+</p>
+<p>
+In half a minute Gordon was beside him. After the first greetings the
+young man nodded toward the dog team.
+</p>
+<p>
+"How did you persuade Tim Ryan to lend you his huskies?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why don't you take a paper and keep up with the news, son? These
+huskies don't belong to Tim."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Meaning that Mr. Gideon Holt is the owner?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You've done guessed it," admitted the miner complacently.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page240" name="page240"></a>[240]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+He had a right to be proud of the team. It was a famous one even in the
+North. It had run second for two years in the Alaska Sweepstakes to
+Macdonald's great Siberian wolf-hounds. The leader Butch was the hero of
+a dozen races and a hundred savage fights.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What in Halifax do you want with the team?" asked Elliot, surprised.
+"The whole outfit must have cost a small fortune."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Some dust," admitted Gideon proudly. He winked mysteriously at Gordon.
+"I got a use for this team, if any one was to ask you."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Haven't taken the Government mail contract, have you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not so you could notice it. I'll tell you what I want with this team,
+as the old sayin' is." Holt lowered his voice and narrowed slyly his
+little beadlike eyes. "I'm going to put a crimp in Colby Macdonald.
+That's what I aim to do with it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"How?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The miner beckoned Elliot closer and whispered in his ear.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page241" name="page241"></a>[241]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0023" id="h2HCH0023"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ IN THE DEAD OF NIGHT
+</h3>
+<p>
+While Kusiak slept that night the wind shifted. It came roaring across
+the range and drove before it great scudding clouds heavily laden with
+sleety snow. The howling storm snuffed out the moonlight as if it had
+been a tallow dip and fought and screamed around the peaks, whirling
+down the gulches with the fury of a blizzard.
+</p>
+<p>
+From dark till dawn the roar of the wind filled the night. Before
+morning heavy drifts had wiped out the roads and sheeted the town in
+virgin white unbroken by trails or furrows.
+</p>
+<p>
+With the coming of daylight the tempest abated. Kusiak got into its
+working clothes and dug itself out from the heavy blanket of white that
+had tucked it in. By noon the business of the town was under way again.
+That which would have demoralized the activities of a Southern city made
+little difference to these Arctic Circle dwellers. Roads were cleared,
+paths shoveled, stores opened. Children in parkas and fur coats trooped
+to school and studied through the short afternoon by the aid of electric
+light.
+</p>
+<p>
+Dusk fell early and with it came a scatter of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page242" name="page242"></a>[242]</span>
+
+ more snow. Mrs. Selfridge gave a dinner-dance at the club that night and
+her guests came in furs of great variety and much value. The hostess
+outdid herself to make the affair the most elaborate of the season.
+Wally had brought the favors in from Seattle and also the wines. Nobody
+in Kusiak of any social importance was omitted from the list of invited
+except Gordon Elliot. Even the grumpy old cashier of Macdonald's
+bank&mdash;an old bachelor who lived by himself in rooms behind those in
+which the banking was done&mdash;was persuaded to break his custom and appear
+in a rusty old dress suit of the vintage of '95.
+</p>
+<p>
+The grizzled cashier&mdash;his name was Robert Milton&mdash;left the clubhouse
+early for his rooms. It was snowing, but the wind had died down.
+Contrary to his custom, he had taken two or three glasses of wine. His
+brain was excited so that he knew he could not sleep. He decided to read
+"Don Quixote" by the stove for an hour or two. The heat and the reading
+together would make him drowsy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Arrived at the bank, he let himself into his rooms and locked the
+door. He stooped to open the draft of the stove when a sound stopped
+him halfway. The cashier stood rigid, still crouched, waiting for a
+repetition of the noise. It came once more&mdash;the low, dull rasping of
+a file.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page243" name="page243"></a>[243]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Shivers ran down the spine of Milton and up the back of his head to
+the roots of his hair. Somebody was in the bank&mdash;at two o'clock in the
+morning&mdash;with tools for burglary. He was a scholarly old fellow, brought
+up in New England and cast out to the uttermost frontier by the malign
+tragedy of poverty. Adventure offered no appeal to him. His soul quaked
+as he waited with slack, feeble muscles upon the discovery that only a
+locked door stood between him and violent ruffians.
+</p>
+<p>
+But though his knees trembled beneath him and the sickness of fear was
+gripping his heart, Robert Milton had in him the dynamic spark that
+makes a man. He tiptoed to his desk and with shaking fingers gripped the
+revolver that lay in a drawer.
+</p>
+<p>
+The cashier stood there for a moment, moistening his dry lips with
+his tongue and trying to swallow the lump that rose to his throat and
+threatened to stop his breathing. He braced himself for the plunge,
+then slowly trod across the room to the inner, locked door. The palsied
+fingers of his left hand could scarce turn the key.
+</p>
+<p>
+It seemed to him that the night was alive with the noise he made in
+turning the lock and opening the door. The hinges grated and the floor
+squeaked beneath the fall of his foot as he stood at the threshold.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page244" name="page244"></a>[244]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Two men were in front of the wire grating which protected the big safe
+that filled the alcove to the right. One held a file and the other a
+candle. Their blank, masked faces were turned toward Milton, and each
+of them covered him with a weapon.
+</p>
+<p>
+"W-what are you doing here?" quavered the cashier.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Drop that gun," came the low, sharp command from one of them.
+</p>
+<p>
+Under the menace of their revolvers the heart of Milton pumped water
+instead of blood. The strength oozed out of him. His body swayed and he
+shut his eyes. A hand groped for the casement of the door to steady him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Drop it&mdash;quick."
+</p>
+<p>
+Some old ancestral instinct in the bank cashier rose out of his panic
+to destroy him. He wanted to lie down quietly in a faint. But his mind
+asserted its mastery over the weakling body. In spite of his terror, of
+his flaccid will, he had to keep the faith. He was guardian of the bank
+funds. At all costs he must protect them.
+</p>
+<p>
+His forearm came up with a jerk. Two shots rang out almost together. The
+cashier sagged back against the wall and slowly slid to the floor.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+The guests of Mrs. Selfridge danced well into the small hours. The
+California champagne that
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page245" name="page245"></a>[245]</span>
+
+ Wally had brought in stimulated a gayety that was balm to his wife's
+soul. She wanted her dinner-dance to be smart, to have the atmosphere
+she had found in the New York cabarets. If everybody talked at once, she
+felt they were having a good time. If nobody listened to anybody else,
+it proved that the affair was a screaming success.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Wally was satisfied as she bade her guests good-bye and saw them
+pass into the heavy snow that was again falling. They all assured her
+that there had not been so hilarious a party in Kusiak. One old-timer, a
+trifle lit up by reason of too much hospitality, phrased his enjoyment a
+little awkwardly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's been great, Mrs. Selfridge. Nothing like it since the days of the
+open dance hall."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Mallory hastily suppressed an internal smile and stepped into the
+breach. "<i>How</i> do you do it?" she asked her hostess enviously.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My dear, if <i>you</i> say it was a success&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"What else could one say?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Genevieve Mallory always preferred to tell the truth when it would do
+just as well. Now it did better, since it contributed to her own ironic
+sense of amusement. Macdonald had once told her that Mrs. Selfridge made
+him think of the saying, "Monkey sees, monkey does." The effervescent
+little woman had never had an original idea in her life.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page246" name="page246"></a>[246]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Most of those who had been at the dance slept late. They were oblivious
+of the fact that the storm had quickened again into a howling gale.
+Nor did they know the two bits of news that were passing up and down
+the main street and being telephoned from house to house. One of the
+items was that the stage for Katma had failed to reach the roadhouse at
+Smith's Crossing. The message had come over the long-distance telephone
+early in the morning. The keeper of the roadhouse added his private
+fears that the stage, crawling up the divide as the blizzard swept down,
+must have gone astray and its occupants perished. The second bit of news
+was local. For the first time since Robert Milton had been cashier the
+bank had failed to open on the dot. The snow had not been cleared from
+the walk in front and no smoke was pouring from the chimney of the
+building.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page247" name="page247"></a>[247]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0024" id="h2HCH0024"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ MACDONALD FOLLOWS A CLUE
+</h3>
+<p>
+Macdonald was no sluggard. It was his habit not to let the pleasure of
+the night before interfere with the business of the morning after. But
+in the darkness he overslept and let the town waken before him. He was
+roused by the sound of knocking on his door.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Who is it?" he asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's me&mdash;Jones&mdash;Gopher Jones. Say, Mac, the bank ain't open and we
+can't rouse Milton. Thought I'd come to you, seeing as you're president
+of the shebang."
+</p>
+<p>
+The mine-owner got up and began to dress. "Probably overslept, same as
+I did."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's the point. We looked through the window of his bedroom and his
+bed ain't been slept in."
+</p>
+<p>
+In three minutes Macdonald joined the marshal and walked down with him
+to the bank. He unlocked the front door and turned to the little crowd
+that had gathered.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Better wait here, boys. Gopher and I will go in. I expect everything is
+all right, but we'll let you know about that as soon as we find out."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page248" name="page248"></a>[248]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The bank president opened the door, let the officer enter, and followed
+himself.
+</p>
+<p>
+The sun had not yet risen and the blinds were down. Macdonald struck a
+match and held it up. The wood burned and the flame flickered out.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Bank's been robbed," he announced quietly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Looks like," agreed Jones. His voice was uneven with excitement.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Scotch-Canadian lit another match. In the flare of it they saw that
+the steel grill cutting off the alcove was open and that the door had
+been blown from the safe. It lay on the floor among a litter of papers,
+silver, fragments of steel, and bits of candle.
+</p>
+<p>
+The marshal clutched at the arm of the banker. "Did you see&mdash;that?" he
+whispered.
+</p>
+<p>
+His finger pointed through the darkness to the other end of the room. In
+the faint gray light of coming day Macdonald could see a huddled mass on
+the floor.
+</p>
+<p>
+"There has been murder done. I'll get a light. Don't move from here,
+Jones. I want to look at things before we disturb them. There's no
+danger. The robbers have been gone for hours."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gopher had as much nerve as the next man&mdash;when the sun was shining and
+he could see what danger he was facing. But there was something sinister
+and nerve-racking here. He wanted to
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page249" name="page249"></a>[249]</span>
+
+ throw open the door and shout the news to those outside.
+</p>
+<p>
+By the light of another match the mine-owner crossed the room into
+the sitting-room of the cashier. Presently he returned with a lamp
+and let its light fall upon the figure lying slumped against the wall.
+A revolver lay close to the inert fingers. The head hung forward
+grotesquely upon the breast.
+</p>
+<p>
+The dead man was Milton. His employer saw nothing ridiculous in the
+twisted neck and sprawling limbs. The cashier had died to save the money
+entrusted to his care.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald handed the lamp to the marshal and picked up the revolver.
+Every chamber was loaded.
+</p>
+<p>
+"They beat him to it. They were probably here when he reached home.
+My guess is he heard them right away, got his gun, and came in. He's
+still wearing his dress suit. That gives us the time, for he left the
+club about midnight. Soon as they saw him they dropped him. Likely they
+heard him and were ready. I wouldn't have had this happen for all the
+money in the safe."
+</p>
+<p>
+"How much was there in it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I don't know exactly. The books will show. I'll send Wally down to look
+them over."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Shot right spang through the heart, looks
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page250" name="page250"></a>[250]</span>
+
+ like," commented Jones, following with his eye the course of the wound.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Wish I'd been here instead of him," Macdonald said grimly. His eyes
+softened as he continued to look down at the employee who had paid
+with his life for his faithfulness. "It wasn't an even break. Poor old
+fellow! You weren't built for a job like this, Robert Milton, but you
+played your hand out to a finish. That's all any man can do."
+</p>
+<p>
+He turned abruptly away and began examining the safe. The silver still
+stood sacked in one large compartment. The bank-notes had escaped the
+hurried search of the robbers, but the gold was practically all gone.
+One sack had been torn by the explosion and single pieces of gold could
+be found all over the safe.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald glanced over the papers rapidly. The officer picked up one
+of dozens scattered over the floor. It was a mortgage note made out to
+the bank by a miner. He collected the others. Evidently the bandits had
+torn off the rubber, glanced over one or two to see if they had any cash
+value, and tossed the package into the air as a disgusted gambler does
+a pack of cards.
+</p>
+<p>
+The bank president stepped to the door and threw it open. He explained
+the situation in three sentences.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I can't let you in now, boys, until the coroner
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page251" name="page251"></a>[251]</span>
+
+ has been here," he went on to tell the crowd. "But there is one way you
+can all help. Keep your eyes open. If you have seen any suspicious
+characters around, let me know. Or if any one has left town in a
+hurry&mdash;or been seen doing anything during the night that you did not
+understand at the time. Men can't do a thing like this without leaving
+some clue behind them even though the snow has wiped away their trail."
+</p>
+<p>
+A man named Fred Tague pushed to the front. He kept a feed corral near
+the edge of town. "I can tell you one man who mushed out before five
+o'clock this morning&mdash;and that's Gid Holt."
+</p>
+<p>
+The eyes of Macdonald, cold and hard as jade, fastened to the man. "How
+do you know?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"That dog team he bought from Tim Ryan&mdash;Well, he's been keeping it in my
+corral. When I got there this morning it was gone. The snow hadn't wiped
+out the tracks of the runners yet, so he couldn't have left more than
+fifteen minutes before."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What time was it when you reached the corral?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Might have been six&mdash;maybe a little later."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You don't know that Holt took the team himself?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Come to that, I don't. But he had a key to the barn where the sled was.
+Holt has been putting
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page252" name="page252"></a>[252]</span>
+
+ up at the hotel. I reckon it is easy to find out if he's still there."
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald's keen brain followed the facts as the nose of a bloodhound
+does a trail. Holt, an open enemy of his, had reached town only two days
+before. He had bought one of the best and swiftest dog teams in the
+North and had let slip before witnesses the remark that Macdonald would
+soon find out what he wanted with the outfit. The bank had been robbed
+after midnight. To file open the grill and to blow up the safe must
+have taken several hours. Before morning the dogs of Holt had taken the
+trail. If their owner were with them, it was a safe bet that the sled
+carried forty thousand dollars in Alaska gold dust.
+</p>
+<p>
+So far the mind of the Scotchman followed the probabilities logically,
+but at this point it made a jump. There were at least two robbers. He
+was morally sure of that, for this was not a one-man job. Now, if Holt
+had with him a companion, who of all those in Kusiak was the most likely
+man? He was a friendless, crabbed old fellow. Since coming to Kusiak old
+Gideon had been seen constantly with one man. Together they had driven
+out the day before and tried his new team. They had been with each other
+at dinner and had later left the hotel together. The name of the man who
+had been so friendly with
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page253" name="page253"></a>[253]</span>
+
+ old Holt was Gordon Elliot&mdash;and Elliot not only was another enemy of
+Macdonald, but had very good reasons for getting out of the country just
+now.
+</p>
+<p>
+The strong jaw of the mine-owner stood out saliently as he gave short,
+sharp orders to men in the crowd. One was to get the coroner, a second
+Wally Selfridge, another the United States District Attorney. He divided
+the rest into squads to guard the roads leading out of town and to see
+that nobody passed for the present.
+</p>
+<p>
+As soon as the men he had sent for arrived, Macdonald went over the
+scene of the crime with them. It was plain that the dynamiting had been
+done by an old-time miner who knew his business, but there had been
+brains in the planning of the robbery.
+</p>
+<p>
+"There is no ivory above the ears of the man who bossed this job,"
+Macdonald told the others. "He picks a night when we're all at the club,
+more than half a mile from here, a stormy night when folks are not
+wandering the streets. He knows that the wind will deaden the sound of
+the dynamite and that the snow will wipe out any tracks that might help
+to identify him and his pal or show which way they have gone."
+</p>
+<p>
+The coroner took charge of the body and Wally of the bank. The
+mine-owner and the district attorney walked up to the hotel together. As
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page254" name="page254"></a>[254]</span>
+
+ soon as they had explained what they wanted, the landlord got a passkey
+and took them to the room Holt had used.
+</p>
+<p>
+Apparently the bed had been slept in. In the waste-paper basket the
+district attorney found something which he held up in a significant
+silence. Macdonald stepped forward and took from him a small cloth sack.
+</p>
+<p>
+"One of those we keep our gold in at the bank," said the Scotchman after
+a close examination. "This definitely ties up Holt with the robbery. Now
+for Elliot."
+</p>
+<p>
+"He left the hotel with Holt about five this morning the porter says."
+This was the contribution of the landlord.
+</p>
+<p>
+The room of Gordon Elliot was in great disorder. Garments had been
+tossed on the bed and on every chair and had been left to lie wherever
+they had chanced to fall. Plainly their owner had been in great haste.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald looked through the closet where clothes hung. "His new fur
+coat is not here&mdash;nor his trail boots. Looks to me as though Mr. Gordon
+had hit the trail with his friend Holt."
+</p>
+<p>
+This opinion was strengthened when it was learned from a store-owner in
+town that Holt and Elliot had routed him out of bed in the early morning
+to sell them two weeks' supplies. These they had packed upon the sled
+outside the store.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page255" name="page255"></a>[255]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's a cinch bet that Elliot took the trail with him," the lawyer
+conceded.
+</p>
+<p>
+All doubt of this was removed when a prospector reached town with the
+news that he had met Holt and Elliot traveling toward the divide as fast
+as they could drive the dogs.
+</p>
+<p>
+The big Scotchman ordered his team of Siberian wolf-hounds made ready
+for the trail. As he donned his heavy furs, Colby Macdonald smiled with
+deep satisfaction. He had Elliot on the run at last.
+</p>
+<p>
+Just as he closed the door of his room, Macdonald heard the telephone
+bell ring. He hesitated, then shrugged his shoulders and strode out into
+the storm. If he had answered the call he would have learned from Diane,
+who was at the other end of the line, that the stage upon which Sheba
+had started for Katma had not reached the roadhouse at Smith's Crossing.
+</p>
+<p>
+Five minutes later the winners of the great Alaska Sweepstakes were
+flying down the street in the teeth of the storm. Armed with a rifle
+and a revolver, their owner was mushing into the hills to bring back
+the men who had robbed his bank and killed the cashier. He traveled
+alone because he could go faster without a companion. It never occurred
+to him that he was not a match for any two men he might face.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page256" name="page256"></a>[256]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0025" id="h2HCH0025"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XXV
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ IN THE BLIZZARD
+</h3>
+<p>
+"Swiftwater" Pete, the driver of the stage between Kusiak and Katma,
+did not like the look of the sky as his ponies breasted the long uphill
+climb that ended at the pass. It was his habit to grumble. He had been
+complaining ever since they had started. But as he studied the heavy
+billows of cloud banked above the peaks and in the saddle between, there
+was real anxiety in his red, apoplectic face.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Gittin' her back up for a blizzard, looks like. Doggone it, if that
+wouldn't jest be my luck," he murmured fretfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba hoped there would be one, not, of course, a really, truly blizzard
+such as Macdonald had told her about, but the tail of a make-believe
+one, enough to send her glowing with exhilaration into the roadhouse
+with the happy sense of an adventure achieved. The girl had got out to
+relieve the horses, and as her young, lissom body took the hill
+scattering flakes of snow were already flying.
+</p>
+<p>
+To-day she was buoyed up by a sense of freedom. For a time, at least,
+she was escaping Macdonald's driving energy, the appeal of Gordon
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page257" name="page257"></a>[257]</span>
+
+ Elliot's warm friendliness, and the unvoiced urging of Diane. Good old
+Peter and the kiddies were the only ones that let her alone.
+</p>
+<p>
+She looked back at the horses laboring up the hill. Swiftwater had got
+down and was urging them forward, his long whip crackling about the ears
+of the leaders. He waddled as he walked. His fat legs were too short for
+the round barrel body. A big roll of fat bulged out over the collar of
+his shirt. Whenever he was excited&mdash;and he always was on the least
+excuse&mdash;he puffed and snorted and grew alarmingly purple.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Fat chance," he exploded as soon as he got within hearing. "Snow in
+those clouds&mdash;tons of it. H'm! And wind. Wow! We're in for an
+honest-to-God blizzard, sure as you're a foot high."
+</p>
+<p>
+Swiftwater was worried. He would have liked to turn and run for it. But
+the last roadhouse was twenty-seven miles back. If the blizzard came
+howling down the slope they would have a sweet time of it reaching
+safety. Smith's Crossing was on the other side of the divide, only nine
+miles away. They would have to worry through somehow. Probably those
+angry clouds were half a bluff.
+</p>
+<p>
+The temperature was dropping rapidly. Already snow fell fast in big
+thick flakes. To make it worse, the wind was beginning to rise. It
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page258" name="page258"></a>[258]</span>
+
+ came in shrill gusts momentarily increasing in force.
+</p>
+<p>
+The stage-driver knew the signs of old and cursed the luck that had led
+him to bring the stage. It was to have been the last trip with horses
+until spring. His dogs were waiting for him at Katma for the return
+journey. He did not blame himself, for there was no reason to expect
+such a storm so early in the season. None the less, it was too bad that
+his lead dog had been ailing when he left the gold camp eight days
+before.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss O'Neill knew that Swiftwater Pete was anxious, and though she was
+not yet afraid, the girl understood the reason for it. The road ran
+through the heart of a vast snow-field, the surface of which was being
+swept by a screaming wind. The air was full of sifted white dust, and
+the road furrow was rapidly filling. Soon it would be obliterated.
+Already the horses were panting and struggling as they ploughed forward.
+Sheba tramped behind the stage-driver and in her tracks walked Mrs.
+Olson, the other passenger.
+</p>
+<p>
+Through the muffled scream of the storm Swiftwater shouted back to
+Sheba. "You wanta keep close to me."
+</p>
+<p>
+She nodded her head. His order needed no explanation. The world was
+narrowing to a lane whose walls she could almost touch with her
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page259" name="page259"></a>[259]</span>
+
+ fingers. A pall of white wrapped them. Upon them beat a wind of stinging
+sleet. Nothing could be seen but the blurred outlines of the stage and
+the driver's figure.
+</p>
+<p>
+The bitter cold searched through Sheba's furs to her soft flesh and the
+blast of powdered ice beat upon her face. The snow was getting deeper
+as the road filled. Once or twice she stumbled and fell. Her strength
+ebbed, and the hinges of her knees gave unexpectedly beneath her. How
+long was it, she asked herself, that Macdonald had said men could live
+in a blizzard?
+</p>
+<p>
+Staggering blindly forward, Sheba bumped into the driver. He had drawn
+up to give the horses a moment's rest before sending them plunging at
+the snow again.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No chance," he called into the young woman's ear. "Never make Smith's
+in the world. Goin' try for miner's cabin up gulch little way."
+</p>
+<p>
+The team stuck in the drifts, fought through, and was blocked again ten
+yards beyond. A dozen times the horses gave up, answered the sting of
+the whip by diving head first at the white banks, and were stopped by
+fresh snow-combs.
+</p>
+<p>
+Pete gave up the fight. He began unhitching the horses, while Sheba and
+Mrs. Olson, clinging to each other's hands, stumbled forward to join
+him. The words he shouted across the back of a
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page260" name="page260"></a>[260]</span>
+
+ horse were almost lost in the roar of the shrieking wind.
+</p>
+<p>
+"... heluvatime ... ride ... gulch," Sheba made out.
+</p>
+<p>
+He flung Mrs. Olson astride one of the wheelers and helped Sheba to the
+back of the right leader. Swiftwater clambered upon its mate himself.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl paid no attention to where they were going. The urge of life
+was so faint within her that she did not greatly care whether she lived
+or died. Her face was blue from the cold; her vitality was sapped. She
+seemed to herself to have turned to ice below the hips. Outside the
+misery of the moment her whole attention was concentrated on sticking
+to the back of the horse. Numb though her fingers were, she must keep
+them fastened tightly in the frozen mane of the animal. She recited her
+lesson to herself like a child. She must stick on&mdash;she must&mdash;she must.
+</p>
+<p>
+Whether she lost consciousness or not Sheba never knew. The next she
+realized was that Swiftwater Pete was pulling her from the horse. He
+dragged her into a cabin where Mrs. Olson lay crouched on the floor.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Got to stable the horses," he explained, and left them.
+</p>
+<p>
+After a time he came back and lit a fire in the sheet-iron stove. As the
+circulation that meant life flooded back into her chilled veins Sheba
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page261" name="page261"></a>[261]</span>
+
+ endured a half-hour of excruciating pain. She had to clench her teeth to
+keep back the groans that came from her throat, to walk the floor and
+nurse her tortured hands with fingers in like plight.
+</p>
+<p>
+The cabin was empty of furniture except for a home-made table, rough
+stools, and the frame of a bed. The last occupant had left a little
+firewood beside the stove, enough to last perhaps for twenty-four hours.
+Sheba did not need to be told that if the blizzard lasted long enough,
+they would starve to death. In the handbag left in the stage were a box
+of candy and an Irish plum pudding. She had brought the latter from the
+old country with her and was taking it and the chocolates to the Husted
+children. But just now the stage was as far from them as Drogheda.
+</p>
+<p>
+Like many rough frontiersmen, Swiftwater Pete was a diamond in the
+raw. He had the kindly, gentle instincts that go to the making of a
+good man. So far as could be he made a hopeless and impossible situation
+comfortable. His judgment told him that they were caught in a trap from
+which there was no escape, but for the sake of the women he put a
+cheerful face on things.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Lucky we found this cabin," he growled amiably. "By this time we'd 'a'
+been up Salt Creek if we hadn't. Seeing as our luck has stood
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page262" name="page262"></a>[262]</span>
+
+ up so far, I reckon we'll be all right. Mighty kind of Mr. Last Tenant
+to leave us this firewood. Comes to a showdown we've got one table, four
+stools, and a bed that will make first-class fuel. We ain't so worse
+off."
+</p>
+<p>
+"If we only had some food," Mrs. Olson suggested.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Food!" Pete looked at her in assumed surprise. "Huh! What about all
+that live stock I got in the stable? I've heard tell, ma'am, that
+broncho tenderloin is a favorite dish with them there French chiefs
+that do the cooking. They kinder trim it up so's it's 'most as good as
+frawgs' legs."
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba had never before slept on bare boards with a sealskin coat for a
+sleeping-bag. But she was very tired and dropped off almost instantly.
+Twice she woke during the night, disturbed by the stiffness and the
+pain of her body. It seemed to her that the hard, whipsawed planks were
+pushing through the soft flesh to the bones. She was cold, too, and
+crept closer to the stout Swedish woman lying beside her. Presently she
+fell asleep again to the sound of the blizzard howling outside. When she
+wakened for the third time it was morning.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the afternoon the blizzard died away. As far as she could see, Sheba
+looked out upon a waste of snow. Her eyes turned from the desolation
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page263" name="page263"></a>[263]</span>
+
+ without to the bare and cheerless room in which they had found shelter.
+In spite of herself a little shiver ran down the spine of the girl. Had
+she come into this Arctic solitude to find her tomb?
+</p>
+<p>
+Resolutely she brushed the gloomy thought from her mind and began to
+chat with Mrs. Olson. In a corner of the cabin Sheba had found a torn
+and disreputable copy of "Vanity Fair." The covers and the first forty
+pages were gone. A splash of what appeared to be tobacco juice defiled
+the last sheet. But the fortunes of Becky and Amelia had served to make
+her forget during the morning that she was hungry and likely to be much
+hungrier before another day had passed.
+</p>
+<p>
+As soon as the storm had moderated enough to let him go out with
+safety, Swiftwater Pete had taken one of the horses for an attempt at
+trail-breaking.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Me, I'm after that plum pudding. I gotta get a feed of oats from the
+stage for my bronchs too. The scenery here is sure fine, but it ain't
+what you would call nourishing. Huh! Watch our smoke when me and old
+Baldface git to bucking them drifts."
+</p>
+<p>
+He had been gone two hours and the early dusk was already descending
+over the white waste when Sheba ventured out to see what had become of
+the stage-driver. But the cold was so
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page264" name="page264"></a>[264]</span>
+
+ bitter that she soon gave up the attempt to fight her way through the
+drifts and turned back to the cabin.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sometime later Swiftwater Pete came stumbling into their temporary home.
+He was fagged to exhaustion but triumphant. Upon the table he dropped
+from the crook of his numbed arm two packages.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The makings for a Christmas dinner," he said with a grin.
+</p>
+<p>
+After he had taken off his mukluks and his frozen socks they wrapped
+him in their furs while he toasted before the stove. Mrs. Olson thawed
+out the pudding and the chocolates in the oven and made a kind of mush
+out of some oats Pete had saved from the horse feed. They ate their
+one-sided meal in high spirits. The freeze had saved their lives. If it
+held clear till to-morrow they could reach Smith's Crossing on the crust
+of the snow.
+</p>
+<p>
+Swiftwater broke up the chairs for fuel and demolished the legs of the
+table, after which he lay down before the stove and fell at once into a
+sodden sleep.
+</p>
+<p>
+Presently Mrs. Olson lay down on the bed and began to snore regularly.
+Sheba could not sleep. The boards tired her bones and she was cold.
+Sometimes she slipped into cat naps that were full of bad dreams. She
+thought she was walking
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page265" name="page265"></a>[265]</span>
+
+ on the snow-comb of a precipice and that Colby Macdonald pushed her from
+her precarious footing and laughed at her as she slid swiftly toward the
+gulf below. When she wakened with a start it was to find that the fire
+had died down. She was shivering from lack of cover. Quietly the girl
+replenished the fire and lay down again.
+</p>
+<p>
+When she wakened with a start it was morning. A faint light sifted
+through the single window of the shack. Sheba whispered to the older
+woman that she was going out for a little walk.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Be careful, dearie," advised Mrs. Olson. "I wouldn't try to go too
+far."
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba smiled to herself at the warning. It was not likely that she would
+go far enough to get lost with all these millions of tons of snow piled
+up around her in every direction.
+</p>
+<p>
+She had come out because she was restless and was tired of the dingy
+and uncomfortable room. Without any definite intentions, she naturally
+followed the trail that Swiftwater had broken the day before. No wind
+stirred and the sky was clear. But it was very cold. The sun would not
+be up for half an hour.
+</p>
+<p>
+As she worked her way down the gulch Sheba wondered whether the news of
+their loss had reached Kusiak. Were search parties out already to rescue
+them? Colby Macdonald had gone out into the blizzard years ago to save
+her father.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page266" name="page266"></a>[266]</span>
+
+ Perhaps he might have been out all night trying to save her father's
+daughter. Peter would go, of course,&mdash;and Gordon Elliot. The work in the
+mines would stop and men would volunteer by scores. That was one fine
+thing about the North. It responded to the unwritten law that a man must
+risk his own life to save others.
+</p>
+<p>
+But if the wires had come down in the storm Kusiak would not know
+they had not got through to Smith's Crossing. Swiftwater Pete spoke
+cheerfully about mushing to the roadhouse. But Sheba knew the snow
+would not bear the horses. They would have to walk, and it was not at
+all certain that Mrs. Olson could do so long a walk with the thermometer
+at forty or fifty below zero.
+</p>
+<p>
+From a little knoll Sheba looked down upon the top of the stage three
+hundred yards below her, and while she stood there the promise of the
+new day was blazoned on the sky. It came with amazing beauty of green
+and primrose and amethyst, while the stars flickered out and the heavens
+took on the blue of sunrise. In a crotch between two peaks a faint
+golden glow heralded the sun. A circle of lovely rose-pink flushed the
+horizon.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba had this much of the poet in her, that every sunrise was still a
+miracle. She drew a deep, slow breath of adoration and turned away. As
+she did so her eyes dilated and her body grew rigid.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page267" name="page267"></a>[267]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Across the snow waste a man was coming. He was moving toward the cabin
+and must cross the trench close to her. The heart of the girl stopped,
+then beat wildly to make up the lost stroke. He had come through the
+blizzard to save her.
+</p>
+<p>
+At that very instant, as if the stage had been set for it, the wonderful
+Alaska sun pushed up into the crotch of the peaks and poured its radiance
+over the Arctic waste. The pink glow swept in a tide of delicate color
+over the snow and transmuted it to millions of sparkling diamonds. The
+Great Magician's wand had recreated the world instantaneously.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page268" name="page268"></a>[268]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0026" id="h2HCH0026"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ HARD MUSHING
+</h3>
+<p>
+Elliot and Holt left Kusiak in a spume of whirling, blinding snow. They
+traveled light, not more than forty pounds to the dog, for they wanted
+to make speed. It was not cold for Alaska. They packed their fur coats
+on the sled and wore waterproof parkas. On their hands were mittens
+of moosehide with duffel lining, on their feet mukluks above "German"
+socks. Holt had been a sour-dough miner too long to let his partner
+perspire from overmuch clothing. He knew the danger of pneumonia from
+a sudden cooling of the heat of the body.
+</p>
+<p>
+Old Gideon took seven of his dogs, driving them two abreast. Six were
+huskies, rangy, muscular animals with thick, dense coats. They were in
+the best of spirits and carried their tails erect like their Malemute
+leader. Butch, though a Malemute, had a strong strain of collie in him.
+It gave him a sense of responsibility. His business was to see that the
+team kept strung out on the trail, and Butch was a past-master in the
+matter of discipline. His weight was ninety-three fighting pounds, and
+he could thrash in short order any dog in the team.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page269" name="page269"></a>[269]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The snow was wet and soft. It clung to everything it touched. The dogs
+carried pounds of it in the tufts of hair that rose from their backs.
+An icy pyramid had to be knocked from the sled every half-hour. The
+snowshoes were heavy with white slush. Densely laden spruce boughs
+brushed the faces of the men and showered them with unexpected little
+avalanches.
+</p>
+<p>
+They took turns in going ahead of the team and breaking trail. It
+was heavy, muscle-grinding work. Before noon they were both utterly
+fatigued. They dragged forward through the slush, lifting their laden
+feet sluggishly. They must keep going, and they did, but it seemed to
+them that every step must be the last.
+</p>
+<p>
+Shortly after noon the storm wore itself out. The temperature had been
+steadily falling and now it took a rapid drop. They were passing through
+timber, and on a little slope they built with a good deal of difficulty
+a fire. By careful nursing they soon had a great bonfire going, in front
+of which they put their wet socks, mukluks, scarfs, and parkas to dry.
+The toes of the dogs had become packed with little ice balls. Gordon and
+Holt had to go carefully over the feet of each animal to dig these out.
+</p>
+<p>
+The old-timer thawed out a slab of dried salmon till the fat began to
+frizzle and fed each husky a pound of the fish and a lump of tallow.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page270" name="page270"></a>[270]</span>
+
+ He and Gordon made a pot of tea and ate some meat sandwiches they had
+brought with them to save cooking until night.
+</p>
+<p>
+When they took the trail again it was in moccasins instead of mukluks.
+The weather was growing steadily colder and with each degree of fall in
+the thermometer the trail became easier.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mushing at fifty below zero is all right when it is all right,"
+explained Holt in the words of the old prospector. "But when it isn't
+right it's hell."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It is not fifty below yet, is it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nope. But she's on the way. When your breath makes a kinder crackling
+noise she's fifty."
+</p>
+<p>
+Travel was much easier now. There was a crust on the snow that held up
+the dogs and the sled so that trail-breaking was not necessary. The
+little party pounded steadily over the barren hills. There was no sign
+of life except what they brought with them out of the Arctic silence and
+carried with them into the greater silence beyond. A little cloud of
+steam enveloped them as they moved, the moisture from the breath of nine
+moving creatures in a waste of emptiness.
+</p>
+<p>
+Each of the men wrapped a long scarf around his mouth and nose for
+protection, and as the part in front of his face became a sheet of ice
+shifted the muffler to another place.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page271" name="page271"></a>[271]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Night fell in the middle of the afternoon, but they kept traveling. Not
+till they were well up toward the summit of the divide did they decide
+to camp. They drove into a little draw and unharnessed the weary dogs.
+It was bitterly cold, but they were forced to set up the tent and stove
+to keep from freezing. Their numbed fingers made a slow job of the camp
+preparations. At last the stove was going, the dogs fed, and they
+themselves thawed out. They fell asleep shortly to the sound of the
+mournful howling of the dogs outside.
+</p>
+<p>
+Long before daybreak they were afoot again. Holt went out to chop some
+wood for the stove while Gordon made breakfast preparations. The little
+miner brought in an armful of wood and went out to get a second supply.
+A few moments later Elliot heard a cry.
+</p>
+<p>
+He stepped out of the tent and ran to the spot where Holt was lying
+under a mass of ice and snow. The young man threw aside the broken
+blocks that had plunged down from a ledge above.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Badly hurt, Gid?" he asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I done bust my laig, son," the old man answered with a twisted grin.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You mean that it is broken?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tell you that in a minute."
+</p>
+<p>
+He felt his leg carefully and with Elliot's help
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page272" name="page272"></a>[272]</span>
+
+ tried to get up. Groaning, he slid back to the snow.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yep. She's busted," he announced.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon carried him to the tent and laid him down carefully. The old
+miner swore softly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ain't this a hell of a note, boy? You'll have to get me to Smith's
+Crossing and leave me there."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was the only thing to be done. Elliot broke camp and packed the sled.
+Upon the load he put his companion, well wrapped up in furs. He
+harnessed the dogs and drove back to the road.
+</p>
+<p>
+Two miles farther up the road Gordon stopped his team sharply. He had
+turned a bend in the trail and had come upon an empty stage buried in
+the snow.
+</p>
+<p>
+The fear that had been uppermost in Elliot's mind for twenty-four hours
+clutched at his throat. Was it tragedy upon which he had come after his
+long journey?
+</p>
+<p>
+Holt guessed the truth. "They got stalled and cut loose the horses. Must
+have tried to ride the cayuses to shelter."
+</p>
+<p>
+"To Smith's Crossing?" asked Gordon.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Expect so." Then, with a whoop, the man on the sled contradicted
+himself. "No, by Moses, to Dick Fiddler's old cabin up the draw. That's
+where Swiftwater would aim for till the blizzard was over."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where is it?" demanded his friend.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page273" name="page273"></a>[273]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"Swing over to the right and follow the little gulch. I'll wait till you
+come back."
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon dropped the gee-pole and started on the instant. Eagerness,
+anxiety, dread fought in his heart. He knew that any moment now he might
+stumble upon the evidence of the sad story which is repeated in Alaska
+many times every winter. It rang in him like a bell that where tough,
+hardy miners succumbed a frail girl would have small chance.
+</p>
+<p>
+He cut across over the hill toward the draw, and at what he saw his
+pulse quickened. Smoke was pouring out of the chimney of a cabin and
+falling groundward, as it does in the Arctic during very cold weather.
+Had Sheba found safety there? Or was it the winter home of a prospector?
+</p>
+<p>
+As he pushed forward the rising sun flooded the earth with pink and
+struck a million sparkles of color from the snow. The wonder of it drew
+the eyes of the young man for a moment toward the hills.
+</p>
+<p>
+A tumult of joy flooded his veins. The girl who held in her soft hands
+the happiness of his life stood looking at him. It seemed to him that
+she was the core of all that lovely tide of radiance. He moved toward
+her and looked down into the trench where she waited. Swiftly he kicked
+off his snowshoes and leaped down beside her.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page274" name="page274"></a>[274]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The gleam of tears was in her eyes as she held out both hands to him.
+During the long look they gave each other something wonderful to both
+of them was born into the world.
+</p>
+<p>
+When he tried to speak his hoarse voice broke. "Sheba&mdash;little Sheba!
+Safe, after all. Thank God, you&mdash;you&mdash;" He swallowed the lump in his
+throat and tried again. "If you knew&mdash;God, how I have suffered! I was
+afraid&mdash;I dared not let myself think."
+</p>
+<p>
+A live pulse beat in her white throat. The tears brimmed over. Then,
+somehow, she was in his arms weeping. Her eyes slowly turned to his,
+and he met the touch of her surrendered lips.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nature had brought them together by one of her resistless and
+unpremeditated impulses.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page275" name="page275"></a>[275]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0027" id="h2HCH0027"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ TWO ON THE TRAIL
+</h3>
+<p>
+A stress of emotion had swept her into his arms. Now she drew away from
+him shyly. The conventions in which she had been brought up asserted
+themselves. Sheba remembered that they had been carried by the high wave
+of their emotion past all the usual preliminaries. He had not even told
+her that he loved her. An absurd little fear obtruded itself into her
+happiness. Had she rushed into his arms like a lovesick girl, taking it
+for granted that he cared for her?
+</p>
+<p>
+"You&mdash;came to look for us?" she asked, with the little shy stiffness of
+embarrassment.
+</p>
+<p>
+"For you&mdash;yes."
+</p>
+<p>
+He could not take his eyes from her. It seemed to him that a bird was
+singing in his heart the gladness he could not express. He had for many
+hours pushed from his mind pictures of her lying white and rigid on the
+snow. Instead she stood beside him, her delicate beauty vivid as the
+flush of a flame.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did they telephone that we were lost?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes. I was troubled when the storm grew. I could not sleep. So I called
+up the roadhouse
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page276" name="page276"></a>[276]</span>
+
+ by long distance. They had not heard from the stage. Later I called
+again. When I could stand it no longer, I started."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not on foot?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No. With Holt's dog team. He is back there. His leg is broken. A
+snow-slide crushed him this morning where we camped."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Bring him to the cabin. I will tell the others you are coming."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Have you had any food?" he asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+A tired smile lit up the shadows of weariness under her soft, dark eyes.
+"Boiled oats, plum pudding, and chocolates," she told him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We have plenty of food on the sled. I'll bring it at once."
+</p>
+<p>
+She nodded, and turned to go to the cabin. He watched for a moment the
+lilt in her walk. An expression from his reading jumped to his mind.
+Melodious feet! Some poet had said that, hadn't he? Surely it must have
+been Sheba of whom he was thinking, this girl so virginal of body and of
+mind, free and light-footed as a caribou on the hills.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon returned to the sled and drove the team up the draw to the cabin.
+The three who had been marooned came to meet their rescuer.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You must 'a' come right through the storm lickitty split," Swiftwater
+said.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're right we did. This side pardner of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page277" name="page277"></a>[277]</span>
+
+ mine was hell-bent on wrestling with a blizzard," Holt answered dryly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sorry you broke your laig, Gid."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then there's two of us sorry, Swiftwater. It's one of the best laigs
+I've got."
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba turned to the old miner impulsively. "If you could be knowing what
+I am thinking of you, Mr. Holt,&mdash;how full our hearts are of the
+gratitude&mdash;" She stopped, tears in her voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sho! No need of that, Miss. He dragged me along." His thumb jerked
+toward the man who was driving. "I've seen better dog punchers than
+Elliot, but he's got the world beat at routin' old-timers out of bed and
+persuadin' them to kick in with him and buck a blizzard. Me, o' course,
+I'm an old fool for comin'&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+The dark eyes of the girl were like stars in a frosty night. "Then
+you're the kind of a fool I love, Mr. Holt. I think it was just fine of
+you, and I'll never forget it as long as I live."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Olson had cooked too long in lumber and mining camps not to know
+something about bone-setting. Under her direction Gordon made splints
+and helped her bandage the broken leg. Meanwhile Swiftwater Pete fed
+his horses from the grain on the sled and Sheba cooked an appetizing
+breakfast. The aroma of coffee and the smell of frying bacon stimulated
+appetites that needed no tempting.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page278" name="page278"></a>[278]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Holt, propped up by blankets, ate with the others. For a good many years
+he had taken his luck as it came with philosophic endurance. Now he
+wasted no time in mourning what could not be helped. He was lucky the
+ice slide had not hit him in the head. A broken leg would mend.
+</p>
+<p>
+While they ate, the party went into committee of the whole to decide
+what was best to be done. Gordon noticed that in all the tentative
+suggestions made by Holt and Swiftwater the comfort of Sheba was the
+first thing in mind.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl, too, noticed it and smilingly protested, her soft hand lying
+for the moment on the gnarled one of the old miner.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It doesn't matter about me. We have to think of what will be best for
+Mr. Holt, of how to get him to the proper care. My comfort can wait."
+</p>
+<p>
+The plan at last decided upon was that Gordon should make a dash for
+Smith's Crossing on snowshoes, where he was to arrange for a relief
+party to come out for the injured man and Mrs. Olson. He was to return
+at once without waiting for the rescuers. Next morning he and Sheba
+would start with Holt's dog team for Kusiak.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald had taught Sheba how to use snowshoes and she had been an apt
+pupil. From her suitcase she got out her moccasins and put them on. She
+borrowed the snowshoes of Holt,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page279" name="page279"></a>[279]</span>
+
+ wrapped herself in her parka, and announced that she was going with
+Elliot part of the way.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon thought her movements a miracle of supple lightness. Her lines
+had the swelling roundness of vital youth, her eyes were alive with
+the eagerness that time dulls in most faces. They spoke little as they
+swept forward over the white snow-wastes. The spell of the great North
+was over her. Its mystery was stirring in her heart, just as it had
+been when her lips had turned to his at the sunrise. As for him, love
+ran through his veins like old wine. But he allowed his feelings no
+expression. For though she had come to him of her own accord for that
+one blessed minute at dawn, he could not be sure what had moved her so
+deeply. She was treading a world primeval, the wonder of it still in
+her soft eyes. Would she waken to love or to disillusion?
+</p>
+<p>
+He took care to see that she did not tire. Presently he stopped and held
+out his hand to say good-bye.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Will you come back this way?" she asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes. I ought to get here soon after dark. Will you meet me?"
+</p>
+<p>
+She gave him a quick, shy little nod, turned without shaking hands, and
+struck out for the cabin. All through the day happiness flooded her
+heart. While she waited on Holt or helped
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page280" name="page280"></a>[280]</span>
+
+ Mrs. Olson cook or watched Swiftwater while he put up the tent in
+the lee of the cabin, little snatches of song bubbled from her lips.
+Sometimes they were bits of old Irish ballads that popped into her mind.
+Once, while she was preparing some coffee for her patient, it was a
+stanza from Burns:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p class="i4"> "Till a' the seas gang dry, my dear, </p>
+<p class="i6"> And the rocks melt wi' the sun: </p>
+<p class="i4"> I will luve thee still, my dear, </p>
+<p class="i6"> While the sands o' life shall run." </p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+She caught old Gideon looking at her with a queer little smile on his
+weather-tanned face and she felt the color beat into her cheeks.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I haven't bought a wedding present for twenty years," he told her
+presently, apropos of nothing that had been said. "I won't know what's
+the proper thing to get, Miss Sheba."
+</p>
+<p>
+"If you talk nonsense like that I'll go out and talk to Mr. Swiftwater
+Pete," she threatened, blushing.
+</p>
+<p>
+Old Gid folded his hands meekly. "I'll be good&mdash;honest I will. Let's
+see. I got to make safe and sane conversation, have I? Hm! Wonder when
+that lazy, long-legged, good-for-nothing horsethief and holdup that
+calls himself Gordon Elliot will get back to camp."
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba looked into his twinkling eyes suspiciously as she handed him his
+coffee. For a moment
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page281" name="page281"></a>[281]</span>
+
+ she bit her lip to keep back a smile, then said with mock severity,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now, I <i>am</i> going to leave you to Mrs. Olson."
+</p>
+<p>
+When sunset came it found Sheba on the trail. Swiftwater Pete had
+offered to go with her, but she had been relieved of his well-meant
+kindness by the demand of Holt.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, you don't, Pete. You ain't a-goin' off gallivantin' with no young
+lady. You're a-goin' to stay here and fix my game laig for me. What do
+you reckon Miss Sheba wants with a fat, lop-sided lummox like you along
+with her?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Pete grew purple with embarrassment. He had not intended anything more
+than civility and he wanted this understood.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hmp! Ain't you got no sense a-tall, Gid? If Miss Sheba's hell-bent on
+goin' to meet Elliot, I allowed some one ought to go along and keep the
+dark offen her. 'Course there ain't nothin' going to harm her, unless
+she goes and gets lost&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba's smile cooled the heat of the stage-driver. "Which she isn't
+going to do. Good of you to offer to go with me. Don't mind Mr. Holt.
+Everybody knows he doesn't mean half of what he says. I'd be glad to
+have you come with me, but it isn't necessary at all. So I'll not
+trouble you."
+</p>
+<p>
+Darkness fell quickly, but Sheba still held to the trail. There was no
+sign of Elliot, but she
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page282" name="page282"></a>[282]</span>
+
+ felt sure he would come soon. Meanwhile she followed steadily the tracks
+he had made earlier in the day.
+</p>
+<p>
+She stopped at last. It was getting much colder. She was miles from the
+camp. Reluctantly she decided to return. Then, out of the darkness, he
+came abruptly upon her, the man whom she had come out to meet.
+</p>
+<p>
+Under the magic of the Northern stars they found themselves again in
+each other's arms for that brief moment of joyful surprise. Then, as it
+had been in the morning, Sheba drew herself shyly away.
+</p>
+<p>
+"They are waiting supper for us," she told him irrelevantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+He did not shout out his happiness and tell her to let them wait.
+For Gordon, too, felt awed at this wonderful adventure of love that had
+befallen them. It was enough for him that they were moving side by side,
+alone in the deep snows and the biting cold, that waves of emotion
+crashed through his pulses when his swinging hand touched hers.
+</p>
+<p>
+They were acutely conscious of each other. Excitement burned in the eyes
+that turned to swift, reluctant meetings. She was a woman, and he was
+her lover. Neither of them dared quite accept the fact yet, but it
+filled the background of all their thoughts with delight.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page283" name="page283"></a>[283]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba did not want to talk of this new, amazing thing that had come into
+her life. It was too sacred a subject to discuss just yet even with him.
+So she began to tell him odd fancies from childhood that lingered in her
+Celtic heart, tales of the "little folk" that were half memories and
+half imaginings, stirred to life by some odd association of sky and
+stars. She laughed softly at herself as she told them, but Gordon did
+not laugh at her.
+</p>
+<p>
+Everything she did was for him divinely done. Even when his eyes were on
+the dark trail ahead he saw only the dusky loveliness of curved cheek,
+the face luminous with a radiance some women are never privileged to
+know, the rhythm of head and body and slender legs that was part of her
+individual, heaven-sent charm.
+</p>
+<p>
+The rest had finished supper before Gordon and Sheba reached camp, but
+Mrs. Olson had a hot meal waiting for them.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I fixed up the tent for the women folks&mdash;stove, sleeping-bags, plenty
+of wood. Touch a match to the fire and it'll be snug as a bug in a rug,"
+explained Swiftwater to Gordon.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot and Sheba were to start early for Kusiak and later the rescue
+party would arrive to take care of Holt and Mrs. Olson.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Time to turn in," Holt advised. "You better light that stove, Elliot."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page284" name="page284"></a>[284]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The young man was still in the tent arranging the sleeping-bags when
+Sheba entered. He tried to walk out without touching her, intending to
+call back his good-night. But he could not do it. There was something
+flamey about her to-night that went to his head. Her tender, tremulous
+little smile and the turn of the buoyant little head stirred in him a
+lover's rhapsody.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's to be a long trail we cover to-morrow, Sheba. You must sleep.
+Good-night."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good-night&mdash;Gordon."
+</p>
+<p>
+There was a little flash of audacity in the whimsical twist of her
+mouth. It was the first time she had ever called him by his given name.
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot threw away prudence and caught her by the hands.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My dear&mdash;my dear!" he cried.
+</p>
+<p>
+She trembled to his kiss, gave herself to his embrace with innocent
+passion. Tendrils of hair, fine as silk, brushed his cheeks and sent
+strange thrills through him.
+</p>
+<p>
+They talked the incoherent language of lovers that is compounded of
+murmurs and silences and the touch of lips and the meetings of eyes.
+There were to be other nights in their lives as rich in memories as
+this, but never another with quite the same delight.
+</p>
+<p>
+Presently Sheba reminded him with a smile of the long trail he had
+mentioned. Mrs. Olson
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page285" name="page285"></a>[285]</span>
+
+ bustled into the tent, and her presence stressed the point.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good-night, neighbors," Gordon called back from outside the tent.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba's "Good-night" echoed softly back to him.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl fell asleep to the sound of the light breeze slapping the tent
+and to the doleful howling of the huskies.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page286" name="page286"></a>[286]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0028" id="h2HCH0028"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ A MESSAGE FROM THE DEAD
+</h3>
+<p>
+Macdonald drove his team into the teeth of the storm. The wind came
+in gusts. Sometimes the gale was so stiff that the dogs could scarcely
+crawl forward against it; again there were moments of comparative
+stillness, followed by squalls that slapped the driver in the face like
+the whipping of a loose sail on a catboat.
+</p>
+<p>
+High drifts made the trail difficult. Not once but fifty times Macdonald
+left the gee-pole to break a way through snow-waves for the sled. The
+best he could get out of his dogs was three miles an hour, and he knew
+that there was not another team or driver in the North could have done
+so well.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was close to noon when he reached a division of the road known as the
+Fork. One trail ran down to the river and up it to the distant creeks.
+The other led across the divide, struck the Yukon, and pointed a way to
+the coast. White drifts had long since blotted out the track of the sled
+that had preceded him. Had the fugitives gone up the river to the creeks
+with intent to hole themselves up for the winter? Or was it
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page287" name="page287"></a>[287]</span>
+
+ their purpose to cross the divide and go out over the ice to the coast?
+</p>
+<p>
+The pursuer knew that Gid Holt was wise as a weasel. He could follow
+blindfolded the paths that led to every creek in the gold-fields.
+It might be taken as a certainty that he had not plunged into such a
+desperate venture without having a plan well worked out beforehand.
+Elliot had a high grade of intelligence. Would they try to reach the
+coast and make their get-away to Seattle? Or would they dig themselves
+in till the heavy snows were past and come back to civilization with the
+story of a lucky strike to account for the gold they brought with them?
+Neither gold-dust nor nuggets could be identified. There would be no way
+of proving the story false. The only evidence against them would be that
+they had left at Kusiak and this was merely of a corroborative kind.
+There would be no chance of convicting them upon it.
+</p>
+<p>
+But to strike for Seattle was to throw away all pretense of innocence.
+Fugitives from justice, they would have to disappear from sight in order
+to escape. The hunt for them would continue until at last they were
+unearthed.
+</p>
+<p>
+One fork of the road led to comparative safety; the other went by
+devious windings to the penitentiary and perhaps the gallows. The
+Scotchman put himself in the place of the men he was
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page288" name="page288"></a>[288]</span>
+
+ trailing. Given the same conditions, he knew which path he would follow.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald took the trail that led down to the river, to the distant
+gold-creeks which offered a refuge from man-hunters in many a deserted
+cabin marooned by the deep snows.
+</p>
+<p>
+Even the iron frame and steel muscles of the Scotch-Canadian protested
+against the task he had set them that day. It was a time to sit snugly
+inside by a stove and listen to the howling of the wind as it hurled
+itself down from the divide. But from daylight till dark Colby Macdonald
+fought with drifts and breasted the storm. He got into the harness with
+the dogs. He broke trail for them, cheered them, soothed, comforted,
+punished. Long after night had fallen he staggered into the hut of two
+prospectors, his parka so stiff with frozen snow that it had to be
+beaten with a hammer before the coat could be removed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"How long since a dog team passed&mdash;seven huskies and two men?" was his
+first question.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No dog team has passed for four days," one of the men answered.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You mean you haven't seen one," Macdonald corrected.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I mean none has passed&mdash;unless it went by in the night while we slept.
+And even then our dogs would have warned us."
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald flung his ice-coated gloves to a
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page289" name="page289"></a>[289]</span>
+
+ table and stooped to take off his mukluks. His face was blue with the
+cold, but the bleak look in the eyes came from within. He said nothing
+more until he was free of his wet clothes. Then he sat down heavily and
+passed a hand over his frozen eyebrows.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Get me something to eat and take care of my dogs. There is food for
+them on the sled," he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+While he ate he told them of the bank robbery and the murder. Their
+resentment against the men who had done it was quite genuine. There
+could be no doubt they told the truth when they said no sled had
+preceded his. They were honest, reliable prospectors. He knew them
+both well.
+</p>
+<p>
+The weary man slept like a log. He opened his eyes next morning to find
+one of his hosts shaking him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Six o'clock, Mr. Macdonald. Your breakfast is ready. Jim is looking out
+for the huskies."
+</p>
+<p>
+Half an hour later the Scotchman gave the order, "Mush!" He was off
+again, this time on the back trail as far as the Narrows, from which
+point he meant to strike across to intersect the fork of the road
+leading to the divide.
+</p>
+<p>
+The storm had passed and when the late sun rose it was in a blue sky.
+Fine enough the day was overhead, but the slushy snow, where it was
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page290" name="page290"></a>[290]</span>
+
+ worn thin on the river by the sweep of the wind, made heavy travel for
+the dogs. Macdonald was glad enough to reach the Narrows, where he could
+turn from the river and cut across to hit the trail of the men he was
+following. He had about five miles to go before he would reach the Smith
+Crossing road and every foot of it he would have to break trail for the
+dogs. This was slow business, since he had no partner at the gee-pole.
+Back and forth, back and forth he trudged, beating down the loose snow
+for the runners. It was a hill trail, and the drifts were in most places
+not very deep. But the Scotchman was doing the work of two, and at a
+killing pace.
+</p>
+<p>
+Over a ridge the team plunged down into a little park where the snow was
+deeper. Macdonald, breaking trail across the mountain valley, found his
+feet weighted with packed ice slush so that he could hardly move them.
+When at last he had beaten down a path for his dogs he stood breathing
+deep at the summit of the slope. Before him lay the main road to Smith's
+Crossing, scarce fifty yards away. He gave a deep whoop of triumph, for
+along it ran the wavering tracks left by a sled. He was on the heels of
+his enemy at last.
+</p>
+<p>
+As he turned back to his Siberian hounds, the eyes of Macdonald came to
+abrupt attention. On the hillside, not ten yards from him, something
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page291" name="page291"></a>[291]</span>
+
+ stuck out of the snow like a signpost. It was the foot of a man.
+</p>
+<p>
+Slowly Macdonald moved toward it. He knew well enough what he had
+stumbled across&mdash;one of the tragedies that in the North are likely
+to be found in the wake of every widespread blizzard. Some unfortunate
+traveler, blinded by the white swirl, had wandered from the trail and
+had staggered up a draw to his death.
+</p>
+<p>
+With a little digging the Alaskan uncovered a leg. The man had died
+where he had fallen, face down. Macdonald scooped away the snow and
+found a pack strapped to the back of the buried man. He cut the thongs
+and tried to ease it away. But the gunnysack had frozen to the parka.
+When he pulled, the rotten sacking gave way under the strain. The
+contents of the pack spilled out.
+</p>
+<p>
+The eyes in the grim face of Macdonald grew hard and steely. He had
+found, by some strange freak of chance, much more than he had expected,
+to find. Using his snowshoe as a shovel, he dug the body free and turned
+it over. At sight of the face he gave a cry of astonishment.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page292" name="page292"></a>[292]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0029" id="h2HCH0029"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ "DON'T TOUCH HIM! DON'T YOU DARE TOUCH HIM!"
+</h3>
+<p>
+Gordon overslept. His plan had been to reach Kusiak at the end of a
+long day's travel, but that had meant getting on the trail with the
+first gleam of light. When he opened his eyes Mrs. Olson was calling
+him to rise.
+</p>
+<p>
+He dressed and stepped out into the cold, crisp morning. From the hill
+crotch the sun was already pouring down a great, fanlike shaft of light
+across the snow vista. Swiftwater Pete passed behind him on his way to
+the stable and called a cheerful good-morning in his direction.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Olson had put the stove outside the tent and Gordon lifted it to
+the spot where they did the cooking.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good-morning, neighbor," he called to Sheba. "Sleep well?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The little rustling sounds within the tent ceased. A face appeared in
+the doorway, the flaps drawn discreetly close beneath the chin.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Never better. Is my breakfast ready yet?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Come and help me make it. Mrs. Olson is waiting on Holt."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page293" name="page293"></a>[293]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"When I'm dressed." The smiling face disappeared. "Dublin Bay" sounded
+in her fresh young voice from the tent. Gordon joined in the song as he
+lit the fire and sliced bacon from a frozen slab of it.
+</p>
+<p>
+The howling of the huskies interrupted the song. They had evidently
+heard something that excited them. Gordon listened. Was it in his fancy
+only that the breeze carried to him the faint jingle of sleigh-bells?
+The sound, if it was one, died away. The cook turned to his job.
+</p>
+<p>
+He stopped sawing at the meat, knife and bacon both suspended in the
+air. On the hard snow there had come to him the crunch of a foot behind
+him. Whose? Sheba was in the tent, Swiftwater at the stable, Mrs. Olson
+in the house. Slowly he turned his head.
+</p>
+<p>
+What Elliot saw sent the starch through his body. He did not move an
+inch, still sat crouched by the fire, but every nerve was at tension,
+every muscle taut. For he was looking at a rifle lying negligently in
+brown, steady hands. They were very sure hands, very competent ones. He
+knew that because he had seen them in action. The owner of the hands was
+Colby Macdonald.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Scotch-Canadian stood at the edge of a willow grove. His face was
+grim as the day of judgment.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't move," he ordered.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page294" name="page294"></a>[294]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot laughed irritably. He was both annoyed and disgusted.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What do you want?" he snapped.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What's worrying you now? Do you think I'm jumping my bond?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're going back to Kusiak with me&mdash;to give a life for the one you
+took."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What's that?" cried Gordon, surprised.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Just as I'm telling you. I've been on your heels ever since you left
+town. You and Holt are going back with me as my prisoners."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But what for?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"For robbing the bank and murdering Robert Milton, as you know well
+enough."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Is this another plant arranged for me by you and Selfridge?" demanded
+Elliot.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald ignored the question and lifted his voice. "Come out of that
+tent, Holt,&mdash;and come with your hands up unless you want your head blown
+off."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Holt isn't in that tent, you damned idiot. If you want to know&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Come <i>now</i>, if you expect to come alive," cut in the Scotchman
+ominously. He raised the rifle to his shoulder and covered the shadow
+thrown by the sun on the figure within.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gordon flung out a wild protest and threw the frozen slab of bacon at
+the head of Macdonald.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page295" name="page295"></a>[295]</span>
+
+ With the same motion he launched his own body across the stove. A fifth
+of a second earlier the tent flap had opened and Sheba had come out.
+</p>
+<p>
+The sight of her paralyzed Macdonald and saved her lover's life.
+It distracted the mine-owner long enough for him to miss his chance.
+A bullet struck the stove and went off at a tangent through the tent
+canvas not two feet from where Sheba stood. A second went speeding
+toward the sun. For Gordon had followed the football player's instinct
+and dived for the knees of his enemy.
+</p>
+<p>
+They went down together. Each squirming for the upper place, they
+rolled over and over. The rifle was forgotten. Like cave men they
+fought, crushing and twisting each other's muscles with the blind lust
+of primordials to kill. As they clinched with one arm, they struck
+savagely with the other. The impact of smashing blows on naked flesh
+sounded horribly cruel to Sheba.
+</p>
+<p>
+She ran forward, calling on each by name to stop. Probably neither knew
+she was there. Their whole attention was focused on each other. Not for
+an instant did their eyes wander, for life and death hung on the issue.
+Chance had lit the spark of their resentment, but long-banked passions
+were blazing fiercely now.
+</p>
+<p>
+They got to their feet and fought toe to toe. Sledge-hammer blows beat
+upon bleeding and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page296" name="page296"></a>[296]</span>
+
+ disfigured faces. No thought of defense as yet was in the mind of
+either. The purpose of each was to bruise, maim, make helpless the
+other. But for the impotent little cries of Sheba no sound broke the
+stillness save the crunch of their feet on the hard snow, the thud of
+heavy fists on flesh, and the throaty snarl of their deep, irregular
+breathing.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gid Holt, from the window of the cabin, watched the battle with shining
+eyes. He exulted in every blow of Gordon; he suffered with him when the
+smashing rights and lefts of Macdonald got home. He shouted jeers,
+advice, threats, encouragement. If he had had ten thousand dollars
+wagered on the outcome he could not have been more excited.
+</p>
+<p>
+Swiftwater Pete, drawn by the cries of Sheba, came running from the
+stable. As he passed the window, Holt caught him by the arm.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What are you aimin' to do, Pete? Let 'em alone. Let 'em go to it.
+They got to have it out. Stop 'em now and they'll get at it with guns."
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba ran up, wringing her hands. "Stop them, please. They're killing
+each other."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nothing of the kind, girl. You let 'em alone, Pete. The kid's
+there every minute, ain't he? Gee, that's a good one, boy.
+Seven&mdash;eleven&mdash;ninety-two. 'Attaboy!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald had slipped on the snow and gone
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page297" name="page297"></a>[297]</span>
+
+ down to his hands and knees. Swift as a wildcat the younger man was on
+top of him. Hampered though he was by his parka, the Scotchman struggled
+slowly to his feet again. He was much the heavier man, and in spite of
+his years the stronger. The muscles stood out in knots on his shoulders
+and across his back, whereas on the body of his more slender opponent
+they flowed and rippled in rounded symmetry. Active as a heather cat,
+Elliot was far the quicker of the two.
+</p>
+<p>
+Half-blinded by the hammering he had received, Gordon changed his method
+of fighting. He broke away from the clinch and sidestepped the bull-like
+rush of his foe, covering up as well as he could from the onset.
+Macdonald pressed the attack and was beaten back by hard, straight lefts
+and rights to the unprotected face.
+</p>
+<p>
+The mine-owner shook the matted hair from his swollen eyes and rushed
+again. He caught an uppercut flush on the end of the chin. It did not
+even stop him. The weight of his body was in the blow he lashed up from
+his side.
+</p>
+<p>
+The knees of Elliot doubled up under him like the blade of a jackknife.
+He sank down slowly, turned, got to his hands and knees, and tried to
+shake off the tons of weight that seemed to be holding him down.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald seized him about the waist and flung him to the ground. Upon
+the inert body
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page298" name="page298"></a>[298]</span>
+
+ the victor dropped, his knees clinching the torso of the unconscious
+man.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now, Pete. Go to him," urged Holt wildly.
+</p>
+<p>
+But before Swiftwater could move, before the great fist of Macdonald
+could smash down upon the bleeding face upturned to his, a sharp blow
+struck the flesh of the raised forearm and for the moment stunned the
+muscles. The Scotch-Canadian lifted a countenance drunk with rage,
+passion-tossed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Slowly the light of reason came back into his eyes. Sheba was standing
+before him, his rifle in her hand. She had struck him with the butt of
+it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't touch him! Don't you dare touch him!" she challenged.
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked at her long, then let his eyes fall to the battered face of
+his enemy. Drunkenly he got to his feet and leaned against a willow.
+His forces were spent, his muscles weighted as with lead. But it was not
+this alone that made his breath come short and raggedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba had flung herself down beside her lover. She had caught him
+tightly in her arms so that his disfigured face lay against her warm
+bosom. In the eyes lifted to those of the mine-owner was an
+unconquerable defiance.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He's mine&mdash;mine, you murderer," she panted fiercely. "If you kill him,
+you must kill me first."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page299" name="page299"></a>[299]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The man she had once promised to marry was looking at a different woman
+from the girl he had known. The soft, shy youth of her was gone. She was
+a forest mother of the wilds ready to fight for her young, a wife ready
+to go to the stake for the husband of her choice. An emotion primitive
+and poignant had transformed her.
+</p>
+<p>
+His eyes burned at her the question his parched lips and throat could
+scarcely utter. "So you ... love him?"
+</p>
+<p>
+But though it was in form a question he knew already the answer. For the
+first time in his life he began to taste the bitterness of defeat.
+Always he had won what he coveted by brutal force or his stark will. But
+it was beyond him to compel the love of a girl who had given her heart
+to another.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes," she answered.
+</p>
+<p>
+Her hair in two thick braids was flung across her shoulders, her dark
+head thrown back proudly from the rounded throat.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald smiled, but there was no mirth in his savage eyes. "Do you
+know what I want with him&mdash;why I have come to get him?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've come to take him back to Kusiak to be hanged because he murdered
+Milton, the bank cashier."
+</p>
+<p>
+The eyes of the woman blazed at him. "Are you mad?"
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page300" name="page300"></a>[300]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's the truth." Macdonald's voice was curt and harsh. "He and Holt
+were robbing the bank when Milton came back from the dance at the club.
+The cowards shot down the old man like a dog. They'll hang for it if it
+costs me my last penny, so help me God."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You say it's the truth," she retorted scornfully. "Do you think I don't
+know you now&mdash;how you twist and distort facts to suit your ends? How
+long is it since your jackal had him arrested for assaulting you&mdash;when
+Wally Selfridge knew&mdash;and you knew&mdash;that he had risked his life for you
+and had saved yours by bringing you to Diane's after he had bandaged
+your wounds?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"That was different. It was part of the game of politics we were
+playing."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You admit that you and your friends lied then. Is it like you could
+persuade me that you're telling the truth now?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The big Alaskan shrugged. "Believe it or not as you like. Anyhow, he's
+going back with me to Kusiak&mdash;and Holt, too, if he's here."
+</p>
+<p>
+An excited cackle cut into the conversation, followed by a drawling
+announcement from the window. "Your old tillicum is right here, Mac.
+What's the use of waiting? Why don't you have your hanging-bee now?"
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page301" name="page301"></a>[301]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0030" id="h2HCH0030"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XXX
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ HOLT FREES HIS MIND
+</h3>
+<p>
+Macdonald whirled in his tracks.
+</p>
+<p>
+Old Gid Holt was leaning on his elbow with his head out of the window.
+"You better come and beat me up first, Mac," he jeered. "I'm all stove
+up with a busted laig, so you can wollop me good. I'd come out there,
+but I'm too crippled to move."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're not too crippled to go back to Kusiak with me. If you can't
+walk, you'll ride. But back you go."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Fine. I been worrying about how to get there. It's right good of you to
+bring one of these here taxis for me, as the old sayin' is."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where is the rest of the gold you stole?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I ain't seen the latest papers, Mac. What is this stuff about robbin' a
+bank and shootin' Milton?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're under arrest for robbery and murder."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Am I? Unload the particulars. When did I do it all?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You know when. Just before you left town."
+</p>
+<p>
+Holt shook his head slowly. "No, sir. I can't seem to remember it. Sure
+it ain't some one else
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page302" name="page302"></a>[302]</span>
+
+ you're thinking about? Howcome you to fix on me as one of the bold, bad
+bandits?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Because you had not sense enough to cover your tracks. You might just
+as well have left a note saying you did it. First, you come to town and
+buy one of the fastest dog teams in Alaska. Why?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's an easy one. I bought that team to win the Alaska Sweepstakes
+from you. And I'm goin' to do it. The team wasn't handled right or it
+would have won last time. I got to millin' it over and figured that old
+Gid Holt was the dog puncher that could land those huskies in front.
+See?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You bought it to make your getaway after the robbery," retorted
+Macdonald.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's a difference of opinion makes horse-races. What else have you got
+against us?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"We found in your room one of the sacks that had held the gold you took
+from the bank."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's right. I took it from the bank in the afternoon, where I had had
+it on deposit, to pay for the team I bought. Milton's books will show
+that. But you didn't find any sack I took when your bank was robbed&mdash;if
+it was robbed," added the old man significantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Of course, I knew you would have an alibi. Have you got one to explain
+why you left town so suddenly the night the bank was robbed?
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page303" name="page303"></a>[303]</span>
+
+ Milton was killed after midnight. Before morning you and your friend
+Elliot routed out Ackroyd and bought a lot of supplies from him for a
+hurry-up trip. You slipped around to the corral and hit the trail right
+into the blizzard. Will you tell me why you were in such a hurry to get
+away, if it wasn't to escape from the town where you had murdered a
+decent old fellow who never had harmed a soul?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sure I'll tell you." The black eyes of the little man snapped eagerly.
+"I came so p. d. q. because that side pardner of mine Gordon Elliot
+wouldn't let me wait till mornin'. He had a reason for leavin' town that
+wouldn't wait a minute, one big enough to drive him right into the heart
+of the blizzard. Me, I tagged along."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I can guess his reason," jeered the Scotchman. "But I'd like to hear
+you put a name to it."
+</p>
+<p>
+Holt grinned maliciously and waved a hand toward the girl who was
+pillowing the head of her lover. "The name of his reason is Sheba
+O'Neill, but it's goin' to be Sheba Elliot soon, looks like."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You mean&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+The little miner took the words triumphantly out of his mouth. He leaned
+forward and threw them into the face of the man he hated. "I mean that
+while you was dancin' and philanderin' with other women, Gordon Elliot
+was buckin' a blizzard to save the life of the girl you both claimed
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page304" name="page304"></a>[304]</span>
+
+ to love. He was mushin' into fifty miles of frozen hell while you was
+fillin' up with potted grouse and champagne. Simultaneous with the lame
+goose and the monkey singlestep you was doin,' this lad was windjammin'
+through white drifts. He beat you at your own game, man. You're a bear
+for the outdoor stuff, they tell me. You chew up a blizzard for
+breakfast and throttle a pack of wolves to work up an appetite for
+dinner. It's your specialty. All right. Take your hat off to that
+chechacko who has just whaled you blind. He has outgamed you, Colby
+Macdonald. You don't run in his class. I see he is holding his haid up
+again. Give him another half-hour and he'd be ready to go to the mat
+with you again."
+</p>
+<p>
+The big Alaskan pushed away a fear that had been lingering in his mind
+ever since he had stumbled on that body buried in the snow yesterday
+afternoon. Was his enemy going to escape him, after all? Could Holt be
+telling the true reason why they had left town so hurriedly? He would
+not let himself believe it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You ought to work up a better story than that," he said contemptuously.
+"You can throw a husky through the holes in it. How could Elliot know,
+for instance, that Miss O'Neill was not safe?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"The same way you could' a' known it," snapped old Gideon. "He 'phoned
+to Smith's
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page305" name="page305"></a>[305]</span>
+
+ Crossin' and found the stage hadn't got in and that there was a hell of
+a storm up in the hills."
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald set his face. "You're lying to me. You stumbled over the stage
+while you were making your getaway. Now you're playing it for an alibi."
+</p>
+<p>
+Elliot had risen. Sheba stood beside him, her hand in his. She spoke
+quietly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's the truth. Believe it or not as you please. We care nothing about
+that."
+</p>
+<p>
+The stab of her eyes, the carriage of the slim, pliant figure with its
+suggestion of fine gallantry, challenged her former lover to do his
+worst.
+</p>
+<p>
+On the battered face of Gordon was a smile. So long as his Irish
+sweetheart stood by him he did not care if he were charged with high
+treason. It was worth all it cost to feel the warmth of her brave,
+impulsive trust.
+</p>
+<p>
+The deep-set eyes of Macdonald clinched with those of his rival. "You
+cached the rest of the gold, I suppose," he said doggedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+With a lift of his shoulders the younger man answered lightly. "There
+are none so blind as those who will not see, Mr. Macdonald." He turned
+to Sheba. "Come. We must make breakfast."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're going to Kusiak with me," his enemy said bluntly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"After we have eaten, Mr. Macdonald,"
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page306" name="page306"></a>[306]</span>
+
+ returned Elliot with an ironic bow. "Perhaps, if you have not had
+breakfast yet, you will join us."
+</p>
+<p>
+"We start in half an hour," announced the mine-owner curtly, and he
+turned on his heel.
+</p>
+<p>
+The rifle lay where Sheba had dropped it when she ran to gather her
+stricken lover into her arms. Macdonald picked it up and strode over the
+brow of the hill without a backward look. He was too proud to stay and
+watch them. It was impossible to escape him in the deep snow that filled
+the hill trails, and he was convinced they would attempt nothing of the
+kind.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Scotchman felt for the first time in his life old and spent. Under
+tremendous difficulty he had mushed for two days and had at last run his
+men down. The lust of vengeance had sat on his shoulders every mile of
+the way and had driven him feverishly forward. But the salt that had
+lent a savor to his passion was gone. Even though he won, he lost. For
+Sheba had gone over to the enemy.
+</p>
+<p>
+With the fierce willfulness of his temperament he tried to tread under
+foot his doubts about the guilt of Holt and Elliot. Success had made him
+arrogant and he was not a good loser. He hated the man who had robbed
+him of Sheba, but he could not escape respecting him. Elliot had fought
+until he had been hammered down into unconsciousness and he had crawled
+to his feet
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page307" name="page307"></a>[307]</span>
+
+ and stood erect with the smile of the unconquered on his lips. Was this
+the sort of man to murder in cold blood a kindly old gentleman who had
+never harmed him?
+</p>
+<p>
+The only answer Macdonald found was that Milton had taken him and his
+partners by surprise. They had been driven to shoot the cashier to cover
+up their crime. Perhaps Holt or another had fired the actual shots, but
+Elliot was none the less guilty. The heart of the Scotchman was bitter
+within him. He intended to see that his enemies paid to the last ounce.
+He would harry them to the gallows if money and influence could do it.
+</p>
+<p>
+None the less, his doubts persisted. If they had planned the bank
+robbery, why did they wait so long to buy supplies for their escape? Why
+had they not taken the river instead of the hill trail? The story that
+his enemies told hung together. It had the ring of truth. The facts
+supported it.
+</p>
+<p>
+One piece of evidence in their favor Macdonald alone knew. It lay buried
+in the deep snows of the hills. He shut his strong teeth in the firm
+resolve that it should stay there.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page308" name="page308"></a>[308]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0031" id="h2HCH0031"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ SHEBA DIGS
+</h3>
+<p>
+The weather had moderated a good deal, but the trail was a protected
+forest one. The two teams now going down had come up, so that the path
+was packed fairly hard and smooth. Holt lay propped on his own sled
+against the sleeping-bags. Sheba mushed behind Gordon. She chatted with
+them both, but ignored entirely the existence of Macdonald, who followed
+with his prize-winning Siberian dogs.
+</p>
+<p>
+Though she tried not to let her lover know it, Sheba was troubled at
+heart. Gordon was practically the prisoner of a man who hated him
+bitterly, who believed him guilty of murder, and who would go through
+fire to bring punishment home to him. She knew the power of Macdonald.
+With the money back of him, he had for two years fought against and
+almost prevailed over a strong public opinion in the United States. He
+was as masterful in his hatred as in his love. The dominant, fighting
+figure in the Northwest, he trod his sturdy way through opposition like
+a Colossus.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nor did she any longer have any illusions
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page309" name="page309"></a>[309]</span>
+
+ about him. He could be both ruthless and unscrupulous when it suited his
+purpose. As the day wore toward noon, her spirits drooped. She was tired
+physically, and this reacted upon her courage.
+</p>
+<p>
+The warmer weather was spoiling the trail. It became so soft and mushy
+that though snowshoes were needed, they could not be worn on account of
+the heavy snow which clung to them every time a foot was lifted. They
+wore mukluks, but Sheba was wet to the knees. The spring had gone from
+her step. Her shoulders began to sag.
+</p>
+<p>
+For some time Gordon's eye had been seeking a good place for a day camp.
+He found it in a bit of open timber above the trail, and without a word
+he swung his team from the path.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where are you going?" demanded Macdonald.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Going to rest for an hour," was Elliot's curt answer.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald's jaw clamped. He strode forward through the snow beside the
+trail. "We'll see about that."
+</p>
+<p>
+The younger man faced him angrily. "Can't you see she is done, man?
+There is not another mile of travel in her until she has rested."
+</p>
+<p>
+The hard, gray eyes of the Alaskan took in the slender, weary figure
+leaning against the sled. On a soft and mushy trail like this, where
+every
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page310" name="page310"></a>[310]</span>
+
+ footstep punched a hole in the loose snow, the dogs could not travel
+with any extra weight. A few miles farther down they would come to a
+main-traveled road and the going would be better. But till then she must
+walk. Macdonald gave way with a gesture of his hand and turned on his
+heel.
+</p>
+<p>
+At the camp-fire Sheba dried her mukluks, stockings, caribou mitts, and
+short skirts. Too tired to eat, she forced herself to swallow a few
+bites and drank eagerly some tea. Gordon had brought blankets from the
+sled and he persuaded her to lie down for a few minutes.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You'll call me soon if I should sleep," she said drowsily, and her eyes
+were closed almost before the words were off her lips.
+</p>
+<p>
+When Macdonald came to order the start half an hour later, she was still
+asleep. "Give her another thirty minutes," he said gruffly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Youth is resilient. Sheba awoke rested and ready for work.
+</p>
+<p>
+While Gordon was untangling the dogs she was left alone for a minute
+with the mine-owner.
+</p>
+<p>
+The hungry look in his eyes touched her. Impulsively she held out her
+hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're going to be fair, aren't you, Mr. Macdonald? Because you&mdash;don't
+like him&mdash;you won't&mdash;?"
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked straight into the dark, appealing
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page311" name="page311"></a>[311]</span>
+
+ eyes. "I'm going to be fair to Robert Milton," he told her harshly. "I'm
+going to see his murderers hanged if it costs me every dollar I have in
+the world."
+</p>
+<p>
+"None of us object to justice," she told him proudly. "Gordon has
+nothing to fear if only the truth is told."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then why come to me?" he demanded.
+</p>
+<p>
+She hesitated; then with a wistful little smile, spoke what was in her
+heart. "I'm afraid you won't do justice to yourself. You're good&mdash;and
+brave&mdash;and strong. But you're very willful and set. I don't want to lose
+my friend. I want to know that he is all I have believed him&mdash;a great
+man who stands for the things that are fine and clean and just."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then it is for my sake and not for his that you want me to drop the
+case against Elliot?" he asked ironically.
+</p>
+<p>
+"For yours and for his, too. You can't hurt him. Nobody can really be
+hurt from outside&mdash;not unless he is a traitor to himself. And Gordon
+Elliot isn't that. He couldn't do such a thing as this with which you
+charge him. It is not in his nature. He can explain everything."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I don't doubt that. He and his friend Holt are great little
+explainers."
+</p>
+<p>
+In spite of his bitterness Sheba felt a change in him. She seemed to
+have a glimpse of his turbid
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page312" name="page312"></a>[312]</span>
+
+ soul engaged in battle. He turned away without shaking hands, but it
+struck her that he was not implacable.
+</p>
+<p>
+While they were at luncheon half a dozen pack-mules laden with supplies
+for a telephone construction line outfit had passed. Their small,
+sharp-shod hoofs had punched sink-holes in the trail at every step.
+Instead of a smooth bottom the dogs found a slushy bog cut to pieces.
+</p>
+<p>
+At the end of an hour of wallowing Macdonald called a halt.
+</p>
+<p>
+"There is a cutoff just below here. It will save us nearly two miles,
+but we'll have to break trail. Swing to the right just below the big
+willow," he told Elliot. "I'll join you presently and relieve you on the
+job. But first Miss O'Neill and I are going for a little side trip."
+</p>
+<p>
+All three of them looked at him in sharp surprise. Gordon opened his
+lips to answer and closed them again without speaking. Sheba had flashed
+a warning to him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I hope this trip isn't very far off the trail," she said quietly. "I'm
+just a wee bit tired."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's not far," the mine-owner said curtly.
+</p>
+<p>
+He was busy unpacking his sled. Presently he found the dog moccasins for
+which he had been looking, repacked his sled, and fitted the shoes to
+the bleeding feet of the team leader. Elliot, suspicious and uncertain
+what to do, watched
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page313" name="page313"></a>[313]</span>
+
+ him at work, but at a signal from Sheba turned reluctantly away and
+drove down to the cutoff.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald turned his dogs out of the trail and followed a little ridge
+for perhaps a quarter of a mile. Sheba trudged behind him. She was full
+of wonder at what he meant to do, but she asked no questions. Some wise
+instinct was telling her to do exactly as he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+From the sled he took a shovel and gave it to the young woman. "Dig just
+this side of the big rock&mdash;close to the root of the tree," he told her.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba dug, and at the second stroke of the spade struck something hard.
+He stooped and pulled out a sack.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Open it," he said. "Rip it with this knife."
+</p>
+<p>
+She ran the knife along the coarse weave of the cloth. Fifteen or twenty
+smaller sacks lay exposed. Sheba looked up at Macdonald, a startled
+question in her eyes.
+</p>
+<p>
+He nodded. "You've guessed it. This is part of the gold for which Robert
+Milton was murdered."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But&mdash;how did it get here?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I buried it there yesterday. Come."
+</p>
+<p>
+He led her around the rock. Back of it lay something over which was
+spread a long bit of canvas. The heart of Sheba was beating wildly.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Scotchman looked at her from a rock-bound face. "Underneath this
+canvas is the body
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page314" name="page314"></a>[314]</span>
+
+ of one of the men who murdered Milton. He died more miserably than the
+man he shot. Half the gold stolen from the bank is in that gunnysack you
+have just dug up. If you'll tell me who has the other half, I'll tell
+you who helped him rob the bank."
+</p>
+<p>
+"This man&mdash;who is he?" asked Sheba, almost in a whisper. She was
+trembling with excitement and nervousness.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald drew back the cloth and showed the rough, hard face of a
+workingman.
+</p>
+<p>
+"His name was Trelawney. I kicked him out of our camps because he was a
+trouble-maker."
+</p>
+<p>
+"He was one of the men that robbed you later!" she exclaimed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes. And now he has tried to rob me again and has paid for it with his
+life."
+</p>
+<p>
+Her mind flashed back over the past. "Then his partner in this last
+crime must have been the same man&mdash;what's his name?&mdash;that was with him
+last time."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Northrup." He nodded slowly. "I hate to believe it, but it is probably
+true. And he, too, is lying somewhere in this park covered with snow&mdash;if
+our guess is right."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And Gordon&mdash;you admit he didn't do it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Again he nodded, sulkily. "No. He didn't do it."
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page315" name="page315"></a>[315]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Joy lilted in her voice. "So you've brought me here to tell me. Oh, I am
+glad, my friend, that you were so good. And it is like you to do it. You
+have always been the good friend to me."
+</p>
+<p>
+The Scotchman smiled, a little wistfully. "You take a mean advantage
+of a man. You nurse him when he is ill&mdash;and are kind to him when he
+is well&mdash;and try to love him, though he is twice your age and more.
+Then, when his enemy is in his power, he finds he can't strike him down
+without striking you too. Take your young man, Sheba O'Neill, and marry
+him, and for God's sake, get him out of Alaska before I come to grips
+with him again. I'm not a patient man, and he's tried me sair. They say
+I'm a good hater, and I always thought it true. But what's the use of
+hating a man when your soft arms are round him for an armor?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The fine eyes of the girl were wells of warm light. Her gladness was
+not for herself and her lover only, but for the friend that had been so
+nearly lost and was now found. He believed he had done it for her, but
+Sheba was sure his reasons lay deeper. He was too much of a man to hide
+evidence and let his rival be falsely accused of murder. It was not in
+him to do a cheap thing like that. When it came to the pinch, he was too
+decent to stab in the back. But she was willing to take him on his own
+ground.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page316" name="page316"></a>[316]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll always be thanking you for your goodness to me," she told him
+simply.
+</p>
+<p>
+He brushed that aside at once. "There's one thing more, lass. I'll
+likely not be seeing you again alone, so I'll say it now. Don't waste
+any tears on Colby Macdonald. Don't fancy any story-book foolishness
+about spoiling his life. That may be true of halfling boys, maybe, but
+a man goes his ain gait even when he gets a bit facer."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes," she agreed. And in a flash she saw what would happen, that in the
+reaction from his depression he would turn to Genevieve Mallory and
+marry her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're too young for me, anyhow,&mdash;too soft and innocent. Once you told
+me that you couldn't keep step with me. It's true. You can't. It was a
+daft dream."
+</p>
+<p>
+He took a deep breath, seemed to shake himself out of it, and smiled
+cheerfully upon her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We'll put our treasure-trove on the sled and go back to your friends,"
+he continued briskly. "To-morrow I'll send men up to scour the hills for
+Northrup's body."
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba drew the canvas back over the face of the dead man. As she
+followed Macdonald back to the trail, tears filled her eyes. She was
+remembering that the white, stinging death that had crept upon these men
+so swiftly had missed her
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page317" name="page317"></a>[317]</span>
+
+ by a hair's breadth. The strong, lusty life had been stricken out of the
+big Cornishman and probably of his partner in crime. Perhaps they had
+left mothers or wives or sweethearts to mourn them.
+</p>
+<p>
+Macdonald relieved Elliot at breaking trail and the young man went back
+to the gee-pole. They had discarded mukluks and wore moccasins and
+snowshoes. It was hard, slow work, for the trail-breaker had to fight
+his way through snow along the best route he could find. The moon was
+high when at last they reached the roadhouse.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page318" name="page318"></a>[318]</span>
+</p>
+<a name="h2HCH0032" id="h2HCH0032"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ DIANE CHANGES HER MIND
+</h3>
+<p>
+The news of Sheba's safety had been telephoned to Diane from the
+roadhouse, so that all the family from Peter down were on the porch to
+welcome her with mingled tears and kisses. Since Gordon had to push on
+to the hospital to have Holt taken care of, it was Macdonald who brought
+the girl home. The mine-owner declined rather brusquely an invitation to
+stay to dinner on the plea that he had business at the office which
+would not wait.
+</p>
+<p>
+Impulsively Sheba held out both her hands to him. "Believe me, I am
+thanking you with the whole of my heart, my friend. And I'm praying for
+you the old Irish blessing, 'God save you kindly.'"
+</p>
+<p>
+The deep-set, rapacious eyes of the Scotchman burned into hers for an
+instant. Without a word he released her hands and turned away.
+</p>
+<p>
+Her eyes followed him, a vital, dynamic American who would do big,
+lawless things to the day of his death. She sighed. He had been a great
+figure in her life, and now he had passed out of it.
+</p>
+
+<a name="image-0004"><!--IMG--></a>
+<div class="figure">
+<a href="images/illus-04.jpg"><img src="images/illus-04t.jpg" width="400"
+alt="FOR HIM THE BEAUTY OF THE NIGHT LAY LARGELY IN HER PRESENCE" /></a>
+<br />
+FOR HIM THE BEAUTY OF THE NIGHT LAY LARGELY IN HER PRESENCE
+</div>
+
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page319" name="page319"></a>[319]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+As soon as she was alone with Diane, her Irish cousin dropped the little
+bomb she had up her sleeve.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm going to be married Thursday, Di."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Paget embraced her for the tenth time within the hour. She was very
+fond of Sheba, and she had been on a great strain concerning her safety.
+That out of her danger had resulted the engagement Diane had hoped for
+was surplusage of good luck.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You lucky, sensible girl."
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba assented demurely. "I do think I'm sensible as well as lucky. It
+isn't every girl that knows the right man for her even when he wants
+her. But I know at last. He's the man for me out of ten million."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm sure of it, dear. Oh, I am <i>so</i> glad." Diane hugged her again.
+She couldn't help it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"One gets to know a man pretty well on a trip like that. I wouldn't
+change mine for any one that was ever made. I like everything about him,
+Di. I am the happiest girl."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm so glad you see it that way at last." Diane passed to the practical
+aspect of the situation. "But Thursday. Will that give us time, my dear?
+And who are you going to have here?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Just the family. I've invited two guests, but neither of them can come.
+One has a broken leg and the other says he doesn't want to see me
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page320" name="page320"></a>[320]</span>
+
+ married to another man," Sheba explained with a smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+"So Gordon won't come."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes. He'll have to be here. We can't get along without the bridegroom.
+It wouldn't be a legal marriage, would it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Diane looked at her, for the moment dumb. "You little wretch!" she got
+out at last. "So it's Gordon, is it? Are you quite sure this time? Not
+likely to change your mind before Thursday?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I suppose, to an outsider, I do seem fickle," Miss O'Neill admitted
+smilingly. "But Gordon and I both understand that."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And Colby Macdonald&mdash;does he understand it too?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, yes." Her smile grew broader. "He told me that he didn't think I
+would quite suit him, after all. Not enough experience for the place."
+</p>
+<p>
+Diane flashed a suspicious look of inquiry. "Of course that's nonsense.
+What did he tell you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Something like that. He will marry Mrs. Mallory, I think, though he
+doesn't know it yet."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You mean she will get him on the rebound," said Diane bluntly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That isn't a nice way to put it. He has always liked her very much. He
+is fond of her for
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page321" name="page321"></a>[321]</span>
+
+ what she is. What attracted him in me were the things his imagination
+gave to me."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And Gordon likes you, I suppose, for what you are?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Sheba did not resent the little note of friendly sarcasm. "I suppose he
+has his fancies about me, too, but by the time he finds out what I am
+he'll have to put up with me."
+</p>
+<p>
+The arrival of Elliot interrupted confidences. He had come, he said, to
+receive congratulations.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What in the world have you been doing with your face?" demanded Diane.
+As an afterthought she added: "Mr. Macdonald is all cut up too."
+</p>
+<p>
+"We've been taking massage treatment." Gordon passed to a subject of
+more immediate interest. "Do I get my congratulations, Di?"
+</p>
+<p>
+She kissed him, too, for old sake's sake. "I do believe you'll suit
+Sheba better than Colby Macdonald would. He's a great man and you are
+not. But it isn't everybody that is fit to be the wife of a great man."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's a double, left-handed compliment," laughed Gordon. "But you
+can't say anything that will hurt my feelings to-day, Di. Isn't that
+your baby I heap crying? What a heartless mother you are!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Diane gave him the few minutes alone with
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page322" name="page322"></a>[322]</span>
+
+ Sheba that his gay smile had asked for. "Get out with you," she said,
+laughing. "Go to the top of the hill and look at the lovers' moon I've
+ordered there expressly for you; and while you are there forget that
+there are going to be crying babies and nursemaids with evenings out in
+that golden future of yours."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Come along, Sheba. We'll start now on the golden trail," said Elliot.
+</p>
+<p>
+She walked as if she loved it. Her long, slender legs moved rhythmically
+and her arms swung true as pendulums.
+</p>
+<p>
+The moon was all that Diane had promised. Sheba drank it in happily.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I believe I must be a pagan. I love the sun and the moon and I know
+it's all true about the little folk and the pied piper and&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"If it's paganism to be in love with the world, you are a thirty-third
+degree pagan."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, and was there ever a more beautiful night before?"
+</p>
+<p>
+He thought not, but he had not the words to tell her that for him its
+beauty lay largely in her presence. Her passionate love of things fine
+and brave transformed the universe for him. It was enough for him to
+be near her, to hear the laughter bubbling in her throat, to touch her
+crisp, blue-black hair as he adjusted the scarf about her head.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page323" name="page323"></a>[323]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+"God made the night," he replied. "So that's a Christian thought as well
+as a pagan one."
+</p>
+<p>
+They were no exception to the rule that lovers are egoists. The world
+for them to-night divided itself into two classes. One included Sheba
+O'Neill and Gordon Elliot; the other took in the uninteresting remnant
+of humanity. No matter how far afield their talk began, it always came
+back to themselves. They wanted to know all about each other, to compare
+experiences and points of view. But time fled too fast for words. They
+talked&mdash;as lovers will to the end of time&mdash;in exclamations and the
+meeting of eyes and little endearments.
+</p>
+<p>
+When Diane and Peter found them on the hilltop, Sheba protested, with
+her half-shy, half-audacious smile, that it could not be two hours since
+she and Gordon had left the living-room. Peter grinned. He remembered a
+hilltop consecrated to his own courtship of Diane.
+</p>
+<p>
+The only wedding present that Macdonald sent Sheba was a long envelope
+with two documents attached by a clip. One was from the Kusiak "Sun."
+It announced that the search party had found the body of Northrup with
+the rest of the stolen gold beside him. The other was a copy of a legal
+document. Its effect was that the district attorney had dismissed all
+charges pending against Gordon Elliot.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page324" name="page324"></a>[324]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Although Macdonald lost the coal claims at Kamatlah by reason of the
+report of Elliot, all Alaska still believes that he was right. In that
+country of strong men he stands head and shoulders above his fellows.
+He has the fortunate gift of commanding the admiration of friend and
+foe alike. The lady who is his wife is secretly the greatest of his
+slaves, but she tries not to let him know how much he has captured her
+imagination. For Genevieve Macdonald cannot quite understand, herself,
+how so elemental an emotion as love can have pierced the armor of her
+sophistication.
+</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div style="width: 60%; border: thin dotted gray; margin: 0% 15% 0% 15%;">
+<p class="center" style="font-weight: bold;">Transcriber's note:</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">Inconsistent hyphenation and spelling in the original document have been preserved.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="pg" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE YUKON TRAIL***</p>
+<p>******* This file should be named 19527-h.txt or 19527-h.zip *******</p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Yukon Trail, by William MacLeod Raine,
+Illustrated by George Ellis Wolfe
+
+
+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 Yukon Trail
+ A Tale of the North
+
+
+Author: William MacLeod Raine
+
+
+
+Release Date: October 11, 2006 [eBook #19527]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE YUKON TRAIL***
+
+
+E-text prepared by David Garcia and the Project Gutenberg Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net/)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 19527-h.htm or 19527-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/9/5/0/19527/19527-h/19527-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/9/5/0/19527/19527-h.zip)
+
+
+ +-------------------------------------------------------+
+ | Transcriber's note: |
+ | |
+ | Inconsistent hyphenation and spelling in the original |
+ | document have been preserved. |
+ | |
+ +-------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE YUKON TRAIL
+
+A Tale of the North
+
+by
+
+WILLIAM MacLEOD RAINE
+
+Author of
+Wyoming, Bucky O'Connor, Etc.
+
+With Illustrations by George Ellis Wolfe
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: NOW HE CAUGHT HER BY THE SHOULDERS (_See page 108_)]
+
+
+
+New York
+Grosset & Dunlap
+Publishers
+Copyright, 1917, by William MacLeod Raine
+All Rights Reserved
+Published May 1917
+
+
+
+
+ TO
+ MY BROTHER
+ EDGAR C. RAINE
+
+ who knew the Lights of Dawson when they were a magnet to the feet
+ of those answering the call of Adventure, who mushed the Yukon Trail
+ from its headwaters to Bering Sea, who still finds in the Frozen
+ North the Romance of the Last Frontier.
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+
+ I. Going "In" 1
+ II. Enter a Man 10
+ III. The Girl from Drogheda 23
+ IV. The Crevasse 34
+ V. Across the Traverse 49
+ VI. Sheba sings--and Two Men listen 58
+ VII. Wally gets Orders 71
+ VIII. The End of the Passage 82
+ IX. Gid Holt goes prospecting 93
+ X. The Rah-Rah Boy functions 109
+ XI. Gordon invites himself to Dinner--and does not enjoy it 125
+ XII. Sheba says "Perhaps" 137
+ XIII. Diane and Gordon differ 144
+ XIV. Genevieve Mallory takes a Hand 156
+ XV. Gordon buys a Revolver 170
+ XVI. Ambushed 181
+ XVII. "God save you kindly" 193
+ XVIII. Gordon spends a Busy Evening 201
+ XIX. Sheba does not think so 210
+ XX. Gordon finds himself Unpopular 217
+ XXI. A New Way of leaving a House 227
+ XXII. Gid Holt comes to Kusiak 232
+ XXIII. In the Dead of Night 241
+ XXIV. Macdonald follows a Clue 247
+ XXV. In the Blizzard 256
+ XXVI. Hard Mushing 268
+ XXVII. Two on the Trail 275
+ XXVIII. A Message from the Dead 286
+ XXIX. "Don't touch him! Don't you dare touch him!" 292
+ XXX. Holt frees his Mind 301
+ XXXI. Sheba digs 308
+ XXXII. Diane changes her Mind 318
+
+
+
+
+Illustrations
+
+
+ Now he caught her by the shoulders _Frontispiece_
+ "So you think I'm a 'fraid-cat, Mr. Elliot?" 44
+ The situation was piquant, even though it was at her expense 236
+ For him the beauty of the night lay largely in her presence 322
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The Yukon Trail
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+GOING "IN"
+
+
+The midnight sun had set, but in a crotch between two snow-peaks it
+had kindled a vast caldron from which rose a mist of jewels, garnet
+and turquoise, topaz and amethyst and opal, all swimming in a sea of
+molten gold. The glow of it still clung to the face of the broad Yukon,
+as a flush does to the soft, wrinkled cheek of a girl just roused from
+deep sleep.
+
+Except for a faint murkiness in the air it was still day. There was
+light enough for the four men playing pinochle on the upper deck, though
+the women of their party, gossiping in chairs grouped near at hand, had
+at last put aside their embroidery. The girl who sat by herself at a
+little distance held a magazine still open on her lap. If she were not
+reading, her attitude suggested it was less because of the dusk than
+that she had surrendered herself to the spell of the mysterious beauty
+which for this hour at least had transfigured the North to a land all
+light and atmosphere and color.
+
+Gordon Elliot had taken the boat at Pierre's Portage, fifty miles
+farther down the river. He had come direct from the creeks, and his
+impressions of the motley pioneer life at the gold-diggings were so
+vivid that he had found an isolated corner of the deck where he could
+scribble them in a notebook while still fresh.
+
+But he had not been too busy to see that the girl in the wicker chair
+was as much of an outsider as he was. Plainly this was her first trip
+in. Gordon was a stranger in the Yukon country, one not likely to be
+over-welcome when it became known what his mission was. It may have been
+because he was out of the picture himself that he resented a little the
+exclusion of the young woman with the magazine. Certainly she herself
+gave no evidence of feeling about it. Her long-lashed eyes looked
+dreamily across the river to the glowing hills beyond. Not once did they
+turn with any show of interest to the lively party under the awning.
+
+From where he was leaning against the deckhouse Elliot could see only
+a fine, chiseled profile shading into a mass of crisp, black hair, but
+some quality in the detachment of her personality stimulated gently his
+imagination. He wondered who she could be. His work had taken him to
+frontier camps before, but he could not place her as a type. The best
+he could do was to guess that she might be the daughter of some
+territorial official on her way in to join him.
+
+A short, thick-set man who had ridden down on the stage with Elliot to
+Pierre's Portage drifted along the deck toward him. He wore the careless
+garb of a mining man in a country which looks first to comfort.
+
+"Bound for Kusiak?" he asked, by way of opening conversation.
+
+"Yes," answered Gordon.
+
+The miner nodded toward the group under the awning. "That bunch lives
+at Kusiak. They've got on at different places the last two or three
+days--except Selfridge and his wife, they've been out. Guess you can
+tell that from hearing her talk--the little woman in red with the snappy
+black eyes. She's spillin' over with talk about the styles in New York
+and the cabarets and the new shows. That pot-bellied little fellow in
+the checked suit is Selfridge. He is Colby Macdonald's man Friday."
+
+Elliot took in with a quickened interest the group bound for Kusiak. He
+had noticed that they monopolized as a matter of course the best places
+on the deck and in the dining-room. They were civil enough to outsiders,
+but their manner had the unconscious selfishness that often regulates
+social activities. It excluded from their gayety everybody that did not
+belong to the proper set.
+
+"That sort of thing gets my goat," the miner went on sourly. "Those
+women over there have elected themselves Society with a capital S. They
+put on all the airs the Four Hundred do in New York. And who the hell
+are they anyhow?--wives to a bunch of grafting politicians mostly."
+
+From the casual talk that had floated to him, with its many little
+allusions punctuating the jolly give-and-take of their repartee, Elliot
+guessed that their lives had the same background of tennis, dinners,
+hops, official gossip, and business. They evidently knew one another
+with the intimacy that comes only to the segment of a small community
+shut off largely from the world and forced into close social relations.
+No doubt they had loaned each other money occasionally, stood by in
+trouble, and gossiped back and forth about their shortcomings and family
+skeletons even as society on the outside does.
+
+"That's the way of the world, isn't it? Our civilization is built on the
+group system," suggested Elliot.
+
+"Maybeso," grumbled the miner. "But I hate to see Alaska come to it.
+Me, I saw this country first in '97--packed an outfit in over the Pass.
+Every man stood on his own hind legs then. He got there if he was
+strong--mebbe; he bogged down on the trail good and plenty if he was
+weak. We didn't have any of the artificial stuff then. A man had to have
+the guts to stand the gaff."
+
+"I suppose it was a wild country, Mr. Strong."
+
+The little miner's eyes gleamed. "Best country in the world. We
+didn't stand for anything that wasn't on the level. It was a poor
+man's country--wages fifteen dollars a day and plenty of work. Everybody
+had a chance. Anybody could stake a claim and gamble on his luck. Now
+the big corporations have slipped in and grabbed the best. It ain't
+a prospector's proposition any more. Instead of faro banks we've got
+savings banks. The wide-open dance hall has quit business in favor
+of moving pictures. And, as I said before, we've got Society."
+
+"All frontier countries have to come to it."
+
+"Hmp! In the days I'm telling you about that crowd there couldn't 'a'
+hustled meat to fill their bellies three meals. Parasites, that's what
+they are. They're living off that bunch of roughnecks down there and
+folks like 'em."
+
+With a wave of his hand Strong pointed to a group of miners who had
+boarded the boat with them at Pierre's Portage. There were about a dozen
+of the men, for the most part husky, heavy-set foreigners. They had been
+drinking, and were in a sullen humor. Elliot gathered from their talk
+that they had lost their jobs because they had tried to organize an
+incipient strike in the Frozen Gulch district.
+
+"Roughnecks and booze-fighters--that's all they are. But they earn their
+way. Not that I blame Macdonald for firing them, mind you," continued
+the miner.
+
+"Were they working for Macdonald?"
+
+"Yep. His superintendent up there was too soft. These here Swedes got
+gay. Mac hit the trail for Frozen Gulch. He hammered his big fist
+into the bread-basket of the ringleader and said, 'Git!' That fellow's
+running yet, I'll bet. Then Mac called the men together and read the
+riot act to them. He fired this bunch on the boat and was out of the
+camp before you could bat an eye. It was the cleanest hurry-up job I
+ever did see."
+
+"From what I've heard about him he must be a remarkable man."
+
+"He's the biggest man in Alaska, bar none."
+
+This was a subject that interested Gordon Elliot very much. Colby
+Macdonald and his activities had brought him to the country.
+
+"Do you mean personally--or because he represents the big corporations?"
+
+"Both. His word comes pretty near being law up here, not only because
+he stands for the Consolidated, but because he's one man from the ground
+up. I ain't any too strong for that New York bunch of capitalists back
+of Mac, but I've got to give it to him that he's all there without
+leaning on anybody."
+
+"I've heard that he's a domineering man--rides roughshod over others.
+Is that right, Mr. Strong?"
+
+"He's a bear for getting his own way," grinned the little miner. "If you
+won't get out of his road he peels your hide off and hangs it up to dry.
+But I can't help liking him. He's big every way you take him. He'll
+stand the acid, Mac will."
+
+"Do you mean that he's square--honest?"
+
+"You've said two things, my friend," answered Strong dryly. "He's
+square. If he tells you anything, don't worry because he ain't put down
+his John Hancock before a notary. He'll see it through to a finish--to
+a fighting finish if he has to. Don't waste any time looking for fat or
+yellow streaks in Mac. They ain't there. Nobody ever heard him squeal
+yet and what's more nobody ever will."
+
+"No wonder men like him."
+
+"But when you say honest--Hell, no! Not the way you define honesty
+down in the States. He's a grabber, Mac is. Better not leave anything
+valuable around unless you've got it spiked to the floor. He takes what
+he wants."
+
+"What does he look like?" asked Gordon.
+
+"Oh, I don't know." Strong hesitated, while he searched for words to
+show the picture in his mind. "Big as a house--steps out like a buck
+in the spring--blue-gray eyes that bore right through you."
+
+"How old?"
+
+"Search me. You never think of age when you're looking at him.
+Forty-five, mebbe--or fifty--I don't know."
+
+"Married?"
+
+"No-o." Hanford Strong nodded in the direction of the Kusiak circle.
+"They say he's going to marry Mrs. Mallory. She's the one with the red
+hair."
+
+It struck young Elliot that the miner was dismissing Mrs. Mallory in too
+cavalier a fashion. She was the sort of woman at whom men look twice,
+and then continue to look while she appears magnificently unaware of it.
+Her hair was not red, but of a lustrous bronze, amazingly abundant,
+and dressed in waves with the careful skill of a coiffeur. Half-shut,
+smouldering eyes had met his for an instant at dinner across the table
+and had told him she was a woman subtle and complex. Slightest shades
+of meaning she could convey with a lift of the eyebrow or an intonation
+of the musical voice. If she was already fencing with the encroaching
+years there was little evidence of it in her opulent good looks. She had
+manifestly specialized in graceful idleness and was prepared to meet
+with superb confidence the competition of debutantes. The elusive shadow
+of lost illusions, of knowledge born of experience, was the only
+betrayal of vanished youth in her equipment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+ENTER A MAN
+
+
+The whistle of the Hannah blew for the Tatlah Cache landing while Strong
+and Elliot were talking. Wally Selfridge had just bid three hundred
+seventy and found no help in the widow. He pushed toward each of the
+other players one red chip and two white ones.
+
+"Can't make it," he announced. "I needed a jack of clubs."
+
+The men counted their chips and settled up in time to reach the deck
+rail just as the gangplank was thrown out to the wharf. The crew
+transferred to the landing a pouch of mail, half a ton of sacked
+potatoes, some mining machinery, and several boxes containing provisions
+and dry goods.
+
+A man came to the end of the wharf carrying a suitcase. He was well-set,
+thick in the chest, and broad-shouldered. He came up the gangplank with
+the strong, firm tread of a man in his prime. Looking down from above,
+Gordon Elliot guessed him to be in the early thirties.
+
+Mrs. Mallory was the first to recognize him, which she did with a
+drawling little shout of welcome. "Oh you, Mr. Man. I knew you first.
+I speak for you," she cried.
+
+The man on the gangplank looked up, smiled, and lifted to her his broad
+gray Stetson in a wave of greeting.
+
+"How do you do, Mrs. Mallory? Glad to see you."
+
+The miners from Frozen Gulch were grouped together on the lower deck.
+At sight of the man with the suitcase a sullen murmur rose among them.
+Those in the rear pushed forward and closed the lane leading to the
+cabins. One of the miners was flung roughly against the new passenger.
+With a wide, powerful sweep of his arm the man who had just come aboard
+hurled the miner back among his companions.
+
+"Gangway!" he said brusquely, and as he strode forward did not even
+glance in the direction of the angry men pressing toward him.
+
+"Here. Keep back there, you fellows. None of that rough stuff goes,"
+ordered the mate sharply.
+
+The big Cornishman who had been tossed aside crouched for a spring. He
+launched himself forward with the awkward force of a bear. The suitcase
+described a whirling arc of a circle with the arm of its owner as the
+radius. The bag and the head of the miner came into swift impact. Like
+a bullock which has been pole-axed the man went to the floor. He turned
+over with a groan and lay still.
+
+The new passenger looked across the huge, sprawling body at the group
+of miners facing him. They glared in savage hate. All they needed was a
+leader to send them driving at him with the force of an avalanche. The
+man at whom they raged did not give an inch. He leaned forward slightly,
+his weight resting on the balls of his feet, alert to the finger tips.
+But in his eyes a grim little smile of derisive amusement rested.
+
+"Next," he taunted.
+
+Then the mate got busy. He hustled his stevedores forward in front of
+the miners and shook his fist in their faces as he stormed up and down.
+If they wanted trouble, by God! it was waiting for 'em, he swore in
+apoplectic fury. The Hannah was a river boat and not a dive for wharf
+rats. No bunch of roughnecks could come aboard a boat where he was mate
+and start anything. They could not assault any passengers of his and
+make it stick.
+
+The man with the suitcase did not wait to hear out his tirade. He
+followed the purser to his stateroom, dropped his baggage beside the
+berth, and joined the Kusiak group on the upper deck.
+
+They greeted him eagerly, a little effusively, as if they were anxious
+to prove themselves on good terms with him. The deference they paid and
+his assured acceptance of it showed him to be a man of importance. But
+apart from other considerations, he dominated by mental and physical
+virility the circle of which he instantly became the center. Only Mrs.
+Mallory held her own, and even she showed a quickened interest. Her
+indolent, half-disdainful manner sheathed a soft sensuousness that held
+the provocation of sex appeal.
+
+"What was the matter?" asked Selfridge. "How did the trouble start?"
+
+The big man shrugged his shoulders. "It didn't start. Some of the outfit
+thought they were looking for a row, but they balked on the job when
+Trelawney got his." Turning to Mrs. Mallory, he changed the subject
+abruptly. "Did you have a good time down the river?"
+
+Gordon, as he watched from a little distance, corrected earlier
+impressions. This man had passed the thirties. Salt and pepper sprinkled
+the temples of his strong, lean head. He had the thick neck and solid
+trunk of middle life, but he carried himself so superbly that his whole
+bearing denied that years could touch his splendid physique. The suit he
+wore was a wrinkled corduroy, with trouser legs thrust into high-laced
+boots. An outdoor tan had been painted upon his face and neck, from the
+point where the soft flannel shirt fell away to show the fine slope of
+the throat line to the shoulders.
+
+Strong had stepped to the wharf to talk with an old acquaintance, but
+when the boat threw out a warning signal he made a hurried good-bye and
+came on board. He rejoined Elliot.
+
+"Well, what d'you think of him? Was I right?"
+
+The young man had already guessed who this imperious stranger was. "I
+never saw anybody get away with a hard job as easily as he did that one.
+You could see with half an eye that those fellows meant fight. They were
+all primed for it--and he bluffed them out."
+
+"Bluffed them--huh! If that's what you call bluffing. I was where I
+could see just what happened. Colby Macdonald wasn't even looking at
+Trelawney, but you bet he saw him start. That suitcase traveled like
+a streak of light. You'd 'a' thought it weighed about two pounds. That
+ain't all either. Mac used his brains. Guess what was in that grip."
+
+"The usual thing, I suppose."
+
+"You've got another guess--packed in among his socks and underwear was
+about twenty pounds of ore samples. The purser told me. It was that
+quartz put Trelawney to sleep so thorough that he'd just begun to wake
+up when I passed a minute ago."
+
+The young man turned his eyes again upon the big Canadian Scotchman.
+He was talking with Mrs. Mallory, who was leaning back luxuriously
+in a steamer chair she had brought aboard at St. Michael's. It would
+have been hard to conceive a contrast greater than the one between
+this pampered heiress of the ages and the modern business berserk who
+looked down into her mocking eyes. He was the embodiment of the dominant
+male,--efficient to the last inch of his straight six feet. What he
+wanted he had always taken, by the sheer strength that was in him. Back
+of her smiling insolence lay a silken force to match his own. She too
+had taken what she wanted from life, but she had won it by indirection.
+Manifestly she was of those women who conceive that charm and beauty
+are tools to bend men to their wills. Was it the very width of the gulf
+between them that made the appeal of the clash in the sex duel upon
+which they had engaged?
+
+The dusky young woman with the magazine was the first of those on
+the upper deck to retire for the night. She flitted so quietly that
+Gordon did not notice until she had gone. Mrs. Selfridge and her friends
+disappeared with their men folks, calling gay good-nights to one another
+as they left.
+
+Macdonald and Mrs. Mallory still talked. After a time she too vanished.
+
+The big promoter leaned against the deck rail, where he was joined by
+Selfridge. For a long time they talked in low voices. The little man had
+most to say. His chief listened, but occasionally interrupted to ask a
+sharp, incisive question.
+
+Elliot, sitting farther forward with Strong, judged that Selfridge was
+making a report of his trip. Once he caught a fragment of their talk,
+enough to confirm this impression.
+
+"Did Winton tell you that himself?" demanded the Scotchman.
+
+The answer of his employee came in a murmur so low that the words were
+lost. But the name used told Gordon a good deal. The Commissioner of the
+General Land Office at Washington signed his letters Harold B. Winton.
+
+Strong tossed the stub of his cigarette overboard and nodded
+good-night. A glance at his watch told Elliot that it was past two
+o'clock. He rose, stretched, and sauntered back to his stateroom.
+
+The young man had just taken off his coat when there came the hurried
+rush of trampling feet upon the hurricane deck above. Almost instantly
+he heard a cry of alarm. Low voices, quick with suppressed excitement,
+drifted back to him. He could hear the shuffling of footsteps and the
+sound of heavy bodies moving.
+
+Some one lifted a frightened shout. "Help! Help!" The call had come, he
+thought, from Selfridge.
+
+Gordon flung open the door of his room, raced along the deck, and took
+the stairs three at a time. A huddle of men swayed and shifted heavily
+in front of him. So close was the pack that the motion resembled the
+writhing of some prehistoric monster rather than the movements of
+individual human beings. In that half-light tossing arms and legs looked
+like tentacles flung out in agony by the mammoth reptile. Its progress
+was jerky and convulsive, sometimes tortuous, but it traveled slowly
+toward the rail as if by the impulsion of an irresistible pressure.
+
+Even as he ran toward the mass, Elliot noticed that the only sounds were
+grunts, stertorous breathings, and the scraping of feet. The attackers
+wanted no publicity. The attacked was too busy to waste breath in futile
+cries. He was fighting for his life with all the stark energy nature and
+his ancestors had given him.
+
+Two men, separated from the crowd, lay on the deck farther aft. One was
+on top of the other, his fingers clutching the gullet of his helpless
+opponent. The agony of the man underneath found expression only in the
+drumming heels that beat a tattoo on the floor. The spasmodic feet were
+shod in Oxford tans of an ultra-fashionable cut. No doubt the owner of
+the smart footwear had been pulled down as he was escaping to shout the
+alarm.
+
+The runner hurdled the two in his stride and plunged straight at the
+struggling tangle. He caught one man by the shoulders from behind and
+flung him back. He struck hard, smashing blows as he fought his way to
+the heart of the melee. Heavy-fisted miners with corded muscles landed
+upon his face and head and neck. The strange excitement of the battle
+lust surged through his veins. He did not care a straw for the odds.
+
+The sudden attack of Elliot had opened the pack. The man battling
+against a dozen was Colby Macdonald. The very number of his foes had
+saved him so far from being rushed overboard or trampled down. In their
+desire to get at him they hindered each other, struck blows that found
+the wrong mark. His coat and shirt were in rags. He was bruised and
+battered and bleeding from the chest up. But he was still slogging hard.
+
+They had him pressed to the rail. A huge miner, head down, had his arms
+around the waist of the Scotchman and was trying to throw him overboard.
+Macdonald lashed out and landed flush upon the cheek of a man attempting
+to brain him with a billet of wood. He hammered home a short-arm jolt
+against the ear of the giant who was giving him the bear grip.
+
+The big miner grunted, but hung on like a football tackler. With a jerk
+he raised Macdonald from the floor just as three or four others rushed
+him again. The rail gave way, splintered like kindling wood. The
+Scotchman and the man at grips with him went over the side together.
+
+Clear and loud rang the voice of Elliot. "Man overboard!"
+
+The wheelsman had known for some minutes that there was trouble afoot.
+He signaled to the engine room to reverse and blew short, sharp shrieks
+of warning. Already deckhands and officers, scantily clad, were
+appearing from fore and aft.
+
+"Men overboard--two of 'em!" explained Elliot in a shout from the boat
+which he was trying to lower.
+
+The first mate and another man ran to help him. The three of them
+lowered and manned the boat. Gordon sat in the bow and gave directions
+while the other two put their backs into the stroke. Quite casually
+Elliot noticed that the man in the waist had a purple bruise on his left
+cheek bone. The young man himself had put it there not three minutes
+since.
+
+Across the water came a call for help. "I'm sinking--hurry!"
+
+The other man in the river was a dozen yards from the one in distress.
+With strong, swift, overhand strokes he shot through the water.
+
+"All right," he called presently. "I've got him."
+
+The oarsmen drew alongside the swimmer. With one hand Macdonald caught
+hold of the edge of the boat. The other clutched the rescued man by the
+hair of his head.
+
+"Look out. You're drowning him," the mate warned.
+
+"Am I?" Macdonald glanced with mild interest at the head that had been
+until that moment submerged. "Shows how absent-minded a man gets. I was
+thinking about how he tried to drown me, I expect."
+
+They dragged the miner aboard.
+
+"Go ahead. I'll swim down," Macdonald ordered.
+
+"Better come aboard," advised the mate.
+
+"No. I'm all right."
+
+The Scotchman pushed himself back from the boat and fell into an easy
+stroke. Nevertheless, there was power in it, for he reached the Hannah
+before the rescued miner had been helped to the deck.
+
+A dozen passengers, crowded on the lower deck, pushed forward eagerly
+to see. Among them was Selfridge, his shirt and collar torn loose at
+the neck and his immaculate checked suit dusty and disheveled. He was
+wearing a pair of up-to-date Oxford tans.
+
+The Scotch-Canadian shook himself like a Newfoundland dog. He looked
+around with sardonic amusement, a grin on his swollen and disfigured
+face.
+
+"Quite a pleasant welcome home," he said ironically, his cold eyes fixed
+on a face that looked as if it might have been kicked by a healthy mule.
+"Eh, Trelawney?"
+
+The Cornishman glared at him, and turned away with a low, savage oath.
+
+"Are you hurt, Mr. Macdonald?" asked the captain.
+
+"Hurt! Not at all, Captain. I cut myself while I was shaving this
+morning--just a scratch," was the ironic answer.
+
+"There's been some dirty work going on. I'll see the men are punished,
+sir."
+
+"Forget it, Captain. I'll attend to that little matter." His jaunty,
+almost insolent glance made the half-circle again. "Sorry you were too
+late for the party, gentlemen,--most of you. I see three or four of you
+who were 'among those present.' It was a strictly exclusive affair. And
+now, if you don't mind, I'll say good-night."
+
+He turned on his heel, went up the stairway to the deck above, and
+disappeared into his stateroom.
+
+The rescued miner, propped against the cabin wall where he had been
+placed, broke into sudden excited protest. "Ach! He tried to drown me.
+Mein head--he hold it under the water."
+
+"Ain't that just like a Swede?" retorted the mate in disgust. "Mac saves
+his life. Then the roughneck kicks because he got a belly full of Yukon.
+Sure Mac soused him some. Why shouldn't he?"
+
+"I ain't no Swede," explained the big miner sullenly.
+
+The mate did not think it worth his while to explain that "Swede" was
+merely his generic term of contempt for all foreigners.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE GIRL FROM DROGHEDA
+
+
+Gordon Elliot was too much of a night owl to be an early riser, but
+next morning he was awakened by the tramp of hurried feet along the
+deck to the accompaniment of brusque orders, together with frequent
+angry puffing and snorting of the boat. From the quiver of the walls he
+guessed that the Hannah was stuck on a sandbar. The mate's language gave
+backing to this surmise. Divided in mind between his obligation to the
+sleeping passengers and his duty to get the boat on her way, that
+officer spilled a good deal of subdued sulphurous language upon the
+situation.
+
+"All together now. Get your back into it. Why are you running around
+like a chicken without a head, Reeves?" he snapped.
+
+Evidently the deck hands were working to get the Hannah off by poling.
+
+Elliot tried to settle back to sleep, but after two or three ineffectual
+efforts gave it up. He rose and did one or two setting-up exercises to
+limber his joints. The first of these flashed the signal to his brain
+that he was stiff and sore. This brought to mind the fight on the
+hurricane deck, and he smiled. His face was about as mobile as if it
+were in a plaster cast. It hurt every time he twitched a muscle.
+
+The young man stepped to the looking-glass. Both eyes were blacked, his
+lip had been cut, and there was a purple weal well up on his left cheek.
+He stopped himself from grinning only just in time to save another
+twinge of pain.
+
+"Some party while it lasted. I never saw more willing mixers. Everybody
+seemed anxious to sit in except Mr. Wally Selfridge," he explained to
+his reflection. "But Macdonald is the class. He's there with both right
+and left. That uppercut of his is vicious. Don't ever get in the way of
+it, Gordon Elliot." He examined his injuries more closely in the glass.
+"Some one landed a peach on my right lamp and the other is in mourning
+out of sympathy. Oh, well, I ain't the only prize beauty on board this
+morning." The young man forgot and smiled. "Ouch! Don't do that, Gordon.
+Yes, son. 'There's many a black, black eye, they say, but none so bright
+as mine.' Now isn't that the truth?"
+
+He bathed, dressed, and went out on the deck.
+
+Early though he was, one passenger at least was up before him. The
+young woman he had noticed last evening with the magazine was doing a
+constitutional. A slight breeze was stirring, and as she moved against
+it the white skirt clung first to one knee and then the other, moulding
+itself to the long lines of her limbs with exquisite grace of motion.
+It was as though her walk were the expression of a gallant and buoyant
+personality.
+
+Irish he guessed her when the deep-blue eyes rested on his for an
+instant as she passed, and fortified his conjecture by the coloring of
+the clear-skinned face and the marks of the Celtic race delicately
+stamped upon it.
+
+The purser came out of his room and joined Elliot. He smiled at sight of
+the young man's face.
+
+"Your map's a little out of plumb this morning, sir," he ventured.
+
+"But you ought to see the other fellow," came back Gordon boyishly.
+
+"I've seen him--several of him. We've got the best collection of bruises
+on board I ever clapped eyes on. I've got to give it to you and Mr.
+Macdonald. You know how to hit."
+
+"Oh, I'm not in his class."
+
+Gordon Elliot meant what he said. He was himself an athlete, had played
+for three years left tackle on his college eleven. More than one critic
+had picked him for the All-America team. He could do his hundred in just
+a little worse than ten seconds. But after all he was a product of
+training and of the gymnasiums. Macdonald was what nature and a long
+line of fighting Highland ancestors had made him. His sinewy, knotted
+strength, his massive build, the breadth of shoulder and depth of
+chest--mushing on long snow trails was the gymnasium that had
+contributed to these.
+
+The purser chuckled. "He's a good un, Mac is. They say he liked to have
+drowned Northrup after he had saved him."
+
+Elliot was again following with his eyes the lilt of the girl's
+movements. Apparently he had not heard what the officer said. At least
+he gave no answer.
+
+With a grin the purser opened another attack. "Don't blame you a bit,
+Mr. Elliot. She's the prettiest colleen that ever sailed from Dublin
+Bay."
+
+The young man brought his eyes home. They answered engagingly the smile
+of the purser.
+
+"Who is she?"
+
+"The name on the books is Sheba O'Neill."
+
+"From Dublin, you say."
+
+"Oh, if you want to be literal, her baggage says Drogheda. Ireland is
+Ireland to me."
+
+"Where is she bound for?"
+
+"Kusiak."
+
+The young woman passed them with a little nod of morning greeting to the
+purser. Fine and dainty though she was, Miss O'Neill gave an impression
+of radiant strength.
+
+"Been with you all the way up the river?" asked Elliot after she had
+passed.
+
+"Yep. She came up on the Skagit from Seattle."
+
+"What is she going to do at Kusiak?"
+
+Again the purser grinned. "What do they all do--the good-looking ones?"
+
+"Get married, you mean?"
+
+"Surest thing you know. Girls coming up ask me what to bring by way of
+outfit. I used to make out a long list. Now I tell them to bring clothes
+enough for six weeks and their favorite wedding march."
+
+"Is this girl engaged?"
+
+"Can't prove it by me," said the officer lightly. "But she'll never get
+out of Alaska a spinster--not that girl. She may be going in to teach,
+or to run a millinery store, or to keep books for a trading company.
+She'll stay to bring up kiddies of her own. They all do."
+
+Three children came up the stairway, caught sight of Miss O'Neill, and
+raced pell-mell across the deck to her.
+
+The young woman's face was transformed. It was bubbling with tenderness,
+with gay and happy laughter. Flinging her arms wide, she waited for
+them. With incoherent cries of delight they flung themselves upon her.
+Her arms enveloped all three as she stooped for their hugs and kisses.
+
+The two oldest were girls. The youngest was a fat, cuddly little boy
+with dimples in his soft cheeks.
+
+"I dwessed myself, Aunt Sheba. Didn't I, Gwen?"
+
+"Not all by yourself, Billie?" inquired the Irish girl, registering a
+proper amazement.
+
+He nodded his head slowly and solemnly up and down. "Honeth to
+goodness."
+
+Sheba stooped and held him off to admire. "All by yourself--just think
+of that."
+
+"We helped just the teeniest bit on the buttons," confessed Janet, the
+oldest of the small family.
+
+"And I tied his shoes," added Gwendolen, "after he had laced them."
+
+"Billie will be such a big man Daddie won't know him." And Sheba gave
+him another hug.
+
+Gwendolen snuggled close to Miss O'Neill. "You always smell so sweet and
+clean and violety, Aunt Sheba," she whispered in confidence.
+
+"You're spoiling me, Gwen," laughed the young woman. "You've kissed the
+blarney stone. It's a good thing you're leaving the boat to-day."
+
+Miss Gwen had one more confidence to make in the ear of her friend.
+"I wish you'd come too and be our new mamma," she begged.
+
+A shell-pink tinge crept into the milky skin of the Irish girl. She was
+less sure of herself, more easily embarrassed, than the average American
+of her age and sex. Occasionally in her manner was that effect of
+shyness one finds in the British even after they have escaped from
+provincialism.
+
+"Are all your things gathered ready for packing, Janet?" she asked
+quietly.
+
+The purser gave information to Elliot. "They call her Aunt Sheba,
+but she's no relative of theirs. The kids are on their way in to their
+father, who is an engineer on one of the creeks back of Katma. Their
+mother died two months ago. Miss O'Neill met them first aboard the
+Skagit on the way up and she has mothered them ever since. Some women
+are that way, bless 'em. I know because I've been married to one myself
+six months. She's back there at St. Michael's, and she just grabs at
+every baby in the block."
+
+The eyes of Elliot rested on Miss O'Neill. "She loves children."
+
+"She sure does--no bluff about that." An imp of mischief sparkled in
+the eye of the supercargo. "Not married yourself, are you, Mr. Elliot?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Hmp!"
+
+That was all he said, but Gordon felt the blood creep into his face.
+This annoyed him, so he added brusquely,--
+
+"And not likely to be."
+
+When the call for breakfast came Miss O'Neill took her retinue of
+youngsters with her to the dining-room. Looking across from his seat at
+an adjoining table, Elliot could see her waiting upon them with a fine
+absorption in their needs. She prepared an orange for Billie and offered
+to the little girls suggestions as to ordering that were accepted by
+them as a matter of course. Unconsciously the children recognized in her
+the eternal Mother.
+
+Before they had been long in the dining-room Macdonald came in carrying
+a sheaf of business papers. He glanced around, recognized Elliot, and
+made instantly for the seat across the table from him. On his face and
+head were many marks of the recent battle.
+
+"Trade you a cauliflower ear for a pair of black eyes, Mr. Elliot," he
+laughed as he shook hands with the man whose name he had just learned
+from the purser.
+
+The grip of his brown, muscular hand was strong. It was in character
+with the steady, cool eyes set deep beneath the jutting forehead, with
+the confident carriage of the deep, broad shoulders. He looked a dynamic
+American, who trod the way of the forceful and fought for his share of
+the spoils.
+
+"You might throw in several other little souvenirs to boot and not miss
+them," suggested Elliot with a smile.
+
+Macdonald nodded indifferently. "I gave and I took, which was as it
+should be. But it's different with you, Mr. Elliot. This wasn't your
+row."
+
+"I hadn't been in a good mix-up since I left college. It did me a lot of
+good."
+
+"Much obliged, anyhow." He turned his attention to a lady entering the
+dining-room. "'Mornin', Mrs. Selfridge. How's Wally?"
+
+She threw up her hands in despair. "He's on his second bottle of
+liniment already. I expect those ruffians have ruined his singing voice.
+It's a mercy they didn't murder both him and you, Mr. Macdonald. When I
+think of how close you both came to death last night--"
+
+"I don't know about Wally, but I had no notion of dying, Mrs. Selfridge.
+They mussed us up a bit. That was all."
+
+"But they _meant_ to kill you, the cowards. And they almost did it too.
+Look at Wally--confined to his bed and speaking in a whisper. Look at
+you--a wreck, horribly beaten up, almost drowned. We must drive the
+villains out of the country or send them to prison."
+
+Mrs. Selfridge always talked in superlatives. She had an enthusiasm
+for the dramatics of conversation. Her supple hands, her shrill, eager
+voice, the snapping black eyes, all had the effect of startling
+headlines to the story she might be telling.
+
+"Am I a wreck?" the big Scotchman wanted to know. "I feel as husky as a
+well-fed malamute."
+
+"Oh, you _talk_. But we all know you--how brave and strong you are.
+That's why this outrage ought to be punished. What would Alaska do if
+anything happened to you?"
+
+"I hadn't thought of that," admitted Macdonald. "The North would have to
+go out of business, I suppose. But you're right about one thing, Mrs.
+Selfridge. I'm brave and strong enough at the breakfast table. Steward,
+will you bring me a double order of these shirred eggs--and a small
+steak?"
+
+"Well, I'm glad you can still joke, Mr. Macdonald, after such a terrible
+experience. All I can say is that I hope Wally isn't permanently
+injured. He hasn't your fine constitution, and one never can tell about
+internal injuries." Mrs. Selfridge sighed and passed to her place.
+
+The eyes of the big man twinkled. "Our little fracas has been a godsend
+to Mrs. Selfridge. Wally and I will both emerge as heroes of a desperate
+struggle. You won't even get a mention. But it's a pity about Wally's
+injuries--and his singing voice."
+
+The younger man agreed with a gravity back of which his amusement was
+apparent. The share of Selfridge in the battle had been limited to leg
+work only, but this had not been good enough to keep him from being
+overhauled and having his throat squeezed.
+
+Elliot finished breakfast first and left Macdonald looking over a
+long typewritten document. He had it propped against a water-bottle
+and was reading as he ate. The paper was a report Selfridge had brought
+in to him from a clerk in the General Land Office. The big Canadian
+and the men he represented were dealing directly with the heads of the
+Government departments, but they thought it the part of wisdom to keep
+in their employ subordinates in the capacity of secret service agents
+to spy upon the higher-ups.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE CREVASSE
+
+
+For an hour before the Hannah reached Katma Miss O'Neill was busy
+getting her little brood ready. In that last half-day she was a creature
+of moods to them. They, too, like Sheba herself, were adventuring into
+a new world. Somehow they represented to her the last tie that bound her
+to the life she was leaving. Her heart was tender as a Madonna to these
+lambs so ill-fitted to face a frigid waste. Their mother had been a good
+woman. She could tell that. But she had no way of knowing what kind of
+man their father might be.
+
+Sheba gave Janet advice about where to keep her money and when to wear
+rubbers and what to do for Billie's cold. She put up a lunch for them to
+take on the stage. When they said their sniffling good-byes at Katma she
+was suspiciously bright and merry. Soon the children were laughing again
+with her.
+
+One glance at their father, who introduced himself to Miss O'Neill
+as John Husted, relieved her mind greatly. His spontaneous delight at
+seeing them again and his choking gratitude to her for having looked
+after them were evidence enough that this kind-eyed man meant to be both
+father and mother to his recovered little folks. His emotion was too
+poignant for him to talk about his wife, but Sheba understood and liked
+him better for it.
+
+Her temporary family stood on the end of the wharf and called good-byes
+to the girl.
+
+"Tum soon and see us, Aunt Sheba," Billie shouted from his seat on the
+shoulder of his father.
+
+The children waved handkerchiefs as long as she could be distinguished
+by them. When they turned away she went directly to her room.
+
+Elliot was passing forward when Miss O'Neill opened her stateroom door
+to go in. The eyes of the young woman were blind with tears and she was
+biting her lip to keep back the emotion that welled up. He knew she was
+very fond of the motherless children, but he guessed at an additional
+reason for her sobs. She too was as untaught as a child in the life of
+this frontier land. Whatever she found here--how much of hardship or
+happiness, of grief or woe--she knew that she had left behind forever
+the safe harborage of quiet waters in which her life craft had always
+floated.
+
+It came on to rain in the afternoon. Heavy clouds swept across from the
+mountains, and the sodden sky opened like a sluice-box. The Kusiak
+contingent, driven indoors, resorted to bridge. Miss O'Neill read.
+Gordon Elliot wrote letters, dawdled over magazines, and lounged
+alternately in the ladies' parlor and the smoking-room, where Macdonald,
+Strong, a hardware merchant from Fairbanks, and a pair of sour-dough
+miners had settled themselves to a poker game that was to last all night
+and well into the next day.
+
+Of the two bridge tables all the players were old-timers except Mrs.
+Mallory. Most of them were young enough in years, but they had been of
+the North long enough to know the gossip of the country and its small
+politics intimately. They shared common hopes of the day when Alaska
+would be thrown open to industry and a large population.
+
+But Mrs. Mallory had come in over the ice for the first time last
+winter. The other women felt that she was a bird of passage, that the
+frozen Arctic could be no more than a whim to her. They deferred a
+little to her because she knew the great world--New York, Vienna,
+London, Paris. Great names fell from her lips casually and carelessly.
+She referred familiarly to princes and famous statesmen, as if she had
+gossiped with them tete-a-tete over the teacups. She was full of spicy
+little anecdotes about German royalty and the British aristocracy. It
+was no wonder, Gordon Elliot thought, that she had rather stunned the
+little social set of Kusiak.
+
+Through Northrup and Trelawney a new slant on Macdonald was given to
+Gordon. He had fallen into casual talk with them after dinner on the
+fore deck. It was still raining, but all three were equipped with
+slickers or mackintoshes. To his surprise the young man discovered that
+they bore him no grudge at all for his interference the night before.
+
+"But we ain't through with Colby Macdonald yet," Trelawney explained.
+"Mind, I don't say we're going to get him. Nothing like that. He
+knocked me cold with that loaded suitcase of his. By the looks of him
+I'm even for that. Good enough. But here's the point. We stand for
+Labor. He stands for Capital. See? Things ain't what they used to be
+in Alaska, and it's because of Colby Macdonald and his friends. They're
+grabbers--that's what they are. They want the whole works. A hell of a
+roar goes up from them when the Government stops their combines, but
+all the time they're bearing down a little harder on us workingmen.
+Understand? It's up to us to fight, ain't it?"
+
+Later Elliot put this viewpoint before Strong.
+
+"There's something in it," the miner agreed. "Wages have gone down, and
+it's partly because the big fellows are consolidating interests. Alaska
+ain't a poor man's country the way it was. But Mac ain't to blame for
+that. He has to play the game the way the cards are dealt out."
+
+The sky was clear again when the Hannah drew in to the wharf at Moose
+Head to unload freight, but the mud in the unpaved street leading to the
+business section of the little frontier town was instep deep. Many of
+the passengers hurried ashore to make the most of the five-hour stop.
+Macdonald, with Mrs. Mallory and their Kusiak friends, disappeared in
+a bus. Elliot put on a pair of heavy boots and started uptown.
+
+At the end of the wharf he passed Miss O'Neill. She wore no rubbers and
+she had come to a halt at the beginning of the mud. After a momentary
+indecision she returned slowly to the boat.
+
+The young man walked up into the town, but ten minutes later he crossed
+the gangplank of the Hannah again with a package under his arm. Miss
+O'Neill was sitting on the forward deck making a pretense to herself of
+reading. This was where Elliot had expected to find her, but now that
+the moment of attack had come he had to take his fear by the throat.
+When he had thought of it first there seemed nothing difficult about
+offering to do her a kindness, yet he found himself shrinking from the
+chance of a rebuff.
+
+He moved over to where she sat and lifted his hat. "I hope you won't
+think it a liberty, Miss O'Neill, but I've brought you some rubbers from
+a store uptown. I noticed you couldn't get ashore without them."
+
+Gordon tore the paper wrapping from his package and disclosed half a
+dozen pairs of rubbers.
+
+The girl was visibly embarrassed. She was not at all certain of the
+right thing to do. Where she had been brought up young men did not offer
+courtesies of this sort so informally.
+
+"I--I think I won't need them, thank you. I've decided not to leave the
+boat," she answered shyly.
+
+Elliot had never been accused of being a quitter. Having begun this, he
+proposed to see it out. He caught sight of the purser superintending the
+discharge of cargo and called to him by name. The officer joined them,
+a pad of paper and a pencil in his hand.
+
+"I'm trying to persuade Miss O'Neill that she ought to go ashore while
+we're lying here. What was it you told me about the waterfall back of
+the town?"
+
+"Finest thing of its kind in Alaska. They're so proud of it in this burg
+that they would like to make it against the law for any one to leave
+without seeing it. Every one takes it in. We won't get away till night.
+You've plenty of time if you want to see it."
+
+"Now, will you please introduce me to Miss O'Neill formally?"
+
+The purser went through the usual formula of presentation, adding that
+Elliot was a government official on his way to Kusiak. Having done his
+duty by the young man, the busy supercargo retired.
+
+"I'm sure it would do you good to walk up to the waterfall with me, Miss
+O'Neill," urged Elliot.
+
+She met a little dubiously the smile that would not stay quite
+extinguished on his good-looking, boyish face. Why shouldn't she go with
+him, since it was the American way for unchaperoned youth to enjoy
+itself naturally?
+
+"If they'll fit," the girl answered, eyeing the rubbers.
+
+Gordon dropped to his knee and demonstrated that they would.
+
+As they walked along the muddy street she gave him a friendly little nod
+of thanks. "Good of you to take the trouble to look out for me."
+
+He laughed. "It was myself I was looking out for. I'm a stranger in the
+country and was awfully lonesome."
+
+"Is it that this is your first time in too?" she asked shyly.
+
+"You're going to Kusiak, aren't you? Do you know anybody there?" replied
+Elliot.
+
+"My cousin lives there, but I haven't seen her since I was ten. She's an
+American. Eleven years ago she visited us in Ireland."
+
+"I'm glad you know some one," he said. "You'll not be so lonesome with
+some of your people living there. I have two friends at Kusiak--a girl I
+used to go to school with and her husband."
+
+"Are you going to live at Kusiak?"
+
+"No; but I'll be stationed in the Territory for several months. I'll be
+in and out of the town a good deal. I hope you'll let me see something
+of you."
+
+The fine Irish coloring deepened in her cheeks. He had a way of taking
+in his stride the barriers between them, but it was impossible for her
+to feel offended at this cheery, vigorous young fellow with the winning
+smile and the firm-set jaw. She liked the warmth in his honest brown
+eyes. She liked the play of muscular grace beneath his well-fitting
+clothes. The sinuous ease of his lean, wide-shouldered body stirred
+faintly some primitive instinct in her maiden heart. Sheba did not know,
+as her resilient muscles carried her forward joyfully, that she was
+answering the call of youth to youth.
+
+Gordon respected her shyness and moved warily to establish his contact.
+He let the talk drift to impersonal topics as they picked their way out
+from the town along the mossy trail. The ground was spongy with water.
+On either side of them ferns and brakes grew lush. Sheba took the porous
+path with a step elastic. To the young man following she seemed a
+miracle of supple lightness.
+
+The trail tilted up from the lowlands, led across dips, and into a draw.
+A little stream meandered down and gurgled over rocks worn smooth by
+ages of attrition. Alders brushed the stream and their foliage checkered
+the trail with sunlight and shadow.
+
+They were ascending steadily now along a pathway almost too indistinct
+to follow. The air was aromatic with pine from a grove that came
+straggling down the side of a gulch to the brook.
+
+"Do you know, I have a queer feeling that I've seen all this before,"
+the Irish girl said. "Of course I haven't--unless it was in my dreams.
+Naturally I've thought about Alaska a great deal because my father lived
+here."
+
+"I didn't know that."
+
+"Yes. He came in with the Klondike stampeders." She added quietly: "He
+died on Bonanza Creek two years later."
+
+"Was he a miner?"
+
+"Not until he came North. He had an interest in a claim. It later turned
+out worthless."
+
+A bit of stiff climbing brought them to a boulder field back of which
+rose a mountain ridge.
+
+"We've got off the trail somehow," Elliot said. "But I don't suppose it
+matters. If we keep going we're bound to come to the waterfall."
+
+Beyond the boulder field the ridge rose sharply. Gordon looked a little
+dubiously at Sheba.
+
+"Are you a good climber?"
+
+As she stood in the sunpour, her cheeks flushed with exercise, he could
+see that her spirit courted adventure.
+
+"I'm sure I must be," she answered with a smile adorable. "I believe I
+could do the Matterhorn to-day."
+
+Well up on the shoulder of the ridge they stopped to breathe. The
+distant noise of falling water came faintly to them.
+
+"We're too far to the left--must have followed the wrong spur," Elliot
+explained. "Probably we can cut across the face of the mountain."
+
+Presently they came to an impasse. The gulch between the two spurs
+terminated in a rock wall that fell almost sheer for two hundred feet.
+
+The color in the cheeks beneath the eager eyes of the girl was warm.
+"Let's try it," she begged.
+
+The young man had noticed that she was as sure-footed as a mountain goat
+and that she could stand on the edge of a precipice without dizziness.
+The surface of the wall was broken. What it might be beyond he could not
+tell, but the first fifty feet was a bit of attractive and not too
+difficult rock traverse.
+
+Now and again he made a suggestion to the young woman following him,
+but for the most part he trusted her to choose her own foot and hand
+holds. Her delicacy was silken strong. If she was slender, she was yet
+deep-bosomed. The movements of the girl were as certain as those of an
+experienced mountaineer.
+
+The way grew more difficult. They had been following a ledge that
+narrowed till it ran out. Jutting knobs of feldspar and stunted shrubs
+growing from crevices offered toe-grips instead of the even foothold of
+the rock shelf. As Gordon looked down at the dizzy fall beneath them his
+judgment told him they had better go back. He said as much to his
+companion.
+
+The smile she flashed at him was delightfully provocative. It served to
+point the figure she borrowed from Gwen. "So you think I'm a 'fraid-cat,
+Mr. Elliot?"
+
+His inclination marched with hers. It was their first adventure together
+and he did not want to spoil it by undue caution. There really was not
+much danger yet so long as they were careful.
+
+Gordon abandoned the traverse and followed an ascending crack in the
+wall. The going was hard. It called for endurance and muscle, as well
+as for a steady head and a sure foot. He looked down at the girl wedged
+between the slopes of the granite trough.
+
+She read his thought. "The old guard never surrenders, sir," was her
+quick answer as she brushed in salute with the tips of her fingers a
+stray lock of hair.
+
+The trough was worse than Elliot had expected. It had in it a good deal
+of loose rubble that started in small slides at the least pressure.
+
+"Be very careful of your footing," he called back anxiously.
+
+A small grassy platform lay above the upper end of the trough, but the
+last dozen feet of the approach was a very difficult bit. Gordon took
+advantage of every least projection. He fought his way up with his back
+against one wall and his knees pressed to the other. Three feet short of
+the platform the rock walls became absolutely smooth. The climber could
+reach within a foot of the top.
+
+"Are you stopped?" asked Sheba.
+
+"Looks that way."
+
+A small pine projected from the edge of the shelf out over the
+precipice. It might be strong enough to bear his weight. It might not.
+Gordon unbuckled his belt and threw one end over the trunk of the dwarf
+tree. Gingerly he tested it with his weight, then went up hand over hand
+and worked himself over the edge of the little plateau.
+
+"All right?" the girl called up.
+
+"All right. But you can't make it. I'm coming down again."
+
+"I'm going to try."
+
+"I wouldn't, Miss O'Neill. It's really dangerous."
+
+"I'd like to try it. I'll stop if it's too hard," she promised.
+
+The strength of her slender wrists surprised him. She struggled up the
+vertical crevasse inch by inch. His heart was full of fear, for a
+misstep now would be fatal. He lay down with his face over the ledge and
+lowered to her the buckled loop of his belt. Twice she stopped
+exhausted, her back and her hands pressed against the walls of the
+trough angle for support.
+
+"Better give it up," he advised.
+
+"I'll not then." She smiled stubbornly as she shook her head.
+
+Presently her fingers touched the belt.
+
+[Illustration: "SO YOU THINK I'M A 'FRAID-CAT, MR. ELLIOT?"]
+
+Gordon edged forward an inch or two farther. "Put your hand through the
+loop and catch hold of the leather above," he told her.
+
+She did so, and at the same instant her foot slipped. The girl swung out
+into space suspended by one wrist. The muscles of Elliot hardened into
+steel as they responded to the strain. His body began to slide very
+slowly down the incline.
+
+In a moment the acute danger was past. Sheba had found a hold with her
+feet and relieved somewhat the dead pull upon Elliot.
+
+She had not voiced a cry, but the face that looked up into his was very
+white.
+
+"Take your time," he said in a quiet, matter-of-fact way.
+
+With his help she came close enough for him to reach her hand. After
+that it was only a moment before she knelt on the plateau beside him.
+
+"Touch and go, wasn't it?" Sheba tried to smile, but the colorless lips
+told the young man she was still faint from the shock.
+
+He knew he was going to reproach himself bitterly for having led her
+into such a risk, but he could not just now afford to waste his energies
+on regrets. Nor could he let her mind dwell on past dangers so long as
+there were future ones to be faced.
+
+"You might have sprained your wrist," he said lightly as he rose to
+examine the cliff still to be negotiated.
+
+Her dark eyes looked at him with quick surprise. "So I might," she
+answered dryly.
+
+But his indifferent tone had the effect upon her of a plunge into cold
+water. It braced and stiffened her will. If he wanted to ignore the
+terrible danger through which she had passed, certainly she was not
+going to remind him of it.
+
+Between where they stood and the summit of the cliff was another rock
+traverse. A kind of rough, natural stairway led down to a point opposite
+them. But before this could be reached thirty feet of granite must be
+crossed. The wall looked hazardous enough in all faith. It lay in the
+shade, and there were spots where a thin coating of ice covered the
+smooth slabs. But there was no other way up, and if the traverse could
+be made the rest was easy.
+
+Gordon was mountaineer enough to know that the climb up is safer than
+the one back. The only possible way for them to go down the trough was
+for him to lower her by the belt until she found footing enough to go
+alone. He did not quite admit it to himself, but in his heart he doubted
+whether she could make it safely.
+
+The alternative was the cliff face.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+ACROSS THE TRAVERSE
+
+
+Elliot took off his shoes and turned toward the traverse.
+
+"Think I'll see if I can cross to that stairway. You had better wait
+here, Miss O'Neill, until we find out if it can be done."
+
+His manner was casual, his voice studiously light.
+
+Sheba looked across the cliff and down to the boulder bed two hundred
+feet below. "You can never do it in the world. Isn't there another way
+up?"
+
+"No. The wall above us slopes out. I've got to cross to the stairway. If
+I make it I'm going to get a rope."
+
+"Do you mean you're going back to town for one?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+Her eyes fastened to his in a long, unspoken question. She read the
+answer. He was afraid to have her try the trough again. To get back to
+town by way of their roundabout ascent would waste time. If he was going
+to rescue her before night, he must take the shortest cut, and that was
+across the face of the sheer cliff. For the first time she understood
+how serious was their plight.
+
+"We can go back together by the trough, can't we?" But even as she
+asked, her heart sank at the thought of facing again that dizzy height.
+The moment of horror when she had thought herself lost had shaken her
+nerve.
+
+"It would be difficult."
+
+The glance of the girl swept again the face of the wall he must cross.
+It could not be done without a rope. Her fear-filled eyes came back to
+his.
+
+"It's my fault. I made you come," she said in a low voice.
+
+"Nonsense," he answered cheerfully. "There's no harm done. If I can't
+reach the stairway I can come back and go down by the trough."
+
+Sheba assented doubtfully.
+
+It had come on to drizzle again. The rain was fine and cold, almost a
+mist, and already it was forming a film of ice on the rocks.
+
+"I can't take time to go back by the trough. The point is that I don't
+want you camped up here after night. There has been no sun on this side
+of the spur and in the chill of the evening it must get cold even in
+summer."
+
+He was making his preparations as he talked. His coat he took off and
+threw down. His shoes he tied by the laces to his belt.
+
+"I'll try not to be very long," he promised.
+
+"It's God's will then, so it is," she sighed, relapsing into the
+vernacular.
+
+Her voice was low and not very steady, for the heart of the girl was
+heavy. She knew she must not protest his decision. That was not the way
+to play the game. But somehow the salt had gone from their light-hearted
+adventure. She had become panicky from the moment when her feet had
+started the rubble in the trough and gone flying into the air. The
+gayety that had been the note of their tramp had given place to fears.
+
+Elliot took her little hand in a warm, strong grip. "You're not going to
+be afraid. We'll work out all right, you know."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"It's not just the thing to leave a lady in the rain when you take her
+for a walk, but it can't be helped. We'll laugh about it to-morrow."
+
+Would they? she wondered, answering his smile faintly. Her courage was
+sapped. She wanted to cry out that he must not try the traverse, but she
+set her will not to make it harder for him.
+
+He turned to the climb.
+
+"You've forgotten your coat," she reminded.
+
+"I'm traveling light this trip. You'd better slip it on before you get
+chilled."
+
+Sheba knew he had left it on purpose for her.
+
+Her fascinated eyes followed him while he moved out from the
+plateau across the face of the precipice. His hand had found a knob
+of projecting feldspar and he was feeling with his right foot for a
+hold in some moss that grew in a crevice. He had none of the tools for
+climbing--no rope, no hatchet, none of the support of numbers. All the
+allies he could summon were his bare hands and feet, his resilient
+muscles, and his stout heart. To make it worse, the ice film from the
+rain coated every jutting inch of quartz with danger.
+
+But he worked steadily forward, moving with the infinite caution of
+one who knows that there will be no chance to remedy later any mistake.
+A slight error in judgment, the failure in response of any one of fifty
+muscles, would send him plunging down.
+
+Occasionally he spoke to Sheba, but she volunteered no remarks. It was
+her part to wait and watch while he concentrated every faculty upon his
+task. He had come to an impasse after crossing a dozen feet of the wall
+and was working up to get around a slab of granite which protruded, a
+convex barrier, from the surface of the cliff. It struck the girl that
+from a distance he must look like a fly on a pane of glass. Even to her,
+close as she was, that smooth rock surface looked impossible.
+
+Her eye left him for an instant to sweep the gulf below. She gave a
+little cry, ran to his coat, and began to wave it. For the first time
+since Elliot had begun the traverse she took the initiative in speech.
+
+"I see some people away over to the left, Mr. Elliot. I'm going to call
+to them." Her voice throbbed with hope.
+
+But it was not her shouts or his, which would not have carried one tenth
+the distance, that reached the group in the valley. One of them caught a
+glimpse of the wildly waving coat. There was a consultation and two or
+three fluttered handkerchiefs in response. Presently they moved on.
+
+Sheba could not believe her eyes. "They're not leaving us surely?" she
+gasped.
+
+"That's what they're doing," answered Gordon grimly. "They think we're
+calling to them out of vanity to show them where we climbed."
+
+"Oh!" She strangled a sob in her throat. Her heart was weighted as with
+lead.
+
+"I'm going to make it. I think I see my way from here," her companion
+called across to her. "A fault runs to the foot of the stairway, if I
+can only do the next yard or two."
+
+He did them, by throwing caution to the winds. An icy, rounded boulder
+projected above him out of reach. He unfastened his belt again and put
+the shoes, tied by the laces, around his neck. There was one way to get
+across to the ledge of the fault. He took hold of the two ends of the
+belt, crouched, and leaned forward on tiptoes toward the knob. The loop
+of the belt slid over the ice-coated boss. There was no chance to draw
+back now, to test the hold he had gained. If the leather slipped he was
+lost. His body swung across the abyss and his feet landed on the little
+ledge beyond.
+
+His shout of success came perhaps ten minutes later. "I've reached
+the stairway, Miss O'Neill. I'll try not to be long, but you'd better
+exercise to keep up the circulation. Don't worry, please. I'll be back
+before night."
+
+"I'm so glad," she cried joyfully. "I was afraid for you. And I'll not
+worry a bit. Good-bye."
+
+Elliot made his way up to the summit and ran along a footpath which
+brought him to a bridge across the mountain stream just above the falls.
+The trail zigzagged down the turbulent little river close to the bank.
+Before he had specialized on the short distances Gordon had been a
+cross-country runner. He was in fair condition and he covered the ground
+fast.
+
+About a mile below the falls he met two men. One of them was Colby
+Macdonald. He carried a coil of rope over one shoulder. The big
+Alaskan explained that he had not been able to get it out of his
+head that perhaps the climbers who had waved at his party had been in
+difficulties. So he had got a rope from the cabin of an old miner and
+was on his way back to the falls.
+
+The three climbed to the falls, crossed the bridge, and reached the top
+of the cliff.
+
+"You know the lay of the land down there, Mr. Elliot. We'll lower you,"
+decided Macdonald, who took command as a matter of course.
+
+Gordon presently stood beside Sheba on the little plateau. She had
+quite recovered from the touch of hysteria that had attacked her courage.
+The wind and the rain had whipped the color into her soft cheeks, had
+disarranged a little the crinkly, blue-black hair, wet tendrils of which
+nestled against her temples. The health and buoyancy of the girl were in
+the live eyes that met his eagerly.
+
+"You weren't long," was all she said.
+
+"I met them coming," he answered as he dropped the loop of the rope over
+her head and arranged it under her shoulders.
+
+He showed her how to relieve part of the strain of the rope on her flesh
+by using her hands to lift.
+
+"All ready?" Macdonald called from above.
+
+"All ready," Elliot answered. To Sheba he said, "Hold tight."
+
+The girl was swung from the ledge and rose jerkily in the air. She
+laughed gayly down at her friend below.
+
+"It's fun."
+
+Gordon followed her a couple of minutes later. She was waiting to give
+him a hand over the edge of the cliff.
+
+"Miss O'Neill, this is Mr. Macdonald," he said, as soon as he had freed
+himself from the rope. "You are fellow passengers on the Hannah."
+
+Macdonald was looking at her straight and hard. "Your father's name--was
+it Farrell O'Neill?" he asked bluntly.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I knew him."
+
+The girl's eyes lit. "I'm glad, Mr. Macdonald. That's one reason I
+wanted to come to Alaska--to hear about my father's life here. Will you
+tell me?"
+
+"Sometime. We must be going now to catch the boat--after I've had a look
+at the cliff this young man crawled across."
+
+He turned away, abruptly it struck Elliot, and climbed down the natural
+stairway up which the young man had come. Presently he rejoined those
+above. Macdonald looked at Elliot with a new respect.
+
+"You're in luck, my friend, that we're not carrying you from the foot
+of the cliff," he said dryly. "I wouldn't cross that rock wall for a
+hundred thousand dollars in cold cash."
+
+"Nor I again," admitted Gordon with a laugh. "But we had either to
+homestead that plateau or vacate it. I preferred the latter."
+
+Miss O'Neill's deep eyes looked at him. She was about to speak, then
+changed her mind.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+SHEBA SINGS--AND TWO MEN LISTEN
+
+
+Elliot did not see Miss O'Neill next morning until she appeared in the
+dining-room for breakfast. He timed himself to get through so as to join
+her when she left. They strolled out to the deck together.
+
+"Did you sleep well?" he asked.
+
+"After I fell asleep. It took me a long time. I kept seeing you on the
+traverse."
+
+He came abruptly to what was on his mind. "I have an apology to make,
+Miss O'Neill. If I made light of your danger yesterday, it was because I
+was afraid you might break down. I had to seem unsympathetic rather than
+risk that."
+
+She smiled forgiveness. "All you said was that I might have sprained my
+wrist. It was true too. I might have--and I did." Sheba showed a white
+linen bandage tied tightly around her wrist.
+
+"Does it pain much?"
+
+"Not so much now. It throbbed a good deal last night."
+
+"Your whole weight came on it with a wrench. No wonder it hurt."
+
+Sheba noticed that the Hannah was drawing up to a wharf and the
+passengers were lining up with their belongings. "Is this where we
+change?"
+
+"Those of us going to Kusiak transfer here. But there's no hurry.
+We wait at this landing two hours."
+
+Gordon helped Sheba move her baggage to the other boat and joined
+her on deck. They were both strangers in the land. Their only common
+acquaintance was Macdonald and he was letting Mrs. Mallory absorb his
+attention just now. Left to their own resources the two young people
+naturally drifted together a good deal.
+
+This suited Elliot. He found his companion wholly delightful, not the
+less because she was so different from the girls he knew at home. She
+could be frank, and even shyly audacious on occasion, but she held a
+little note of reserve he felt bound to respect. Her experience of the
+world had clearly been limited. She was not at all sure of herself, of
+the proper degree of intimacy to permit herself with a strange and
+likable young man who had done her so signal a service.
+
+Macdonald left the boat twenty miles below Kusiak with Mrs. Mallory and
+the Selfridges. A chauffeur with a motor-car was waiting on the wharf to
+run them to town, but he gave the wheel to Macdonald and took the seat
+beside the driver.
+
+The little miner Strong grinned across to Elliot, who was standing
+beside Miss O'Neill at the boat rail.
+
+"That's Mac all over. He hires a fellow to run his car--brings him up
+here from Seattle--and then takes the wheel himself every time he rides.
+I don't somehow see Mac sitting back and letting another man run the
+machine."
+
+It was close to noon before the river boat turned a bend and steamed up
+to the wharf at Kusiak. The place was an undistinguished little log town
+that rambled back from the river up the hill in a hit-or-miss fashion.
+Its main street ran a tortuous course parallel to the stream.
+
+Half of the town, it seemed, was down to meet the boat.
+
+"Are you going to the hotel or direct to your cousin's?" Gordon asked
+Miss O'Neill.
+
+"To my cousin's. I fancy she's down here to meet me. It was arranged
+that I come on this boat."
+
+There was much waving of handkerchiefs and shouting back and forth as
+the steamer slowly drew close to the landing.
+
+Elliot caught a glimpse of the only people in Kusiak he had known before
+coming in, but though he waved to them he saw they did not recognize
+him. After the usual delay about getting ashore he walked down the
+gangway carrying the suitcases of the Irish girl. Sheba followed at his
+heels. On the wharf he came face to face with a slender, well-dressed
+young woman.
+
+"Diane!" he cried.
+
+She stared at him. "You! What in Heaven's name are you doing here,
+Gordon Elliot?" she demanded, and before he could answer had seized both
+hands and turned excitedly to call a stocky man near. "Peter--Peter!
+Guess who's here?"
+
+"Hello, Paget!" grinned Gordon, and he shook hands with the husband of
+Diane.
+
+Elliot turned to introduce his friend, but she anticipated him.
+
+"Cousin Diane," she said shyly. "Don't you know me?"
+
+Mrs. Paget swooped down upon the girl and smothered her in her embrace.
+
+"This is Sheba--little Sheba that I have told you so often about,
+Peter," she cried. "Glory be, I'm glad to see you, child." And Diane
+kissed her again warmly. "You two met on the boat, of course, coming
+in, I hope you didn't let her get lonesome, Gordon. Look after Sheba's
+suitcases, Peter. You'll come to dinner to-night, Gordon--at seven."
+
+"I'm in the kind hands of my countrywoman," laughed Gordon. "I'll
+certainly be on hand."
+
+"But what in the world are you doing here? You're the last man I'd have
+expected to see."
+
+"I'm in the service of the Government, and I've been sent in on
+business."
+
+"Well, I'm going to say something original, dear people," Mrs. Paget
+replied. "It's a small world, isn't it?"
+
+While he was dressing for dinner later in the day, Elliot recalled
+early memories of the Pagets. He had known Diane ever since they had
+been youngsters together at school. He remembered her as a restless,
+wiry little thing, keen as a knife-blade. She had developed into a very
+pretty girl, alive, ambitious, energetic, with a shrewd eye to the main
+chance. Always popular socially, she had surprised everybody by refusing
+the catch of the town to marry a young mining engineer without a penny.
+Gordon was in college at the time, but during the next long vacation
+he had fraternized a good deal with the Peter Pagets. The young
+married people had been very much in love with each other, but not too
+preoccupied to take the college boy into their happiness as a comrade.
+Diane always had been a manager, and she liked playing older sister
+to so nice a lad. He had been on a footing friendly enough to drop in
+unannounced whenever he took the fancy. If they were out, or about to go
+out, the freedom of the den, a magazine, and good tobacco had been his.
+Then the Arctic gold-fields had claimed Paget and his bride. That had
+been more than ten years ago, and until to-day Gordon had not seen them
+since.
+
+While Elliot was brushing his dinner coat before the open window of the
+room assigned him at the hotel, somebody came out to the porch below.
+The voice of a woman floated faintly to him.
+
+"Seen Diane's Irish beauty yet, Ned?"
+
+"Yes," a man answered.
+
+The woman laughed softly. "Mrs. Mallory came up on the same boat with
+her." The inflection suggested that the words were meant not to tell a
+fact, but some less obvious inference.
+
+"Oh, you women!" the man commented good-naturedly.
+
+"She's wonderfully pretty, and of course Diane will make the most of
+her. But Mrs. Mallory is a woman among ten thousand."
+
+"I'd choose the girl if it were me," said the man.
+
+"But it isn't you. We'll see what we'll see."
+
+They were moving up the street and Gordon heard no more. What he had
+heard was not clear to him. Why should any importance attach to the fact
+that Mrs. Mallory and Sheba O'Neill had come up the river on the same
+boat? Yet he was vaguely disturbed by the insinuation that in some way
+Diane was entering her cousin as a rival of the older woman. He resented
+the idea that the fine, young personality of the Irish girl was being
+cheapened by management on the part of Diane Paget.
+
+Elliot was not the only dinner guest at the Paget home that evening. He
+found Colby Macdonald sitting in the living-room with Sheba. She came
+quickly forward to meet the newly arrived guest.
+
+"Mr. Macdonald has been telling me about my father. He knew him on
+Frenchman Creek where they both worked claims," explained the girl.
+
+The big mining man made no comment and added nothing to what she said.
+There were times when his face was about as expressive as a stone wall.
+Except for a hard wariness in the eyes it told nothing now.
+
+The dinner went off very well. Diane and Peter had a great many
+questions to ask Gordon about old friends. By the time these had been
+answered Macdonald was chatting easily with Sheba. The man had been in
+many out-of-the-way corners of the world, had taken part in much that
+was dramatic and interesting. If the experience of the Irish girl had
+been small, her imagination had none the less gone questing beyond the
+narrow bars of her life upon amazing adventure. She listened with
+glowing eyes to the strange tales this man of magnificent horizons had
+to tell. Never before had she come into contact with any one like him.
+
+The others too succumbed to his charm. He dominated that little
+dining-room because he was a sixty-horse-power dynamo. For all his bulk
+he was as lean as a panther and as sinewy. There was virility in the
+very economy of his motions, in the reticence of his speech. Not even
+a fool could have read weakness there. When he followed Sheba into the
+living-room, power trod in his long, easy stride.
+
+Paget was superintendent of the Lucky Strike, a mine owned principally
+by Macdonald. The two talked business for a few minutes over their
+cigars, but Diane interrupted gayly to bring them back into the circle.
+Adroitly she started Macdonald on the account of a rescue of two men
+lost in a blizzard the year before. He had the gift of dramatizing his
+story, of selecting only effective details. There was no suggestion of
+boasting. If he happened to be the hero of any of his stories the fact
+was of no importance to him. It was merely a detail of the picture he
+was sketching.
+
+Gordon interrupted with a question a story he was telling of a fight he
+had seen between two bull moose.
+
+"Did you say that was while you were on the way over to inspect the
+Kamatlah coal-fields for the first time?"
+
+The eyes of the young man were quick with interest.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Four years ago last spring?"
+
+Macdonald looked at him with a wary steadiness. Some doubt had found
+lodgment in his mind. Before he could voice it, if, indeed, he had any
+such intention, Elliot broke in swiftly,--
+
+"Don't answer that question. I asked it without proper thought. I am a
+special agent of the General Land Office sent up to investigate the
+Macdonald coal claims and kindred interests."
+
+Slowly the rigor of the big Scotchman's steely eyes relaxed to a smile
+that was genial and disarming. If this news hit him hard he gave no sign
+of it. And that it was an unexpected blow there could be no doubt.
+
+"Glad you've come, Mr. Elliot. We ask nothing but fair play. Tell the
+truth, and we'll thank you. The men who own the Macdonald group of
+claims have nothing to conceal. I'll answer that question. I meant to
+say two years ago last spring."
+
+His voice was easy and his gaze unwavering as he made the correction,
+yet everybody in the room except Sheba knew he was deliberately lying
+to cover the slip. For the admission that he had inspected the Kamatlah
+field just before his dummies had filed upon it would at least tend to
+aggravate suspicion that the entries were not _bona-fide_.
+
+It was rather an awkward moment. Diane blamed herself because she had
+brought the men together socially. Why had she not asked Gordon more
+explicitly what his business was? Peter grinned a little uncomfortably.
+It was Sheba who quite unconsciously relieved the situation.
+
+"But what about the big moose, Mr. Macdonald? What did it do then?"
+
+The Alaskan went back to his story. He was talking for Sheba alone,
+for the young girl with eager, fascinated eyes which flashed with
+sympathy as they devoured selected glimpses of his wild, turbulent
+career. Her clean, brave spirit was throwing a glamour over the man.
+She saw him with other eyes than Elliot's. The Government official
+admired him tremendously. Macdonald was an empire-builder. He blazed
+trails for others to follow in safety. But Gordon could guess how
+callously his path was strewn with brutality, with the effects of an
+ethical color-blindness largely selfish, though even he did not know
+that the man's primitive jungle code of wolf eat wolf had played havoc
+with Sheba's young life many years before.
+
+Diane, satisfied that Macdonald had scored, called upon Sheba.
+
+"I want you to sing for us, dear, if you will."
+
+Sheba accompanied herself. The voice of the girl had no unusual range,
+but it was singularly sweet and full of the poignant feeling that
+expresses the haunting pathos of her race.
+
+ "It's well I know ye, Sheve Cross, ye weary, stony hill,
+ An' I'm tired, och, I'm tired to be looking on ye still.
+ For here I live the near side an' he is on the far,
+ An' all your heights and hollows are between us, so they are.
+ Och anee!"
+
+Gordon, as he listened, felt the strange hunger of that homesick cry
+steal through his blood. He saw his own emotions reflected in the face
+of the Scotch-Canadian, who was watching with a tense interest the slim,
+young figure at the piano, the girl whose eyes were soft and dewy with
+the mysticism of her people, were still luminous with the poetry of the
+child in spite of the years that heralded her a woman.
+
+Elliot intercepted the triumphant sweep of Diane's glance from Macdonald
+to her husband. In a flash it lit up for him the words he had heard on
+the hotel porch. Diane, an inveterate matchmaker, intended her cousin to
+marry Colby Macdonald. No doubt she thought she was doing a fine thing
+for the girl. He was a millionaire, the biggest figure in the Northwest.
+His iron will ran the town and district as though the people were
+chattels of his. Back of him were some of the biggest financial
+interests in the United States.
+
+But the gorge of Elliot rose. The man, after all, was a law-breaker,
+a menace to civilization. He was a survivor by reason of his strength
+from the primitive wolf-pack. Already the special agent had heard many
+strange stories of how this man of steel had risen to supremacy by
+trampling down lesser men with whom he had had dealings, of terrible
+battles from which his lean, powerful body had emerged bloody and
+battered, but victorious. The very look of his hard, gray eyes was
+dominant and masterful. He would win, no matter how. It came to Gordon's
+rebel heart that if Macdonald wanted this lovely Irish girl,--and the
+young man never doubted that the Scotchman would want her,--he would
+reach out and gather in Sheba just as if she were a coal mine or a
+placer prospect.
+
+All this surged through the mind of the young man while the singer was
+on the first line of the second stanza.
+
+ "But if 't was only Sheve Cross to climb from foot to crown,
+ I'd soon be up an' over that, I'd soon be runnin' down.
+ Then sure the great ould sea itself is there beyont the bar,
+ An' all the windy wathers are between us, so they are.
+ Och anee!"
+
+The rich, soft, young voice with its Irish brogue died away. The little
+audience paid the singer the tribute of silence. She herself was the
+first to speak.
+
+"'Divided' is the name of it. A namesake of mine, Moira O'Neill, wrote
+it," she explained.
+
+"It's a beautiful song, and I thank ye for singing it," Macdonald said
+simply. "It minds me of my own barefoot days by the Tay."
+
+Later in the evening the two dinner guests walked back to the hotel
+together. The two subjects uppermost in the minds of both were not
+mentioned by either. They discussed casually the cost of living in the
+North, the raising of strawberries at Kusiak, and the best way to treat
+the mosquito nuisance, but neither of them referred to the Macdonald
+coal claims or to Sheba O'Neill.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+WALLY GETS ORDERS
+
+
+Macdonald, from his desk, looked up at the man in the doorway. Selfridge
+had come in jauntily, a cigar in his mouth, but at sight of the grim
+face of his chief the grin fled.
+
+"Come in and shut the door," ordered the Scotchman. "I sent for you to
+congratulate you, Wally. You did fine work outside. You told me, didn't
+you, that it was all settled at last--that our claims are clear-listed
+for patent?"
+
+The tubby little man felt the edge of irony in the quiet voice. "Sure.
+That's what Winton told me," he assented nervously.
+
+"Then you'll be interested to know that a special field agent of the
+Land Department sat opposite me last night and without batting an eye
+came across with the glad news that he was here to investigate our
+claims."
+
+Selfridge bounced up like a rubber ball from the chair into which he had
+just settled. "What!"
+
+"Pleasant surprise, isn't it? I've been wondering what you were doing
+outside. Of course I know you had to take in the shows and cabarets of
+New York. But couldn't you edge in an hour or two once a week to attend
+to business?"
+
+Wally's collar began to choke him. The cool, hard words of the big
+Scotchman pelted like hail.
+
+"Must be a bluff, Mac. The muckrake magazines have raised such a row
+about the Guttenchild crowd putting over a big steal on the public that
+the party leaders are scared stiff. I couldn't pick up a newspaper
+anywhere without seeing your name in the headlines. It was fierce."
+Selfridge had found his glib tongue and was off.
+
+"I understand that, Wally. What I don't get is how you came to let them
+slip this over on you without even a guess that it was going to happen."
+
+That phase of the subject Selfridge did not want to discuss.
+
+"Bet you a hat I've guessed it right--just a grand-stand play of the
+Administration to fool the dear people. This fellow has got his orders
+to give us a clean bill of health. Sure. That must be it. I suppose it's
+this man Elliot that came up on the boat with us."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, that's easy. If he hasn't been seen we can see him."
+
+Macdonald looked his man Friday over with a scarcely veiled contempt.
+"You have a beautiful, childlike faith in every man's dishonesty, Wally.
+Did it ever occur to you that some people are straight--that they won't
+sell out?"
+
+"All he gets is a beggarly two thousand or so a year. We can fix him all
+right."
+
+"You've about as much vision as a breed trader. Unless I miss my guess
+Elliot isn't that kind. He'll go through to a finish. What I'd like to
+know is how his mind works. If he sees straight we're all right, but if
+he is a narrow conservation fanatic he might go ahead and queer the
+whole game."
+
+"You wouldn't stand for that." The quick glance of Selfridge asked a
+question.
+
+The lips of the Scotchman were like steel traps and his eyes points of
+steel. "We'll cross that bridge if we come to it. Our first move is to
+try to win him to see this thing our way. I'll have a casual talk with
+him before he leaves for Kamatlah and feel him out."
+
+"What's he doing here at all? If he's investigating the Kamatlah claims,
+why does he go hundreds of miles out of his way to come in to Kusiak?"
+asked Selfridge.
+
+Macdonald smiled sardonically. "He's doing this job right. Elliot as
+good as told me that he's on the job to look up my record thoroughly. So
+he comes to Kusiak first. In a few days he'll leave for Kamatlah. That's
+where you come in, Wally."
+
+"How do you mean?"
+
+"You're going to start for Kamatlah to-morrow. You'll arrange the stage
+before he gets there--see all the men and the foremen. Line them up so
+they'll come through with the proper talk. If you have any doubts about
+whether you can trust some one, don't take any chances. Fire him out of
+the camp. Offer Elliot the company hospitality. Load him down with
+favors. Take him everywhere. Show him everything. But don't let him get
+any proofs that the claims are being worked under the same management."
+
+"But he'll suspect it."
+
+"You can't help his suspicions. Don't let him get proof. Cover all the
+tracks that show company control."
+
+"I can fix that," he said. "But what about Holt? The old man won't do a
+thing but tell all he knows, and a lot more that he suspects. You know
+how bitter he is--and crazy. He ought to be locked away with the
+flitter-mice."
+
+"You mustn't let Elliot meet Holt."
+
+"How the deuce can I help it? No chance to keep them apart in that
+little hole. It can't be done."
+
+"Can't it?"
+
+Something in the quiet voice rang a bell of alarm in the timid heart of
+Selfridge.
+
+"You mean--"
+
+"A man who works for me as my lieutenant must have nerve, Wally. Have
+you got it? Will you take orders and go through with them?"
+
+His hard eyes searched the face of the plump little man. This was a job
+he would have liked to do himself, but he could not get away just now.
+Selfridge was the only man about him he could trust with it.
+
+Wally nodded. His lips were dry and parched. "Go to it. What am I to do?"
+
+"Get Holt out of the way while Elliot is at Kamatlah."
+
+"But, Good Lord, I can't keep the man tied up a month," protested the
+leading tenor of Kusiak.
+
+"It isn't doing Holt any good to sit tight clamped to that claim of his!
+He needs a change. Besides, I want him away so that we can contest his
+claim. Run him up into the hills. Or send him across to Siberia on a
+whaler. Or, better still, have him arrested for insanity and send him to
+Nome. I'll get Judge Landor to hold him a while."
+
+"That would give him an alibi for his absence and prevent a contest."
+
+"That's right. It would."
+
+"Leave it to me. The old man is going on a vacation, though he doesn't
+know it yet."
+
+"Good enough, Wally. I'll trust you. But remember, this fight has
+reached an acute stage. No more mistakes. The devil of it is we never
+seem to land the knockout punch. We've beaten this bunch of reform
+idiots before Winton, before the Secretary of the Interior, before the
+President, and before Congress. Now they're beginning all over again.
+Where is it to end?"
+
+"This is their last kick. Probably Guttenchild agreed to it so as to
+let the party go before the people at the next election without any
+apologies. Entirely formal investigation, I should say."
+
+This might be true, or it might not. Macdonald knew that just now the
+American people, always impulsive in its thinking, was supporting
+strongly the movement for conservation. A searchlight had been turned
+upon the Kamatlah coal-fields. Magazines and newspapers had hammered
+it home to readers that the Guttenchild and allied interests were
+engaged in a big steal from the people of coal, timber, and power-site
+lands to the value of more than a hundred million dollars.
+
+The trouble had originated in a department row, but it had spread until
+the Macdonald claims had become a party issue. The officials of the Land
+Office, as well as the National Administration, were friendly to the
+claimants. They had no desire to offend one of the two largest money
+groups in the country. But neither did they want to come to wreck on
+account of the Guttenchilds. They found it impossible to ignore the
+charge that the entries were fraudulent and if consummated would result
+in a wholesale robbery of the public domain. Superficial investigations
+had been made and the claimants whitewashed. But the clamor had
+persisted.
+
+Though he denied it officially, Macdonald made a present to the public
+of the admission that the entries were irregular. Laws, he held, were
+made for men and should be interpreted to aid progress. Bad ones ought
+to be evaded.
+
+The facts were simple enough. Macdonald was the original promoter of
+the Kamatlah coal-field. He had engaged dummy entrymen to take up one
+hundred and sixty acres each under the Homestead Act. Later he intended
+to consolidate the claims and turn them over to the Guttenchilds under
+an agreement by which he was to receive one eighth of the stock of the
+company formed to work the mines. The entries had been made, the fee
+accepted by the Land Office, and receipts issued. In course of time
+Macdonald had applied for patents.
+
+Before these were issued the magazines began to pour in their
+broadsides, and since then the papers had been held up.
+
+The conscience of Macdonald was quite clear. The pioneers in Alaska were
+building out of the Arctic waste a new empire for the United States, and
+he held that a fair Government could do no less than offer them liberal
+treatment. To lock up from present use vast resources needed by Alaskans
+would be a mistaken policy, a narrow and perverted application of the
+doctrine of conservation. The Territory should be thrown open to the
+world. If capital were invited in to do its share of the building,
+immigration would flow rapidly northward. Within the lives of the
+present generation the new empire would take shape and wealth would pour
+inevitably into the United States from its frozen treasure house.
+
+The view held by Macdonald was one common to the whole Pacific Coast.
+Seattle, Portland, San Francisco were a unit in the belief that the
+Government had no right to close the door of Alaska and then put a
+padlock upon it.
+
+Feminine voices drifted from the outer office. Macdonald opened the door
+to let in Mrs. Selfridge and Mrs. Mallory.
+
+The latter lady, Paris-shod and gloved, shook hands smilingly with the
+Scotch-Canadian. "Of course we're intruders in business hours, though
+you'll tell us we're not," she suggested.
+
+He was not a man to surrender easily to the spell of woman, but when he
+looked into her deep-lidded, smouldering eyes something sultry beat in
+his blood.
+
+"Business may fly out of the window when Mrs. Mallory comes in at the
+door," he answered.
+
+"How gallant of you, especially when I've come with an impertinent
+question." Her gay eyes mocked him as she spoke.
+
+"Then I'll probably tell you to mind your own business," he laughed.
+"Let's have your question."
+
+"I've just been reading the 'Transcontinental Magazine.' A writer there
+says that you are a highway robber and a gambler. I know you're a robber
+because all the magazines say so. But are you only a big gambler?"
+
+He met her raillery without the least embarrassment.
+
+"Sure I gamble. Every time I take a chance I'm gambling. So does
+everybody else. When you walk past the Flatiron Building you bet it
+won't fall down and crush you. We've got to take chances to live."
+
+"How true, and I never thought of it," beamed Mrs. Selfridge. "What a
+philosopher you are, Mr. Macdonald."
+
+The Scotchman went on without paying any attention to her effervescence.
+"I've gambled ever since I was a kid. I bet I could cross Death Valley
+and get out alive. That time I won. I bet it would rain once down in
+Arizona before my cattle died. I lost. Another time I took a contract
+to run a tunnel. In my bid I bet I wouldn't run into rock. My bank went
+broke that trip. When I joined the Klondike rush I was backing my luck
+to stand up. Same thing when I located the Kamatlah field. The coal
+might be a poor quality. Maybe I couldn't interest big capital in the
+proposition. Perhaps the Government would turn me down when I came to
+prove up. I was betting my last dollar against big odds. When I quit
+gambling it will be because I've quit living."
+
+"And I suppose I'm a gambler too?" Mrs. Mallory demanded with a little
+tilt of her handsome head.
+
+He looked straight at her with the keen eyes that had bored through her
+from the first day they had met, the eyes that understood the manner of
+woman she was and liked her none the less.
+
+"Of all the women I know you are the best gambler. It's born in you."
+
+"Why, Mr. Macdonald!" screamed Mrs. Selfridge in her high staccato. "I
+don't think that's a compliment."
+
+Mrs. Mallory did not often indulge in the luxury of a blush, but she
+changed color now. This big, blunt man sometimes had an uncanny
+divination. Did he, she asked herself, know what stake she was gambling
+for at Kusiak?
+
+"You are too wise," she laughed with a touch of embarrassment very
+becoming. "But I suppose you are right. I like excitement."
+
+"We all do. The only man who doesn't gamble is the convict in stripes,
+and the only reason he doesn't is that his chips are all gone. It's true
+that men on the frontier play for bigger stakes. They back their bets
+with all they have got and put their lives on top for good measure. But
+kids in the cradle all over the United States are going to live easier
+because of the gamblers at the dropping-off places. That writer fellow
+hit the nail on the head about me. My whole life is a gamble."
+
+She moved with slow grace toward the door, then over her shoulder
+flashed a sudden invitation at him. "Mrs. Selfridge and I are doing a
+little betting to-day, Big Chief Gambler. We're backing our luck that
+you two men will eat lunch with us at the Blue Bird Inn. Do we win?"
+
+Macdonald reached for his hat promptly. "You win."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE END OF THE PASSAGE
+
+
+Wally Selfridge was a reliable business subordinate, even though he had
+slipped up in the matter of the appointment of Elliot. But when it came
+to facing the physical hardships of the North he was a malingerer. The
+Kamatlah trip had to be taken because his chief had ordered it, but the
+little man shirked the journey in his heart just as he knew his soft
+muscles would shrink from the aches of the trail.
+
+His idea of work was a set of tennis on the outdoor wooden court of the
+Kusiak clubhouse, and even there his game was not a hard, smashing one,
+but an easy foursome with a girl for partner. He liked better to play
+bridge with attendants at hand to supply drinks and cigars. By nature he
+was a sybarite. The call of the frontier found no response in his
+sophisticated soul.
+
+The part of the journey to be made by water was not so bad. Left to his
+own judgment, he would have gone to St. Michael's by boat and chartered
+a small steamer for the long trip along the coast through Bering Sea.
+But this would take time, and Macdonald did not mean to let him waste
+a day. He was to leave the river boat at the big bend and pack across
+country to Kamatlah. It would be a rough, heavy trail. The mosquitoes
+would be a continual torment. The cooking would be poor. And at the end
+of the long trek there awaited him monotonous months in a wretched coal
+camp far from all the comforts of civilization. No wonder he grumbled.
+
+But though he grumbled at home and at the club and on the street about
+his coming exile, Selfridge made no complaints to Macdonald. That man of
+steel had no sympathy with the yearnings for the fleshpots. He was used
+to driving himself through discomfort to his end, and he expected as
+much of his deputies. Wherefore Wally took the boat at the time
+scheduled and waved a dismal farewell to wife and friends assembled upon
+the wharf.
+
+Elliot said good-bye to the Pagets and Miss O'Neill ten days later.
+Diane was very frank with him.
+
+"I hear you've been sleuthing around, Gordon, for facts about Colby
+Macdonald. I don't know what you have heard about him, but I hope you've
+got the sense to see how big a man he is and how much this country here
+owes him."
+
+Gordon nodded agreement. "Yes, he's a big man."
+
+"And he's good," added Sheba eagerly. "He never talks of it, but one
+finds out splendid things he has done."
+
+The young man smiled, but not at all superciliously. He liked the stanch
+faith of the girl in her friend, even though his investigations had not
+led him to accept goodness as the outstanding quality of the Scotchman.
+
+"I don't know what we would do without him," Diane went on. "Give him
+ten years and a free hand and Alaska will be fit for white people to
+live in. These attacks on him by newspapers and magazines are an
+outrage."
+
+"It's plain that you are a partisan," charged Gordon gayly.
+
+"I'm against locking up Alaska and throwing away the key, if that is
+what you mean by a partisan. We need this country opened up--the farms
+settled, the mines worked, the coal-fields developed, railroads built.
+It is one great big opportunity, the country here, and the narrow little
+conservation cranks want to shut it up tight from the people who have
+energy and foresight enough to help do the building."
+
+"The Kusiak Chamber of Commerce ought to send you out as a lecturer to
+change public opinion, Diane. You are one enthusiastic little booster
+for freedom of opportunity," laughed the young man.
+
+"Oh, well!" Diane joined in his laughter. It was one of her good points
+that she could laugh at herself. "I dare say I do sound like a real
+estate pamphlet, but it's all true anyhow."
+
+Gordon left Kusiak as reluctantly as Wally Selfridge had done, though
+his reasons for not wanting to go were quite different. They centered
+about a dusky-eyed young woman whom he had seen for the first time a
+fortnight before. He would have denied even to himself that he was in
+love, but whenever he was alone his thoughts reverted to Sheba O'Neill.
+
+At the big bend Gordon left the river boat for his cross-country trek.
+Near the roadhouse was an Indian village where he had expected to get a
+guide for the journey to Kamatlah. But the fishing season had begun, and
+the men had all gone down river to take part in it.
+
+The old Frenchman who kept the trading-post and roadhouse advised Gordon
+not to attempt the tramp alone.
+
+"The trail it ees what you call dangerous. Feefty-Mile Swamp ees a
+monster that swallows men alive, Monsieur. You wait one week--two
+week--t'ree week, and some one will turn up to take you through," he
+urged.
+
+"But I can't wait. And I have an official map of the trail. Why can't
+I follow it without a guide?" Elliot wanted to know impatiently.
+
+The post-trader shrugged. "Maybeso, Monsieur--maybe not. Feefty-Mile--it
+ees one devil of a trail. No chechakoes are safe in there without a
+guide. I, Baptiste, know."
+
+"Selfridge and his party went through a week ago. I can follow the
+tracks they left."
+
+"But if it rains, Monsieur, the tracks will vaneesh, n'est ce pas? Lose
+the way, and the little singing folk will swarm in clouds about Monsieur
+while he stumbles through the swamp."
+
+Elliot hesitated for the better part of a day, then came to an impulsive
+decision. He knew the evil fame of Fifty-Mile Swamp--that no trail in
+Alaska was held to be more difficult or dangerous. He knew too what a
+fearful pest the mosquitoes were. Peter had told him a story of how he
+and a party of engineers had come upon a man wandering in the hills,
+driven mad by mosquitoes. The traveler had lost his matches and had been
+unable to light smudge fires. Day and night the little singing devils
+had swarmed about him. He could not sleep. He could not rest. Every
+moment for forty-eight hours he had fought for his life against them.
+Within an hour of the time they found him the man had died a raving
+maniac.
+
+But Elliot was well equipped with mosquito netting and with supplies. He
+had a reliable map, and anyhow he had only to follow the tracks left by
+the Selfridge party. He turned his back upon the big river and plunged
+into the wilderness.
+
+There came a night when he looked up into the stars of the deep, still
+sky and knew that he was hundreds of miles from any other human being.
+Never in all his life had he been so much alone. He was not afraid, but
+there was something awesome in a world so empty of his kind. Sometimes
+he sang, and the sound of his voice at first startled him. It was like
+living in a world primeval, this traverse of a land so void of all the
+mechanism that man has built about him.
+
+The tracks of the Selfridge party grew fainter after a night of rain.
+More rain fell, and they were obliterated altogether.
+
+Gordon fished. He killed fresh game for his needs. Often he came on the
+tracks of moose and caribou. Sometimes, startled, they leaped into view
+quite close enough for a shot, but he used his rifle only to meet his
+wants. A huge grizzly faced him on the trail one afternoon, growled its
+menace, and went lumbering into the big rocks with awkward speed.
+
+The way led through valley and morass, across hills and mountains. It
+wandered in a sort of haphazard fashion through a sun-bathed universe
+washed clean of sordidness and meanness. Always, as he pushed forward,
+the path grew more faint and uncertain. Elk runs crossed it here and
+there, so that often Gordon went astray and had to retrace his steps.
+
+The maddening song of the mosquitoes was always with him. Only when he
+slept did he escape from it. The heavy gloves, the netting, the smudge
+fires were at best an insufficient protection.
+
+It was the seventh night out that Elliot suspected he was off the trail.
+Rain sluiced down in torrents and next day continued to pour from a dun
+sky. His own tracks were blotted out and he searched for the trail in
+vain. Before the rain stopped, he was thoroughly disturbed in mind. It
+would be a serious business if he should be lost in the bad lands of the
+bogs. Even though he knew the general direction he must follow, there
+was no certainty that he would ever emerge from this swamp into which he
+had plunged.
+
+Before he knew it he was entangled in Fifty-Mile. His map showed him the
+morass stretched for fifty miles to the south, but he knew that it had
+been charted hurriedly by a surveying party which had made no extensive
+explorations. A good deal of this country was _terra incognita_. It
+ran vaguely into a No Man's Land unknown to the prospector.
+
+The going was heavy. Gordon had to pick his way through the mossy swamp,
+leading the pack-horse by the bridle. Sometimes he was ankle-deep in
+water of a greenish slime. Again he had to drag the animal from the bog
+to a hummock of grass which gave a spongy footing. This would end in
+another quagmire of peat through which they must plough with the mud
+sucking at their feet. It was hard, wearing toil. There was nothing to
+do but keep moving. The young man staggered forward till dusk. Utterly
+exhausted, he camped for the night on a hillock of moss that rose like
+an island in the swamp.
+
+After he had eaten he fed his fire with green boughs that raised a dense
+smoke. He lay on the leeward side where the smoke drifted over him and
+fought mosquitoes till a shift of the wind lessened the plague. Toward
+midnight he rigged up a net for protection and crawled into his
+blankets. Instantly he fell sound asleep.
+
+Elliot traveled next day by the compass. He had food for three days
+more, but he knew that no living man had the strength to travel for so
+long in such a morass. It was near midday when he lost his horse. The
+animal had bogged down several times and Gordon had wasted much time and
+spent a good deal of needed energy in dragging it to firmer footing.
+This time the pony refused to answer the whip. Its master unloaded pack
+and saddle. He tried coaxing; he tried the whip.
+
+"Come, Old-Timer. One plunge, and you'll make it yet," he urged.
+
+The pack-horse turned upon him dumb eyes of reproach, struggled to free
+its limbs from the mud, and sank down helplessly. It had traveled its
+last yard on the long Alaska trails.
+
+After the sound of the shot had died away, Gordon struggled with the
+pack to the nearest hummock. He cut holes in a gunny-sack to fit his
+shoulders and packed into it his blankets, a saucepan, the beans, the
+coffee, and the diminished handful of flour. Into it went too the three
+slices of bacon that were left.
+
+He hoisted the pack to his back and slipped his arms through the slits
+he had made. Painfully he labored forward over the quivering peat. Every
+weary muscle revolted at the demands his will imposed upon it. He drew
+on the last ounce of his strength and staggered forward. Sometimes he
+stumbled and went down into the oozing mud, minded to stay there and
+be done with the struggle. But the urge of life drove him to his feet
+again. It sent him pitching forward drunkenly. It carried him for weary
+miles after he despaired of ever covering another hundred yards.
+
+With old, half-forgotten signals from the football field he spurred his
+will. Perhaps his mind was already beginning to wander, though through
+it all he held steadily to the direction that alone could save him.
+
+He clapped his hands feebly and stooped for the plunge at the line of
+the enemy. "'Attaboy, Gord--'attaboy--nine, eleven, seventeen. Hit 'er
+low, you Elliot."
+
+When at last he went down to stay it was in an exhaustion so complete
+that not even his indomitable will could lash him to his feet again.
+For an hour he lay in a stupor, never stirring even to fight the swarm
+of mosquitoes that buzzed about him.
+
+Toward evening he sat up and undid the pack from his back. The matches,
+in a tin box wrapped carefully with oilskin, were still perfectly dry.
+Soon he had a fire going and coffee boiling in the frying-pan. From
+the tin cup he carried strung on his belt he drank the coffee. It went
+through him like strong liquor. He warmed some beans and fried himself a
+slice of bacon, sopping up the grease with a cold biscuit left over from
+the day before.
+
+Again he slept for a few hours. He had wound his watch mechanically
+and it showed him four o'clock when he took up the trail once more.
+In Seattle and San Francisco people were still asleep and darkness was
+heavy over the land. Here it had been day for a long time, ever since
+the summer sun, hidden for a while behind the low, distant hills, had
+come blazing forth again in a saddle between two peaks.
+
+Gordon had reduced his pack by discarding a blanket, the frying-pan,
+and all the clothing he was not wearing. His rifle lay behind him in the
+swamp. He had cut to a minimum of safety what he was carrying, according
+to his judgment. But before long his last blanket was flung aside. He
+could not afford to carry an extra pound, for he knew he was running a
+race, the stakes of which were life and death.
+
+A cloud of mosquitoes moved with him. He carried in his hand a spruce
+bough for defense against them. His hands were gloved, his face was
+covered with netting. But in spite of the best he could do they were an
+added torture.
+
+Afternoon found him still staggering forward. The swamps were now
+behind him. He had won through at last by the narrowest margin possible.
+The ground was rising sharply toward the mountains. Across the range
+somewhere lay Kamatlah. But he was all in. With his food almost gone,
+a water supply uncertain, reserve strength exhausted, the chances of
+getting over the divide to safety were practically none.
+
+He had come, so far as he could see, to the end of the passage.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+GID HOLT GOES PROSPECTING
+
+
+As soon as Selfridge reached Kamatlah he began arranging the stage
+against the arrival of the Government agent. His preparations were
+elaborate and thorough. A young engineer named Howland had been in
+charge of the development work, but Wally rearranged his forces so as
+to let each dummy entryman handle the claim entered in his name. One or
+two men about whom he was doubtful he discharged and hurried out of the
+camp.
+
+Selfridge had been given a free hand as to expenses and he oiled his
+way by liberal treatment of the men and by a judicious expenditure.
+He let them know pretty plainly that if the agent on his way to Kamatlah
+suspected corporate ownership of the claims, the Government would close
+down all work and there would be no jobs for them.
+
+The company boarding-house became a restaurant, above which was
+suspended a newly painted sign with the legend, "San Francisco Grill,
+J. Glynn, Proprietor." The store also passed temporarily into the hands
+of its manager. Miners moved from the barracks that had been built by
+Macdonald into hastily constructed cabins on the individual claims.
+Wally had always fancied himself as a stage manager for amateur
+theatricals. Now he justified his faith by transforming Kamatlah
+outwardly from a company camp to a mushroom one settled by wandering
+prospectors.
+
+Gideon Holt alone was outside of all these activities and watched them
+with suspicion. He was an old-timer, sly but fearless, who hated Colby
+Macdonald with a bitter jealousy that could not be placated and he
+took no pains to hide the fact. He had happened to be in the vicinity
+prospecting when Macdonald had rushed his entries. Partly out of mere
+perversity and partly by reason of native shrewdness, old Holt had
+slipped in and located one of the best claims in the heart of the
+group. Nor had he been moved to a reasonable compromise by any amount
+of persuasion, threats, or tentative offers to buy a relinquishment.
+He was obstinate. He knew a good thing when he had it, and he meant to
+sit tight.
+
+The adherents of the company might charge that Holt was cracked in the
+upper story, but none of them denied he was sharp as a street Arab. He
+guessed that all this preparation was not for nothing. Kamatlah was
+being dressed up to impress somebody who would shortly arrive. The
+first thought of Holt was that a group of big capitalists might be
+coming to look over their investment. But he rejected this surmise.
+There would be no need to try any deception upon them.
+
+Mail from Seattle reached camp once a month. Holt sat down before his
+stove to read one of the newspapers he had brought from the office. It
+was the "P.-I." On the fifth page was a little boxed story that gave him
+his clue.
+
+ ELLIOT TO INVESTIGATE MACDONALD COAL CLAIMS
+
+ The reopening of the controversy as to the Macdonald claims,
+ which had been clear-listed for patent by Harold B. Winton,
+ the Commissioner of the General Land Office, takes on another
+ phase with the appointment of Gordon Elliot as special field
+ agent to examine the validity of the holdings. The new field
+ agent won a reputation by his work in unearthing the Oklahoma
+ "Gold Brick" land frauds.
+
+ Elliot leaves Seattle in the Queen City Thursday for the North,
+ where he will make a thorough investigation of the whole situation
+ with a view to clearing up the matter definitely. If his report
+ is favorable to the claimants, the patents will be granted without
+ further delay.
+
+This was too good to keep. Holt pulled on his boots and went out to twit
+such of the enemy as he might meet. It chanced that the first of them
+was Selfridge, whom he had not seen since his arrival, though he knew
+the little man was in camp.
+
+"How goes it, Holt? Fine and dandy, eh?" inquired Wally with the
+professional geniality he affected.
+
+The old miner shook his head dolefully. "I done bust my laig, Mr.
+Selfish," he groaned. It was one of his pleasant ways to affect a
+difficulty of hearing and a dullness of understanding, so that he could
+legitimately call people by distorted versions of their names. "The old
+man don't amount to much nowadays. Onct a man or a horse gits stove up
+I don't reckon either one pans out much pay dust any more."
+
+"Nothing to that, Gid. You're younger than you ever were, judging by
+your looks."
+
+"Then my looks lie to beat hell, Mr. Selfish."
+
+"My name is Selfridge," explained Wally, a trifle irritated.
+
+Holt put a cupped hand to his ear anxiously. "Shellfish, did you say?
+Tha' 's right. Howcome I to forget? The old man's going pretty fast,
+Mr. Shellfish. No more memory than a jackrabbit. Say, Mr. Shellfish,
+what's the idee of all this here back-to-the-people movement, as the
+old sayin' is?"
+
+"I don't know what you mean. And my name is Selfridge, I tell you,"
+snapped the owner of that name.
+
+"'Course I ain't got no more sense than the law allows. I'm a buzzard
+haid, but me I kinder got to millin' it over and in respect to these
+here local improvements, as you might say, I'm doggoned if I _sabe_
+the whyfor." There was an imp of malicious deviltry in the black, beady
+eyes sparkling at Selfridge from between narrowed lids.
+
+"Just some business changes we're making."
+
+Holt showed his tobacco-stained teeth in a grin splenetic. "Oh. That's
+all. I didn't know but what you might be expecting a visitor."
+
+Selfridge flashed a sharp sidelong glance at him. "What do you mean--a
+visitor?"
+
+"I just got a notion mebbe you might be looking for one, Mr. Pelfrich.
+But I don't know sic' 'em. Like as not you ain't fixing up for this
+Gordon Elliot a-tall."
+
+Wally had no come-back, unless it was one to retort in ironic
+admiration. "You're a wonder, Holt. Pity you don't start a detective
+bureau."
+
+The old man went away cackling dryly.
+
+If Selfridge had held any doubts before, he discarded them now. Holt
+would wreck the whole enterprise, were he given a chance. It would never
+do to let Elliot meet and talk with him. He knew too much, and he was
+eager to tell all he knew.
+
+Macdonald's lieutenant got busy at once with plans to abduct Holt. That
+it was very much against the law did not disturb him much so long as his
+chief stood back of him. The unsupported word of the old man would not
+stand in court, and if he became obstreperous they could always have him
+locked up as a lunatic. The very pose of the old miner--the make-believe
+pretension that he was half a fool--would lend itself to such a charge.
+
+"We'll send the old man off on a prospecting trip with some of the
+boys," explained Selfridge to Rowland. "That way we'll kill two birds.
+He's back on his assessment work. The time limit will be up before he
+returns and we'll start a contest for the claim."
+
+Howland made no comment. He was an engineer and not a politician. In his
+position it was impossible for him not to know that a good deal about
+the legal status of the Macdonald claims was irregular. But he was a
+firm believer in a wide-open Alaska, in the use of the Territory by
+those who had settled it. The men back of the big Scotchman were going
+to spend millions in development work, in building railroads. It would
+help labor and business. The whole North would feel a healthful reaction
+from the Kamatlah activities. So, on the theory that the end sometimes
+justifies doubtful means, he shut his eyes to many acts that in his own
+private affairs he would not have countenanced.
+
+"Better arrange it with Big Bill, then, but don't tell me anything about
+it. I don't want to know the details," he told Selfridge.
+
+Big Bill Macy accepted the job with a grin. There was double pay in it
+both for him and the men he chose as his assistants. He had never liked
+old Holt anyhow. Besides, they were not going to do him any harm.
+
+Holt was baking a batch of sour-dough bread that evening when there came
+a knock at the cabin door. At sight of Big Bill and his two companions
+the prospector closed the oven and straightened with alert suspicion.
+He was not on visiting terms with any of these men. Why had they come
+to see him? He asked point-blank the question in his mind.
+
+"We're going prospecting up Wild-Goose Creek, and we want you to go
+along, Gid," explained Macy. "You're an old sour-dough miner, and we-all
+agree we'd like to have you throw-in with us. What say?"
+
+The old miner's answer was direct but not flattering. "What do I want to
+go on a wild-goose mush with a bunch of bums for?" he shrilled.
+
+Bill Macy scratched his hook nose and looked reproachfully at his host.
+At least Holt thought he was looking at him. One could not be sure, for
+Bill's eyes did not exactly track.
+
+"That ain't no kind o' way to talk to a fellow when he comes at you with
+a fair proposition, Gid."
+
+"You tell Selfridge I ain't going to leave Kamatlah--not right now. I'm
+going to stay here on the job till that Land Office inspector comes--and
+then I'm going to have a nice, long, confidential chat with him. See?"
+
+"What's the use of snapping at me like a turtle? Durden says Wild-Goose
+looks fine. There's gold up there--heaps of it."
+
+"Let it stay there, then. I ain't going. That's flat." Holt turned to
+adjust the damper of his stove.
+
+"Oh, I don't know. I wouldn't say that," drawled Bill insolently.
+
+The man at the stove caught the change in tone and turned quickly. He
+was too late. Macy had thrown himself forward and the weight of his body
+flung Holt against the wall. Before the miner could recover, the other
+two men were upon him. They bore him to the floor and in spite of his
+struggles tied him hand and foot.
+
+Big Bill rose and looked down derisively at his prisoner. "Better change
+your mind and go with us, Holt. We'll spend a quiet month up at the
+headquarters of Wild-Goose. Say you'll come along."
+
+"You'll go to prison for this, Bill Macy."
+
+"Guess again, Gid, and mebbe you'll get it right this time." Macy turned
+to his companions. "George, you bring up the horses. Dud, see if that
+bread is cooked. Might as well take it along with us--save us from
+baking to-morrow."
+
+"What are you going to do with me?" demanded Holt.
+
+"I reckon you need a church to fall on you before you can take a hint.
+Didn't I mention Wild-Goose Creek three or four times?" jeered his
+captor.
+
+"Every step you take will be one toward the penitentiary. Get that into
+your cocoanut," the old miner retorted sharply.
+
+"Nothing to that idee, Gid."
+
+"I'll scream when you take me out."
+
+"Go to it. Then we'll gag you."
+
+Holt made no further protest. He was furious, but at present quite
+helpless. However it went against the grain, he might as well give in
+until rebellion would do some good.
+
+Ten minutes later the party was moving silently along the trail that led
+to the hills. The pack-horses went first, in charge of George Holway.
+The prisoner walked next, his hands tied behind him. Big Bill followed,
+and the man he had called Dud brought up the rear.
+
+They wound up a rising valley, entering from it a canon with precipitous
+walls that shut out the late sun. It was by this time past eleven
+o'clock and dusk was gathering closer. The winding trail ran parallel
+with the creek, sometimes through thickets of young fir and sometimes
+across boulder beds that made traveling difficult and slow. They went in
+single file, each of them with a swarm of mosquitoes about his head.
+
+Macy had released the hands of his prisoner so that he might have a
+chance to fight the singing pests, but he kept a wary eye upon him and
+never let him move more than a few feet from him. The trail grew steeper
+as it neared the head of the canon till at last it climbed the left wall
+and emerged from the gulch to an uneven mesa.
+
+The leader of the party looked at his watch. "Past midnight. We'll camp
+here, George, and see if we can't get rid of the 'skeeters."
+
+They built smudge fires of green wood and on the lee side of these
+another one of dry sticks. Dud made coffee upon this and cooked bacon
+to eat with the fresh bread they had taken from the oven of Holt. While
+George chopped wood for the fires and boughs of small firs for bedding,
+Big Bill sat with a rifle across his knees just back of the prisoner.
+
+"Gid's a shifty old cuss, and I ain't taking any chances," he explained
+aloud to Dud.
+
+Holt was beginning to take the outrage philosophically. He sat close to
+a smudge and smoked his pipe.
+
+"I wouldn't either if I were you. Sometime when you ain't watching, I'm
+liable to grab that gun and shoot a hole in the place where your brains
+would be if you had any," countered the old man.
+
+He slept peacefully while they took turns watching him. Just now there
+would be no chance to escape, but in a few days they would become
+careless. The habit of feeling that they had him securely would grow
+upon them. Then, reasoned Holt, his opportunity would come. One of the
+guards would take a chance. Perhaps he might even fall asleep on duty.
+It was not reasonable to suppose that in the next week or two he would
+not catch them napping once for a short ten seconds.
+
+There was, of course, just the possibility that they intended to murder
+him, but Holt could not associate Selfridge with anything so lawless.
+The man was too soft of fiber to carry through such a programme, and as
+yet there was need of nothing so drastic. No, this little kidnapping
+expedition would not run to murder. He would be set free in a few weeks,
+and if he told the true story of where he had been his foes would spread
+the report that he was insane in his hatred of Macdonald and imagined
+all sorts of persecutions.
+
+They followed Wild-Goose Creek all next day, getting always closer to
+its headwaters near the divide. On the third day they crossed to the
+other side of the ridge and descended into a little mountain park. They
+were in a country where prospectors never came, one deserted even by
+trappers at this season of the year.
+
+The country was so much a primeval wilderness that a big bull moose
+stalked almost upon their camp before discovering the presence of a
+strange biped. Big Bill snatched up a rifle and took a shot which sent
+the intruder scampering.
+
+From somewhere in the distance came a faint sound.
+
+"What was that?" asked George.
+
+"Sounded like a shot. Mebbe it was an echo," returned Dud.
+
+"Came too late for an echo," Big Bill said.
+
+Again faintly from some far corner of the basin the sound drifted. It
+was like the pop of a scarcely heard firecracker.
+
+The men looked at one another and at their prisoner. Their eyes
+consulted once more.
+
+"Think we better break camp and drift?" asked Dud.
+
+"No. We're in a little draw here--as good a hiding-place as we'd be
+likely to find. Drive the horses into the brush, George. We'll sit
+tight."
+
+"Got the criminals guessing," Holt contributed maliciously. "You lads
+want to take the hide offen Macy if he lands you in the pen through that
+fool shot of his. Wonder if I hadn't better yell."
+
+"I'll stop your clock right then if you do," threatened Big Bill with a
+scowl.
+
+Dud had been busy stamping out the camp-fire while Holway was driving
+the horses into the brush.
+
+"Mebbe you had better get the camp things behind them big rocks," Macy
+conceded.
+
+Even as he spoke there came the crack of a revolver almost at the
+entrance to the draw.
+
+One of the men swore softly. The gimlet eyes of the old miner fastened
+on the spot where in another moment his hoped-for rescuers would appear.
+
+A man staggered drunkenly into view. He reeled halfway across the mouth
+of the draw and stopped. His eyes, questing dully, fell upon the camp.
+He stared, as if doubtful whether they had played him false, then
+lurched toward the waiting group.
+
+"Lost, and all in," Holway said in a whisper to Dud.
+
+The other man nodded. Neither of them made a move toward the stranger,
+who stopped in front of their camp and looked with glazed eyes from one
+to another. His face was drawn and haggard and lined. Extreme exhaustion
+showed in every movement. He babbled incoherently.
+
+"Seven--eighteen--ninety-nine. 'Atta-boy," he said thickly.
+
+"Don't you see he's starving and out of his head?" snapped Holt
+brusquely. "Get him grub, _pronto_."
+
+The old man rose and moved toward the suffering man. "Come, pard. Tha'
+'s all right. Sit down right here and go to it, as the old sayin' is."
+He led the man to a place beside Big Bill and made him sit down. "Better
+light a fire, boys, and get some coffee on. Don't give him too much
+solid grub at first."
+
+The famished man ate what was given him and clamored for more.
+
+"Coming up soon, pardner," Holt told him soothingly. "Now tell us
+howcome you to get lost."
+
+The man nodded gravely. "Hit that line low, Gord. Hit 'er low. Only
+three yards to gain."
+
+"Plumb bughouse," commented Dud, chewing tobacco stolidly.
+
+"Out of his head--that's all. He'll be right enough after he's fed up
+and had a good sleep. But right now he's sure some Exhibit A. Look at
+the bones sticking through his cheeks," Big Bill commented.
+
+"Come, Old-Timer. Get down in your collar to it. Once more now. Don't
+lie down on the job. All together now." The stranger clucked to an
+imaginary horse and made a motion of lifting with his hands.
+
+"Looks like his hawss bogged down in Fifty-Mile Swamp," suggested Holt.
+
+"Looks like," agreed Dud.
+
+The old miner said no more. But his eyes narrowed to shining slits. If
+this man had come through Fifty-Mile Swamp he must have started from the
+river. That probably meant that he had come from Kusiak. He was a young
+man, talking the jargon of a college football player. Without doubt he
+was, in the old phrasing of the North, a chechako. His clothing, though
+much soiled and torn, had been good. His voice held the inflections of
+the cultured world.
+
+Gideon Holt's sly brain moved keenly to the possibility that he could
+put a name to this human derelict they had picked up. He began to see
+it as more than a possibility, as even a probability, at least as a
+fifty-fifty chance. A sardonic grin hovered about the corners of his
+grim mouth. It would be a strange freak of irony if Wally Selfridge,
+to prevent a meeting between him and the Government land agent, had
+sent him a hundred miles into the wilderness to save the life of Gordon
+Elliot and so had brought about the meeting that otherwise would never
+have taken place.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE RAH-RAH BOY FUNCTIONS
+
+
+Big Bill grumbled a good deal at the addition to the party. It would be
+decidedly awkward if this stranger should become rational and understand
+the status of the camp he had joined. The word of old Holt alone might
+be negligible, but supported by that of a disinterested party it would
+be a very different matter. Still, there was no help for it. They would
+have to take care of the man until he was able to travel. Perhaps he
+would go in with them as an additional guard. At the worst Big Bill
+could give him a letter to Selfridge explaining things and so pass the
+buck to that gentleman.
+
+Gid Holt had, with the tacit consent of his guards, appointed himself as
+a sort of nurse to the stranger. He lit a smudge fire to the windward
+side of him, fed him small quantities of food at intervals, and arranged
+a sleeping-place for him with mosquito netting for protection.
+
+Early in the evening the sick man fell into a sound sleep from
+which he did not awake until morning. George was away looking after the
+pack-horses, Dud was cooking breakfast, and Big Bill, his rifle close at
+hand, was chopping young firs fifty feet back of the camp. The cook also
+had a gun, loaded with buckshot, lying on a box beside him, so that they
+were taking no chances with their prisoner. He could not have covered
+twenty yards without being raked by a cross-fire.
+
+The old miner turned from rearranging the boughs of green fir on the
+smudge to see that his patient was awake and his mind normal. The quiet,
+steady eyes resting upon him told that the delirium had passed.
+
+"Pretty nearly all in, wasn't I?" the young man said.
+
+The answer of Gid Holt was an odd one. "Yep. Seven--eleven--fifteen.
+Take 'er easy, old man," he said in his shrill, high voice as he moved
+toward the man in the blankets. Then, in a low tone, while he pretended
+to arrange the bedding over the stranger, he asked a quick question.
+
+"Are you Elliot?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Don't tell them. Talk football lingo as if you was still out of your
+haid." Holt turned and called to Dud. "Says he wants some breakfast."
+
+"On the way," the cook answered.
+
+Holt seemed to be soothing the delirious man. What he really said was
+this. "Selfridge has arranged a plant for you at Kamatlah. The camp has
+been turned inside out to fool you. They've brought me here a prisoner
+so as to keep me from telling you the truth. Pst! Tune up now."
+
+Big Bill had put down his axe and was approaching. He was not exactly
+suspicious, but he did not believe in taking unnecessary chances.
+
+"I tell you I'm out of training. Played the last game, haven't we? Come
+through with a square meal, you four-flusher," demanded Elliot in a
+querulous voice. He turned to Macy. "Look here, Cap. Haven't I played
+the game all fall? Don't I get what I want now we're through?"
+
+The voice of the young man was excited. His eyes had lost their quiet
+steadiness and roved restlessly to and fro. If Big Bill had held any
+doubts one glance dissipated them.
+
+"Sure you do. Hustle over and help Dud with the breakfast, Holt. I'll
+look out for our friend."
+
+Elliot and Holt found no more chance to talk together that morning.
+Sometimes the young Government official lay staring straight in front
+of him. Sometimes he appeared to doze. Again he would talk in the
+disjointed way of one not clear in the head.
+
+An opportunity came in the afternoon for a moment.
+
+"Keep your eyes skinned for a chance to lay out the guard to-night and
+get his gun," Holt said quickly.
+
+Gordon nodded. "I don't know that I've got to do everything just as you
+say," he complained aloud for the benefit of George, who was passing on
+his way to the place where the horses were hobbled.
+
+"Now--now! There ain't nobody trying to boss you," Holt explained in a
+patient voice.
+
+"They'd better not," snapped the invalid.
+
+"Some scrapper--that kid," said the horse wrangler with a grin.
+
+Macy took the first watch that night. He turned in at two after he had
+roused Dud to take his place. The cook had been on duty about an hour
+when Elliot kicked Holt, who was sleeping beside him, to make sure that
+he was ready. The old man answered the kick with another.
+
+Presently Gordon got up, yawned, and strolled toward the edge of the
+camp.
+
+"Don't go and get lost, young fellow," cautioned Dud.
+
+Gordon, on his way back, passed behind the guard, who was sitting tailor
+fashion before a smudge with a muley shotgun across his knees.
+
+"This ain't no country for chechakoes to be wandering around without a
+keeper," the cook continued. "Looks like your folks would have better
+sense than to let their rah-rah boy--"
+
+He got no farther. Elliot dropped to one knee and his strong fingers
+closed on the gullet of the man so tightly that not even a groan could
+escape him. His feet thrashed to and fro as he struggled, but he could
+not shake off the grip that was strangling him. The old miner, waiting
+with every muscle ready and every nerve under tension, flung aside his
+blanket and hurled himself at the guard. It took him less time than it
+takes to tell to wrest the gun from the cook.
+
+He got to his feet just as Big Bill, his eyes and brain still fogged
+with sleep, sat up and began to take notice of the disturbance.
+
+"Don't move," warned Holt sharply. "Better throw your hands up. You
+reach for the stars, too, Holway. No monkey business, do you hear? I'd
+as lief blow a hole through you as not."
+
+Big Bill turned bitterly upon Elliot. "So you were faking all the time,
+young fellow. We save your life and you round on us. You're a pretty
+slick proposition as a double-crosser."
+
+"And that ain't all," chirped up Holt blithely. "Let me introduce our
+friend to you, Mr. Big Bill Macy. This is Gordon Elliot, the land agent
+appointed to look over the Kamatlah claims. Selfridge gave you lads this
+penitentiary job so as I wouldn't meet Elliot when he reached the camp.
+If he hadn't been so darned anxious about it, our young friend would
+have died here on the divide. But Mr. Selfridge kindly outfitted a party
+and sent us a hundred miles into the hills to rescue the perishing, as
+the old sayin' goes. Consequence is, Elliot and me meet up and have that
+nice confidential talk after all. The ways of Providence is strange, as
+you might say, Mr. Macy."
+
+"Your trick," conceded Big Bill sullenly. "Now what are you going to do
+with us?"
+
+"Not a thing--going to leave you right here to prospect Wild-Goose
+Creek," answered Holt blandly. "Durden says there's gold up here--heaps
+of it."
+
+Bill Macy condemned Durden in language profane and energetic. He didn't
+stop at Durden. Holt came in for a share of it, also Elliot and
+Selfridge.
+
+The old miner grinned at him. "You'll feel better now you've got that
+out of your system. But don't stop there if you'd like to say a few more
+well-chosen words. We got time a-plenty."
+
+"Cut it out, Bill. That line o' talk don't buy you anything," said
+Holway curtly. "What's the use of beefing?"
+
+"Now you're shouting, my friend," agreed old Gideon. "I guess, Elliot,
+you can loosen up on the chef's throat awhile. He's had persuading
+enough, don't you reckon? I'll sit here and sorter keep the boys company
+while you cut the pack-ropes and bring 'em here. But first I'd step in
+and unload all the hardware they're packing. If you don't one of them is
+likely to get anxious. I'd hate to see any of them commit suicide with
+none of their friends here to say, 'Don't he look natural?'"
+
+Elliot brought back the pack-ropes and cut them into suitable lengths.
+Holt's monologue rambled on. He was garrulous and affable. Not for a
+long time had he enjoyed himself so much.
+
+"Better begin with Chief Big Bill," he suggested. "No, I wouldn't make
+that move if I was you, Mr. Macy. This old gun is liable to go off
+accidental in your direction and she spatters like hell. That's the
+idee. Be reasonable. Not that I give a hoot, but a man hadn't ought to
+let his impulses run away with his judgment, as the old sayin' is."
+
+Gordon tied the hands of Big Bill behind him, then roped his feet
+together, after which he did the same for Holway. The old miner
+superintended the job and was not satisfied till he had added a few
+extra knots on his own behalf.
+
+"That'll hold them for awhile, I shouldn't wonder. Now if you'll just
+cover friend chef with this sawed-off gat, Elliot, I'll throw the
+diamond hitch over what supplies we'll need to get back to Kamatlah.
+I'll take one bronch and leave the other to the convicts," said Holt
+cheerfully.
+
+"Forget that convict stuff," growled Macy. "With Macdonald back of us
+and the Guttenchilds back of him, you'll have a hectic time getting
+anything on us."
+
+"That might be true if these folks were back of you. But are they?
+Course I ain't any Sherlock Holmes, but it don't look to me like they'd
+play any such fool system as this."
+
+Big Bill opened his mouth to answer--and said nothing. He had caught a
+look flashed at him by Holway, a look that warned him he was talking too
+much.
+
+After Holt had packed one of the animals he turned to Elliot.
+
+"I reckon we're ready."
+
+Under orders from Elliot, Dud fixed up the smudges and arranged the
+mosquito netting over the bound men so as to give them all the
+protection possible.
+
+"We're going to take Dud with us for a part of the trip. We'll send him
+back to you later in the day. You'll have to fast till he gets back, but
+outside of that you'll do very well if you don't roll around trying to
+get loose. Do that, and you'll jar loose the mosquito netting. You know
+what that means," explained Gordon.
+
+"It ain't likely any grizzlies will come pokin' their noses into camp.
+But you never can tell. Any last words you want sent to relatives?"
+asked Gideon Holt.
+
+The last words they heard from Big Bill as they moved down the draw were
+sulphuric.
+
+"Macy he ain't wearin' any W. J. Bryan smile this glad mo'nin'," mused
+old Holt aloud.
+
+It was three o'clock in the morning by the watch when they started.
+About nine they threw off for breakfast. By this time they were just
+across the divide and were ready to take the down trail.
+
+"I think we'll let Dud go now," Elliot told his partner in the
+adventure.
+
+"Better hold him till afternoon. Then they can't possibly reach us till
+we get to Kamatlah."
+
+"What does it matter if they do? We have both rifles and have left them
+only one revolver. Besides, I don't like to leave two bound men alone in
+so wild a district for any great time. No, we'll start Dud on the back
+trail. That grizzly you promised Big Bill might really turn up."
+
+The two men struck the headwaters of Wild-Goose Creek about noon and
+followed the stream down. They traveled steadily without haste. So long
+as they kept a good lookout there was nothing to be feared from the men
+they had left behind. They had both a long start and the advantage of
+weapons.
+
+If Elliot had advertised for a year he could not have found a man who
+knew more of Colby Macdonald's past than Gideon Holt. The old man had
+mushed on the trail with him in the Klondike days. He had worked a
+claim on Frenchman Creek with him and had by sharp practice--so at
+least he had come to believe--been lawed out of his rights by the shrewd
+Scotchman. For seventeen years he had nursed a grudge against Macdonald,
+and he was never tired of talking about him. He knew many doubtful
+things charged to the account of the big man as he had blazed a way
+to success over the failures of less fortunate people. One story in
+particular interested Gordon. It came out the second day, as they were
+getting down into the foothills.
+
+"There was Farrell O'Neill. He was a good fellow, Farrell was, but he
+had just one weakness. There was times when he liked the bottle too
+well. He'd let it alone for months and then just lap the stuff up. It
+was the time of the stampede to Bonanza Creek. Men are just like sheep.
+They wear wool on their backs like them and have their habits. You can
+start 'em any fool way for no cause a-tall. Don't you know it? Well, the
+news of the strike on Bonanza reached Dawson and we all burnt up the
+trail to get to the new ground first. O'Neill was one of the first.
+He got in about twenty below discovery, if I remember. Mac wasn't in
+Dawson, but he got there next mo'nin' and heard the news. He lit out
+for Bonanza _pronto_."
+
+The old miner stopped, took a chew of tobacco, and looked down into the
+valley far below where Kamatlah could just be seen, a little huddle of
+huts.
+
+"Well?" asked Elliot. It was occasionally necessary to prompt Holt when
+he paused for his dramatic effects. He would pretend to forget that he
+was telling a yarn which might interest his hearer.
+
+"Mac draps in and joins O'Neill at night. They knew each other, y'
+understand, so o' course it was natural Mac would put up at his camp.
+O'Neill had a partner and they had located together. Fellow named
+Strong."
+
+"Not Hanford Strong, a little, heavy-set man somewhere around fifty?"
+Gordon asked quickly.
+
+"You've tagged the right man. Know him?"
+
+"I've met him."
+
+"Well, I never heard anything against Han Strong. Anyway, he was off
+that night packing grub up while Farrell held down the claim. Mac had
+a jug of booze with him. He got Farrell tanked up. You know Mac--how he
+can put it across when he's a mind to. He's a forceful devil, and he can
+be a mighty likable one."
+
+Elliot nodded understanding. "He's always the head of the table no
+matter where he sits. And there is something wonderfully attractive
+about him."
+
+"Sure there is. But when he is friendliest you want to watch out he
+don't slip an upper cut at you that'll put you out of biz. He done that
+to Farrell--and done it a-plenty."
+
+"How?"
+
+"O'Neill got mellowed up till he thought Mac was his best friend.
+He was ready to eat out of his hand. So Mac works him up to sign a
+contract--before witnesses too; trust Mac for that--exchanging his
+half-interest in the claim for five hundred dollars in cash and Mac's
+no-'count lease on Frenchman Creek. Inside of a week Mac and Strong
+struck a big pay streak. They took over two hundred thousand from the
+spring clean-up."
+
+"It was nothing better than robbery."
+
+"Call it what you want to. Anyhow, it stuck. O'Neill kicked, and that's
+all the good it did him. He consulted lawyers at Dawson. Finally he got
+so discouraged that he plumb went to pieces--got on a long bat and
+stayed there till his money ran out. Then one bitter night he starts up
+to Bonanza to have it out with Mac. The mercury was so low it had run
+into the ground a foot. Farrell slept in a deserted cabin without a fire
+and not enough bedding. He caught pneumony. By the time he reached the
+claim he was a mighty sick man. Next week he died. That's all Mac done
+to O'Neill. Not a thing that wasn't legal either."
+
+Gordon thought of Sheba O'Neill as she sat listening to the tales of
+Macdonald in Diane's parlor and his gorge rose at the man.
+
+"But Mac had fell on his feet all right," continued Holt. "He got his
+start off that claim. Now he's a millionaire two or three times over,
+I reckon."
+
+They reached the outskirts of Kamatlah about noon of the third day.
+Gordon left Holt at his cabin after they had eaten and went in alone
+to look the ground over. He met Selfridge at the post-office. That
+gentleman was effusive in his greeting.
+
+"This _is_ a pleasant surprise, Mr. Elliot. When did you get in?
+Had no idea you were coming or I'd have asked you for the pleasure
+of your company. I'm down on business, of course. No need to tell you
+that--nobody would come to this hole for any other reason. Howland and
+his wife are the only possible people here. Hope you play bridge."
+
+Elliot played it, but he did not say so. It was his business not to be
+drawn into entangling alliances.
+
+"Of course you'll put up with me as my guest," Selfridge flowed on.
+"I've wanted to meet you again ever since we were on the Hannah
+together."
+
+This was a little too cheeky. Gordon recalled with some amusement how
+this tubby little man and his friends had ignored the existence of Sheba
+O'Neill and himself for several days.
+
+He answered genially. "Pleasant time we had on the river, didn't we?
+Thanks awfully for your invitation, but I've already made arrangements
+for putting up."
+
+"Where? There's no decent place in camp except at Howland's. He keeps
+open house for our friends."
+
+"I couldn't think of troubling him," countered Gordon.
+
+"No trouble at all. We'll send for your things. Where are they?"
+
+The land agent let him have it right between the eyes. "At Gideon
+Holt's. I'm staying with him on his claim."
+
+Wally had struck a match to light a cigarette, but this simple statement
+petrified him. His jaw dropped and his eyes bulged. Not till the flame
+burned his fingers did he come to life.
+
+"Did you say you were staying--with Gid Holt?" he floundered weakly.
+
+Gordon noticed that his florid face had lost its color. The jaunty
+cock-sureness of the man had flickered out like the flame of the charred
+match.
+
+"Yes. He offered to board me," answered the young man blandly.
+
+"But--I didn't know he was here--seems to me I had
+heard--somewhere--that he was away."
+
+"He was away. But he has come back." Gordon gave the information without
+even a flash of mirth in his steady eyes.
+
+Selfridge could not quite let the subject alone. "Seems to me I heard he
+went prospecting."
+
+"He did. Up Wild-Goose Creek, with Big Bill Macy and two other men. But
+I asked him to come back with me--and he did."
+
+Feebly Wally groped for the clue without finding it. Had Big Bill sold
+him out? And how had Elliot got into touch with him?
+
+"Just so, Mr. Elliot. But really, you know, Howland can make you a great
+deal more comfortable than Holt. His wife is a famous cook. I'll have a
+man go get your traps."
+
+"It's very good of you, but I think I won't move."
+
+"Oh, but you must. Holt's nutty--nobody at home, you know. Everybody
+knows that."
+
+"Is he? The old man struck me as being remarkably clear-headed. By the
+way, I want to thank you for sending a relief party out to find me, Mr.
+Selfridge. Except for your help I would have died in the hills."
+
+This was another facer for Wally. What the devil did the fellow mean?
+The deuce of it was that he knew all the facts and Wally did not. He
+talked as if he meant it, but behind those cool eyes there might lie
+either mockery or irony. One thing alone stood out to Selfridge like
+a sore thumb. His plans had come tumbling down like a house of cards.
+Either Big Bill had blundered amazingly, or he had played traitor.
+In either case Wally could guess pretty shrewdly whose hide Macdonald
+would tan for the failure. The chief wanted results. He did not ask of
+his subordinates how they got them. And this was the second time in
+succession that Selfridge had come to grief.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+GORDON INVITES HIMSELF TO DINNER--AND DOES NOT ENJOY IT
+
+
+Big Bill and his companions reached Kamatlah early next day. They
+reported at once to Selfridge. It had been the intention of Wally to
+vent upon them the bad temper that had been gathering ever since his
+talk with Elliot. But his first sarcastic question drew such a snarl of
+anger that he reconsidered. The men were both sullen and furious. They
+let him know roundly that if Holt made them any trouble through the
+courts, they would tell all they knew.
+
+The little man became alarmed. Instead of reproaches he gave them soft
+words and promises. The company would see them through. It would protect
+them against criminal procedure. But above all they must stand pat in
+denial. A conviction would be impossible even if the State's attorney
+filed an indictment against them. Meanwhile they would remain on the
+company pay-roll.
+
+Gordon Elliot was a trained investigator. Even without Holt at his side
+he would probably have unearthed the truth about the Kamatlah situation.
+But with the little miner by his side to tell him the facts, he found
+his task an easy one.
+
+Selfridge followed orders and let him talk with the men freely. All of
+them had been drilled till they knew their story like parrots. They were
+suspicious of the approaches of Elliot, but they had been warned that
+they must appear to talk candidly. The result was that some talked too
+much and some not enough. They contradicted themselves and one another.
+They let slip admissions under skillful examination that could be
+explained on no other basis than that of company ownership.
+
+Both Selfridge and Howland outdid themselves in efforts to establish
+close social relations. But Gordon was careful to put himself under no
+obligations. He called on the Howlands, but he laughingly explained why
+he could not accept the invitations of Mrs. Howland to dinner.
+
+"I have to tell things here as I see them, and may not have your point
+of view. How can I accept your hospitality and then report that I think
+your husband ought to be sent up for life?"
+
+She was a good, motherly woman and she laughed with him. But she did
+wish this pleasant young fellow could be made to take the proper view of
+things.
+
+Within two weeks Elliot had finished his work at Kamatlah.
+
+"Off for Kusiak to-morrow," he told Holt that night.
+
+The old miner went with him as a guide to the big bend. Gordon had no
+desire to attempt again Fifty-Mile Swamp without the help of some one
+who knew every foot of the trail. Holt had taken the trip a dozen times.
+With him to show the way the swamp became merely a hard, grueling mush
+through boggy lowlands.
+
+Weary with the trail, they reached the river at the end of a long day.
+An Indian village lay sprawled along the bank, and through this the two
+men tramped to the roadhouse where they were to put up for the night.
+
+Holt called to the younger man, who was at the time in the lead.
+
+"Wait a minute, Elliot."
+
+Gordon turned. The old Alaskan was offering a quarter to a little
+half-naked Indian boy. Shyly the four-year-old came forward, a step at
+a time, his finger in his mouth. He held out a brown hand for the coin.
+
+"What's your name, kid?" Holt flashed a look at Elliot that warned him
+to pay attention.
+
+"Colmac," the boy answered bashfully.
+
+His fist closed on the quarter, he turned, and like a startled caribou
+he fled to a comely young Indian woman standing near the trail.
+
+With gleaming eyes Holt turned to Elliot. "Take a good look at the
+squaw," he said in a low voice.
+
+Elliot glanced at the woman behind whose skirts the youngster was
+hiding. He smiled and nodded pleasantly to her.
+
+"She's not bad looking if that's what you mean," he said after they had
+taken up the trail again.
+
+"You ain't the only white man that has thought that," retorted the old
+miner significantly.
+
+"No?" Gordon had learned to let Holt tell things at his leisure. It
+usually took less time than to try to hurry him.
+
+"Name of the kid mean anything to you?"
+
+"Can't say it did."
+
+"Hm! Named for his dad. First syllable of each of his names."
+
+The land inspector stopped in his stride and wheeled upon Holt. His eyes
+asked eagerly a question. "You don't mean Colby Macdonald?"
+
+"Why don't I?"
+
+"But--Good Lord, he isn't a squawman, is he?"
+
+"Not in the usual meaning of the word. She never cooked and kept house
+for him. Just the same, little Colmac is his kid. Couldn't you see it
+sticking out all over him? He's the spit'n' image of his dad."
+
+"I see it now you've pointed it out. I was trying to think who he
+reminded me of. Of course it was Macdonald."
+
+"Mac met up with Meteetse when he first scouted this country for coal
+five years ago. So far's I know he was square enough with the girl. She
+never claimed he made any promises or anything like that. He sends a
+check down once a quarter to the trader here for her and the kid."
+
+But young Elliot was not thinking about Meteetse. His mind's eye saw
+another picture--the girl at Kusiak, listening spellbound to the tales
+of a man whose actions translated romance into life for her, a girl
+swept from the quiet backwaters of an Irish village to this land of
+the midnight sun with its amazing contrasts.
+
+And all the way up on the boat she continued to fill his mind. The
+slowness of the steamer fretted him. He paced up and down the deck for
+hours at a time worried and anxious. Sometimes the jealousy in his heart
+flamed up like a prairie fire when it comes to a brush heap. The outrage
+of it set him blazing with indignation. Diane ought to be whipped, he
+told himself, for her part in the deception. It was no less than a
+conspiracy. What could an innocent young girl like Sheba know of such
+a man as Colby Macdonald? Her imagination conceived, no doubt, an
+idealized vision of him. But the real man was clear outside her ken.
+
+Gordon set his jaw grimly. He would have it out with Diane. He would let
+her see she was not going to have it all her own way. By God, he would
+put a spoke in her wheel.
+
+Sometimes, when the cool, evening breezes blew on his bare, fevered
+head, he laughed at himself for an idiot. How did he know that Macdonald
+wanted Sheba O'Neill. All the evidence he had was that he had once seen
+the man watch her while she sang a sentimental song. Whereas it was
+common talk that he would probably marry Mrs. Mallory, that for months
+he had been her almost daily companion. If the older woman had lost
+the sweet, supple slimness of her first youth, she had won in exchange
+a sophisticated grace, a seductive allure that made her the envy of
+all the women with whom she associated. She held at command a warm,
+languorous charm which had stirred banked fires in the hearts of many
+men. Why should not Macdonald woo her? Gordon himself admitted her
+attractiveness.
+
+And why should he take it for granted that Sheba was ready to drop into
+the arms of the big Alaskan whenever he said the word? At the least he
+was twenty years older than she. Surely she might admire him without
+falling in love with the man. Was there not something almost insulting
+in the supposition that Macdonald had only to speak to her in order to
+win?
+
+But in spite of reason he was on fire to come to his journey's end.
+No sooner had he reached his hotel than he called up Mrs. Paget. Quite
+clearly she understood that he wanted an invitation to dinner. Yet she
+hesitated.
+
+"My 'phone can't be working well," Gordon told her gayly. "You must have
+asked me to dinner, but I didn't just hear it. Never mind. I'll be
+there. Seven o'clock, did you say?"
+
+Diane laughed. "You're just as much a boy as you were ten years ago,
+Gord. All right. Come along. But you're to leave at ten. Do you
+understand?"
+
+"No, I can't hear that. My 'phone has gone bad again. And if I had
+heard, I shouldn't think of doing anything so ridiculous as leaving at
+that hour. It would be an insult to your hospitality. I know when I'm
+well off."
+
+"Then I'll have to withdraw my invitation. Perhaps some other day--"
+
+"I'll leave at ten," promised Elliot meekly.
+
+He could almost hear the smile in her voice as she answered. "Very well.
+Seven sharp. I'll explain about the curfew limit sometime."
+
+Macdonald was with Miss O'Neill in the living-room when Gordon arrived
+at the Paget home.
+
+Sheba came forward to greet the new guest. The welcome in her eyes was
+very genuine.
+
+"You and Mr. Macdonald know each other, of course," she said after her
+handshake.
+
+The Scotchman nodded his lean, grizzled head, looking straight into the
+eyes of the field agent. There was always a certain deliberation about
+his manner, but it was the slowness of strength and not of weakness.
+
+"Yes, I know Mr. Elliot--now. I'm not so sure that he knows me--yet."
+
+"I'm beginning to know you rather well, Mr. Macdonald," answered Gordon
+quietly, but with a very steady look.
+
+If the Alaskan wanted to declare war he was ready for it. The field
+agent knew that Selfridge had sent reports detailing what had happened
+at Kamatlah. Up to date Macdonald had offered him the velvet glove. He
+wondered if the time had come when the fist of steel was to be doubled.
+
+Paget was frankly pleased to see Gordon again. He was a simple, honest
+man who moved always in a straight line. He had liked Elliot as a boy
+and he still liked him. So did Diane, for that matter, but she was a
+little on her guard against him. She had certain plans under way that
+she intended to put through. She was not going to let even Gordon Elliot
+frustrate them.
+
+"Did you have a successful trip, Mr. Elliot?" asked Sheba innocently.
+
+Paget grinned behind his hand. The girl's question was like a match
+to powder, and every one in the room knew it but she. The engineer's
+interests and his convictions were on the side of Macdonald, but
+he recognized that Elliot had been sent in to gather facts for the
+Government and not to give advice to it. If he played fair, he could
+only tell the truth as he saw it.
+
+The eyes of Diane held a spark of hostility as she leaned forward. The
+word had already been passed among the faithful that this young man was
+not taking the right point of view.
+
+"Did you, Gordon?" echoed his hostess.
+
+"I think so," he answered quietly.
+
+"I hear you put up with old Gideon Holt. Is he as cracked as he used to
+be?" asked Macdonald.
+
+"Was he cracked when you used to know him on Frenchman Creek?" countered
+the young man.
+
+Macdonald shot a quick, slant look at him. The old man had been talking,
+had he?
+
+"He was cracked and broke too," laughed the mine-owner hardily. "Cracked
+when he came, broke when he left."
+
+"Yes, that was one of the stories he told me." Gordon turned to Sheba.
+"You should meet the old man, Miss O'Neill. He knew your father at
+Dawson and on Bonanza."
+
+The girl was all eagerness. "I'd like to. Does he ever come to Kusiak?"
+
+"Nonsense!" cut in Diane sharply. She flashed at Gordon a look of
+annoyance. "He's nothing but a daft old idiot, my dear."
+
+The dinner had started wrong, and though Paget steered the conversation
+to safer ground, it did not go very well. At least three of those
+present were a little on edge. Even Sheba, who had missed entirely the
+point of the veiled thrusts, knew that Elliot was not in harmony with
+either Diane or Macdonald.
+
+Gordon was ashamed of himself. He could not quite have told what were
+the impulses that had moved him to carry the war into the camp of the
+enemy. Perhaps, more than anything else, it had been a certain look of
+quiet assurance in the eyes of his rival when he looked at Sheba.
+
+He rose promptly at ten.
+
+"Must you go so soon?" Diane asked. She was smiling at him with bland
+mockery.
+
+"I really must," answered Elliot.
+
+His hostess followed him into the hall. She watched him get into his
+coat before saying what was on her mind.
+
+"What did you mean by telling Sheba that old Holt knew her father?
+What is he to tell her if they meet--that her father died of pneumonia
+brought on by drink? Is that what you want?"
+
+Gordon was honestly contrite. "I didn't think of that."
+
+"No, you were too busy thinking of something mean to say to Mr.
+Macdonald."
+
+He agreed, yet could not forbear one dig more. "I suppose I wanted Holt
+to tell her that Macdonald robbed her father and indirectly was the
+cause of his death."
+
+"Absurd!" exploded Diane. "You're so simple that you accept as true the
+gossip of every crack-brained idiot--when it suits your purpose."
+
+He smiled, boyishly, engagingly, as he held out his hand. "Don't let's
+quarrel, Di. I admit I forgot myself."
+
+"All right. We won't. But don't believe all the catty talk you hear,
+Gordon."
+
+"I'll try to believe only the truth." He smiled, a little ruefully. "And
+it isn't necessary for you to explain why the curfew law applies to me
+and not to Macdonald."
+
+She was on her dignity at once. "You're quite right. It isn't necessary.
+But I'm going to tell you anyhow. Mr. Macdonald is going away to-morrow
+for two or three days and he has some business he wants to talk over
+with Sheba. He had made an appointment with her, and I didn't think it
+fair to let your coming interfere with it."
+
+Gordon took this facer with his smile still working.
+
+"I've got a little business I want to talk over with _you_, Di."
+
+She had always been a young woman of rather a hard finish. Now she met
+him fairly, eye to eye. "Any time you like, Gordon."
+
+Elliot carried away with him one very definite impression. Diane
+intended Sheba to marry Macdonald if she could bring it about. She had
+as good as served notice on him that the girl was spoken for.
+
+The young man set his square jaw. Diane was used to having her own way.
+So was Macdonald. Well, the Elliots had a will of their own too.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+SHEBA SAYS "PERHAPS"
+
+
+Obeying the orders of the general in command, Peter took himself to
+his den with the excuse that he had blue-prints to work over. Presently
+Diane said she thought she heard one of the children crying and left
+to investigate.
+
+The Scotchman strode to the fireplace and stood looking down into the
+glowing coals. He seemed in no hurry to break the silence and Sheba
+glanced at his strong, brooding face a little apprehensively. Her
+excitement showed in the color that was beating into her cheeks. She
+knew of only one subject that would call for so formal a private talk
+between her and Macdonald, and any discussion of this she would very
+much have liked to postpone.
+
+He turned from the fire to Sheba. It was characteristic of him that he
+plunged straight at what he wanted to say.
+
+"I've asked to see you alone, Miss O'Neill, because I want to make a
+confession and restitution--to begin with," he told her abruptly.
+
+She had a sense of suddenly stilled pulses. "That sounds very serious."
+The young woman smiled faintly.
+
+His face of chiseled granite masked all emotion. It kept under lock and
+key the insurgent impulses that moved him when he looked into the sloe
+eyes charged with reserve. Back of them, he felt, was the mystery of
+purity, of maidenhood. He longed to know her better, to find out and
+to appropriate for himself the woman that lay behind the fine veil of
+flesh. She seemed to him delicate as a flame and as vivid. There would
+come a day when her innocent, passional nature would respond to the love
+of a man as a waiting harp does to skillful fingers.
+
+"My story goes away back to the Klondike days. I told you that I knew
+your father on Frenchman Creek, but I didn't say much about knowing him
+on Bonanza."
+
+"Mr. Strong has told me something about the days on Bonanza, and I knew
+you would tell me more some day--when you wanted to speak about it." She
+was seated in a low chair and the white throat lifted toward him was
+round as that of a bird.
+
+"Your father was among the first of those who stampeded to Bonanza. He
+and Strong took up a claim together. I bought out the interest of your
+father."
+
+"You told me that."
+
+His masterful eyes fastened to hers. "I didn't tell you that I took
+advantage of him. He was--not well. I used that against him in the
+bargaining. He wanted ready money, and I tempted him."
+
+"Do you mean that you--wronged him?"
+
+"Yes. I cheated him." He was resolved to gloss over nothing, to offer no
+excuses. "I didn't know there was gold on his claim, but I had what we
+call a hunch. I took his claim without giving value received."
+
+It was her turn now to look into the fire and think. From the letters
+of her father, from talks with old-timers she knew how in the stampedes
+every man's hand had been for himself, how keen-edged had been the
+passion for gold, a veritable lust that corroded the souls of men.
+
+"But--I don't understand." Her brave, steady eyes looked directly into
+those of Macdonald. "If he felt you had--done him a wrong--why did he
+come to you when he was ill?"
+
+"He was coming to demand justice of me. On the way he suffered exposure
+and caught pneumonia. The word reached us, and Strong and I brought him
+to our cabin."
+
+"You faced a blizzard to bring him in. Mr. Strong told me how you risked
+your life by carrying him through the storm--how you wouldn't give up
+and leave him, though you were weak and staggering yourself. He says it
+was a miracle you ever got through."
+
+The big mine-owner brushed this aside as of no importance. "We don't
+leave sick men to die in a blizzard up North. But that's not the point."
+
+"I think it has a bearing on the matter--that you saved him from the
+blizzard--and took him in--and nursed him like a brother till he died."
+
+"I'm not heartless," said Macdonald impatiently. "Of course I did that.
+I had to do it. I couldn't do less."
+
+"Or more," she suggested. "You may have made a hard bargain with him,
+but you wiped that out later."
+
+"That's just what I didn't do. Don't think my conscience is troubling
+me. I'm not such a mush-brained fool. If it had not been for you I would
+never have thought of it again. But you are his daughter. What I cheated
+him out of belongs to you--and you are my friend."
+
+"Don't use that word about what you did, please. He wasn't a child. If
+you got the best of him in a bargain, I don't think father would think
+of it that way."
+
+The difficulty was that he could not tell her the truth about her
+father's weakness for drink and how he had played upon it. He bridged
+all explanations and passed to the thing he meant to do in reparation.
+
+"The money I cleaned up from that claim belongs to you, Miss O'Neill.
+You will oblige me by taking it."
+
+From his pocket he took a folded paper and handed it to her. Sheba
+opened it doubtfully. The paper contained a typewritten statement and
+to it was attached a check by means of a clip. The check was made out
+to her and signed by Colby Macdonald. The amount it called for was one
+hundred and eighty-three thousand four hundred and thirty-one dollars.
+
+"Oh, I couldn't take this, Mr. Macdonald--I couldn't. It doesn't belong
+to me," she cried.
+
+"It belongs to you--and you're going to take it."
+
+"I wouldn't know what to do with so much."
+
+"The bank will take care of it for you until you decide. So that's
+settled." He passed definitely from the subject. "There's something else
+I want to say to you, Miss O'Neill."
+
+Some change in his voice warned her. The girl slanted a quick, shy
+glance at him.
+
+"I want to know if you'll marry me, Miss O'Neill," he shot at her
+abruptly. Then, without giving her time to answer, he pushed on:
+"I'm older than you--by twenty-five years. Always I've lived on the
+frontiers. I've had to take the world by the throat and shake from it
+what I wanted. So I've grown hard and willful. All the sweet, fine
+things of life I've missed. But with you beside me I'm not too old to
+find them yet--if you'll show me the way, Sheba."
+
+A wave of color swept into her face, but her eyes never faltered from
+his. "I'm not quite sure," she said in a low voice.
+
+"You mean--whether you love me?"
+
+She nodded. "I--admire you more than any man I ever met. You are a great
+man, strong and powerful,--and I am so insignificant beside you. I--am
+drawn to you--so much. But--I am not sure."
+
+Afterward, when she thought of it, Sheba wondered at the direct ease of
+his proposal. In the romances she had read, men were shy and embarrassed
+and fearful of the issue. But Colby Macdonald had known what he wanted
+to say and had said it as coolly and as readily as if it had been a
+business detail. She was the one that had blushed and stammered and
+found a difficulty in expressing herself.
+
+"I'm going away for two days. Perhaps when I come back you will know,
+Sheba. Take your time. Marriage is serious business. I want you to
+remember that my life has been very different from yours. You'll hear
+all sorts of things about me. Some of them are true. There is this
+difference between a man and a good woman. He fights and falls and
+fights again and wins. But a good woman is finer. She has never known
+the failure that drags one through slime and mud. Her goodness is born
+in her; she doesn't have to fight for it."
+
+The girl smiled a little tremulously. "Doesn't she? We're not all angel,
+you know."
+
+"I hope you're not. There will need to be a lot of the human in you to
+make allowances for Colby Macdonald," he replied with an answering
+smile.
+
+When he said good-bye it was with a warm, strong handshake.
+
+"I'll be back in two days. Perhaps you'll have good news for me then,"
+he suggested.
+
+The dark, silken lashes of her eyes lifted shyly to meet his.
+
+"Perhaps," she said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+DIANE AND GORDON DIFFER
+
+
+During the absence of Macdonald the field agent saw less of Sheba than
+he had expected, and when he did see her she had an abstracted manner he
+did not quite understand. She kept to her own room a good deal, except
+when she took long walks into the hills back of the town. Diane had a
+shrewd idea that the Alaskan had put his fortune to the test, and she
+not only let her cousin alone herself, but fended Gordon from her
+adroitly.
+
+The third day after the dinner Elliot dropped around to the Pagets with
+intent to get Sheba into a set of tennis. Diane sat on the porch darning
+socks.
+
+"Sheba is out walking with Mr. Macdonald," she explained in answer to
+a question as to the whereabouts of her guest.
+
+"Oh, he's back, is he?" remarked Gordon moodily.
+
+Mrs. Paget was quite cheerful on that subject. "He came back this
+morning. Sheba has gone up with him to see the Lucky Strike."
+
+"You're going to marry her to that man if you can, aren't you?" he
+charged.
+
+"If I can, Gordon." She slipped a darning-ball into one of little
+Peter's stockings and placidly trimmed the edges of the hole.
+
+"It's what I call a conspiracy."
+
+"Is it?" Diane smiled.
+
+Gordon understood her smile to mean that he was jealous.
+
+"Maybe I am. That's not the point," he answered, just as if she had made
+her accusation in words.
+
+"Suppose you tell me what the point is," she suggested, both amused and
+annoyed.
+
+"He isn't good enough for her. You know that perfectly well."
+
+"Good enough!" She shrugged her shoulders. "What man _is_ good
+enough for a nice girl if you come to that? There are other things
+beside sugary goodness. Any man who is strong can make himself good
+enough for the woman he loves."
+
+"Generally speaking, yes. But Colby Macdonald is different."
+
+"Thank Heaven he is," she retorted impatiently. Then added after a
+moment: "He isn't a Sunday-School superintendent if that's what you
+mean."
+
+"That isn't what I mean at all. But there's such a thing as a difference
+between right and wrong, isn't there?"
+
+"Oh, yes. For instance, Mr. Macdonald is right about the need of
+developing Alaska and the way to do it, and you are wrong."
+
+He could not help smiling a little at the adroit way she tried to
+sidetrack him, even though he was angry at her. But he had no intention
+of letting her go without freeing his mind.
+
+"I'm talking about essential right and wrong. Miss O'Neill is idealizing
+Macdonald. I don't suppose you've told her, for instance, that he made
+his first money in the North running a dance hall."
+
+"No, I haven't told her any such thing, because it isn't true," she
+replied scornfully. "He owned an opera house and brought in a company of
+players. I dare say they danced. That's very different, as you'd know if
+you didn't have astigmatism of the mind."
+
+"Not the way the story was told me. But let that pass. Does she know
+that Macdonald beat her father out of one of the best claims on Bonanza
+and was indirectly responsible for his death?"
+
+"What's the use of talking nonsense, Gordon. You know you can't prove
+that," his friend told him sharply.
+
+"I think I can--if it is necessary."
+
+Diane looked across at him with an impudent little tilt of the chin.
+"I don't think I like you as well as I used to."
+
+"Sorry, because I'd like you just as well, Diane, if you would stop
+trying to manage your cousin into a marriage that will spoil her life,"
+he answered gravely.
+
+"How dare you say that! How dare you, Gordon Elliot!" she flung back,
+furious at him. "I won't have you here talking that way to me. It's an
+insult."
+
+The fearless, level eyes of her friend looked straight at her. "I say it
+because the happiness of Miss O'Neill is of very great importance to me."
+
+"Do you mean--?" Wide-eyed, she looked her question straight at him.
+
+"That's just what I mean, Diane."
+
+She darned for a minute in silence. It had occurred to Diane before that
+perhaps Gordon might be in love with Sheba, but she had put the thought
+from her because she did not want to believe it.
+
+"That's different, Gordon. It explains--and in a way excuses--your
+coming here and trying to bully me." She stopped her work to flash a
+question at him. "Don't you think that maybe it's only a fancy of yours?
+I remember you used--"
+
+He shook his head. "No chance, Diane. I'm hard hit. She's the only girl
+I ever met that suited me. Everything she does is right. Every move she
+makes is wonderful."
+
+The eyes with which she looked at him were softer, as those of women are
+wont to be for the true romance.
+
+"You poor boy," she murmured, and let her hand for a moment rest on his.
+
+"Meaning that I lose?" he asked quickly.
+
+"I think you do. I'm not sure."
+
+Elliot leaned forward impulsively. "Be a good sport, Diane. Let me have
+my chance too. Why do you make it easy for Macdonald and hard for me?
+Isn't it because the glamour of his millions blinds you?"
+
+"He's a big, splendid man, but I don't like him any the less because he
+has the power to make life easy and comfortable for Sheba," she defended
+sturdily.
+
+"Yet you turned down Arthur West, the best catch in your set, to marry
+Peter, who was the worst," he reminded her. "Have you ever been sorry
+for it?"
+
+"That's different. Peter and I fit. It was one case out of a million."
+She gave him her old, friendly smile. "But I don't want to be hard on
+you, Gord. I'll be neutral. Come and see Sheba as often as she'll let
+you."
+
+Gordon beamed as he shook hands with her. "That sounds like the Di Paget
+I used to know."
+
+She recurred to the previous question. "Sheba knows more about Mr.
+Macdonald than you think. And about how he got her father's claim, for
+instance,--she has heard all that."
+
+"You told her?"
+
+"No. Colby Macdonald told her. He said he practically robbed her father,
+and he gave her a check for nearly two hundred thousand to cover the
+clean-up from the claim and interest."
+
+"Bully for him." On the heel of this he flung a question at her. "Did
+Macdonald ask her to marry him the night of the dinner?"
+
+A flash of whimsical amusement lit her dainty face. "You'd better ask
+him that. Here he comes now."
+
+They were coming down the walk together, Macdonald and Sheba. The young
+woman was absorbed in his talk, and she did not know that her cousin and
+Elliot were on the porch until she was close upon them. But at sight of
+the young man her eyes became warm and kind.
+
+"I'm sorry I was out yesterday when you called," she told him.
+
+"And you were out again to-day. My luck isn't very good, is it?"
+
+He laughed pleasantly, but his heart was bitter. He believed Macdonald
+had won. Some hint of proprietorship in his manner, together with her
+slight confusion when she saw them on the porch, had weighted his heart
+with lead.
+
+"We've had such a good walk." Sheba went on quickly. "I wish you could
+have heard Mr. Macdonald telling me how he once had a chance to save a
+small Esquimaux tribe during a hard winter. He carried food five hundred
+miles to them. It was a thrilling experience."
+
+"Mr. Macdonald has had a lot of very interesting experiences. You must
+get him to tell you about all of them," answered Gordon quietly.
+
+The eyes of the two men met. The steel-gray ones of the older man
+answered the challenge of his rival with a long, steady look. There was
+in it something of triumph, something of scornful insolence. If this
+young fellow wanted war, he did not need to wait long for it.
+
+"Time enough for that, man. Miss O'Neill and I have the whole Arctic
+winter before us for stories."
+
+The muscles in the lean jaws of Gordon Elliot stood out like steel
+ropes. He turned to Sheba. "Am I to congratulate Mr. Macdonald?"
+
+The color in her cheeks grew warmer, but her shy glance met his fairly.
+"I think it is I that am to be congratulated, Mr. Elliot."
+
+Diane took her cousin in her arms. "My dear, I wish you all the
+happiness in the world," she said softly.
+
+The Irish girl fled into the house as soon as she could, but not before
+making an announcement.
+
+"We're to be married soon, very quietly. If you are still at Kusiak we
+want you to be one of the few friends present, Mr. Elliot."
+
+Macdonald backed her invitation with a cool, cynical smile. "Miss
+O'Neill speaks for us both, of course, Elliot."
+
+The defeated man bowed. "Thanks very much. The chances are that I'll be
+through my business here before then."
+
+As soon as his fiancee had gone into the house, the Scotchman left.
+Gordon sat down in a porch chair and stared straight in front of him.
+The suddenness of the news had brought his world tumbling about his
+ears. He felt that such a marriage would be an outrage against Sheba's
+innocence. But he was not yet far enough away from the blow to ask
+himself how much the personal hurt influenced his opinion.
+
+Though she was sorry for him, Diane did not think it best to say so yet.
+
+Presently he spoke thickly. "I suppose you have heard that he was a
+squawman."
+
+His friend joined battle promptly with him. "That's ridiculous. Don't be
+absurd, Gordon."
+
+"It's the truth. I've seen the woman. She was pointed out to me."
+
+"By old Gideon Holt, likely," she flashed.
+
+"One could get evidence and show it to Miss O'Neill," he said aloud, to
+himself rather than to her.
+
+Diane put her point of view before him with heated candor. "_You_
+couldn't. Nobody but a cad would rake up old scandals about the man who
+has beaten him fairly for a woman's love."
+
+"You beg the question. _Has_ he won fairly?"
+
+"Of course he has. Be a good sport, Gordon. Don't kick on the umpire's
+decision. Play the game."
+
+"That's all very well. But what about her? Am I to sit quiet while she
+is sacrificed to a code of honor that seems to me rooted in dishonor?"
+
+"She is not being sacrificed. I'm her cousin. I'm very fond of her. And
+I'd trust her with Colby Macdonald."
+
+"Play fair, Diane. Tell her the truth about this Indian woman and let
+your cousin decide for herself. You can't do less, can you?"
+
+Mrs. Paget was distinctly annoyed. "You ought to be ashamed of yourself,
+Gordon Elliot. You take all the gossip of a crack-brained old idiot
+for gospel truth just because you want to believe the worst about Mr.
+Macdonald. Don't you know that people will say anything about a man who
+succeeds? Colby Macdonald is too big and too aggressive not to have made
+hundreds of enemies. His life has been threatened dozens of times. But
+he pays no attention to it--goes right on building-up this country.
+Yet you'd think he had a cloven hoof to hear some people talk. I've no
+patience with them."
+
+"The woman's name is Meteetse," Gordon said in an even voice, just as
+if he were answering a question. "She is young and good-looking for an
+Indian. Her boy is four or five years old. Colmac, they call him, and
+he looks just like Macdonald."
+
+"People are always tracing resemblances. There's nothing to that. But
+suppose his life _was_ irregular--years ago. This isn't Boston. It
+used to be the fringe of civilization. Men did as they pleased in the
+early days. We don't ask a man up here what he has been, but what he is.
+You ought to know that by this time."
+
+"This wasn't in the early days. It was five years ago, when Macdonald
+was examining the Kamatlah coal-field. I'm told he sends a check down
+the river once a month for the woman."
+
+"All the more credit to him if he does." Diane rose and looked stormily
+down at her friend. "You're about as broad as a clam, Gordon. Can't you
+see that even if it's true, all that is done with? It is a part of his
+past--and it's finished--trodden under foot. It hasn't a thing to do
+with Sheba."
+
+"I don't agree with you. A man can't cut loose entirely from his past.
+It is a part of him--and Macdonald's past isn't good enough for Sheba
+O'Neill."
+
+Diane tapped her little foot impatiently on the floor. "Do you know many
+men whose pasts are good enough for their wives? Are you a plaster-cast
+saint yourself? You know perfectly well that men trample down their
+pasts and begin again when they are married. Colby Macdonald is good
+enough for any woman alive if he loves her enough."
+
+"You don't know him."
+
+"I know him far better than you do. He is the biggest man I know, and
+now that he is in love with a good woman he'll rise to his chance."
+
+"She ought to be told the truth about Meteetse and her boy," he insisted
+doggedly.
+
+"I'm not going to disturb her with a lot of old maids' gossip. That's
+flat."
+
+"But if I prove to you that it isn't gossip."
+
+Mrs. Paget lost her temper completely. "Does the Government pay you to
+mind other people's business, Gordon?" she snapped.
+
+"I wouldn't be working for the Government then, but for Sheba O'Neill."
+
+"And for Gordon Elliot. You'd be doing underhand work for him too. Don't
+forget that. You can't do it. You're not that kind of a man. It isn't in
+you to go muckraking in the past of the man Sheba is going to marry."
+
+Elliot rose and looked across at the blue-ribbed mountains. His square
+jaw was set when he turned it back toward Diane.
+
+"She isn't going to marry him if I can help it," he said quietly.
+
+He walked out of the gate and down the walk toward his hotel.
+
+A message was waiting for him there from his chief in Seattle. It called
+him down the river on business.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+GENEVIEVE MALLORY TAKES A HAND
+
+
+Inside of an hour the news of the engagement of Macdonald was all over
+Kusiak. It was through a telephone receiver that the gossip was buzzed
+to Mrs. Mallory by a friend who owed her a little stab. The voice of
+Genevieve Mallory registered faint amusement, but as soon as she had
+hung up, her face fell into haggard lines. She had staked a year of her
+waning youth on winning the big mining man of Kusiak, together with all
+the money that she had been able to scrape up for a campaign outfit.
+Moreover, she liked him.
+
+It was not in the picture that she should fall desperately in love with
+any man. A woman of the world, she was sheathed in the plate armor of
+selfishness. But she was as near to loving Macdonald as was possible for
+her. She had a great deal of admiration for his iron strength, for the
+grit of the man. No woman could twist him around her finger, yet it was
+possible to lead him a long way in the direction one wanted.
+
+Mrs. Mallory sat down in the hall beside the telephone, her fingers
+laced about one crossed knee. She knew that if Sheba O'Neill had not
+come on the scene, Macdonald would have asked her to marry him. He had
+been moving slowly toward her for months. They understood each other and
+were at ease together. Between them was a strong physical affinity. Both
+were good-tempered and were wise enough to expect human imperfection.
+
+Then Diane Paget had brought in this slim, young cousin of hers and
+Colby Macdonald had been fascinated by the mystery of her innocent
+youth. Mrs. Mallory was like steel beneath the soft and indolent
+surface. Swiftly she mapped her plan of attack. The Alaskan could not be
+moved, but it might be possible to startle the girl into breaking the
+engagement. Genevieve Mallory would have used the weapon at hand without
+scruple in any case, but she justified herself on the ground that such a
+marriage could result only in unhappiness.
+
+But before she made any move Mrs. Mallory intended to be sure of her
+facts. It was like her to go to headquarters for information. She got
+Macdonald on the wire.
+
+"I've just heard something nice about you. Do tell me it's true," she
+said, her voice warm with sympathy.
+
+Macdonald laughed with an almost boyish embarrassment. "It's true, I
+reckon."
+
+"I'm so glad. She's a lovely girl. The sweetest thing that ever lived.
+I'm sure you'll be happy. I always did think you would make a perfect
+husband. Of course, I'm simply green with envy of her."
+
+Her little ripple of laughter was gay and care-free. The man at the
+other end of the line never had liked her better. Since he was not a
+fool he had guessed pretty closely how things stood with her. She was
+a game little sport, he told himself approvingly. It appealed to him
+immensely that she could take such a facer and come up smiling.
+
+There were no signs of worry wrinkles on her face when the maid admitted
+a caller half an hour later. Oliver Dustin was the name on the card. He
+was a remittance man, a tame little parlor pet whose vocation was to
+fetch and carry for pretty women, and by some odd trick of fate he had
+been sifted into the Northland. Mrs. Mallory had tolerated him rather
+scornfully, but to-day she smiled upon him.
+
+Propped up by pillows, she reclined luxuriously on a lounge. A thin
+spiral of smoke rose like incense to the ceiling from her lips. The
+slow, regular rise and fall of her breathing beneath the filmy lace
+of her gown accented the perfect fullness of bust and throat.
+
+Dustin helped himself to a cigarette and made himself comfortable.
+
+She set herself to win him. He was immensely flattered at her awakened
+interest. When she called him by his first name, he wagged all over like
+a pleased puppy.
+
+It came to him after a time that she was considering him for a
+confidential mission. He assured her eagerly that there was no trouble
+too great for him to take if he could be of any service to her. She
+hesitated and doubted and at last as a special favor to him accepted his
+offer. Their heads were close in whispered talk for a few minutes, at
+the end of which Dustin left the room with his chin in the air. He was
+a knight errant in the employ of the most attractive woman north of
+fifty-three.
+
+When Elliot took the down-river boat he found Oliver Dustin was a fellow
+passenger. The little man smoked an occasional cigar with the land agent
+and aired his views on politics and affairs social. He left the boat at
+the big bend. Without giving him much of his thought Gordon was a little
+surprised that the voluble remittance man had not told him where he was
+going.
+
+Not till a week later did Elliot return up the river. He was asleep at
+the time the Sarah passed the big bend, but next morning he discovered
+that Selfridge and Dustin had come aboard during the night. In the
+afternoon he came upon a real surprise when he found Meteetse and her
+little boy Colmac seated upon a box on the lower deck where freight for
+local points was stored.
+
+His guess was that they were local passengers, but wharf after wharf
+slipped behind them and the two still remained on board. They appeared
+to know nobody else on the Sarah, though once Gordon met Dustin just as
+he was hurrying away from the Indian woman. The little remittance man
+took the pains to explain to Elliot later that he was trying to find out
+whether the Indians knew any English.
+
+Meteetse transferred with the other Kusiak passengers at the river
+junction. The field agent was not the only one on board who wondered
+where she was going. Selfridge was consumed with curiosity, and when
+she and the boy got off at Kusiak, he could restrain himself no longer.
+Gordon saw Wally talking with her. Meteetse showed him an envelope which
+evidently had an address written upon it, for the little man pointed out
+to her the direction in which she must go.
+
+Since leaving Kusiak nearly two weeks before, no word had reached Gordon
+of Sheba. As soon as he had finished dinner at the hotel, he walked out
+to the Paget house and sent in his card.
+
+Sheba came into the hall to meet him from the living-room where she had
+been sitting with the man she expected to marry next week. She gave a
+little murmur of pleasure at sight of him and held out both hands.
+
+"I was afraid you weren't going to get back in time. I'm so glad," she
+told him warmly.
+
+He managed to achieve a smile. "When is the great day?"
+
+"Next Thursday. Of course, we're as busy as can be, but Diane says--"
+
+A ring at the door interrupted her. Sheba stepped forward and let in an
+Indian woman with a little boy clinging to her hand.
+
+"You Miss O'Neill?" she asked.
+
+"Yes."
+
+From the folds of her shawl she drew a letter. The girl glanced at the
+address, then opened and read what was written. She looked up, puzzled,
+first at the comely, flatfooted Indian woman and afterward at the
+handsome little brown-faced papoose. She turned to Gordon.
+
+"This letter says I am to ask this woman who is the father of her boy.
+What does it mean?"
+
+Gordon knew instantly what it meant, though he could not guess who had
+dealt the blow. He hesitated for an answer, and in his embarrassment she
+felt that which began to ring a bell of warning in her heart.
+
+The impulse to spare her pain was stronger in him than the desire that
+she should know the truth.
+
+"Send her away," he urged. "Don't ask any questions. She has been sent
+to hurt you."
+
+A fawnlike fear flashed into the startled eyes. "To hurt me?"
+
+"I am afraid so."
+
+"But--why? I have done nobody any harm." She seemed to hold even her
+breathing in suspense. Only a pulse beat wildly in her white throat like
+the heart of an imprisoned thrush.
+
+"Perhaps some of Macdonald's enemies," he suggested.
+
+And at that there came a star-flash into the soft eyes and a lifted tilt
+to the chin cut fine as a cameo. She turned proudly to the Indian woman.
+
+"What is it that you have to tell me about this boy's father?"
+
+Meteetse began to speak. At the first mention of Macdonald's name
+Sheba's eyes dilated. Her smile, her sweet, glad pleasure at Gordon's
+arrival, were already gone like the flame of a blown candle. Clearly her
+heart was a-flutter, in fear of she knew not what. When the Indian woman
+told how she had first crossed the path of Macdonald, the color flamed
+into the cheeks of the Irish girl, but as the story progressed, the
+blood ebbed even from her lips.
+
+With a swift movement of her fingers she flashed on the hall light. Her
+gaze searched the brown, shiny face of the little chap. She read there
+an affidavit of the truth of his mother's tale. The boy had his father's
+trick of squinting a slant look at anything he found interesting. It was
+impossible to see him and not recognize Colby Macdonald reincarnated.
+
+"What is your name?" asked Sheba suddenly.
+
+The youngster hung back shyly among the folds of the Indian woman's
+skirt. "Colmac," he said at last softly.
+
+"Come!" Sheba flung open the door of the living-room and ushered them
+in.
+
+Macdonald, pacing restlessly up and down the room during her absence,
+pulled up in his stride. He stood frowning at the native woman, then his
+eyes passed to Elliot and fastened upon him. The face of the Scotchman
+might have been chipped from granite. It was grim as that of a hanging
+judge.
+
+Gordon started to explain, then stopped with a shrug. What was the use?
+The man would never believe him in the world.
+
+"I'll remember this," the Alaskan promised his rival. There was a cold
+glitter in his eyes, a sudden flare of the devil that was
+blood-chilling.
+
+"It's true, then," broke in Sheba. "You're a--a squawman. You belong to
+this woman."
+
+"Nothing of the kind," he cried roughly. "That's been ended for years."
+
+"Ended?" Sheba drew Colmac forward by the wrist. "Do you deny that this
+is your boy?"
+
+The big Alaskan brushed this aside as of no moment. "I dare say he is.
+Anyhow I'm paying for his keep. What of it? That's all finished and done
+with."
+
+"How can it be done with when--when she's the mother of your child, your
+wife before God?" The live eyes attacked him from the dusk that framed
+the oval of her pale face. Standing there straight as an aspen, the
+beautiful bosom rising and falling quickly while the storm waves beat
+through her blood, Sheba O'Neill had never made more appeal to the
+strong, lawless man who desired her for his wife.
+
+"You don't understand." Macdonald's big fists were clenched so savagely
+that the knuckles stood out white from the brown tan of the flesh.
+"This is a man's country. It's new--close to nature. What he wants he
+takes--if he's strong enough. I'm elemental. I--"
+
+"You wanted her--and you took her. Now you want me--and I suppose you'll
+take me too." Her scornful words had the sting of a whiplash.
+
+"I've lived as all men live who have red blood in them. This woman is an
+incident. I've been aboveboard. She can't say I ever promised more than
+I've given. I've kept her and the boy. It's been no secret. If you had
+asked, I would have told you the whole story."
+
+"Does that excuse you?"
+
+"I don't need any excuse. I'm a man. That's excuse enough. You've been
+brought up among a lot of conventions and social lies. The one big fact
+you want to set your teeth into now is that I love you, that there isn't
+another woman on God's earth for me, and that there never will be again."
+
+Her eyes flashed battle. "The one big fact I'm facing is that you have
+insulted me--that you insult me again when you mention love with that
+woman and boy in the room. You belong to them--go to them--and leave
+me alone." She had been fighting for self-control, to curb her growing
+resentment, but now it flamed passionately into words. "I hate the sight
+of you. Why don't you go--all of you--and leave me in peace?"
+
+It was a cry of bruised pride and wounded love. Elliot touched the
+Indian woman on the shoulder. Meteetse turned stolidly and walked out
+of the room, still leading Colmac by the hand. The young man followed.
+
+Macdonald closed the door behind them, then strode frowning up and down
+the room. The fear was growing on him that for all his great driving
+power he could not shake this slim girl from the view to which she
+clung. If the situation had not been so serious, it would have struck
+him as ridiculous. His relation with Meteetse had been natural enough.
+He believed that he had acted very honorably to her. Many a man would
+have left her in the lurch to take care of the youngster by herself. But
+he had acknowledged his obligation. He was paying his debt scrupulously,
+and because of it the story had risen to confront him. He felt that it
+was an unjust blow of fate. Punishment was falling upon him, not for
+what he had done, but because he had scorned to make a secret of it.
+
+He knew that he must justify himself before Sheba or lose her. As she
+stood in the dusk so tall and rigid, he knew her heart was steel to him.
+Her finely chiseled face had the look of race. Never had the spell of
+her been more upon him. He crushed back a keen-edged desire to take her
+supple young body into his arms and kiss her till the scarlet ran into
+her cheeks like splashes of wine.
+
+"You haven't the proper slant on this, Sheba. Alaska is the last
+frontier. It's the dropping-off place. You're north of fifty-three."
+
+"Am I north of the Ten Commandments?" she demanded with the inexorable
+judgment of youth. "Did you leave the moral code at home when you came
+in over the ice?"
+
+He smiled a little. "Morality is the average conduct of the average
+man at a given time and place. It is based on custom and expediency.
+The rules made for Drogheda won't fit Dawson or Nome. The laws made to
+protect young women in Ireland would be absurd if applied to half-breed
+squaws in Alaska. Meteetse does not hold herself disgraced but honored.
+She counts her boy far superior to the other youngsters of the village,
+and he is so considered by the tribe. I am told she lords it over her
+sisters."
+
+A faint flush of anger had crept into her cheeks. "Your view of morality
+puts us on a level with the animals. I will not discuss the subject, if
+you please."
+
+"We must discuss it. I must get you to see that Meteetse and what she
+stood for in my life have nothing to do with us. They belong to my past.
+She doesn't exist for either of us--isn't in any way a part of my
+present or future."
+
+"She exists for me," answered Sheba listlessly. She felt suddenly old
+and weary. "But I can't talk about it. Please go. I want to be alone."
+
+Again Macdonald paced restlessly down the room and back. He moved
+with a long, easy, tireless stride. The man was one among ten thousand,
+dominant, virile, every ounce of him strong as tested steel. But he felt
+as if all his energy were caged.
+
+"Why don't you go?" the girl pleaded. "It's no use to stay."
+
+He stopped in front of her. "I'm going to marry you, Sheba. Don't think
+I'll let that meddler interfere with our happiness. You're mine."
+
+"No. Never!" she cried. "I'll take the boat and go home first."
+
+"You've promised to marry me. You're going to keep your word and be glad
+of it all your life."
+
+She shook her head. "No."
+
+"Yes." Macdonald had always shown remarkable restraint with her. He had
+kissed her seldom, and always with a kind of awe at her young purity.
+Now he caught her by the shoulders. His eyes, deep in their sockets,
+mirrored the passionate desire of his heart.
+
+The color flamed into her face. She looked hot to the touch, an active
+volcano ready to erupt. There was an odd feeling in her mind that this
+big man was a stranger to her.
+
+"Take your hands from me," she ordered.
+
+"Do you think I'm going to give you up now--now, after I've won
+you--because of a damfool scruple in your pretty head? You don't know
+me. It's too late. I love you--and I'm going to protect both of us from
+your prudishness."
+
+His arms closed on her and he crushed her to him, looking down hungrily
+into the dark, little face.
+
+"Let me go," she cried fiercely, struggling to free herself.
+
+For answer he kissed the red lips, the flaming cheeks, the angry eyes.
+Then, coming to his senses, he pushed her from him, turned, and strode
+heavily from the room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+GORDON BUYS A REVOLVER
+
+
+Selfridge was not eager to meet his chief, but he knew he must report at
+once. He stopped at his house only long enough to get into fresh clothes
+and from there walked down to the office. Over the Paget telephone he
+had got into touch with Macdonald who told him to wait at headquarters
+until he came.
+
+It had been the intention of Macdonald to go direct from Sheba to his
+office, but the explosion brought about by Meteetse had sent him out
+into the hills for a long tramp. He was in a stress of furious emotion,
+and until he had worked off the edge of it by hard mushing, the cramped
+civilization of the town stifled him.
+
+Hours later he strode into the office of the company. He was
+dust-stained and splashed with mud. Fifteen miles of stiff heel-and-toe
+walking had been flung behind him.
+
+Wally lay asleep in a swivel chair, his fat body sagging and his head
+fallen sideways in such a way as to emphasize the plump folds of his
+double chin. His eyes opened. They took in his chief slowly. Then, in
+a small panic, he jumped to his feet.
+
+"Must 'a' been taking thirty winks," he explained. "Been up nights a
+good deal."
+
+"What doing?" demanded the Scotchman harshly.
+
+In a hurried attempt to divert the anger of Macdonald, his assistant
+made a mistake. "Say, Mac! Who do you think came up on the boat with me?
+I wondered if you knew. Meteetse and her kid--"
+
+He stopped. The big man was glaring savagely at him. But Macdonald said
+nothing. He waited, and under the compulsion of his forceful silence
+Wally stumbled on helplessly.
+
+"--They got off here. 'Course I didn't know whether you'd sent for her
+or not, so I stopped and kinder gave her the glad hand just to size
+things up."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"She had the address of Miss O'Neill, that Irish girl staying at the
+Pagets, the one that came in--"
+
+"Go on," snapped his chief.
+
+"So I directed her how she could get there and--"
+
+Wally found himself lifted from the chair and hammered down into it
+again. His soft flesh quaked like a jelly. As he stared pop-eyed at the
+furious face above him, the fat chin of the little man drooped.
+
+"My God, Mac, don't do that!" he whined.
+
+Macdonald wheeled abruptly away, crossed the room in long strides, and
+came back. He had a grip on himself again.
+
+"What's the use?" he said aloud. "You're nothing but a spineless
+putterer. Haven't you enough sense even to give me a chance to decide
+for myself? Why didn't you keep the woman with you till you could send
+for me, you daft donkey?"
+
+"I swear I never thought of that."
+
+"What have you got up there in your head instead of brains? I send you
+outside to look after things and you fall down on the job. I give you
+plain instructions what to do at Kamatlah and you let Elliot make a
+monkey of you. You see him on the boat with a woman coming to make
+trouble for me, and the best you can do is to help her on the way. Man,
+man, use your gumption."
+
+"If I had known--"
+
+"D'ye think you've got sense enough to take a plain, straight message as
+far as the hotel? Because if you have, I've got one to send."
+
+Wally caressed tenderly his bruised flesh. He had a childlike desire to
+weep, but he was afraid Macdonald would kick him out of the office.
+
+"'Course I'll do whatever you say, Mac," he answered humbly.
+
+The Scotch-Canadian brushed the swivel chair and its occupant to one
+side, drew up another chair in front of the desk, and faced Selfridge
+squarely. The eyes that blazed at the little man were the grimmest he
+had ever looked into.
+
+"Go to the hotel and see this man Elliot alone. Tell him he's gone too
+far--butted into my affairs once too often. There's not a man alive I'd
+stand it from. My orders are for him to get out on the next boat. If
+he's here after that, I'll kill him on sight."
+
+The color ebbed out of the florid face of Wally. He moistened his lips
+to speak. "Good God, Mac, you can't do that. He'll go out and
+report--"
+
+"To hell with his report. Let him say what he likes. Put this to him
+straight: that he and I can't stay in this town--_and both of us
+live_."
+
+Wally had lapped up too many highballs in the past ten years to relish
+this kind of a mission. He had depressed his nerves with overmuch
+tobacco and spurred them with liquors, had dissipated his force in many
+small riotings. His nerve was gone. He had not the punch any more.
+Yet Mac was always expecting him to help out with his rough stuff, he
+reflected fretfully. This was the third time in a month that he had been
+flung headlong into trouble. Take this message now. There was no sense
+in it. Selfridge plucked up his courage to say so.
+
+"That won't buy us anything but trouble, Mac. In the old days you could
+put over--"
+
+The little man never guessed how close he came to being flung through
+the transom over the door, but his instinct warned him to stop. His
+objection died away in a mumble.
+
+"O' course I'll do whatever you say," he added a second time.
+
+"See you do," advised his chief, an ugly look in his eyes. "Tell him he
+gets till the next boat. If he's here after that, he'd better go heeled,
+for I'll shoot on sight wherever we meet."
+
+Selfridge went on his errand with lagging feet. On the way he stopped
+at the Pay-Streak Saloon to fortify himself with a cocktail. He found
+Elliot sitting moodily alone on the porch of the hotel.
+
+In Gordon's pocket there was a note to Macdonald explaining that he had
+nothing to do with the coming of Meteetse. He had expected to send it by
+the hotel porter that evening, but the curt order to leave town filled
+him with a chill anger. The dictator of affairs at Kusiak might think
+what he pleased for all the explanation he would get from him. As for
+taking the next boat, Elliot did not even give that consideration.
+
+"Tell your master I don't take orders from him," he told Wally quietly.
+"I'll stay till my work here is done."
+
+They had moved a few yards down the street. Now Gordon turned,
+lean-loined and active, and trod with crisp, confident step back to the
+hotel. He had said all that was necessary to say.
+
+Two men standing on the porch nodded a good-evening to him. Gordon,
+about to pass, glanced at them again. They were Northrup and Trelawney,
+two of the miners who had had trouble with Macdonald on the boat.
+
+On impulse he stopped. "Found work yet?" he asked.
+
+"Found a job and lost it again," Northrup answered sullenly.
+
+"Too bad."
+
+"Macdonald passed the word along that we weren't to get work. So our
+boss fired us. The whole district is closed to us. We been blacklisted,"
+explained Trelawney.
+
+"And we're busted," added his mate.
+
+Elliot was always free-handed. Perhaps he felt just now unusually
+sympathetic towards these victims of the high-handed methods of
+Macdonald. From his pocket he took a small leather purse and gave a
+piece of gold to each of them.
+
+"Just as a loan to carry you for a couple of days till you get something
+to do," he suggested.
+
+Northrup demurred, but after a little pressure accepted the
+accommodation.
+
+"I pay you soon back," he promised.
+
+Trelawney laughed recklessly. He had been drinking.
+
+"You bet. Me too."
+
+His companion flashed a look of warning at him and explained that they
+were going down the river to look for work outside of the district.
+
+Suddenly Trelawney broke loose and began to curse Macdonald with a
+bitterness that surprised the Government agent. What struck him most,
+though, was the obvious anxiety of Northrup to quiet his partner and to
+gloss over what he had said. Thinking of it later, Gordon wondered why
+the Dane, who had as much cause to hate Macdonald as the other, should
+be at such pains to smooth down the man and explain away his threats.
+
+Elliot bought an automatic revolver next morning and a box of
+cartridges. He was not looking for trouble, but he intended to be
+prepared for it when trouble came looking for him. With a rifle he was a
+fair shot, but he lacked experience with the revolver. In the afternoon
+he walked out of town and practiced shooting at tin cans for a half an
+hour. On his way back he met Peter Paget.
+
+The engineer came straight to the subject in his mind.
+
+"Selfridge came to see me last night. He told me about the trouble
+between you and Macdonald, Gordon. You must leave town till he cools
+down. Macdonald is a bad man with a gat."
+
+"Is he?"
+
+"You can drop down the river on business for a few weeks. After a
+while--"
+
+His friend looked at him coolly. "I can, but I'm not going to. Where do
+you get this stuff about me being a quitter, Pete?"
+
+Peter laid a hand on his shoulder. "Now, look here, Gordon. Don't be a
+kid and foolhardy. Duck. I'm your friend--"
+
+"You're his, too, aren't you?"
+
+"Yes, of course, but--"
+
+"All right. Tell him to duck. There'll be no trouble of my making. But
+if he starts any I'll be there. Macdonald doesn't own the earth, you
+know. I've been sent up here by Uncle Sam on business, and you can bet
+your last dollar I'll stay on the job till I'm through."
+
+"Of course you've got to finish your job. But it doesn't all have to be
+done right here. Just for a week or two--"
+
+"Tell your friend something else while you're on the subject. If I drop
+him, I go scot free because he is interfering with me in my duty. I'll
+put Selfridge on the stand to prove it. But if he should kill me, his
+last chance for getting the Macdonald claims patented would be gone.
+The public would raise such a howl that the Administration would have to
+throw your friend and the Guttenchilds overboard to save itself. I know
+that--and Macdonald knows it. So he stands to lose either way."
+
+Paget knew this was true. He knew, too, there was no use in arguing with
+this young athlete. That close-gripped jaw and salient chin did not
+belong to a slacker. Gordon would stick and see the thing out. But Peter
+could not drop the subject without one more appeal.
+
+"He's not sore at you about the claims. You know that. It's because you
+brought the squaw up the river to see Sheba."
+
+"I didn't bring her--hadn't a thing to do with that. I don't know who
+brought her, though I could give a good guess."
+
+A gleam of hope showed in the eye of the engineer. "You didn't bring
+her? Diane said you threatened--"
+
+"Maybe I did say I would. Anyhow, I thought better of it. But I'm glad
+some one had the sense to tell Miss O'Neill the truth."
+
+"Who do you think brought her?"
+
+"I'm not thinking on that subject out loud."
+
+"But if we could show Mac--"
+
+"That's up to you. I'll not lift a finger. Your king of Kusiak has to
+learn some time that everybody isn't going to sidestep him and pussyfoot
+when he's around. I didn't start this war and I'm not making any peace
+overtures."
+
+"You're as obstinate as the devil," smiled Peter, but in his heart he
+admired the dourness of his friend.
+
+The engineer went to Macdonald and gave a deleted version of his talk
+with Elliot. The Scotchman listened, a bitter, incredulous smile on his
+face.
+
+"Says he didn't bring her, does he? Tell him from me that he lies. Your
+wife let out to me by accident that he threatened to bring her. Meteetse
+and he came up on the boat together. He was with her at your house when
+she told her story. He's trying to save his hide. No chance."
+
+"Elliot isn't a liar. When he says he didn't bring the woman, that
+satisfies me. I know he didn't do it," insisted Paget stiffly.
+
+"Different here. Who else had any interest in bringing her except him?
+Nobody. Use your brains, Peter. He takes the first boat down the river.
+He comes back on the next one. She comes back, too. They couldn't figure
+I'd be at your house when they showed up there to tell the story. That's
+where Mr. Elliot slipped up."
+
+Peter was of different stuff from Selfridge. He had something to say. So
+he said it.
+
+"Times have changed, Mac. You can't shoot down this young fellow without
+making all kinds of trouble. First thing we'd lose the claims. The
+Administration would drop you like a hot potato if you did a thing like
+that. Sheba would never speak to you again. Your friends would know in
+their hearts it was murder. You can't do it."
+
+Macdonald's jaw clamped. "Then let him get out. That's my last word to
+him."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+AMBUSHED
+
+
+Colby Macdonald, in miner's boots and corduroy working suit, stood
+beside his horse with one arm thrown carelessly across its rump. He was
+about to start for Seven-Mile Creek Camp with twenty-seven hundred
+dollars in the saddlebags to pay the men there.
+
+Diane was talking with him. "She's young and fine and spirited. Of
+course it was a great shock to her. She had been idealizing you. But I
+think she is beginning to understand things better. At any rate, she
+does not hate you any more. Give the girl time."
+
+"You think she will--be reasonable?"
+
+Mrs. Paget finished the pattern she was punching in the soft ground
+beside the board walk with the ferrule of her umbrella. Her eyes met his
+frankly.
+
+"I don't know. But I'm sure of one thing. She'll not be reasonable, as
+you call it, unless you are reasonable."
+
+"You mean--Elliot?"
+
+"Yes. She likes him very much. Do you know that when the Indian woman
+came he urged Sheba not to listen to her story?"
+
+"Sounds likely--after he had spent his good money bringing her here,"
+sneered the mine-owner.
+
+"He didn't. Gordon is a splendid fellow. He wouldn't lie," answered
+Diane hotly. "And one thing is sure--if you lay a finger on him for
+this, it will be fatal with Sheba. She will be through with you."
+
+Macdonald had thought of this before. It had been coming to him from
+several different angles that he could not afford to gratify his desire
+to wipe this meddlesome young official from his path. He made a slow,
+sulky promise.
+
+"All right. I'll let him alone. Peter can tell him."
+
+Swinging to the saddle, he spurred his horse and cantered away. With a
+little smile Diane watched his flat, muscular back and the arrogant set
+of his strong shoulders. There was not his match in the territory, she
+thought, but sometimes a clever woman could manage him.
+
+His mind was full of the problem that had come into his life. He rode
+abstractedly, so that he was at the lower ford of the creek almost
+before he knew it. A bilberry thicket straggled down to the opposite
+bank of the stream on both sides of the road.
+
+The horse splashed through the ford and took the little rise beyond with
+a rush. Just before reaching the brow of the hill, the animal stumbled
+and fell. As its rider went headlong, he caught a glimpse of a cord
+drawn taut across the path.
+
+Macdonald, shaken by the fall, began slowly to rise. From the shadows
+of the bilberry bushes two stooping figures rushed at him. He threw up
+an arm to ward off the club aimed at his head, but succeeded only in
+breaking the force of the blow. As he staggered back, stunned, a bullet
+glanced along his forehead and ridged a furrow through the thick hair.
+A second stroke of the club jarred him to the heels.
+
+Though his mind was not clear, his body answered automatically the
+instinct that told him to close with his assailants. He lurched forward
+and gripped one, wrestling with him for the revolver. Vaguely he knew
+by the sharp, jagged shoots of pain that the second man was beating his
+head with a club. The warm blood dripped through his hair and blinded
+his eyes. Dazed and shaken, he yet managed to get the revolver from the
+man who had it. But it was his last effort. He was too far gone to use
+it. A blow on the forehead brought him unconscious to the ground
+bleeding from a dozen wounds.
+
+On his way back from Seven-Mile Creek Camp Gordon Elliot rode down to
+the ford. In the dusk he was almost upon them before the robbers heard
+him. For a moment the two men stood gazing at him and he at the tragedy
+before him. One of the men moved toward his horse.
+
+"Stop there!" ordered Gordon sharply, and he reached for his revolver.
+
+The man--it was the miner Northrup--jumped for Elliot and the field
+agent fired. Another moment, and he was being dragged from the saddle.
+What happened next was never clear to him. He knew that both of the
+bandits closed in on him and that he was fighting desperately against
+odds. The revolver had been knocked from his hand and he fought with
+bare fists just as they did. Twice he emptied his lungs in a cry for
+help.
+
+They quartered over the ground, for Gordon would not let either of them
+get behind him. They were larger than he, heavy, muscle-bound giants of
+great strength, but he was far more active on his feet. He jabbed and
+sidestepped and retreated. More than once their heavy blows crashed home
+on his face. His eyes dared not wander from them for an instant, but he
+was working toward a definite plan. As he moved, his feet were searching
+for the automatic he had dropped.
+
+One of his feet, dragging over the ground, came into contact with the
+steel. With a swift side kick Gordon flung the weapon a dozen feet to
+the left. Presently, watching his chance, he made a dive for it.
+
+Trelawney, followed by Northrup, turned and ran. One of them caught
+Macdonald's horse by the bridle. He swung to the saddle and the other
+man clambered on behind. There was a clatter of hoofs and they were
+gone.
+
+Elliot stooped over the battered body that lay huddled at the edge
+of the water. The man was either dead or unconscious, he was not sure
+which. So badly had the face been beaten and hammered that it was not
+until he had washed the blood from the wounds that Gordon recognized
+Macdonald.
+
+Opening the coat of the insensible man, Gordon put his hand against the
+heart. He could not be sure whether he felt it beating or whether the
+throbbing came from the pulses in his finger tips. As well as he could
+he bound up the wounds with handkerchiefs and stanched the bleeding.
+With ice-cold water from the stream he drenched the bruised face. A
+faint sigh quivered through the slack, inert body.
+
+Gordon hoisted Macdonald across the saddle and led the horse through
+the ford. He walked beside the animal to town, and never had two miles
+seemed to him so far. With one hand he steadied the helpless body that
+lay like a sack of flour balanced in the trough of the saddle.
+
+Kusiak at last lay below him, and when he descended the hill to the
+suburbs almost the first house was the one where the Pagets lived.
+
+Elliot threw the body across his shoulder and walked up the walk to the
+porch. He kicked upon the door with his foot. Sheba answered the knock,
+and at sight of what he carried the color faded from her face.
+
+"Macdonald has been hurt--badly," he explained quickly.
+
+"This way," the girl cried, and led him to her own room, hurrying in
+advance to throw back the bedclothes.
+
+"Get Diane--and a doctor," ordered Gordon after he had laid the
+unconscious man on the white sheet.
+
+While he and Diane undressed the mine-owner Sheba got a doctor on the
+telephone. The wounded man opened his eyes after a long time, but there
+was in them the glaze of delirium. He recognized none of them. He did
+not know that he was in the house of Peter Paget, that Diane and Sheba
+and his rival were fighting with the help of the doctor to push back
+the death that was crowding close upon him. All night he raved, and
+his delirious talk went back to the wild scenes of his earlier life.
+Sometimes he swore savagely; again he made quiet deadly threats; but
+always his talk was crisp and clean and vigorous. Nothing foul or slimy
+came to the surface in those hours of unconscious babbling.
+
+The doctor had shaken his head when he first saw the wounds. He would
+make no promises.
+
+"He's a mighty sick man. The cuts are deep, and the hammering must have
+jarred his brain terribly. If it was anybody but Macdonald, I wouldn't
+give him a chance," he told Diane when he left in the morning to get
+breakfast. "But Macdonald has tremendous vitality. Of course if he lives
+it will be because Mr. Elliot brought him in so soon."
+
+Gordon walked with the doctor as far as the hotel. A brown, thin,
+leathery man undraped himself from a chair in the lobby when Elliot
+opened the door. He was officially known as the chief of police of
+Kusiak. Incidentally he constituted the whole police force. Generally he
+was referred to as Gopher Jones on account of his habit of spasmodic
+prospecting.
+
+"I got to put you under arrest, Mr. Elliot," he explained.
+
+The loafers in the hotel drew closer.
+
+"What for?" demanded Gordon, surprised.
+
+"Doc thinks it will run to murder, I reckon."
+
+The field agent was startled. "You mean--Macdonald?"
+
+The brown man chewed his quid steadily. "You done guessed it."
+
+"That's absurd, you know. What evidence have you got?"
+
+"First off, you'd had trouble with him. It was common talk that when you
+and Mac met, guns were going to pop. You bought an automatic revolver at
+the Seattle & Kusiak Emporium two days ago. You was seen practising with
+it."
+
+"He had threatened me."
+
+"You want to be careful what you say, Mr. Elliot. It will be used
+against you." Gopher shot a squirt of tobacco unerringly at the open
+door of the stove. "You was seen talking with Trelawney and Northrup.
+Money passed from you to them."
+
+"I gave them a loan of ten dollars each because they were broke. Is that
+criminal?" demanded Gordon angrily.
+
+"That's your story. You'll git a chance to tell it to the jury, I
+shouldn't wonder. Mebbe they'll believe it. You never can tell."
+
+"Believe it! Why, you muttonhead, I found him where he was bleeding to
+death and brought him in."
+
+"That's what I heard say. Kinder queer, ain't it, you happened to be the
+man that found him?"
+
+"Nothing queer about it. I was riding in from Seven-Mile Creek Camp."
+Gordon was exasperated, but not at all alarmed.
+
+"So you was. While you was out at the camp, you asked one of the boys
+how big the pay-roll would be."
+
+"Does that prove I was planning a hold-up? Isn't that the last thing I
+would have asked if I had intended robbery?"
+
+"Don't ask me. I ain't no psychologist. All I know is you took an
+interest in the bank-roll on the way."
+
+"I'm here for the Government investigating Macdonald. I was getting
+information--earning my pay. Can you understand that?"
+
+Gopher chewed his cud impassively. "Sure I can, and I been earning mine.
+By the way, howcome you to be beat up so bad, Mr. Elliot?"
+
+"I had a fight with the robbers."
+
+"Sure it wasn't with the robbed. That split lip of yours looks to me
+plumb like Mac's John Hancock."
+
+Elliot flushed angrily. "Of course if you intend to believe me
+guilty--"
+
+"Now, there ain't no manner o' use in gettin' het up, young fellow.
+Mebbe you did it; mebbe you didn't. Anyhow, you'll gimme that gat you
+been toting these last few days."
+
+Gordon's hand moved toward his hip. Then he remembered.
+
+"I haven't it. I left it--"
+
+"You left it at the ford--with one shell empty. That's where you left
+it," interrupted the officer.
+
+"Yes. I fired at Northrup as he rushed me."
+
+"Um-hu," assented Jones, impudent unbelief in his eye. "At Northrup or
+at Macdonald."
+
+"What do you think I did with the money, then? Did I eat it?"
+
+"Not so you could notice it. Since you put it to me flat-foot, you gave
+it to your pardners. You didn't want it. They did. They have got the
+horse too--and they're hitting the high spots to make their get-away."
+
+Elliot was locked up in the flimsy jail without breakfast. He was
+furious, but as he paced up and down the narrow beat beside the bed his
+anger gave way to anxiety. Surely the Pagets could not believe he had
+done such a thing. And Sheba--would she accept as true this weight of
+circumstantial evidence that was piling up against him?
+
+It could all be explained so easily. And yet--the facts fitted like
+links of a chain to condemn him. He went over them one by one. The
+babbling tongue of Selfridge that had made common gossip of the
+impending tragedy in which he and Macdonald were the principals--his
+purchase of the automatic--his public meeting with two known enemies of
+the Scotchman, during which he had been seen to give them money--his
+target practice with the new revolver--the unhappy chance that had taken
+him out to Seven-Mile Creek Camp the very day of the robbery--his casual
+questions of the miners--even the finding of the body by him. All of
+these dovetailed with the hypothesis that his partners in crime were to
+escape and bear the blame, while he was to bring the body back to town
+and assume innocence.
+
+Paget was admitted to his cell later in the morning by Gopher Jones. He
+shook hands with the prisoner. Jones retired.
+
+"Tough luck, Gordon," the engineer said.
+
+"What does Sheba think?" asked the young man quickly.
+
+"We haven't told her you have been arrested. I heard it only a little
+while ago."
+
+"And Diane?"
+
+"Yes, she knows."
+
+"Well?" demanded Gordon brusquely.
+
+Peter looked at him in questioning surprise. "Well, what?" He caught the
+meaning of his friend. "Try not to be an ass, Gordon. Of course she
+knows the charge is ridiculous."
+
+The chip dropped from the young man's shoulder. "Good old Diane. I might
+have known," he said with a new cheerfulness.
+
+"I think you might have," agreed Peter dryly. "By the way, have you had
+any breakfast?"
+
+"No. I'm hungry, come to think of it."
+
+"I'll have something sent in from the hotel."
+
+"How's Macdonald?"
+
+"He's alive--and while there's life there is hope."
+
+"Any news of the murderers?" asked Gordon.
+
+"Posses are combing the hills for them. They stole a packhorse from a
+truck gardener up the valley. It seems they bought an outfit for a month
+yesterday--said they were going prospecting."
+
+They talked for a few minutes longer, mainly on the question of a lawyer
+and the chances of getting out on bond. Peter left the prisoner in very
+much better spirits than he had found him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+"GOD SAVE YOU KINDLY"
+
+
+A nurse from the hospital had relieved Diane and Sheba at daybreak.
+They slept until the middle of the afternoon, then under orders from the
+doctor walked out to take the air. They were to divide the night watch
+between them and he said that he wanted them fit for service. The fever
+of the patient was subsiding. He slept a good deal, and in the intervals
+between had been once or twice quite rational.
+
+The thoughts of the cousins drew their steps toward the jail. Sheba
+looked at Diane.
+
+"Will they let us see him, do you think?"
+
+"Perhaps. We can try."
+
+Gopher Jones was not proof against the brisk confidence with which Mrs.
+Paget demanded admittance. He stroked his unshaven chin while he chewed
+his quid, then reluctantly got his keys.
+
+The prisoner was sitting on the bed. His heart jumped with gladness when
+he looked up.
+
+Diane shook hands cheerfully. "How is the criminal?"
+
+"Better for hearing your kind voice," he answered.
+
+His eyes strayed to the ebon-haired girl in the background. They met a
+troubled smile, grave and sweet.
+
+"Awfully good of you to come to see me," he told Sheba gratefully. "How
+is Macdonald?"
+
+"Better, we hope. He knew Diane this afternoon."
+
+Mrs. Paget did most of the talking, but Gordon contributed his share.
+Sheba did not say much, but it seemed to the young man that there was
+a new tenderness in her manner, the expression of a gentle kindness
+that went out to him because he needed it. The walk had whipped the
+color into her cheeks and she bloomed in that squalid cell like a desert
+rose. There was in the fluent grace of the slender, young body a naive,
+virginal sweetness that took him by the throat. He knew that she
+believed in him and the trouble rolled from his heart like a cold,
+heavy wave.
+
+"We haven't talked to Mr. Macdonald yet about the attack on him,"
+Diane explained. "But he must have recognized the men. There are many
+footprints at the ford, showing how they moved over the ground as they
+fought. So he could not have been unconscious from the first blow."
+
+"Unless they were masked he must have known them. It was light enough,"
+agreed Elliot.
+
+"Peter is still trying to get the officers to accept bail, but I don't
+think he will succeed. There is a good deal of feeling in town against
+you."
+
+"Because I am supposed to be an enemy to an open Alaska, I judge."
+
+"Mainly that. Wally Selfridge has been talking a good deal. He takes it
+for granted that you are guilty. We'll have to wait in patience till Mr.
+Macdonald speaks and clears you. The doctor won't let us mention the
+subject to him until he comes to it of his own free will."
+
+Gopher stuck his head in at the door. "You'll have to go, ladies. Time's
+up."
+
+When Sheba bade the prisoner good-bye it was with a phrase of the old
+Irish vernacular. "God save you kindly."
+
+He knew the peasant's answer to the wish and gave it. "And you too."
+
+The girl left the prison with a mist in her eyes. Her cousin looked at
+her with a queer, ironic little smile of affection. To be in trouble was
+a sure passport to the sympathy of Sheba. Now both her lovers were in
+a sad way. Diane wondered which of them would gain most from this new
+twist of fate.
+
+Sheba turned to Mrs. Paget with an impulsive little burst of feminine
+ferocity. "Why do they put him in prison when they must know he didn't
+do it--that he couldn't do such a thing?"
+
+"They don't all know as well as you do how noble he is, my dear,"
+answered Diane dryly.
+
+"But it's just absurd to think that he would plan the murder of a man he
+has broken bread with for a few hundred dollars."
+
+Diane flashed another odd little glance in the direction of her cousin.
+Probably Sheba was the one woman in Kusiak who did not know that
+Macdonald had served an ultimatum on Elliot to get out or fight and that
+their rivalry over her favor was at the bottom of the difficulty between
+them.
+
+"It will work out all right," promised the older cousin.
+
+Returning from their walk, they met Wally Selfridge coming out of the
+Paget house.
+
+"Did you see Mr. Macdonald?" asked Diane.
+
+"Yes. He's quite rational now." There was a jaunty little strut of
+triumph in Wally's cock-sure manner.
+
+Mrs. Paget knew he had made himself very busy securing evidence against
+Gordon. He was probably trying to curry favor with his chief. The little
+man always had been jealous of Peter. Perhaps he was attempting to rap
+him over the shoulder of Elliot because the Government official was a
+friend of Paget. Just now his insolent voice suggested a special cause
+for exultation.
+
+The reason Wally was so pleased with himself was that he had dropped a
+hint into the ear of the wounded man not to clear Elliot of complicity
+in the attack upon him. The news that the special investigator had been
+arrested for robbery and attempted murder, flashed all over the United
+States, would go far to neutralize any report he might make against
+the validity of the Macdonald claims. If to this could be added later
+reports of an indictment, a trial, and possibly a conviction, it would
+not matter two straws what Elliot said in his official statement to the
+Land Office.
+
+Since the attack upon his chief, Selfridge had moved on the presumption
+that Elliot had been in a conspiracy to get rid of him. He accepted the
+guilt of the field agent because this theory jumped with the interest
+of Wally and his friends. As a politician he intended to play this new
+development for all it was worth.
+
+He had been shocked at the sight of Macdonald. The terrible beating and
+the loss of blood had sapped all the splendid, vital strength of the
+Scotchman. His battered head was swathed in bandages, but the white face
+was bruised and disfigured. The wounded man was weak as a kitten; only
+the steady eyes told that he was still strong and unconquered.
+
+"I want to talk business for a minute, Miss Sedgwick. Will you please
+step out?" said Macdonald to his nurse.
+
+She hesitated. "The doctor says--"
+
+"Do as I say, please."
+
+The nurse left them alone. Wally told the story of the evidence against
+Elliot in four sentences. His chief caught the point at once.
+
+After Selfridge had gone, the wounded man lay silent thinking out his
+programme. Not for a moment did he doubt that he was going to live, and
+his brain was already busy planning for the future. By some freak of
+luck the cards had been stacked by destiny in his favor. He knew now
+that in the violence of his anger against Elliot he had made a mistake.
+To have killed his rival would have been fatal to the Kamatlah coal
+claims, would have alienated his best friends, and would have prejudiced
+hopelessly his chances with Sheba. Fate had been kind to him. He had
+been in the wrong and it had put him in the right. By the same cut of
+the cards young Elliot had been thrust down from an impregnable position
+to one in which he was a discredited suspect. With all this evidence
+to show that he had conspired against Macdonald, his report to the
+Department would be labor lost.
+
+Diane came into the sick-room stripping her gloves after the walk.
+Macdonald smiled feebly at her and fired the first shot of his campaign
+to defeat the enemy.
+
+"Has Elliot been captured yet?" he asked weakly.
+
+The keen eyes of his hostess fastened upon him. "Captured! What do you
+mean? It was Gordon Elliot that brought you in and saved your life."
+
+"Brought me from where?"
+
+"From where he found you unconscious--at the ford."
+
+"That's his story, is it?"
+
+Macdonald shut his eyes wearily, but his incredulous voice had suggested
+a world of innuendo.
+
+The young woman stood with her gloves crushed tight in both hands. It
+was her nature to be always a partisan. Without any reserve she was for
+Gordon in this new fight upon him. What had Wally Selfridge been saying
+to Macdonald? She longed mightily to ask the sick man some questions,
+but the orders of the doctor were explicit. Did the mine-owner mean to
+suggest that he had identified Elliot as one of his assailants? The
+thing was preposterous.
+
+And yet--that was plainly what he had meant to imply. If he told such a
+story, things would go hard with Gordon. In court it would clinch the
+case against him by supplying the one missing link in the chain of
+circumstantial evidence.
+
+Diane, in deep thought, frowned down upon the wounded man, who seemed
+already to have fallen into a light sleep. She told herself that this
+was some of Wally Selfridge's deviltry. Anyhow, she would talk it over
+with Peter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+GORDON SPENDS A BUSY EVENING
+
+
+Paget smoked placidly, but the heart within him was troubled. It looked
+as if Selfridge had made up his mind to frame Gordon for a prison
+sentence. The worst of it was that he need not invent any evidence
+or take any chances. If Macdonald came through on the stand with an
+identification of Elliot as one of his assailants, the young man would
+go down the river to serve time. There was enough corroborative
+testimony to convict St. Peter himself.
+
+It all rested with Macdonald--and the big Scotch-Canadian was a very
+uncertain quantity. His whole interests were at one in favor of getting
+Elliot out of the way. On the other hand--how far would he go to save
+the Kamatlah claims and to remove this good-looking rival from his path?
+Peter could not think he would stoop to perjury against an innocent man.
+
+"I'm just telling you what he said," Diane explained. "And it worried
+me. His smile was cynical. I couldn't help thinking that if he wants to
+get even with Gordon--"
+
+Mrs. Paget stopped. The maid had just brought into the room a visitor.
+Diane moved forward and shook hands with him. "How do you do, Mr.
+Strong? Take this big chair."
+
+Hanford Strong accepted the chair and a cigar. Though a well-to-do
+mine-owner, he wore as always the rough clothes of a prospector. He came
+promptly to the object of his call.
+
+"I don't know whether this is where I should have come or not. Are you
+folks for young Elliot or are you for Selfridge?" he demanded.
+
+"If you put it that way, we're for Elliot," smiled Peter.
+
+"All right. Let me put it another way. You work for Mac. Are you on his
+side or on Elliot's in this matter of the coal claims?"
+
+Diane looked at Peter. He took his time to answer.
+
+"We hope the coal claimants will win, but we've got sense enough to see
+that Gordon is in here to report the facts. That's what he is paid for.
+He'll tell the truth as he sees it. If his superior officers decide on
+those facts against Macdonald, I don't see that Elliot is to blame."
+
+"That's how it looks to me," agreed Strong. "I'm for a wide-open Alaska,
+but that don't make it right to put this young fellow through for a
+crime he didn't do. Lots of folks think he did it. That's all right.
+I know he didn't. Fact is, I like him. He's square. So I've come to tell
+you something."
+
+He smoked for a minute silently before he continued.
+
+"I've got no evidence in his favor, but I bumped into something a little
+while ago that didn't look good to me. You know I room next him at the
+hotel. I heard a noise in his room, and I thought that was funny, seeing
+as he was locked up in jail. So I kinder listened and heard whispers and
+the sound of some one moving about. There's a door between his room and
+mine that is kept locked. I looked through the keyhole, and in Elliot's
+room there was Wally Selfridge and another man. They were looking
+through papers at the desk. Wally put a stack of them in his pocket and
+they went out locking the door behind them."
+
+"They had no business doing that," burst out Diane. "Wally Selfridge
+isn't an officer of the law."
+
+Strong nodded dryly to her. "Just what I thought. So I followed them.
+They went to Macdonald's offices. After awhile Wally came out and left
+the other man there. Then presently the lights went out. The man is
+camped there for the night. Will you tell me why?"
+
+"Why?" repeated Diane with her sharp eyes on the miner.
+
+"Because Wally has some papers there he don't want to get away from
+him."
+
+"Some of Gordon's papers, of course."
+
+"You've said it."
+
+"All his notes and evidence in the case of the coal claims probably,"
+contributed Peter.
+
+"Maybe. Wally has stole them, but he hasn't nerve enough to burn them
+till he gets orders from Mac. So he's holding them safe at the office,"
+guessed Strong.
+
+"It's an outrage," Diane decided promptly.
+
+"Surest thing you know. Wally has fixed it to frame him for prison and
+to play safe about his evidence on the coal claims."
+
+"What are you going to do about it?" Diane asked her husband sharply.
+
+Peter rose. "First I'm going to see Gordon and hear what he has to say.
+Come on, Strong. We may be gone quite a while, Diane. Don't wait up for
+me if you get through your stint of nursing."
+
+Roused from sleep, Gopher Jones grumbled a good deal about letting the
+men see his prisoner. "You got all day, ain't you, without traipsing
+around here nights. Don't you figure I'm entitled to any rest?"
+
+But he let them into the ramshackle building that served as a jail, and
+after three dollars had jingled in the palm of his hand he stepped
+outside and left the men alone with his prisoner. The three put their
+heads together and whispered.
+
+"I'll meet you outside the house of Selfridge in half an hour, Strong,"
+was the last thing that Gordon said before Jones came back to order out
+the visitors.
+
+As soon as the place was dark again, Gordon set to work on the flimsy
+framework of his cell window. He knew already it was so decrepit that he
+could escape any time he desired, but until now there had been no reason
+why he should. Within a quarter of an hour he lifted the iron-grilled
+sash bodily from the frame and crawled through the window.
+
+He found Paget and Strong waiting for him in the shadows of a pine
+outside the yard of Selfridge.
+
+"To begin with, you walk straight home and go to bed, Peter," the young
+man announced. "You're not in this. You're not invited to our party. I
+don't have to tell you why, do I?"
+
+The engineer understood the reason. He was an employee of Macdonald, a
+man thoroughly trusted by him. Even though Gordon intended only to right
+a wrong, it was better that Paget should not be a party to it.
+Reluctantly Peter went home.
+
+Gordon turned to Strong. "I owe you a lot already. There's no need for
+you to run a risk of getting into trouble for me. If things break right,
+I can do what I have to do without help."
+
+"And if they don't?" Strong waved an impatient hand. "Cut it out,
+Elliot. I've taken a fancy to go through with this. I never did like
+Selfridge anyhow, and I ain't got a wife and I don't work for Mac. Why
+the hell shouldn't I have some fun?"
+
+Gordon shrugged his shoulders. "All right. Might as well play ball and
+get things moving, then."
+
+The little miner knocked at the door. Wally himself opened. Elliot, from
+the shelter of the pine, saw the two men in talk. Selfridge shut the
+door and came to the edge of the porch. He gave a gasp and his hands
+went trembling into the air. The six-gun of the miner had been pressed
+hard against his fat paunch. Under curt orders he moved down the steps
+and out of the yard to the tree.
+
+At sight of Gordon the eyes of Wally stood out in amazement. Little
+sweat beads burst out on his forehead, for he remembered how busy he had
+been collecting evidence against this man.
+
+"W-w-what do you want?" he asked.
+
+"Got your keys with you?"
+
+"Y-yes."
+
+"Come with us."
+
+Wally breathed more freely. For a moment he had thought this man had
+come to take summary vengeance on him.
+
+They led him by alleys and back streets to the office of the Macdonald
+Yukon Trading Company. Under orders he knocked on the door and called
+out who he was. Gordon crouched close to the log wall, Strong behind
+him.
+
+"Let me in, Olson," ordered Selfridge again.
+
+The door opened, and a man stood on the threshold. Elliot was on top of
+him like a panther. The man went down as though his knees were oiled
+hinges. Before he could gather his slow wits, the barrel of a revolver
+was shoved against his teeth.
+
+"Take it easy, Olson," advised Gordon. "Get up--slowly. Now, step back
+into the office. Keep your hands up."
+
+Strong closed and locked the door behind them.
+
+"I want my papers, Selfridge. Dig up your keys and get them for me,"
+Elliot commanded.
+
+Wally did not need any keys. He knew the combination of the safe and
+opened it. From an inner drawer he drew a bunch of papers. Gordon looked
+them over carefully. Strong sat on a table and toyed with a revolver
+which he jammed playfully into the stomach of his fat prisoner.
+
+"All here," announced the field agent.
+
+The safe-robbers locked their prisoners in the office and disappeared
+into the night. They stopped at the house of the collector of customs, a
+genial young fellow with whom Elliot had played tennis a good deal, and
+left the papers in his hands for safe-keeping. After which they returned
+to the hotel and reached the second floor by way of the back stairs used
+by the servants.
+
+Here they parted, each going to his own room. Gordon slept like a
+schoolboy and woke only when the sun poured through the window upon his
+bed in a broad ribbon of warm gold.
+
+He got up, bathed, dressed, and went down into the hotel dining-room.
+The waiters looked at him in amazement. Presently the cook peered in
+at him from the kitchen and the clerk made an excuse to drop into the
+room. Gordon ate as if nothing were the matter, apparently unaware of
+the excitement he was causing. He paid not the least attention to the
+nudging and the whispering. After he had finished breakfast, he lit a
+cigar, leaned back in his chair, and smoked placidly.
+
+Presently an eruption of men poured into the room. At the head of them
+was Gopher Jones. Near the rear Wally Selfridge lingered modestly. He
+was not looking for hazardous adventure.
+
+"Whad you doing here?" demanded Gopher, bristling up to Elliot.
+
+The young man watched a smoke wreath float ceilingward before he turned
+his mild gaze on the chief of police.
+
+"I'm smoking."
+
+"Don't you know we just got in from hunting you--two posses of us been
+out all night?" Gopher glared savagely at the smoker.
+
+Gordon looked distressed. "That's too bad. There's a telephone in my
+room, too. Why didn't you call up? I've been there all night."
+
+"The deuce you have," exploded Jones. "And us combing the hills for you.
+Young man, you're mighty smart. But I want to tell you that you'll pay
+for this."
+
+"Did you want me for anything in particular--or just to get up a poker
+game?" asked Elliot suavely.
+
+The leader of the posse gave himself to a job of scientific profanity.
+He was spurred on to outdo himself because he had heard a titter or
+two behind him. When he had finished, he formed a procession. He, with
+Elliot hand-cuffed beside him, was at the head of it. It marched to the
+jail.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+SHEBA DOES NOT THINK SO
+
+
+The fingers of Sheba were busy with the embroidery upon which she
+worked, but her thoughts were full of the man who lay asleep on the
+lounge. His strong body lay at ease, relaxed.
+
+Already health was flowing back into his veins. Beneath the tan of the
+lean, muscular cheeks a warmer color was beginning to creep. Soon he
+would be about again, vigorous and forceful, striding over obstacles to
+the goal he had set himself.
+
+Just now she was the chief goal of his desire. Sheba did not deceive
+herself into thinking that he had for a moment accepted her dismissal
+of him.
+
+He still meant to marry her, and he had told her so in characteristic
+way the day after their break.
+
+Sheba had sent him a check for the amount he had paid her and had
+refused to see him or anybody else.
+
+Shamed and humiliated, she had kept to her room. The check had come back
+to her by mail.
+
+Across the face of it he had written in his strong handwriting:--
+
+ I don't welsh on my bets. You can't give to me what is not mine.
+
+ Do not think for an instant that I shall not marry you.
+
+Watching him now, she wondered what manner of man he was. There had
+been a day or two when she had thought she understood him. Then she had
+learned, from the story of Meteetse, how far his world of thought was
+from hers. That which to her had put a gulf between them was to him only
+an incident.
+
+She moved to adjust a window blind and when she returned found that his
+steady eyes were fixed upon her.
+
+"You're getting better fast," she said.
+
+"Yes."
+
+The girl had a favor to ask of him and lest her courage fail she plunged
+into it.
+
+"Mr. Macdonald, if you say the word Mr. Elliot will be released on bail.
+I am thinking you will be so good as to say it."
+
+His narrowed eyes held a cold glitter. "Why?"
+
+"You must know he is innocent. You must--"
+
+"I know only what the evidence shows," he cut in, warily on his guard.
+"He may or may not have been one of my attackers. From the first blow
+I was dazed. But everything points to it that he hired--"
+
+"Oh, no!" interrupted the Irish girl, her dark eyes shining softly. "The
+way of it is that he saved your life, that he fought for you, and that
+he is in prison because of it."
+
+"If that is true, why doesn't he bring some proof of it?"
+
+"Proof!" she cried scornfully. "Between friends--"
+
+"He's no friend of mine. The man is a meddler. I despise him."
+
+The scarlet flooded her cheeks. "And I am liking him very, very much,"
+she flung back stanchly.
+
+Macdonald looked up at the vivid, flushed face and found it wholly
+charming. He liked her none the less because her fine eyes were hot and
+defiant in behalf of his rival.
+
+"Very well," he smiled. "I'll get him out if you'll do me a good turn
+too."
+
+"Thank you. It's a bargain."
+
+"Then sing to me."
+
+She moved to the piano. "What shall I sing?"
+
+"Sing 'Divided.'"
+
+The long lashes veiled her soft eyes while she considered. In a way he
+had tricked her into singing for him a love-song she did not want to
+sing. But she made no protest. Swiftly she turned and slid along the
+bench. Her fingers touched the keys and she began.
+
+He watched the beauty and warmth of her dainty youth with eyes that
+mirrored the hunger of his heart. How buoyantly she carried her dusky
+little head! With what a gallant spirit she did all things! He was
+usually a frank pagan, but when he was with her it seemed to him that
+God spoke through her personality all sorts of brave, fine promises.
+
+Sheba paid her pledge in full. After the first two stanzas were finished
+she sang the last ones as well:--
+
+ "An' what about the wather when I'd have ould Paddy's boat,
+ Is it me that would be feared to grip the oars an' go afloat?
+ Oh, I could find him by the light of sun or moon or star:
+ But there's caulder things than salt waves between us, so they are.
+ Och anee!
+
+ "Sure well I know he'll never have the heart to come to me,
+ An' love is wild as any wave that wanders on the sea,
+ 'Tis the same if he is near me, 'tis the same if he is far:
+ His thoughts are hard an' ever hard between us, so they are.
+ Och anee!"
+
+Her hands dropped from the keys and she turned slowly on the end of the
+seat. The dark lashes fell to her hot cheeks. He did not speak, but she
+felt the steady insistence of his gaze. In self-defense she looked at
+him.
+
+The pallor of his face lent accent to the fire that smouldered in his
+eyes.
+
+"I'm going to marry you, Sheba. Make up your mind to that, girl," he
+said harshly.
+
+There was infinite pity in the look she gave him. "'There's caulder
+things than salt waves between us, so they are,'" she quoted.
+
+"Not if I love you and you love me. By God, I trample down everything
+that comes between us."
+
+He swung to a sitting position on the lounge. Through the steel-gray
+eyes in the brooding face his masterful spirit wrestled with hers. A
+lean-loined Samson, with broad, powerful shoulders and deep chest, he
+dominated his world ruthlessly. But this slim Irish girl with the young,
+lissom body held her own.
+
+"Must we go through that again?" she asked gently.
+
+"Again and again until you see reason."
+
+She knew the tremendous driving power of the man and she was afraid in
+her heart that he would sweep her from the moorings to which she clung.
+
+"There is something else I haven't told you." The embarrassed lashes
+lifted bravely from the flushed cheeks to meet steadily his look.
+"I don't think--that I--care for you. 'Tis I that am shamed at
+my--fickleness. But I don't--not with the full of my heart."
+
+His bold, possessive eyes yielded no fraction of all they claimed.
+"Time enough for that, Sheba. Truth is that you're afraid to let
+yourself love me. You're worried because you can't measure me by the
+little two-by-four foot-rule you brought from Ireland with you."
+
+Sheba nodded her dusky little head in naive candor. "I think there will
+be some truth in that, Mr. Macdonald. You're lawless, you know."
+
+"I'm a law to myself, if that's what you mean. It is my business to help
+hammer out an empire in this Northland. If I let my work be cluttered up
+by all the little rules made by little men for other little ones, my
+plans would come to a standstill. I am a practical man, but I keep sight
+of the vision. No need for me to brag. What I have done speaks for me as
+a guidepost to what I mean to do."
+
+"I know," the girl admitted with the impetuous generosity of her race.
+"I hear it from everybody. You have built towns and railroads and
+developed mines and carried the twentieth century into new outposts. You
+have given work to thousands. But you go so fast I can't keep step with
+you. I am one of the little folks for whom laws were made."
+
+"Then I'll make a new code for you," he said, smiling. "Just do as I say
+and everything will come out right."
+
+Faintly her smile met his. "My grandmother might have agreed to that.
+But we live in a new world for women. They have to make their own
+decisions. I suppose that is a part of the penalty we pay for freedom."
+
+Diane came into the room and Macdonald turned to her.
+
+"I have just been telling Sheba that I am going to marry her--that there
+is no escape for her. She had better get used to the idea that I intend
+to make her happy."
+
+The older cousin glanced at Sheba and laughed with a touch of
+embarrassment. "Whether she wants to be happy or not, O Cave Man?"
+
+"I'm going to make her want to."
+
+Sheba fled, but from the door she flung back her challenge. "I don't
+think so."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+GORDON FINDS HIMSELF UNPOPULAR
+
+
+Macdonald kept his word to Sheba. He used his influence to get Elliot
+released, and with a touch of cynicism quite characteristic went on the
+bond of his rival. An information was filed against the field agent of
+the Land Department for highway robbery and attempted murder, but Gordon
+went about his business just as if he were not under a cloud.
+
+None the less, he walked the streets a marked man. Women and children
+looked at him curiously and whispered as he passed. The sullen, hostile
+eyes of miners measured him silently. He was aware that feeling had
+focused against him with surprising intensity of resentment, and he
+suspected that the whispers of Wally Selfridge were largely responsible
+for this.
+
+For Wally saw to it that in the minds of the miners Elliot in his own
+person stood for the enemies of the open-Alaska policy. He scattered
+broadcast garbled extracts from the first preliminary report of the
+field agent, and in the coal camps he spread the impression that the
+whole mining activities of the Territory would be curtailed if Elliot
+had his way.
+
+In the States the fight between the coal claimants and their foes was
+growing more bitter. The muckrakers were busy, and the sentiment outside
+had settled so definitely against granting the patents that the National
+Administration might at any time jettison Macdonald and his backers as a
+sop to public opinion.
+
+It was not hard for Gordon to guess how unpopular he was, but he did not
+let this interfere with his activities. He moved to and fro among the
+mining camps with absolute disregard of the growing hatred against him.
+
+Paget came to him at last with a warning.
+
+"What's this I hear about you being almost killed up on Bonanza?" Peter
+wanted to know.
+
+"Down in the None Such Mine, you mean? It did seem to be raining hammers
+as I went down the shaft," admitted his friend.
+
+"Were the hammers dropped on purpose?"
+
+Gordon looked at him with a grim smile. "Your guess is just as good as
+mine, Peter. What do you think?"
+
+Peter answered seriously. "I think it isn't safe for you to take the
+chances you do, Gordon. I find a wrong impression about you prevalent
+among the men. They are blaming you for stirring up all this trouble on
+the outside, and they are worried for fear the mines may close and they
+will lose their jobs. I tell you that they are in a dangerous mood."
+
+"Sorry, but I can't help that."
+
+"You can stay around town and not go out alone nights, can't you?"
+
+"I dare say I can, but I'm not going to."
+
+"Some of these men are violent. They don't think straight about you--"
+
+"Kindness of Mr. Selfridge," contributed Gordon.
+
+"Perhaps. Anyhow, there's a lot of sullen hate brewing against you.
+Don't invite an explosion. That would be just kid foolhardiness."
+
+"You think I'd better buy another automatic gat," said Elliot with a
+grin.
+
+"I think you had better use a little sense, Gordon. I dare say I am
+exaggerating the danger. But when you go around with that jaunty,
+devil-may-care way of yours, the men think you are looking for
+trouble--and you're likely to get it."
+
+"Am I?"
+
+"I know what I'm talking about. Nine out of ten of the men think you
+tried to murder Macdonald after you had robbed him and that your nerve
+weakened on the job. This seems to some of the most lawless to give
+them a moral right to put you out of the way. Anyhow, it is a kind of
+justification, according to their point of view. I'm not defending it,
+of course. I'm telling you so that you can appreciate your danger."
+
+"You have done your duty, then, Peter."
+
+"But you don't intend to take my advice?"
+
+"I'll tell you what I told you last time when you warned me. I'm going
+through with the job I've been hired to do, just as you would stick it
+out in my place. I don't think I'm in much danger. Men in general are
+law-abiding. They growl, but they don't go as far as murder."
+
+Peter gave him up. After all, the chances were that Gordon was right.
+Alaska was not a lawless country. And it might be that the best way to
+escape peril was to walk through it with a grin as if it did not exist.
+
+The next issue of the Kusiak "Sun" contained a bitter editorial attack
+upon Elliot. The occasion for it was a press dispatch from Washington to
+the effect that the pressure of public opinion had become so strong that
+Winton, Commissioner of the General Land Office, might be forced to
+resign his place. This was a blow to the coal claimants, and the "Sun"
+charged in vitriolic language that the reports of Elliot were to blame.
+He was, the newspaper claimed, an enemy to all those who had come to
+Alaska to earn an honest living there. Under indictment for attempted
+murder and for highway robbery, this man was not satisfied with having
+tried to kill from ambush the best friend Alaska had ever known. In
+every report that he sent to Washington he was dealing underhanded blows
+at the prosperity of Alaska. He was a snake in the grass, and as such
+every decent man ought to hold him in scorn.
+
+Elliot read this just as he was leaving for the Willow Creek Camp.
+He thrust the paper impatiently into his coat pocket and swung to the
+saddle. Why did they persecute him? He had told nothing but the truth,
+nothing not required of him by the simplest, elemental honesty. Yet he
+was treated as an outcast and a criminal. The injustice of it was
+beginning to rankle.
+
+He was temperamentally an optimist, but depression rode with him to the
+gold camp and did not lift from his spirits till he started back next
+day for Kusiak. The news had been flashed by wire all over the United
+States that he was a crook. His friends and relatives could give no
+adequate answer to the fact that an indictment hung over his head.
+In Alaska he was already convicted by public opinion. Even the Pagets
+were lined up as to their interests with Macdonald. Sheba liked him and
+believed in him. Her loyal heart acquitted him of all blame. But it was
+to the wooing of his enemy that she had listened rather than to his.
+The big Scotchman had run against a barrier, but his rival expected
+him to trample it down. He would wear away the scruples of Sheba by
+the pressure of his masterful will.
+
+In the late afternoon, while Gordon was still fifteen miles from Kusiak,
+his horse fell lame. He led it limping to the cabin of some miners.
+
+There were three of them, and they had been drinking heavily from a jug
+of whiskey left earlier in the day by the stage-driver. Gordon was in
+two minds whether to accept their surly permission to stay for the
+night, but the lameness of his horse decided him.
+
+Not caring to invite their hostility, he gave his name as Gordon instead
+of Elliot. He was to learn within the hour that this was mistake number
+two.
+
+From a pocket of the coat he had thrown on a bed protruded the newspaper
+Gordon had brought from Kusiak. One of the men, a big red-headed fellow,
+pulled it out and began sulkily to read.
+
+While he read the other two bickered and drank and snarled at each
+other. All three of the men were in that stage of drunkenness when a
+quarrel is likely to flare up at a moment's notice.
+
+"Listen here," demanded the man with the newspaper. "Tell you what,
+boys, I'm going to wring the neck of that pussyfooting spy Elliot if
+I ever get a chanct."
+
+He read aloud the editorial in the "Sun." After he had finished, the
+others joined him in a chorus of curses.
+
+"I always did hate a spy--and this one's a murderer too. Why don't some
+one fill his hide with lead?" one of the men wanted to know.
+
+Redhead was sitting at the table. He thumped a heavy fist down so hard
+that the tin cups jumped. "Gimme a crack at him and I'll show you, by
+God."
+
+A shadow fell across the room. In the doorway stood a newcomer. Gordon
+had a sensation as if a lump of ice had been drawn down his spine. For
+the man who had just come in was Big Bill Macy, and he was looking at
+the field agent with eyes in which amazement, anger, and triumph blazed.
+
+"I'm glad to death to meet up with you again, Mr. Elliot," he jeered.
+"Seems like old times on Wild-Goose."
+
+"Whad you say his name is?" cut in the man with the newspaper.
+
+"Hasn't he introduced himself, boys?" Macy answered with a cruel
+grin. "Now, ain't that modest of him? You lads are entertaining that
+well-known deteckative and spy Gordon Elliot, that renowned king of
+hold-ups--"
+
+The red-headed man interrupted with a howl of rage. "If you're telling
+it straight, Bill Macy, I'll learn him to spy on me."
+
+Elliot was sitting on one of the beds. He had not moved an inch since
+Macy had appeared, but the brain behind his live eyes was taking stock
+of the situation. Big Bill blocked the doorway. The table was in front
+of the window. Unless he could fight his way out, there was no escape
+for him. He was trapped.
+
+Quietly Gordon looked from one to another. He read no hope in the eyes
+of any.
+
+"I'm not spying on you. My horse is lame. You can see that for yourself.
+All I asked was a night's lodging."
+
+"Under another name than your own, you damned sneak."
+
+The field agent did not understand the fury of the man, because he
+did not know that these miners were working the claim under a defective
+title and that they had jumped to the conclusion that he had come to get
+evidence against them. But he knew that never in his life had he been
+in a tighter hole. In another minute they would attack him. Whether it
+would run to murder he could not tell. At the best he would be hammered
+helpless.
+
+But no evidence of this knowledge appeared in his manner.
+
+"I didn't give my last name because there is a prejudice against me in
+this country," he explained in an even voice.
+
+He wondered as he spoke if he had better try to fling himself through
+the window sash. There might be a remote chance that he could make it.
+
+The miner at the table killed this possibility by rising and standing
+squarely in the road.
+
+"Look out! He's got a gat," warned Macy.
+
+Gordon fervently wished he had. But he was unarmed. While his eyes
+quested for a weapon he played for time.
+
+"You can't get away with this, you know. The United States Government
+is back of me. It's known I left the Willow Creek Camp. I'll be traced
+here."
+
+Through Gordon's mind there flashed a word of advice once given him by
+a professional prize-fighter: "If you get in a rough house, don't wait
+for the other fellow to hit first."
+
+They were crouching for the attack. In another moment they would be upon
+him. Almost with one motion he stooped, snatched up by the leg a heavy
+stool, and sprang to the bed upon which he had been sitting.
+
+The four men closed with him in a rush. They came at him low, their
+heads protected by uplifted arms. His memory brought to him a picture of
+the whitewashed gridiron of a football field, and in it he saw a vision
+of safety.
+
+The stool crashed down upon Big Bill Macy's head. Gordon hurdled the
+crumpling figure, plunged between hands outstretched to seize him, and
+over the table went through the window, taking the flimsy sash with him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+A NEW WAY OF LEAVING A HOUSE
+
+
+The surge of disgust with which Sheba had broken her engagement to marry
+Macdonald ebbed away as the weeks passed. It was impossible for her to
+wait upon him in his illness and hold any repugnance toward this big,
+elemental man. The thing he had done might be wrong, but the very
+openness and frankness of his relation to Meteetse redeemed it from
+shame. He was neither a profligate nor a squawman.
+
+This was Diane's point of view, and in time it became to a certain
+extent that of Sheba. One takes on the color of one's environment, and
+the girl from Drogheda knew in her heart that Meteetse and Colmac were
+no longer the real barriers that stood between her and the Alaskan.
+She had been disillusioned, saw him more clearly; and though she still
+recognized the quality of bigness that set him apart, her spirit did not
+now do such complete homage to it. More and more her thoughts contrasted
+him with another man.
+
+Macdonald did not need to be told that he had lost ground, but with
+the dogged determination that had carried him to success he refused to
+accept the verdict. She was a woman, therefore to be won. The habit of
+victory was so strong in him that he could see no alternative.
+
+He embarrassed her with his downright attentions, hemmed her in with
+courtesies she could not evade. If she appealed to her cousin, Diane
+only laughed.
+
+"My dear, you might as well make up your mind to him. He is going to
+marry you, willy-nilly."
+
+Sheba herself began to be afraid he would. There was something dominant
+and masterful about the man that swept opposition aside. He had a way of
+getting what he wanted.
+
+The motor-car picnic to the Willow Creek Camp was a case in point. Sheba
+did not want to go, but she went. She would much rather have sat in the
+rear seat with Diane,--at least, she persuaded herself that she
+would,--yet she occupied the place beside Macdonald in front. The girl
+was a rebel. Still, in her heart, she was not wholly reluctant. He made
+a strong appeal to her imagination. She felt that it would have been
+impossible for any girl to be indifferent to the wooing of such a man.
+
+The picnic was a success. Macdonald was an outdoor man rather than a
+parlor one. He took charge of the luncheon, lit the fire, and cooked the
+coffee without the least waste of effort. In his shirt-sleeves, the neck
+open at the throat, he looked the embodiment of masculine vigor. Diane
+could not help mentioning it to her cousin.
+
+"Isn't he a splendid human animal?"
+
+Sheba nodded. "He's wonderful."
+
+"If I were a little Irish colleen and he had done me the honor to care
+for me, I'd have fallen fathoms deep in love with him."
+
+The Irish colleen's eyes grew reflective. "Not if you had seen Peter
+first, Di. There's nothing reasonable about a girl, I do believe. She
+loves--or else she just doesn't."
+
+Diane fired a question at her point-blank. "Have you met _your_
+Peter? Is that why you hang back?"
+
+The color flamed into Sheba's face. "Of course not. You do say the most
+outrageous things, Di."
+
+They had driven to Willow Creek over the river road. They returned by
+way of the hills. Macdonald drew up in front of a cabin to fill the
+radiator.
+
+He stood listening beside the car, the water bucket in his hand.
+Something unusual was going on inside the house. There came the sound
+of a thud, of a groan, and then the crash of breaking glass. The whole
+window frame seemed to leap from the side of the house. The head and
+shoulders of a man projected through the broken glass.
+
+The man swept himself free of the debris and started to run. Instantly
+he pulled up in his stride, as amazed to see those in the car as they
+were to see him.
+
+"Gordon!" cried Diane.
+
+Out of the house poured a rush of men. They too pulled up abruptly at
+sight of Macdonald and his guests.
+
+A sardonic mirth gleamed in the eyes of the Scotchman. "Do you always
+come out of a house through the wall, Mr. Elliot?" he asked.
+
+"Only when I'm in a hurry." Gordon pulled out a handkerchief and dabbed
+at some glass-cuts on his face.
+
+"Don't let us detain you," said the Alaskan satirically. "We'll excuse
+you, since you must go."
+
+"I'm not in such a hurry now. In fact, if you're going to Kusiak,
+I think I'll ask you for a lift," returned the field agent coolly.
+
+"And your friends-in-a-hurry--do they want a lift too?"
+
+Big Bill Macy came swaying forward, both hands to his bleeding head.
+"He's a spy, curse him. And he tried to kill me."
+
+"Did he?" commented Macdonald evenly. "What were you doing to him?"
+
+"He can't sneak around our claim under a false name," growled one of the
+miners. "We'll beat his damn head off."
+
+"I've had notions like that myself sometimes," assented the big
+Scotchman. "But I think we had all better leave Mr. Elliot to the law.
+He has Uncle Sam back of him in his spying, and none of us are big
+enough to buck the Government." Crisply Macdonald spoke to Gordon,
+turning upon him cold, hostile eyes. "Get in if you're going to."
+
+Elliot met him eye to eye. "I've changed my mind. I'm going to walk."
+
+"That's up to you."
+
+Gordon shook hands with Diane and Sheba, went into the house for his
+coat, and walked to the stable. He brought out his horse and turned it
+loose, then took the road himself for Kusiak.
+
+A couple of miles out the car passed him trudging townward. As they
+flashed down the road he waved a cheerful and nonchalant greeting.
+
+Sheba had been full of gayety and life, but her mood was changed. All
+the way home she was strangely silent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+GID HOLT COMES TO KUSIAK
+
+
+The days grew short. In sporting circles the talk was no longer of the
+midnight Fourth of July baseball game, but of preparation for the Alaska
+Sweepstakes, since the shadow of the cold Arctic winter had crept down
+to the Yukon and touched its waters to stillness. Men, gathered around
+warm stoves, spoke of the merits of huskies and Siberian wolf-hounds, of
+the heavy fall of snow in the hills, of the overhauling of outfits and
+the transportation of supplies to distant camps.
+
+The last river boat before the freeze-up had long since gone. A month
+earlier the same steamer had taken down in a mail sack the preliminary
+report of Elliot to his department chief. One of the passengers on that
+trip had been Selfridge, sent out to counteract the influence of the
+evidence against the claimants submitted by the field agent. An
+information had been filed against Gordon for highway robbery and
+attempted murder. Wally was to see that the damning facts against him
+were brought to the attention of officials in high places where the
+charges would do most good. The details of the story were to be held in
+reserve for publicity in case the muckrake magazines should try to make
+capital of the report of Elliot.
+
+Kusiak found much time for gossip during the long nights. It knew
+that Macdonald had gone on the bond of Elliot in spite of the scornful
+protest of the younger man. The two gave each other chilly nods of
+greeting when they met, but friends were careful not to invite them to
+the same social affairs. The case against the field agent was pending.
+Pursuit of the miners who had robbed the big mine-owner had long ago
+been dropped. Somewhere in the North the outlaws lay hidden, swallowed
+up by the great white waste of snow.
+
+The general opinion was that Mac was playing politics about the trial
+of his rival. He would not let the case come to a jury until the time
+when a conviction would have most effect in the States, the gossips
+predicted. They did not know that he was waiting for the return of
+Wally Selfridge.
+
+The whispers touched closely the personal affairs of Macdonald. The
+report of his engagement to Sheba O'Neill had been denied, but it was
+noticed that he was a constant guest at the home of the Pagets. Young
+Elliot called there too. Almost any day one or other of the two men
+could be seen with Sheba on the street. Those who wanted to take a
+sporting chance on the issue knew that odds were offered _sub rosa_
+at the Pay Streak saloon of three to one on Mac.
+
+As for Sheba, she rebelled impotently at the situation. The mine-owner
+would not take "No" for an answer. He wooed her with a steady, dominant
+persistence that shook even her strong, young will. There was something
+resistless in the way he took her for granted. Gordon Elliot had not
+mentioned love to her, though there were times when her heart fluttered
+for fear he would. She did not want any more complications. She wanted
+to be let alone. So when an invitation came from her little friends the
+Husteds, signed by all three of the children, asking her to come and
+visit them at the camp back of Katma, the Irish girl jumped at the
+chance to escape for a time from the decision being forced upon her.
+
+Sheba pledged her cousin to secrecy until after she had gone, so that
+Miss O'Neill was able to slip away on the stage unnoticed either by
+Macdonald or Elliot. The only other passenger was an elderly woman going
+up to the Katma camp to take a place as cook.
+
+Later on the same day Wally Selfridge, coming in over the ice, reached
+Kusiak with important news for his chief. He brought with him an order
+from Winton, Commissioner of the General Land Office, suspending Elliot
+pending an investigation of the charges against him. The field agent was
+to forward by mail all documents in his possession and for the time, at
+least, drop the matter of the coal claims.
+
+Oddly enough, it was to Genevieve Mallory that Macdonald went for
+consolation when he learned that Sheba had left town. He had always
+found it very pleasant to drop in for a chat with her, and she saw to
+it that he met the same friendly welcome now that a rival had annexed
+his scalp to her slender waist. For Mrs. Mallory did not concede defeat.
+If the Irish girl could be eliminated, she believed she would yet win.
+
+His hostess laced her fingers behind her beautiful, tawny head, quite
+well aware that the attitude set off the perfect modeling of the soft,
+supple body. She looked up at him with a mocking little smile.
+
+"Rumor says that she has run away, my lord. Is it true?"
+
+"Yes. Slipped away on the stage this morning."
+
+"That's a good sign. She was afraid to stay."
+
+It was a part of the fiction between them that Mrs. Mallory was to give
+him the benefit of her advice in his wooing of her rival. She seemed to
+take it for granted that he would at last marry Sheba after wearing away
+the rigid Puritanism of her resentment.
+
+Macdonald had never liked her so well as now. Her point of view was so
+sane, so reasonable. It asked for no impossible virtues in a man. There
+was something restful in her genial, derisive understanding of him. She
+had a silent divination of his moods and ministered indolently to them.
+
+"Do you think so? Ought I to follow her?" he asked.
+
+She showed a row of perfect teeth in a low ripple of amusement. The
+situation at least was piquant, even though it was at her expense.
+
+"No. Give the girl time. Catch her impulse on the rebound. She'll be
+bored to death at Katma and she will come back docile."
+
+Her scarlet lips, the long, unbroken lines of the sinuous, opulent body,
+the challenge of the smouldering eyes, the warmth of her laughter, all
+invited him to forget the charms of other women. The faint feminine
+perfume of her was wafted to his brain. He felt a besieging of the
+blood.
+
+Stepping behind the chair in which she sat, he tilted back the head of
+lustrous bronze, and very deliberately kissed her on the lips.
+
+For a moment she gave herself to his embrace, then pushed him back,
+rose, and walked across the room to a little table. With fingers that
+trembled slightly she lit a cigarette. Sheathed in her close-fitting
+gown, she made a strong carnal appeal to him, but there was between
+them, too, a close bond of the spirit. He made no apologies, no
+explanation.
+
+Presently she turned and looked at him. Only the deeper color beneath
+her eyes betrayed any excitement.
+
+"Unless I'm a bad prophet you'll get the answer you want when she comes
+back, Colby."
+
+He thought her reply to his indiscretion superb. It admitted complicity,
+reproached, warned, and at the same time ignored. Never before had she
+called him by his given name. He took it as a token of forgiveness and
+renunciation.
+
+Why was it not Genevieve Mallory that he wanted to marry? It would be
+the wise thing to do. She would ask nothing of him that he could not
+give, and she would bring to him many things that he wanted. But he was
+under the spell of Sheba's innocence, of the mystery of her youth, of
+the charm she had brought with her from the land of fairies and
+banshees. The reasonable course made just now not enough appeal to him.
+He craved the rapture of an impossible adventure into a world wonderful.
+
+The mine-owner carried with him back to his office a sense of the futile
+irony of life. A score of men would have liked to marry Mrs. Mallory.
+She had all the sophisticated graces of life and much of the natural
+charm of an unusually attractive personality. He had only to speak the
+word to win her, and his fancy had flown in pursuit of a little Puritan
+with no knowledge of the world.
+
+In front of the Seattle & Kusiak Emporium the Scotchman stopped. A
+little man who had his back to him was bargaining for a team of huskies.
+The man turned, and Macdonald recognized him.
+
+"Hello, Gid. Aren't you off your usual beat a bit?" he asked.
+
+The little miner looked him over impudently. "Well--well! If it ain't
+the Big Mogul himself--and wantin' to know if I've got permission to
+travel off the reservation."
+
+Macdonald laughed tolerantly. He had that large poise which is not
+disturbed by the sand stings of life.
+
+"I reckon you travel where you want to, Gid,--same as I do."
+
+"Maybeso. I shouldn't wonder if you'd find out quite soon enough what
+I'm doing here. You never can tell," the old man retorted with a manner
+that concealed volumes.
+
+Those who were present remembered the words and in the light of what
+took place later thought them significant.
+
+"Anyhow, it is quite a social event for Kusiak," Macdonald suggested
+with a smile of irony.
+
+[Illustration: THE SITUATION AT LEAST WAS PIQUANT, EVEN THOUGH IT WAS
+AT HER EXPENSE]
+
+Without more words Holt turned back to his bargaining. The big Scotchman
+went on his way, remembered that he wanted to see the cashier of the
+bank which he controlled, and promptly forgot that old Gid existed.
+
+The old man concluded his purchase and drove up to the hotel behind one
+of the best dog teams in Alaska. He had paid one hundred dollars down
+and was to settle the balance next day.
+
+Gideon asked a question of the porter.
+
+"Second floor. That's his room up there," the man answered, pointing to
+a window.
+
+"Oh, you, seven--eighteen--ninety-nine," the little miner shouted up.
+
+Elliot appeared at the window. "Well, I'll be hanged! What are you doing
+here, Old-Timer?"
+
+"Onct I knew a man lived to be a grandpa minding his own business,"
+grinned the little man. "Come down and I'll tell you all about it, boy."
+
+In half a minute Gordon was beside him. After the first greetings the
+young man nodded toward the dog team.
+
+"How did you persuade Tim Ryan to lend you his huskies?"
+
+"Why don't you take a paper and keep up with the news, son? These
+huskies don't belong to Tim."
+
+"Meaning that Mr. Gideon Holt is the owner?"
+
+"You've done guessed it," admitted the miner complacently.
+
+He had a right to be proud of the team. It was a famous one even in the
+North. It had run second for two years in the Alaska Sweepstakes to
+Macdonald's great Siberian wolf-hounds. The leader Butch was the hero of
+a dozen races and a hundred savage fights.
+
+"What in Halifax do you want with the team?" asked Elliot, surprised.
+"The whole outfit must have cost a small fortune."
+
+"Some dust," admitted Gideon proudly. He winked mysteriously at Gordon.
+"I got a use for this team, if any one was to ask you."
+
+"Haven't taken the Government mail contract, have you?"
+
+"Not so you could notice it. I'll tell you what I want with this team,
+as the old sayin' is." Holt lowered his voice and narrowed slyly his
+little beadlike eyes. "I'm going to put a crimp in Colby Macdonald.
+That's what I aim to do with it."
+
+"How?"
+
+The miner beckoned Elliot closer and whispered in his ear.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+IN THE DEAD OF NIGHT
+
+
+While Kusiak slept that night the wind shifted. It came roaring across
+the range and drove before it great scudding clouds heavily laden with
+sleety snow. The howling storm snuffed out the moonlight as if it had
+been a tallow dip and fought and screamed around the peaks, whirling
+down the gulches with the fury of a blizzard.
+
+From dark till dawn the roar of the wind filled the night. Before
+morning heavy drifts had wiped out the roads and sheeted the town in
+virgin white unbroken by trails or furrows.
+
+With the coming of daylight the tempest abated. Kusiak got into its
+working clothes and dug itself out from the heavy blanket of white that
+had tucked it in. By noon the business of the town was under way again.
+That which would have demoralized the activities of a Southern city made
+little difference to these Arctic Circle dwellers. Roads were cleared,
+paths shoveled, stores opened. Children in parkas and fur coats trooped
+to school and studied through the short afternoon by the aid of electric
+light.
+
+Dusk fell early and with it came a scatter of more snow. Mrs. Selfridge
+gave a dinner-dance at the club that night and her guests came in furs
+of great variety and much value. The hostess outdid herself to make
+the affair the most elaborate of the season. Wally had brought the
+favors in from Seattle and also the wines. Nobody in Kusiak of any
+social importance was omitted from the list of invited except Gordon
+Elliot. Even the grumpy old cashier of Macdonald's bank--an old bachelor
+who lived by himself in rooms behind those in which the banking was
+done--was persuaded to break his custom and appear in a rusty old dress
+suit of the vintage of '95.
+
+The grizzled cashier--his name was Robert Milton--left the clubhouse
+early for his rooms. It was snowing, but the wind had died down.
+Contrary to his custom, he had taken two or three glasses of wine. His
+brain was excited so that he knew he could not sleep. He decided to read
+"Don Quixote" by the stove for an hour or two. The heat and the reading
+together would make him drowsy.
+
+Arrived at the bank, he let himself into his rooms and locked the
+door. He stooped to open the draft of the stove when a sound stopped
+him halfway. The cashier stood rigid, still crouched, waiting for a
+repetition of the noise. It came once more--the low, dull rasping of
+a file.
+
+Shivers ran down the spine of Milton and up the back of his head to
+the roots of his hair. Somebody was in the bank--at two o'clock in the
+morning--with tools for burglary. He was a scholarly old fellow, brought
+up in New England and cast out to the uttermost frontier by the malign
+tragedy of poverty. Adventure offered no appeal to him. His soul quaked
+as he waited with slack, feeble muscles upon the discovery that only a
+locked door stood between him and violent ruffians.
+
+But though his knees trembled beneath him and the sickness of fear was
+gripping his heart, Robert Milton had in him the dynamic spark that
+makes a man. He tiptoed to his desk and with shaking fingers gripped the
+revolver that lay in a drawer.
+
+The cashier stood there for a moment, moistening his dry lips with
+his tongue and trying to swallow the lump that rose to his throat and
+threatened to stop his breathing. He braced himself for the plunge,
+then slowly trod across the room to the inner, locked door. The palsied
+fingers of his left hand could scarce turn the key.
+
+It seemed to him that the night was alive with the noise he made in
+turning the lock and opening the door. The hinges grated and the floor
+squeaked beneath the fall of his foot as he stood at the threshold.
+
+Two men were in front of the wire grating which protected the big safe
+that filled the alcove to the right. One held a file and the other a
+candle. Their blank, masked faces were turned toward Milton, and each
+of them covered him with a weapon.
+
+"W-what are you doing here?" quavered the cashier.
+
+"Drop that gun," came the low, sharp command from one of them.
+
+Under the menace of their revolvers the heart of Milton pumped water
+instead of blood. The strength oozed out of him. His body swayed and he
+shut his eyes. A hand groped for the casement of the door to steady him.
+
+"Drop it--quick."
+
+Some old ancestral instinct in the bank cashier rose out of his panic
+to destroy him. He wanted to lie down quietly in a faint. But his mind
+asserted its mastery over the weakling body. In spite of his terror, of
+his flaccid will, he had to keep the faith. He was guardian of the bank
+funds. At all costs he must protect them.
+
+His forearm came up with a jerk. Two shots rang out almost together. The
+cashier sagged back against the wall and slowly slid to the floor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The guests of Mrs. Selfridge danced well into the small hours. The
+California champagne that Wally had brought in stimulated a gayety that
+was balm to his wife's soul. She wanted her dinner-dance to be smart, to
+have the atmosphere she had found in the New York cabarets. If everybody
+talked at once, she felt they were having a good time. If nobody
+listened to anybody else, it proved that the affair was a screaming
+success.
+
+Mrs. Wally was satisfied as she bade her guests good-bye and saw them
+pass into the heavy snow that was again falling. They all assured her
+that there had not been so hilarious a party in Kusiak. One old-timer, a
+trifle lit up by reason of too much hospitality, phrased his enjoyment a
+little awkwardly.
+
+"It's been great, Mrs. Selfridge. Nothing like it since the days of the
+open dance hall."
+
+Mrs. Mallory hastily suppressed an internal smile and stepped into the
+breach. "_How_ do you do it?" she asked her hostess enviously.
+
+"My dear, if _you_ say it was a success--"
+
+"What else could one say?"
+
+Genevieve Mallory always preferred to tell the truth when it would do
+just as well. Now it did better, since it contributed to her own ironic
+sense of amusement. Macdonald had once told her that Mrs. Selfridge made
+him think of the saying, "Monkey sees, monkey does." The effervescent
+little woman had never had an original idea in her life.
+
+Most of those who had been at the dance slept late. They were oblivious
+of the fact that the storm had quickened again into a howling gale.
+Nor did they know the two bits of news that were passing up and down
+the main street and being telephoned from house to house. One of the
+items was that the stage for Katma had failed to reach the roadhouse at
+Smith's Crossing. The message had come over the long-distance telephone
+early in the morning. The keeper of the roadhouse added his private
+fears that the stage, crawling up the divide as the blizzard swept down,
+must have gone astray and its occupants perished. The second bit of news
+was local. For the first time since Robert Milton had been cashier the
+bank had failed to open on the dot. The snow had not been cleared from
+the walk in front and no smoke was pouring from the chimney of the
+building.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+MACDONALD FOLLOWS A CLUE
+
+
+Macdonald was no sluggard. It was his habit not to let the pleasure of
+the night before interfere with the business of the morning after. But
+in the darkness he overslept and let the town waken before him. He was
+roused by the sound of knocking on his door.
+
+"Who is it?" he asked.
+
+"It's me--Jones--Gopher Jones. Say, Mac, the bank ain't open and we
+can't rouse Milton. Thought I'd come to you, seeing as you're president
+of the shebang."
+
+The mine-owner got up and began to dress. "Probably overslept, same as
+I did."
+
+"That's the point. We looked through the window of his bedroom and his
+bed ain't been slept in."
+
+In three minutes Macdonald joined the marshal and walked down with him
+to the bank. He unlocked the front door and turned to the little crowd
+that had gathered.
+
+"Better wait here, boys. Gopher and I will go in. I expect everything is
+all right, but we'll let you know about that as soon as we find out."
+
+The bank president opened the door, let the officer enter, and followed
+himself.
+
+The sun had not yet risen and the blinds were down. Macdonald struck a
+match and held it up. The wood burned and the flame flickered out.
+
+"Bank's been robbed," he announced quietly.
+
+"Looks like," agreed Jones. His voice was uneven with excitement.
+
+The Scotch-Canadian lit another match. In the flare of it they saw that
+the steel grill cutting off the alcove was open and that the door had
+been blown from the safe. It lay on the floor among a litter of papers,
+silver, fragments of steel, and bits of candle.
+
+The marshal clutched at the arm of the banker. "Did you see--that?" he
+whispered.
+
+His finger pointed through the darkness to the other end of the room. In
+the faint gray light of coming day Macdonald could see a huddled mass on
+the floor.
+
+"There has been murder done. I'll get a light. Don't move from here,
+Jones. I want to look at things before we disturb them. There's no
+danger. The robbers have been gone for hours."
+
+Gopher had as much nerve as the next man--when the sun was shining and
+he could see what danger he was facing. But there was something sinister
+and nerve-racking here. He wanted to throw open the door and shout the
+news to those outside.
+
+By the light of another match the mine-owner crossed the room into
+the sitting-room of the cashier. Presently he returned with a lamp
+and let its light fall upon the figure lying slumped against the wall.
+A revolver lay close to the inert fingers. The head hung forward
+grotesquely upon the breast.
+
+The dead man was Milton. His employer saw nothing ridiculous in the
+twisted neck and sprawling limbs. The cashier had died to save the money
+entrusted to his care.
+
+Macdonald handed the lamp to the marshal and picked up the revolver.
+Every chamber was loaded.
+
+"They beat him to it. They were probably here when he reached home.
+My guess is he heard them right away, got his gun, and came in. He's
+still wearing his dress suit. That gives us the time, for he left the
+club about midnight. Soon as they saw him they dropped him. Likely they
+heard him and were ready. I wouldn't have had this happen for all the
+money in the safe."
+
+"How much was there in it?"
+
+"I don't know exactly. The books will show. I'll send Wally down to look
+them over."
+
+"Shot right spang through the heart, looks like," commented Jones,
+following with his eye the course of the wound.
+
+"Wish I'd been here instead of him," Macdonald said grimly. His eyes
+softened as he continued to look down at the employee who had paid
+with his life for his faithfulness. "It wasn't an even break. Poor old
+fellow! You weren't built for a job like this, Robert Milton, but you
+played your hand out to a finish. That's all any man can do."
+
+He turned abruptly away and began examining the safe. The silver still
+stood sacked in one large compartment. The bank-notes had escaped the
+hurried search of the robbers, but the gold was practically all gone.
+One sack had been torn by the explosion and single pieces of gold could
+be found all over the safe.
+
+Macdonald glanced over the papers rapidly. The officer picked up one
+of dozens scattered over the floor. It was a mortgage note made out to
+the bank by a miner. He collected the others. Evidently the bandits had
+torn off the rubber, glanced over one or two to see if they had any cash
+value, and tossed the package into the air as a disgusted gambler does
+a pack of cards.
+
+The bank president stepped to the door and threw it open. He explained
+the situation in three sentences.
+
+"I can't let you in now, boys, until the coroner has been here," he went
+on to tell the crowd. "But there is one way you can all help. Keep your
+eyes open. If you have seen any suspicious characters around, let me
+know. Or if any one has left town in a hurry--or been seen doing
+anything during the night that you did not understand at the time. Men
+can't do a thing like this without leaving some clue behind them even
+though the snow has wiped away their trail."
+
+A man named Fred Tague pushed to the front. He kept a feed corral near
+the edge of town. "I can tell you one man who mushed out before five
+o'clock this morning--and that's Gid Holt."
+
+The eyes of Macdonald, cold and hard as jade, fastened to the man. "How
+do you know?"
+
+"That dog team he bought from Tim Ryan--Well, he's been keeping it in my
+corral. When I got there this morning it was gone. The snow hadn't wiped
+out the tracks of the runners yet, so he couldn't have left more than
+fifteen minutes before."
+
+"What time was it when you reached the corral?"
+
+"Might have been six--maybe a little later."
+
+"You don't know that Holt took the team himself?"
+
+"Come to that, I don't. But he had a key to the barn where the sled was.
+Holt has been putting up at the hotel. I reckon it is easy to find out
+if he's still there."
+
+Macdonald's keen brain followed the facts as the nose of a bloodhound
+does a trail. Holt, an open enemy of his, had reached town only two days
+before. He had bought one of the best and swiftest dog teams in the
+North and had let slip before witnesses the remark that Macdonald would
+soon find out what he wanted with the outfit. The bank had been robbed
+after midnight. To file open the grill and to blow up the safe must
+have taken several hours. Before morning the dogs of Holt had taken the
+trail. If their owner were with them, it was a safe bet that the sled
+carried forty thousand dollars in Alaska gold dust.
+
+So far the mind of the Scotchman followed the probabilities logically,
+but at this point it made a jump. There were at least two robbers. He
+was morally sure of that, for this was not a one-man job. Now, if Holt
+had with him a companion, who of all those in Kusiak was the most likely
+man? He was a friendless, crabbed old fellow. Since coming to Kusiak old
+Gideon had been seen constantly with one man. Together they had driven
+out the day before and tried his new team. They had been with each other
+at dinner and had later left the hotel together. The name of the man who
+had been so friendly with old Holt was Gordon Elliot--and Elliot not
+only was another enemy of Macdonald, but had very good reasons for
+getting out of the country just now.
+
+The strong jaw of the mine-owner stood out saliently as he gave short,
+sharp orders to men in the crowd. One was to get the coroner, a second
+Wally Selfridge, another the United States District Attorney. He divided
+the rest into squads to guard the roads leading out of town and to see
+that nobody passed for the present.
+
+As soon as the men he had sent for arrived, Macdonald went over the
+scene of the crime with them. It was plain that the dynamiting had been
+done by an old-time miner who knew his business, but there had been
+brains in the planning of the robbery.
+
+"There is no ivory above the ears of the man who bossed this job,"
+Macdonald told the others. "He picks a night when we're all at the club,
+more than half a mile from here, a stormy night when folks are not
+wandering the streets. He knows that the wind will deaden the sound of
+the dynamite and that the snow will wipe out any tracks that might help
+to identify him and his pal or show which way they have gone."
+
+The coroner took charge of the body and Wally of the bank. The
+mine-owner and the district attorney walked up to the hotel together. As
+soon as they had explained what they wanted, the landlord got a passkey
+and took them to the room Holt had used.
+
+Apparently the bed had been slept in. In the waste-paper basket the
+district attorney found something which he held up in a significant
+silence. Macdonald stepped forward and took from him a small cloth sack.
+
+"One of those we keep our gold in at the bank," said the Scotchman after
+a close examination. "This definitely ties up Holt with the robbery. Now
+for Elliot."
+
+"He left the hotel with Holt about five this morning the porter says."
+This was the contribution of the landlord.
+
+The room of Gordon Elliot was in great disorder. Garments had been
+tossed on the bed and on every chair and had been left to lie wherever
+they had chanced to fall. Plainly their owner had been in great haste.
+
+Macdonald looked through the closet where clothes hung. "His new fur
+coat is not here--nor his trail boots. Looks to me as though Mr. Gordon
+had hit the trail with his friend Holt."
+
+This opinion was strengthened when it was learned from a store-owner in
+town that Holt and Elliot had routed him out of bed in the early morning
+to sell them two weeks' supplies. These they had packed upon the sled
+outside the store.
+
+"It's a cinch bet that Elliot took the trail with him," the lawyer
+conceded.
+
+All doubt of this was removed when a prospector reached town with the
+news that he had met Holt and Elliot traveling toward the divide as fast
+as they could drive the dogs.
+
+The big Scotchman ordered his team of Siberian wolf-hounds made ready
+for the trail. As he donned his heavy furs, Colby Macdonald smiled with
+deep satisfaction. He had Elliot on the run at last.
+
+Just as he closed the door of his room, Macdonald heard the telephone
+bell ring. He hesitated, then shrugged his shoulders and strode out into
+the storm. If he had answered the call he would have learned from Diane,
+who was at the other end of the line, that the stage upon which Sheba
+had started for Katma had not reached the roadhouse at Smith's Crossing.
+
+Five minutes later the winners of the great Alaska Sweepstakes were
+flying down the street in the teeth of the storm. Armed with a rifle
+and a revolver, their owner was mushing into the hills to bring back
+the men who had robbed his bank and killed the cashier. He traveled
+alone because he could go faster without a companion. It never occurred
+to him that he was not a match for any two men he might face.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+IN THE BLIZZARD
+
+
+"Swiftwater" Pete, the driver of the stage between Kusiak and Katma,
+did not like the look of the sky as his ponies breasted the long uphill
+climb that ended at the pass. It was his habit to grumble. He had been
+complaining ever since they had started. But as he studied the heavy
+billows of cloud banked above the peaks and in the saddle between, there
+was real anxiety in his red, apoplectic face.
+
+"Gittin' her back up for a blizzard, looks like. Doggone it, if that
+wouldn't jest be my luck," he murmured fretfully.
+
+Sheba hoped there would be one, not, of course, a really, truly blizzard
+such as Macdonald had told her about, but the tail of a make-believe
+one, enough to send her glowing with exhilaration into the roadhouse
+with the happy sense of an adventure achieved. The girl had got out to
+relieve the horses, and as her young, lissom body took the hill
+scattering flakes of snow were already flying.
+
+To-day she was buoyed up by a sense of freedom. For a time, at least,
+she was escaping Macdonald's driving energy, the appeal of Gordon
+Elliot's warm friendliness, and the unvoiced urging of Diane. Good old
+Peter and the kiddies were the only ones that let her alone.
+
+She looked back at the horses laboring up the hill. Swiftwater had got
+down and was urging them forward, his long whip crackling about the ears
+of the leaders. He waddled as he walked. His fat legs were too short for
+the round barrel body. A big roll of fat bulged out over the collar of
+his shirt. Whenever he was excited--and he always was on the least
+excuse--he puffed and snorted and grew alarmingly purple.
+
+"Fat chance," he exploded as soon as he got within hearing. "Snow in
+those clouds--tons of it. H'm! And wind. Wow! We're in for an
+honest-to-God blizzard, sure as you're a foot high."
+
+Swiftwater was worried. He would have liked to turn and run for it. But
+the last roadhouse was twenty-seven miles back. If the blizzard came
+howling down the slope they would have a sweet time of it reaching
+safety. Smith's Crossing was on the other side of the divide, only nine
+miles away. They would have to worry through somehow. Probably those
+angry clouds were half a bluff.
+
+The temperature was dropping rapidly. Already snow fell fast in big
+thick flakes. To make it worse, the wind was beginning to rise. It came
+in shrill gusts momentarily increasing in force.
+
+The stage-driver knew the signs of old and cursed the luck that had led
+him to bring the stage. It was to have been the last trip with horses
+until spring. His dogs were waiting for him at Katma for the return
+journey. He did not blame himself, for there was no reason to expect
+such a storm so early in the season. None the less, it was too bad that
+his lead dog had been ailing when he left the gold camp eight days
+before.
+
+Miss O'Neill knew that Swiftwater Pete was anxious, and though she was
+not yet afraid, the girl understood the reason for it. The road ran
+through the heart of a vast snow-field, the surface of which was being
+swept by a screaming wind. The air was full of sifted white dust, and
+the road furrow was rapidly filling. Soon it would be obliterated.
+Already the horses were panting and struggling as they ploughed forward.
+Sheba tramped behind the stage-driver and in her tracks walked Mrs.
+Olson, the other passenger.
+
+Through the muffled scream of the storm Swiftwater shouted back to
+Sheba. "You wanta keep close to me."
+
+She nodded her head. His order needed no explanation. The world was
+narrowing to a lane whose walls she could almost touch with her fingers.
+A pall of white wrapped them. Upon them beat a wind of stinging sleet.
+Nothing could be seen but the blurred outlines of the stage and the
+driver's figure.
+
+The bitter cold searched through Sheba's furs to her soft flesh and the
+blast of powdered ice beat upon her face. The snow was getting deeper
+as the road filled. Once or twice she stumbled and fell. Her strength
+ebbed, and the hinges of her knees gave unexpectedly beneath her. How
+long was it, she asked herself, that Macdonald had said men could live
+in a blizzard?
+
+Staggering blindly forward, Sheba bumped into the driver. He had drawn
+up to give the horses a moment's rest before sending them plunging at
+the snow again.
+
+"No chance," he called into the young woman's ear. "Never make Smith's
+in the world. Goin' try for miner's cabin up gulch little way."
+
+The team stuck in the drifts, fought through, and was blocked again ten
+yards beyond. A dozen times the horses gave up, answered the sting of
+the whip by diving head first at the white banks, and were stopped by
+fresh snow-combs.
+
+Pete gave up the fight. He began unhitching the horses, while Sheba and
+Mrs. Olson, clinging to each other's hands, stumbled forward to join
+him. The words he shouted across the back of a horse were almost lost in
+the roar of the shrieking wind.
+
+"... heluvatime ... ride ... gulch," Sheba made out.
+
+He flung Mrs. Olson astride one of the wheelers and helped Sheba to the
+back of the right leader. Swiftwater clambered upon its mate himself.
+
+The girl paid no attention to where they were going. The urge of life
+was so faint within her that she did not greatly care whether she lived
+or died. Her face was blue from the cold; her vitality was sapped. She
+seemed to herself to have turned to ice below the hips. Outside the
+misery of the moment her whole attention was concentrated on sticking
+to the back of the horse. Numb though her fingers were, she must keep
+them fastened tightly in the frozen mane of the animal. She recited her
+lesson to herself like a child. She must stick on--she must--she must.
+
+Whether she lost consciousness or not Sheba never knew. The next she
+realized was that Swiftwater Pete was pulling her from the horse. He
+dragged her into a cabin where Mrs. Olson lay crouched on the floor.
+
+"Got to stable the horses," he explained, and left them.
+
+After a time he came back and lit a fire in the sheet-iron stove. As the
+circulation that meant life flooded back into her chilled veins Sheba
+endured a half-hour of excruciating pain. She had to clench her teeth to
+keep back the groans that came from her throat, to walk the floor and
+nurse her tortured hands with fingers in like plight.
+
+The cabin was empty of furniture except for a home-made table, rough
+stools, and the frame of a bed. The last occupant had left a little
+firewood beside the stove, enough to last perhaps for twenty-four hours.
+Sheba did not need to be told that if the blizzard lasted long enough,
+they would starve to death. In the handbag left in the stage were a box
+of candy and an Irish plum pudding. She had brought the latter from the
+old country with her and was taking it and the chocolates to the Husted
+children. But just now the stage was as far from them as Drogheda.
+
+Like many rough frontiersmen, Swiftwater Pete was a diamond in the
+raw. He had the kindly, gentle instincts that go to the making of a
+good man. So far as could be he made a hopeless and impossible situation
+comfortable. His judgment told him that they were caught in a trap from
+which there was no escape, but for the sake of the women he put a
+cheerful face on things.
+
+"Lucky we found this cabin," he growled amiably. "By this time we'd 'a'
+been up Salt Creek if we hadn't. Seeing as our luck has stood up so far,
+I reckon we'll be all right. Mighty kind of Mr. Last Tenant to leave us
+this firewood. Comes to a showdown we've got one table, four stools, and
+a bed that will make first-class fuel. We ain't so worse off."
+
+"If we only had some food," Mrs. Olson suggested.
+
+"Food!" Pete looked at her in assumed surprise. "Huh! What about all
+that live stock I got in the stable? I've heard tell, ma'am, that
+broncho tenderloin is a favorite dish with them there French chiefs
+that do the cooking. They kinder trim it up so's it's 'most as good as
+frawgs' legs."
+
+Sheba had never before slept on bare boards with a sealskin coat for a
+sleeping-bag. But she was very tired and dropped off almost instantly.
+Twice she woke during the night, disturbed by the stiffness and the
+pain of her body. It seemed to her that the hard, whipsawed planks were
+pushing through the soft flesh to the bones. She was cold, too, and
+crept closer to the stout Swedish woman lying beside her. Presently she
+fell asleep again to the sound of the blizzard howling outside. When she
+wakened for the third time it was morning.
+
+In the afternoon the blizzard died away. As far as she could see, Sheba
+looked out upon a waste of snow. Her eyes turned from the desolation
+without to the bare and cheerless room in which they had found shelter.
+In spite of herself a little shiver ran down the spine of the girl. Had
+she come into this Arctic solitude to find her tomb?
+
+Resolutely she brushed the gloomy thought from her mind and began to
+chat with Mrs. Olson. In a corner of the cabin Sheba had found a torn
+and disreputable copy of "Vanity Fair." The covers and the first forty
+pages were gone. A splash of what appeared to be tobacco juice defiled
+the last sheet. But the fortunes of Becky and Amelia had served to make
+her forget during the morning that she was hungry and likely to be much
+hungrier before another day had passed.
+
+As soon as the storm had moderated enough to let him go out with
+safety, Swiftwater Pete had taken one of the horses for an attempt at
+trail-breaking.
+
+"Me, I'm after that plum pudding. I gotta get a feed of oats from the
+stage for my bronchs too. The scenery here is sure fine, but it ain't
+what you would call nourishing. Huh! Watch our smoke when me and old
+Baldface git to bucking them drifts."
+
+He had been gone two hours and the early dusk was already descending
+over the white waste when Sheba ventured out to see what had become of
+the stage-driver. But the cold was so bitter that she soon gave up the
+attempt to fight her way through the drifts and turned back to the
+cabin.
+
+Sometime later Swiftwater Pete came stumbling into their temporary home.
+He was fagged to exhaustion but triumphant. Upon the table he dropped
+from the crook of his numbed arm two packages.
+
+"The makings for a Christmas dinner," he said with a grin.
+
+After he had taken off his mukluks and his frozen socks they wrapped
+him in their furs while he toasted before the stove. Mrs. Olson thawed
+out the pudding and the chocolates in the oven and made a kind of mush
+out of some oats Pete had saved from the horse feed. They ate their
+one-sided meal in high spirits. The freeze had saved their lives. If it
+held clear till to-morrow they could reach Smith's Crossing on the crust
+of the snow.
+
+Swiftwater broke up the chairs for fuel and demolished the legs of the
+table, after which he lay down before the stove and fell at once into a
+sodden sleep.
+
+Presently Mrs. Olson lay down on the bed and began to snore regularly.
+Sheba could not sleep. The boards tired her bones and she was cold.
+Sometimes she slipped into cat naps that were full of bad dreams. She
+thought she was walking on the snow-comb of a precipice and that Colby
+Macdonald pushed her from her precarious footing and laughed at her as
+she slid swiftly toward the gulf below. When she wakened with a start it
+was to find that the fire had died down. She was shivering from lack of
+cover. Quietly the girl replenished the fire and lay down again.
+
+When she wakened with a start it was morning. A faint light sifted
+through the single window of the shack. Sheba whispered to the older
+woman that she was going out for a little walk.
+
+"Be careful, dearie," advised Mrs. Olson. "I wouldn't try to go too
+far."
+
+Sheba smiled to herself at the warning. It was not likely that she would
+go far enough to get lost with all these millions of tons of snow piled
+up around her in every direction.
+
+She had come out because she was restless and was tired of the dingy
+and uncomfortable room. Without any definite intentions, she naturally
+followed the trail that Swiftwater had broken the day before. No wind
+stirred and the sky was clear. But it was very cold. The sun would not
+be up for half an hour.
+
+As she worked her way down the gulch Sheba wondered whether the news of
+their loss had reached Kusiak. Were search parties out already to rescue
+them? Colby Macdonald had gone out into the blizzard years ago to save
+her father. Perhaps he might have been out all night trying to save her
+father's daughter. Peter would go, of course,--and Gordon Elliot. The
+work in the mines would stop and men would volunteer by scores. That was
+one fine thing about the North. It responded to the unwritten law that a
+man must risk his own life to save others.
+
+But if the wires had come down in the storm Kusiak would not know
+they had not got through to Smith's Crossing. Swiftwater Pete spoke
+cheerfully about mushing to the roadhouse. But Sheba knew the snow
+would not bear the horses. They would have to walk, and it was not at
+all certain that Mrs. Olson could do so long a walk with the thermometer
+at forty or fifty below zero.
+
+From a little knoll Sheba looked down upon the top of the stage three
+hundred yards below her, and while she stood there the promise of the
+new day was blazoned on the sky. It came with amazing beauty of green
+and primrose and amethyst, while the stars flickered out and the heavens
+took on the blue of sunrise. In a crotch between two peaks a faint
+golden glow heralded the sun. A circle of lovely rose-pink flushed the
+horizon.
+
+Sheba had this much of the poet in her, that every sunrise was still a
+miracle. She drew a deep, slow breath of adoration and turned away. As
+she did so her eyes dilated and her body grew rigid.
+
+Across the snow waste a man was coming. He was moving toward the cabin
+and must cross the trench close to her. The heart of the girl stopped,
+then beat wildly to make up the lost stroke. He had come through the
+blizzard to save her.
+
+At that very instant, as if the stage had been set for it, the wonderful
+Alaska sun pushed up into the crotch of the peaks and poured its radiance
+over the Arctic waste. The pink glow swept in a tide of delicate color
+over the snow and transmuted it to millions of sparkling diamonds. The
+Great Magician's wand had recreated the world instantaneously.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+HARD MUSHING
+
+
+Elliot and Holt left Kusiak in a spume of whirling, blinding snow. They
+traveled light, not more than forty pounds to the dog, for they wanted
+to make speed. It was not cold for Alaska. They packed their fur coats
+on the sled and wore waterproof parkas. On their hands were mittens
+of moosehide with duffel lining, on their feet mukluks above "German"
+socks. Holt had been a sour-dough miner too long to let his partner
+perspire from overmuch clothing. He knew the danger of pneumonia from
+a sudden cooling of the heat of the body.
+
+Old Gideon took seven of his dogs, driving them two abreast. Six were
+huskies, rangy, muscular animals with thick, dense coats. They were in
+the best of spirits and carried their tails erect like their Malemute
+leader. Butch, though a Malemute, had a strong strain of collie in him.
+It gave him a sense of responsibility. His business was to see that the
+team kept strung out on the trail, and Butch was a past-master in the
+matter of discipline. His weight was ninety-three fighting pounds, and
+he could thrash in short order any dog in the team.
+
+The snow was wet and soft. It clung to everything it touched. The dogs
+carried pounds of it in the tufts of hair that rose from their backs.
+An icy pyramid had to be knocked from the sled every half-hour. The
+snowshoes were heavy with white slush. Densely laden spruce boughs
+brushed the faces of the men and showered them with unexpected little
+avalanches.
+
+They took turns in going ahead of the team and breaking trail. It
+was heavy, muscle-grinding work. Before noon they were both utterly
+fatigued. They dragged forward through the slush, lifting their laden
+feet sluggishly. They must keep going, and they did, but it seemed to
+them that every step must be the last.
+
+Shortly after noon the storm wore itself out. The temperature had been
+steadily falling and now it took a rapid drop. They were passing through
+timber, and on a little slope they built with a good deal of difficulty
+a fire. By careful nursing they soon had a great bonfire going, in front
+of which they put their wet socks, mukluks, scarfs, and parkas to dry.
+The toes of the dogs had become packed with little ice balls. Gordon and
+Holt had to go carefully over the feet of each animal to dig these out.
+
+The old-timer thawed out a slab of dried salmon till the fat began to
+frizzle and fed each husky a pound of the fish and a lump of tallow.
+He and Gordon made a pot of tea and ate some meat sandwiches they had
+brought with them to save cooking until night.
+
+When they took the trail again it was in moccasins instead of mukluks.
+The weather was growing steadily colder and with each degree of fall in
+the thermometer the trail became easier.
+
+"Mushing at fifty below zero is all right when it is all right,"
+explained Holt in the words of the old prospector. "But when it isn't
+right it's hell."
+
+"It is not fifty below yet, is it?"
+
+"Nope. But she's on the way. When your breath makes a kinder crackling
+noise she's fifty."
+
+Travel was much easier now. There was a crust on the snow that held up
+the dogs and the sled so that trail-breaking was not necessary. The
+little party pounded steadily over the barren hills. There was no sign
+of life except what they brought with them out of the Arctic silence and
+carried with them into the greater silence beyond. A little cloud of
+steam enveloped them as they moved, the moisture from the breath of nine
+moving creatures in a waste of emptiness.
+
+Each of the men wrapped a long scarf around his mouth and nose for
+protection, and as the part in front of his face became a sheet of ice
+shifted the muffler to another place.
+
+Night fell in the middle of the afternoon, but they kept traveling. Not
+till they were well up toward the summit of the divide did they decide
+to camp. They drove into a little draw and unharnessed the weary dogs.
+It was bitterly cold, but they were forced to set up the tent and stove
+to keep from freezing. Their numbed fingers made a slow job of the camp
+preparations. At last the stove was going, the dogs fed, and they
+themselves thawed out. They fell asleep shortly to the sound of the
+mournful howling of the dogs outside.
+
+Long before daybreak they were afoot again. Holt went out to chop some
+wood for the stove while Gordon made breakfast preparations. The little
+miner brought in an armful of wood and went out to get a second supply.
+A few moments later Elliot heard a cry.
+
+He stepped out of the tent and ran to the spot where Holt was lying
+under a mass of ice and snow. The young man threw aside the broken
+blocks that had plunged down from a ledge above.
+
+"Badly hurt, Gid?" he asked.
+
+"I done bust my laig, son," the old man answered with a twisted grin.
+
+"You mean that it is broken?"
+
+"Tell you that in a minute."
+
+He felt his leg carefully and with Elliot's help tried to get up.
+Groaning, he slid back to the snow.
+
+"Yep. She's busted," he announced.
+
+Gordon carried him to the tent and laid him down carefully. The old
+miner swore softly.
+
+"Ain't this a hell of a note, boy? You'll have to get me to Smith's
+Crossing and leave me there."
+
+It was the only thing to be done. Elliot broke camp and packed the sled.
+Upon the load he put his companion, well wrapped up in furs. He
+harnessed the dogs and drove back to the road.
+
+Two miles farther up the road Gordon stopped his team sharply. He had
+turned a bend in the trail and had come upon an empty stage buried in
+the snow.
+
+The fear that had been uppermost in Elliot's mind for twenty-four hours
+clutched at his throat. Was it tragedy upon which he had come after his
+long journey?
+
+Holt guessed the truth. "They got stalled and cut loose the horses. Must
+have tried to ride the cayuses to shelter."
+
+"To Smith's Crossing?" asked Gordon.
+
+"Expect so." Then, with a whoop, the man on the sled contradicted
+himself. "No, by Moses, to Dick Fiddler's old cabin up the draw. That's
+where Swiftwater would aim for till the blizzard was over."
+
+"Where is it?" demanded his friend.
+
+"Swing over to the right and follow the little gulch. I'll wait till you
+come back."
+
+Gordon dropped the gee-pole and started on the instant. Eagerness,
+anxiety, dread fought in his heart. He knew that any moment now he might
+stumble upon the evidence of the sad story which is repeated in Alaska
+many times every winter. It rang in him like a bell that where tough,
+hardy miners succumbed a frail girl would have small chance.
+
+He cut across over the hill toward the draw, and at what he saw his
+pulse quickened. Smoke was pouring out of the chimney of a cabin and
+falling groundward, as it does in the Arctic during very cold weather.
+Had Sheba found safety there? Or was it the winter home of a prospector?
+
+As he pushed forward the rising sun flooded the earth with pink and
+struck a million sparkles of color from the snow. The wonder of it drew
+the eyes of the young man for a moment toward the hills.
+
+A tumult of joy flooded his veins. The girl who held in her soft hands
+the happiness of his life stood looking at him. It seemed to him that
+she was the core of all that lovely tide of radiance. He moved toward
+her and looked down into the trench where she waited. Swiftly he kicked
+off his snowshoes and leaped down beside her.
+
+The gleam of tears was in her eyes as she held out both hands to him.
+During the long look they gave each other something wonderful to both
+of them was born into the world.
+
+When he tried to speak his hoarse voice broke. "Sheba--little Sheba!
+Safe, after all. Thank God, you--you--" He swallowed the lump in his
+throat and tried again. "If you knew--God, how I have suffered! I was
+afraid--I dared not let myself think."
+
+A live pulse beat in her white throat. The tears brimmed over. Then,
+somehow, she was in his arms weeping. Her eyes slowly turned to his,
+and he met the touch of her surrendered lips.
+
+Nature had brought them together by one of her resistless and
+unpremeditated impulses.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+TWO ON THE TRAIL
+
+
+A stress of emotion had swept her into his arms. Now she drew away from
+him shyly. The conventions in which she had been brought up asserted
+themselves. Sheba remembered that they had been carried by the high wave
+of their emotion past all the usual preliminaries. He had not even told
+her that he loved her. An absurd little fear obtruded itself into her
+happiness. Had she rushed into his arms like a lovesick girl, taking it
+for granted that he cared for her?
+
+"You--came to look for us?" she asked, with the little shy stiffness of
+embarrassment.
+
+"For you--yes."
+
+He could not take his eyes from her. It seemed to him that a bird was
+singing in his heart the gladness he could not express. He had for many
+hours pushed from his mind pictures of her lying white and rigid on the
+snow. Instead she stood beside him, her delicate beauty vivid as the
+flush of a flame.
+
+"Did they telephone that we were lost?"
+
+"Yes. I was troubled when the storm grew. I could not sleep. So I called
+up the roadhouse by long distance. They had not heard from the stage.
+Later I called again. When I could stand it no longer, I started."
+
+"Not on foot?"
+
+"No. With Holt's dog team. He is back there. His leg is broken. A
+snow-slide crushed him this morning where we camped."
+
+"Bring him to the cabin. I will tell the others you are coming."
+
+"Have you had any food?" he asked.
+
+A tired smile lit up the shadows of weariness under her soft, dark eyes.
+"Boiled oats, plum pudding, and chocolates," she told him.
+
+"We have plenty of food on the sled. I'll bring it at once."
+
+She nodded, and turned to go to the cabin. He watched for a moment the
+lilt in her walk. An expression from his reading jumped to his mind.
+Melodious feet! Some poet had said that, hadn't he? Surely it must have
+been Sheba of whom he was thinking, this girl so virginal of body and of
+mind, free and light-footed as a caribou on the hills.
+
+Gordon returned to the sled and drove the team up the draw to the cabin.
+The three who had been marooned came to meet their rescuer.
+
+"You must 'a' come right through the storm lickitty split," Swiftwater
+said.
+
+"You're right we did. This side pardner of mine was hell-bent on
+wrestling with a blizzard," Holt answered dryly.
+
+"Sorry you broke your laig, Gid."
+
+"Then there's two of us sorry, Swiftwater. It's one of the best laigs
+I've got."
+
+Sheba turned to the old miner impulsively. "If you could be knowing what
+I am thinking of you, Mr. Holt,--how full our hearts are of the
+gratitude--" She stopped, tears in her voice.
+
+"Sho! No need of that, Miss. He dragged me along." His thumb jerked
+toward the man who was driving. "I've seen better dog punchers than
+Elliot, but he's got the world beat at routin' old-timers out of bed and
+persuadin' them to kick in with him and buck a blizzard. Me, o' course,
+I'm an old fool for comin'--"
+
+The dark eyes of the girl were like stars in a frosty night. "Then
+you're the kind of a fool I love, Mr. Holt. I think it was just fine of
+you, and I'll never forget it as long as I live."
+
+Mrs. Olson had cooked too long in lumber and mining camps not to know
+something about bone-setting. Under her direction Gordon made splints
+and helped her bandage the broken leg. Meanwhile Swiftwater Pete fed
+his horses from the grain on the sled and Sheba cooked an appetizing
+breakfast. The aroma of coffee and the smell of frying bacon stimulated
+appetites that needed no tempting.
+
+Holt, propped up by blankets, ate with the others. For a good many years
+he had taken his luck as it came with philosophic endurance. Now he
+wasted no time in mourning what could not be helped. He was lucky the
+ice slide had not hit him in the head. A broken leg would mend.
+
+While they ate, the party went into committee of the whole to decide
+what was best to be done. Gordon noticed that in all the tentative
+suggestions made by Holt and Swiftwater the comfort of Sheba was the
+first thing in mind.
+
+The girl, too, noticed it and smilingly protested, her soft hand lying
+for the moment on the gnarled one of the old miner.
+
+"It doesn't matter about me. We have to think of what will be best for
+Mr. Holt, of how to get him to the proper care. My comfort can wait."
+
+The plan at last decided upon was that Gordon should make a dash for
+Smith's Crossing on snowshoes, where he was to arrange for a relief
+party to come out for the injured man and Mrs. Olson. He was to return
+at once without waiting for the rescuers. Next morning he and Sheba
+would start with Holt's dog team for Kusiak.
+
+Macdonald had taught Sheba how to use snowshoes and she had been an
+apt pupil. From her suitcase she got out her moccasins and put them on.
+She borrowed the snowshoes of Holt, wrapped herself in her parka, and
+announced that she was going with Elliot part of the way.
+
+Gordon thought her movements a miracle of supple lightness. Her lines
+had the swelling roundness of vital youth, her eyes were alive with
+the eagerness that time dulls in most faces. They spoke little as they
+swept forward over the white snow-wastes. The spell of the great North
+was over her. Its mystery was stirring in her heart, just as it had
+been when her lips had turned to his at the sunrise. As for him, love
+ran through his veins like old wine. But he allowed his feelings no
+expression. For though she had come to him of her own accord for that
+one blessed minute at dawn, he could not be sure what had moved her so
+deeply. She was treading a world primeval, the wonder of it still in
+her soft eyes. Would she waken to love or to disillusion?
+
+He took care to see that she did not tire. Presently he stopped and held
+out his hand to say good-bye.
+
+"Will you come back this way?" she asked.
+
+"Yes. I ought to get here soon after dark. Will you meet me?"
+
+She gave him a quick, shy little nod, turned without shaking hands, and
+struck out for the cabin. All through the day happiness flooded her
+heart. While she waited on Holt or helped Mrs. Olson cook or watched
+Swiftwater while he put up the tent in the lee of the cabin, little
+snatches of song bubbled from her lips. Sometimes they were bits of old
+Irish ballads that popped into her mind. Once, while she was preparing
+some coffee for her patient, it was a stanza from Burns:--
+
+ "Till a' the seas gang dry, my dear,
+ And the rocks melt wi' the sun:
+ I will luve thee still, my dear,
+ While the sands o' life shall run."
+
+She caught old Gideon looking at her with a queer little smile on his
+weather-tanned face and she felt the color beat into her cheeks.
+
+"I haven't bought a wedding present for twenty years," he told her
+presently, apropos of nothing that had been said. "I won't know what's
+the proper thing to get, Miss Sheba."
+
+"If you talk nonsense like that I'll go out and talk to Mr. Swiftwater
+Pete," she threatened, blushing.
+
+Old Gid folded his hands meekly. "I'll be good--honest I will. Let's
+see. I got to make safe and sane conversation, have I? Hm! Wonder when
+that lazy, long-legged, good-for-nothing horsethief and holdup that
+calls himself Gordon Elliot will get back to camp."
+
+Sheba looked into his twinkling eyes suspiciously as she handed him his
+coffee. For a moment she bit her lip to keep back a smile, then said
+with mock severity,--
+
+"Now, I _am_ going to leave you to Mrs. Olson."
+
+When sunset came it found Sheba on the trail. Swiftwater Pete had
+offered to go with her, but she had been relieved of his well-meant
+kindness by the demand of Holt.
+
+"No, you don't, Pete. You ain't a-goin' off gallivantin' with no young
+lady. You're a-goin' to stay here and fix my game laig for me. What do
+you reckon Miss Sheba wants with a fat, lop-sided lummox like you along
+with her?"
+
+Pete grew purple with embarrassment. He had not intended anything more
+than civility and he wanted this understood.
+
+"Hmp! Ain't you got no sense a-tall, Gid? If Miss Sheba's hell-bent on
+goin' to meet Elliot, I allowed some one ought to go along and keep the
+dark offen her. 'Course there ain't nothin' going to harm her, unless
+she goes and gets lost--"
+
+Sheba's smile cooled the heat of the stage-driver. "Which she isn't
+going to do. Good of you to offer to go with me. Don't mind Mr. Holt.
+Everybody knows he doesn't mean half of what he says. I'd be glad to
+have you come with me, but it isn't necessary at all. So I'll not
+trouble you."
+
+Darkness fell quickly, but Sheba still held to the trail. There was no
+sign of Elliot, but she felt sure he would come soon. Meanwhile she
+followed steadily the tracks he had made earlier in the day.
+
+She stopped at last. It was getting much colder. She was miles from the
+camp. Reluctantly she decided to return. Then, out of the darkness, he
+came abruptly upon her, the man whom she had come out to meet.
+
+Under the magic of the Northern stars they found themselves again in
+each other's arms for that brief moment of joyful surprise. Then, as it
+had been in the morning, Sheba drew herself shyly away.
+
+"They are waiting supper for us," she told him irrelevantly.
+
+He did not shout out his happiness and tell her to let them wait.
+For Gordon, too, felt awed at this wonderful adventure of love that had
+befallen them. It was enough for him that they were moving side by side,
+alone in the deep snows and the biting cold, that waves of emotion
+crashed through his pulses when his swinging hand touched hers.
+
+They were acutely conscious of each other. Excitement burned in the eyes
+that turned to swift, reluctant meetings. She was a woman, and he was
+her lover. Neither of them dared quite accept the fact yet, but it
+filled the background of all their thoughts with delight.
+
+Sheba did not want to talk of this new, amazing thing that had come into
+her life. It was too sacred a subject to discuss just yet even with him.
+So she began to tell him odd fancies from childhood that lingered in her
+Celtic heart, tales of the "little folk" that were half memories and
+half imaginings, stirred to life by some odd association of sky and
+stars. She laughed softly at herself as she told them, but Gordon did
+not laugh at her.
+
+Everything she did was for him divinely done. Even when his eyes were on
+the dark trail ahead he saw only the dusky loveliness of curved cheek,
+the face luminous with a radiance some women are never privileged to
+know, the rhythm of head and body and slender legs that was part of her
+individual, heaven-sent charm.
+
+The rest had finished supper before Gordon and Sheba reached camp, but
+Mrs. Olson had a hot meal waiting for them.
+
+"I fixed up the tent for the women folks--stove, sleeping-bags, plenty
+of wood. Touch a match to the fire and it'll be snug as a bug in a rug,"
+explained Swiftwater to Gordon.
+
+Elliot and Sheba were to start early for Kusiak and later the rescue
+party would arrive to take care of Holt and Mrs. Olson.
+
+"Time to turn in," Holt advised. "You better light that stove, Elliot."
+
+The young man was still in the tent arranging the sleeping-bags when
+Sheba entered. He tried to walk out without touching her, intending to
+call back his good-night. But he could not do it. There was something
+flamey about her to-night that went to his head. Her tender, tremulous
+little smile and the turn of the buoyant little head stirred in him a
+lover's rhapsody.
+
+"It's to be a long trail we cover to-morrow, Sheba. You must sleep.
+Good-night."
+
+"Good-night--Gordon."
+
+There was a little flash of audacity in the whimsical twist of her
+mouth. It was the first time she had ever called him by his given name.
+
+Elliot threw away prudence and caught her by the hands.
+
+"My dear--my dear!" he cried.
+
+She trembled to his kiss, gave herself to his embrace with innocent
+passion. Tendrils of hair, fine as silk, brushed his cheeks and sent
+strange thrills through him.
+
+They talked the incoherent language of lovers that is compounded of
+murmurs and silences and the touch of lips and the meetings of eyes.
+There were to be other nights in their lives as rich in memories as
+this, but never another with quite the same delight.
+
+Presently Sheba reminded him with a smile of the long trail he had
+mentioned. Mrs. Olson bustled into the tent, and her presence stressed
+the point.
+
+"Good-night, neighbors," Gordon called back from outside the tent.
+
+Sheba's "Good-night" echoed softly back to him.
+
+The girl fell asleep to the sound of the light breeze slapping the tent
+and to the doleful howling of the huskies.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+A MESSAGE FROM THE DEAD
+
+
+Macdonald drove his team into the teeth of the storm. The wind came
+in gusts. Sometimes the gale was so stiff that the dogs could scarcely
+crawl forward against it; again there were moments of comparative
+stillness, followed by squalls that slapped the driver in the face like
+the whipping of a loose sail on a catboat.
+
+High drifts made the trail difficult. Not once but fifty times Macdonald
+left the gee-pole to break a way through snow-waves for the sled. The
+best he could get out of his dogs was three miles an hour, and he knew
+that there was not another team or driver in the North could have done
+so well.
+
+It was close to noon when he reached a division of the road known as the
+Fork. One trail ran down to the river and up it to the distant creeks.
+The other led across the divide, struck the Yukon, and pointed a way to
+the coast. White drifts had long since blotted out the track of the sled
+that had preceded him. Had the fugitives gone up the river to the creeks
+with intent to hole themselves up for the winter? Or was it their
+purpose to cross the divide and go out over the ice to the coast?
+
+The pursuer knew that Gid Holt was wise as a weasel. He could follow
+blindfolded the paths that led to every creek in the gold-fields.
+It might be taken as a certainty that he had not plunged into such a
+desperate venture without having a plan well worked out beforehand.
+Elliot had a high grade of intelligence. Would they try to reach the
+coast and make their get-away to Seattle? Or would they dig themselves
+in till the heavy snows were past and come back to civilization with the
+story of a lucky strike to account for the gold they brought with them?
+Neither gold-dust nor nuggets could be identified. There would be no way
+of proving the story false. The only evidence against them would be that
+they had left at Kusiak and this was merely of a corroborative kind.
+There would be no chance of convicting them upon it.
+
+But to strike for Seattle was to throw away all pretense of innocence.
+Fugitives from justice, they would have to disappear from sight in order
+to escape. The hunt for them would continue until at last they were
+unearthed.
+
+One fork of the road led to comparative safety; the other went by
+devious windings to the penitentiary and perhaps the gallows. The
+Scotchman put himself in the place of the men he was trailing. Given
+the same conditions, he knew which path he would follow.
+
+Macdonald took the trail that led down to the river, to the distant
+gold-creeks which offered a refuge from man-hunters in many a deserted
+cabin marooned by the deep snows.
+
+Even the iron frame and steel muscles of the Scotch-Canadian protested
+against the task he had set them that day. It was a time to sit snugly
+inside by a stove and listen to the howling of the wind as it hurled
+itself down from the divide. But from daylight till dark Colby Macdonald
+fought with drifts and breasted the storm. He got into the harness with
+the dogs. He broke trail for them, cheered them, soothed, comforted,
+punished. Long after night had fallen he staggered into the hut of two
+prospectors, his parka so stiff with frozen snow that it had to be
+beaten with a hammer before the coat could be removed.
+
+"How long since a dog team passed--seven huskies and two men?" was his
+first question.
+
+"No dog team has passed for four days," one of the men answered.
+
+"You mean you haven't seen one," Macdonald corrected.
+
+"I mean none has passed--unless it went by in the night while we slept.
+And even then our dogs would have warned us."
+
+Macdonald flung his ice-coated gloves to a table and stooped to take off
+his mukluks. His face was blue with the cold, but the bleak look in the
+eyes came from within. He said nothing more until he was free of his wet
+clothes. Then he sat down heavily and passed a hand over his frozen
+eyebrows.
+
+"Get me something to eat and take care of my dogs. There is food for
+them on the sled," he said.
+
+While he ate he told them of the bank robbery and the murder. Their
+resentment against the men who had done it was quite genuine. There
+could be no doubt they told the truth when they said no sled had
+preceded his. They were honest, reliable prospectors. He knew them
+both well.
+
+The weary man slept like a log. He opened his eyes next morning to find
+one of his hosts shaking him.
+
+"Six o'clock, Mr. Macdonald. Your breakfast is ready. Jim is looking out
+for the huskies."
+
+Half an hour later the Scotchman gave the order, "Mush!" He was off
+again, this time on the back trail as far as the Narrows, from which
+point he meant to strike across to intersect the fork of the road
+leading to the divide.
+
+The storm had passed and when the late sun rose it was in a blue sky.
+Fine enough the day was overhead, but the slushy snow, where it was worn
+thin on the river by the sweep of the wind, made heavy travel for the
+dogs. Macdonald was glad enough to reach the Narrows, where he could
+turn from the river and cut across to hit the trail of the men he was
+following. He had about five miles to go before he would reach the Smith
+Crossing road and every foot of it he would have to break trail for the
+dogs. This was slow business, since he had no partner at the gee-pole.
+Back and forth, back and forth he trudged, beating down the loose snow
+for the runners. It was a hill trail, and the drifts were in most places
+not very deep. But the Scotchman was doing the work of two, and at a
+killing pace.
+
+Over a ridge the team plunged down into a little park where the snow was
+deeper. Macdonald, breaking trail across the mountain valley, found his
+feet weighted with packed ice slush so that he could hardly move them.
+When at last he had beaten down a path for his dogs he stood breathing
+deep at the summit of the slope. Before him lay the main road to Smith's
+Crossing, scarce fifty yards away. He gave a deep whoop of triumph, for
+along it ran the wavering tracks left by a sled. He was on the heels of
+his enemy at last.
+
+As he turned back to his Siberian hounds, the eyes of Macdonald came to
+abrupt attention. On the hillside, not ten yards from him, something
+stuck out of the snow like a signpost. It was the foot of a man.
+
+Slowly Macdonald moved toward it. He knew well enough what he had
+stumbled across--one of the tragedies that in the North are likely
+to be found in the wake of every widespread blizzard. Some unfortunate
+traveler, blinded by the white swirl, had wandered from the trail and
+had staggered up a draw to his death.
+
+With a little digging the Alaskan uncovered a leg. The man had died
+where he had fallen, face down. Macdonald scooped away the snow and
+found a pack strapped to the back of the buried man. He cut the thongs
+and tried to ease it away. But the gunnysack had frozen to the parka.
+When he pulled, the rotten sacking gave way under the strain. The
+contents of the pack spilled out.
+
+The eyes in the grim face of Macdonald grew hard and steely. He had
+found, by some strange freak of chance, much more than he had expected,
+to find. Using his snowshoe as a shovel, he dug the body free and turned
+it over. At sight of the face he gave a cry of astonishment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+"DON'T TOUCH HIM! DON'T YOU DARE TOUCH HIM!"
+
+
+Gordon overslept. His plan had been to reach Kusiak at the end of a
+long day's travel, but that had meant getting on the trail with the
+first gleam of light. When he opened his eyes Mrs. Olson was calling
+him to rise.
+
+He dressed and stepped out into the cold, crisp morning. From the hill
+crotch the sun was already pouring down a great, fanlike shaft of light
+across the snow vista. Swiftwater Pete passed behind him on his way to
+the stable and called a cheerful good-morning in his direction.
+
+Mrs. Olson had put the stove outside the tent and Gordon lifted it to
+the spot where they did the cooking.
+
+"Good-morning, neighbor," he called to Sheba. "Sleep well?"
+
+The little rustling sounds within the tent ceased. A face appeared in
+the doorway, the flaps drawn discreetly close beneath the chin.
+
+"Never better. Is my breakfast ready yet?"
+
+"Come and help me make it. Mrs. Olson is waiting on Holt."
+
+"When I'm dressed." The smiling face disappeared. "Dublin Bay" sounded
+in her fresh young voice from the tent. Gordon joined in the song as he
+lit the fire and sliced bacon from a frozen slab of it.
+
+The howling of the huskies interrupted the song. They had evidently
+heard something that excited them. Gordon listened. Was it in his fancy
+only that the breeze carried to him the faint jingle of sleigh-bells?
+The sound, if it was one, died away. The cook turned to his job.
+
+He stopped sawing at the meat, knife and bacon both suspended in the
+air. On the hard snow there had come to him the crunch of a foot behind
+him. Whose? Sheba was in the tent, Swiftwater at the stable, Mrs. Olson
+in the house. Slowly he turned his head.
+
+What Elliot saw sent the starch through his body. He did not move an
+inch, still sat crouched by the fire, but every nerve was at tension,
+every muscle taut. For he was looking at a rifle lying negligently in
+brown, steady hands. They were very sure hands, very competent ones. He
+knew that because he had seen them in action. The owner of the hands was
+Colby Macdonald.
+
+The Scotch-Canadian stood at the edge of a willow grove. His face was
+grim as the day of judgment.
+
+"Don't move," he ordered.
+
+Elliot laughed irritably. He was both annoyed and disgusted.
+
+"What do you want?" he snapped.
+
+"You."
+
+"What's worrying you now? Do you think I'm jumping my bond?"
+
+"You're going back to Kusiak with me--to give a life for the one you
+took."
+
+"What's that?" cried Gordon, surprised.
+
+"Just as I'm telling you. I've been on your heels ever since you left
+town. You and Holt are going back with me as my prisoners."
+
+"But what for?"
+
+"For robbing the bank and murdering Robert Milton, as you know well
+enough."
+
+"Is this another plant arranged for me by you and Selfridge?" demanded
+Elliot.
+
+Macdonald ignored the question and lifted his voice. "Come out of that
+tent, Holt,--and come with your hands up unless you want your head blown
+off."
+
+"Holt isn't in that tent, you damned idiot. If you want to know--"
+
+"Come _now_, if you expect to come alive," cut in the Scotchman
+ominously. He raised the rifle to his shoulder and covered the shadow
+thrown by the sun on the figure within.
+
+Gordon flung out a wild protest and threw the frozen slab of bacon at
+the head of Macdonald. With the same motion he launched his own body
+across the stove. A fifth of a second earlier the tent flap had opened
+and Sheba had come out.
+
+The sight of her paralyzed Macdonald and saved her lover's life.
+It distracted the mine-owner long enough for him to miss his chance.
+A bullet struck the stove and went off at a tangent through the tent
+canvas not two feet from where Sheba stood. A second went speeding
+toward the sun. For Gordon had followed the football player's instinct
+and dived for the knees of his enemy.
+
+They went down together. Each squirming for the upper place, they
+rolled over and over. The rifle was forgotten. Like cave men they
+fought, crushing and twisting each other's muscles with the blind lust
+of primordials to kill. As they clinched with one arm, they struck
+savagely with the other. The impact of smashing blows on naked flesh
+sounded horribly cruel to Sheba.
+
+She ran forward, calling on each by name to stop. Probably neither knew
+she was there. Their whole attention was focused on each other. Not for
+an instant did their eyes wander, for life and death hung on the issue.
+Chance had lit the spark of their resentment, but long-banked passions
+were blazing fiercely now.
+
+They got to their feet and fought toe to toe. Sledge-hammer blows beat
+upon bleeding and disfigured faces. No thought of defense as yet was
+in the mind of either. The purpose of each was to bruise, maim, make
+helpless the other. But for the impotent little cries of Sheba no sound
+broke the stillness save the crunch of their feet on the hard snow,
+the thud of heavy fists on flesh, and the throaty snarl of their deep,
+irregular breathing.
+
+Gid Holt, from the window of the cabin, watched the battle with shining
+eyes. He exulted in every blow of Gordon; he suffered with him when the
+smashing rights and lefts of Macdonald got home. He shouted jeers,
+advice, threats, encouragement. If he had had ten thousand dollars
+wagered on the outcome he could not have been more excited.
+
+Swiftwater Pete, drawn by the cries of Sheba, came running from the
+stable. As he passed the window, Holt caught him by the arm.
+
+"What are you aimin' to do, Pete? Let 'em alone. Let 'em go to it.
+They got to have it out. Stop 'em now and they'll get at it with guns."
+
+Sheba ran up, wringing her hands. "Stop them, please. They're killing
+each other."
+
+"Nothing of the kind, girl. You let 'em alone, Pete. The kid's
+there every minute, ain't he? Gee, that's a good one, boy.
+Seven--eleven--ninety-two. 'Attaboy!"
+
+Macdonald had slipped on the snow and gone down to his hands and knees.
+Swift as a wildcat the younger man was on top of him. Hampered though he
+was by his parka, the Scotchman struggled slowly to his feet again. He
+was much the heavier man, and in spite of his years the stronger. The
+muscles stood out in knots on his shoulders and across his back, whereas
+on the body of his more slender opponent they flowed and rippled in
+rounded symmetry. Active as a heather cat, Elliot was far the quicker
+of the two.
+
+Half-blinded by the hammering he had received, Gordon changed his method
+of fighting. He broke away from the clinch and sidestepped the bull-like
+rush of his foe, covering up as well as he could from the onset.
+Macdonald pressed the attack and was beaten back by hard, straight lefts
+and rights to the unprotected face.
+
+The mine-owner shook the matted hair from his swollen eyes and rushed
+again. He caught an uppercut flush on the end of the chin. It did not
+even stop him. The weight of his body was in the blow he lashed up from
+his side.
+
+The knees of Elliot doubled up under him like the blade of a jackknife.
+He sank down slowly, turned, got to his hands and knees, and tried to
+shake off the tons of weight that seemed to be holding him down.
+
+Macdonald seized him about the waist and flung him to the ground. Upon
+the inert body the victor dropped, his knees clinching the torso of the
+unconscious man.
+
+"Now, Pete. Go to him," urged Holt wildly.
+
+But before Swiftwater could move, before the great fist of Macdonald
+could smash down upon the bleeding face upturned to his, a sharp blow
+struck the flesh of the raised forearm and for the moment stunned the
+muscles. The Scotch-Canadian lifted a countenance drunk with rage,
+passion-tossed.
+
+Slowly the light of reason came back into his eyes. Sheba was standing
+before him, his rifle in her hand. She had struck him with the butt of
+it.
+
+"Don't touch him! Don't you dare touch him!" she challenged.
+
+He looked at her long, then let his eyes fall to the battered face of
+his enemy. Drunkenly he got to his feet and leaned against a willow.
+His forces were spent, his muscles weighted as with lead. But it was not
+this alone that made his breath come short and raggedly.
+
+Sheba had flung herself down beside her lover. She had caught him
+tightly in her arms so that his disfigured face lay against her warm
+bosom. In the eyes lifted to those of the mine-owner was an
+unconquerable defiance.
+
+"He's mine--mine, you murderer," she panted fiercely. "If you kill him,
+you must kill me first."
+
+The man she had once promised to marry was looking at a different woman
+from the girl he had known. The soft, shy youth of her was gone. She was
+a forest mother of the wilds ready to fight for her young, a wife ready
+to go to the stake for the husband of her choice. An emotion primitive
+and poignant had transformed her.
+
+His eyes burned at her the question his parched lips and throat could
+scarcely utter. "So you ... love him?"
+
+But though it was in form a question he knew already the answer. For the
+first time in his life he began to taste the bitterness of defeat.
+Always he had won what he coveted by brutal force or his stark will. But
+it was beyond him to compel the love of a girl who had given her heart
+to another.
+
+"Yes," she answered.
+
+Her hair in two thick braids was flung across her shoulders, her dark
+head thrown back proudly from the rounded throat.
+
+Macdonald smiled, but there was no mirth in his savage eyes. "Do you
+know what I want with him--why I have come to get him?"
+
+"No."
+
+"I've come to take him back to Kusiak to be hanged because he murdered
+Milton, the bank cashier."
+
+The eyes of the woman blazed at him. "Are you mad?"
+
+"It's the truth." Macdonald's voice was curt and harsh. "He and Holt
+were robbing the bank when Milton came back from the dance at the club.
+The cowards shot down the old man like a dog. They'll hang for it if it
+costs me my last penny, so help me God."
+
+"You say it's the truth," she retorted scornfully. "Do you think I don't
+know you now--how you twist and distort facts to suit your ends? How
+long is it since your jackal had him arrested for assaulting you--when
+Wally Selfridge knew--and you knew--that he had risked his life for you
+and had saved yours by bringing you to Diane's after he had bandaged
+your wounds?"
+
+"That was different. It was part of the game of politics we were
+playing."
+
+"You admit that you and your friends lied then. Is it like you could
+persuade me that you're telling the truth now?"
+
+The big Alaskan shrugged. "Believe it or not as you like. Anyhow, he's
+going back with me to Kusiak--and Holt, too, if he's here."
+
+An excited cackle cut into the conversation, followed by a drawling
+announcement from the window. "Your old tillicum is right here, Mac.
+What's the use of waiting? Why don't you have your hanging-bee now?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+HOLT FREES HIS MIND
+
+
+Macdonald whirled in his tracks.
+
+Old Gid Holt was leaning on his elbow with his head out of the window.
+"You better come and beat me up first, Mac," he jeered. "I'm all stove
+up with a busted laig, so you can wollop me good. I'd come out there,
+but I'm too crippled to move."
+
+"You're not too crippled to go back to Kusiak with me. If you can't
+walk, you'll ride. But back you go."
+
+"Fine. I been worrying about how to get there. It's right good of you to
+bring one of these here taxis for me, as the old sayin' is."
+
+"Where is the rest of the gold you stole?"
+
+"I ain't seen the latest papers, Mac. What is this stuff about robbin' a
+bank and shootin' Milton?"
+
+"You're under arrest for robbery and murder."
+
+"Am I? Unload the particulars. When did I do it all?"
+
+"You know when. Just before you left town."
+
+Holt shook his head slowly. "No, sir. I can't seem to remember it. Sure
+it ain't some one else you're thinking about? Howcome you to fix on me
+as one of the bold, bad bandits?"
+
+"Because you had not sense enough to cover your tracks. You might just
+as well have left a note saying you did it. First, you come to town and
+buy one of the fastest dog teams in Alaska. Why?"
+
+"That's an easy one. I bought that team to win the Alaska Sweepstakes
+from you. And I'm goin' to do it. The team wasn't handled right or it
+would have won last time. I got to millin' it over and figured that old
+Gid Holt was the dog puncher that could land those huskies in front.
+See?"
+
+"You bought it to make your getaway after the robbery," retorted
+Macdonald.
+
+"It's a difference of opinion makes horse-races. What else have you got
+against us?"
+
+"We found in your room one of the sacks that had held the gold you took
+from the bank."
+
+"That's right. I took it from the bank in the afternoon, where I had had
+it on deposit, to pay for the team I bought. Milton's books will show
+that. But you didn't find any sack I took when your bank was robbed--if
+it was robbed," added the old man significantly.
+
+"Of course, I knew you would have an alibi. Have you got one to explain
+why you left town so suddenly the night the bank was robbed? Milton was
+killed after midnight. Before morning you and your friend Elliot routed
+out Ackroyd and bought a lot of supplies from him for a hurry-up trip.
+You slipped around to the corral and hit the trail right into the
+blizzard. Will you tell me why you were in such a hurry to get away, if
+it wasn't to escape from the town where you had murdered a decent old
+fellow who never had harmed a soul?"
+
+"Sure I'll tell you." The black eyes of the little man snapped eagerly.
+"I came so p. d. q. because that side pardner of mine Gordon Elliot
+wouldn't let me wait till mornin'. He had a reason for leavin' town that
+wouldn't wait a minute, one big enough to drive him right into the heart
+of the blizzard. Me, I tagged along."
+
+"I can guess his reason," jeered the Scotchman. "But I'd like to hear
+you put a name to it."
+
+Holt grinned maliciously and waved a hand toward the girl who was
+pillowing the head of her lover. "The name of his reason is Sheba
+O'Neill, but it's goin' to be Sheba Elliot soon, looks like."
+
+"You mean--"
+
+The little miner took the words triumphantly out of his mouth. He leaned
+forward and threw them into the face of the man he hated. "I mean that
+while you was dancin' and philanderin' with other women, Gordon Elliot
+was buckin' a blizzard to save the life of the girl you both claimed
+to love. He was mushin' into fifty miles of frozen hell while you was
+fillin' up with potted grouse and champagne. Simultaneous with the lame
+goose and the monkey singlestep you was doin,' this lad was windjammin'
+through white drifts. He beat you at your own game, man. You're a bear
+for the outdoor stuff, they tell me. You chew up a blizzard for
+breakfast and throttle a pack of wolves to work up an appetite for
+dinner. It's your specialty. All right. Take your hat off to that
+chechacko who has just whaled you blind. He has outgamed you, Colby
+Macdonald. You don't run in his class. I see he is holding his haid up
+again. Give him another half-hour and he'd be ready to go to the mat
+with you again."
+
+The big Alaskan pushed away a fear that had been lingering in his mind
+ever since he had stumbled on that body buried in the snow yesterday
+afternoon. Was his enemy going to escape him, after all? Could Holt be
+telling the true reason why they had left town so hurriedly? He would
+not let himself believe it.
+
+"You ought to work up a better story than that," he said contemptuously.
+"You can throw a husky through the holes in it. How could Elliot know,
+for instance, that Miss O'Neill was not safe?"
+
+"The same way you could' a' known it," snapped old Gideon. "He 'phoned
+to Smith's Crossin' and found the stage hadn't got in and that there was
+a hell of a storm up in the hills."
+
+Macdonald set his face. "You're lying to me. You stumbled over the stage
+while you were making your getaway. Now you're playing it for an alibi."
+
+Elliot had risen. Sheba stood beside him, her hand in his. She spoke
+quietly.
+
+"It's the truth. Believe it or not as you please. We care nothing about
+that."
+
+The stab of her eyes, the carriage of the slim, pliant figure with its
+suggestion of fine gallantry, challenged her former lover to do his
+worst.
+
+On the battered face of Gordon was a smile. So long as his Irish
+sweetheart stood by him he did not care if he were charged with high
+treason. It was worth all it cost to feel the warmth of her brave,
+impulsive trust.
+
+The deep-set eyes of Macdonald clinched with those of his rival. "You
+cached the rest of the gold, I suppose," he said doggedly.
+
+With a lift of his shoulders the younger man answered lightly. "There
+are none so blind as those who will not see, Mr. Macdonald." He turned
+to Sheba. "Come. We must make breakfast."
+
+"You're going to Kusiak with me," his enemy said bluntly.
+
+"After we have eaten, Mr. Macdonald," returned Elliot with an ironic
+bow. "Perhaps, if you have not had breakfast yet, you will join us."
+
+"We start in half an hour," announced the mine-owner curtly, and he
+turned on his heel.
+
+The rifle lay where Sheba had dropped it when she ran to gather her
+stricken lover into her arms. Macdonald picked it up and strode over the
+brow of the hill without a backward look. He was too proud to stay and
+watch them. It was impossible to escape him in the deep snow that filled
+the hill trails, and he was convinced they would attempt nothing of the
+kind.
+
+The Scotchman felt for the first time in his life old and spent. Under
+tremendous difficulty he had mushed for two days and had at last run his
+men down. The lust of vengeance had sat on his shoulders every mile of
+the way and had driven him feverishly forward. But the salt that had
+lent a savor to his passion was gone. Even though he won, he lost. For
+Sheba had gone over to the enemy.
+
+With the fierce willfulness of his temperament he tried to tread under
+foot his doubts about the guilt of Holt and Elliot. Success had made him
+arrogant and he was not a good loser. He hated the man who had robbed
+him of Sheba, but he could not escape respecting him. Elliot had fought
+until he had been hammered down into unconsciousness and he had crawled
+to his feet and stood erect with the smile of the unconquered on his
+lips. Was this the sort of man to murder in cold blood a kindly old
+gentleman who had never harmed him?
+
+The only answer Macdonald found was that Milton had taken him and his
+partners by surprise. They had been driven to shoot the cashier to cover
+up their crime. Perhaps Holt or another had fired the actual shots, but
+Elliot was none the less guilty. The heart of the Scotchman was bitter
+within him. He intended to see that his enemies paid to the last ounce.
+He would harry them to the gallows if money and influence could do it.
+
+None the less, his doubts persisted. If they had planned the bank
+robbery, why did they wait so long to buy supplies for their escape? Why
+had they not taken the river instead of the hill trail? The story that
+his enemies told hung together. It had the ring of truth. The facts
+supported it.
+
+One piece of evidence in their favor Macdonald alone knew. It lay buried
+in the deep snows of the hills. He shut his strong teeth in the firm
+resolve that it should stay there.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+SHEBA DIGS
+
+
+The weather had moderated a good deal, but the trail was a protected
+forest one. The two teams now going down had come up, so that the path
+was packed fairly hard and smooth. Holt lay propped on his own sled
+against the sleeping-bags. Sheba mushed behind Gordon. She chatted with
+them both, but ignored entirely the existence of Macdonald, who followed
+with his prize-winning Siberian dogs.
+
+Though she tried not to let her lover know it, Sheba was troubled at
+heart. Gordon was practically the prisoner of a man who hated him
+bitterly, who believed him guilty of murder, and who would go through
+fire to bring punishment home to him. She knew the power of Macdonald.
+With the money back of him, he had for two years fought against and
+almost prevailed over a strong public opinion in the United States. He
+was as masterful in his hatred as in his love. The dominant, fighting
+figure in the Northwest, he trod his sturdy way through opposition like
+a Colossus.
+
+Nor did she any longer have any illusions about him. He could be both
+ruthless and unscrupulous when it suited his purpose. As the day wore
+toward noon, her spirits drooped. She was tired physically, and this
+reacted upon her courage.
+
+The warmer weather was spoiling the trail. It became so soft and mushy
+that though snowshoes were needed, they could not be worn on account of
+the heavy snow which clung to them every time a foot was lifted. They
+wore mukluks, but Sheba was wet to the knees. The spring had gone from
+her step. Her shoulders began to sag.
+
+For some time Gordon's eye had been seeking a good place for a day camp.
+He found it in a bit of open timber above the trail, and without a word
+he swung his team from the path.
+
+"Where are you going?" demanded Macdonald.
+
+"Going to rest for an hour," was Elliot's curt answer.
+
+Macdonald's jaw clamped. He strode forward through the snow beside the
+trail. "We'll see about that."
+
+The younger man faced him angrily. "Can't you see she is done, man?
+There is not another mile of travel in her until she has rested."
+
+The hard, gray eyes of the Alaskan took in the slender, weary figure
+leaning against the sled. On a soft and mushy trail like this, where
+every footstep punched a hole in the loose snow, the dogs could not
+travel with any extra weight. A few miles farther down they would come
+to a main-traveled road and the going would be better. But till then she
+must walk. Macdonald gave way with a gesture of his hand and turned on
+his heel.
+
+At the camp-fire Sheba dried her mukluks, stockings, caribou mitts, and
+short skirts. Too tired to eat, she forced herself to swallow a few
+bites and drank eagerly some tea. Gordon had brought blankets from the
+sled and he persuaded her to lie down for a few minutes.
+
+"You'll call me soon if I should sleep," she said drowsily, and her eyes
+were closed almost before the words were off her lips.
+
+When Macdonald came to order the start half an hour later, she was still
+asleep. "Give her another thirty minutes," he said gruffly.
+
+Youth is resilient. Sheba awoke rested and ready for work.
+
+While Gordon was untangling the dogs she was left alone for a minute
+with the mine-owner.
+
+The hungry look in his eyes touched her. Impulsively she held out her
+hand.
+
+"You're going to be fair, aren't you, Mr. Macdonald? Because you--don't
+like him--you won't--?"
+
+He looked straight into the dark, appealing eyes. "I'm going to be fair
+to Robert Milton," he told her harshly. "I'm going to see his murderers
+hanged if it costs me every dollar I have in the world."
+
+"None of us object to justice," she told him proudly. "Gordon has
+nothing to fear if only the truth is told."
+
+"Then why come to me?" he demanded.
+
+She hesitated; then with a wistful little smile, spoke what was in her
+heart. "I'm afraid you won't do justice to yourself. You're good--and
+brave--and strong. But you're very willful and set. I don't want to lose
+my friend. I want to know that he is all I have believed him--a great
+man who stands for the things that are fine and clean and just."
+
+"Then it is for my sake and not for his that you want me to drop the
+case against Elliot?" he asked ironically.
+
+"For yours and for his, too. You can't hurt him. Nobody can really be
+hurt from outside--not unless he is a traitor to himself. And Gordon
+Elliot isn't that. He couldn't do such a thing as this with which you
+charge him. It is not in his nature. He can explain everything."
+
+"I don't doubt that. He and his friend Holt are great little
+explainers."
+
+In spite of his bitterness Sheba felt a change in him. She seemed to
+have a glimpse of his turbid soul engaged in battle. He turned away
+without shaking hands, but it struck her that he was not implacable.
+
+While they were at luncheon half a dozen pack-mules laden with supplies
+for a telephone construction line outfit had passed. Their small,
+sharp-shod hoofs had punched sink-holes in the trail at every step.
+Instead of a smooth bottom the dogs found a slushy bog cut to pieces.
+
+At the end of an hour of wallowing Macdonald called a halt.
+
+"There is a cutoff just below here. It will save us nearly two miles,
+but we'll have to break trail. Swing to the right just below the big
+willow," he told Elliot. "I'll join you presently and relieve you on the
+job. But first Miss O'Neill and I are going for a little side trip."
+
+All three of them looked at him in sharp surprise. Gordon opened his
+lips to answer and closed them again without speaking. Sheba had flashed
+a warning to him.
+
+"I hope this trip isn't very far off the trail," she said quietly. "I'm
+just a wee bit tired."
+
+"It's not far," the mine-owner said curtly.
+
+He was busy unpacking his sled. Presently he found the dog moccasins for
+which he had been looking, repacked his sled, and fitted the shoes to
+the bleeding feet of the team leader. Elliot, suspicious and uncertain
+what to do, watched him at work, but at a signal from Sheba turned
+reluctantly away and drove down to the cutoff.
+
+Macdonald turned his dogs out of the trail and followed a little ridge
+for perhaps a quarter of a mile. Sheba trudged behind him. She was full
+of wonder at what he meant to do, but she asked no questions. Some wise
+instinct was telling her to do exactly as he said.
+
+From the sled he took a shovel and gave it to the young woman. "Dig just
+this side of the big rock--close to the root of the tree," he told her.
+
+Sheba dug, and at the second stroke of the spade struck something hard.
+He stooped and pulled out a sack.
+
+"Open it," he said. "Rip it with this knife."
+
+She ran the knife along the coarse weave of the cloth. Fifteen or twenty
+smaller sacks lay exposed. Sheba looked up at Macdonald, a startled
+question in her eyes.
+
+He nodded. "You've guessed it. This is part of the gold for which Robert
+Milton was murdered."
+
+"But--how did it get here?"
+
+"I buried it there yesterday. Come."
+
+He led her around the rock. Back of it lay something over which was
+spread a long bit of canvas. The heart of Sheba was beating wildly.
+
+The Scotchman looked at her from a rock-bound face. "Underneath this
+canvas is the body of one of the men who murdered Milton. He died more
+miserably than the man he shot. Half the gold stolen from the bank is in
+that gunnysack you have just dug up. If you'll tell me who has the other
+half, I'll tell you who helped him rob the bank."
+
+"This man--who is he?" asked Sheba, almost in a whisper. She was
+trembling with excitement and nervousness.
+
+Macdonald drew back the cloth and showed the rough, hard face of a
+workingman.
+
+"His name was Trelawney. I kicked him out of our camps because he was a
+trouble-maker."
+
+"He was one of the men that robbed you later!" she exclaimed.
+
+"Yes. And now he has tried to rob me again and has paid for it with his
+life."
+
+Her mind flashed back over the past. "Then his partner in this last
+crime must have been the same man--what's his name?--that was with him
+last time."
+
+"Northrup." He nodded slowly. "I hate to believe it, but it is probably
+true. And he, too, is lying somewhere in this park covered with snow--if
+our guess is right."
+
+"And Gordon--you admit he didn't do it?"
+
+Again he nodded, sulkily. "No. He didn't do it."
+
+Joy lilted in her voice. "So you've brought me here to tell me. Oh, I am
+glad, my friend, that you were so good. And it is like you to do it. You
+have always been the good friend to me."
+
+The Scotchman smiled, a little wistfully. "You take a mean advantage
+of a man. You nurse him when he is ill--and are kind to him when he
+is well--and try to love him, though he is twice your age and more.
+Then, when his enemy is in his power, he finds he can't strike him down
+without striking you too. Take your young man, Sheba O'Neill, and marry
+him, and for God's sake, get him out of Alaska before I come to grips
+with him again. I'm not a patient man, and he's tried me sair. They say
+I'm a good hater, and I always thought it true. But what's the use of
+hating a man when your soft arms are round him for an armor?"
+
+The fine eyes of the girl were wells of warm light. Her gladness was
+not for herself and her lover only, but for the friend that had been so
+nearly lost and was now found. He believed he had done it for her, but
+Sheba was sure his reasons lay deeper. He was too much of a man to hide
+evidence and let his rival be falsely accused of murder. It was not in
+him to do a cheap thing like that. When it came to the pinch, he was too
+decent to stab in the back. But she was willing to take him on his own
+ground.
+
+"I'll always be thanking you for your goodness to me," she told him
+simply.
+
+He brushed that aside at once. "There's one thing more, lass. I'll
+likely not be seeing you again alone, so I'll say it now. Don't waste
+any tears on Colby Macdonald. Don't fancy any story-book foolishness
+about spoiling his life. That may be true of halfling boys, maybe, but
+a man goes his ain gait even when he gets a bit facer."
+
+"Yes," she agreed. And in a flash she saw what would happen, that in the
+reaction from his depression he would turn to Genevieve Mallory and
+marry her.
+
+"You're too young for me, anyhow,--too soft and innocent. Once you told
+me that you couldn't keep step with me. It's true. You can't. It was a
+daft dream."
+
+He took a deep breath, seemed to shake himself out of it, and smiled
+cheerfully upon her.
+
+"We'll put our treasure-trove on the sled and go back to your friends,"
+he continued briskly. "To-morrow I'll send men up to scour the hills for
+Northrup's body."
+
+Sheba drew the canvas back over the face of the dead man. As she
+followed Macdonald back to the trail, tears filled her eyes. She was
+remembering that the white, stinging death that had crept upon these men
+so swiftly had missed her by a hair's breadth. The strong, lusty life
+had been stricken out of the big Cornishman and probably of his partner
+in crime. Perhaps they had left mothers or wives or sweethearts to mourn
+them.
+
+Macdonald relieved Elliot at breaking trail and the young man went back
+to the gee-pole. They had discarded mukluks and wore moccasins and
+snowshoes. It was hard, slow work, for the trail-breaker had to fight
+his way through snow along the best route he could find. The moon was
+high when at last they reached the roadhouse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+DIANE CHANGES HER MIND
+
+
+The news of Sheba's safety had been telephoned to Diane from the
+roadhouse, so that all the family from Peter down were on the porch to
+welcome her with mingled tears and kisses. Since Gordon had to push on
+to the hospital to have Holt taken care of, it was Macdonald who brought
+the girl home. The mine-owner declined rather brusquely an invitation to
+stay to dinner on the plea that he had business at the office which
+would not wait.
+
+Impulsively Sheba held out both her hands to him. "Believe me, I am
+thanking you with the whole of my heart, my friend. And I'm praying for
+you the old Irish blessing, 'God save you kindly.'"
+
+The deep-set, rapacious eyes of the Scotchman burned into hers for an
+instant. Without a word he released her hands and turned away.
+
+Her eyes followed him, a vital, dynamic American who would do big,
+lawless things to the day of his death. She sighed. He had been a great
+figure in her life, and now he had passed out of it.
+
+[Illustration: FOR HIM THE BEAUTY OF THE NIGHT LAY LARGELY IN HER
+PRESENCE]
+
+As soon as she was alone with Diane, her Irish cousin dropped the little
+bomb she had up her sleeve.
+
+"I'm going to be married Thursday, Di."
+
+Mrs. Paget embraced her for the tenth time within the hour. She was very
+fond of Sheba, and she had been on a great strain concerning her safety.
+That out of her danger had resulted the engagement Diane had hoped for
+was surplusage of good luck.
+
+"You lucky, sensible girl."
+
+Sheba assented demurely. "I do think I'm sensible as well as lucky. It
+isn't every girl that knows the right man for her even when he wants
+her. But I know at last. He's the man for me out of ten million."
+
+"I'm sure of it, dear. Oh, I am _so_ glad." Diane hugged her again.
+She couldn't help it.
+
+"One gets to know a man pretty well on a trip like that. I wouldn't
+change mine for any one that was ever made. I like everything about him,
+Di. I am the happiest girl."
+
+"I'm so glad you see it that way at last." Diane passed to the practical
+aspect of the situation. "But Thursday. Will that give us time, my dear?
+And who are you going to have here?"
+
+"Just the family. I've invited two guests, but neither of them can come.
+One has a broken leg and the other says he doesn't want to see me
+married to another man," Sheba explained with a smile.
+
+"So Gordon won't come."
+
+"Yes. He'll have to be here. We can't get along without the bridegroom.
+It wouldn't be a legal marriage, would it?"
+
+Diane looked at her, for the moment dumb. "You little wretch!" she got
+out at last. "So it's Gordon, is it? Are you quite sure this time? Not
+likely to change your mind before Thursday?"
+
+"I suppose, to an outsider, I do seem fickle," Miss O'Neill admitted
+smilingly. "But Gordon and I both understand that."
+
+"And Colby Macdonald--does he understand it too?"
+
+"Oh, yes." Her smile grew broader. "He told me that he didn't think I
+would quite suit him, after all. Not enough experience for the place."
+
+Diane flashed a suspicious look of inquiry. "Of course that's nonsense.
+What did he tell you?"
+
+"Something like that. He will marry Mrs. Mallory, I think, though he
+doesn't know it yet."
+
+"You mean she will get him on the rebound," said Diane bluntly.
+
+"That isn't a nice way to put it. He has always liked her very much. He
+is fond of her for what she is. What attracted him in me were the things
+his imagination gave to me."
+
+"And Gordon likes you, I suppose, for what you are?"
+
+Sheba did not resent the little note of friendly sarcasm. "I suppose he
+has his fancies about me, too, but by the time he finds out what I am
+he'll have to put up with me."
+
+The arrival of Elliot interrupted confidences. He had come, he said, to
+receive congratulations.
+
+"What in the world have you been doing with your face?" demanded Diane.
+As an afterthought she added: "Mr. Macdonald is all cut up too."
+
+"We've been taking massage treatment." Gordon passed to a subject of
+more immediate interest. "Do I get my congratulations, Di?"
+
+She kissed him, too, for old sake's sake. "I do believe you'll suit
+Sheba better than Colby Macdonald would. He's a great man and you are
+not. But it isn't everybody that is fit to be the wife of a great man."
+
+"That's a double, left-handed compliment," laughed Gordon. "But you
+can't say anything that will hurt my feelings to-day, Di. Isn't that
+your baby I heap crying? What a heartless mother you are!"
+
+Diane gave him the few minutes alone with Sheba that his gay smile had
+asked for. "Get out with you," she said, laughing. "Go to the top of the
+hill and look at the lovers' moon I've ordered there expressly for you;
+and while you are there forget that there are going to be crying babies
+and nursemaids with evenings out in that golden future of yours."
+
+"Come along, Sheba. We'll start now on the golden trail," said Elliot.
+
+She walked as if she loved it. Her long, slender legs moved rhythmically
+and her arms swung true as pendulums.
+
+The moon was all that Diane had promised. Sheba drank it in happily.
+
+"I believe I must be a pagan. I love the sun and the moon and I know
+it's all true about the little folk and the pied piper and--"
+
+"If it's paganism to be in love with the world, you are a thirty-third
+degree pagan."
+
+"Well, and was there ever a more beautiful night before?"
+
+He thought not, but he had not the words to tell her that for him its
+beauty lay largely in her presence. Her passionate love of things fine
+and brave transformed the universe for him. It was enough for him to
+be near her, to hear the laughter bubbling in her throat, to touch her
+crisp, blue-black hair as he adjusted the scarf about her head.
+
+"God made the night," he replied. "So that's a Christian thought as well
+as a pagan one."
+
+They were no exception to the rule that lovers are egoists. The world
+for them to-night divided itself into two classes. One included Sheba
+O'Neill and Gordon Elliot; the other took in the uninteresting remnant
+of humanity. No matter how far afield their talk began, it always came
+back to themselves. They wanted to know all about each other, to compare
+experiences and points of view. But time fled too fast for words. They
+talked--as lovers will to the end of time--in exclamations and the
+meeting of eyes and little endearments.
+
+When Diane and Peter found them on the hilltop, Sheba protested, with
+her half-shy, half-audacious smile, that it could not be two hours since
+she and Gordon had left the living-room. Peter grinned. He remembered a
+hilltop consecrated to his own courtship of Diane.
+
+The only wedding present that Macdonald sent Sheba was a long envelope
+with two documents attached by a clip. One was from the Kusiak "Sun."
+It announced that the search party had found the body of Northrup with
+the rest of the stolen gold beside him. The other was a copy of a legal
+document. Its effect was that the district attorney had dismissed all
+charges pending against Gordon Elliot.
+
+Although Macdonald lost the coal claims at Kamatlah by reason of the
+report of Elliot, all Alaska still believes that he was right. In that
+country of strong men he stands head and shoulders above his fellows.
+He has the fortunate gift of commanding the admiration of friend and
+foe alike. The lady who is his wife is secretly the greatest of his
+slaves, but she tries not to let him know how much he has captured her
+imagination. For Genevieve Macdonald cannot quite understand, herself,
+how so elemental an emotion as love can have pierced the armor of her
+sophistication.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE YUKON TRAIL***
+
+
+******* This file should be named 19527.txt or 19527.zip *******
+
+
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/9/5/2/19527
+
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
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