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+Project Gutenberg's The Valley of Silent Men, by James Oliver Curwood
+
+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 Valley of Silent Men
+
+Author: James Oliver Curwood
+
+Release Date: July 14, 2009 [EBook #29407]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VALLEY OF SILENT MEN ***
+
+
+
+
+Thanks to Al Haines, based on the
+non-illustrated version, at
+https://www.gutenberg.org/etext/4707
+
+Thanks to Robert Rowe, Dianne Bean, Charles Franks and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Frontispiece: From the girl's revolver leaped forth a sudden spurt of
+smoke and flame.]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE VALLEY OF SILENT MEN
+
+A STORY OF THE THREE RIVER COUNTRY
+
+
+BY
+
+JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD
+
+
+
+AUTHOR OF "THE RIVER'S END," ETC.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE VALLEY OF SILENT MEN
+
+
+Before the railroad's thin lines of steel bit their way up through the
+wilderness, Athabasca Landing was the picturesque threshold over which
+one must step who would enter into the mystery and adventure of the
+great white North. It is still _Iskwatam_--the "door" which opens to the
+lower reaches of the Athabasca, the Slave, and the Mackenzie. It is
+somewhat difficult to find on the map, yet it is there, because its
+history is written in more than a hundred and forty years of romance
+and tragedy and adventure in the lives of men, and is not easily
+forgotten. Over the old trail it was about a hundred and fifty miles
+north of Edmonton. The railroad has brought it nearer to that base of
+civilization, but beyond it the wilderness still howls as it has howled
+for a thousand years, and the waters of a continent flow north and into
+the Arctic Ocean. It is possible that the beautiful dream of the
+real-estate dealers may come true, for the most avid of all the
+sportsmen of the earth, the money-hunters, have come up on the bumpy
+railroad that sometimes lights its sleeping cars with lanterns, and
+with them have come typewriters, and stenographers, and the art of
+printing advertisements, and the Golden Rule of those who sell handfuls
+of earth to hopeful purchasers thousands of miles away--"Do others as
+they would do you." And with it, too, has come the legitimate business
+of barter and trade, with eyes on all that treasure of the North which
+lies between the Grand Rapids of the Athabasca and the edge of the
+polar sea. But still more beautiful than the dream of fortunes quickly
+made is the deep-forest superstition that the spirits of the wilderness
+dead move onward as steam and steel advance, and if this is so, the
+ghosts of a thousand Pierres and Jacquelines have risen uneasily from
+their graves at Athabasca Landing, hunting a new quiet farther north.
+
+For it was Pierre and Jacqueline, Henri and Marie, Jacques and his
+Jeanne, whose brown hands for a hundred and forty years opened and
+closed this door. And those hands still master a savage world for two
+thousand miles north of that threshold of Athabasca Landing. South of
+it a wheezy engine drags up the freight that came not so many months
+ago by boat.
+
+It is over this threshold that the dark eyes of Pierre and Jacqueline,
+Henri and Marie, Jacques and his Jeanne, look into the blue and the
+gray and the sometimes watery ones of a destroying civilization. And
+there it is that the shriek of a mad locomotive mingles with their
+age-old river chants; the smut of coal drifts over their forests; the
+phonograph screeches its reply to _le violon_; and Pierre and Henri and
+Jacques no longer find themselves the kings of the earth when they come
+in from far countries with their precious cargoes of furs. And they no
+longer swagger and tell loud-voiced adventure, or sing their wild river
+songs in the same old abandon, for there are streets at Athabasca
+Landing now, and hotels, and schools, and rules and regulations of a
+kind new and terrifying to the bold of the old _voyageurs_.
+
+It seems only yesterday that the railroad was not there, and a great
+world of wilderness lay between the Landing and the upper rim of
+civilization. And when word first came that a steam thing was eating
+its way up foot by foot through forest and swamp and impassable muskeg,
+that word passed up and down the water-ways for two thousand miles, a
+colossal joke, a stupendous bit of drollery, the funniest thing that
+Pierre and Henri and Jacques had heard in all their lives. And when
+Jacques wanted to impress upon Pierre his utter disbelief of a thing,
+he would say:
+
+"It will happen, m'sieu, when the steam thing comes to the Landing,
+when cow-beasts eat with the moose, and when our bread is found for us
+in yonder swamps!"
+
+And the steam thing came, and cows grazed where moose had fed, and
+bread WAS gathered close to the edge of the great swamps. Thus did
+civilization break into Athabasca Landing.
+
+Northward from the Landing, for two thousand miles, reached the domain
+of the rivermen. And the Landing, with its two hundred and twenty-seven
+souls before the railroad came, was the wilderness clearing-house which
+sat at the beginning of things. To it came from the south all the
+freight which must go into the north; on its flat river front were
+built the great scows which carried this freight to the end of the
+earth. It was from the Landing that the greatest of all river brigades
+set forth upon their long adventures, and it was back to the Landing,
+perhaps a year or more later, that still smaller scows and huge canoes
+brought as the price of exchange their cargoes of furs.
+
+Thus for nearly a century and a half the larger craft, with their great
+sweeps and their wild-throated crews, had gone _down_ the river toward
+the Arctic Ocean, and the smaller craft, with their still wilder crews,
+had come _up_ the river toward civilization. The River, as the Landing
+speaks of it, is the Athabasca, with its headwaters away off in the
+British Columbian mountains, where Baptiste and McLeod, explorers of
+old, gave up their lives to find where the cradle of it lay. And it
+sweeps past the Landing, a slow and mighty giant, unswervingly on its
+way to the northern sea. With it the river brigades set forth. For
+Pierre and Henri and Jacques it is going from one end to the other of
+the earth. The Athabasca ends and is replaced by the Slave, and the
+Slave empties into Great Slave Lake, and from the narrow tip of that
+Lake the Mackenzie carries on for more than a thousand miles to the sea.
+
+In this distance of the long water trail one sees and hears many
+things. It is life. It is adventure. It is mystery and romance and
+hazard. Its tales are so many that books could not hold them. In the
+faces of men and women they are written. They lie buried in graves so
+old that the forest trees grow over them. Epics of tragedy, of love, of
+the fight to live! And as one goes farther north, and still farther,
+just so do the stories of things that have happened change.
+
+For the world is changing, the sun is changing, and the breeds of men
+are changing. At the Landing in July there are seventeen hours of
+sunlight; at Fort Chippewyan there are eighteen; at Fort Resolution,
+Fort Simpson, and Fort Providence there are nineteen; at the Great Bear
+twenty-one, and at Fort McPherson, close to the polar sea, from
+twenty-two to twenty-three. And in December there are also these hours
+of darkness. With light and darkness men change, women change, and life
+changes. And Pierre and Henri and Jacques meet them all, but always
+THEY are the same, chanting the old songs, enshrining the old loves,
+dreaming the same dreams, and worshiping always the same gods. They
+meet a thousand perils with eyes that glisten with the love of
+adventure.
+
+The thunder of rapids and the howlings of storm do not frighten them.
+Death has no fear for them. They grapple with it, wrestle joyously with
+it, and are glorious when they win. Their blood is red and strong.
+Their hearts are big. Their souls chant themselves up to the skies. Yet
+they are simple as children, and when they are afraid, it is of things
+which children fear. For in those hearts of theirs is superstition--and
+also, perhaps, royal blood. For princes and the sons of princes and the
+noblest aristocracy of France were the first of the gentlemen
+adventurers who came with ruffles on their sleeves and rapiers at their
+sides to seek furs worth many times their weight in gold two hundred
+and fifty years ago, and of these ancient forebears Pierre and Henri
+and Jacques, with their Maries and Jeannes and Jacquelines, are the
+living voices of today.
+
+And these voices tell many stories. Sometimes they whisper them, as the
+wind would whisper, for there are stories weird and strange that must
+be spoken softly. They darken no printed pages. The trees listen to
+them beside red camp-fires at night. Lovers tell them in the glad
+sunshine of day. Some of them are chanted in song. Some of them come
+down through the generations, epics of the wilderness, remembered from
+father to son. And each year there are the new things to pass from
+mouth to mouth, from cabin to cabin, from the lower reaches of the
+Mackenzie to the far end of the world at Athabasca Landing. For the
+three rivers are always makers of romance, of tragedy, of adventure.
+The story will never be forgotten of how Follette and Ladouceur swam
+their mad race through the Death Chute for love of the girl who waited
+at the other end, or of how Campbell O'Doone, the red-headed giant at
+Fort Resolution, fought the whole of a great brigade in his effort to
+run away with a scow captain's daughter.
+
+And the brigade loved O'Doone, though it beat him, for these men of the
+strong north love courage and daring. The epic of the lost scow--how
+there were men who saw it disappear from under their very eyes,
+floating upward and afterward riding swiftly away in the skies--is told
+and retold by strong-faced men, deep in whose eyes are the smoldering
+flames of an undying superstition, and these same men thrill as they
+tell over again the strange and unbelievable story of Hartshope, the
+aristocratic Englishman who set off into the North in all the glory of
+monocle and unprecedented luggage, and how he joined in a tribal war,
+became a chief of the Dog Ribs, and married a dark-eyed, sleek-haired,
+little Indian beauty, who is now the mother of his children.
+
+But deepest and most thrilling of all the stories they tell are the
+stories of the long arm of the Law--that arm which reaches for two
+thousand miles from Athabasca Landing to the polar sea, the arm Of the
+Royal Northwest Mounted Police.
+
+And of these it is the story of Jim Kent we are going to tell, of Jim
+Kent and of Marette, that wonderful little goddess of the Valley of
+Silent Men, in whose veins there must have run the blood of fighting
+men--and of ancient queens. A story of the days before the railroad
+came.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+In the mind of James Grenfell Kent, sergeant in the Royal Northwest
+Mounted Police, there remained no shadow of a doubt. He knew that he
+was dying. He had implicit faith in Cardigan, his surgeon friend, and
+Cardigan had told him that what was left of his life would be measured
+out in hours--perhaps in minutes or seconds. It was an unusual case.
+There was one chance in fifty that he might live two or three days, but
+there was no chance at all that he would live more than three. The end
+might come with any breath he drew into his lungs. That was the
+pathological history of the thing, as far as medical and surgical
+science knew of cases similar to his own.
+
+Personally, Kent did not feel like a dying man. His vision and his
+brain were clear. He felt no pain, and only at infrequent intervals was
+his temperature above normal. His voice was particularly calm and
+natural.
+
+At first he had smiled incredulously when Cardigan broke the news. That
+the bullet which a drunken half-breed had sent into his chest two weeks
+before had nicked the arch of the aorta, thus forming an aneurism, was
+a statement by Cardigan which did not sound especially wicked or
+convincing to him. "Aorta" and "aneurism" held about as much
+significance for him as his perichondrium or the process of his
+stylomastoid. But Kent possessed an unswerving passion to grip at facts
+in detail, a characteristic that had largely helped him to earn the
+reputation of being the best man-hunter in all the northland service.
+So he had insisted, and his surgeon friend had explained.
+
+The aorta, he found, was the main blood-vessel arching over and leading
+from the heart, and in nicking it the bullet had so weakened its outer
+wall that it bulged out in the form of a sack, just as the inner tube
+of an automobile tire bulges through the outer casing when there is a
+blowout.
+
+"And when that sack gives way inside you," Cardigan had explained,
+"you'll go like that!" He snapped a forefinger and thumb to drive the
+fact home.
+
+After that it was merely a matter of common sense to believe, and now,
+sure that he was about to die. Kent had acted. He was acting in the
+full health of his mind and in extreme cognizance of the paralyzing
+shock he was contributing as a final legacy to the world at large, or
+at least to that part of it which knew him or was interested. The
+tragedy of the thing did not oppress him. A thousand times in his life
+he had discovered that humor and tragedy were very closely related, and
+that there were times when only the breadth of a hair separated the
+two. Many times he had seen a laugh change suddenly to tears, and tears
+to laughter.
+
+The tableau, as it presented itself about his bedside now, amused him.
+Its humor was grim, but even in these last hours of his life he
+appreciated it. He had always more or less regarded life as a joke--a
+very serious joke, but a joke for all that--a whimsical and trickful
+sort of thing played by the Great Arbiter on humanity at large; and
+this last count in his own life, as it was solemnly and tragically
+ticking itself off, was the greatest joke of all. The amazed faces that
+stared at him, their passing moments of disbelief, their repressed but
+at times visible betrayals of horror, the steadiness of their eyes, the
+tenseness of their lips--all added to what he might have called, at
+another time, the dramatic artistry of his last great adventure.
+
+That he was dying did not chill him, or make him afraid, or put a
+tremble into his voice. The contemplation of throwing off the mere
+habit of breathing had never at any stage of his thirty-six years of
+life appalled him. Those years, because he had spent a sufficient
+number of them in the raw places of the earth, had given him a
+philosophy and viewpoint of his own, both of which he kept unto himself
+without effort to impress them on other people. He believed that life
+itself was the cheapest thing on the face of all the earth. All other
+things had their limitations.
+
+There was so much water and so much land, so many mountains and so many
+plains, so many square feet to live on and so many square feet to be
+buried in. All things could be measured, and stood up, and
+catalogued--except life itself. "Given time," he would say, "a single
+pair of humans can populate all creation." Therefore, being the
+cheapest of all things, it was true philosophy that life should be the
+easiest of all things to give up when the necessity came.
+
+Which is only another way of emphasizing that Kent was not, and never
+had been, afraid to die. But it does not say that he treasured life a
+whit less than the man in another room, who, a day or so before, had
+fought like a lunatic before going under an anesthetic for the
+amputation of a bad finger. No man had loved life more than he. No man
+had lived nearer it.
+
+It had been a passion with him. Full of dreams, and always with
+anticipations ahead, no matter how far short realizations fell, he was
+an optimist, a lover of the sun and the moon and the stars, a worshiper
+of the forests and of the mountains, a man who loved his life, and who
+had fought for it, and yet who was ready--at the last--to yield it up
+without a whimper when the fates asked for it.
+
+Bolstered up against his pillows, he did not look the part of the fiend
+he was confessing himself to be to the people about him. Sickness had
+not emaciated him. The bronze of his lean, clean-cut face had faded a
+little, but the tanning of wind and sun and campfire was still there.
+His blue eyes were perhaps dulled somewhat by the nearness of death.
+One would not have judged him to be thirty-six, even though over one
+temple there was a streak of gray in his blond hair--a heritage from
+his mother, who was dead. Looking at him, as his lips quietly and
+calmly confessed himself beyond the pale of men's sympathy or
+forgiveness, one would have said that his crime was impossible.
+
+Through his window, as he sat bolstered up in his cot, Kent could see
+the slow-moving shimmer of the great Athabasca River as it moved on its
+way toward the Arctic Ocean. The sun was shining, and he saw the cool,
+thick masses of the spruce and cedar forests beyond, the rising
+undulations of wilderness ridges and hills, and through that open
+window he caught the sweet scents that came with a soft wind from out
+of the forests he had loved for so many years.
+
+"They've been my best friends," he had said to Cardigan, "and when this
+nice little thing you're promising happens to me, old man, I want to go
+with my eyes on them."
+
+So his cot was close to the window.
+
+Nearest to him sat Cardigan. In his face, more than in any of the
+others, was disbelief. Kedsty, Inspector of the Royal Northwest Mounted
+Police, in charge of N Division during an indefinite leave of absence
+of the superintendent, was paler even than the girl whose nervous
+fingers were swiftly putting upon paper every word that was spoken by
+those in the room. O'Connor, staff-sergeant, was like one struck dumb.
+The little, smooth-faced Catholic missioner whose presence as a witness
+Kent had requested, sat with his thin fingers tightly interlaced,
+silently placing this among all the other strange tragedies that the
+wilderness had given up to him. They had all been Kent's friends, his
+intimate friends, with the exception of the girl, whom Inspector Kedsty
+had borrowed for the occasion. With the little missioner he had spent
+many an evening, exchanging in mutual confidence the strange and
+mysterious happenings of the deep forests, and of the great north
+beyond the forests. O'Connor's friendship was a friendship bred of the
+brotherhood of the trails. It was Kent and O'Connor who had brought
+down the two Eskimo murderers from the mouth of the Mackenzie, and the
+adventure had taken them fourteen months. Kent loved O'Connor, with his
+red face, his red hair, and his big heart, and to him the most tragic
+part of it all was that he was breaking this friendship now.
+
+But it was Inspector Kedsty, commanding N Division, the biggest and
+wildest division in all the Northland, that roused in Kent an unusual
+emotion, even as he waited for that explosion just over his heart which
+the surgeon had told him might occur at any moment. On his death-bed
+his mind still worked analytically. And Kedsty, since the moment he had
+entered the room, had puzzled Kent. The commander of N Division was an
+unusual man. He was sixty, with iron-gray hair, cold, almost colorless
+eyes in which one would search long for a gleam of either mercy or
+fear, and a nerve that Kent had never seen even slightly disturbed. It
+took such a man, an iron man, to run N Division according to law, for N
+Division covered an area of six hundred and twenty thousand square
+miles of wildest North America, extending more than two thousand miles
+north of the 70th parallel of latitude, with its farthest limit three
+and one-half degrees within the Arctic Circle. To police this area
+meant upholding the law in a country fourteen times the size of the
+state of Ohio. And Kedsty was the man who had performed this duty as
+only one other man had ever succeeded in doing it.
+
+Yet Kedsty, of the five about Kent, was most disturbed. His face was
+ash-gray. A number of times Kent had detected a broken note in his
+voice. He had seen his hands grip at the arms of the chair he sat in
+until the cords stood out on them as if about to burst. He had never
+seen Kedsty sweat until now.
+
+Twice the Inspector had wiped his forehead with a handkerchief. He was
+no longer _Minisak_--"The Rock"--a name given to him by the Crees. The
+armor that no shaft had ever penetrated seemed to have dropped from
+him. He had ceased to be Kedsty, the most dreaded inquisitor in the
+service. He was nervous, and Kent could see that he was fighting to
+repossess himself.
+
+"Of course you know what this means to the Service," he said in a hard,
+low voice. "It means--"
+
+"Disgrace," nodded Kent. "I know. It means a black spot on the
+otherwise bright escutcheon of N Division. But it can't be helped. I
+killed John Barkley. The man you've got in the guard-house, condemned
+to be hanged by the neck until he is dead, is innocent. I understand.
+It won't be nice for the Service to let it be known that a sergeant in
+His Majesty's Royal Mounted is an ordinary murderer, but--"
+
+"Not an _ordinary_ murderer," interrupted Kedsty. "As you have described
+it, the crime was deliberate--horrible and inexcusable to its last
+detail. You were not moved by a sudden passion. You tortured your
+victim. It is inconceivable!"
+
+"And yet true," said Kent.
+
+He was looking at the stenographer's slim fingers as they put down his
+words and Kedsty's. A bit of sunshine touched her bowed head, and he
+observed the red lights in her hair. His eyes swept to O'Connor, and in
+that moment the commander of N Division bent over him, so close that
+his face almost touched Kent's, and he whispered, in a voice so low
+that no one of the other four could hear,
+
+"_Kent--you lie_!"
+
+"No, it is true," replied Kent.
+
+Kedsty drew back, again wiping the moisture from his forehead.
+
+"I killed Barkley, and I killed him as I planned that he should die,"
+Kent went on. "It was my desire that he should suffer. The one thing
+which I shall not tell you is _why_ I killed him. But it was a sufficient
+reason."
+
+He saw the shuddering tremor that swept through the shoulders of the
+girl who was putting down the condemning notes.
+
+"And you refuse to confess your motive?"
+
+"Absolutely--except that he had wronged me in a way that deserved
+death."
+
+"And you make this confession knowing that you are about to die?"
+
+The flicker of a smile passed over Kent's lips. He looked at O'Connor
+and for an instant saw in O'Connor's eyes a flash of their old
+comradeship.
+
+"Yes. Dr. Cardigan has told me. Otherwise I should have let the man in
+the guard-house hang. It's simply that this accursed bullet has spoiled
+my luck--and saved him!"
+
+Kedsty spoke to the girl. For half an hour she read her notes, and
+after that Kent wrote his name on the last page. Then Kedsty rose from
+his chair.
+
+"We have finished, gentlemen," he said.
+
+They trailed out, the girl hurrying through the door first in her
+desire to free herself of an ordeal that had strained every nerve in
+her body. The commander of N Division was last to go. Cardigan
+hesitated, as if to remain, but Kedsty motioned him on. It was Kedsty
+who closed the door, and as he closed it he looked back, and for a
+flash Kent met his eyes squarely. In that moment he received an
+impression which he had not caught while the Inspector was in the room.
+It was like an electrical shock in its unexpectedness, and Kedsty must
+have seen the effect of it in his face, for he moved back quickly and
+closed the door. In that instant Kent had seen in Kedsty's eyes and
+face a look that was not only of horror, but what in the face and eyes
+of another man he would have sworn was fear.
+
+It was a gruesome moment in which to smile, but Kent smiled. The shock
+was over. By the rules of the Criminal Code he knew that Kedsty even
+now was instructing Staff-Sergeant O'Connor to detail an officer to
+guard his door. The fact that he was ready to pop off at any moment
+would make no difference in the regulations of the law. And Kedsty was
+a stickler for the law as it was written. Through the closed door he
+heard voices indistinctly. Then there were footsteps, dying away. He
+could hear the heavy thump, thump of O'Connor's big feet. O'Connor had
+always walked like that, even on the trail.
+
+Softly then the door reopened, and Father Layonne, the little
+missioner, came in. Kent knew that this would be so, for Father Layonne
+knew neither code nor creed that did not reach all the hearts of the
+wilderness. He came back, and sat down close to Kent, and took one of
+his hands and held it closely in both of his own. They were not the
+soft, smooth hands of the priestly hierarchy, but were hard with the
+callosity of toil, yet gentle with the gentleness of a great sympathy.
+He had loved Kent yesterday, when Kent had stood clean in the eyes of
+both God and men, and he still loved him today, when his soul was
+stained with a thing that must be washed away with his own life.
+
+"I'm sorry, lad," he said. "I'm sorry."
+
+Something rose up in Kent's throat that was not the blood he had been
+wiping away since morning. His fingers returned the pressure of the
+little missioner's hands. Then he pointed out through the window to the
+panorama of shimmering river and green forests.
+
+"It is hard to say good-by to all that, Father," he said. "But, if you
+don't mind, I'd rather not talk about it. I'm not afraid of it. And why
+be unhappy because one has only a little while to live? Looking back
+over your life, does it seem so very long ago that you were a boy, a
+small boy?"
+
+"The time has gone swiftly, very swiftly."
+
+"It seems only yesterday--or so?"
+
+"Yes, only yesterday--or so."
+
+Kent's face lit up with the whimsical smile that long ago had reached
+the little missioner's heart. "Well, that's the way I'm looking at it,
+Father. There is only a yesterday, a today, and a tomorrow in the
+longest of our lives. Looking back from seventy years isn't much
+different from looking back from thirty-six _when_ you're looking back
+and not ahead. Do you think what I have just said will free Sandy
+McTrigger?"
+
+"There is no doubt. Your statements have been accepted as a death-bed
+confession."
+
+The little missioner, instead of Kent, was betraying a bit of
+nervousness.
+
+"There are matters, my son--some few matters--which you will want
+attended to. Shall we not talk about them?"
+
+"You mean--"
+
+"Your people, first. I remember that once you told me there was no one.
+But surely there is some one somewhere."
+
+Kent shook his head. "There is no one now. For ten years those forests
+out there have been father, mother, and home to me."
+
+"But there must be personal affairs, affairs which you would like to
+entrust, perhaps, to me?"
+
+Kent's face brightened, and for an instant a flash of humor leaped into
+his eyes. "It is funny," he chuckled. "Since you remind me of it,
+Father, it is quite in form to make my will. I've bought a few little
+pieces of land here. Now that the railroad has almost reached us from
+Edmonton, they've jumped up from the seven or eight hundred dollars I
+gave for them to about ten thousand. I want you to sell the lots and
+use the money in your work. Put as much of it on the Indians as you
+can. They've always been good brothers to me. And I wouldn't waste much
+time in getting my signature on some sort of paper to that effect."
+
+Father Layonne's eyes shone softly. "God will bless you for that,
+Jimmy," he said, using the intimate name by which he had known him.
+"And I think He is going to pardon you for something else, if you have
+the courage to ask Him."
+
+"I am pardoned," replied Kent, looking out through the window. "I feel
+it. I know it, Father."
+
+In his soul the little missioner was praying. He knew that Kent's
+religion was not his religion, and he did not press the service which
+he would otherwise have rendered. After a moment he rose to his feet,
+and it was the old Kent who looked up into his face, the clean-faced,
+gray-eyed, unafraid Kent, smiling in the old way.
+
+"I have one big favor to ask of you, Father," he said. "If I've got a
+day to live, I don't want every one forcing the fact on me that I'm
+dying. If I've any friends left, I want them to come in and see me, and
+talk, and crack jokes. I want to smoke my pipe. I'll appreciate a box
+of cigars if you'll send 'em up. Cardigan can't object now. Will you
+arrange these things for me? They'll listen to you--and please shove my
+cot a little nearer the window before you go."
+
+Father Layonne performed the service in silence. Then at last the
+yearning overcame him to have the soul speak out, that his God might be
+more merciful, and he said: "My boy, you are sorry? You repent that you
+killed John Barkley?"
+
+"No, I'm not sorry. It had to be done. And please don't forget the
+cigars, will you, Father?"
+
+"No, I won't forget," said the little missioner, and turned away.
+
+As the door opened and closed behind him, the flash of humor leaped
+into Kent's eyes again, and he chuckled even as he wiped another of the
+telltale stains of blood from his lips. He had played the game. And the
+funny part about it was that no one in all the world would ever know,
+except himself--and perhaps one other.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+Outside Kent's window was Spring, the glorious Spring of the Northland,
+and in spite of the death-grip that was tightening in his chest he
+drank it in deeply and leaned over so that his eyes traveled over wide
+spaces of the world that had been his only a short time before.
+
+It occurred to him that he had suggested this knoll that overlooked
+both settlement and river as the site for the building which Dr.
+Cardigan called his hospital. It was a structure rough and unadorned,
+unpainted, and sweetly smelling with the aroma of the spruce trees from
+the heart of which its unplaned lumber was cut. The breath of it was a
+thing to bring cheer and hope. Its silvery walls, in places golden and
+brown with pitch and freckled with knots, spoke joyously of life that
+would not die, and the woodpeckers came and hammered on it as though it
+were still a part of the forest, and red squirrels chattered on the
+roof and scampered about in play with a soft patter of feet.
+
+"It's a pretty poor specimen of man that would die up here with all
+that under his eyes," Kent had said a year before, when he and Cardigan
+had picked out the site. "If he died looking at that, why, he just
+simply ought to die, Cardigan," he had laughed.
+
+And now he was that poor specimen, looking out on the glory of the
+world!
+
+His vision took in the South and a part of the East and West, and in
+all those directions there was no end of the forest. It was like a
+vast, many-colored sea with uneven billows rising and falling until the
+blue sky came down to meet them many miles away. More than once his
+heart ached at the thought of the two thin ribs of steel creeping up
+foot by foot and mile by mile from Edmonton, a hundred and fifty miles
+away. It was, to him, a desecration, a crime against Nature, the murder
+of his beloved wilderness. For in his soul that wilderness had grown to
+be more than a thing of spruce and cedar and balsam, of poplar and
+birch; more than a great, unused world of river and lake and swamp. It
+was an individual, a thing. His love for it was greater than his love
+for man. It was his inarticulate God. It held him as no religion in the
+world could have held him, and deeper and deeper it had drawn him into
+the soul of itself, delivering up to him one by one its guarded secrets
+and its mysteries, opening for him page by page the book that was the
+greatest of all books. And it was the wonder of it now, the fact that
+it was near him, about him, embracing him, glowing for him in the
+sunshine, whispering to him in the soft breath of the air, nodding and
+talking to him from the crest of every ridge, that gave to him a
+strange happiness even in these hours when he knew that he was dying.
+
+And then his eyes fell nearer to the settlement which nestled along the
+edge of the shining river a quarter of a mile away. That, too, had been
+the wilderness, in the days before the railroad came. The poison of
+speculation was stirring, but it had not yet destroyed. Athabasca
+Landing was still the door that opened and closed on the great North.
+Its buildings were scattered and few, and built of logs and rough
+lumber. Even now he could hear the drowsy hum of the distant sawmill
+that was lazily turning out its grist. Not far away the wind-worn flag
+of the British Empire was floating over a Hudson Bay Company's post
+that had bartered in the trades of the North for more than a hundred
+years. Through that hundred years Athabasca Landing had pulsed with the
+heart-beats of strong men bred to the wilderness. Through it, working
+its way by river and dog sledge from the South, had gone the precious
+freight for which the farther North gave in exchange its still more
+precious furs. And today, as Kent looked down upon it, he saw that same
+activity as it had existed through the years of a century. A brigade of
+scows, laden to their gunwales, was just sweeping out into the river
+and into its current. Kent had watched the loading of them; now he saw
+them drifting lazily out from the shore, their long sweeps glinting in
+the sun, their crews singing wildly and fiercely their beloved Chanson
+des Voyageurs as their faces turned to the adventure of the North.
+
+In Kent's throat rose a thing which he tried to choke back, but which
+broke from his lips in a low cry, almost a sob. He heard the distant
+singing, wild and free as the forests themselves, and he wanted to lean
+out of his window and shout a last good-by. For the brigade--a Company
+brigade, the brigade that had chanted its songs up and down the water
+reaches of the land for more than two hundred and fifty years--was
+starting north. And he knew where it was going--north, and still
+farther north; a hundred miles, five hundred, a thousand--and then
+another thousand before the last of the scows unburdened itself of its
+precious freight. For the lean and brown-visaged men who went with them
+there would be many months of clean living and joyous thrill under the
+open skies. Overwhelmed by the yearning that swept over him, Kent
+leaned back against his pillows and covered his eyes.
+
+In those moments his brain painted for him swiftly and vividly the
+things he was losing. Tomorrow or next day he would be dead, and the
+river brigade would still be sweeping on--on into the Grand Rapids of
+the Athabasca, fighting the Death Chute, hazarding valiantly the rocks
+and rapids of the Grand Cascade, the whirlpools of the Devil's Mouth,
+the thundering roar and boiling dragon teeth of the Black Run--on to
+the end of the Athabasca, to the Slave, and into the Mackenzie, until
+the last rock-blunted nose of the outfit drank the tide-water of the
+Arctic Ocean. And he, James Kent, would be DEAD!
+
+He uncovered his eyes, and there was a wan smile on his lips as he
+looked forth once more. There were sixteen scows in the brigade, and
+the biggest, he knew, was captained by Pierre Rossand. He could fancy
+Pierre's big red throat swelling in mighty song, for Pierre's wife was
+waiting for him a thousand miles away. The scows were caught steadily
+now in the grip of the river, and it seemed to Kent, as he watched them
+go, that they were the last fugitives fleeing from the encroaching
+monsters of steel. Unconscious of the act, he reached out his arms, and
+his soul cried out its farewell, even though his lips were silent.
+
+He was glad when they were gone and when the voices of the chanting
+oarsmen were lost in the distance. Again he listened to the lazy hum of
+the sawmill, and over his head he heard the velvety run of a red
+squirrel and then its reckless chattering. The forests came back to
+him. Across his cot fell a patch of golden sunlight. A stronger breath
+of air came laden with the perfume of balsam and cedar through his
+window, and when the door opened and Cardigan entered, he found the old
+Kent facing him.
+
+There was no change in Cardigan's voice or manner as he greeted him.
+But there was a tenseness in his face which he could not conceal. He
+had brought in Kent's pipe and tobacco. These he laid on a table until
+he had placed his head close to Kent's hearty listening to what he
+called the _bruit_--the rushing of blood through the aneurismal sac.
+
+"Seems to me that I can hear it myself now and then," said Kent.
+"Worse, isn't it?"
+
+Cardigan nodded. "Smoking may hurry it up a bit," he said. "Still, if
+you want to--"
+
+Kent held out his hand for the pipe and tobacco. "It's worth it.
+Thanks, old man."
+
+Kent loaded the pipe, and Cardigan lighted a match. For the first time
+in two weeks a cloud of smoke issued from between Kent's lips.
+
+"The brigade is starting north," he said.
+
+"Mostly Mackenzie River freight," replied Cardigan. "A long run."
+
+"The finest in all the North. Three years ago O'Connor and I made it
+with the Follette outfit. Remember Follette--and Ladouceur? They both
+loved the same girl, and being good friends they decided to settle the
+matter by a swim through the Death Chute. The man who came through
+first was to have her. Gawd, Cardigan, what funny things happen!
+Follette came out first, but he was dead. He'd brained himself on a
+rock. And to this day Ladouceur hasn't married the girl, because he
+says Follette beat him; and that Follette's something-or-other would
+haunt him if he didn't play fair. It's a queer--"
+
+He stopped and listened. In the hall was the approaching tread of
+unmistakable feet.
+
+"O'Connor," he said.
+
+Cardigan went to the door and opened it as O'Connor was about to knock.
+When the door closed again, the staff-sergeant was in the room alone
+with Kent. In one of his big hands he clutched a box of cigars, and in
+the other he held a bunch of vividly red fire-flowers.
+
+"Father Layonne shoved these into my hands as I was coming up," he
+explained, dropping them on the table. "And I--well--I'm breaking
+regulations to come up an' tell you something, Jimmy. I never called
+you a liar in my life, but I'm calling you one now!"
+
+He was gripping Kent's hands in the fierce clasp of a friendship that
+nothing could kill. Kent winced, but the pain of it was joy. He had
+feared that O'Connor, like Kedsty, must of necessity turn against him.
+Then he noticed something unusual in O'Connor's face and eyes. The
+staff-sergeant was not easily excited, yet he was visibly disturbed now.
+
+"I don't know what the others saw, when you were making that
+confession, Kent. Mebby my eyesight was better because I spent a year
+and a half with you on the trail. You were lying. What's your game, old
+man?"
+
+Kent groaned. "Have I got to go all over it again?" he appealed.
+
+O'Connor began thumping back and forth over the floor. Kent had seen
+him that way sometimes in camp when there were perplexing problems
+ahead of them.
+
+"You didn't kill John Barkley," he insisted. "I don't believe you did,
+and Inspector Kedsty doesn't believe it--yet the mighty queer part of
+it is--"
+
+"What?"
+
+"That Kedsty is acting on your confession in a big hurry. I don't
+believe it's according to Hoyle, as the regulations are written. But
+he's doing it. And I want to know--it's the biggest thing I EVER wanted
+to know--did you kill Barkley?"
+
+"O'Connor, if you don't believe a dying man's word--you haven't much
+respect for death, have you?"
+
+"That's the theory on which the law works, but sometimes it ain't
+human. Confound it, man, _did you_?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+O'Connor sat down and with his finger-nails pried open the box of
+cigars. "Mind if I smoke with you?" he asked. "I need it. I'm shot up
+with unexpected things this morning. Do you care if I ask you about the
+girl?"
+
+"The girl!" exclaimed Kent. He sat up straighter, staring at O'Connor.
+
+The staff-sergeant's eyes were on him with questioning steadiness. "I
+see--you don't know her," he said, lighting his cigar. "Neither do I.
+Never saw her before. That's why I am wondering about Inspector Kedsty.
+I tell you, it's queer. He didn't believe you this morning, yet he was
+all shot up. He wanted me to go with him to his house. The cords stood
+out on his neck like that--like my little finger.
+
+"Then suddenly he changed his mind and said we'd go to the office. That
+took us along the road that runs through the poplar grove. It happened
+there. I'm not much of a girl's man, Kent, and I'd be a fool to try to
+tell you what she looked like. But there she was, standing in the path
+not ten feet ahead of us, and she stopped me in my tracks as quick as
+though she'd sent a shot into me. And she stopped Kedsty, too. I heard
+him give a sort of grunt--a funny sound, as though some one had hit
+him. I don't believe I could tell whether she had a dress on or not,
+for I never saw anything like her face, and her eyes, and her hair, and
+I stared at them like a thunder-struck fool. She didn't seem to notice
+me any more than if I'd been thin air, a ghost she couldn't see.
+
+"She looked straight at Kedsty, and she kept looking at him--and then
+she passed us. Never said a word, mind you. She came so near I could
+have touched her with my hand, and not until she was that close did she
+take her eyes from Kedsty and look at me. And when she'd passed I
+thought what a couple of cursed idiots we were, standing there
+paralyzed, as if we'd never seen a beautiful girl before in our lives.
+I went to remark that much to the Old Man when--"
+
+O'Connor bit his cigar half in two as he leaned nearer to the cot.
+
+"Kent, I swear that Kedsty was as white as chalk when I looked at him!
+There wasn't a drop of blood left in his face, and he was staring
+straight ahead, as though the girl still stood there, and he gave
+another of those grunts--it wasn't a laugh--as if something was choking
+him. And then he said:
+
+"'Sergeant, I've forgotten something important. I must go back to see
+Dr. Cardigan. You have my authority to give McTrigger his liberty at
+once!'"
+
+O'Connor paused, as if expecting some expression of disbelief from
+Kent. When none came, he demanded,
+
+"Was that according to the Criminal Code? Was it, Kent?"
+
+"Not exactly. But, coming from the S.O.D., it was law."
+
+"And I obeyed it," grunted the staff-sergeant. "And if you could have
+seen McTrigger! When I told him he was free, and unlocked his cell, he
+came out of it gropingly, like a blind man. And he would go no farther
+than the Inspector's office. He said he would wait there for him."
+
+"And Kedsty?"
+
+O'Connor jumped from his chair and began thumping back and forth across
+the room again. "Followed the girl," he exploded. "He couldn't have
+done anything else. He lied to me about Cardigan. There wouldn't be
+anything mysterious about it if he wasn't sixty and she less than
+twenty. She was pretty enough! But it wasn't her beauty that made him
+turn white there in the path. Not on your life it wasn't! I tell you he
+aged ten years in as many seconds. There was something in that girl's
+eyes more terrifying to him than a leveled gun, and after he'd looked
+into them, his first thought was of McTrigger, the man you're saving
+from the hangman. It's queer, Kent. The whole business is queer. And
+the queerest of it all is your confession."
+
+"Yes, it's all very funny," agreed Kent. "That's what I've been telling
+myself right along, old man. You see, a little thing like a bullet
+changed it all. For if the bullet hadn't got me, I assure you I
+wouldn't have given Kedsty that confession, and an innocent man would
+have been hanged. As it is, Kedsty is shocked, demoralized. I'm the
+first man to soil the honor of the finest Service on the face of the
+earth, and I'm in Kedsty's division. Quite natural that he should be
+upset. And as for the girl--"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders and tried to laugh. "Perhaps she came in this
+morning with one of the up-river scows and was merely taking a little
+constitutional," he suggested. "Didn't you ever notice, O'Connor, that
+in a certain light under poplar trees one's face is sometimes ghastly?"
+
+"Yes, I've noticed it, when the trees are in full leaf, but not when
+they're just opening, Jimmy. It was the girl. Her eyes shattered every
+nerve in him. And his first words were an order for me to free
+McTrigger, coupled with the lie that he was coming back to see
+Cardigan. And if you could have seen her eyes when she turned them on
+me! They were blue--blue as violets--but shooting fire. I could imagine
+black eyes like that, but not blue ones. Kedsty simply wilted in their
+blaze. And there was a reason--I know it--a reason that sent his mind
+like lightning to the man in the cell!"
+
+"Now, that you leave me out of it, the thing begins to get
+interesting," said Kent. "It's a matter of the relationship of this
+blonde girl and--"
+
+"She isn't blonde--and I'm not leaving you out of it," interrupted
+O'Connor. "I never saw anything so black in my life as her hair. It was
+magnificent. If you saw that girl once, you would never forget her
+again as long as you lived. She has never been in Athabasca Landing
+before, or anywhere near here. If she had, we surely would have heard
+about her. She came for a purpose, and I believe that purpose was
+accomplished when Kedsty gave me the order to free McTrigger."
+
+"That's possible, and probable," agreed Kent. "I always said you were
+the best clue-analyst in the force, Bucky. But I don't see where I come
+in."
+
+O'Connor smiled grimly. "You don't? Well, I may be both blind and a
+fool, and perhaps a little excited. But it seemed to me that from the
+moment Inspector Kedsty laid his eyes on that girl he was a little too
+anxious to let McTrigger go and hang you in his place. A little too
+anxious, Kent."
+
+The irony of the thing brought a hard smile to Kent's lips as he nodded
+for the cigars. "I'll try one of these on top of the pipe," he said,
+nipping off the end of the cigar with his teeth. "And you forget that
+I'm not going to hang, Bucky. Cardigan has given me until tomorrow
+night. Perhaps until the next day. Did you see Rossand's fleet leaving
+for up north? It made me think of three years ago!"
+
+O'Connor was gripping his hand again. The coldness of it sent a chill
+into the staff-sergeant's heart. He rose and looked through the upper
+part of the window, so that the twitching in his throat was hidden from
+Kent. Then he went to the door.
+
+"I'll see you again tomorrow," he said. "And if I find out anything
+more about the girl, I'll report."
+
+He tried to laugh, but there was a tremble in his voice, a break in the
+humor he attempted to force.
+
+Kent listened to the tramp of his heavy feet as they went down the hall.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+Again the world came back to Kent, the world that lay just beyond his
+open window. But scarcely had O'Connor gone when it began to change,
+and in spite of his determination to keep hold of his nerve Kent felt
+creeping up with that change a thing that was oppressive and
+smothering. Swiftly the distant billowings of the forests were changing
+their tones and colors under the darkening approach of storm. The
+laughter of the hills and ridges went out. The shimmer of spruce and
+cedar and balsam turned to a somber black. The flashing gold and silver
+of birch and poplar dissolved into a ghostly and unanimated gray that
+was almost invisible. A deepening and somber gloom spread itself like a
+veil over the river that only a short time before had reflected the
+glory of the sun in the faces of dark-visaged men of the Company
+brigade. And with the gloom came steadily nearer a low rumbling of
+thunder.
+
+For the first time since the mental excitement of his confession Kent
+felt upon him an appalling loneliness. He still was not afraid of
+death, but a part of his philosophy was gone. It was, after all, a
+difficult thing to die alone. He felt that the pressure in his chest
+was perceptible greater than it had been an hour or two before, and the
+thought grew upon him that it would be a terrible thing for the
+"explosion" to come when the sun was not shining. He wanted O'Connor
+back again. He had the desire to call out for Cardigan. He would have
+welcomed Father Layonne with a glad cry. Yet more than all else would
+he have had at his side in these moments of distress a woman. For the
+storm, as it massed heavier and nearer, filling the earth with its
+desolation, bridged vast spaces for him, and he found himself suddenly
+face to face with the might-have-beens of yesterday.
+
+He saw, as he had never guessed before, the immeasurable gulf between
+helplessness and the wild, brute freedom of man, and his soul cried
+out--not for adventure, not for the savage strength of life--but for
+the presence of a creature frailer than himself, yet in the gentle
+touch of whose hand lay the might of all humanity.
+
+He struggled with himself. He remembered that Dr. Cardigan had told him
+there would be moments of deep depression, and he tried to fight
+himself out of the grip of this that was on him. There was a bell at
+hand, but he refused to use it, for he sensed his own cowardice. His
+cigar had gone out, and he relighted it. He made an effort to bring his
+mind back to O'Connor, and the mystery girl, and Kedsty. He tried to
+visualize McTrigger, the man he had saved from the hangman, waiting for
+Kedsty in the office at barracks. He pictured the girl, as O'Connor had
+described her, with her black hair and blue eyes--and then the storm
+broke.
+
+The rain came down in a deluge, and scarcely had it struck when the
+door opened and Cardigan hurried in to close the window. He remained
+for half an hour, and after that young Mercer, one of his two
+assistants, came in at intervals. Late in the afternoon it began to
+clear up, and Father Layonne returned with papers properly made out for
+Kent's signature. He was with Kent until sundown, when Mercer came in
+with supper.
+
+Between that hour and ten o'clock Kent observed a vigilance on the part
+of Dr. Cardigan which struck him as being unusual. Four times he
+listened with the stethoscope at his chest, but when Kent asked the
+question which was in his mind, Cardigan shook his head.
+
+"It's no worse, Kent. I don't think it will happen tonight."
+
+In spite of this assurance Kent was positive there was in Cardigan's
+manner an anxiety of a different quality than he had perceived earlier
+in the day. The thought was a definite and convincing one. He believed
+that Cardigan was smoothing the way with a professional lie.
+
+He had no desire to sleep. His light was turned low, and his window was
+open again, for the night had cleared. Never had air tasted sweeter to
+him than that which came in through his window. The little bell in his
+watch tinkled the hour of eleven, when he heard Cardigan's door close
+for a last time across the hall. After that everything was quiet. He
+drew himself nearer to the window, so that by leaning forward he could
+rest himself partly on the sill. He loved the night. The mystery and
+lure of those still hours of darkness when the world slept had never
+ceased to hold their fascination for him. Night and he were friends. He
+had discovered many of its secrets. A thousand times he had walked hand
+in hand with the spirit of it, approaching each time a little nearer to
+the heart of it, mastering its life, its sound, the whispering
+languages of that "other side of life" which rises quietly and as if in
+fear to live and breathe long after the sun has gone out. To him it was
+more wonderful than day.
+
+And this night that lay outside his window now was magnificent. Storm
+had washed the atmosphere between earth and sky, and it seemed as
+though the stars had descended nearer to his forests, shining in golden
+constellations. The moon was coming up late, and he watched the ruddy
+glow of it as it rode up over the wilderness, a splendid queen entering
+upon a stage already prepared by the lesser satellites for her coming.
+No longer was Kent oppressed or afraid. In still deeper inhalations he
+drank the night air into his lungs, and in him there seemed to grow
+slowly a new strength. His eyes and ears were wide open and attentive.
+The town was asleep, but a few lights burned dimly here and there along
+the river's edge, and occasionally a lazy sound came up to him--the
+clink of a scow chain, the bark of a dog, the rooster crowing. In spite
+of himself he smiled at that. Old Duperow's rooster was a foolish bird
+and always crowed himself hoarse when the moon was bright. And in front
+of him, not far away, were two white, lightning-shriven spruce stubs
+standing like ghosts in the night. In one of these a pair of owls had
+nested, and Kent listened to the queer, chuckling notes of their
+honeymooning and the flutter of their wings as they darted out now and
+then in play close to his window. And then suddenly he heard the sharp
+snap of their beaks. An enemy was prowling near, and the owls were
+giving warning. He thought he heard a step. In another moment or two
+the step was unmistakable. Some one was approaching his window from the
+end of the building. He leaned over the sill and found himself staring
+into O'Connor's face.
+
+"These confounded feet of mine!" grunted the staff-sergeant. "Were you
+asleep, Kent?"
+
+"Wide-awake as those owls," assured Kent.
+
+O'Connor drew up to the window. "I saw your light and thought you were
+awake," he said. "I wanted to make sure Cardigan wasn't with you. I
+don't want him to know I am here. And--if you don't mind--will you turn
+off the light? Kedsty is awake, too--as wide-awake as the owls."
+
+Kent reached out a hand, and his room was in darkness except for the
+glow of moon and stars. O'Connor's bulk at the window shut out a part
+of this. His face was half in gloom.
+
+"It's a crime to come to you like this, Kent," he said, keeping his big
+voice down to a whisper. "But I had to. It's my last chance. And I know
+there's something wrong. Kedsty is getting me out of the way--because I
+was with him when he met the girl over in the poplar bush. I'm detailed
+on special duty up at Fort Simpson, two thousand miles by water if it's
+a foot! It means six months or a year. We leave in the motor boat at
+dawn to overtake Rossand and his outfit, so I had to take this chance
+of seeing you. I hesitated until I knew that some one was awake in your
+room."
+
+"I'm glad you came," said Kent warmly. "And--good God, how I would like
+to go with you, Bucky! If it wasn't for this thing in my chest,
+ballooning up for an explosion--"
+
+"I wouldn't be going," interrupted O'Connor in a low voice. "If you
+were on your feet, Kent, there are a number of things that wouldn't be
+happening. Something mighty queer has come over Kedsty since this
+morning. He isn't the Kedsty you knew yesterday or for the last ten
+years. He's nervous, and I miss my guess if he isn't constantly on the
+watch for some one. And he's afraid of me. I know it. He's afraid of me
+because I saw him go to pieces when he met that girl. Fort Simpson is
+simply a frame-up to get me away for a time. He tried to smooth the
+edge off the thing by promising me an inspectorship within the year.
+That was this afternoon, just before the storm. Since then--"
+
+O'Connor turned and faced the moonlight for a moment.
+
+"Since then I've been on a still-hunt for the girl and Sandy
+McTrigger," he added. "And they've disappeared, Kent. I guess McTrigger
+just melted away into the woods. But it's the girl that puzzles me.
+I've questioned every scow _cheman_ at the Landing. I've investigated
+every place where she might have got food or lodging, and I bribed
+Mooie, the old trailer, to search the near-by timber. The unbelievable
+part of it isn't her disappearance. It's the fact that not a soul in
+Athabasca Landing has seen her! Sounds incredible, doesn't it? And
+then, Kent, the big hunch came to me. Remember how we've always played
+up to the big hunch? And this one struck me strong. I think I know
+where the girl is."
+
+Kent, forgetful of his own impending doom, was deeply interested in the
+thrill of O'Connor's mystery. He had begun to visualize the situation.
+More than once they had worked out enigmas of this kind together, and
+the staff-sergeant saw the old, eager glow in his eyes. And Kent
+chuckled joyously in that thrill of the game of man-hunting, and said:
+
+"Kedsty is a bachelor and doesn't even so much as look at a woman. But
+he likes home life--"
+
+"And has built himself a log bungalow somewhat removed from the town,"
+added O'Connor.
+
+"And his Chinaman cook and housekeeper is away."
+
+"And the bungalow is closed, or supposed to be."
+
+"Except at night, when Kedsty goes there to sleep."
+
+O'Connor's hand gripped Kent's. "Jimmy, there never was a team in N
+Division that could beat us, The girl is hiding at Kedsty's place!"
+
+"But why _hiding_?" insisted Kent. "She hasn't committed a crime."
+
+O'Connor sat silent for a moment. Kent could hear him stuffing the bowl
+of his pipe.
+
+"It's simply the big hunch," he grunted. "It's got hold of me, Kent,
+and I can't throw it off. Why, man--"
+
+He lighted a match in the cup of his hands, and Kent saw his face.
+There was more than uncertainty in the hard, set lines of it.
+
+"You see, I went back to the poplars again after I left you today,"
+O'Connor went on. "I found her footprints. She had turned off the
+trail, and in places they were very clear.
+
+"She had on high-heeled shoes, Kent--those Frenchy things--and I swear
+her feet can't be much bigger than a baby's! I found where Kedsty
+caught up with her, and the moss was pretty well beaten down. He
+returned through the poplars, but the girl went on and into the edge of
+the spruce. I lost her trail there. By traveling in that timber it was
+possible for her to reach Kedsty's bungalow without being seen. It must
+have been difficult going, with shoes half as big as my hand and heels
+two inches high! And I've been wondering, why didn't she wear
+bush-country shoes or moccasins?"
+
+"Because she came from the South and not the North," suggested Kent.
+"Probably up from Edmonton."
+
+"Exactly. And Kedsty wasn't expecting her, was he? If he had been, that
+first sight of her wouldn't have shattered every nerve in his body.
+That's why the big hunch won't let loose of me, Kent. From the moment
+he saw her, he was a different man. His attitude toward you changed
+instantly. If he could save you now by raising his little finger, he
+wouldn't do it, simply because it's absolutely necessary for him to
+have an excuse for freeing McTrigger. Your confession came at just the
+psychological moment. The girl's unspoken demand there in the poplars
+was that he free McTrigger, and it was backed up by a threat which
+Kedsty understood and which terrified him to his marrow. McTrigger must
+have seen him afterward, for he waited at the office until Kedsty came.
+I don't know what passed between them. Constable Doyle says they were
+together for half an hour. Then McTrigger walked out of barracks, and
+no one has seen him since. It's mighty queer. The whole thing is queer.
+And the queerest part of the whole business is this sudden commission
+of mine at Fort Simpson."
+
+Kent leaned back against his pillows. His breath came in a series of
+short, hacking coughs. In the star glow O'Connor saw his face grow
+suddenly haggard and tired-looking, and he leaned far in so that in
+both his own hands he held one of Kent's.
+
+"I'm tiring you, Jimmy," he said huskily. "Good-by, old pal! I--I--" He
+hesitated and then lied steadily. "I'm going up to take a look around
+Kedsty's place. I won't be gone more than half an hour and will stop on
+my way back. If you're asleep--"
+
+"I won't be asleep," said Kent.
+
+O'Connor's hands gripped closer. "Good-by, Jimmy."
+
+"Good-by." And then, as O'Connor stepped back into the night, Kent's
+voice called after him softly: "I'll be with you on the long trip,
+Bucky. Take care of yourself--always."
+
+O'Connor's answer was a sob, a sob that rose in his throat like a great
+fist, and choked him, and filled his eyes with scalding tears that shut
+out the glow of moon and stars. And he did not go toward Kedsty's, but
+trudged heavily in the direction of the river, for he knew that Kent
+had called his lie, and that they had said their last farewell.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+It was a long time after O'Connor had gone before Kent at last fell
+asleep. It was a slumber weighted with the restlessness of a brain
+fighting to the last against exhaustion and the inevitable end. A
+strange spirit seemed whirling Kent back through the years he had
+lived, even to the days of his boyhood, leaping from crest to crest,
+giving to him swift and passing visions of valleys almost forgotten, of
+happenings and things long ago faded and indistinct in his memory.
+Vividly his dreams were filled with ghosts--ghosts that were
+transformed, as his spirit went back to them, until they were riotous
+with life and pulsating with the red blood of reality. He was a boy
+again, playing three-old-cat in front of the little old red brick
+schoolhouse half a mile from the farm where he was born, and where his
+mother had died.
+
+And Skinny Hill, dead many years ago, was his partner at the
+bat--lovable Skinny, with his smirking grin and his breath that always
+smelled of the most delicious onions ever raised in Ohio. And then, at
+dinner hour, he was trading some of his mother's cucumber pickles for
+some of Skinny's onions--two onions for a pickle, and never a change in
+the price. And he played old-fashioned casino with his mother, and they
+were picking blackberries together in the woods, and he killed over
+again a snake that he had clubbed to death more than twenty years ago,
+while his mother ran away and screamed and then sat down and cried.
+
+He had worshiped that mother, and the spirit of his dreams did not let
+him look down into the valley where she lay dead, under a little white
+stone in the country cemetery a thousand miles away, with his father
+close beside her. But it gave him a passing thrill of the days in which
+he had fought his way through college--and then it brought him into the
+North, his beloved North.
+
+For hours the wilderness was heavy about Kent. He moved restlessly, at
+times he seemed about to awaken, but always he slipped back into the
+slumberous arms of his forests. He was on the trail in the cold, gray
+beginning of Winter, and the glow of his campfire made a radiant patch
+of red glory in the heart of the night, and close to him in that glow
+sat O'Connor. He was behind dogs and sledge, fighting storm; dark and
+mysterious streams rippled under his canoe; he was on the Big River,
+O'Connor with him again--and then, suddenly, he was holding a blazing
+gun in his hand, and he and O'Connor stood with their backs to a rack,
+facing the bloodthirsty rage of McCaw and his free-traders. The roar of
+the guns half roused him, and after that came pleasanter things--the
+droning of wind in the spruce tops, the singing of swollen streams in
+Springtime, the songs of birds, the sweet smells of life, the glory of
+life as he had lived it, he and O'Connor. In the end, half between
+sleep and wakefulness, he was fighting a smothering pressure on his
+chest. It was an oppressive and torturing thing, like the tree that had
+fallen on him over in the Jackfish country, and he felt himself
+slipping off into darkness. Suddenly there was a gleam of light. He
+opened his eyes. The sun was flooding in at his window, and the weight
+on his chest was the gentle pressure of Cardigan's stethoscope.
+
+In spite of the physical stress of the phantoms which his mind has
+conceived, Kent awakened so quietly that Cardigan was not conscious of
+the fact until he raised his head. There was something in his face
+which he tried to conceal, but Kent caught it before it was gone. There
+were dark hollows under his eyes. He was a bit haggard, as though he
+had spent a sleepless night. Kent pulled himself up, squinting at the
+sun and grinning apologetically. He had slept well along into the day,
+and--
+
+He caught himself with a sudden grimace of pain. A flash of something
+hot and burning swept through his chest. It was like a knife. He opened
+his mouth to breathe in the air. The pressure inside him was no longer
+the pressure of a stethoscope. It was real.
+
+Cardigan, standing over him, was trying to look cheerful. "Too much of
+the night air, Kent," he explained. "That will pass away--soon."
+
+It seemed to Kent that Cardigan gave an almost imperceptible emphasis
+to the word "soon," but he asked no question. He was quite sure that he
+understood, and he knew how unpleasant for Cardigan the answer to it
+would be. He fumbled under his pillow for his watch. It was nine
+o'clock. Cardigan was moving about uneasily, arranging the things on
+the table and adjusting the shade at the window. For a few moments,
+with his back to Kent, he stood without moving. Then he turned, and
+said:
+
+"Which will you have, Kent--a wash-up and breakfast, or a visitor?"
+
+"I am not hungry, and I don't feel like soap and water just now. Who's
+the visitor? Father Layonne or--Kedsty?"
+
+"Neither. It's a lady."
+
+"Then I'd better have the soap and water! Do you mind telling me who it
+is?"
+
+Cardigan shook his head. "I don't know. I've never seen her before. She
+came this morning while I was still in pajamas, and has been waiting
+ever since. I told her to come back again, but she insisted that she
+would remain until you were awake. She has been very patient for two
+hours."
+
+A thrill which he made no effort to conceal leaped through Kent. "Is
+she a young woman?" he demanded eagerly. "Wonderful black hair, blue
+eyes, wears high-heeled shoes just about half as big as your hand--and
+very beautiful?"
+
+"All of that," nodded Cardigan. "I even noticed the shoes, Jimmy. A
+very beautiful young woman!"
+
+"Please let her come in," said Kent. "Mercer scrubbed me last night,
+and I feel fairly fit. She'll forgive this beard, and I'll apologize
+for your sake. What is her name?"
+
+"I asked her, and she didn't seem to hear. A little later Mercer asked
+her, and he said she just looked at him for a moment and he froze. She
+is reading a volume of my Plutarch's 'Lives'--actually reading it. I
+know it by the way she turns the pages!"
+
+Kent drew himself up higher against his pillows and faced the door when
+Cardigan went out. In a flash all that O'Connor had said swept back
+upon him--this girl, Kedsty, the mystery of it all. Why had she come to
+see him? What could be the motive of her visit--unless it was to thank
+him for the confession that had given Sandy McTrigger his freedom?
+O'Connor was right. She was deeply concerned in McTrigger and had come
+to express her gratitude. He listened. Distant footsteps sounded in the
+hall. They approached quickly and paused outside his door. A hand moved
+the latch, but for a moment the door did not open. He heard Cardigan's
+voice, then Cardigan's footsteps retreating down the hall. His heart
+thumped. He could not remember when he had been so upset over an
+unimportant thing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+The latch moved slowly, and with its movement came a gentle tap on the
+panel.
+
+"Come in," he said.
+
+The next instant he was staring. The girl had entered and closed the
+door behind her. O'Connor's picture stood in flesh and blood before
+him. The girl's eyes met his own. They were like glorious violets, as
+O'Connor had said, but they were not the eyes he had expected to see.
+They were the wide-open, curious eyes of a child. He had visualized
+them as pools of slumbering flame--the idea O'Connor had given him--and
+they were the opposite of that. Their one emotion seemed to be the
+emotion roused by an overwhelming, questioning curiosity. They were
+apparently not regarding him as a dying human being, but as a creature
+immensely interesting to look upon. In place of the gratitude he had
+anticipated, they were filled with a great, wondering interrogation,
+and there was not the slightest hint of embarrassment in their gaze.
+For a space it seemed to Kent that he saw nothing but those wonderful,
+dispassionate eyes looking at him. Then he saw the rest of her--her
+amazing hair, her pale, exquisite face, the slimness and beauty of her
+as she stood with her back to the door, one hand still resting on the
+latch. He had never seen anything quite like her. He might have guessed
+that she was eighteen, or twenty, or twenty-two. Her hair, wreathed in
+shimmering, velvety coils from the back to the crown of her head,
+struck him as it had struck O'Connor, as unbelievable. The glory of it
+gave to her an appearance of height which she did not possess, for she
+was not tall, and her slimness added to the illusion.
+
+And then, greatly to his embarrassment in the next instant, his eyes
+went to her feet. Again O'Connor was right--tiny feet, high-heeled
+pumps, ravishingly turned ankles showing under a skirt of some fluffy
+brown stuff or other--
+
+Correcting himself, his face flushed red. The faintest tremble of a
+smile was on the girl's lips. She looked down, and for the first time
+he saw what O'Connor had seen, the sunlight kindling slumberous fires
+in her hair.
+
+Kent tried to say something, but before he succeeded she had taken
+possession of the chair near his bedside.
+
+"I have been waiting a long time to see you," she said. "You are James
+Kent, aren't you?"
+
+"Yes, I'm Jim Kent. I'm sorry Dr. Cardigan kept you waiting. If I had
+known--"
+
+He was getting a grip on himself again, and smiled at her. He noticed
+the amazing length of her dark lashes, but the violet eyes behind them
+did not smile back at him. The tranquillity of their gaze was
+disconcerting. It was as if she had not quite made up her mind about
+him yet and was still trying to classify him in the museum of things
+she had known.
+
+"He should have awakened me," Kent went on, trying to keep himself from
+slipping once more. "It isn't polite to keep a young lady waiting two
+hours!"
+
+This time the blue eyes made him feel that his smile was a maudlin grin.
+
+"Yes--you are different." She spoke softly, as if expressing the
+thought to herself. "That is what I came to find out, if you were
+different. You are dying?"
+
+"My God--yes--I'm dying!" gasped Kent. "According to Dr. Cardigan I'm
+due to pop off this minute. Aren't you a little nervous, sitting so
+near to a man who's ready to explode while you're looking at him?"
+
+For the first time the eyes changed. She was not facing the window, yet
+a glow like the glow of sunlight flashed into them, soft, luminous,
+almost laughing.
+
+"No, it doesn't frighten me," she assured him. "I have always thought I
+should like to see a man die--not quickly, like drowning or being shot,
+but slowly, an inch at a time. But I shouldn't like to see YOU die."
+
+"I'm glad," breathed Kent. "It's a great satisfaction to me."
+
+"Yet I shouldn't be frightened if you did."
+
+"Oh!"
+
+Kent drew himself up straighter against his pillows. He had been a man
+of many adventures. He had faced almost every conceivable kind of
+shock. But this was a new one. He stared into the blue eyes, tongueless
+and mentally dazed. They were cool and sweet and not at all excited.
+And he knew that she spoke the truth. Not by a quiver of those lovely
+lashes would she betray either fear or horror if he popped off right
+there. It was astonishing.
+
+Something like resentment shot for an instant into his bewildered
+brain. Then it was gone, and in a flash it came upon him that she was
+but uttering his own philosophy of life, showing him life's cheapness,
+life's littleness, the absurdity of being distressed by looking upon
+the light as it flickered out. And she was doing it, not as a
+philosopher, but with the beautiful unconcern of a child.
+
+Suddenly, as if impelled by an emotion in direct contradiction to her
+apparent lack of sympathy, she reached out a hand and placed it on
+Kent's forehead. It was another shock. It was not a professional touch,
+but a soft, cool little pressure that sent a comforting thrill through
+him. The hand was there for only a moment, and she withdrew it to
+entwine the slim fingers with those of the others in her lap.
+
+"You have no fever," she said. "What makes you think you are dying?"
+
+Kent explained what was happening inside him. He was completely shunted
+off his original track of thought and anticipation. He had expected to
+ask for at least a mutual introduction when his visitor came into his
+room, and had anticipated taking upon himself the position of a polite
+inquisitor. In spite of O'Connor, he had not thought she would be quite
+so pretty. He had not believed her eyes would be so beautiful, or their
+lashes so long, or the touch of her hand so pleasantly unnerving. And
+now, in place of asking for her name and the reason for her visit, he
+became an irrational idiot, explaining to her certain matters of
+physiology that had to do with aortas and aneurismal sacs. He had
+finished before the absurdity of the situation dawned upon him, and
+with absurdity came the humor of it. Even dying, Kent could not fail to
+see the funny side of a thing It struck him as suddenly as had the
+girl's beauty and her bewildering and unaffected ingenuousness.
+
+Looking at him, that same glow of mysterious questioning in her eyes,
+the girl found him suddenly laughing straight into her face.
+
+"This is funny. It's very funny, Miss--Miss--"
+
+"Marette," she supplied, answering his hesitation.
+
+"It's funny, Miss Marette."
+
+"Not Miss Marette. Just Marette," she corrected.
+
+"I say, it's funny," he tried again. "You see, it's not so terribly
+pleasant as you might think to--er--be here, where I am, dying. And
+last night I thought about the finest thing in the world would be to
+have a woman beside me, a woman who'd be sort of sympathetic, you know,
+ease the thing off a little, maybe say she was sorry. And then the Lord
+answers my prayer, and _you_ come--and you sort of give me the impression
+that you made the appointment with yourself to see how a fellow looks
+when he pops off."
+
+The shimmer of light came into the blue eyes again. She seemed to have
+done with her mental analysis of him, and he saw that a bit of color
+was creeping into her cheeks, pale when she had entered the room.
+
+"You wouldn't be the first I've seen pop off," she assured him. "There
+have been a number, and I've never cried very much. I'd rather see a
+man die than some animals. But I shouldn't like to see YOU do it. Does
+that comfort you--like the woman you prayed the Lord for?"
+
+"It does," gasped Kent. "But why the devil, Miss Marette--"
+
+"Marette," she corrected again.
+
+"Yes, Marette--why the devil have you come to see me at just the moment
+I'm due to explode? And what's your other name, and how old are you,
+and what do you want of me?"
+
+"I haven't any other name, I'm twenty, and I came to get acquainted
+with you and see what you are like."
+
+"Bully!" exclaimed Kent. "We're getting there fast! And now, why?"
+
+The girl drew her chair a few inches nearer, and for a moment Kent
+thought that her lovely mouth was trembling on the edge of a smile.
+
+"Because you have lied so splendidly to save another man who was about
+to die."
+
+"_Et tu, Brute_!" sighed Kent, leaning back against his pillows. "Isn't
+it possible for a decent man to kill another man and not be called a
+liar when he tells about it? Why do so many believe that I lie?"
+
+"They don't," said the girl. "They believe you--now. You have gone so
+completely into the details of the murder in your confession that they
+are quite convinced. It would be too bad if you lived, for you surely
+would be hanged. Your lie sounds and reads like the truth. But I know
+it is a lie. You did not kill John Barkley."
+
+"And the reason for your suspicion?"
+
+For fully half a minute the girl's eyes rested on, his own. Again they
+seemed to be looking through him and into him. "Because I know the man
+who DID kill him," she said quietly, "and it was not you."
+
+Kent made a mighty effort to appear calm. He reached for a cigar from
+the box that Cardigan had placed on his bed, and nibbled the end of it.
+"Has some one else been confessing?" he asked.
+
+She shook her head the slightest bit.
+
+"Did you--er--see this other gentleman kill John Barkley?" he insisted.
+
+"No."
+
+"Then I must answer you as I have answered at least one other. I killed
+John Barkley. If you suspect some other person, your suspicion is
+wrong."
+
+"What a splendid liar!" she breathed softly. "Don't you believe in God?"
+
+Kent winced. "In a large, embracing sense, yes," he said. "I believe in
+Him, for instance, as revealed to our senses in all that living,
+growing glory you see out there through the window Nature and I have
+become pretty good pals, and you see I've sort of built up a mother
+goddess to worship instead of a he-god. Sacrilege, maybe, but it's a
+great comfort at times. But you didn't come to talk religion?"
+
+The lovely head bent still nearer him. He felt an impelling desire to
+put up his hand and touch her shining hair, as she laid her hand on his
+forehead.
+
+"I know who killed John Barkley," she insisted. "I know how and when
+and why he was killed. Please tell me the truth. I want to know. Why
+did you confess to a crime which you did not commit?"
+
+Kent took time to light his cigar. The girl watched him closely, almost
+eagerly.
+
+"I may be mad," he said. "It is possible for any human being to be mad
+and not know it. That's the funny part about insanity. But if I'm not
+insane, I killed Barkley; if I didn't kill him, I must be insane, for
+I'm very well convinced that I did. Either that, or you are insane. I
+have my suspicions that you are. Would a sane person wear pumps with
+heels like those up here?" He pointed accusingly to the floor.
+
+For the first time the girl smiled, openly, frankly, gloriously. It was
+as if her heart had leaped forth for an instant and had greeted him.
+And then, like sunlight shadowed by cloud, the smile was gone. "You are
+a brave man," she said. "You are splendid. I hate men. But I think if
+you lived very long, I should love you. I will believe that you killed
+Barkley. You compel me to believe it. You confessed, when you found you
+were going to die, that an innocent man might be saved. Wasn't that it?"
+
+Kent nodded weakly. "That's it. I hate to think of it that way, but I
+guess it's true. I confessed because I knew I was going to die.
+Otherwise I am quite sure that I should have let the other fellow take
+my medicine for me. You must think I am a beast."
+
+"All men are beasts," she agreed quickly. "But you are--a different
+kind of beast. I like you. If there were a chance, I might fight for
+you. I can fight." She held up her two small hands, half smiling at him
+again.
+
+"But not with those," he exclaimed. "I think you would fight with your
+eyes. O'Connor told me they half killed Kedsty when you met them in the
+poplar grove yesterday."
+
+He had expected that the mention of Inspector Kedsty's name would
+disturb her. It had no effect that he could perceive.
+
+"O'Connor was the big, red-faced man with Mr. Kedsty?"
+
+"Yes, my trail partner. He came to me yesterday and raved about your
+eyes. They ARE beautiful; I've never seen eyes half so lovely. But that
+wasn't what struck Bucky so hard. It was the effect they had on Kedsty.
+He said they shattered every nerve in Kedsty's body, and Kedsty isn't
+the sort to get easily frightened. And the queer part of it was that
+the instant you had gone, he gave O'Connor an order to free
+McTrigger--and then turned and followed you. All the rest of that day
+O'Connor tried to discover something about you at the Landing. He
+couldn't find hide nor hair--I beg pardon!--I mean he couldn't find out
+anything about you at all. We made up our minds that for some reason or
+other you were hiding up at Kedsty's bungalow. You don't mind a fellow
+saying all this--when he is going to pop off soon--do you?"
+
+He was half frightened at the directness with which he had expressed
+the thing. He would gladly have buried his own curiosity and all of
+O'Connor's suspicions for another moment of her hand on his forehead.
+But it was out, and he waited.
+
+She was looking down, her fingers twisting some sort of tasseled dress
+ornament in her lap, and Kent mentally measured the length of her
+lashes with a foot rule in mind. They were superb, and in the thrill of
+his admiration he would have sworn they were an inch long. She looked
+up suddenly and caught the glow in his eyes and the flush that lay
+under the tan of his cheeks. Her own color had deepened a little.
+
+"What if you shouldn't die?" she asked him bluntly, as if she had not
+heard a word of all he had said about Kedsty. "What would you do?"
+
+"I'm going to."
+
+"But if you shouldn't?"
+
+Kent shrugged his shoulders. "I suppose I'd have to take my medicine.
+You're not going?"
+
+She had straightened up and was sitting on the edge of her chair. "Yes,
+I'm going. I'm afraid of my eyes. I may look at you as I looked at Mr.
+Kedsty, and then--pop you'd go, quick! And I don't want to be here when
+you die!"
+
+He heard a soft little note of laughter in her throat. It sent a chill
+through him. What an adorable, blood-thirsty little wretch she was! He
+stared at her bent head, at the shining coils of her wonderful hair.
+Undone, he could see it completely hiding her. And it was so soft and
+warm that again he was tempted to reach out and touch it. She was
+wonderful, and yet it was not possible that she had a heart. Her
+apparent disregard of the fact that he was a dying man was almost
+diabolic. There was no sympathy in the expression of her violet eyes as
+she looked at him. She was even making fun of the fact that he was
+about to die!
+
+She stood up, surveying for the first time the room in which she had
+been sitting. Then she turned to the window and looked out. She
+reminded Kent of a beautiful young willow that had grown at the edge of
+a stream, exquisite, slender, strong. He could have picked her up in
+his arms as easily as a child, yet he sensed in the lithe beauty of her
+body forces that could endure magnificently. The careless poise of her
+head fascinated him. For that head and the hair that crowned it he knew
+that half the women of the earth would have traded precious years of
+their lives.
+
+And then, without turning toward him, she said, "Some day, when I die,
+I wish I might have as pleasant a room as this."
+
+"I hope you never die," he replied devoutly.
+
+She came back and stood for a moment beside him.
+
+"I have had a very pleasant time," she said, as though he had given her
+a special sort of entertainment. "It's too bad you are going to die.
+I'm sure we should have been good friends. Aren't you?"
+
+"Yes, very sure. If you had only arrived sooner--"
+
+"And I shall always think of you as a different kind of man-beast," she
+interrupted him. "It is really true that I shouldn't like to see you
+die. I want to get away before it happens. Would you care to have me
+kiss you?"
+
+For an instant Kent felt that his aorta was about to give away. "I--I
+would," he gasped huskily.
+
+"Then--close your eyes, please."
+
+He obeyed. She bent over him. He felt the soft touch of her hands and
+caught for an instant the perfume of her face and hair, and then the
+thrill of her lips pressed warm and soft upon his.
+
+She was not flushed or embarrassed when he looked at her again. It was
+as if she had kissed a baby and was wondering at its red face. "I've
+only kissed three men before you," she avowed. "It is strange. I never
+thought I should do it again. And now, good-by!" She moved quickly to
+the door.
+
+"Wait," he cried plaintively. "Please wait. I want to know your name.
+It is Marette--"
+
+"Radisson," she finished for him. "Marette Radisson, and I come from
+away off there, from a place we call the Valley of Silent Men." She was
+pointing into the north.
+
+"The North!" he exclaimed.
+
+"Yes, it is far north. Very far."
+
+Her hand was on the latch. The door opened slowly.
+
+"Wait," he pleaded again. "You must not go."
+
+"Yes, I must go. I have remained too long. I am sorry I kissed you. I
+shouldn't have done that. But I had to because you are such a splendid
+liar!"
+
+The door opened quickly and closed behind her. He heard her steps
+almost running down the hall, where not long ago he had listened to the
+last of O'Connor's.
+
+And then there was silence, and in that silence he heard her words
+again, drumming like little hammers in his head, "_Because you are such
+a splendid liar_!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+James Kent, among his other qualities good and bad, possessed a
+merciless opinion of his own shortcomings, but never, in that opinion,
+had he fallen so low as in the interval which immediately followed the
+closing of his door behind the mysterious girl who had told him that
+her name was Marette Radisson. No sooner was she gone than the
+overwhelming superiority of her childlike cleverness smote him until,
+ashamed of himself, he burned red in his aloneness.
+
+He, Sergeant Kent, the coolest man on the force next to Inspector
+Kedsty, the most dreaded of catechists when questioning criminals, the
+man who had won the reputation of facing quietly and with deadly
+sureness the most menacing of dangers, had been beaten--horribly
+beaten--by a girl! And yet, in defeat, an irrepressible and at times
+distorted sense of humor made him give credit to the victor. The shame
+of the thing was his acknowledgment that a bit of feminine beauty had
+done the trick. He had made fun of O'Connor when the big staff-sergeant
+had described the effect of the girl's eyes on Inspector Kedsty. And,
+now, if O'Connor could know of what had happened here--
+
+And then, like a rubber ball, that saving sense of humor bounced up out
+of the mess, and Kent found himself chuckling as his face grew cooler.
+His visitor had come, and she had gone, and he knew no more about her
+than when she had entered his room, except that her very pretty name
+was Marette Radisson. He was just beginning to think of the questions
+he had wanted to ask, a dozen, half a hundred of them--more definitely
+who she was; how and why she had come to Athabasca Landing; her
+interest in Sandy McTrigger; the mysterious relationship that must
+surely exist between her and Inspector Kedsty; and, chiefly, her real
+motive in coming to him when she knew that he was dying. He comforted
+himself by the assurance that he would have learned these things had
+she not left him so suddenly. He had not expected that.
+
+The question which seated itself most insistently in his mind was, why
+had she come? Was it, after all, merely a matter of curiosity? Was her
+relationship to Sandy McTrigger such that inquisitiveness alone had
+brought her to see the man who had saved him? Surely she had not been
+urged by a sense of gratitude, for in no way had she given expression
+to that. On his death-bed she had almost made fun of him. And she could
+not have come as a messenger from McTrigger, or she would have left her
+message. For the first time he began to doubt that she knew the man at
+all, in spite of the strange thing that had happened under O'Connor's
+eyes. But she must know Kedsty. She had made no answer to his
+half-accusation that she was hiding up at the Inspector's bungalow. He
+had used that word--"hiding." It should have had an effect. And she was
+as beautifully unconscious of it as though she had not heard him, and
+he knew that she had heard him very distinctly. It was then that she
+had given him that splendid view of her amazingly long lashes and had
+countered softly,
+
+"What if you shouldn't die?"
+
+Kent felt himself suddenly aglow with an irresistible appreciation of
+the genius of her subtlety, and with that appreciation came a thrill of
+deeper understanding. He believed that he knew why she had left him so
+suddenly. It was because she had seen herself close to the danger-line.
+There were things which she did not want him to know or question her
+about, and his daring intimation that she was hiding in Kedsty's
+bungalow had warned her. Was it possible that Kedsty himself had sent
+her for some reason which he could not even guess at? Positively it was
+not because of McTrigger, the man he had saved. At least she would have
+thanked him in some way. She would not have appeared quite so adorably
+cold-blooded, quite so sweetly unconscious of the fact that he was
+dying. If McTrigger's freedom had meant anything to her, she could not
+have done less than reveal to him a bit of sympathy. And her greatest
+compliment, if he excepted the kiss, was that she had called him a
+splendid liar!
+
+Kent grimaced and drew in a deep breath because of the tightness in his
+chest. Why was it that every one seemed to disbelieve him? Why was it
+that even this mysterious girl, whom he had never seen before in his
+life, politely called him a liar when he insisted that he had killed
+John Barkley? Was the fact of murder necessarily branded in one's face?
+If so, he had never observed it. Some of the hardest criminals he had
+brought in from the down-river country were likable-looking men. There
+was Horrigan, for instance, who for seven long weeks kept him in good
+humor with his drollery, though he was bringing him in to be hanged.
+And there were McTab, and _le Bête Noir_--the Black Beast--a lovable
+vagabond in spite of his record, and Le Beau, the gentlemanly robber of
+the wilderness mail, and half a dozen others he could recall without
+any effort at all. No one called them liars when, like real men, they
+confessed their crimes when they saw their game was up. To a man they
+had given up the ghost with their boots on, and Kent respected their
+memory because of it. And he was dying--and even this stranger girl
+called him a liar? And no case had ever been more complete than his
+own. He had gone mercilessly into the condemning detail of it all. It
+was down in black and white. He had signed it. And still he was
+disbelieved. It was funny, deuced funny, thought Kent.
+
+Until young Mercer opened the door and came in with his late breakfast,
+he had forgotten that he had really been hungry when he awakened with
+Cardigan's stethoscope at his chest. Mercer had amused him from the
+first. The pink-faced young Englishman, fresh from the old country,
+could not conceal in his face and attitude the fact that he was walking
+in the presence of the gallows whenever he entered the room. He was, as
+he had confided in Cardigan, "beastly hit up" over the thing. To feed
+and wash a man who would undoubtedly die, but who would be hanged by
+the neck until he was dead if he lived, filled him with peculiar and at
+times conspicuous emotions. It was like attending to a living corpse,
+if such a thing could be conceived. And Mercer had conceived it. Kent
+had come to regard him as more or less of a barometer giving away
+Cardigan's secrets. He had not told Cardigan, but had kept the
+discovery for his own amusement.
+
+This morning Mercer's face was less pink, and his pale eyes were paler,
+Kent thought. Also he started to sprinkle sugar on his eggs in place of
+salt.
+
+Kent laughed and stopped his hand. "You may sugar my eggs when I'm
+dead, Mercer," he said, "but while I'm alive I want salt on 'em! Do you
+know, old man, you look bad this morning. Is it because this is my last
+breakfast?"
+
+"I hope not, sir, I hope not," replied Mercer quickly. "Indeed, I hope
+you are going to live, sir."
+
+"Thanks!" said Kent dryly. "Where is Cardigan?"
+
+"The Inspector sent a messenger for him, sir. I think he has gone to
+see him. Are your eggs properly done, sir?"
+
+"Mercer, if you ever worked in a butler's pantry, for the love of
+heaven forget it now!" exploded Kent, "I want you to tell me something
+straight out. How long have I got?"
+
+Mercer fidgeted for a moment, and a shade or two more of the red went
+out of his face. "I can't say, sir. Doctor Cardigan hasn't told me. But
+I think not very long, sir. Doctor Cardigan is cut up all in rags this
+morning. And Father Layonne is coming to see you at any moment."
+
+"Much obliged," nodded Kent, calmly beginning his second egg. "And, by
+the way, what did you think of the young lady?"
+
+"Ripping, positively ripping!" exclaimed Mercer.
+
+"That's the word," agreed Kent. "Ripping. It sounds like the calico
+counter in a dry-goods store, but means a lot. Don't happen to know
+where she is staying or why she is at the Landing, do you?"
+
+He knew that he was asking a foolish question and scarcely expected an
+answer from Mercer. He was astonished when the other said:
+
+"I heard Doctor Cardigan ask her if we might expect her to honor us
+with another visit, and she told him it would be impossible, because
+she was leaving on a down-river scow tonight. Fort Simpson, I think she
+said she was going to, sir."
+
+"The deuce you say!" cried Kent, spilling a bit of his coffee in the
+thrill of the moment. "Why, that's where Staff-Sergeant O'Connor is
+bound for!"
+
+"So I heard Doctor Cardigan tell her. But she didn't reply to that. She
+just--went. If you don't mind a little joke in your present condition,
+sir, I might say that Doctor Cardigan was considerably flayed up over
+her. A deuced pretty girl, sir, deuced pretty! And I think he was shot
+through!"
+
+"Now you're human, Mercer. She was pretty, wasn't she?"
+
+"Er--yes--stunningly so, Mr. Kent," agreed Mercer, reddening suddenly
+to the roots of his pasty, blond hair. "I don't mind confessing that in
+this unusual place her appearance was quite upsetting."
+
+"I agree with you, friend Mercer," nodded Kent. "She upset me. And--see
+here, old man!--will you do a dying man the biggest favor he ever asked
+in his life?"
+
+"I should be most happy, sir, most happy."
+
+"It's this," said Kent. "I want to know if that girl actually leaves on
+the down-river scow tonight. If I'm alive tomorrow morning, will you
+tell me?"
+
+"I shall do my best, sir."
+
+"Good. It's simply the silly whim of a dying man, Mercer. But I want to
+be humored in it. And I'm sensitive--like yourself. I don't want
+Cardigan to know. There's an old Indian named Mooie, who lives in a
+shack just beyond the sawmill. Give him ten dollars and tell him there
+is another ten in it if he sees the business through, and reports
+properly to you, and keeps his mouth shut afterward. Here--the money is
+under my pillow."
+
+Kent pulled out a wallet and put fifty dollars in Mercer's hands.
+
+"Buy cigars with the rest of it, old man. It's of no more use to me.
+And this little trick you are going to pull off is worth it. It's my
+last fling on earth, you might say."
+
+"Thank you, sir. It is very kind of you."
+
+Mercer belonged to a class of wandering Englishmen typical of the
+Canadian West, the sort that sometimes made real Canadians wonder why a
+big and glorious country like their own should cling to the mother
+country. Ingratiating and obsequiously polite at all times, he gave one
+the impression of having had splendid training as a servant, yet had
+this intimation been made to him, he would have become highly
+indignant. Kent had learned their ways pretty well. He had met them in
+all sorts of places, for one of their inexplicable characteristics was
+the recklessness and apparent lack of judgment with which they located
+themselves. Mercer, for instance, should have held a petty clerical job
+of some kind in a city, and here he was acting as nurse in the heart of
+a wilderness!
+
+After Mercer had gone with the breakfast things and the money, Kent
+recalled a number of his species. And he knew that under their veneer
+of apparent servility was a thing of courage and daring which needed
+only the right kind of incentive to rouse it. And when roused, it was
+peculiarly efficient in a secretive, artful-dodger sort of way. It
+would not stand up before a gun. But it would creep under the mouths of
+guns on a black night. And Kent was positive his fifty dollars would
+bring him results--if he lived.
+
+Just why he wanted the information he was after, he could not have told
+himself. It was a pet aphorism between O'Connor and him that they had
+often traveled to success on the backs of their hunches. And his
+proposition to Mercer was made on the spur of one of those moments when
+the spirit of a hunch possessed him. His morning had been one of
+unexpected excitement, and now he leaned back in an effort to review it
+and to forget, if he could, the distressing thing that was bound to
+happen to him within the next few hours. But he could not get away from
+the thickening in his chest. It seemed growing on him. Now and then he
+was compelled to make quite an effort to get sufficient air into his
+lungs.
+
+He found himself wondering if there was a possibility that the girl
+might return. For a long time he lay thinking about her, and it struck
+him as incongruous and in bad taste that fate should have left this
+adventure for his last. If he had met her six months ago--or even
+three--it was probable that she would so have changed the events of
+life for him that he would not have got the half-breed's bullet in his
+chest. He confessed the thing unblushingly. The wilderness had taken
+the place of woman for him. It had claimed him, body and soul. He had
+desired nothing beyond its wild freedom and its never-ending games of
+chance. He had dreamed, as every man dreams, but realities and not the
+dreams had been the red pulse of his life. And yet, if this girl had
+come sooner--
+
+He revisioned for himself over and over again her hair and eyes, the
+slimness of her as she had stood at the window, the freedom and
+strength of that slender body, the poise of her exquisite head, and he
+felt again the thrill of her hand and the still more wonderful thrill
+of her lips as she had pressed them warmly upon his.
+
+_And she was of the North_! That was the thought that overwhelmed him. He
+did not permit himself to believe that she might have told him an
+untruth. He was confident, if he lived until tomorrow, that Mercer
+would corroborate his faith in her. He had never heard of a place
+called the Valley of Silent Men, but it was a big country, and Fort
+Simpson with its Hudson Bay Company's post and its half-dozen shacks
+was a thousand miles away. He was not sure that such a place as that
+valley really existed. It was easier to believe that the girl's home
+was at Fort Providence, Fort Simpson, Fort Good Hope, or even at Fort
+McPherson. It was not difficult for him to picture her as the daughter
+of one of the factor lords of the North. Yet this, upon closer
+consideration, he gave up as unreasonable. The word "Fort" did not
+stand for population, and there were probably not more than fifty white
+people at all the posts between the Great Slave and the Arctic. She was
+not one of these, or the fact would have been known at the Landing.
+
+Neither could she be a riverman's daughter, for it was inconceivable
+that either a riverman or a trapper would have sent this girl down into
+civilization, where this girl had undoubtedly been. It was that point
+chiefly which puzzled Kent. She was not only beautiful. She had been
+tutored in schools that were not taught by wilderness missioners. In
+her, it seemed to him, he had seen the beauty and the wild freedom of
+the forests as they had come to him straight out of the heart of an
+ancient aristocracy that was born nearly two hundred years ago in the
+old cities of Quebec and Montreal.
+
+His mind flashed back at that thought: he remembered the time when he
+had sought out every nook and cranny of that ancient town of Quebec,
+and had stood over graves two centuries old, and deep in his soul had
+envied the dead the lives they had lived. He had always thought of
+Quebec as a rare old bit of time-yellowed lace among cities--the heart
+of the New World as it had once been, still beating, still whispering
+of its one-time power, still living in the memory of its mellowed
+romance, its almost forgotten tragedies--a ghost that lived, that still
+beat back defiantly the destroying modernism that would desecrate its
+sacred things. And it pleased him to think of Marette Radisson as the
+spirit of it, wandering north, and still farther north--even as the
+spirits of the profaned dead had risen from the Landing to go farther
+on.
+
+And feeling that the way had at last been made easy for him, Kent
+smiled out into the glorious day and whispered softly, as if she were
+standing there, listening to him:
+
+"If I had lived--I would have called you--my Quebec. It's pretty, that
+name. It stands for a lot. And so do you."
+
+And out in the hall, as Kent whispered those words, stood Father
+Layonne, with a face that was whiter than the mere presence of death
+had ever made it before. At his side stood Cardigan, aged ten years
+since he had placed his stethoscope at Kent's chest that morning. And
+behind these two were Kedsty, with a face like gray rock, and young
+Mercer, in whose staring eyes was the horror of a thing he could not
+yet quite comprehend. Cardigan made an effort to speak and failed.
+Kedsty wiped his forehead, as he had wiped it the morning of Kent's
+confession. And Father Layonne, as he went to Kent's door, was
+breathing softly to himself a prayer.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+From the window, the glorious day outside, and the vision he had made
+for himself of Marette Radisson, Kent turned at the sound of a hand at
+his door and saw it slowly open. He was expecting it. He had read young
+Mercer like a book. Mercer's nervousness and the increased tightening
+of the thing in his chest had given him warning. The thing was going to
+happen soon, and Father Layonne had come. He tried to smile, that he
+might greet his wilderness friend cheerfully and unafraid. But the
+smile froze when the door opened and he saw the missioner standing
+there.
+
+More than once he had accompanied Father Layonne over the threshold of
+life into the presence of death, but he had never before seen in his
+face what he saw there now. He stared. The missioner remained in the
+doorway, hesitating, as if at the last moment a great fear held him
+back. For an interval the eyes of the two men rested upon each other in
+a silence that was like the grip of a living thing. Then Father Layonne
+came quietly into the room and closed the door behind him.
+
+Kent drew a deep breath and tried to grin. "You woke me out of a
+dream," he said, "a day-dream. I've had a very pleasant experience this
+morning, _mon père_."
+
+"So some one was trying to tell me, Jimmy," replied the little
+missioner with an effort to smile back.
+
+"Mercer?"
+
+"Yes. He told me about it confidentially. The poor boy must have fallen
+in love with the young lady."
+
+"So have I, _mon père_. I don't mind confessing it to you. I'm rather
+glad. And if Cardigan hadn't scheduled me to die--"
+
+"Jimmy," interrupted the missioner quickly, but a bit huskily, "has it
+ever occurred to you that Doctor Cardigan may be mistaken?"
+
+He had taken one of Kent's hands. His grip tightened. It began to hurt.
+And Kent, looking into his eyes, found his brain all at once like a
+black room suddenly illuminated by a flash of fire. Drop by drop the
+blood went out of his face until it was whiter than Father Layonne's.
+
+"You--you don't--mean--"
+
+"Yes, yes, boy, I mean just that," said the missioner, in a voice so
+strange that it did not seem to be his own. "You are not going to die,
+Jimmy. You are going to live!"
+
+"Live!" Kent dropped back against his pillows. "_Live_!" His lips gasped
+the one word.
+
+He closed his eyes for an instant, and it seemed to him that the world
+was aflame. And he repeated the word again, but only his lips formed
+it, and there came no sound. His senses, strained to the breaking-point
+to meet the ordeal of death, gave way slowly to the mighty reaction. He
+felt in those moments like a reeling man. He opened his eyes, and there
+was a meaningless green haze through the window where the world should
+have been. But he heard Father Layonne's voice. It seemed a great
+distance off, but it was very clear. Doctor Cardigan had made an error,
+it was saying. And Doctor Cardigan, because of that error, was like a
+man whose heart had been taken out of him. But it was an excusable
+error.
+
+If there had been an X-ray--But there had been none. And Doctor
+Cardigan had made the diagnosis that nine out of ten good surgeons
+would probably have made. What he had taken to be the aneurismal
+blood-rush was an exaggerated heart murmur, and the increased
+thickening in his chest was a simple complication brought about by too
+much night air. It was too bad the error had happened. But he must not
+blame Cardigan!
+
+_He must not blame Cardigan_! Those last words pounded like an endless
+series of little waves in Kent's brain. He must not blame Cardigan! He
+laughed, laughed before his dazed senses readjusted themselves, before
+the world through the window pieced itself into shape again. At least
+he thought he was laughing. He must--not--blame--Cardigan! What an
+amazingly stupid thing for Father Layonne to say! Blame Cardigan for
+giving him back his life? Blame him for the glorious knowledge that he
+was not going to die? Blame him for--
+
+Things were coming clearer. Like a bolt slipping into its groove his
+brain found itself. He saw Father Layonne again, with his white, tense
+face and eyes in which were still seated the fear and the horror he had
+seen in the doorway. It was not until then that he gripped fully at the
+truth.
+
+"I--I see," he said. "You and Cardigan think it would have been better
+if I had died!"
+
+The missioner was still holding his hand. "I don't know, Jimmy, I don't
+know. What has happened is terrible."
+
+"But not so terrible as death," cried Kent, suddenly growing rigid
+against his pillows. "Great God, _mon père_, I want to live! Oh--"
+
+He snatched his hand free and stretched forth both arms to the open
+window. "Look at it out there! My world again! MY WORLD! I want to go
+back to it. It's ten times more precious to me now than it was. Why
+should I blame Cardigan? _Mon père_--_mon père_--listen to me. I can say it
+now, because I've got a right to say it. _I lied_. I didn't kill John
+Barkley!"
+
+A strange cry fell from Father Layonne's lips. It was a choking cry, a
+cry, not of rejoicing, but of a grief-stung thing. "Jimmy!"
+
+"I swear it! Great heaven, _mon père_, don't you believe me?"
+
+The missioner had risen. In his eyes and face was another look. It was
+as if in all his life he had never seen James Kent before. It was a
+look born suddenly of shock, the shock of amazement, of incredulity, of
+a new kind of horror. Then swiftly again his countenance changed, and
+he put a hand on Kent's head.
+
+"God forgive you, Jimmy," he said. "And God help you, too!"
+
+Where a moment before Kent had felt the hot throb of an inundating joy,
+his heart was chilled now by the thing he sensed in Father Layonne's
+voice and saw in his face and eyes. It was not entirely disbelief. It
+was a more hopeless thing than that.
+
+"You do not believe me!" he said.
+
+"It is my religion to believe, Jimmy," replied Father Layonne in a
+gentle voice into which the old calmness had returned. "I must believe,
+for your sake. But it is not a matter of human sentiment now, lad. It
+is the Law! Whatever my heart feels toward you can do you no good. You
+are--" He hesitated to speak the words.
+
+Then it was that Kent saw fully and clearly the whole monstrous
+situation. It had taken time for it to fasten itself upon him. In a
+general way it had been clear to him a few moments before; now, detail
+by detail, it closed in upon him, and his muscles tightened, and Father
+Layonne saw his jaw set hard and his hands clench. Death was gone. But
+the mockery of it, the grim exultation of the thing over the colossal
+trick it had played, seemed to din an infernal laughter in his ears.
+But--he was going to live! That was the one fact that rose above all
+others. No matter what happened to him a month or six months from now,
+he was not going to die today. He would live to receive Mercer's
+report. He would live to stand on his feet again and to fight for the
+life which he had thrown away. He was, above everything else, a
+fighting man. It was born in him to fight, not so much against his
+fellow men as against the overwhelming odds of adventure as they came
+to him. And now he was up against the deadliest game of all. He saw it.
+He felt it. The thing gripped him. In the eyes of that Law of which he
+had so recently been a part he was a murderer. And in the province of
+Alberta the penalty for killing a man was hanging. Because horror and
+fear did not seize upon him, he wondered if he still realized the
+situation. He believed that he did. It was merely a matter of human
+nature. Death, he had supposed, was a fixed and foregone thing. He had
+believed that only a few hours of life were left for him. And now it
+was given back to him, for months at least. It was a glorious reprieve,
+and--
+
+Suddenly his heart stood still in the thrill of the thought that came
+to him. Marette Radisson had known that he was not going to die! She
+had hinted the fact, and he, like a blundering idiot, had failed to
+catch the significance of it. She had given him no sympathy, had
+laughed at him, had almost made fun of him, simply because she knew
+that he was going to live!
+
+He turned suddenly on Father Layonne.
+
+"They shall believe me!" he cried. "I shall make them believe me! _Mon
+père_, I lied! I lied to save Sandy McTrigger, and I shall tell them
+why. If Doctor Cardigan has not made another mistake, I want them all
+here again. Will you arrange it?"
+
+"Inspector Kedsty is waiting outside," said Father Layonne quietly,
+"but I should not act in haste, Jimmy. I should wait. I should
+think--think."
+
+"You mean take time to think up a story that will hold water, _mon père_?
+I have that. I have the story. And yet--" He smiled a bit dismally. "I
+did make one pretty thorough confession, didn't I, Father?"
+
+"It was very convincing, Jimmy. It went so particularly into the
+details, and those details, coupled with the facts that you were seen
+at John Barkley's earlier in the evening, and that it was you who found
+him dead a number of hours later--"
+
+"All make a strong case against me," agreed Kent. "As a matter of fact,
+I was up at Barkley's to look over an old map he had made of the
+Porcupine country twenty years ago. He couldn't find it. Later he sent
+word he had run across it. I returned and found him dead."
+
+The little missioner nodded, but did not speak.
+
+"It is embarrassing," Kent went on. "It almost seems as though I ought
+to go through with it, like a sport. When a man loses, it isn't good
+taste to set up a howl. It makes him sort of yellow-backed, you know.
+To play the game according to rules, I suppose I ought to keep quiet
+and allow myself to be hung without making any disturbance. Die game,
+and all that, you know. Then there is the other way of looking at it.
+This poor neck of mine depends on me. It has given me a lot of good
+service. It has been mighty loyal. It has even swallowed eggs on the
+day it thought it was going to die. And I'd be a poor specimen of
+humanity to go back on it now. I want to do that neck a good turn. I
+want to save it. And I'm going to--if I can!"
+
+In spite of the unpleasant tension of the moment, it cheered Father
+Layonne to see this old humor returning into the heart of his friend.
+With him love was an enduring thing. He might grieve for James Kent, he
+might pray for the salvation of his soul, he might believe him guilty,
+yet he still bore for him the affection which was too deeply rooted in
+his heart to be uptorn by physical things or the happenings of chance.
+So the old cheer of his smile came back, and he said:
+
+"To fight for his life is a privilege which God gives to every man,
+Jimmy. I was terrified when I came to you. I believed it would have
+been better if you had died. I can see my error. It will be a terrible
+fight. If you win, I shall be glad. If you lose, I know that you will
+lose bravely. Perhaps you are right. It may be best to see Inspector
+Kedsty before you have had time to think. That point will have its
+psychological effect. Shall I tell him you are prepared to see him?"
+
+Kent nodded. "Yes. Now."
+
+Father Layonne went to the door. Even there he seemed to hesitate an
+instant, as if again to call upon Kent to reconsider. Then he opened it
+and went out.
+
+Kent waited impatiently. His hand, fumbling at his bedclothes, seized
+upon the cloth with which he had wiped his lips, and it suddenly
+occurred to him that it had been a long time since it had shown a fresh
+stain of blood. Now that he knew it was not a deadly thing, the
+tightening in his chest was less uncomfortable. He felt like getting up
+and meeting his visitors on his feet. Every nerve in his body wanted
+action, and the minutes of silence which followed the closing of the
+door after the missioner were drawn out and tedious to him. A quarter
+of an hour passed before he heard returning footsteps, and by the sound
+of them he knew Kedsty was not coming alone. Probably _le père_ would
+return with him. And possibly Cardigan.
+
+What happened in the next few seconds was somewhat of a shock to him.
+Father Layonne entered first, and then came Inspector Kedsty. Kent's
+eyes shot to the face of the commander of N Division. There was
+scarcely recognition in it. A mere inclination of the head, not enough
+to call a greeting, was the reply to Kent's nod and salute. Never had
+he seen Kedsty's face more like the face of an emotionless sphinx. But
+what disturbed him most was the presence of people he had not expected.
+Close behind Kedsty was McDougal, the magistrate, and behind McDougal
+entered Constables Felly and Brant, stiffly erect and clearly under
+orders. Cardigan, pale and uneasy, came in last, with the stenographer.
+Scarcely had they entered the room when Constable Pelly pronounced the
+formal warning of the Criminal Code of the Royal Northwest Mounted
+Police, and Kent was legally under arrest.
+
+He had not looked for this. He knew, of course, that the process of the
+Law would take its course, but he had not anticipated this bloodthirsty
+suddenness. He had expected, first of all, to talk with Kedsty as man
+to man. And yet--it was the Law. He realized this as his eyes traveled
+from Kedsty's rock-like face to the expressionless immobility of his
+old friends, Constables Pelly and Brant. If there was sympathy, it was
+hidden except in the faces of Cardigan and Father Layonne. And Kent,
+exultantly hopeful a little while before, felt his heart grow heavy
+within him as he waited for the moment when he would begin the fight to
+repossess himself of the life and freed which he had lost.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+For some time after the door to Kent's room had closed upon the ominous
+visitation of the Law, young Mercer remained standing in the hall,
+debating with himself whether his own moment had not arrived. In the
+end he decided that it had, and with Kent's fifty dollars in his pocket
+he made for the shack of the old Indian trailer, Mooie. It was an hour
+later when he returned, just in time to see Kent's door open again.
+Doctor Cardigan and Father Layonne reappeared first, followed in turn
+by the blonde stenographer, the magistrate, and Constables Pelly and
+Brant. Then the door closed.
+
+Within the room, sweating from the ordeal through which he had passed,
+Kent sat bolstered against his pillows, facing Inspector Kedsty with
+blazing eyes.
+
+"I've asked for these few moments alone with you, Kedsty, because I
+wanted to talk to you as a man, and not as my superior officer. I am, I
+take it, no longer a member of the force. That being the case, I owe
+you no more respect than I owe to any other man. And I am pleased to
+have the very great privilege of calling you a cursed scoundrel!"
+
+Kedsty's face was hot, but as his hands clenched slowly, it turned
+redder. Before he could speak, Kent went on.
+
+"You have not shown me the courtesy or the sympathy you have had for
+the worst criminals that ever faced you. You amazed every man that was
+in this room, because at one time--if not now--they were my friends. It
+wasn't what you said. It was how you said it. Whenever there was an
+inclination on their part to believe, you killed it--not honestly and
+squarely, by giving me a chance. Whenever you saw a chance for me to
+win a point, you fell back upon the law. And you don't believe that I
+killed John Barkley. I know it. You called me a liar the day I made
+that fool confession. You still believe that I lied. And I have waited
+until we were alone to ask you certain things, for I still have
+something of courtesy left in me, if you haven't. What is your game?
+What has brought about the change in you? Is it--"
+
+His right hand clenched hard as a rock as he leaned toward Kedsty.
+
+"Is it because of the girl hiding up at your bungalow, Kedsty?"
+
+Even in that moment, when he had the desire to strike the man before
+him, it was impossible for him not to admire the stone-like
+invulnerability of Kedsty. He had never heard of another man calling
+Kedsty a scoundrel or dishonest. And yet, except that his faced burned
+more dully red, the Inspector was as impassively calm as ever. Even
+Kent's intimation that he was playing a game, and his direct accusation
+that he was keeping Marette Radisson in hiding at his bungalow, seemed
+to have no disturbing effect on him. For a space he looked at Kent, as
+if measuring the poise of the other's mind. When he spoke, it was in a
+voice so quiet and calm that Kent stared at him in amazement.
+
+"I don't blame you, Kent," he said. "I don't blame you for calling me a
+scoundrel, or anything else you want to. I think I should do the same
+if I were in your place. You think it is incredible, because of our
+previous association, that I should not make every effort to save you.
+I would, if I thought you were innocent. But I don't. I believe you are
+guilty. I cannot see where there is a loophole in the evidence against
+you, as given in your own confession. Why, man, even if I could help to
+prove you innocent of killing John Barkley--"
+
+He paused and twisted one of his gray mustaches, half facing the window
+for a moment. "Even if I did that," he went on, "you would still have
+twenty years of prison ahead of you for the worst kind of perjury on
+the face of the earth, perjury committed at a time when you thought you
+were dying! You are guilty, Kent. If not of one thing, then of the
+other. I am not playing a game. And as for the girl--there is no girl
+at my bungalow."
+
+He turned to the door; and Kent made no effort to stop him. Words came
+to his lips and died there, and for a space after Kedsty had gone he
+stared out into the green forest world beyond his window, seeing
+nothing. Inspector Kedsty, quietly and calmly, had spoken words that
+sent his hopes crashing in ruin about him. For even if he escaped the
+hangman, he was still a criminal--a criminal of the worst sort,
+perhaps, next to the man who kills another. If he proved that he had
+not killed John Barkley, he would convict himself, at the same time, of
+having made solemn oath to a lie on what he supposed was his death-bed.
+And for that, a possible twenty years in the Edmonton penitentiary! At
+best he could not expect less than ten. Ten years--twenty years--in
+prison! That, or hang.
+
+The sweat broke out on his face. He did not curse Kedsty now. His anger
+was gone. Kedsty had seen all the time what he, like a fool, had not
+thought of. No matter how the Inspector might feel in that deeply
+buried heart of his, he could not do otherwise than he was doing. He,
+James Kent, who hated a lie above all the things on the earth, was
+kin-as-kisew--the blackest liar of all, a man who lied when he was
+dying.
+
+And for that lie there was a great punishment. The Law saw with its own
+eyes. It was a single-track affair, narrow-visioned, caring nothing for
+what was to the right or the left. It would tolerate no excuse which he
+might find for himself. He had lied to save a human life, but that life
+the Law itself had wanted. So he had both robbed and outraged the Law,
+even though a miracle saved him the greatest penalty of all.
+
+The weight of the thing crushed him. It was as if for the first time a
+window had opened for him, and he saw what Kedsty had seen. And then,
+as the minutes passed, the fighting spirit in him rose again. He was
+not of the sort to go under easily. Personal danger had always stirred
+him to his greatest depths, and he had never confronted a danger
+greater than this he was facing now. It was not a matter of leaping
+quickly and on the spur of the moment. For ten years his training had
+been that of a hunter of men, and the psychology of the man hunt had
+been his strong point. Always, in seeking his quarry, he had tried
+first to bring himself into a mental sympathy and understanding with
+that quarry. To analyze what an outlaw would do under certain
+conditions and with certain environments and racial inheritances behind
+him was to Kent the premier move in the thrilling game. He had evolved
+rules of great importance for himself, but always he had worked them
+out from the vantage point of the huntsman. Now he began to turn them
+around. He, James Kent, was no longer the hunter, but the hunted, and
+all the tricks which he had mastered must now be worked the other way.
+His woodcraft, his cunning, the fine points he had learned of the game
+of one-against-one would avail him but little when it came to the
+witness chair and a trial.
+
+The open window was his first inspiration. Adventure had been the blood
+of his life. And out there, behind the green forests rolling away like
+the billows of an ocean, lay the greatest adventure of all. Once in
+those beloved forests covering almost the half of a continent, he would
+be willing to die if the world beat him. He could see himself playing
+the game of the hunted as no other man had ever played it before. Let
+him once have his guns and his freedom, with all that world waiting for
+him--
+
+Eagerness gleamed in his eyes, and then, slowly, it died out. The open
+window, after all, was but a mockery. He rolled sideways from his bed
+and partly balanced himself on his feet. The effort made him dizzy. He
+doubted if he could have walked a hundred yards after climbing through
+the window. Instantly another thought leaped into his brain. His head
+was clearing. He swayed across the room and back again, the first time
+he had been on his feet since the half-breed's bullet had laid him out.
+He would fool Cardigan. He would fool Kedsty. As he recovered his
+strength, he would keep it to himself. He would play sick man to the
+limit, and then some night he would take advantage of the open window!
+
+The thought thrilled him as no other thing in the world had ever
+thrilled him before. For the first time he sensed the vast difference
+between the hunter and the hunted, between the man who played the game
+of life and death alone and the one who played it with the Law and all
+its might behind him. To hunt was thrilling. To be hunted was more
+thrilling. Every nerve in his body tingled. A different kind of fire
+burned in his brain. He was the creature who was at bay. The other
+fellow was the hunter now.
+
+He went back to the window and leaned far out. He looked at the forest
+and saw it with new eyes. The gleam of the slowly moving river held a
+meaning for him that it had never held before. Doctor Cardigan, seeing
+him then, would have sworn the fever had returned. His eyes held a
+slumbering fire. His face was flushed. In these moments Kent did not
+see death. He was not visioning the iron bars of a prison. His blood
+pulsed only to the stir of that greatest of all adventures which lay
+ahead of him. He, the best man-hunter in two thousand miles of
+wilderness, would beat the hunters themselves. The hound had turned
+fox, and that fox knew the tricks of both the hunter and the hunted. He
+would win! A world beckoned to him, and he would reach the heart of
+that world. Already there began to flash through his mind memory of the
+places where he could find safety and freedom for all time. No man in
+all the Northland knew its out-of-the-way corners better than he--its
+unmapped and unexplored places, the far and mysterious patches of _terra
+incognita_, where the sun still rose and set without permission of the
+Law, and God laughed as in the days when prehistoric monsters fed from
+the tops of trees no taller than themselves. Once through that window,
+with the strength to travel, and the Law might seek him for a hundred
+years without profit to itself.
+
+It was not bravado in his blood that stirred these thoughts. It was not
+panic or an unsound excitement. He was measuring things even as he
+visioned them. He would go down-river way, toward the Arctic. And he
+would find Marette Radisson! Yes, even though she lived at Barracks at
+Fort Simpson, he would find her! And after that? The question blurred
+all other questions in his mind. There were many answers to it.
+
+Knowing that it would be fatal to his scheme if he were found on his
+feet, he returned to his bed. The flush of his exertion and excitement
+was still in his face when Doctor Cardigan came half an hour later.
+
+Within the next few minutes he put Cardigan more at his ease than he
+had been during the preceding day and night. It was, after all, an
+error which made him happier the more he thought about it, he told the
+surgeon. He admitted that at first the discovery that he was going to
+live had horrified him. But now the whole thing bore a different aspect
+for him. As soon as he was sufficiently strong, he would begin
+gathering the evidences for his alibi, and he was confident of proving
+himself innocent of John Barkley's murder.
+
+He anticipated ten years in the Edmonton penitentiary. But what were
+ten years there as compared with forty or fifty under the sod? He wrung
+Cardigan's hand. He thanked him for the splendid care he had given him.
+It was he, Cardigan, who had saved him from the grave, he said--and
+Cardigan grew younger under his eyes.
+
+"I thought you'd look at it differently, Kent," he said, drawing in a
+deep breath. "My God, when I found I had made that mistake--"
+
+"You figured you were handing me over to the hangman," smiled Kent.
+"It's true I shouldn't have made that confession, old man, if I hadn't
+rated you right next to God Almighty when it came to telling whether a
+man was going to live or die. But we all make slips. I've made 'em. And
+you've got no apology to make. I may ask you to send me good cigars now
+and then while I'm in retirement at Edmonton, and I shall probably
+insist that you come to smoke with me occasionally and tell me the news
+of the rivers. But I'm afraid, old chap, that I'm going to worry you a
+bit more here. I feel queer today, queer inside me. Now it would be a
+topping joke if some other complication should set in and fool us all
+again, wouldn't it?"
+
+He could see the impression he was making on Cardigan. Again his faith
+in the psychology of the mind found its absolute verification.
+Cardigan, lifted unexpectedly out of the slough of despond by the very
+man whom he expected to condemn him, became from that moment, in the
+face of the mental reaction, almost hypersympathetic. When finally he
+left the room, Kent was inwardly rejoicing. For Cardigan had told him
+it would be some time before he was strong enough to stand on his feet.
+
+He did not see Mercer all the rest of that day. It was Cardigan who
+personally brought his dinner and his supper and attended him last at
+night. He asked not to be interrupted again, as he felt that he wanted
+to sleep. There was a guard outside his door now.
+
+Cardigan scowled when he volunteered this information. It was sheer
+nonsense in Kedsty taking such a silly precaution. But he would give
+the guard rubber-soled shoes and insist that he make no sound that
+would disturb him. Kent thanked him, and grinned exultantly when he was
+gone.
+
+He waited until his watch told him it was ten o'clock before he began
+the exercise which he had prescribed for himself. Noiselessly he rolled
+out of bed. There was no sensation of dizziness when he stood on his
+feet this time. His head was as clear as a bell. He began experimenting
+by inhaling deeper and still deeper breaths and by straightening his
+chest.
+
+There was no pain, as he had expected there would be. He felt like
+crying out in his joy. One after the other he stretched up his arms. He
+bent over until the tips of his fingers touched the floor. He crooked
+his knees, leaned from side to side, changed from one attitude to
+another, amazed at the strength and elasticity of his body. Twenty
+times, before he returned to his bed, he walked back and forth across
+his room.
+
+He was sleepless. Lying with his back to the pillows he looked out into
+the starlight, watching for the first glow of the moon and listening
+again to the owls that had nested in the lightning-shriven tree. An
+hour later he resumed his exercise.
+
+He was on his feet when through his window he heard the sound of
+approaching voices and then of running feet. A moment later some one
+was pounding at a door, and a loud voice shouted for Doctor Cardigan.
+Kent drew cautiously nearer the window. The moon had risen, and he saw
+figures approaching, slowly, as if weighted under a burden. Before they
+turned out of his vision, he made out two men bearing some heavy object
+between them. Then came the opening of a door, other voices, and after
+that an interval of quiet.
+
+He returned to his bed, wondering who the new patient could be.
+
+He was breathing easier after his exertion. The fact that he was
+feeling keenly alive, and that the thickening in his chest was
+disappearing, flushed him with elation. An unbounded optimism possessed
+him. It was late when he fell asleep, and he slept late. It was
+Mercer's entrance into his room that roused him. He came in softly,
+closed the door softly, yet Kent heard him. The moment he pulled
+himself up, he knew that Mercer had a report to make, and he also saw
+that something upsetting had happened to him. Mercer was a bit excited.
+
+"I beg pardon for waking you, sir," he said, leaning close over Kent,
+as though fearing the guard might be listening at the door. "But I
+thought it best for you to hear about the Indian, sir."
+
+"The Indian?"
+
+"Yes, sir--Mooie, sir. I am quite upset over it, Mr. Kent. He told me
+early last evening that he had found the scow on which the girl was
+going down-river. He said it was hidden in Kim's Bayou."
+
+"Kim's Bayou! That was a good hiding-place, Mercer!"
+
+"A very good place of concealment indeed, sir. As soon as it was dark,
+Mooie returned to watch. What happened to him I haven't fully
+discovered, sir. But it must have been near midnight when he staggered
+up to Crossen's place, bleeding and half out of his senses. They
+brought him here, and I watched over him most of the night. He says the
+girl went aboard the scow and that the scow started down-river. That
+much I learned, sir. But all the rest he mumbles in a tongue I can not
+understand. Crossen says it's Cree, and that old Mooie believes devils
+jumped on him with clubs down at Kim's Bayou. Of course they must have
+been men. I don't believe in Mooie's devils, sir."
+
+"Nor I," said Kent, the blood stirring strangely in his veins. "Mercer,
+it simply means there was some one cleverer than old Mooie watching
+that trail."
+
+With a curiously tense face Mercer was looking cautiously toward the
+door. Then he leaned still lower over Kent.
+
+"During his mumblings, when I was alone with him, I heard him speak a
+name, sir. Half a dozen times, sir--and it was--_Kedsty_!"
+
+Kent's fingers gripped the young Englishman's hand.
+
+"You heard _that_, Mercer?"
+
+"I am sure I could not have been mistaken, sir. It was repeated a
+number of times."
+
+Kent fell back against his pillows. His mind was working swiftly. He
+knew that behind an effort to appear calm Mercer was uneasy over what
+had happened.
+
+"We mustn't let this get out, Mercer," he said. "If Mooie should be
+badly hurt--should die, for instance--and it was discovered that you
+and I--"
+
+He knew he had gone far enough to give effect to his words. He did not
+even look at Mercer.
+
+"Watch him closely, old man, and report to me everything that happens.
+Find out more about Kedsty, if you can. I shall advise you how to act.
+It is rather ticklish, you know--for you! And"--he smiled at
+Mercer--"I'm unusually hungry this morning. Add another egg, will you,
+Mercer? Three instead of two, and a couple of extra slices of toast.
+And don't let any one know that my appetite is improving. It may be
+best for both of us--especially if Mooie should happen to die.
+Understand, old man?"
+
+"I--I think I do, sir," replied Mercer, paling at the grimly smiling
+thing he saw in Kent's eyes. "I shall do as you say, sir."
+
+When he had gone, Kent knew that he had accurately measured his man.
+True to a certain type, Mercer would do a great deal for fifty
+dollars--under cover. In the open he was a coward. And Kent knew the
+value of such a man under certain conditions. The present was one of
+those conditions. From this hour Mercer would be a priceless asset to
+his scheme for personal salvation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+That morning Kent ate a breakfast that would have amazed Doctor
+Cardigan and would have roused a greater caution in Inspector Kedsty
+had he known of it. While eating he strengthened the bonds already
+welded between himself and Mercer. He feigned great uneasiness over the
+condition of Mooie, who he knew was not fatally hurt because Mercer had
+told him there was no fracture. But if he should happen to die, he told
+Mercer, it would mean something pretty bad for them, if their part in
+the affair leaked out.
+
+As for himself, it would make little difference, as he was "in bad"
+anyway. But he did not want to see a good friend get into trouble on
+his account. Mercer was impressed. He saw himself an instrument in a
+possible murder affair, and the thought terrified him. Even at best,
+Kent told him, they had given and taken bribes, a fact that would go
+hard with them unless Mooie kept his mouth shut. And if the Indian knew
+anything out of the way about Kedsty, it was mighty important that he,
+Mercer, get hold of it, for it might prove a trump card with them in
+the event of a showdown with the Inspector of Police. As a matter of
+form, Mercer took his temperature. It was perfectly normal, but it was
+easy for Kent to persuade a notation on the chart a degree above.
+
+"Better keep them thinking I'm still pretty sick," he assured Mercer.
+"They won't suspect there is anything between us then."
+
+Mercer was so much in sympathy with the idea that he suggested adding
+another half-degree.
+
+It was a splendid day for Kent. He could feel himself growing stronger
+with each hour that passed. Yet not once during the day did he get out
+of his bed, fearing that he might be discovered. Cardigan visited him
+twice and had no suspicion of Mercer's temperature chart. He dressed
+his wound, which was healing fast. It was the fever which depressed
+him. There must be, he said, some internal disarrangement which would
+soon clear itself up. Otherwise there seemed to be no very great reason
+why Kent should not get on his feet. He smiled apologetically.
+
+"Seems queer to say that, when a little while ago I was telling you it
+was time to die," he said.
+
+That night, after ten o'clock, Kent went through his setting-up
+exercises four times. He marveled even more than the preceding night at
+the swiftness with which his strength was returning. Half a dozen times
+the little devils of eagerness working in his blood prompted him to
+take to the window at once.
+
+For three days and nights thereafter he kept his secret and added to
+his strength. Doctor Cardigan came in to see him at intervals, and
+Father Layonne visited him regularly every afternoon. Mercer was his
+most frequent visitor. On the third day two things happened to create a
+little excitement. Doctor Cardigan left on a four-day journey to a
+settlement fifty miles south, leaving Mercer in charge--and Mooie came
+suddenly out of his fever into his normal senses again. The first event
+filled Kent with joy. With Cardigan out of the way there would be no
+immediate danger of the discovery that he was no longer a sick man. But
+it was the recovery of Mooie from the thumping he had received about
+the head that delighted Mercer. He was exultant. With the quick
+reaction of his kind he gloated over the fact before Kent. He let it be
+known that he was no longer afraid, and from the moment Mooie was out
+of danger his attitude was such that more than once Kent would have
+taken keen pleasure in kicking him from the room. Also, from the hour
+he was safely in charge of Doctor Cardigan's place, Mercer began to
+swell with importance. Kent saw the new danger and began to humor him.
+He flattered him. He assured him that it was a burning shame Cardigan
+had not taken him into partnership. He deserved it. And, in justice to
+himself, Mercer should demand that partnership when Cardigan returned.
+He, Kent, would talk to Father Layonne about it, and the missioner
+would spread the gospel of what ought to be among others who were
+influential at the Landing. For two days he played with Mercer as an
+angler plays with a treacherous fish. He tried to get Mercer to
+discover more about Mooie's reference to Kedsty. But the old Indian had
+shut up like a clam.
+
+"He was frightened when I told him he had said things about the
+Inspector," Mercer reported. "He disavowed everything. He shook his
+head--no, no, no. He had not seen Kedsty. He knew nothing about him. I
+can do nothing with him, Kent."
+
+He had dropped his "sirs," also his servant-like servility. He helped
+to smoke Kent's cigars with the intimacy of proprietorship, and with
+offensive freedom called him "Kent." He spoke of the Inspector as
+"Kedsty," and of Father Layonne as "the little preacher." He swelled
+perceptibly, and Kent knew that each hour of that swelling added to his
+own danger.
+
+He believed that Mercer was talking. Several times a day he heard him
+in conversation with the guard, and not infrequently Mercer went down
+to the Landing, twirling a little reed cane that he had not dared to
+use before. He began to drop opinions and information to Kent in a
+superior sort of way. On the fourth day word came that Doctor Cardigan
+would not return for another forty-eight hours, and with unblushing
+conceit Mercer intimated that when he did return he would find big
+changes. Then it was that in the stupidity of his egotism he said:
+
+"Kedsty has taken a great fancy to me, Kent. He's a square old top,
+when you take him right. Had me over this afternoon, and we smoked a
+cigar together. When I told him that I looked in at your window last
+night and saw you going through a lot of exercises, he jumped up as if
+some one had stuck a pin in him. 'Why, I thought he was sick--_bad_!' he
+said. And I let him know there were better ways of making a sick man
+well than Cardigan's. 'Give them plenty to eat,' I said. 'Let 'em live
+normal,' I argued. 'Look at Kent, for instance,' I told him. 'He's been
+eating like a bear for a week, and he can turn somersaults this
+minute!' That topped him over, Kent. I knew it would be a bit of a
+surprise for him, that I should do what Cardigan couldn't do. He walked
+back and forth, black as a hat--thinking of Cardigan, I suppose. Then
+he called in that Pelly chap and gave him something which he wrote on a
+piece of paper. After that he shook hands with me, slapped me on the
+shoulder most intimately, and gave me another cigar. He's a keen old
+blade, Kent. He doesn't need more than one pair of eyes to see what
+I've done since Cardigan went away!"
+
+If ever Kent's hands had itched to get at the throat of a human being,
+the yearning convulsed his fingers now. At the moment when he was about
+to act Mercer had betrayed him to Kedsty! He turned his face away so
+that Mercer could not see what was in his eyes. Under his body he
+concealed his clenched hands. Within himself he fought against the
+insane desire that was raging in his blood, the desire to leap on
+Mercer and kill him. If Cardigan had reported his condition to Kedsty,
+it would have been different. He would have accepted the report as a
+matter of honorable necessity on Cardigan's part. But Mercer--a toad
+blown up by his own wind, a consummate fiend who would sell his best
+friend, a fool, an ass--
+
+For a space he held himself rigid as a stone, his face turned away from
+Mercer. His better sense won. He knew that his last chance depended
+upon his coolness now. And Mercer unwittingly helped him to win by
+slyly pocketing a couple of his cigars and leaving the room. For a
+minute or two Kent heard him talking to the guard outside the door.
+
+He sat up then. It was five o'clock. How long ago was it that Mercer
+had seen Kedsty? What was the order that the Inspector had written on a
+sheet of paper for Constable Pelly? Was it simply that he should be
+more closely watched, or was it a command to move him to one of the
+cells close to the detachment office? If it was the latter, all his
+hopes and plans were destroyed. His mind flew to those cells.
+
+The Landing had no jail, not even a guard-house, though the members of
+the force sometimes spoke of the cells just behind Inspector Kedsty's
+office by that name. The cells were of cement, and Kent himself had
+helped to plan them! The irony of the thing did not strike him just
+then. He was recalling the fact that no prisoner had ever escaped from
+those cement cells. If no action were taken before six o'clock, he was
+sure that it would be postponed until the following morning. It was
+possible that Kedsty's order was for Pelly to prepare a cell for him.
+Deep in his soul he prayed fervently that it was only a matter of
+preparation. If they would give him one more night--just one!
+
+His watch tinkled the half-hour. Then a quarter of six. Then six. His
+blood ran feverishly, in spite of the fact that he possessed the
+reputation of being the coolest man in N Division. He lighted his last
+cigar and smoked it slowly to cover the suspense which he feared
+revealed itself in his face, should any one come into his room. His
+supper was due at seven. At eight it would begin to get dusk. The moon
+was rising later each night, and it would not appear over the forests
+until after eleven. He would go through his window at ten o'clock. His
+mind worked swiftly and surely as to the method of his first night's
+flight. There were always a number of boats down at Crossen's place. He
+would start in one of these, and by the time Mercer discovered he was
+gone, he would be forty miles on his way to freedom. Then he would set
+his boat adrift, or hide it, and start cross-country until his trail
+was lost. Somewhere and in some way he would find both guns and food.
+It was fortunate that he had not given Mercer the other fifty dollars
+under his pillow.
+
+At seven Mercer came with his supper. A little gleam of disappointment
+shot into his pale eyes when he found the last cigar gone from the box.
+Kent saw the expression and tried to grin good-humoredly.
+
+"I'm going to have Father Layonne bring me up another box in the
+morning, Mercer," he said. "That is, if I can get hold of him."
+
+"You probably can," snapped Mercer. "He doesn't live far from barracks,
+and that's where you are going. I've got orders to have you ready to
+move in the morning."
+
+Kent's blood seemed for an instant to flash into living flame. He drank
+a part of his cup of coffee and said then, with a shrug of his
+shoulders: "I'm glad of it, Mercer. I'm anxious to have the thing over.
+The sooner they get me down there, the quicker they will take action.
+And I'm not afraid, not a bit of it. I'm bound to win. There isn't a
+chance in a hundred that they can convict me." Then he added: "And I'm
+going to have a box of cigars sent up to you, Mercer. I'm grateful to
+you for the splendid treatment you have given me."
+
+No sooner had Mercer gone with the supper things than Kent's knotted
+fist shook itself fiercely in the direction of the door.
+
+"My God, how I'd like to have you out in the woods--alone--for just one
+hour!" he whispered.
+
+Eight o'clock came, and nine. Two or three times he heard voices in the
+hall, probably Mercer talking with the guard. Once he thought he heard
+a rumble of thunder, and his heart throbbed joyously. Never had he
+welcomed a storm as he would have welcomed it tonight. But the skies
+remained clear. Not only that, but the stars as they began to appear
+seemed to him more brilliant than he had ever seen them before. And it
+was very still. The rattle of a scow-chain came up to him from the
+river as though it were only a hundred yards away. He knew that it was
+one of Mooie's dogs he heard howling over near the sawmill. The owls,
+flitting past his window, seemed to click their beaks more loudly than
+last night. A dozen times he fancied he could hear the rippling voice
+of the river that very soon was to carry him on toward freedom.
+
+The river! Every dream and aspiration found its voice for him in that
+river now. Down it Marette Radisson had gone. And somewhere along it,
+or on the river beyond, or the third river still beyond that, he would
+find her. In the long, tense wait between the hours of nine and ten he
+brought the girl back into his room again. He recalled every gesture
+she had made, every word she had spoken. He felt the thrill of her hand
+on his forehead, her kiss, and in his brain her softly spoken words
+repeated themselves over and over again, "I think that if you lived
+very long I should love you." And as she had spoken those words _she
+knew that he was not going to die_!
+
+Why, then, had she gone away? Knowing that he was going to live, why
+had she not remained to help him if she could? Either she had spoken
+the words in jest, or--
+
+A new thought flashed into his mind. It almost drew a cry from his
+lips. It brought him up tense, erect, his heart pounding. Had she gone
+away? Was it not possible that she, too, was playing a game in giving
+the impression that she was leaving down-river on the hidden scow? Was
+it conceivable that she was playing that game against Kedsty? A
+picture, clean-cut as the stars in the sky, began to outline itself in
+his mental vision. It was clear, now, what Mooie's mumblings about
+Kedsty had signified. Kedsty had accompanied Marette to the scow. Mooie
+had seen him and had given the fact away in his fever. Afterward he had
+clamped his mouth shut through fear of the "big man" of the Law. But
+why, still later, had he almost been done to death? Mooie was a
+harmless creature. He had no enemies.
+
+There was no one at the Landing who would have assaulted the old
+trailer, whose hair was white with age. No one, unless it was Kedsty
+himself--Kedsty at bay, Kedsty in a rage. Even that was inconceivable.
+Whatever the motive of the assault might be, and no matter who had
+committed it, Mooie had most certainly seen the Inspector of Police
+accompany Marette Radisson to the scow. And the question which Kent
+found it impossible to answer was, had Marette Radisson really gone
+down the river on that scow?
+
+It was almost with a feeling of disappointment that he told himself it
+was possible she had not. He wanted her on the river. He wanted her
+going north and still farther north. The thought that she was mixed up
+in some affair that had to do with Kedsty was displeasing to him. If
+she was still in the Landing or near the Landing, it could no longer be
+on account of Sandy McTrigger, the man his confession had saved. In his
+heart he prayed that she was many days down the Athabasca, for it was
+there--and only there--that he would ever see her again. And his
+greatest desire, next to his desire for his freedom, was to find her.
+He was frank with himself in making that confession. He was more than
+that. He knew that not a day or night would pass that he would not
+think or dream of Marette Radisson. The wonder of her had grown more
+vivid for him with each hour that passed, and he was sorry now that he
+had not dared to touch her hair. She would not have been offended with
+him, for she had kissed him--after he had killed the impulse to lay his
+hand on that soft glory that had crowned her head.
+
+And then the little bell in his watch tinkled the hour of ten! He sat
+up with a jerk. For a space he held his breath while he listened. In
+the hall outside his room there was no sound. An inch at a time he drew
+himself off his bed until he stood on his feet. His clothes hung on
+hooks in the wall, and he groped his way to them so quietly that one
+listening at the crack of his door would not have heard him. He dressed
+swiftly. Then he made his way to the window, looked out, and listened.
+
+In the brilliant starlight he saw nothing but the two white stubs of
+the lightning-shattered trees in which the owls lived. And it was very
+still. The air was fresh and sweet in his face. In it he caught the
+scent of the distant balsams and cedars. The world, wonderful in its
+night silence, waited for him. It was impossible for him to conceive of
+failure or death out there, and it seemed unreal and trivial that the
+Law should expect to hold him, with that world reaching out its arms to
+him and calling him.
+
+Assured that the moment for action was at hand, he moved quickly. In
+another ten seconds he was through the window, and his feet were on the
+ground. For a space he stood out clear in the starlight. Then he
+hurried to the end of the building and hid himself in the shadow. The
+swiftness of his movement had brought him no physical discomfort, and
+his blood danced with the thrill of the earth under his feet and the
+thought that his wound must be even more completely healed than he had
+supposed. A wild exultation swept over him. He was free! He could see
+the river now, shimmering and talking to him in the starlight, urging
+him to hurry, telling him that only a little while ago another had gone
+north on the breast of it, and that if he hastened it would help him to
+overtake her. He felt the throb of new life in his body. His eyes shone
+strangely in the semi-gloom.
+
+It seemed to him that only yesterday Marette had gone. She could not be
+far away, even now. And in these moments, with the breath of freedom
+stirring him with the glory of new life, she was different for him from
+what she had ever been. She was a part of him. He could not think of
+escape without thinking of her. She became, in these precious moments,
+the living soul of his wilderness. He felt her presence. The thought
+possessed him that somewhere down the river she was thinking of him,
+waiting, expecting him. And in that same flash he made up his mind that
+he would not discard the boat, as he had planned; he would conceal
+himself by day, and float downstream by night, until at last he came to
+Marette Radisson. And then he would tell her why he had come. And after
+that--
+
+He looked toward Crossen's place. He would make straight for it,
+openly, like a man bent on a mission there was no reason to conceal. If
+luck went right, and Crossen was abed, he would be on the river within
+fifteen minutes. His blood ran faster as he took his first step out
+into the open starlight. Fifty yards ahead of him was the building
+which Cardigan used for his fuel. Safely beyond that, no one could see
+him from the windows of the hospital. He walked swiftly. Twenty paces,
+thirty, forty--and he stopped as suddenly as the half-breed's bullet
+had stopped him weeks before. Round the end of Cardigan's fuel house
+came a figure. It was Mercer. He was twirling his little cane and
+traveling quietly as a cat. They were not ten feet apart, yet Kent had
+not heard him.
+
+Mercer stopped. The cane dropped from his hand. Even in the starlight
+Kent could see his face turn white.
+
+"Don't make a sound, Mercer," he warned. "I'm taking a little exercise
+in the open air. If you cry out, I'll kill you!"
+
+He advanced slowly, speaking in a voice that could not have been heard
+at the windows behind him. And then a thing happened that froze the
+blood in his veins. He had heard the scream of every beast of the great
+forests, but never a scream like that which came from Mercer's lips
+now. It was not the cry of a man. To Kent it was the voice of a fiend,
+a devil. It did not call for help. It was wordless. And as the horrible
+sound issued from Mercer's mouth he could see the swelling throat and
+bulging eyes that accompanied the effort. They made him think of a
+snake, a cobra.
+
+The chill went out of his blood, replaced by a flame of hottest fire.
+He forgot everything but that this serpent was in his path. Twice he
+had stood in his way. And he hated him. He hated him with a virulency
+that was death. Neither the call of freedom nor the threat of prison
+could keep him from wreaking vengeance now. Without a sound he was at
+Mercer's throat, and the scream ended in a choking shriek. His fingers
+dug into flabby flesh, and his clenched fist beat again and again into
+Mercer's face.
+
+He went to the ground, crushing the human serpent under him. And he
+continued to strike and choke as he had never struck or choked another
+man, all other things overwhelmed by his mad desire to tear into pieces
+this two-legged English vermin who was too foul to exist on the face of
+the earth.
+
+And he still continued to strike--even after the path lay clear once
+more between him and the river.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+What a terrible and inexcusable madness had possessed him, Kent
+realized the instant he rose from Mercer's prostrate body. Never had
+his brain flamed to that madness before. He believed at first that he
+had killed Mercer. It was neither pity nor regret that brought him to
+his senses. Mercer, a coward and a traitor, a sneak of the lowest type,
+had no excuse for living. It was the thought that he had lost his
+chance to reach the river that cleared his head as he swayed over
+Mercer.
+
+He heard running feet. He saw figures approaching swiftly through the
+starlight. And he was too weak to fight or run. The little strength he
+had saved up, and which he had planned to use so carefully in his
+flight, was gone. His wound, weeks in bed, muscles unaccustomed to the
+terrific exertion he had made in these moments of his vengeance, left
+him now panting and swaying as the running footsteps came nearer.
+
+His head swam. For a space he was sickeningly dizzy, and in the first
+moment of that dizziness, when every drop of blood in his body seemed
+rushing to his brain, his vision was twisted and his sense of direction
+gone. In his rage he had overexerted himself. He knew that something
+had gone wrong inside him and that he was helpless. Even then his
+impulse was to stagger toward the inanimate Mercer and kick him, but
+hands caught him and held him. He heard an amazed voice, then
+another--and something hard and cold shut round his wrists like a pair
+of toothless jaws.
+
+It was Constable Carter, Inspector Kedsty's right-hand man about
+barracks, that he saw first; then old Sands, the caretaker at
+Cardigan's place. Swiftly as he had turned sick, his brain grew clear,
+and his blood distributed itself evenly again through his body. He held
+up his hands. Carter had slipped a pair of irons on him, and the
+starlight glinted on the shining steel. Sands was bending over Mercer,
+and Carter was saying in a low voice:
+
+"It's too bad, Kent. But I've got to do it. I saw you from the window
+just as Mercer screamed. Why did you stop for _him_?"
+
+Mercer was getting up with the assistance of Sands. He turned a bloated
+and unseeing face toward Kent and Carter. He was blubbering and
+moaning, as though entreating for mercy in the fear that Kent had not
+finished with him. Carter pulled Kent away.
+
+"There's only one thing for me to do now," he said. "It isn't pleasant.
+But the law says I must take you to barracks."
+
+In the sky Kent saw the stars clearly again, and his lungs were
+drinking in the cool air as in the wonderful moments before his
+encounter with Mercer.
+
+He had lost. And it was Mercer who had made him lose. Carter felt the
+sudden tightening of his muscles as he walked with a hand on his arm.
+And Kent shut his teeth close and made no answer to what Carter had
+said, except that Carter heard something which he thought was a sob
+choked to death in the other's throat.
+
+Carter, too, was a man bred of the red blood of the North, and he knew
+what was in Kent's heart. For only by the breadth of a hair had Kent
+failed in his flight.
+
+Pelly was on duty at barracks, and it was Pelly who locked him in one
+of the three cells behind the detachment office. When he was gone, Kent
+sat down on the edge of his prison cot and for the first time let the
+agony of his despair escape in a gasping breath from between his lips.
+Half an hour ago the world had reached out its arms to him, and he had
+gone forth to its welcome, only to have the grimmest tragedy of all his
+life descend upon him like the sword of Damocles. For this was real
+tragedy. Here there was no hope. The tentacles of the law had him in
+their grip, and he could no longer dream of escape.
+
+Ghastly was the thought that it was he, James Kent, who had supervised
+the building of these cells! Acquainted with every trick and stratagem
+of the prisoner plotting for his freedom, he had left no weak point in
+their structure. Again he clenched his hands, and in his soul he cursed
+Mercer as he went to the little barred window that overlooked the river
+from his cell. The river was near now. He could hear the murmur of it.
+He could see its movement, and that movement, played upon by the stars,
+seemed now a writhing sort of almost noiseless laughter taunting him in
+his folly.
+
+He went back to his cot, and in his despair buried his face in his
+hands. In the half-hour after that he did not raise his head. For the
+first time in his life he knew that he was beaten, so utterly beaten
+that he no more had the desire to fight, and his soul was dark with the
+chaos of the things he had lost.
+
+At last he opened his eyes to the blackness of his prison room, and he
+beheld a marvelous thing. Across the gloom of the cell lay a shaft of
+golden fire. It was the light of the rising moon coming through his
+little, steel-barred window. To Kent it had crept into his cell like a
+living thing. He watched it, fascinated. His eyes followed it to the
+foot-square aperture, and there, red and glorious as it rose over the
+forests, the moon itself filled the world. For a space he saw nothing
+but that moon crowding the frame of his window. And as he rose to his
+feet and stood where his face was flooded in the light of it, he felt
+stirring within him the ghosts of his old hopes. One by one they rose
+up and came to life. He held out his hands, as if to fill them with the
+liquid glow; his heart beat faster in that glory of the moonrise. The
+taunting murmur of the river changed once more into hopeful song, his
+fingers closed tightly around the bars, and the fighting spirit rose in
+him again. As that spirit surged stronger, beating down his despair,
+driving the chaos out of his brain, he watched the moon as it climbed
+higher, changing from the red of the lower atmosphere to the yellow
+gold of the greater heights, marveling at the miracle of light and
+color that had never failed to stir him.
+
+And then he laughed. If Pelly or Carter had heard him, they would have
+wondered if he was mad. It was madness of a sort--the madness of
+restored confidence, of an unlimited faith, of an optimism that was
+bound to make dreams come true. Again he looked beyond the bars of his
+cell. The world was still there; the river was there; all the things
+that were worth fighting for were there. And he would fight. Just how,
+he did not try to tell himself now. And then he laughed again, softly,
+a bit grimly, for he saw the melancholy humour of the fact that he had
+built his own prison.
+
+He sat down again on the edge of his cot, and the whimsical thought
+struck him that all those he had brought to this same cell, and who had
+paid the first of their penance here, must be laughing at him now in
+the spirit way. In his mental fancy a little army of faces trooped
+before him, faces dark and white, faces filled with hatred and despair,
+faces brave with the cheer of hope and faces pallid with the dread of
+death. And of these ghosts of his man-hunting prowess it was Anton
+Fournet's face that came out of the crowd and remained with him. For he
+had brought Anton to this same cell--Anton, the big Frenchman, with his
+black hair, his black beard, and his great, rolling laugh that even in
+the days when he was waiting for death had rattled the paper-weights on
+Kedsty's desk.
+
+Anton rose up like a god before Kent now. He had killed a man, and like
+a brave man he had not denied it. With a heart in his great body as
+gentle as a girl's, Anton had taken pride in the killing. In his prison
+days he sang songs to glorify it. He had killed the white man from
+Chippewyan who had stolen his neighbor's wife! Not _his_ wife, but his
+neighbor's! For Anton's creed was, "Do unto others as you would have
+others do unto you," and he had loved his neighbor with the great
+forest love of man for man. His neighbor was weak, and Anton was strong
+with the strength of a bull, so that when the hour came, it was Anton
+who had measured out vengeance. When Kent brought Anton in, the giant
+had laughed first at the littleness of his cell, then at the
+unsuspected strength of it, and after that he had laughed and sung
+great, roaring songs every day of the brief tenure of life that was
+given him. When he died, it was with the smiling glory in his face of
+one who had cheaply righted a great wrong.
+
+Kent would never forget Anton Fournet. He had never ceased to grieve
+that it had been his misfortune to bring Anton in, and always, in close
+moments, the thought of Anton, the stout-hearted, rallied him back to
+courage. Never would he be the man that Anton Fournet had been, he told
+himself many times. Never would his heart be as great or as big, though
+the Law had hanged Anton by the neck until the soul was choked out of
+his splendid body, for it was history that Anton Fournet had never
+harmed man, woman, or child until he set out to kill a human snake and
+the Law placed its heel upon him and crushed him.
+
+And tonight Anton Fournet came into the cell again and sat with Kent on
+the cot where he had slept many nights, and the ghosts of his laughter
+and his song filled Kent's ears, and his great courage poured itself
+out in the moonlit prison room so that at last, when Kent stretched
+himself on the cot to sleep, it was with the knowledge that the soul of
+the splendid dead had given him a strength which it was impossible to
+have gained from the living. For Anton Fournet had died smiling,
+laughing, singing--and it was of Anton Fournet that he dreamed when he
+fell asleep. And in that dream came also the vision of a man called
+Dirty Fingers--and with it inspiration.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+Where a bit of the big river curved inward like the tongue of a
+friendly dog, lapping the shore at Athabasca Landing, there still
+remained Fingers' Row--nine dilapidated, weather-worn, and
+crazily-built shacks put there by the eccentric genius who had foreseen
+a boom ten years ahead of its time. And the fifth of these nine,
+counting from either one end or the other, was named by its owner,
+Dirty Fingers himself, the Good Old Queen Bess. It was a shack covered
+with black tar paper, with two windows, like square eyes, fronting the
+river as if always on the watch for something. Across the front of this
+shack Dirty Fingers had built a porch to protect himself from the rain
+in springtime, from the sun in Summer time, and from the snow in the
+months of Winter. For it was here that Dirty Fingers sat out all of
+that part of his life which was not spent in bed.
+
+Up and down two thousand miles of the Three Rivers was Dirty Fingers
+known, and there were superstitious ones who believed that little gods
+and devils came to sit and commune with him in the front of the
+tar-papered shack. No one was so wise along those rivers, no one was so
+satisfied with himself, that he would not have given much to possess
+the many things that were hidden away in Dirty Fingers' brain. One
+would not have suspected the workings of that brain by a look at Dirty
+Fingers on the porch of his Good Old Queen Bess. He was a great soft
+lump of a man, a giant of flabbiness. Sitting in his smooth-worn,
+wooden armchair, he was almost formless. His head was huge, his hair
+uncut and scraggy, his face smooth as a baby's, fat as a cherub's, and
+as expressionless as an apple. His folded arms always rested on a huge
+stomach, whose conspicuousness was increased by an enormous watch-chain
+made from beaten nuggets of Klondike gold, and Dirty Fingers' thumb and
+forefinger were always twiddling at this chain. How he had come by the
+name of Dirty Fingers, when his right name was Alexander Toppet
+Fingers, no one could definitely say, unless it was that he always bore
+an unkempt and unwashed appearance.
+
+Whatever the quality of the two hundred and forty-odd pounds of flesh
+in Dirty Fingers' body, it was the quality of his brain that made
+people hold him in a sort of awe. For Dirty Fingers was a lawyer, a
+wilderness lawyer, a forest bencher, a legal strategist of the trail,
+of the river, of the great timber-lands.
+
+Stored away in his brain was every rule of equity and common law of the
+great North country. For his knowledge he went back two hundred years.
+He knew that a law did not die of age, that it must be legislated to
+death, and out of the moldering past he had dug up every trick and trap
+of his trade. He had no law-books. His library was in his head, and his
+facts were marshaled in pile after pile of closely-written,
+dust-covered papers in his shack. He did not go to court as other
+lawyers; and there were barristers in Edmonton who blessed him for that.
+
+His shack was his tabernacle of justice. There he sat, hands folded,
+and gave out his decisions, his advice, his sentences. He sat until
+other men would have gone mad. From morning until night, moving only
+for his meals or to get out of heat or storm, he was a fixture on the
+porch of the Good Old Queen Bess. For hours he would stare at the
+river, his pale eyes never seeming to blink. For hours he would remain
+without a move or a word. One constant companion he had, a dog, fat,
+emotionless, lazy, like his master. Always this dog was sleeping at his
+feet or dragging himself wearily at his heels when Dirty Fingers
+elected to make a journey to the little store where he bartered for
+food and necessities.
+
+It was Father Layonne who came first to see Kent in his cell the
+morning after Kent's unsuccessful attempt at flight. An hour later it
+was Father Layonne who traveled the beaten path to the door of Dirty
+Fingers' shack. If a visible emotion of pleasure ever entered into
+Dirty Fingers' face, it was when the little missioner came occasionally
+to see him. It was then that his tongue let itself loose, and until
+late at night they talked of many things of which other men knew but
+little. This morning Father Layonne did not come casually, but
+determinedly on business, and when Dirty Fingers learned what that
+business was, he shook his head disconsolately, folded his fat arms
+more tightly over his stomach, and stated the sheer impossibility of
+his going to see Kent. It was not his custom. People must come to him.
+And he did not like to walk. It was fully a third of a mile from his
+shack to barracks, possibly half a mile. And it was mostly upgrade! If
+Kent could be brought to him--
+
+In his cell Kent waited. It was not difficult for him to hear voices in
+Kedsty's office when the door was open, and he knew that the Inspector
+did not come in until after the missioner had gone on his mission to
+Dirty Fingers. Usually he was at the barracks an hour or so earlier.
+Kent made no effort to figure out a reason for Kedsty's lateness, but
+he did observe that after his arrival there was more than the usual
+movement between the office door and the outside of the barracks. Once
+he was positive that he heard Cardigan's voice, and then he was equally
+sure that he heard Mercer's. He grinned at that. He must be wrong, for
+Mercer would be in no condition to talk for several days. He was glad
+that a turn in the hall hid the door of the detachment office from him,
+and that the three cells were in an alcove, safely out of sight of the
+curious eyes of visitors. He was also glad that he had no other
+prisoner for company. His situation was one in which he wanted to be
+alone. To the plan that was forming itself in his mind, solitude was as
+vital as the cooperation of Alexander Toppet Fingers.
+
+Just how far he could win that cooperation was the problem which
+confronted him now, and he waited anxiously for the return of Father
+Layonne, listening for the sound of his footsteps in the outer hall.
+If, after all, that inspirational thought of last night came to
+nothing, if Fingers should fail him--
+
+He shrugged his shoulders. If that happened, he could see no other
+chance. He would have to go on and take his medicine at the hands of a
+jury. But if Fingers played up to the game--
+
+He looked out on the river again, and again it was the river that
+seemed to answer him. If Fingers played with him, they would beat
+Kedsty and the whole of N Division! And in winning he would prove out
+the greatest psychological experiment he had ever dared to make. The
+magnitude of the thing, when he stopped to think of it, was a little
+appalling, but his faith was equally large. He did not consider his
+philosophy at all supernatural. He had brought it down to the level of
+the average man and woman.
+
+He believed that every man and woman possessed a subliminal
+consciousness which it was possible to rouse to tremendous heights if
+the right psychological key was found to fit its particular lock, and
+he believed he possessed the key which fitted the deeply-buried and
+long-hidden thing in Dirty Fingers' remarkable brain. Because he
+believed in this metaphysics which he had not read out of Aristotle, he
+had faith that Fingers would prove his salvation. He felt growing in
+him stronger than ever a strange kind of elation. He felt better
+physically than last night. The few minutes of strenuous action in
+which he had half killed Mercer had been a pretty good test, he told
+himself. It had left no bad effect, and he need no longer fear the
+reopening of his wound.
+
+A dozen times he had heard a far door open and close. Now he heard it
+again, and a few moments later it was followed by a sound which drew a
+low cry of satisfaction from him. Dirty Fingers, because of overweight
+and lack of exercise, had what he called an "asthmatic wind," and it
+was this strenuous working of his lungs that announced his approach to
+Kent. His dog was also afflicted and for the same reasons, so that when
+they traveled together there was some rivalry between them.
+
+"We're both bad put out for wind, thank God," Dirty Fingers would say
+sometimes. "It's a good thing, for if we had more of it, we'd walk
+farther, and we don't like walking."
+
+The dog was with Fingers now, also Father Layonne, and Pelly. Pelly
+unlocked the cell, then relocked it again after Fingers and the dog
+entered. With a nod and a hopeful look the missioner returned with
+Pelly to the detachment office. Fingers wiped his red face with a big
+handkerchief, gasping deeply for breath. Togs, his dog, was panting as
+if he had just finished the race of his life.
+
+"A difficult climb," wheezed Fingers. "A most difficult climb."
+
+He sat down, rolling out like a great bag of jelly in the one chair in
+the cell, and began to fan himself with his hat. Kent had already taken
+stock of the situation. In Fingers' florid countenance and in his
+almost colorless eyes he detected a bit of excitement which Fingers was
+trying to hide. Kent knew what it meant. Father Layonne had found it
+necessary to play his full hand to lure Fingers up the hill, and had
+given him a hint of what it was that Kent had in store for him. Already
+the psychological key had begun to work.
+
+Kent sat down on the edge of his cot and grinned sympathetically. "It
+hasn't always been like this, has it, Fingers?" he said then, leaning a
+bit forward and speaking with a sudden, low-voiced seriousness. "There
+was a time, twenty years ago, when you didn't puff after climbing a
+hill. Twenty years make a big difference, sometimes."
+
+"Yes, sometimes," agreed Fingers in a wheezy whisper.
+
+"Twenty years ago you were--a fighter."
+
+It seemed to Kent that a deeper color came into Dirty Fingers' pale
+eyes in the few seconds that followed these words.
+
+"A fighter," he repeated. "Most men were fighters in those days of the
+gold rushes, weren't they, Fingers? I've heard a lot of the old stories
+about them in my wanderings, and some of them have made me thrill. They
+weren't afraid to die. And most of them were pretty white when it came
+to a show-down. You were one of them, Fingers. I heard the story one
+Winter far north. I've kept it to myself, because I've sort of had the
+idea that you didn't want people to know or you would have told it
+yourself. That's why I wanted you to come to see me, Fingers. You know
+the situation. It's either the noose or iron bars for me. Naturally one
+would seek for assistance among those who have been his friends. But I
+do not, with the exception of Father Layonne. Just friendship won't
+save me, not the sort of friendship we have today. That's why I sent
+for you. Don't think that I am prying into secrets that are sacred to
+you, Fingers. God knows I don't mean it that way. But I've got to tell
+you of a thing that happened a long time ago, before you can
+understand. You haven't forgotten--you will never forget--Ben Tatman?"
+
+As Kent spoke the name, a name which Dirty Fingers had heard no lips
+but his own speak aloud in nearly a quarter of a century, a strange and
+potent force seemed suddenly to take possession of the forest bencher's
+huge and flabby body. It rippled over and through him like an
+electrical voltaism, making his body rigid, stiffening what had seemed
+to be fat into muscle, tensing his hands until they knotted themselves
+slowly into fists. The wheeze went out of his breath, and it was the
+voice of another man who answered Kent.
+
+"You have heard--about--Ben Tatman?"
+
+"Yes. I heard it away up in the Porcupine country. They say it happened
+twenty years ago or more. This Tatman, so I was told, was a young
+fellow green from San Francisco--a bank clerk, I think--who came into
+the gold country and brought his wife with him. They were both
+chuck-full of courage, and the story was that each worshiped the ground
+the other walked on, and that the girl had insisted on being her
+husband's comrade in adventure. Of course neither guessed the sort of
+thing that was ahead of them.
+
+"Then came that death Winter in Lost City. You know better than I what
+the laws were in those days, Fingers. Food failed to come up. Snow came
+early, the thermometer never rose over fifty below zero for three
+straight months, and Lost City was an inferno of starvation and death.
+You could go out and kill a man, then, and perhaps get away with it,
+Fingers. But if you stole so much as a crust of bread or a single bean,
+you were taken to the edge of the camp and told to go! And that meant
+certain death--death from hunger and cold, more terrible than shooting
+or hanging, and for that reason it was the penalty for theft.
+
+"Tatman wasn't a thief. It was seeing his young wife slowly dying of
+hunger, and his horror at the thought of seeing her fall, as others
+were falling, a victim to scurvy, that made him steal. He broke into a
+cabin in the dead of night and stole two cans of beans and a pan of
+potatoes, more precious than a thousand times their weight in gold. And
+he was caught. Of course, there was the wife. But those were the days
+when a woman couldn't save a man, no matter how lovely she was. Tatman
+was taken to the edge of camp and given his pack and his gun--but no
+food. And the girl, hooded and booted, was at his side, for she was
+determined to die with him. For her sake Tatman had lied up to the last
+minute, protesting his innocence.
+
+"But the beans and the potatoes were found in his cabin, and that was
+evidence enough. And then, just as they were about to go straight out
+into the blizzard that meant death within a few hours, then--"
+
+Kent rose to his feet, and walked to the little window, and stood
+there, looking out. "Fingers, now and then a superman is born on earth.
+And a superman was there in that crowd of hunger-stricken and
+embittered men. At the last moment he stepped out and in a loud voice
+declared that Tatman was innocent and that he was guilty. Unafraid, he
+made a remarkable confession. He had stolen the beans and the potatoes
+and had slipped them into the Tatman cabin when they were asleep. Why?
+Because he wanted to save the woman from hunger! Yes, he lied, Fingers.
+He lied because he loved the wife that belonged to another man--lied
+because in him there was a heart as true as any heart God ever made. He
+lied! And his lie was a splendid thing. He went out into that blizzard,
+strengthened by a love that was greater than his fear of death, and the
+camp never heard of him again. Tatman and his wife returned to their
+cabin and lived. Fingers--" Kent whirled suddenly from the window.
+"Fingers--"
+
+And Fingers, like a sphynx, sat and stared at Kent.
+
+"You were that man," Kent went on, coming nearer to him. "You lied,
+because you loved a woman, and you went out to face death because of
+that woman. The men at Lost City didn't know it, Fingers. The husband
+didn't know it. And the girl, that girl-wife you worshiped in secret,
+didn't dream of it! But that was the truth, and you know it deep down
+in your soul. You fought your way out. You lived! And all these years,
+down here on your porch, you've been dreaming of a woman, of the girl
+you were willing to die for a long time ago. Fingers, am I right? And
+if I am, will you shake hands?"
+
+Slowly Fingers had risen from his chair. No longer were his eyes dull
+and lifeless, but flaming with a fire that Kent had lighted again after
+many years. And he reached out a hand and gripped Kent's, still staring
+at him as though something had come back to him from the dead.
+
+"I thank you, Kent, for your opinion of that man," he said. "Somehow,
+you haven't made me--ashamed. But it was only the shell of a man that
+won out after that day when I took Tatman's place. Something happened.
+I don't know what. But--you see me now. I never went back into the
+diggings. I degenerated. I became what I am."
+
+"And you are today just what you were when you went out to die for Mary
+Tatman," cried Kent. "The same heart and the same soul are in you.
+Wouldn't you fight again today for her?"
+
+A stifled cry came from Fingers' lips. "My God, yes, Kent--I would!"
+
+"And that's why I wanted you, of all men, to come to me, Fingers," Kent
+went on swiftly. "To you, of all the men on earth, I wanted to tell my
+story. And now, will you listen to it? Will you forgive me for bringing
+up this memory that must be precious to you, only that you might more
+fully understand what I am going to say? I don't want you to think of
+it as a subterfuge on my part. It is more than that. It is--Fingers, is
+it inspiration? Listen, and tell me."
+
+And for a long time after that James Kent talked, and Fingers listened,
+the soul within him writhing and dragging itself back into fierce life,
+demanding for the first time in many years the something which it had
+once possessed, but which it had lost. It was not the lazy, mysterious,
+silent Dirty Fingers who sat in the cell with Kent. In him the spirit
+of twenty years ago had roused itself from long slumber, and the thrill
+of it pounded in his blood. Two-Fisted Fingers they had called him
+then, and he was Two-Fisted Fingers in this hour with Kent. Twice
+Father Layonne came to the head of the cell alcove, but turned back
+when he heard the low and steady murmur of Kent's voice. Nothing did
+Kent keep hidden, and when he had finished, something that was like the
+fire of a revelation had come into Fingers' face.
+
+"My God!" he breathed deeply. "Kent, I've been sitting down there on my
+porch a long time, and a good many strange things have come to me, but
+never anything like this. Oh, if it wasn't for this accursed flesh of
+mine!"
+
+He jumped from his chair more quickly than he had moved in ten years,
+and he laughed as he had not laughed in all that time. He thrust out a
+great arm and doubled it up, like a prizefighter testing his muscle.
+"Old? I'm not old! I was only twenty-eight when that happened up there,
+and I'm forty-eight now. That isn't old. It's what is in me that's
+grown old. I'll do it, Kent! I'll do it, if I hang for it!"
+
+Kent fairly leaped upon him. "God bless you!" he cried huskily. "God
+bless you, Fingers! Look! Look at that!" He pulled Fingers to the
+little window, and together they looked out upon the river, shimmering
+gloriously under a sun-filled sky of blue. "Two thousand miles of it,"
+he breathed. "Two thousand miles of it, running straight through the
+heart of that world we both have known! No, you're not old, Fingers.
+The things you used to know are calling you again, as they are calling
+me, for somewhere off there are the ghosts of Lost City, ghosts--and
+realities!"
+
+"Ghosts--and hopes," said Fingers.
+
+"Hopes make life," softly whispered Kent, as if to himself. And then,
+without turning from the window, his hand found Fingers' and clasped it
+tight. "It may be that mine, like yours, will never come true. But
+they're fine to think about, Fingers. Funny, isn't it, that their names
+should be so strangely alike--Mary and Marette? I say, Fingers--"
+
+Heavy footsteps sounded in the hall. Both turned from the window as
+Constable Pelly came to the door of the cell. They recognized this
+intimation that their time was up, and with his foot Fingers roused his
+sleeping dog.
+
+It was a new Fingers who walked back to the river five minutes later,
+and it was an amazed and discomfited dog who followed at his heels, for
+at times the misshapen and flesh-ridden Togs was compelled to trot for
+a few steps to keep up. And Fingers did not sink into the chair on the
+shady porch when he reached his shack. He threw off his coat and
+waistcoat and rolled up his sleeves, and for hours after that he was
+buried deep in the accumulated masses of dust-covered legal treasures
+stored away in hidden corners of the Good Old Queen Bess.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+That morning Kent had heard wild songs floating up from the river, and
+now he felt like shouting forth his own joy and exultation in song. He
+wondered if he could hide the truth from the eyes of others, and
+especially from Kedsty if he came to see him. It seemed that some
+glimmer of the hope blazing within him must surely reveal itself, no
+matter how he tried to hold it back. He felt the vital forces of that
+hope more powerful within him now than in the hour when he had crept
+from the hospital window with freedom in his face. For then he was not
+sure of himself. He had not tested his physical strength. And in the
+present moment, fanned by his unbounded optimism, the thought came to
+him that perhaps it was good luck and not bad that had thrown Mercer in
+his way. For with Fingers behind him now, his chances for a clean
+get-away were better. He would not be taking a hazardous leap chanced
+on the immediate smiles of fortune. He would be going deliberately,
+prepared.
+
+He blessed the man who had been known as Dirty Fingers, but whom he
+could not think of now in the terms of that name. He blessed the day he
+had heard that chance story of Fingers, far north. He no longer
+regarded him as the fat pig of a man he had been for so many years. For
+he looked upon the miracle of a great awakening. He had seen the soul
+of Fingers lift itself up out of its tabernacle of flesh and grow young
+again; he had seen stagnant blood race with new fire. He had seen
+emotions roused that had slept for long years. And he felt toward
+Fingers, in the face of that awakening, differently than he had felt
+toward any other living man. His emotion was one of deep and embracing
+comradeship.
+
+Father Layonne did not come again until afternoon, and then he brought
+information that thrilled Kent. The missioner had walked down to see
+Fingers, and Fingers was not on his porch. Neither was the dog. He had
+knocked loudly on the door, but there was no answer. Where was Fingers?
+Kent shook his head, feigning an anxious questioning, but inside him
+his heart was leaping. He knew! He told Father Layonne he was afraid
+all Fingers' knowledge of the law could do him but little good, that
+Fingers had told him as much, and the little missioner went away
+considerably depressed. He would talk with Fingers again, he said, and
+offer certain suggestions he had in mind. Kent chuckled when he was
+gone. How shocked _le Pere_ would be if he, too, could know!
+
+The next morning Father Layonne came again, and his information was
+even more thrilling to Kent. The missioner was displeased with Fingers.
+Last night, noticing a light in his shack, he had walked down to see
+him. And he had found three men closely drawn up about a table with
+Dirty Fingers. One of them was Ponte, the half-breed; another was Kinoo
+the outcast Dog Rib from over on Sand Creek; the third was Mooie, the
+old Indian trailer. Kent wanted to jump up and shout, for those three
+were the three greatest trailers in all that part of the Northland.
+Fingers had lost no time, and he wanted to voice his approbation like a
+small boy on the Fourth of July.
+
+But his face, seen by Father Layonne, betrayed none of the excitement
+that was in his blood. Fingers had told him he was going into a timber
+deal with these men, a long-distance deal where there would be much
+traveling, and that he could not interrupt himself just then to talk
+about Kent. Would Father Layonne come again in the morning? And he had
+gone again that morning, and Fingers' place was locked up!
+
+All the rest of the day Kent waited eagerly for Fingers. For the first
+time Kedsty came to see him, and as a matter of courtesy said he hoped
+Fingers might be of assistance to him. He did not mention Mercer and
+remained no longer than a couple of minutes, standing outside the cell.
+In the afternoon Doctor Cardigan came and shook hands warmly with Kent.
+He had found a tough job waiting for him, he said. Mercer was all cut
+up, in a literal as well as a mental way. He had five teeth missing,
+and he had to have seventeen stitches taken in his face. It was
+Cardigan's opinion that some one had given him a considerable
+beating--and he grinned at Kent. Then he added in a whisper,
+
+"My God, Kent, how I wish you had made it!"
+
+It was four o'clock when Fingers came. Even less than yesterday did he
+look like the old Fingers. He was not wheezing. He seemed to have lost
+flesh. His face was alive. That was what struck Kent--the new life in
+it. There was color in his eyes. And Togs, the dog, was not with him.
+He smiled when he shook hands with Kent, and nodded, and chuckled. And
+Kent, after that, gripped him by the shoulders and shook him in his
+silent joy.
+
+"I was up all last night," said Fingers in a low voice. "I don't dare
+move much in the day, or people will wonder. But, God bless my soul!--I
+did move last night, Kent. I must have walked ten miles, more or less.
+And things are coming--coming!"
+
+"And Ponte, Kinoo, Mooie--?"
+
+"Are working like devils," whispered Fingers. "It's the only way, Kent.
+I've gone through all my law, and there's nothing in man-made law that
+can save you. I've read your confession, and I don't think you could
+even get off with the penitentiary. A noose is already tied around your
+neck. I think you'd hang. We've simply got to get you out some other
+way. I've had a talk with Kedsty. He has made arrangements to have you
+sent to Edmonton two weeks from tomorrow. We'll need all that time, but
+it's enough."
+
+For three days thereafter Fingers came to Kent's cell each afternoon,
+and each time was looking better. Something was swiftly putting
+hardness into his flesh and form into his body. The second day he told
+Kent that he had found the way at last, and that when the hour came,
+escape would be easy, but he thought it best not to let Kent in on the
+little secret just yet. He must be patient and have faith. That was the
+chief thing, to have faith at all times, no matter what happened.
+Several times he emphasized that "no matter what happens." The third
+day he puzzled Kent. He was restless, a bit nervous. He still thought
+it best not to tell Kent what his scheme was, until to-morrow. He was
+in the cell not more than five or ten minutes, and there was an unusual
+pressure in the grip of his hand when he bade Kent good-by. Somehow
+Kent did not feel so well when he had gone. He waited impatiently for
+the next day. It came, and hour after hour he listened for Fingers'
+heavy tread in the hall. The morning passed. The afternoon lengthened.
+Night came, and Fingers had not come. Kent did not sleep much between
+the hour when he went to bed and morning. It was eleven o'clock when
+the missioner made his call. Before he left, Kent gave him a brief note
+for Fingers. He had just finished his dinner, and Carter had taken the
+dishes away, when Father Layonne returned. A look at his face, and Kent
+knew that he bore unpleasant tidings.
+
+"Fingers is an--an apostate," he said, his lips twitching as if to keep
+back a denunciation still more emphatic. "He was sitting on his porch
+again this morning, half asleep, and says that after a great deal of
+thought he has come to the definite opinion that he can do nothing for
+you. He read your note and burned it with a match. He asked me to tell
+you that the scheme he had in mind was too risky--for him. He says he
+won't come up again. And--"
+
+The missioner was rubbing his brown, knotted hands together raspingly.
+
+"Go on," said Kent a little thickly.
+
+"He has also sent Inspector Kedsty the same word," finished Father
+Layonne. "His word to Kedsty is that he can see no fighting chance for
+you, and that it is useless effort on his part to put up a defense for
+you. Jimmy!" His hand touched Kent's arm gently.
+
+Kent's face was white. He faced the window, and for a space he did not
+see. Then with pencil and paper he wrote again to Fingers.
+
+It was late in the afternoon before Father Layonne returned with an
+answer. Again it was verbal. Fingers had read his note and had burned
+it with a match. He was particular that the last scrap of it was turned
+into ash, the missioner said. And he had nothing to say to Kent that he
+had not previously said. He simply could not go on with their plans.
+And he requested Kent not to write to him again. He was sorry, but that
+was his definite stand in the matter.
+
+Even then Kent could not bring himself to believe. All the rest of the
+day he tried to put himself in Fingers' brain, but his old trick of
+losing his personality in that of another failed him this time. He
+could find no reason for the sudden change in Fingers, unless it was
+what Fingers had frankly confessed to Father Layonne--fear. The
+influence of mind, in this instance, had failed in its assault upon a
+mass of matter. Fingers' nerve had gone back on him.
+
+The fifth day Kent rose from his cot with hope still not quite dead in
+his heart. But that day passed and the sixth, and the missioner brought
+word that Fingers was the old Dirty Fingers again, sitting from morning
+till night on his porch.
+
+On the seventh day came the final crash to Kent's hopes. Kedsty's
+program had changed. He, Kent, was to start for Edmonton the following
+morning under charge of Pelly and a special constable!
+
+After this Kent felt a strange change come over him. Years seemed to
+multiply themselves in his body. His mind, beaten back, no longer
+continued in its old channels of thought. The thing pressed upon him
+now as fatalistic. Fingers had failed him. Fortune had failed him.
+Everything had failed, and for the first time in the weeks of his
+struggle against death and a thing worse than death, he cursed himself.
+There was a limit to optimism and a limit to hope. His limit was
+reached.
+
+In the afternoon of this seventh day came a depressing gloom. It was
+filled with a drizzling rain. Hour after hour this drizzle kept up,
+thickening as the night came. He ate his supper by the light of a cell
+lamp. By eight o'clock it was black outside. In that blackness there
+was an occasional flash of lightning and rumble of thunder. On the roof
+of the barracks the rain beat steadily and monotonously.
+
+His watch was in his hand--it was a quarter after nine o'clock, when he
+heard the door at the far exit of the hall open and close. He had heard
+it a dozen times since supper and paid no attention to it, but this
+time it was followed by a voice at the detachment office that hit him
+like an electrical shock. Then, a moment later, came low laughter. It
+was a woman who laughed.
+
+He stood up. He heard the detachment office door close, and silence
+followed. The watch in his hand seemed ticking off the seconds with
+frantic noise. He shoved it into his pocket and stood staring out into
+the prison alcove. A few minutes later the office door opened again.
+This time it was not closed. He heard distinctly a few light,
+hesitating footsteps, and his heart seemed to stop its beating. They
+came to the head of the lighted alcove, and for perhaps the space of a
+dozen seconds there was silence again. Then they advanced.
+
+Another moment, and Kent was staring through the bars into the glorious
+eyes of Marette Radisson!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+In that moment Kent did not speak. He made no sound. He gave no sign of
+welcome, but stood in the middle of his cell, staring. If life had hung
+upon speech in those few seconds, he would have died, but everything he
+would have said, and more, was in his face. The girl must have seen it.
+With her two hands she was gripping at the bars of the cell and looking
+through at him. Kent saw that her face was pale in the lamp glow. In
+that pallor her violet eyes were like pools of black. The hood of her
+dripping raincoat was thrown partly back, and against the whiteness of
+her cheeks her hair glistened wet, and her long lashes were heavy with
+the rain.
+
+Kent, without moving over the narrow space between them, reached out
+his hands and found his voice. "Marette!"
+
+Her hands had tightened about the bars until they were bloodless. Her
+lips were parted. She was breathing quickly, but she did not smile; she
+made no response to his greeting, gave no sign even of recognition.
+What happened after that was so sudden and amazing that his heart
+stopped dead still. Without warning she stepped back from the cell and
+began to scream and then drew away from him, still facing him and still
+screaming, as if something had terrified her.
+
+Kent heard the crash of a chair in the detachment office, excited
+voices, and the running of feet. Marette Radisson had withdrawn to the
+far corner of the alcove, and as Carter and Pelly ran toward her, she
+stood, a picture of horror, pointing at Kent's cell. The two constables
+rushed past her. Close behind them followed the special officer
+detailed to take Kent to Edmonton.
+
+Kent had not moved. He was like one petrified. Close up against the
+bars came the faces of Pelly, Carter, and the special constable, filled
+with the expressions of men who had expected to look in upon tragedy.
+And then, behind their backs, Kent saw the other thing happen. Swift as
+a flash Marette Radisson's hand went in and out of her raincoat, and at
+the backs of the three men she was leveling a revolver! Not only did
+Kent see that swift change, but the still swifter change that came into
+her face. Her eyes shot to his just once, and they were filled with a
+laughing, exultant fire. With one mighty throb Kent's heart seemed to
+leap out through the bars of his prison, and at the look in his face
+and eyes Carter swung suddenly around.
+
+"Please don't make any disturbance, gentlemen," said Marette Radisson.
+"The first man that makes a suspicious move, I shall kill!"
+
+Her voice was calm and thrilling. It had a deadly ring in it. The
+revolver in her hand was held steadily. It was a slim-barreled, black
+thing. The very color of it was menacing. And behind it were the girl's
+eyes, pools of flame. The three men were facing them now, shocked to
+speechlessness. Automatically they seemed to obey her command to throw
+up their hands. Then she leveled her grim little gun straight at
+Pelly's heart.
+
+"You have the key," she said. "Unlock the cell!" Felly fumbled and
+produced the key. She watched him closely. Then suddenly the special
+constable dropped his arms with a coarse laugh. "A pretty trick," he
+said, "but the bluff won't work!"
+
+"Oh, but it will!" came the reply.
+
+The little black gun was shifted to him, even as the constable's
+fingers touched his revolver holster. With half-smiling lips, Marette's
+eyes blazed at him.
+
+"Please put up your hands," she commanded.
+
+The constable hesitated; then his fingers gripped the butt of his gun.
+Kent, holding his breath, saw the almost imperceptible tensing of
+Marette's body and the wavering of Pelly's arms over his head. Another
+moment and he, too, would have called the bluff if it were that. But
+that moment did not come. From the slim, black barrel of the girl's
+revolver leaped forth a sudden spurt of smoke and flame, and the
+special constable lurched back against the cell bars, caught himself as
+he half fell, and then stood with his pistol arm hanging limp and
+useless at his side. He had not made a sound, but his face was twisted
+in pain.
+
+"Open the cell door!"
+
+A second time the deadly-looking little gun was pointed straight at
+Pelly's heart. The half-smile was gone from the girl's lips now. Her
+eyes blazed a deeper fire. She was breathing quickly, and she leaned a
+little toward Pelly, repeating her command. The words were partly
+drowned in a sudden crash of thunder. But Pelly understood. He saw her
+lips form the words, and half heard,
+
+"Open the door, or I shall kill you!"
+
+He no longer hesitated. The key grated in the lock, and Kent himself
+flung the door wide open and sprang out. He was quick to see and seize
+upon opportunity and swift to act. The astounding audacity of the
+girl's ruse, her clever acting in feigning horror to line the guards up
+at the cell door and the thrilling decisiveness with which she had used
+the little black gun in her hand set every drop of blood in his body
+afire. No sooner was he outside his cell than he was the old Jim Kent,
+fighting man. He whipped Carter's automatic out of its holster and,
+covering Pelly and the special constable, relieved them of their guns.
+Behind him he heard Marette's voice, calm and triumphant,
+
+"Lock them in the cell, Mr. Kent!"
+
+He did not look at her, but swung his gun on Pelly and the special
+constable, and they backed through the door into the cell. Carter had
+not moved. He was looking straight at the girl, and the little black
+gun was leveled at his breast. Pelly and the wounded man did not see,
+but on Carter's lips was a strange smile. His eyes met Kent's, and
+there was revealed for an instant a silent flash of comradeship and an
+unmistakable something else. Carter was glad! It made Kent want to
+reach out and grip his hand, but in place of that he backed him into
+the cell, turned the key in the lock, and with the key in his hand
+faced Marette Radisson. Her eyes were shining gloriously. He had never
+seen such splendid, fighting eyes, nor the birdlike swiftness with
+which she turned and ran down the hall, calling him to follow her.
+
+He was only a step behind her in passing Kedsty's office. She reached
+the outer door and opened it. It was pitch-dark outside, and a deluge
+of rain beat into their faces. He observed that she did not replace the
+hood of her raincoat when she darted out. As he closed the door, her
+hand groped to his arm and from that found his hand. Her fingers clung
+to his tightly.
+
+He did not ask questions as they faced the black chaos of rain. A
+rending streak of lightning revealed her for an instant, her bare head
+bowed to the wind. Then came a crash of thunder that shook the earth
+under their feet, and her fingers closed more tightly about his hand.
+And in that crash he heard her voice, half laughing, half broken,
+saying,
+
+"I'm afraid--of thunder!"
+
+In that storm his laugh rang out, a great, free, joyous laugh. He
+wanted to stop in that instant, sweep her up into his arms, and carry
+her. He wanted to shout like an insane man in his mad joy. And a moment
+before she had risked everything in facing three of the bravest men in
+the service and had shot one of them! He started to say something, but
+she increased her speed until she was almost running.
+
+She was not leading Jim in the direction of the river, but toward the
+forest beyond Kedsty's bungalow. Not for an instant did she falter in
+that drenched and impenetrable darkness. There was something imperative
+in the clasp of her fingers, even though they tightened perceptibly
+when the thunder crashed. They gave Kent the conviction that there was
+no doubt in her mind as to the point she was striving for. He took
+advantage of the lightning, for each time it gave him a glimpse of her
+bare, wet head bowed to the storm, her white profile, and her slim
+figure fighting over the sticky earth under her feet.
+
+It was this presence of her, and not the thought of escape, that
+exalted him now. She was at his side. Her hand lay close in his. The
+lightning gave him glimpses of her. He felt the touch of her shoulder,
+her arm, her body, as they drew close together. The life and warmth and
+thrill of her seemed to leap into his own veins through the hand he
+held. He had dreamed of her. And now suddenly she had become a part of
+him, and the glory of it rode overwhelmingly over all other emotions
+that were struggling in his brain--the glory of the thought that it was
+she who had come to him in the last moment, who had saved him, and who
+was now leading him to freedom through the crash of storm.
+
+At the crest of a low knoll between barracks and Kedsty's bungalow she
+stopped for the first time. He had there, again, the almost
+irresistible impulse to reach out in the darkness and take her into his
+arms, crying out to her of his joy, of a happiness that had come to him
+greater even than the happiness of freedom. But he stood, holding her
+hand, his tongue speechless, and he was looking at her when the
+lightning revealed her again. In a rending flash it cut open the night
+so close that the hiss of it was like the passing of a giant rocket,
+and involuntarily she shrank against him, and her free hand caught his
+arm at the instant thunder crashed low over their heads. His own hand
+groped out, and in the blackness it touched for an instant her wet face
+and then her drenched hair.
+
+"Marette," he cried, "where are we going?"
+
+"Down there," came her voice.
+
+Her hand had left his arm, and he sensed that she was pointing, though
+he could not see. Ahead of them was a chaotic pit of gloom, a sea of
+blackness, and in the heart of that sea he saw a light. He knew that it
+was a lamp in one of Kedsty's windows and that Marette was guiding
+herself by that light when she started down the slope with her hand
+still in his. That she had made no effort to withdraw it made him
+unconscious of the almost drowning discomfort of the fresh deluge of
+rain that beat their faces. One of her fingers had gripped itself
+convulsively about his thumb, like a child afraid of falling. And each
+time the thunder crashed that soft hold on his thumb tightened, and
+Kent's soul acclaimed.
+
+They drew swiftly nearer to the light, for it was not far from the
+knoll to Kedsty's place. Kent's mind leaped ahead. A little west by
+north from the inspector's bungalow was Kim's Bayou and it was
+undoubtedly to the forest trail over which she had gone at least once
+before, on the night of the mysterious assault upon Mooie, that Marette
+was leading him. Questions began to rush upon him now, immediate
+demanding questions. They were going to the river. They must be going
+to the river. It was the quickest and surest way of escape. Had Marette
+prepared for that? And was she going with him?
+
+He had no time to answer. Their feet struck the gravel path leading to
+the door of Kedsty's place, and straight up this path the girl turned,
+straight toward the light blazing in the window. Then, to his
+amazement, he heard in the sweep of storm her voice crying out in glad
+triumph,
+
+"We're home!"
+
+Home! His breath came in a sudden gulp. He was more than astounded. He
+was shocked. Was she mad or playing an amazingly improper joke? She had
+freed him from a cell to lead him to the home of the Inspector of
+Police, the deadliest enemy the world now held for him. He stopped, and
+Marette Radisson tugged at his hand, pulling him after her, insisting
+that he follow. She was clutching his thumb as though she thought he
+might attempt to escape.
+
+"It is safe, M'sieu Jeems," she cried. "Don't be afraid!"
+
+M'sieu Jeems! And the laughing note of mockery in her voice! He rallied
+himself and followed her up the three steps to the door. Her hand found
+the latch, the door opened, and swiftly they were inside. The lamp in
+the window was close to them, but for a space he could not see because
+of the water in his eyes. He blinked it out, drew a hand across his
+face, and looked at Marette. She stood three or four paces from him.
+Her face was very white, and she was panting as if hard-run for breath,
+but her eyes were shining, and she was smiling at him. The water was
+running from her in streams.
+
+"You are wet," she said. "And I am afraid you will catch cold. Come
+with me!"
+
+Again she was making fun of him just as she had made fun of him at
+Cardigan's! She turned, and he ran upstairs behind her. At the top she
+waited for him, and as he came up, she reached out her hand, as if
+apologizing for having taken it from him when they entered the
+bungalow. He held it again as she led him down the hall to a door
+farthest from the stair. This she opened, and they entered. It was dark
+inside, and the girl withdrew her hand again, and Kent heard her moving
+across the room. In that darkness a new and thrilling emotion possessed
+him. The air he was breathing was not the air he had breathed in the
+hall. In it was the sweet scent of flowers, and of something else--the
+faint and intangible perfume of a woman's room. He waited, staring. His
+eyes were wide when a match leaped into flame in Marette's fingers.
+Then he stood in the glow of a lamp.
+
+He continued to stare in the stupidity of a shock to which he was not
+accustomed. Marette, as if to give him time to acquaint himself with
+his environment, was taking off her raincoat. Under it her slim little
+figure was dry, except where the water had run down from her uncovered
+head to her shoulders. He noticed that she wore a short skirt, and
+boots, adorably small boots of splendidly worked caribou. And then
+suddenly she came toward him with both hands reaching out to him.
+
+"Please shake hands and say you're glad," she said. "Don't look
+so--so--frightened. This is my room and you are safe here."
+
+He held her hands tight, staring into the wonderful, violet eyes that
+were looking at him with the frank and unembarrassed directness of a
+child's. "I--I don't understand," he struggled. "Marette, where is
+Kedsty?"
+
+"He should be returning very soon."
+
+"And he knows you are here, of course?"
+
+She nodded. "I have been here for a month."
+
+Kent's hands closed tighter about hers. "I--I don't understand," he
+repeated. "Tonight Kedsty will know that it was you who rescued me and
+you who shot Constable Willis. Good God, we must lose no time in
+getting away!"
+
+"There is great reason why Kedsty dare not betray my presence in his
+house," she said quietly. "He would die first! And he will not suspect
+that I have brought you to my room, that an escaped murderer is hiding
+under the very roof of the Inspector of Police! They will search for
+you everywhere but here! Isn't it splendid? He planned it all, every
+move, even to the screaming in front of your cell--"
+
+"You mean--Kedsty?"
+
+She withdrew her hands and stepped back from him, and again he saw in
+her eyes a flash of the fire that had come into them when she leveled
+her gun at the three men in the prison alcove. "No, not Kedsty. He
+would hang you, and he would kill me, if he dared. I mean that great,
+big, funny-looking friend of yours, M'sieu Fingers!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+The manner in which Kent stared at Marette Radisson after her
+announcement that it was Dirty Fingers who had planned his escape must
+have been, he thought afterward, little less than imbecile. He had
+wronged Fingers, he believed. He had called him a coward and a
+backslider. In his mind he had reviled him for helping to raise his
+hopes to the highest pitch, only to smash them in the end. And all the
+time Dirty Fingers had been planning this! Kent began to grin. The
+thing was clear in a moment--that is, the immediate situation was
+clear--or he thought it was. But there were questions--one, ten, a
+hundred of them. They wanted to pile over the end of his tongue,
+questions that had little or nothing to do with Kedsty. He saw nothing
+now but Marette.
+
+She had begun to take down her hair. It fell about her in wet, shining
+masses. Kent had never seen anything like it. It clung to her face, her
+neck, her shoulders and arms, and shrouded her slender body to her
+hips, lovely in its confusion. Little drops of water glistened in it
+like diamonds in the lamp glow, trickling down and dropping to the
+floor. It was like a glowing coat of velvety sable beaten by storm.
+Marette ran her arms up through it, shaking it out in clouds, and a
+mist of rain leaped out from it, some of it striking Kent in the face.
+He forgot Fingers. He forgot Kedsty. His brain flamed only with the
+electrifying nearness of her. It was the thought of her that had
+inspired the greatest hope in him. It was his dreams of her, somewhere
+on the Big River, that had given him his great courage to believe in
+the ultimate of things. And now time and space had taken a leap
+backward. She was not four or five hundred miles north. There was no
+long quest ahead of him. She was here, within a few feet of him,
+tossing the wet from that glorious hair he had yearned to touch,
+brushing it out now, with her back toward him, in front of her mirror.
+
+And as he sat there, uttering no word, looking at her, the demands of
+the immense responsibility that had fallen upon him and of the great
+fight that lay ahead pounded within him with naked fists. Fingers had
+planned. She had executed. It was up to him to finish.
+
+He saw her, not as a creature to win, but as a priceless possession.
+Her fight had now become his fight. The rain was beating against the
+window near him. Out there was blackness, the river, the big world. His
+blood leaped with the old fighting fire. They were going tonight; they
+must be going tonight! Why should they wait? Why should they waste time
+under Kedsty's roof when freedom lay out there for the taking? He
+watched the swift movements of her hand, listened to the silken rustle
+of the brush as it smoothed out her long hair. Bewilderment, reason,
+desire for action fought inside him.
+
+Suddenly she faced him again. "It has just this moment occurred to me,"
+she said, "that you haven't said 'Thank you.'"
+
+So suddenly that he startled her he was at her side. He did not
+hesitate this time, as he had hesitated in his room at Cardigan's
+place. He caught her two hands in his, and with them he felt the soft,
+damp crush of her hair between his fingers. Words tumbled from his
+lips. He could not remember afterward all that he said. Her eyes
+widened, and they never for an instant left his own. Thank her! He told
+her what had happened to him--in the heart and soul of him--from the
+hour she had come to him at Cardigan's. He told her of dreams and
+plans, of his determination to find her again after he had escaped, if
+it took him all his life. He told her of Mercer, of his discovery of
+her visit to Kim's Bayou, of his scheme to follow her down the Three
+Rivers, to seek for her at Fort Simpson, to follow her to the Valley of
+Silent Men, wherever it was. Thank her! He held her hands so tight they
+hurt, and his voice trembled. Under the cloud of her hair a slow fire
+burned in Marette Radisson's cheeks. But it did not show in her eyes.
+They looked at him so steadily, so unfalteringly, that his own face
+burned before he had finished what was in his mind to say, and he freed
+her hands and stepped back from her again.
+
+"Forgive me for saying all that," he entreated. "But it's true. You
+came to me there, at Cardigan's place, like something I'd always
+dreamed about, but never expected to find. And you came to me again, at
+the cell, like--"
+
+"Yes, I know how I came," she interrupted him. "Through the mud and the
+rain, Mr. Kent. And it was so black I lost my way and was terrified to
+think that I might not find barracks. I was half an hour behind Mr.
+Fingers' schedule. For that reason I think Inspector Kedsty may return
+at any moment, and you must not talk so loud--or so much."
+
+"Lord!" he breathed in a whisper. "I have said a lot in a short time,
+haven't I? But it isn't a hundredth part of what I want to get out of
+my system. I won't ask the million questions that want to be asked. But
+I must know why we are here. Why have we come to Kedsty's? Why didn't
+we make for the river? There couldn't be a better night to get away."
+
+"But it is not so good as the fifth night from now will be," she said,
+resuming the task of drying her hair. "On that night you may go to the
+river. Our plans were a little upset, you know, by Inspector Kedsty's
+change in the date on which you were to leave for Edmonton.
+Arrangements have been made so that on the fifth night you may leave
+safely."
+
+"And you?"
+
+"I shall remain here." And then she added in a low voice that struck
+his heart cold, "I shall remain to pay Kedsty the price which he will
+ask for what has happened tonight."
+
+"Good God!" he cried. "Marette!"
+
+She turned on him swiftly. "No, no, I don't mean that he will hurt me,"
+she cried, a fierce little note in her voice. "I would kill him before
+that! I'm sorry I told you. But you must not question me. You shall
+not!"
+
+She was trembling. He had never seen her excited like that before, and
+as she stood there before him, he knew that he was not afraid for her
+in the way that had flashed into his mind. She had not spoken empty
+words. She would fight. She would kill, if it was necessary to kill.
+And he saw her, all at once, as he had not seen her before. He
+remembered a painting which he had seen a long time ago in Montreal. It
+was _L'Esprit de la Solitude_--The Spirit of the Wild--painted by Conné,
+the picturesque French-Canadian friend of Lord Strathcona and Mount
+Royal, and a genius of the far backwoods who had drawn his inspiration
+from the heart of the wilderness itself. And that painting stood before
+him now in flesh and blood, its crudeness gone, but the marvelous
+spirit it had breathed remaining. Shrouded in her tumbled hair, her
+lips a little parted, every line of her slender body vibrant with an
+emotion which seemed consuming her, her beautiful eyes aglow with its
+fire, he saw in her, as Conné must have seen at another time, the soul
+of the great North itself. She seemed to him to breathe of the God's
+country far down the Three Rivers; of its almost savage fearlessness;
+its beauty, its sunshine, and its storm; its tragedy, its pathos, and
+its song. In her was the courage and the glory of that North. He had
+seen; and now he felt these things, and the thrill of them swept over
+him like an inundation.
+
+He had heard her soft laugh, she had made fun of him when he thought he
+was dying; she had kissed him, she had fought for him, she had clung in
+terror to his hand when the lightning flashed; and now she stood with
+her little hands clenched in her hair, like a storm about to break. A
+moment ago she was so near that he had almost taken her in his arms.
+Now, in an instant, she had placed something so vast between them that
+he would not have dared to touch her hand or her hair. Like sun and
+cloud and wind she changed, and for him each change added to the wonder
+of her. And now it was storm. He saw it in her eyes, her hands, her
+body. He felt the electrical nearness of it in those low-spoken,
+trembling words, "_You shall not_!" The room seemed surcharged for a
+moment with impending shock. And then his physical eyes took in again
+the slimness of her, seized upon the alluring smallness of her and the
+fact that he could have tossed her to the ceiling without great effort.
+And yet he saw her as one sees a goddess.
+
+"No, I won't ask you questions, when you look at me like that," he
+said, finding his tongue. "I won't ask you what this price is that
+Kedsty may demand, because you're not going to pay it. If you won't go
+with me, I won't go. I'd rather stay here and be hung. I'm not asking
+you questions, so please don't shoot, but if you told me the truth, and
+you belong in the North, you're going back with me--or I'm not going.
+I'll not budge an inch."
+
+She drew a deep breath, as if something had greatly relieved her. Again
+her violet eyes came out from the shadow into sunlight, and her
+trembling mouth suddenly broke into a smile. It was not apologetic.
+There was about it a quick and spontaneous gladness which she made no
+effort at all to conceal.
+
+"That is nice of you," she said. "I'm glad to hear you say it. I never
+knew how pleasant it was to have some one who was willing to be hung
+for me. But you will go. And I will not go. There isn't time to explain
+all about it just now, for Inspector Kedsty will be here very soon, and
+I must dry my hair and show you your hiding-place--if you have to hide."
+
+She began to brush her hair again. In the mirror Kent caught a glimpse
+of the smile still trembling on her lips.
+
+"I'm not questioning you," he guarded himself again, "but if you could
+only understand how anxious I am to know where Kedsty is, how Fingers
+found you, why you made us believe you were leaving the Landing and
+then returned--and--how badly I want to know something about you--I
+almost believe you'd talk a little while you are drying your hair."
+
+"It was Mooie, the old Indian," she said. "It was he who found out in
+some way that I was here, and then M'sieu Fingers came himself one
+night when the Inspector was away--got in through a window and simply
+said that you had sent him, when I was just about to shoot him. You
+see, I knew you weren't going to die. Kedsty had told me that. I was
+going to help you in another way, if M'sieu Fingers hadn't come.
+Inspector Kedsty was over there tonight, at his cabin, when the thing
+happened down there. It was a part of Fingers' scheme--to keep him out
+of the way."
+
+Suddenly she grew rigid. The brush remained poised in her hair. Kent,
+too, heard the sound that she had heard. It was a loud tapping at one
+of the curtained windows, the tapping of some metallic object. And that
+window was fifteen feet above the ground!
+
+With a little cry the girl threw down her brush, ran to the window, and
+raised and lowered the curtain once. Then she turned to Kent, swiftly
+dividing her hair into thick strands and weaving them into a braid.
+
+"It is Mooie," she cried. "Kedsty is coming!"
+
+She caught his hand and hurried him toward the head of the bed, where
+two long curtains were strung on a wire. She drew these apart. Behind
+them were what seemed to Kent an innumerable number of feminine
+garments.
+
+"You must hide in them, if you have to," she said, the excited little
+tremble in her voice again. "I don't think it will come to that, but if
+it does, you must! Bury yourself way back in them, and keep quiet. If
+Kedsty finds you are here--"
+
+She looked into his eyes, and it seemed to Kent that there was
+something which was very near to fear in them now.
+
+"If he should find you here, it would mean something terrible for me,"
+she went on, her hands creeping to his arms. "I can not tell you what
+it is now, but it would be worse than death. Will you promise to stay
+here, no matter what happens down there, no matter what you may hear?
+Will you--Mr. Kent?"
+
+"Not if you call me Mr. Kent," he said, something thickening in his
+throat.
+
+"Will you--Jeems? Will you--no matter what happens--if I promise--when
+I come back--to kiss you?"
+
+Her hands slipped almost caressingly from his arms, and then she had
+turned swiftly and was gone through the partly open door, closing it
+after her, before he could give his promise.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+For a space he stood where she had left him, staring at the door
+through which she had gone. The nearness of her in those last few
+seconds of her presence, the caressing touch of her hands, what he had
+seen in her eyes, her promise to kiss him if he did not reveal
+himself--these things, and the thought of the splendid courage that
+must be inspiring her to face Kedsty now, made him blind even to the
+door and the wall at which he was apparently looking. He saw only her
+face, as he had seen it in that last moment--her eyes, the tremble of
+her lips, and the fear which she had not quite hidden from him. She was
+afraid of Kedsty. He was sure of it. For she had not smiled; there was
+no flicker of humor in her eyes, when she called him Jeems, an intimate
+use of the names Jim and James in the far North. It was not facetiously
+that she had promised to kiss him. An almost tragic seriousness had
+possessed her. And it was that seriousness that thrilled him--that, and
+the amazing frankness with which she had coupled the name Jeems with
+the promise of her lips. Once before she had called him Jeems. But it
+was M'sieu Jeems then, and there had been a bit of taunting laughter in
+her voice. Jim or James meant nothing, but Jeems--He had heard mothers
+call little children that, in moments of endearment. He knew that wives
+and sweethearts used it in that same way. For Jim and James were not
+uncommon names up and down the Three Rivers, even among the half-breeds
+and French, and Jeems was the closer and more intimate thing bred of it.
+
+His heart was thumping riotously as he went to the door and listened. A
+little while ago, when she faced him with flashing eyes, commanding him
+not to question her, he had felt an abyss under his feet. Now he was on
+a mountain. And he knew that no matter what he heard, unless it was her
+cry for help, he would not go down.
+
+After a little he opened the door a mere crack so that sound might come
+to him. She had not forbidden that. Through the crack he could see a
+dim glow of light in the lower hall. But he heard no sound, and it
+occurred to him that old Mooie could still run swiftly, and that it
+might be some time before Kedsty would arrive.
+
+As he waited, he looked about the room. His first impression was that
+Marette must have lived in it for a long time. It was a woman's room,
+without the newness of sudden and unpremeditated occupancy. He knew
+that formerly it had been Kedsty's room, but nothing of Kedsty remained
+in it now. And then, as his wondering eyes beheld the miracle, a number
+of things struck him with amazing significance. He no longer doubted
+that Marette Radisson was of the far Northland. His faith in that was
+absolute. If there had been a last question in his mind, it was wiped
+away because she called him Jeems. Yet this room seemed to give the lie
+to his faith. Fascinated by his discovery of things, he drew away from
+the door and stood over the dressing-table in front of the mirror.
+
+Marette had not prepared the room for him, and her possessions were
+there. It did not strike him as sacrilege to look at them, the many
+intimate little things that are mysteriously used in the process of a
+lady's toilette. It was their number and variety that astounded him. He
+might have expected them in the boudoir of the Governor General's
+daughter at Ottawa, but not here--and much less farther north. What he
+saw was of exquisite material and workmanship. And then, as if
+attracted by a magnet, his eyes were drawn to something else. It was a
+row of shoes neatly and carefully arranged on the floor at one side of
+the dressing-table.
+
+He stared at them, astounded. Never had he seen such an array of
+feminine footwear intended for the same pair of feet. And it was not
+Northern footwear. Every individual little beauty in that amazing row
+stood on a high heel! Their variety was something to which he had long
+been a stranger. There were buttoned boots, laced boots, brown boots,
+black boots, and white boots, with dangerously high and fragile looking
+heels; there were dainty little white kid slippers, slippers with bows,
+slippers with cut steel buckles, and slippers with dainty ribbon ties;
+there were high-heeled oxfords and high-heeled patent leather pumps! He
+gasped. He reached over, moved by an automatic sort of impulse, and
+took a satiny little pump in his hand.
+
+The size of it gave him a decidedly pleasant mental shock, and,
+beginning to feel like one prying into a sleeper's secrets, he looked
+inside it. The size was there--number three. And it had come from
+Favre's in Montreal! One after another he looked inside half a dozen
+others. And all of them had come from Favre's in Montreal. The little
+shoes, more than all else that he had seen or that had happened, sent a
+question pounding through his brain. Who was Marette Radisson?
+
+And that question was followed by other questions, until they tumbled
+over one another in his head. If she was from Montreal, why was she
+going north? If she belonged in the North, if she was a part of it, why
+was she taking all of this apparently worthless footwear with her? Why
+had she come to Athabasca Landing? What was she to Kedsty? Why was she
+hiding under his roof? Why--
+
+He stopped himself, trying to find some one answer in all that chaos of
+questions. It was impossible for him to take his eyes from the shoes. A
+thought seized him. Ludicrously he dropped upon his knees in front of
+the row and with a face growing hotter each moment examined them all.
+But he wanted to know. And the discovery he made was that most of the
+footwear had been worn, some of it so slightly, however, that the
+impression of the foot was barely visible.
+
+He rose to his feet and continued his inquiry. Of course she had
+expected him to look about. One couldn't help seeing, unless one were
+blind. He would have cut off a hand before opening one of the
+dressing-table drawers. But Marette herself had told him to hide behind
+the curtains if it became necessary, and it was an excusable caution
+for him to look behind those curtains now, to see what sort of
+hiding-place he had. He returned to the door first and listened. There
+was still no sound from below. Then he drew the curtains apart, as
+Marette had drawn them. Only he looked longer. He would tell her about
+it when she returned, if the act needed an apology.
+
+His impression was a man's impression. What he saw was a billowing,
+filmy mass of soft stuff, and out of it there greeted him the faintest
+possible scent of lilac sachet powder. He closed the curtains with a
+deep breath of utter joy and of consternation. The two emotions were a
+jumble to him. The shoes, all that mass of soft stuff behind the
+curtains, were exquisitely feminine. The breath of perfume had come to
+him straight out of a woman's soul. There were seduction and witchery
+to it. He saw Marette, an enrapturing vision of loveliness, floating
+before his eyes in that sacred and mysterious vestment of which he had
+stolen a half-frightened glimpse. In white--the white, cobwebby thing
+of laces and embroidery that had hung straight before his eyes--in
+white--with her glorious black hair, her violet eyes, her--
+
+And then it was that the incongruity of the thing, the almost sheer
+impossibility of it, clashed in upon his vision. Yet his faith was not
+shaken. Marette Radisson was of the North. He could not disbelieve
+that, even in the face of these amazing things that confronted him.
+
+Suddenly he heard a sound that was like the explosion of a gun under
+his feet. It was the opening and closing of the hall door--but mostly
+the closing. The slam of it shook the house and rattled the glass in
+the windows. Kedsty had returned, and he was in a rage. Kent
+extinguished the light so that the room was in darkness. Then he went
+to the door. He could hear the quick, heavy tread of Kedsty's feet
+After that came the closing of a second door, followed by the rumble of
+Kedsty's voice. Kent was disappointed.
+
+The Inspector of Police and Marette were in a room too far distant for
+him to distinguish what was said. But he knew that Kedsty had returned
+to barracks and had discovered what had happened there. After an
+interval his voice was a steady rumble. It rose higher. He heard the
+crash of a chair. Then the voice ceased, and after it came the tramping
+of Kedsty's feet. Not once did he catch the sound of Marette's voice,
+but he was sure that in the interval of silence she was talking. Then
+Kedsty's voice broke forth more furiously than before. Kent's fingers
+dug into the sill of the door. Each moment added to his conviction that
+Marette was in danger. It was not physical violence he feared. He did
+not believe Kedsty capable of perpetrating that upon a woman. It was
+fear that he would take her to barracks. The fact that Marette had told
+him there was a powerful reason why Kedsty would not do this failed to
+assure him. For she had also told him that Kedsty would kill her, if he
+dared. He held himself in readiness. At a cry from her, or the first
+move on Kedsty's part to take her from the bungalow, he would give
+battle in spite of Marette's warning.
+
+He almost hoped one of these two things would happen. As he stood
+there, listening, waiting, the thought became almost a prayer. He had
+Pelly's revolver. Within twenty seconds he could have Kedsty looking
+down the barrel of it. The night was ideal for escape. Within half an
+hour they would be on the river. They could even load up with
+provisions from Kedsty's place. He opened the door a little more,
+scarcely making an effort to combat the impulse that dragged him out.
+Marette must be in danger, or she would not have confessed to him that
+she was in the house of a man who would like to see her dead. Why she
+was there did not interest him deeply now. It was the fact of the
+moment that was moving him swiftly toward action.
+
+The door below opened again, and Kent's body grew rigid. He heard
+Kedsty charging through the lower hall like a mad bull. The outer door
+opened, slammed shut, and he was gone.
+
+Kent drew back into the darkness of his room. It was some moments
+before he heard Marette coming slowly up the stairs. She seemed to be
+groping her way, though there was a dim illumination out there. Then
+she came through the door into the blackness of her room.
+
+"Jeems," she whispered.
+
+He went to her. Her hands reached out, and again they rested on his
+arms.
+
+"You--you didn't come down the stair?"
+
+"No."
+
+"You--didn't hear?"
+
+"I heard no words. Only Kedsty's voice."
+
+It seemed to him that her voice, when she spoke again, trembled with an
+immeasurable relief. "You were good, Jeems. I am glad."
+
+In that darkness he could not see. Yet something reached into him,
+thrilling him, quickening his pulse with a thing to which his eyes were
+blind. He bent down. He found her lips upturned, offering him the
+sweetness of the kiss which was to be his reward; and as he felt their
+warmth upon his own, he felt also the slightest pressure of her hands
+upon his arms.
+
+"He is gone. We will light the lamp again," she said then.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+Kent stood still while Marette moved in that gloom, found matches, and
+lighted the lamp. He had not spoken a word after the kiss. He had not
+taken advantage of it. The gentle pressure of her hands had restrained
+him from taking her in his arms. But the kiss itself fired him with a
+wild and glorious thrill that was like a vibrant music to which every
+atom of life in his body responded. If he claimed his reward at all, he
+had expected her kiss to be perhaps indifferent, at least neutral. But
+the lips she had given him there in the darkness of the room were warm,
+living, breathing lips. They had not been snatched away from him too
+quickly. Their sweetness, for an instant, had lingered.
+
+Then, in the lamp glow, he was looking into Marette Radisson's face. He
+knew that his own was aflame. He had no desire to hide its confession,
+and he was eager to find what lay in her own eyes. And he was
+astonished, and then startled. The kiss had not disturbed Marette. It
+was as if it had never happened.
+
+She was not embarrassed, and there was no hint of color in her face. It
+was her deathly whiteness that startled him, a pallor emphasized by the
+dark masses of her hair, and a strange glow in her eyes. It was not a
+glow brought there by the kiss. It was fear, fading slowly out of them
+as he looked, until at last it was gone, and her lips trembled with an
+apologetic smile.
+
+"He was very angry," she said. "How easily some men lose their tempers,
+don't they--Jeems?"
+
+The little break in her voice, her brave effort to control herself, and
+the whimsical bit of smile that accompanied her words made him want to
+do what the gentle pressure of her hands had kept him from doing a few
+moments before--pick her up in his arms. What she was trying to hide he
+saw plainly. She had been in danger, a danger greater than that which
+she had quietly and fearlessly faced at barracks. And she was still
+afraid of that menace. It was the last thing which she wanted him to
+know, and yet he knew it. A new force swept through him. It was the
+force which comes of mastery, of possessorship, of fighting grimly
+against odds. It rose in a mighty triumph. It told him this girl
+belonged to him, that she was his to fight for. And he was going to
+fight. Marette saw the change that came into his face. For a moment
+after she had spoken there was silence between them. Outside the storm
+beat in a fiercer blast. A roll of thunder crashed over the bungalow.
+The windows rattled in a sweep of wind and rain. Kent, looking at her,
+his muscles hardening, his face growing grimmer, nodded toward the
+window at which Mooie's signal had come.
+
+"It is a splendid night--for us," he said. "And we must go."
+
+She did not answer.
+
+"In the eyes of the law I am a murderer," he went on. "You saved me.
+You shot a man. In those same eyes you are a criminal. It is folly to
+remain here. It is sheer suicide for both of us. If Kedsty--"
+
+"If Kedsty does not do what I told him to do to-night, I shall kill
+him!" she said.
+
+The quietness of her words, the steadiness of her eyes, held him
+speechless. Again it seemed to him, as it had seemed to him in his room
+at Cardigan's place, that it was a child who was looking at him and
+speaking to him. If she had shown fear a few moments before, that fear
+was not revealed in her face now. She was not excited. Her eyes were
+softly and quietly beautiful. She amazed him and discomfited him.
+Against that child-like sureness he felt himself helpless. Its potency
+was greater than his strength and greater than his determination. It
+placed between them instantly a vast gulf, a gulf that might be bridged
+by prayer and entreaty, but never by force. There was no hint of
+excitement in her threat against Kedsty, and yet in the very calmness
+of it he felt its deadliness.
+
+A whimsical half-smile was trembling on her lips again, and a warmer
+glow came into her eyes. "Do you know," she said, "that according to an
+old and sacred code of the North you belong to me?"
+
+"I have heard of that code," he replied. "A hundred years ago I should
+have been your slave. If it exists today, I am happy."
+
+"Yes, you see the point, Jeems, don't you? You were about to die,
+probably. I think they would have hanged you. And I saved your life.
+Therefore your life belongs to me, for I insist that the code still
+lives. You are my property, and I am going to do with you as I please,
+until I turn you over to the Rivers. And you are not going tonight. You
+shall wait here for Laselle and his brigade."
+
+"Laselle--Jean Laselle?"
+
+She nodded. "Yes, that is why you must wait. We have made a splendid
+arrangement. When Laselle and his brigade start north, you go with
+them. And no one will ever know. You are safe here. No one will think
+of looking for you under the roof of the Inspector of Police."
+
+"But you, Marette!" He caught himself, remembering her injunction not
+to question her. Marette shrugged her slim shoulders the slightest bit
+and nodded for him to look upon what she knew he had already seen, her
+room.
+
+"It is not uncomfortable," she said. "I have been here for a number of
+weeks, and nothing has happened to me. I am quite safe. Inspector
+Kedsty has not looked inside that door since the day your big
+red-headed friend saw me down in the poplars. He has not put a foot on
+the stair. That is the dead-line. And--I know--you are wondering. You
+are asking yourself a great many questions--_a bon droit_, M'sieu Jeems.
+You are burning up with them. I can see it. And I--"
+
+There was something suddenly pathetic about her, as she sank into the
+big-armed, upholstered chair which had been Kedsty's favorite reading
+chair. She was tired, and for a moment it seemed to Kent that she was
+almost ready to cry. Her ringers twisted nervously at the shining end
+of the braid in her lap, and more than ever he thought how slim and
+helpless, she was, yet how gloriously unafraid, how unconquerable with
+that something within her that burned like the fire of a dynamo. The
+flame of that force had gone down now, as though the fire itself was
+dying out; but when she raised her eyes to him, looking up at him from
+out of the big chair, he knew that back of the yearning, child-like
+glow that lay in them the heart of that fire was living and
+unquenchable. Again, for him, she had ceased to be a woman. It was the
+soul of a child that lay in her wide-open, wonderfully blue eyes. Twice
+before he had seen that miracle, and it held him now, as it had held
+him that first time when she had stood with her back at Cardigan's
+door. And as it had changed then, so it changed now, slowly, and she
+was a woman again, with that great gulf of unapproachableness between
+them. But the yearning was still there, revealing itself to him, and
+yet, like the sun, infinitely remote from him.
+
+"I wish that I might answer those questions for you," she said, in a
+voice that was low and tired. "I should like to have you know, because
+I--I have great faith in you, Jeems. But I cannot. It is impossible. It
+is inconceivable. If I did--" She made a hopeless little gesture. "If I
+told you everything, you would not like me any more. And I want you to
+like me--until you go north with M'sieu Jean and his brigade."
+
+"And when I do that," cried Kent, almost savagely, "I shall find this
+place you call the Valley of Silent Men, if it takes me all my life."
+
+It was becoming a joy for him to see the sudden flashes of pleasure
+that leaped into her eyes. She attempted no concealment. Whatever her
+emotions were they revealed themselves unaffectedly and with a simple
+freedom from embarrassment that swept him with an almost reverential
+worship. And what he had just said pleased her. Unreservedly her
+glowing eyes and her partly smiling lips told him that, and she said:
+"I am glad you feel that way, Jeems. And I think you would find it--in
+time. Because--"
+
+Her little trick of looking at him so steadily, as if there was
+something inside him which she was trying to see more clearly, made him
+feel more helplessly than ever her slave. It was as if, in those
+moments, she forgot that he was of flesh and blood, and was looking
+into his heart to see what was there before she gave voice to things.
+
+And then she said, still twisting her braid between her slim fingers,
+"You would find it--perhaps--because you are one who would not give up
+easily. Shall I tell you why I came to see you at Doctor Cardigan's? It
+was curiosity, at first--largely that. Just why or how I was interested
+in the man you freed is one of the things I can not tell you. And I can
+not tell you why I came to the Landing. Nor can I say a word about
+Kedsty. It may be, some day, that you will know. And then you will not
+like me. For nearly four years before I saw you that day I had been in
+a desolation. It was a terrible place. It ate my heart and soul out
+with its ugliness, its loneliness, its emptiness. A little while longer
+and I would have died. Then the thing happened that brought me away.
+Can you guess where it was?"
+
+He shook his head, "No."
+
+"To all the others it was a beautiful place, Montreal."
+
+"You were at school there?" he guessed.
+
+"Yes, the Villa Maria. I wasn't quite sixteen then. They were kind. I
+think they liked me. But each night I prayed one prayer. You know what
+the Three Rivers are to us, to the people of the North. The Athabasca
+is Grandmother, the Slave is Mother, the Mackenzie is Daughter, and
+over them watches always the goddess Niska, the Gray Goose. And my
+prayer was that I might go back to them. In Montreal there were people,
+people everywhere, thousands and tens of thousands of them, so many
+that I was lonely and heartsick and wanted to get away. For the Gray
+Goose blood is in me, Jeems. I love the forests. And Niska's God
+doesn't live in Montreal. Her sun doesn't rise there. Her moon isn't
+the same there. The flowers are not hers. The winds tell different
+stories. The air is another air. People, when they look at you, look in
+another way. Away down the Three Rivers I had loved men. There I was
+learning to hate them. Then, something happened. I came to Athabasca
+Landing. I went to see you because--"
+
+She clasped her two hands tightly in her lap. "Because, after those
+four terrible years, you were the first man I found who was playing a
+great, big, square game to the end. Don't ask me how I found it out.
+Please don't ask me anything. I am telling you all you can know, all
+you _shall_ know. But I did find it out. And then I learned that you were
+not going to die. Kedsty told me that. And when I had talked with you I
+knew that you would play any game square, and I made up my mind to help
+you. That is why I am telling you all this--just to let you know that I
+have faith in you, and that you must not break that faith. You must not
+insist on knowing more about me. You must still play the game. I am
+playing mine, and you must play yours. And to play yours clean, you
+must go with Laselle's brigade and leave me with Kedsty. You must
+forget what has happened. You must forget what MAY happen. You can not
+help me. You can only harm me. And if--some day, a long time from
+now--you should happen to find the Valley of Silent Men--"
+
+He waited, his heart pounding like a fist.
+
+"I may--be there," she finished, in a voice so low that it was scarcely
+above a whisper.
+
+It seemed to him that she was looking a long way off, and it was not in
+his direction. And then she smiled, not at him, but in a half-hopeless
+little way.
+
+"I think I shall be disappointed if you don't find it," she said then,
+and her eyes were pure as the blue flowers from which they had stolen
+their color, as she looked at him. "You know the great Sulphur Country
+beyond Fort Simpson, westward between the Two Nahannis?"
+
+"Yes. That is where Kilbane and his patrol were lost. The Indians call
+it the Devil Country. Is that it?"
+
+She nodded. "They say no living thing has ever been through the Sulphur
+Country," she said. "But that is not true. I have been through it. It
+is beyond the Sulphur Country you must go to find the Valley of Silent
+Men, straight through that gap between the North and the South Nahanni.
+That is the way _you_ must go if you should ever find it, Jeems, for
+otherwise you would have to come down from Dawson or up from Skagway,
+and the country is so great that you would never come upon it in a
+thousand years. The police will not find you there. You will always be
+safe. Perhaps I shall tell you more before the Brigade comes. But that
+is all tonight. I may never tell you anything more. And you must not
+question me."
+
+Speechless he had stood, all the life of his soul burning like a fire
+in his eyes as he looked at her and listened to her, and now, quietly
+and unexcitedly, he said:
+
+"Marette, I am going to play this game as you want me to play it,
+because I love you. It is only honest for me to tell you in words what
+you must already know. And I am going to fight for you as long as there
+is a drop of blood in my body. If I go with Jean Laselle's brigade,
+will you promise me--"
+
+His voice trembled. He was repressing a mighty emotion. But not by the
+quiver of one of her long lashes did Marette Radisson give evidence
+that she had even heard his confession of love. She interrupted him
+before he had finished.
+
+"I can promise you nothing, no matter what you do. Jeems, Jeems, you
+are not like those other men I learned to hate? You will not INSIST? If
+you do--if you are like them--yes, you may go away from here tonight
+and not wait for Jean Laselle. Listen! The storm will not break for
+hours. If you are going to demand a price for playing the game as I
+want you to play it, you may go. You have my permission."
+
+She was very white. She rose from the big chair and stood before him.
+There was no anger in her voice or gesture, but her eyes glowed like
+luminous stars. There was something in them which he had not seen
+before, and suddenly a thought struck his heart cold as ice.
+
+With a low cry he stretched out his hands, "My God, Marette, I am not a
+murderer! I did not kill John Barkley!"
+
+She did not answer him.
+
+"You don't believe me," he cried. "You believe that I killed Barkley,
+and that now--a murderer--I dare to tell you that I love you!"
+
+She was trembling. It was like a little shiver running through her. For
+only a flash it seemed to him that he had caught a glimpse of something
+terrible, a thing she was hiding, a thing she was fighting as she stood
+there with her two little clenched hands. For in her face, in her eyes,
+in the beating throb of her white throat he saw, in that moment, the
+almost hidden agony of a hurt thing. And then it was gone, even as he
+entreated again, pleading for her faith.
+
+"I did not kill John Barkley!"
+
+"I am not thinking of that, Jeems," she said. "It is of something--"
+
+They had forgotten the storm. It was howling and beating at the windows
+outside. But suddenly there came a sound that rose above the monotonous
+tumult of it, and Marette started as if it had sent an electric shock
+through her. Kent, too, turned toward the window.
+
+It was the metallic tap, tap, tapping which once before had warned them
+of approaching danger. And this time it was insistent. It was as if a
+voice was crying out to them from beyond the window. It was more than
+premonition--it was the alarm of a near and impending menace. And in
+that moment Kent saw Marette Radisson's hands go swiftly to her throat
+and her eyes leap with sudden fire, and she gave a little cry as she
+listened to the sound.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+In ten seconds, it seemed to Kent, Marette Radisson was again the
+splendid creature who had held the three men at bay over the end of her
+little black gun at barracks. The sound of Mooie's second warning came
+at first as a shock. Accompanying it there was a moment of fear, of
+fear driven almost to the point of actual terror. Following it came a
+reaction so swift that Kent was dazed. Within those ten seconds the
+girl's slender body seemed to grow taller; a new light flamed in her
+face; her eyes, turning swiftly to him, were filled with the same fire
+with which they had faced the three constables. She was unafraid. She
+was ready to fight.
+
+In such moments as these it was the quiet and dispassionate composure
+of her voice that amazed him most. It was musical in its softness now.
+Yet in that softness was a hidden thing. It was like velvet covering
+steel. She had spoken of Niska, the Gray Goose, the goddess of the
+Three Rivers. And he thought that something of the spirit of a goddess
+must be in Marette Radisson to give her the courage with which she
+faced him, even as the metallic thing outside tapped its warning again
+at the window.
+
+"Inspector Kedsty is coming back," she said. "I did not think he would
+do that--tonight."
+
+"He has not had time to go to barracks," said Kent.
+
+"No. Possibly he has forgotten something. Before he arrives, I want to
+show you the nest I have made for you, Jeems. Come quickly!"
+
+It was her first intimation that he was not to remain in her room, a
+possibility that had already caused him some inward embarrassment. She
+seized a number of matches, turned down her light, and hurried into the
+hall. Kent followed her to the end of this hall, where she paused
+before a low half-door that apparently opened into some sort of a space
+close under the sloping roof of the bungalow.
+
+"It is an old storeroom," she whispered. "I have made it quite
+comfortable, I think. I have covered the window, so you may light the
+lamp. But you must see that no light shows under this door. Lock it on
+the inside, and be very quiet. For whatever you find in there you must
+thank M'sieu Fingers."
+
+She pulled the door slightly open and gave him the matches. The
+illumination in the lower hall made its way only dimly to where they
+stood. In the gloom he found himself close to the soft glow of her
+eyes. His fingers closed about her hand as he took the matches.
+
+"Marette, you believe me?" he entreated. "You believe that I love you,
+that I didn't kill John Barkley, that I am going to fight for you as
+long as God gives me breath to fight?"
+
+For a moment there was silence. Her hand withdrew gently from his.
+
+"Yes, I think that I believe. Good-night, Jeems."
+
+She went from him quickly. At her door she turned. "Go in now, please,"
+she called back softly. "If you care as you say you do, _go in_."
+
+She did not wait for his reply. Her own door closed behind her, and
+Kent, striking a match, stooped low and entered his hiding-place. In a
+moment he saw directly ahead of him a lamp on a box. He lighted this,
+and his first movement then was to close the door and turn the key that
+was in the lock. After that he looked about him. The storeroom was not
+more than ten feet square, and the roof was so close over his head that
+he could not stand upright. It was not the smallness of the place that
+struck him first, but the preparations which Marette had made for him.
+In a corner was a bed of blankets, and the rough floor of the place was
+carpeted with blankets, except for a two-or-three-foot space around the
+edge of it. Beyond the box was a table and a chair, and it was the
+burden of this table that made his pulse jump quickest. Marette had not
+forgotten that he might grow hungry. It was laid sumptuously, with a
+plate for one, but with food for half a dozen. There were a brace of
+roasted grouse, brown as nuts; a cold roast of moose meat or beef; a
+dish piled high with golden potato salad; olives, pickles, an open can
+of cherries, a loaf of bread, butter, cheese--and one of Kedsty's
+treasured thermos bottles, which undoubtedly held hot coffee or tea.
+And then he noticed what was on the chair--a belt and holster and a
+Colt automatic forty-five! Marette had not figured on securing a gun in
+the affair at barracks, and her foresight had not forgotten a weapon.
+She had placed it conspicuously where he could not fail to see it at
+once. And just beyond the chair, on the floor, was a shoulder-pack. It
+was of the regulation service sort, partly filled. Resting against the
+pack was a Winchester. He recognized the gun. He had seen it hanging in
+Dirty Fingers' shack.
+
+For a matter of five minutes he scarcely moved from where he stood
+beside the table. Nothing but an unplastered roof was between him and
+the storm, and over his head the thunder crashed, and the rain beat in
+torrents. He saw where the window was, carefully covered with a
+blanket. Even through the blanket he caught faintly the illumination of
+lightning. This window overlooked the entrance to Kedsty's bungalow,
+and the idea came to him of turning out the light and opening it. In
+darkness he took down the blanket. But the window itself was not
+movable, and after assuring himself of this fact he flattened his face
+against it, peering out into the chaos of the night.
+
+In that instant came a flare of lightning, and to Kent, looking down,
+was revealed a sight that tightened every muscle in his body. More
+vividly than if it had been day he saw a man standing below in the
+deluge. It was not Mooie. It was not Kedsty. It was no one that he had
+ever seen. Even more like a ghost than a man was that apparition of the
+lightning flare. A great, gaunt giant of a ghost, bare-headed, with
+long, dripping hair and a long, storm-twisted beard. The picture shot
+to his brain with the swiftness of the lightning itself. It was like
+the sudden throwing of a cinema picture on a screen. Then blackness
+shut it out. Kent stared harder. He waited.
+
+Again came the lightning, and again he saw that tragic, ghost-like
+figure waiting in the storm. Three times he saw it. And he knew that
+the mysterious, bearded giant was an old man. The fourth time the
+lightning came, the figure was gone. And in that flare it was the bowed
+figure of Kedsty he saw hurrying up the gravel path to the door.
+
+Quickly Kent covered the window, but he did not relight the lamp.
+Before Kedsty could have reached the foot of the stair, he had unlocked
+the door. Cautiously he opened it three or four inches and sat down
+with his back against the wall, listening. He heard Kedsty pass through
+into the big room where Marette had waited for him a short time before.
+After that there was silence except for the tumult of the storm.
+
+For an hour Kent listened. In all that time he did not hear a sound
+from the lower hall or from Marette's room. He wondered if she was
+sleeping, and if Kedsty had gone to bed, waiting for morning before he
+set in action his bloodhounds of the law.
+
+Kent had no intention of disturbing the comfortable looking bed of
+blankets. He was not only sleepless, but filled with a premonition of
+events about to happen. He felt impinging itself more and more upon him
+a sense of watchfulness. That Inspector Kedsty and Marette Radisson
+were under the same roof, and that there was some potent and mysterious
+reason which kept Kedsty from betraying the girl's presence, was the
+thought which troubled him most. He was not developing further the
+plans for his own escape.
+
+He was thinking of Marette. What was her power over Kedsty? Why was it
+that Kedsty would like to see her dead? Why was she in his house? Again
+and again he asked himself the questions and found no answers to them.
+And yet, even in this purgatory of mystery that environed him, he felt
+himself happier than he had ever been in his life. For Marette was not
+four or five hundred miles down the river. She was in the same house
+with him. And he had told her that he loved her. He was glad that he
+had been given courage to let her know that. He relighted the lamp, and
+opened his watch and placed it on the table, where frequently he could
+look at the time. He wanted to smoke his pipe, but the odor of tobacco,
+he was sure, would reach Kedsty, unless the Inspector had actually
+retired into his bedroom for the night.
+
+Half a dozen times he questioned himself as to the identity of the
+ghostly apparition he had seen in the lightning flare of the storm.
+Perhaps it was some one of Fingers' strange friends from out of the
+wilderness, Mooie's partner in watching the bungalow. The picture of
+that giant of a man with his great beard and long hair, as his eyes had
+caught him in a sea of electrical fire, was indelibly burned into his
+brain. It was a tragic picture.
+
+Again he put out the light and bared the blanketed window, but he saw
+nothing but the sodden gleam of the earth when the lightning flashed. A
+second time he opened the door a few inches and sat down with his back
+to the wall, listening.
+
+How long it was before drowsiness stole upon him he did not know, but
+it came, and for a few moments at a time, as his eyes closed, it robbed
+him of his caution. And then, for a space, he slept. A sound brought
+him suddenly into wide wakefulness. His first impression was that the
+sound had been a cry. For a moment or two, as his senses adjusted
+themselves, he was not sure. Then swiftly the thing grew upon him.
+
+He rose to his feet and widened the crack of his door. A bar of light
+shot across the upper hall. It was from Marette's room. He had taken
+off his boots to deaden the sound of his feet, and he stepped outside
+his door. He was positive he heard a low cry, a choking, sobbing cry,
+only barely audible, and that it came from down the stair.
+
+No longer hesitating, he moved quickly to Marette's room and looked in.
+His first glimpse was of the bed. It had not been used. The room was
+empty.
+
+Something cold and chilling gripped at his heart, and an impulse which
+he no longer made an effort to resist pulled him to the head of the
+stair. It was more than an impulse--it was a demand. Step by step he
+went down, his hand on the butt of his Colt.
+
+He reached the lower hall, which was still lighted, and a step or two
+brought him to a view of the door that opened into the big living-room
+beyond. That door was partly open, and the room itself was filled with
+light. Soundlessly Kent approached. He looked in.
+
+What he saw first brought him relief together with shock. At one end of
+the long desk table over which hung a great brass lamp stood Marette.
+She was in profile to him. He could not see her face. Her hair fell
+loose about her, glowing like a rich, sable cape in the light of the
+lamp. She was safe, alive, and yet the attitude of her as she looked
+down was the thing that gave him shock. He was compelled to move a few
+inches more before he could see what she was staring at. And then his
+heart stopped dead still.
+
+Huddled down in his chair, with his head flung back so that the
+terrible ghastliness of his face fronted Kent, was Kedsty. And Kent, in
+an instant, knew. Only a dead man could look like that.
+
+With a cry he entered the room. Marette did not start, but an answering
+cry came into her throat as she turned her eyes from Kedsty to him. To
+Kent it was like looking upon the dead in two ways. Marette Radisson,
+living and breathing, was whiter than Kedsty, who was white with the
+unbreathing pallor of the actually dead. She did not speak. She made no
+sound after that answering cry in her throat. She simply looked. And
+Kent spoke her name gently as he saw her great, wide eyes blazing dully
+their agony and despair. Then, like one stunned and fascinated, she
+stared down upon Kedsty again.
+
+Every instinct of the man-hunter became alive in Kent's brain as he,
+too, turned toward the Inspector of Police. Kedsty's arms hung limp
+over the side of his chair. On the floor under his right hand was his
+Colt automatic. His head was strained so far over the back of the chair
+that it looked as though his neck had been broken. On his forehead,
+close up against his short-cropped, iron-gray hair, was a red stain.
+
+Kent approached and bent over him. He had seen death too many times not
+to recognize it now, but seldom had he seen a face twisted and
+distorted as Kedsty's was. His eyes were open and bulging in a glassy
+stare. His jaws hung loose. His--
+
+It was then Kent's blood froze in his veins. Kedsty had received a
+blow, but it was not the blow that had killed him. Afterward he had
+been choked to death. And the thing that had choked him was _a tress
+of woman's hair_.
+
+In the seconds that followed that discovery Kent could not have moved
+if his own life had paid the penalty of inaction. For the story was
+told--there about Kedsty's throat and on his chest. The tress of hair
+was long and soft and shining and black. It was twisted twice around
+Kedsty's neck, and the loose end rippled down over his shoulder,
+_glowing like a bit of rich sable in the lamplight_. It was that thought
+of velvety sable that had come to him at the doorway, looking at
+Marette. It was the thought that came to him now. He touched it; he
+took it in his fingers; he unwound it from about Kedsty's neck, where
+it had made two deep rings in the flesh. From his fingers it rippled
+out full length. And he turned slowly and faced Marette Radisson.
+
+Never had human eyes looked at him as she was looking at him now. She
+reached out a hand, her lips mute, and Kent gave her the tress of hair.
+And the next instant she turned, with a hand clasped at her own throat,
+and passed through the door.
+
+After that he heard her going unsteadily up the stairs.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+Kent did not move. His senses for a space were stunned. He was almost
+physically insensible to all emotions but that one of shock and horror.
+He was staring at Kedsty's gray-white, twisted face when he heard
+Marette's door close. A cry came from his lips, but he did not hear
+it--was unconscious that he had made a sound. His body shook with a
+sudden tremor. He could not disbelieve, for the evidence was there.
+From behind, as he had sat in his chair Marette Radisson had struck the
+Inspector of Police with some blunt object. The blow had stunned him.
+And after that--
+
+He drew a hand across his eyes, as if to clear his vision. What he had
+seen was impossible. The evidence was impossible. Assaulted, in deadly
+peril, defending either honor or love, Marette Radisson was of the
+blood to kill. But to creep up behind her victim--it was inconceivable!
+Yet there had been no struggle. Even the automatic on the floor gave no
+evidence of that. Kent picked it up. He looked at it closely, and again
+the unconscious cry of despair came in a half groan from his lips. For
+on the butt of the Colt was a stain of blood and a few gray hairs.
+Kedsty had been stunned by a blow from his own gun!
+
+As Kent placed it on the table, his eyes caught suddenly a gleam of
+steel under the edge of a newspaper, and he drew out from their
+hiding-place the long-bladed clipping scissors which Kedsty had used in
+the preparation of his scrap-books and official reports. It was the
+last link in the deadly evidence--the automatic with its telltale
+stain, the scissors, the tress of hair, and Marette Radisson. He felt a
+sensation of sudden dizziness. Every nerve-center in his body had
+received its shock, and when the shock had passed it left him sweating.
+
+Swiftly the reaction came. It was a lie, he told himself. The evidence
+was false. Marette could not have committed that crime, as the crime
+had visualized itself before his eyes. There was something which he had
+not seen, something which he could not see, something that was hiding
+itself from him. He became, in an instant, the old James Kent. The
+instinctive processes of the man-hunter leaped to their stations like
+trained soldiers. He saw Marette again, as she had looked at him when
+he entered the room. It was not murder he had caught in her wide-open
+eyes. It was not hatred. It was not madness. It was a quivering,
+bleeding soul crying out to him in an agony that no other human eyes
+had ever revealed to him before. And suddenly a great voice cried out
+in his brain, drowning all other things, telling him how contemptible a
+thing was love unless in that love was faith.
+
+With his heart choking him, he turned again to Kedsty. The futility of
+the thing which he had told himself was faith gripped at him
+sickeningly, yet he fought for that faith, even as his eyes looked
+again upon the ghastly torture that was in Kedsty's face.
+
+He was becoming calmer. He touched the dead man's cheek and found that
+it was no longer warm. The tragedy must have occurred an hour before.
+He examined more closely the abrasion on Kedsty's forehead. It was not
+a deep wound, and the blow that had made it must have stunned the
+Inspector of Police for only a short time. In that space the other
+thing had happened. In spite of his almost superhuman effort to keep
+the picture away from him, Kent saw it vividly--the swift turning to
+the table, the inspiration of the scissors, the clipping of the long
+tress of hair, the choking to death of Kedsty as he regained
+consciousness. Over and over again he whispered to himself the
+impossibility of it, the absurdity of it, the utter incongruity of it.
+Only a brain gone mad would have conceived that monstrous way of
+killing Kedsty. And Marette was not mad. She was sane.
+
+Like the eyes of a hunting ferret his own eyes swept quickly about the
+room. At the four windows there were long curtain cords. On the walls,
+hung there as trophies, were a number of weapons. On one end of
+Kedsty's desk, used as a paperweight, was a stone tomahawk. Still
+nearer to the dead man's hands, unhidden by papers, was a boot-lace.
+Under his limp right hand was the automatic. With these possible
+instruments of death close at hand, ready to be snatched up without
+trouble or waste of time, why had the murderer used a tress of woman's
+hair?
+
+The boot-lace drew Kent's eyes. It was impossible not to see it,
+forty-eight inches long and quarter-inch-wide buckskin. He began
+seeking for its mate, and found it on the floor where Marette Radisson
+had been standing. And again the unanswerable question pounded in
+Kent's brain--why had Kedsty's murderer used a tress of hair instead of
+a buckskin lace or one of the curtain cords hanging conspicuously at
+the windows?
+
+He went to each of these windows and found them locked. Then, a last
+time, he bent over Kedsty. He knew that in the final moments of his
+life Kedsty had suffered a slow and torturing agony. His twisted face
+left the story. And the Inspector of Police was a powerful man. He had
+struggled, still partly dazed by the blow. But it had taken strength to
+overcome him even then, to hold his head back, to choke life out of him
+slowly with the noose of hair. And Kent, now that the significance of
+what he saw began to grow upon him more clearly, felt triumphing over
+all other things in his soul a slow and mighty joy. It was
+inconceivable that with the strength of her own hands and body Marette
+Radisson had killed Kedsty. A greater strength than hers had held him
+in the death-chair, and a greater strength than hers had choked life
+from the Inspector of Police!
+
+He drew slowly out of the room, closing the door noiselessly behind
+him. He found that the front door was as Kedsty had left it, unlocked.
+
+Close to that door he stood for a space, scarcely allowing himself to
+breathe. He listened, but no sound came down the dimly illumined
+stairway.
+
+A new thing was pressing upon him now. It rode over the shock of
+tragedy, over the first-roused instincts of the man-hunter,
+overwhelming him with the realization of a horror such as had never
+confronted him before. It gripped him more fiercely than the mere
+killing of Kedsty. His thought was of Marette, of the fate which dawn
+and discovery would bring for her. His hands clenched and his jaws
+tightened. The world was against him, and tomorrow it would be against
+her. Only he, in the face of all that condemning evidence in the room
+beyond, would disbelieve her guilty of Kedsty's death. And he, Jim
+Kent, was already a murderer in the eyes of the law.
+
+He felt within him the slow-growing inspiration of a new spirit, the
+gathering might of a new force. A few hours ago he was an outcast. He
+was condemned. Life, for him, had been robbed of its last hope. And in
+that hour of his grimmest despair Marette Radisson had come to him.
+Through storm that had rocked the earth under her feet and set ablaze
+the chaotic blackness of the sky over her head she had struggled--for
+him. She had counted no cost. She had measured no chances. She had
+simply come--_because she believed in him_. And now, upstairs, she was
+the victim of the terrible price that was the first cost of his
+freedom. For he believed, now that the thought came to him like a
+dagger stroke, that this was so. Her act in freeing him had brought
+about the final climax, and as a result of it, Kedsty was dead.
+
+He went to the foot of the stair. Quietly, in his shoeless feet, he
+began to climb them. He wanted to cry out Marette's name even before he
+came to the top. He wanted to reach up to her with his arms
+outstretched. But he came silently to her door and looked in.
+
+She lay in a crumpled, huddled heap on her bed. Her face was hidden,
+and all about her lay her smothering hair. For a moment he was
+frightened. He could not see that she was breathing. So still was she
+that she was like one dead.
+
+His footsteps were unheard as he moved across the room. He knelt down
+beside her, reached out his arms, and gathered her into them.
+
+"Marette!" he cried in a low voice.
+
+He felt the sudden quiver, like a little shock, that ran through her.
+He crushed his face down, so that it lay in her hair, still damp from
+its wetting. He drew her closer, tightening his arms about her slender
+body, and a little cry came from her a cry that was a broken thing, a
+sob without tears.
+
+"Marette!"
+
+It was all he said. It was all he could say in that moment when his
+heart was beating like a drum against her breast. And then he felt the
+slow pressure of her hands against him, saw her white face, her wide,
+staring eyes within a few inches of his own, and she drew away from
+him, back against the wall, still huddled like a child on the bed, with
+her eyes fixed on him in a way that frightened him. There were no tears
+in them. She had not been crying. But her face was as white as he had
+seen it down in Kedsty's room. Some of the horror and shock had gone
+out of it. In it was another look as her eyes glowed upon Kent. It was
+a look of incredulity, of disbelief, a thing slowly fading away under
+the miracle of an amazing revelation. The truth thrust itself upon him.
+
+Marette had not expected that he would come to her like this. She had
+believed that he would take flight into the night, escaping from her as
+he would have run from a plague. She put up her two hands, in the trick
+they had of groping at her white throat, and her lips formed a word
+which she did not speak.
+
+Kent, to his own amazement, was smiling and still on his knees. He
+pulled himself to his feet, and stood up straight, looking down at her
+in that same strange, comforting, all-powerful way. The thrill of it
+was passing into her veins. A flush of color was driving the deathly
+pallor from her face. Her lips were parted, and she breathed quickly, a
+little excitedly.
+
+"I thought--you would go!" she said.
+
+"Not without you," he said. "I have come to take you with me."
+
+He drew out his watch. It was two o'clock. He held it down so that she
+could look at the dial.
+
+"If the storm keeps up, we have three hours before dawn," he said. "How
+soon can you be ready, Marette?"
+
+He was fighting to make his voice quiet and unexcited. It was a
+terrific struggle. And Marette was not blind to it. She drew herself
+from the bed and stood up before him, her two hands still clasped at
+her throbbing throat.
+
+"You believe--that I killed Kedsty," she said in a voice that was
+forced from her lips. "And you have come to help me--to pay me for what
+I tried to do for you? That is it--Jeems?"
+
+"Pay you?" he cried. "I couldn't pay you in a million years! From that
+day you first came to Cardigan's place you gave me life. You came when
+the last spark of hope in me had died. I shall always believe that I
+would have died that night. But you saved me.
+
+"From the moment I saw you I loved you, and I believe it was that love
+that kept me alive. And then you came to me again, down there, through
+this storm. Pay you! I can't. I never shall be able to. Because you
+thought I had killed a man made no difference You came just the same.
+And you came ready to kill, if necessary--for me. I'm not trying to
+tell myself _why_! But you did. You were ready to kill. And I am ready to
+kill--tonight--for you! I haven't got time to think about Kedsty. I'm
+thinking about you. If you killed him, I'm just telling myself there
+was a mighty good reason for it. But I don't believe it was you who
+killed him. You couldn't do it--with those hands!"
+
+He reached out suddenly and seized them, slipping his grip to her
+wrists, so that her hands lay upward in his own, hands that were small,
+slim-fingered, soft-palmed, beautiful.
+
+"They couldn't!" he cried, almost fiercely. "I swear to God they
+couldn't!"
+
+Her eyes and face flamed at his words. "You believe that, Jeems?"
+
+"Yes, just as you believe that I did not kill John Barkley. But the
+world is against us. It is against us both now. And we've got to hunt
+that hidden valley of yours together. Understand, Marette? And
+I'm--rather glad."
+
+He turned toward the door. "Will you be ready in ten minutes?" he asked.
+
+She nodded. "Yes, in ten minutes."
+
+He ran out into the hall and down the stair, locking the front door.
+Then he returned to his hiding-place under the roof. He knew that a
+strange sort of madness was in his blood, for in the face of tonight's
+tragedy only madness could inspire him with the ecstatic thrill that
+was in his veins. Kedsty's death seemed far removed from a more
+important thing--the fact that from this hour Marette was his to fight
+for, that she belonged to him, that she must go with him. He loved her.
+In spite of whoever she was and whatever she had done, he loved her.
+Very soon she would tell him what had happened in the room below, and
+the thing would be clear.
+
+There was one little corner of his brain that fought him. It kept
+telling him, like a parrot, that it was a tress of Marette's hair about
+Kedsty's throat, and that it was the hair that had choked him. But
+Marette would explain that, too. He was sure of it. In the face of the
+facts below he was illogical and unreasonable. He knew it. But his love
+for this girl, who had come strangely and tragically into his life, was
+like an intoxicant. And his faith was illimitable. She did not kill
+Kedsty. Another part of his brain kept repeating that over and over,
+even as he recalled that only a few hours before she had told him quite
+calmly that she would kill the Inspector of Police--if a certain thing
+should happen.
+
+His hands worked as swiftly as his thoughts. He laced up his service
+boots. All the food and dishes on the table he made into a compact
+bundle and placed in the shoulder-pack. He carried this and the rifle
+out into the hall. Then he returned to Marette's room. The door was
+closed. At his knock the girl's voice told him that she was not quite
+ready.
+
+He waited. He could hear her moving about quickly in her room. An
+interval of silence followed. Another five minutes
+passed--ten--fifteen. He tapped at the door again. This time it was
+opened.
+
+He stared, amazed at the change in Marette. She had stepped back from
+the door to let him enter, and stood full in the lamp-glow. Her slim,
+beautiful body was dressed in a velvety blue corduroy; the coat was
+close-fitting and boyish; the skirt came only a little below her knees.
+On her feet were high-topped caribou boots. About her waist was a
+holster and the little black gun. Her hair was done up and crowded
+under a close-fitting turban. She was exquisitely lovely, as she stood
+there waiting for him, and in that loveliness Kent saw there was not
+one thing out of place. The corduroy, the turban, the short skirt, and
+the high, laced boots were made for the wilderness. She was not a
+tenderfoot. She was a little _sourdough_--clear through! Gladness leaped
+into Kent's face. But it was not the transformation of her dress alone
+that amazed him. She was changed in another way. Her cheeks were
+flushed. Her eyes glowed with a strange and wonderful radiance as she
+looked at him. Her lips were red, as he had seen them that first time
+at Cardigan's place. Her pallor, her fear, her horror were gone, and in
+their place was the repressed excitement of one about to enter upon a
+strange adventure.
+
+On the floor was a pack only half as large as Kent's and when he picked
+it up, he found it of almost no weight. He fastened it to his own pack
+while Marette put on her raincoat and went down the stair ahead of him.
+In the hall below she was waiting, when he came down, with Kedsty's big
+rubber slicker in her hands.
+
+"You must put it on," she said.
+
+She shuddered slightly as she held the garment. The color was almost
+gone from her cheeks, as she faced the door beyond which the dead man
+sat in his chair, but the marvelous glow was still in her eyes as she
+helped Kent with his pack and the slicker and afterward stood for an
+instant with her hands touching his breast and her lips as if about to
+speak something which she held back.
+
+A few steps beyond them they heard the storm. It seemed to rush upon
+the bungalow in a new fury, beating at the door, crashing over their
+heads in thunder, daring them to come out. Kent reached up and turned
+out the hall light.
+
+In darkness he opened the door. Rain and wind swept in. With his free
+hand he groped out, found Marette, drew her after him, and closed the
+door again. Entering from the lighted hall into the storm was like
+being swallowed in a pit of blackness. It engulfed and smothered them.
+Then came suddenly a flash of lightning, and he saw Marette's face,
+white and drenched, but looking at him with that same strange glow in
+her eyes. It thrilled him. Even in the darkness it was there. It had
+been there since he had returned to her from Kedsty and had knelt at
+her bedside, with his arms about her for a moment.
+
+Only now, in the beat of the storm, did an answer to the miracle of it
+come to him. It was because of _him_. It was because of his _faith_ in her.
+Even death and horror could not keep it from her eyes. He wanted to cry
+out the joy of his discovery, to give wild voice to it in the teeth of
+the wind and the rain. He felt sweeping through him a force mightier
+than that of the night. Her hands were on his arm, as if she was afraid
+of losing him in that pit of blackness; the soft cling of them was like
+a contact through which came a warm thrill of electrical life. He put
+out his arm and drew her to him, so that for a moment his face pressed
+against the top of her wet little turban.
+
+And then he heard her say: "There is a scow at the bayou, Jeems. It is
+close to the end of the path. M'sieu Fingers has kept it there,
+waiting, ready."
+
+He had been thinking of Crossen's place and an open boat. He blessed
+Fingers again, as he took Marette's hand in his own and started for the
+trail that led through the poplar thicket.
+
+Their feet slopped deep in wet and mud, and with the rain there was a
+wind that took their breath away. It was impossible to see a tree an
+arm's length away, and Kent hoped that the lightning would come
+frequently enough to guide him. In the first flare of it he looked down
+the slope that led riverward. Little rivulets of water were running
+down it. Rocks and stumps were in their way, and underfoot it was
+slippery. Marette's fingers were clinging to his again, as she had held
+to them on the wild race up to Kedsty's bungalow from the barracks. He
+had tingled then in the sheer joy of their thrill, but it was a
+different thrill that stirred him now--an overwhelming emotion of
+possessorship. This night, with its storm and its blackness, was the
+most wonderful of all his nights.
+
+He sensed nothing of its discomfort. It could not beat back the joyous
+racing of the blood in his body. Sun and stars, day and night, sunshine
+and cloud, were trivial and inconsequential to him now. For close to
+him, struggling with him, fighting through the night with him, trusting
+him, helpless without him, was the living, breathing thing he loved
+more than he loved his own life. For many years, without knowing it, he
+had waited for this night, and now that it was upon him, it inundated
+and swept away his old life. He was no longer the huntsman, but the
+hunted. He was no longer alone, but had a priceless thing to fight for,
+a priceless and helpless thing that was clinging to his fingers in the
+darkness. He did not feel like a fugitive, but as one who has come into
+a great triumph. He sensed no uncertainty or doubt.
+
+The river lay ahead, and for him the river had become the soul and the
+promise of life. It was Marette's river and his river, and in a little
+while they would be on it. And Marette would then tell him about
+Kedsty. He was sure of that. She would tell him what had happened while
+he slept. His faith was illimitable.
+
+They came into the sodden dip at the foot of the ridge, and the
+lightning revealed to him the edge of the poplar growth in which
+O'Connor had seen Marette many weeks ago. The bayou trail wound through
+this, and Kent struck out for it blindly in the darkness. He did not
+try to talk, but he freed his companion's hand and put his arm about
+her when they came to the level ground, so that she was sheltered by
+him from the beat of the storm. Then brush swished in their faces, and
+they stopped, waiting for the lightning again. Kent was not anxious for
+it to come. He drew the girl still closer, and in that pit of
+blackness, with the deluge about her and the crash of thunder over her
+head, she snuggled up against his breast, the throb of her body against
+him, waiting, watching, with him. Her frailty, the helplessness of her,
+the slimness of her in the crook of his arm, filled him with an
+exquisite exultation. He did not think of her now as the splendid,
+fearless creature who had leveled her little black gun at the three men
+in barracks. She was no longer the mysterious, defiant, unafraid person
+who had held him in a sort of awe that first hour in Kedsty's place.
+For she was crumpled against him now, utterly dependent and afraid. In
+that chaos of storm something told him that her nerve was broken, that
+without him she would be lost and would cry out in fear. _And he was
+glad_! He held her tighter; he bent his head until his face touched the
+wet, crushed hair under the edge of her turban. And then the lightning
+split open the night again, and he saw the way ahead of him to the
+trail.
+
+Even in darkness it was not difficult to follow in the clean-cut wagon
+path. Over their heads the tops of the poplars swished and wailed.
+Under their feet the roadway in places was a running stream or
+inundated until it became a pool. In pitch blackness they struck such a
+pool, and in spite of the handicap of his packs and rifle Kent stopped
+suddenly, and picked Marette up in his arms, and carried her until they
+reached high ground. He did not ask permission. And Marette, for a
+minute or two, lay crumpled up close in his arms, and for a thrilling
+instant his face touched her rain-wet cheek.
+
+The miracle of their adventure was that neither spoke. To Kent the
+silence between them had become a thing which he had no desire to
+break. In that silence, excused and abetted by the tumult of the storm,
+he felt that a wonderful something was drawing them closer and closer
+together, and that words might spoil the indescribable magic of the
+thing that was happening. When he set Marette on her feet again, her
+hand accidentally fell upon his, and for a moment her fingers closed
+upon it in a soft pressure that meant more to him than a thousand words
+of gratitude.
+
+A quarter of a mile beyond the poplar thicket they came to the edge of
+the spruce and cedar timber, and Soon the thick walls of the forest
+shut them in, sheltering them from the wind, but the blackness was even
+more like that of a bottomless pit. Kent had noticed that the thunder
+and lightning were drifting steadily eastward, and now the occasional
+flashes of electrical fire scarcely illumined the trail ahead of them.
+The rain was not beating so fiercely. They could hear the wail of the
+spruce and cedar tops and the slush of their boots in mud and water. An
+interval came, where the spruce-tops met overhead, when it was almost
+calm. It was then that Kent threw out of him a great, deep breath and
+laughed joyously and exultantly.
+
+"Are you wet, little Gray Goose?"
+
+"Only outside, Big Otter. My feathers have kept me dry."
+
+Her voice had a trembling, half-sobbing, half-rejoicing note in it. It
+was not the voice of one who had recently killed a man. In it was a
+pathos which Kent knew she was trying to hide behind brave words. Her
+hands clung to the arm of his rubber slicker even as they stood there,
+close together, as if she was afraid something might drag them apart in
+that treacherous gloom. Kent, fumbling for a moment, drew from an inner
+pocket a dry handkerchief. Then he found her face, tilted it a bit
+upward, and wiped it dry. He might have done the same thing to a child
+who had been crying. After that he scrubbed his own, and they went on,
+his arm about her again.
+
+It was half a mile from the edge of the forest to the bayou, and half a
+dozen times in that distance Kent took the girl in his arms and carried
+her through water that almost reached his boot tops. The lightning no
+longer served them. The rain still fell steadily, but the wind had gone
+with the eastward sweep of the storm. Close-hung with the forest walls,
+the bayou itself was indiscernible in the blackness. Marette guided him
+now, though Kent walked ahead of her, holding firmly to her hand.
+Unless Fingers had changed its location, the scow should be somewhere
+within forty or fifty paces of the end of the trail. It was small, a
+two-man scow, with a tight little house built amidships. And it was
+tied close up against the shore. Marette told him this as they felt
+their way through brush and reeds. Then he stumbled against something
+taut and knee-high, and he found it was the tie-rope.
+
+Leaving Marette with her back to the anchor tree, he went aboard. The
+water was three or four inches deep in the bottom of the scow, but the
+cabin was built on a platform raised above the floor of the boat, and
+Kent hoped it was still dry. He groped until he found the twisted wire
+which held the door shut. Opening it, he ducked his head low and
+entered. The little room was not more than four feet high, and for
+greater convenience he fell upon his knees while fumbling under his
+slicker for his water-proof box of matches. The water had not yet risen
+above the floor.
+
+The first light he struck revealed the interior to him. It was a tiny
+cabin, scarcely larger than some boxes he had seen. It was about eight
+feet long by six in width, and the ceiling was so low that, even
+kneeling, his head touched it. His match burned out, and he lighted
+another. This time he saw a candle stuck in a bit of split birch that
+projected from the wall. He crept to it and lighted it. For a moment he
+looked about him, and again he blessed Fingers. The little scow was
+prepared for a voyage. Two narrow bunks were built at the far end, one
+so close above the other that Kent grinned as he thought of squeezing
+between. There were blankets. Within reach of his arm was a tiny stove,
+and close to the stove a supply of kindling and dry wood. The whole
+thing made him think of a child's playhouse. Yet there was still room
+for a wide, comfortable, cane-bottomed chair, a stool, and a
+smooth-planed board fastened under a window, so that it answered the
+purpose of a table. This table was piled with many packages.
+
+He stripped off his packs and returned for Marette. She had come to the
+edge of the scow and called to him softly as she heard him splashing
+through the water. Her arms were reaching toward him, to meet him in
+the darkness. He carried her through the shallow sea about his feet and
+laughed as he put her down on the edge of the platform at the door. It
+was a low, joyous laugh. The yellow light of the candle sputtered in
+their wet faces. Only dimly could he see her, but her eyes were shining.
+
+"Your nest, little Gray Goose," he cried gently.
+
+Her hand reached up and touched his face. "You have been good to me,
+Jeems," she said, a little tremble in her voice. "You may--kiss me."
+
+Out in the beat of the rain Kent's heart choked him with song. His soul
+swelled with the desire to shout forth a paean of joy and triumph at
+the world he was leaving this night for all time. With the warm thrill
+of Marette's lips he had become the superman, and as he leaped ashore
+in the darkness and cut the tie-rope with a single slash of his knife,
+he wanted to give voice to the thing that was in him as the rivermen
+had chanted in the glory of their freedom the day the big brigade
+started north. And he _did_ sing, under his laughing, sobbing breath.
+With a giant's strength he sent the scow out into the bayou, and then
+back and forth he swung the long one-man sweep, twisting the craft
+riverward with the force of two pairs of arms instead of one. Behind
+the closed door of the tiny cabin was all that the world now held worth
+fighting for. By turning his head he could see the faint illumination
+of the candle at the window. The light--the cabin--Marette!
+
+He laughed inanely, foolishly, like a boy. He began to hear a dull,
+droning murmur, a sound that with each stroke of the sweep grew into a
+more distinct, cataract-like roar. It was the river. Swollen by flood,
+it was a terrifying sound. But Kent did not dread it. It was _his_ river;
+it was his friend. It was the pulse and throb of life to him now. The
+growing tumult of it was not menace, but the joyous thunder of many
+voices calling to him, rejoicing at his coming. It grew in his ears.
+Over his head the black sky opened again, and a deluge of rain fell
+straight down. But above the sound of it the rush of the river drew
+nearer, and still nearer. He felt the first eddying swirl of it against
+the scow head, and powerful hands seemed to reach in out of the
+darkness. He knew that the nose of the current had caught him and was
+carrying him out on the breast of the stream. He shipped the sweep and
+straightened himself, facing the utter chaos of blackness ahead. He
+felt under him the slow and mighty pulse of the great flood as it swept
+toward the Slave, the Mackenzie, and the Arctic. And he cried out at
+last in the downpour of storm, a cry of joy, of exultation, of hope
+that reached beyond the laws of men--and then he turned toward the
+little cabin, where through the thickness of sodden night the tiny
+window was glowing yellow with candle-light.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+To the cabin Kent groped his way, and knocked, and it was Marette who
+opened the door for him and stepped back for him to enter. Like a great
+wet dog he came in, doubling until his hands almost touched the floor.
+He sensed the incongruity of it, the misplacement of his overgrown body
+in this playhouse thing, and he grinned through the trickles of wet
+that ran down his face, and tried to see. Marette had taken off her
+turban and rain-coat, and she, too, stooped low in the four-feet space
+of the cabin--but not so ridiculously low as Kent. He dropped on his
+knees again. And then he saw that in the tiny stove a fire was burning.
+The crackle of it rose above the beat of the rain on the roof, and the
+air was already mellowing with the warmth of it. He looked at Marette.
+Her wet hair was still clinging to her face, her feet and arms and part
+of her body were wet; but her eyes were shining, and she was smiling at
+him. She seemed to him, in this moment, like a child that was glad it
+had found refuge. He had thought that the terror of the night would
+show in her face, but it was gone. She was not thinking of the thunder
+and the lightning, the black trail, or of Kedsty lying dead in his
+bungalow. She was thinking of him.
+
+He laughed outright. It was a joyous, thrilling thing, this black night
+with the storm over their heads and the roll of the great river under
+them--they two--alone--in this cockleshell cabin that was not high
+enough to stand in and scarcely big enough in any direction to turn
+round in. The snug cheer of it, the warmth of the fire beginning to
+reach their chilled bodies, and the inspiring crackle of the birch in
+the little stove filled Kent, for a space, with other thoughts than
+those of the world they were leaving. And Marette, whose eyes and lips
+were smiling at him softly in the candle-glow, seemed also to have
+forgotten. It was the little window that brought them back to the
+tragedy of their flight. Kent visioned it as it must look from the
+shore--a telltale blotch of light traveling through the darkness. There
+were occasional cabins for several miles below the Landing, and eyes
+turned riverward in the storm might see it. He made his way to the
+window and fastened his slicker over it.
+
+"We're off, Gray Goose," he said then, rubbing his hands. "Would it
+seem more homelike if I smoked?"
+
+She nodded, her eyes on the slicker at the window.
+
+"It's pretty safe," said Kent, fishing out his pipe, and beginning to
+fill it. "Everybody asleep, probably. But we won't take any chances."
+The scow was swinging sideways in the current. Kent felt the change in
+its movement, and added: "No danger of being wrecked, either. There
+isn't a rock or rapids for thirty miles. River clear as a floor. If we
+bump ashore, don't get frightened."
+
+"I'm not afraid--of the river," she said. Then, with rather startling
+unexpectedness, she asked him, "Where will they look for us tomorrow?"
+
+Kent lighted his pipe, eyeing her a bit speculatively as she seated
+herself on the stool, leaning toward him as she waited for an answer to
+her question.
+
+"The woods, the river, everywhere," he said. "They'll look for a
+missing boat, of course. We've simply got to watch behind us and take
+advantage of a good start."
+
+"Will the rain wipe out our footprints, Jeems?"
+
+"Yes. Everything in the open."
+
+"But--perhaps--in a sheltered place--?"
+
+"We were in no sheltered place," he assured her. "Can you remember that
+we were, Gray Goose?"
+
+She shook her head slowly. "No. But there was Mooie, under the window."
+
+"His footprints will be wiped out."
+
+"I am glad. I would not have him, or M'sieu Fingers, or any of our
+friends brought into this trouble."
+
+She made no effort to hide the relief his words brought her. He was a
+little amazed that she should worry over Fingers and the old Indian in
+this hour of their own peril. That danger he had decided to keep as far
+from her mind as possible. But she could not help realizing the
+impending menace of it. She must know that within a few hours Kedsty
+would be found, and the long arm of the wilderness police would begin
+its work. And if it caught them--
+
+She had thrust her feet toward him and was wriggling them inside her
+boots, so that he heard the slushing sound of water. "Ugh, but they are
+wet!" she shivered. "Will you unlace them and pull them off for me,
+Jeems?"
+
+He laid his pipe aside and knelt close to her. It took him five minutes
+to get the boots off. Then he held one of her sodden little feet close
+between his two big hands.
+
+"Cold--cold as ice," he said. "You must take off your stockings,
+Marette. Please."
+
+He arranged a pile of wood in front of the stove and covered it with a
+blanket which he pulled from one of the bunks. Then, still on his
+knees, he drew the cane chair close to the fire and covered it with a
+second blanket. A few moments later Marette was tucked comfortably in
+this chair, with her bare feet on the blanketed pile of wood. Kent
+opened the stove door. Then he extinguished one of the smoking candles,
+and after that, the other. The flaming birch illumined the little cabin
+with a mellower light. It gave a subdued flush to the girl's face. Her
+eyes seemed to Kent wonderfully soft and beautiful in that changed
+light. And when he had finished, she reached out a hand, and for an
+instant it touched his face and his wet hair so lightly that he sensed
+the thrilling caress of it without feeling its weight.
+
+"You are so good to me, Jeems," she said, and he thought there was a
+little choking note in her throat.
+
+He had seated himself on the floor, close to her chair, with his back
+to the wall. "It is because I love you, Gray Goose," he replied
+quietly, looking straight into the fire.
+
+She was silent. She, too, was looking into the fire. Close over their
+heads they heard the beating of the rain, like a thousand soft little
+fists pounding the top of the cabin. Under them they could feel the
+slow swinging of the scow as it responded to the twists and vagaries of
+the current that was carrying them on. And Kent, unseen by the girl who
+was looking away from him, raised his eyes. The birch light was glowing
+in her hair; it trembled on her white throat; her long lashes were
+caught in the shimmer of it. And, looking at her, Kent thought of
+Kedsty lying back in his bungalow room, choked to death by a tress of
+that glorious hair, so near to him now that, by leaning a little
+forward, he might have touched it with his lips. The thought brought
+him no horror. For even as he looked, one of her hands crept up to her
+cheek--the small, soft hand that had touched his face and hair as
+lightly as a bit of thistle-down--and he knew that two hands like that
+could not have killed a man who was fighting for life when he died.
+
+And Kent reached up, and took the hand, and held it close in his own,
+as he said, "Little Gray Goose, please tell me now--what happened in
+Kedsty's room?"
+
+His voice thrilled with an immeasurable faith. He wanted her to know,
+no matter what had happened, that this faith and his love for her could
+not be shaken. He believed in her, and would always believe in her.
+
+Already he was sure that he knew how Kedsty had died. The picture of
+the tragedy had pieced itself together in his mind, bit by bit. While
+he slept, Marette and a man were down in the big room with the
+Inspector of Police. The climax had come, and Kedsty was struck a
+blow--in some unaccountable way--with his own gun. Then, just as Kedsty
+was recovering sufficiently from the shock of the blow to fight,
+Marette's companion had killed him. Horrified, dazed by what had
+already happened, perhaps unconscious, she had been powerless to
+prevent the use of a tress of her hair in the murderer's final work.
+Kent, in this picture, eliminated the boot-laces and the curtain cords.
+He knew that the unusual and the least expected happened frequently in
+crime. And Marette's long hair was flowing loose about her. To use it
+had simply been the first inspiration of the murderer. And Kent
+believed, as he waited for her answer now, that Marette would tell him
+this.
+
+And as he waited, he felt her fingers tighten in his hand.
+
+"Tell me, Gray Goose--what happened?"
+
+"I--don't--know--Jeems--"
+
+His eyes went to her suddenly from the fire, as if he was not quite
+sure he had heard what she had said. She did not move her head, but
+continued to gaze unseeingly into the flames. Inside his palm her
+fingers worked to his thumb and held it tightly again, as they had
+clung to it when she was frightened by the thunder and lightning.
+
+"I don't know what happened, Jeems."
+
+This time he did not feel the clinging thrill of her little fingers and
+soft palm. Deep within him he experienced something that was like a
+sudden and unexpected blow. He was ready to fight for her until his
+last breath was gone. He was ready to believe anything she told
+him--anything except this impossible thing which she had just spoken.
+For she did know what had happened in Kedsty's room. She knew--unless--
+
+Suddenly his heart leaped with joyous hope. "You mean--you were
+unconscious?" he cried in a low voice that trembled with his eagerness.
+"You fainted--and it happened then?"
+
+She shook her head. "No. I was asleep in my room. I didn't intend to
+sleep, but--I did. Something awakened me. I thought I had been
+dreaming. But something kept pulling me, pulling me downstairs. And
+when I went, I found Kedsty like that. He was dead. I was paralyzed,
+standing there, when you came."
+
+She drew her, hand away from him, gently, but significantly. "I know
+you can't believe me, Jeems. It is impossible for you to believe me."
+
+"And you don't want me to believe you, Marette."
+
+"Yes--I do. You must believe me."
+
+"But the tress of hair--your hair--round Kedsty's neck--"
+
+He stopped. His words, spoken gently as they were, seemed brutal to
+him. Yet he could not see that they affected her. She did not flinch.
+He saw no tremor of horror. Steadily she continued to look into the
+fire. And his brain grew confused. Never in all his experience had he
+seen such absolute and unaffected self-control. And somehow, it chilled
+him. It chilled him even as he wanted to reach out and gather her close
+in his arms, and pour his love into her ears, entreating her to tell
+him everything, to keep nothing back from him that might help in the
+fight he was going to make.
+
+And then she said, "Jeems, if we should be caught by the Police--it
+would probably be quite soon, wouldn't it?"
+
+"They won't catch us."
+
+"But our greatest danger of being caught is right now, isn't it?" she
+insisted.
+
+Kent took out his watch and leaned over to look at it in the fireglow.
+"It is three o'clock," he said. "Give me another day and night, Gray
+Goose, and the Police will never find us."
+
+For a moment or two more she was silent. Then her hand reached out, and
+her fingers twined softly round his thumb again. "Jeems--when we are
+safe--when we are sure the Police won't find us--I will tell you all
+that I know--about what happened in Kedsty's room. And I will tell
+you--about--the hair. I will tell you--everything." Her fingers
+tightened almost fiercely. "Everything," she repeated. "I will tell you
+about that in Kedsty's room--and I will tell you about myself--and
+after that--I am afraid--you won't like me."
+
+"I love you," he said, making no movement to touch her. "No matter what
+you tell me, Gray Goose, I shall love you."
+
+She gave a little cry, scarcely more than a broken note in her throat,
+and Kent--had her face been turned toward him then--would have seen the
+glory that came into it, and into her eyes, like a swift flash of
+light--and passed as swiftly away.
+
+What he did see, when she turned her head, were eyes caught suddenly by
+something at the cabin door. He looked. Water was trickling in slowly
+over the sill.
+
+"I expected that," he said cheerfully. "Our scow is turning into a
+rain-barrel, Marette. Unless I bail out, we'll soon be flooded."
+
+He reached for his slicker and put it on. "It won't take me long to
+throw the water overboard," he added. "And while I'm doing that I want
+you to take _off_ your wet things and tuck yourself into bed. Will you,
+Gray Goose?"
+
+"I'm not tired, but if you think it is best--" Her hand touched his arm.
+
+"It is best," he said, and for a moment he bent over her until his lips
+touched her hair.
+
+Then he seized a pail, and went out into the rain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+It was that hour when, with clear skies, the gray northern dawn would
+have been breaking faintly over the eastern forests. Kent found the
+darkness more fog-like; about him was a grayer, ghostlier sort of
+gloom. But he could not see the water under his feet. Nor could he see
+the rail of the scow, or the river. From the stern, ten feet from the
+cabin door, the cabin itself was swallowed up and invisible.
+
+With the steady, swinging motion of the riverman he began bailing. So
+regular became his movements that they ran in a sort of rhythmic
+accompaniment to his thoughts. The monotonous _splash, splash, splash_ of
+the outflung pails of water assumed, after a few minutes, the character
+of a mechanical thing. He could smell the nearness of the shore. Even
+in the rain the tang of cedar and balsam came to him faintly.
+
+But it was the river that impressed itself most upon his senses. It
+seemed to him, as the minutes passed, like a living thing. He could
+hear it gurgling and playing under the end of the scow. And with that
+sound there was another and more indescribable thing, the tremble of
+it, the pulse of it, the thrill of it in the impenetrable gloom, the
+life of it as it swept on in a slow and mighty flood between its
+wilderness walls. Kent had always said, "You can hear the river's heart
+beat--if you know how to listen for it." And he heard it now. He felt
+it. The rain could not beat it out, nor could the splash of the water
+he was throwing overboard drown it, and the darkness could not hide it
+from the vision that was burning like a living coal within him. Always
+it was the river that had given him consolation in times of loneliness.
+For him it had grown into a thing with a soul, a thing that personified
+hope, courage, comradeship, everything that was big and great in final
+achievement. And tonight--for he still thought of the darkness as
+night--the soul of it seemed whispering to him a sort of paean.
+
+He could not lose. That was the thought that filled him. Never had his
+pulse beat with greater assurance, never had a more positive sense of
+the inevitable possessed him. It was inconceivable, he thought, even to
+fear the possibility of being taken by the Police. He was more than a
+man fighting for his freedom alone, more than an individual struggling
+for the right to exist. A thing vastly more priceless than either
+freedom or life, if they were to be accepted alone, waited for him in
+the little cabin, shut in by its sea of darkness. And ahead of them lay
+their world. He emphasized that. _Their_ world--the world which, in an
+illusive and unreal sort of way, had been a part of his dreams all his
+life. In that world they would shut themselves in. No one would ever
+find them. And the glory of the sun and the stars and God's open
+country would be with them always.
+
+Marette was the very heart of that reality which impinged itself upon
+him now. He did not worry about what it was she would tell him
+tomorrow, or day after tomorrow. He believed that it was then--when she
+had told him what there was to tell, and he still reached, out his arms
+to her--that she would come into those arms. And he knew that nothing
+that might have happened in Kedsty's room would keep his arms from
+reaching, to her. Such was his faith, potent as the mighty flood hidden
+in the gray-ghost gloom of approaching dawn.
+
+Yet he did not expect to win easily. As he worked, his mind swept up
+and down the Three Rivers from the Landing to Fort Simpson, and
+mentally he pictured the situations that might arise, and how he would
+triumph over them. He figured that the men at Barracks would not enter
+Kedsty's bungalow until noon at the earliest. The Police gasoline
+launch would probably set out on a river search soon after. By
+mid-afternoon the scow would have a fifty-mile start.
+
+Before darkness came again they would be through the Death Chute, where
+Follette and Ladouceur swam their mad race for the love of a girl. And
+not many miles below the Chute was a swampy country where he could hide
+the scow. Then they would start overland, west and north. Given until
+another sunset, and they would be safe. This was what he expected. But
+if it came to fighting--he would fight.
+
+The rain had slackened to a thin drizzle by the time he finished his
+bailing. The aroma of cedar and balsam came to him more clearly, and he
+heard more distinctly the murmuring surge of the river. He tapped again
+at the door of the cabin, and Marette answered him.
+
+The fire had burned down to a bed of glowing coals when he entered.
+Again he fell on his knees, and took off his dripping slicker.
+
+The girl greeted him from the berth. "You look like a great bear,
+Jeems." There was a glad, welcoming note in her voice.
+
+He laughed, and drew the stool beside her, and managed to sit on it,
+the roof compelling him to bend his head over a little. "I feel like an
+elephant in a birdcage," he replied. "Are you comfortable, little Gray
+Goose?"
+
+"Yes. But you, Jeems? You are wet!"
+
+"But so happy that I don't feel it, Gray Goose."
+
+He could make her out only dimly there in the darkness of the berth.
+Her face was a pale shadow, and she had loosened her damp hair so that
+the warmth and dry air might reach it more easily. Kent wondered if she
+could hear the beating of his heart. He forgot the fire, and the
+darkness grew thicker. He could no longer see the pale outline of her
+face, and he drew back a little, possessed by the thought that it was
+sacrilegious to bend nearer to her, like a thief, in that gloom. She
+sensed his movement, and her hand reached to him and lay lightly with
+its fingertips touching his arm.
+
+"Jeems," she said softly. "I'm not sorry--now--that I came up to
+Cardigan's place that day--when you thought you were dying. I wasn't
+wrong. You are different. And I made fun of you then, and laughed at
+you, because I knew that you were not going to die. Will you forgive
+me?"
+
+He laughed happily. "It's funny how little things work out, sometimes,"
+he said. "Wasn't a kingdom lost once upon a time because some fellow
+didn't have a horseshoe? Anyway, I knew of a man whose life was saved
+because of a broken pipe-stem. And you came to me, and I'm here with
+you now, because--"
+
+"Of what?" she whispered.
+
+"Because of something that happened a long time ago," he said.
+"Something you wouldn't dream could have anything to do with you or
+with me. Shall I tell you about it, Marette?"
+
+Her fingers pressed slightly upon his arm. "Yes."
+
+"Of course, it's a story of the Police," he began. "And I won't mention
+this fellow's name. You may think of him as that red-headed O'Connor,
+if you want to. But I don't say that it was he. He was a constable in
+the Service and had been away North looking up some Indians who were
+brewing an intoxicating liquor from roots. That was six years ago. And
+he caught something. Le Mort Rouge, we sometimes call it--the Red
+Death--or smallpox. And he was alone when the fever knocked him down,
+three hundred miles from anywhere. His Indian ran away at the first
+sign of it, and he had just time to get up his tent before he was flat
+on his back. I won't try to tell you of the days he went through. It
+was a living death. And he would have died, there is no doubt of it, if
+it hadn't been for a stranger who came along. He was a white man.
+Marette, it doesn't take a great deal of nerve to go up against a man
+with a gun, when you've got a gun of your own; and it doesn't take such
+a lot of nerve to go into battle when a thousand others are going with
+you. But it does take nerve to face what that stranger faced. And the
+sick man was nothing to him. He went into that tent and nursed the
+other back to life. Then the sickness got him, and for ten weeks those
+two were together, each fighting to save the other's life, and they won
+out. But the glory of it was with the stranger. He was going west. The
+constable was going south. They shook hands and parted."
+
+Marette's fingers tightened on Kent's arm. And Kent went on.
+
+"And the constable never forgot, Gray Goose. He wanted the day to come
+when he might repay. And the time came. It was years later, and it
+worked out in a curious way. A man was murdered. And the constable, who
+had become a sergeant now, had talked with the dead man only a little
+while before he was killed. Returning for something he had forgotten,
+it was the sergeant who found him dead. Very shortly afterward a man
+was arrested. There was blood on his clothing. The evidence was
+convincing, deadly. And this man--"
+
+Kent paused, and in the darkness Marette's hand crept down his arm to
+his hand, and her fingers closed round it.
+
+"Was the man you lied to save," she whispered.
+
+"Yes. When the halfbreed's bullet got me, I thought it was a good
+chance to repay Sandy McTrigger for what he did for me in that tent
+years before. But it wasn't heroic. It wasn't even brave. I thought I
+was going to die and that I was risking nothing."
+
+And then there came a soft, joyous little laugh from where her head lay
+on the pillow. "And all the time you were lying so splendidly, Jeems--I
+KNEW," she cried. "I knew that you didn't kill Barkley, and I knew that
+you weren't going to die, and I knew what happened in that tent ten
+years ago. And--Jeems--Jeems--"
+
+She raised herself from the pillow. Her breath was coming a little
+excitedly. Both her hands, instead of one, were gripping his hand now.
+"I knew that you didn't kill John Barkley," she repeated. "And--_Sandy
+McTrigger didn't kill him_!"
+
+"But--"
+
+"He _didn't_," she interrupted him, almost fiercely. "He was innocent, as
+innocent as you were. Jeems--I Jeems--I know who killed Barkley. Oh, I
+_know_--I _know_!"
+
+A choking sob came into her throat, and then she added, in a voice
+which she was straining to make calm, "Don't think that I haven't faith
+in you because I can't tell you more now, Jeems," she said. "You will
+understand--quite soon. When we are safe from the Police, I shall tell
+you. I shall keep nothing from you then. I shall tell you about
+Barkley, and Kedsty--everything. But I can't now. It won't be long.
+When you tell me we are safe, I shall believe you. And then--" She
+withdrew her hands from his and dropped back on her pillow.
+
+"And then--what?" he asked, leaning far over.
+
+"You may not like me, Jeems."
+
+"I love you," he whispered. "Nothing in the world can stop my loving
+you."
+
+"Even if I tell you--soon--that I killed Barkley?"
+
+"No. You would be lying."
+
+"Or--if I told you--that I--killed--Kedsty?"
+
+"No matter what you said, or what proof there might be back there, I
+would not believe you."
+
+She was silent. And then, "Jeems--"
+
+"Yes, Niska, Little Goddess--?"
+
+"I'm going to tell you something--now!"
+
+He waited.
+
+"It is going to--shock you--Jeems."
+
+He felt her arms reaching up. Her two hands touched his shoulders.
+
+"Are you listening?"
+
+"Yes, I am listening."
+
+"Because I'm not going to say it very loud." And then she whispered,
+"Jeems--_I love you_!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+In the slowly breaking gloom of the cabin, with Marette's arms round
+his neck, her soft lips given him to kiss, Kent for many minutes was
+conscious of nothing but the thrill of his one great hope on earth come
+true. What he had prayed for was no longer a prayer, and what he had
+dreamed of was no longer a dream; yet for a space the reality of it
+seemed unreal. What he said in those first moments of his exaltation he
+would probably never remember.
+
+His own physical existence seemed a thing trivial and almost lost, a
+thing submerged and swallowed up by the warm beat and throb of that
+other life, a thousand times more precious than his own, which he held
+in his arms. Yet with the mad thrill that possessed him, in the embrace
+of his arms, there was an infinite tenderness, a gentleness, that drew
+from Marette's lips a low, glad whispering of his name. She drew his
+head down and kissed him, and Kent fell upon his knees at her side and
+crushed his face close down to her--while outside the patter of rain on
+the roof had ceased, and the fog-like darkness was breaking with gray
+dawn.
+
+In that dawn of the new day Kent came at last out of the cabin and
+looked upon a splendid world. In his breast was the glory of a thing
+new-born, and the world, like himself, was changed. Storm had passed.
+The gray river lay under his eyes. Shoreward he made out the dark
+outlines of the deep spruce and cedar and balsam forests. About him
+there was a great stillness, broken only by the murmur of the river and
+the ripple of water under the scow. Wind had gone with the black
+rainclouds, and Kent, as he looked about him, saw the swift dissolution
+of the last shadows of night, and the breaking in the East of a new
+paradise. In the East, as the minutes passed, there came a soft and
+luminous gray, and after that, swiftly, with the miracle of far
+Northern dawn, a vast, low-burning fire seemed to start far beyond the
+forests, tinting the sky with a delicate pink that crept higher and
+higher as Kent watched it. The river, all at once, came out of its last
+drifting haze of fog and night. The scow was about in the middle of the
+channel. Two hundred yards on either side were thick green walls of
+forest glistening fresh and cool with the wet of storm and breathing
+forth the perfume which Kent was drawing deep into his lungs.
+
+In the cabin he heard sound. Marette was up, and he was eager to have
+her come out and stand with him in this glory of their first day. He
+watched the smoke of the fire he had built, hardwood smoke that drifted
+up white and clean into the rain-washed air.
+
+The smell of it, like the smell of balsam and cedar, was to Kent the
+aroma of life. And then he began to clean out what was left of the
+water in the bottom of the scow, and as he worked he whistled. He
+wanted Marette to hear that whistle. He wanted her to know that day had
+brought with it no doubt for him. A great and glorious world was about
+them and ahead of them. And they were safe.
+
+As he worked, his mind became more than ever set upon the resolution to
+take no chances. He paused in his whistling for a moment to laugh
+softly and exultantly as he thought of the years of experience which
+were his surest safeguard now. He had become almost uncannily expert in
+all the finesse and trickery of his craft of hunting human game, and he
+knew what the man-hunters would do and what they would not do. He had
+them checkmated at the start. And, besides--with Kedsty, O'Connor, and
+himself gone--the Landing was short-handed just at present. There was
+an enormous satisfaction in that. But even with a score of men behind
+him Kent knew that he would beat them. His hazard, if there was peril
+at all, lay in this first day. Only the Police gasoline launch could
+possibly overtake them. And with the start they had, he was sure they
+would pass the Death Chute, conceal the scow, and take to the untracked
+forests north and west before the launch could menace them. After that
+he would keep always west and north, deeper and deeper into that wild
+and untraveled country which would be the last place in which the Law
+would seek for them. He straightened himself and looked at the smoke
+again, drifting like gray-white lace between him and the blue of the
+sky, and in that moment the sun capped the tall green tops of the
+highest cedars, and day broke gloriously over the earth.
+
+For a quarter of an hour longer Kent mopped at the floor of the scow,
+and then--with a suddenness that drew him up as if a whip-lash had
+snapped behind him--he caught another aroma in the clean,
+forest-scented air. It was bacon and coffee! He had believed that
+Marette was taking her time in putting on dry footwear and making some
+sort of morning toilet. Instead of that, she was getting breakfast. It
+was not an extraordinary thing to do. To fry bacon and make coffee was
+not, in any sense, a remarkable achievement. But at the present moment
+it was the crowning touch to Kent's paradise. She was getting HIS
+breakfast! And--coffee and bacon--To Kent those two things had always
+stood for home. They were intimate and companionable. Where there were
+coffee and bacon, he had known children who laughed, women who sang,
+and men with happy, welcoming faces. They were home-builders.
+
+"Whenever you smell coffee and bacon at a cabin," O'Connor had always
+said, "they'll ask you in to breakfast if you knock at the door."
+
+But Kent was not recalling his old trail mate's words. In the present
+moment all other thoughts were lost in the discovery that Marette was
+getting breakfast--for him.
+
+He went to the door and listened. Then he opened it and looked in.
+Marette was on her knees before the open door of the stove, toasting
+bread on two forks. Her face was flushed pink. She had not taken time
+to brush her hair, but had woven it carelessly into a thick braid that
+fell down her back. She gave a little exclamation of mock
+disappointment when she saw Kent.
+
+"Why didn't you wait?" she remonstrated. "I wanted to surprise you."
+
+"You have," he said. "And I couldn't wait. I had to come in and help."
+
+He was inside the door and on his knees beside her. As he reached for
+the two forks, his lips pressed against her hair. The pink deepened in
+Marette's face, and the soft little note that was like laughter came
+into her throat. Her hand caressed his cheek as she rose to her feet,
+and Kent laughed back. And after that, as she arranged things on the
+shelf table, her hand now and then touched his shoulder, or his hair,
+and two or three times he heard that wonderful little throat-note that
+sent through him a wild pulse of happiness. And then, he sitting in the
+low chair and she on the stool, they drew close together before the
+board that answered as a table, and ate their breakfast. Marette poured
+his coffee and stirred sugar and condensed milk in it, and so happy was
+Kent that he did not tell her he used neither milk nor sugar in his
+coffee. The morning sun burst through the little window, and through
+the open door Kent pointed to the glory of it on the river and in the
+shimmering green of the forests slipping away behind. When they had
+finished, Marette went outside with him.
+
+For a space she stood silent and without movement, looking upon the
+marvelous world that encompassed them. It seemed to Kent that for a few
+moments she did not breathe. With her head thrown back and her white
+throat bare to the soft, balsam-laden air she faced the forests. Her
+eyes became suddenly filled with the luminous glow of stars. Her face
+reflected the radiance of the rising sun, and Kent, looking at her,
+knew that he had never seen her so beautiful as in these wonderful
+moments. He held his own breath, for he also knew that Niska, his
+goddess, was looking upon her own world again after a long time away.
+
+Her world--and his. Different from all the other worlds God had ever
+made; different, even, from the world only a few miles behind them at
+the Landing. For here was no sound or whisper of destroying human life.
+They were in the embrace of the Great North, and it was drawing them
+closer, and with each minute nearer to the mighty, pulsing heart of it.
+
+The forests hung heavy and green and glistening with the wet of storm;
+out of them came the tremulous breath of life and the glory of living;
+they hugged the shores like watchful hosts guarding the river from
+civilization--and suddenly the girl held out her arms, and Kent heard
+the low, thrilling cry that came to her lips.
+
+She had forgotten him. She had forgotten everything but the river, the
+forests, and the untrod worlds beyond them, and he was glad. For this
+world that she was welcoming, that her soul was crying out to, was his
+world, for ever and ever. It held his dreams, his hopes, all the
+desires that he had in life. And when at last Marette turned toward him
+slowly, his arms were reaching out to her, and in his face she saw that
+same glory which filled her own.
+
+"I'm glad--glad," she cried softly. "Oh, Jeems--I'm glad!"
+
+She came into his arms without hesitation; her hands stroked his face;
+and then she stood with her head against his shoulder, looking ahead,
+breathing deeply now of the sweet, clear air filled with the elixir of
+the hovering forests. She did not speak, or move, and Kent remained
+quiet. The scow drifted around a bend. Shoreward a great moose splashed
+up out of the water, and they could hear him afterward, crashing
+through the forest. Her body tensed, but she did not speak. After a
+little he heard her whisper,
+
+"It has been a long time, Jeems. I have been away four years."
+
+"And now we are going home, little Gray Goose. You will not be lonely?"
+
+"No. I was lonely down there. There were so many people, and so many
+things, that I was homesick for the woods and mountains. I believe I
+would have died soon. There were only two things I loved, Jeems--"
+
+"What?" he asked.
+
+"Pretty dresses--and shoes."
+
+His arms closed about her a little more tightly. "I--I understand," he
+laughed softly. "That is why you came, that first time, with pretty
+high-heeled pumps."
+
+He bowed his head, and she turned her face to him. On her upturned
+mouth he kissed her.
+
+"More than any other man ever loved a woman I love you, Niska, little
+goddess," he cried.
+
+The minutes and the hours of that day stood out ever afterward in
+Kent's life as unforgettable memories. There were times when they
+seemed illusory and unreal, as though he lived and breathed in an
+insubstantial world made up of gossamer things which must be the fabric
+of dream. These were moments when the black shadow of the tragedy from
+which they were fleeing pressed upon him, when the thought came to him
+that they were criminals racing with the law; that they were not on
+enchanted ground, but in deadly peril; that it was all a fools'
+paradise from which some terrible shock would shortly awaken him. But
+these periods of apprehension were, in themselves, mere shadows thrown
+for a moment upon his happiness. Again and again the subconscious force
+within him pounded home to his physical brain the great truth, that it
+was all extraordinarily real.
+
+It was Marette who made him doubt himself at times. He could not, quite
+yet, comprehend the fulness of that love which she had given him. More
+than ever, in the glory of this love that had come to them she was like
+a child to him. It seemed to him in the first hours of the morning that
+she had forgotten yesterday, and the day before, and ill the days
+before that. She was going home. She whispered that to him so often
+that it became a little song in his brain. Yet she told him nothing of
+that home, and he waited, knowing that the fulfilment of her promise
+was not far away. And there was no embarrassment in the manner of her
+surrender when he held her in his arms, and she held her face up, so
+that he could kiss her mouth and look into her glowing, lovely eyes.
+What he saw was the flush of a great happiness, the almost childish
+confession of it along with the woman's joy of possession. And he
+thought of Kedsty, and of the Law that was rousing itself into life
+back at Athabasca Landing.
+
+And then she ran her fingers through his own and told him to wait, and
+ran into the cabin and came out a moment later with her brush; and
+after that she seated herself at the fulcrum of the big sweep and began
+to brush out her hair in the sun.
+
+"I'm glad you love it, Jeems," she said.
+
+She unbound the thick braid and let the silken strands of it run
+caressingly between her fingers. She smoothed it out, brushed it until
+it was more beautiful than he had ever seen it, in that glow of the
+sun. She held it up so that it rippled out in shimmering cascades about
+her--and then, suddenly, Kent saw the short tress from which had been
+clipped the rope of hair that he had taken from Kedsty's neck. And as
+his lips tightened, crushing fiercely the exclamation of his horror,
+there came a trembling happiness from Marette's lips, scarcely more
+than the whisper of a song, the low, thrilling melody of _Le Chaudière_.
+
+Her arms reached up, and she drew his head down to her, so that for a
+time his visions were blinded in that sweet smother of her hair.
+
+The intimacy of that day was in itself like a dream. Hour after hour
+they drifted deeper into the great North. The sun shone. The
+forest-walled shores of the river grew mightier in their stillness and
+their grandeur, and the vast silence of unpeopled places brooded over
+the world. To Kent it was as if they were drifting through Paradise.
+Occasionally he found it necessary to work the big sweep, for still
+water was gradually giving way to a swifter current.
+
+Beyond that there was no labor for him to perform. It seemed to him
+that with each of these wonderful hours danger was being left farther
+and still farther behind them. Watching the shores, looking ahead,
+listening for sound that might come from behind--at times possessed of
+the exquisite thrills of children in their happiness--Kent and Marette
+found the gulf of strangeness passing swiftly away from between them.
+
+They did not speak of Kedsty, or the tragedy, or again of the death of
+John Barkley. But Kent told of his days in the North, of his aloneness,
+of the wild, weird love in his soul for the deepest wildernesses. And
+from that he went away back into dim and distant yesterdays, alive with
+mellowed memories of boyhood days spent on a farm. To all these things
+Marette listened with glowing eyes, with low laughter, or with breath
+that rose or fell with his own emotions.
+
+She told of her own days down at school and of their appalling
+loneliness; of childhood spent in the forests; of the desire to live
+there always. But she did not speak intimately of herself or her life
+in its more vital aspects; she said nothing of the home in the Valley
+of Silent Men, nothing of father or mother, sisters or brothers. There
+was no embarrassment in her omissions. And Kent did not question. He
+knew that those were among the things she would tell him when that
+promised hour came, the hour when he would tell her they were safe.
+
+There began to possess him now a growing eagerness for this hour, when
+they should leave the river and take to the forests. He explained to
+Marette why they could not float on indefinitely. The river was the one
+great artery through which ran the blood of all traffic to the far
+North. It was patrolled. Sooner or later they would be discovered. In
+the forests, with a thousand untrod trails to choose, they would be
+safe. He had only one reason for keeping to the river until they passed
+through the Death Chute. It would carry them beyond a great swampy
+region to the westward through which it would be impossible for them to
+make their way at this season of the year. Otherwise he would have gone
+ashore now. He loved the river, had faith in it, but he knew that not
+until the deep forests swallowed them, as a vast ocean swallows a ship,
+would they be beyond the peril that threatened them from the Landing.
+
+Three or four times between sunrise and noon they saw life ashore and
+on the stream; once a scow tied to a tree, then an Indian camp, and
+twice trappers' shacks built in the edge of little clearings. With the
+beginning of afternoon Kent felt growing within him something that was
+not altogether eagerness. It was, at times, a disturbing emotion, a
+foreshadowing of evil, a warning for him to be on his guard. He used
+the sweep more, to help their progress in the current, and he began to
+measure time and distance with painstaking care. He recognized many
+landmarks.
+
+By four o'clock, or five at the latest, they would strike the head of
+the Chute. Ten minutes of its thrilling passage and he would work the
+scow into the concealment he had in mind ashore, and no longer would he
+fear the arm of the law that reached out from the Landing. As he
+planned, he listened. From noon on he never ceased to listen for that
+distant _putt, putt, putt_, that would give them a mile's warning of the
+approach of the patrol launch.
+
+He did not keep his plans to himself. Marette sensed his growing
+uneasiness, and he made her a partner of his thoughts.
+
+"If we hear the patrol before we reach the Chute, we'll still have time
+to run ashore," he assured her. "And they won't catch us. We'll be
+harder to find than two needles in a haystack. But it's best to be
+prepared."
+
+So he brought out his pack and Marette's smaller bundle, and laid his
+rifle and pistol holster across them.
+
+It was three o'clock when the character of the river began to change,
+and Kent smiled happily. They were entering upon swifter waters. There
+were places where the channel narrowed, and they sped through rapids.
+Only where unbroken straight waters stretched out ahead of them did
+Kent give his arms a rest at the sweep. And through most of the
+straight water he added to the speed of the scow. Marette helped him.
+In him the exquisite thrill of watching her slender, glorious body as
+it worked with his own never grew old. She laughed at him over the big
+oar between them. The wind and sun played riot in her hair. Her parted
+lips were rose-red, her cheeks flushed, her eyes like sun-warmed rock
+violets. More than once, in the thrill of that afternoon flight, as he
+looked at the marvelous beauty of her, he asked himself if it could be
+anything but a dream. And more than once he laughed joyously, and
+paused in his swinging of the sweep, and proved that it was real and
+true. And Kent thanked God, and worked harder.
+
+Once, a long time ago, Marette told him, she had been through the
+Chute. It had horrified her then. She remembered it as a sort of death
+monster, roaring for its victims. As they drew nearer to it, Kent told
+her more about it. Only now and then was a life lost there now, he
+said. At the mouth of the Chute there was a great, knife-like rock,
+like a dragon's tooth, that cut the Chute into two roaring channels. If
+a scow kept to the left-hand channel it was safe. There would be a
+mighty roaring and thundering as it swept on its passage, but that
+roaring of the Chute, he told her, was like the barking of a harmless
+dog.
+
+Only when a scow became unmanageable, or hit the Dragon's Tooth, or
+made the right-hand channel instead of the left, was there tragedy.
+There was that delightful little note of laughter in Marette's throat
+when Kent told her that.
+
+"You mean, Jeems, that if one of three possible things doesn't happen,
+we'll get through safely?"
+
+"None of them is possible--with us," he corrected himself quickly.
+"We've a tight little scow, we're not going to hit the rock, and we'll
+make the left-hand channel so smoothly you won't know when it happens."
+He smiled at her with splendid confidence. "I've been through it a
+hundred times," he said.
+
+He listened. Then, suddenly, he drew out his watch. It was a quarter of
+four. Marette's ears caught what he heard. In the air was a low,
+trembling murmur. It was growing slowly but steadily. He nodded when
+she looked at him, the question in her eyes.
+
+"The rapids at the head of the Chute!" he cried, his voice vibrant with
+joy. "We've beat them out. _We're safe_!"
+
+They swung around a bend, and the white spume of the rapids lay half a
+mile ahead of them. The current began to race with them now. Kent put
+his whole weight on the sweep to keep the scow in mid-channel.
+
+"We're safe," he repeated. "Do you understand, Marette? _We're safe_!"
+
+He was speaking the words for which she had waited, was telling her
+that at last the hour had come when she could keep her promise to him.
+The words, as he gave them voice, thrilled him. He felt like shouting
+them. And then all at once he saw the change that had come into her
+face. Her wide, startled eyes were not looking at him, but beyond. She
+was looking back in the direction from which they had come, and even as
+he stared her face grew white.
+
+"_Listen_!"
+
+She was tense, rigid. He turned his head. And in that moment it came to
+him above the growing murmur of the river--the _putt, putt, putt_ of the
+Police patrol boat from Athabasca Landing!
+
+A deep breath came from between his lips. When Marette took her eyes
+from the river and looked at him, his face was like carven rock. He was
+staring dead ahead.
+
+"We can't make the Chute," he said, his voice sounding hard and unreal
+to her. "If we do, they'll be up with us before we can land at the
+other end. We must let this current drive us ashore--_now_."
+
+As he made his decision, he put the strength of his body into action.
+He knew there was not the hundredth part of a second to lose. The
+outreaching suction of the rapids was already gripping the scow, and
+with mighty strokes he fought to work the head of his craft toward the
+westward shore. With swift understanding Marette saw the priceless
+value of a few seconds of time. If they were caught in the stronger
+swirl of the rapids before the shore was reached, they would be forced
+to run the Chute, and in that event the launch would be upon them
+before they could make a landing farther on. She sprang to Kent's side
+and added her own strength in the working of the sweep. Foot by foot
+and yard by yard the scow made precious westing, and Kent's face
+lighted up with triumph as he nodded ahead to a timbered point that
+thrust itself out like a stubby thumb into the river. Beyond that point
+the rapids were frothing white, and they could see the first black
+walls of rock that marked the beginning of the Chute.
+
+"We'll make it," he smiled confidently. "We'll hit that timbered point
+close inshore. I don't see where the launch can make a landing anywhere
+within a mile of the Chute. And once ashore we'll make trail about five
+times as fast they can follow it." Marette's face was no longer pale,
+but flushed with excitement. He caught the white gleam of teeth between
+her parted lips. Her eyes shone gloriously, and he laughed.
+
+"You beautiful little fighter," he cried exultantly. "You--you--"
+
+His words were cut short by a snap that was like the report of a pistol
+close to his ears. He pitched forward and crashed to the bottom of the
+scow, Marette's slim body clutched in his arms as he fell. In a flash
+they were up, and mutely they stared where the sweep had been. The
+blade of it was gone. Kent was conscious of hearing a little cry from
+the girl at his side, and then her fingers were gripping tightly again
+about his thumb. No longer possessed of the power of guidance, the scow
+swung sideways. It swept past the wooded point. The white maelstrom of
+the lower rapids seized upon it. And Kent, looking ahead to the black
+maw of the death-trap that was waiting for them, drew Marette close in
+his arms and held her tight.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+For a brief space after the breaking of the scow-sweep Kent did not
+move. He felt Marette's arms closing tighter and tighter around his
+neck. He caught a flash of her upturned face, the flush of a few
+moments before replaced by a deathly pallor, and he knew that without
+explanation on his part she understood the almost hopeless situation
+they were in. He was glad of that. It gave him a sense of relief to
+know that she would not go into a panic, no matter what happened. He
+bowed his face to hers, so that he felt the velvety smoothness of her
+cheek. She turned her mouth to him, and they kissed. His embrace was
+crushing for a moment, fierce with his love for her, desperate with his
+determination to keep her from harm.
+
+His brain was working swiftly. There was possibly one chance in ten
+that the scow--rudderless and without human guidance--would sweep
+safely between the black walls and jagged teeth of the Chute. Even if
+the scow made this passage, they would be in the power of the Police,
+unless some splendid whimsicality of Fate sent it ashore before the
+launch came through.
+
+On the other hand, if it was carried far enough through the lower
+rapids, they might swim. And--there was the rifle laying across the
+pack. That, after all, was his greatest hope--if the scow made the
+passage of the Chute. The bulwarks of the scow would give them greater
+protection than the thinner walls of the launch would give to their
+pursuers. In his heart there raged suddenly a hatred for that Law of
+which he had been a part. It was running them to destruction, and he
+would fight. There would not be more than three men in the launch, and
+he would kill them, if killing became a necessity.
+
+They were speeding like an unbridled race-horse through the boiling
+rapids now. The clumsy craft under their feet twisted and turned. The
+dripping tops of great rocks shot past a little out of their channel.
+And Marette, with one arm still about his neck, was facing the peril
+ahead with him. They could see the Dragon's Tooth, black and grim,
+waiting squarely in their path. In another hundred and twenty seconds
+they would be upon it--or past it. There was no time for Kent to
+explain. He sprang to his pack, whipped a knife from his pocket, and
+cut the stout babiche rope that reenforced its straps. In another
+instant he was back at Marette's side, fastening the babiche about her
+waist. The other end he gave to her, and she tied it about his wrist.
+She smiled as she finished the knot. It was a strange, tense little
+smile, but it told him that she was not afraid, that she had great
+faith in him, and knew what the babiche meant.
+
+"I can swim, Jeems," she cried. "If we strike the rock."
+
+She did not finish because of the sudden cry that came to his lips. He
+had almost forgotten the most vital of all things. There was not time
+to unlace his boots. With his knife he cut the laces in a single
+downward thrust. Swiftly he freed his own feet, and Marette's. Even in
+this hour of their peril it thrilled him to see how quickly Marette
+responded to the thoughts that moved him. She tore at her outer
+garments and slipped them off as he wriggled out of his heavy shirt. A
+slim, white-underskirted little thing, her glorious hair flying in the
+wind that came through the Chute, her throat and arms bare, her eyes
+shining at Kent, she came again close within his arms, and her lips
+framed softly his name. And a moment later she turned her face up, and
+cried quickly,
+
+"Kiss me, Jeems--kiss me--"
+
+Her warm lips clung to his, and her bare arms encircled his neck with
+the choking grip of a child's. He looked ahead and braced himself on
+his feet, and after that he buried one of his hands in the soft mass of
+her hair and pressed her face against his naked breast.
+
+Ten seconds later the crash came. Squarely amidships the scow struck
+the Dragon's Tooth. Kent was prepared for the shock, but his attempt to
+hold his feet, with Marette in his arms, was futile. The bulwark saved
+them from crashing against the slippery face of the rock itself. Amid
+the roar of water that filled his ears he was conscious of the rending
+of timbers. The scow bulged up with the mighty force beneath, and for a
+second or two it seemed as though that force was going to overturn and
+submerge it. Then slowly it began to slip off the nose of the rock.
+
+Holding to the rail with one hand and clinging to Marette with his
+other arm, Kent was gripped in the horror of what was happening. The
+scow was slipping _into the right hand channel_! In that channel there
+as no hope--only death.
+
+Marette was squarely facing the thing ahead. In this hour when each
+second held a lifetime of suspense Kent saw that she understood. Yet
+she did not cry out. Her face was dead white. Her hair and arms and
+shoulders were dripping with the splash of water. But she was not
+terrified as he had seen terror. When she turned her eyes to him, he
+was amazed by the quiet, calm look that was in them. Her lips trembled.
+
+His soul expressed itself in a wordless cry that was drowned in another
+crash of timber as a jutting snag of the Tooth crumpled up the little
+cabin as if it had been pasteboard. He felt overwhelming him the surge
+of a thing mightier than the menace of the Chute. He could not lose! It
+was inconceivable. Impossible! With _her_ to fight for--this slim,
+wonderful creature who smiled at him even as she saw death.
+
+And then, as his arm closed still more tightly about her, the monsters
+of power and death gave him their answer. The scow swung free of the
+Dragon's Tooth, half-filled with water. Its cracked and broken carcass
+was caught in the rock jaws of the eastern channel. It ceased to be a
+floating thing. It was inundation, dissolution, utter obliteration
+almost without shock. And Kent found himself in the thundering rush of
+waters, holding to Marette.
+
+For a space they were under. Black water and white froth fumed and
+exploded over them. It seemed an age before fresh air filled Kent's
+nostrils. He thrust Marette upward and cried out to her. He heard her
+answer.
+
+"I'm all right--Jeems!"
+
+His swimming prowess was of little avail now. He was like a chip. All
+his effort was to make of himself a barrier between Marette's soft body
+and the rocks. It was not the water itself that he feared, but the
+rocks.
+
+There were scores and hundreds of them, like the teeth of a mighty
+grinding machine. And the jaw was a quarter of a mile in length. He
+felt the first shock, the second, the third. He was not thinking of
+time or distance, but was fighting solely to keep himself between
+Marette and death. The first time he failed, a blind sort of rage
+burned in his brain.
+
+He saw her white body strained over a slippery, deluge-worn rock. Her
+head was flung back, and he saw the long masses of her hair streaming
+out in the white froth, and he thought for an instant that her fragile
+body had been broken. He fought still more fiercely after that. And she
+knew for what he was fighting. Only in an unreal sort of way was he
+conscious of shock and hurt. It gave him no physical pain. Yet he
+sensed the growing dizziness in his head, an increasing lack of
+strength in his arms and body.
+
+They were halfway through the Chute when he shot against a rock with
+terrific force. The contact tore Marette from him. He plunged for her,
+missed his grip, and then saw her opposite him, clinging to the same
+rock. The babiche rope had saved her. Fastened about her waist and tied
+to his wrist, it still held them together--with the five feet of rock
+between them.
+
+Panting, their life half beaten out of them, their eyes met over that
+rock. Now that he was out of the water, the blood began streaming from
+Kent's arms and shoulders and face, but he smiled at her as a few
+moments before she had smiled at him. Her eyes were filled with the
+pain of his hurts. He nodded back in the direction from which they had
+come.
+
+"We're out of the worst of it," he tried to shout. "As soon as we've
+got our wind, I will climb over the rock to you. It won't take us
+longer than a couple of minutes, perhaps less, to make the quiet water
+at the end of the channel."
+
+She heard him and nodded her reply. He wanted to give her confidence.
+And he had no intention of resting, for her position filled him with a
+terror which he fought to hide. The babiche rope, not half as large
+around as his little finger, had swung her to the downstream side of
+the rock. It was the slender thread of buckskin and his own weight that
+were holding her. If the buckskin should break--
+
+He thanked God that it was the tough babiche that had been around his
+pack. An inch at a time he began to draw himself up on the rock. The
+undertow behind the rock had flung a mass of Marette's long hair toward
+him, so that it was a foot or two nearer to him than her clinging
+hands. He worked himself toward that, for he saw that he could reach it
+more quickly than he could reach her. At the same time he had to keep
+his end of the babiche taut. It was, from the beginning, an almost
+superhuman task. The rock was slippery as oil. Twice his eyes shot
+down-stream, with the thought that it might be better to cast himself
+bodily into the water, and after that draw Marette to him by means of
+the babiche. What he saw convinced him that such action would be fatal.
+He must have Marette in his arms. If he lost her--even for a few
+seconds--the life would be beaten from her body in that rock-strewn
+maelstrom below.
+
+And then, suddenly, the babiche cord about his wrist grew loose. The
+reaction almost threw him back. With the loosening of it a cry came
+from Marette. It all happened in an instant, in almost less time than
+his brain could seize upon the significance of it--the slipping of her
+hands from the rock, the shooting of her white body away from him in
+the still whiter spume of the rapids, The rock had cut the babiche, and
+she was gone! With a cry that was like the cry of a madman he plunged
+after her. The water engulfed him. He twisted himself up, freeing
+himself from the undertow. Twenty feet ahead of him--thirty--he caught
+a glimpse of a white arm and then of Marette's face, before she
+disappeared in a wall of froth.
+
+Into that froth he shot after her. He came out of it blinded, groping
+wildly for her, crying out her name. His fingers caught the end of the
+babiche that was fastened about his own wrist, and he clutched it
+savagely, believing for a moment that he had found her. Thicker and
+more deadly the rocks of the lower passage rose in his way. They seemed
+like living things, like devils filled with the desire to torture and
+destroy. They struck and beat at him. Their laughter was the roar of a
+Niagara. He no longer cried out. His brain grew heavy, and clubs were
+beating him--beating and breaking him into a formless thing. The
+rock-drifts of spume, lather-white, like the frosting of a monster
+cake, turned gray and then black.
+
+He did not know when he ceased fighting. The day went out. Night came.
+The world was oblivion. And for a space he ceased to live.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+
+An hour later the fighting forces in his body dragged Kent back into
+existence. He opened his eyes. The shock of what had happened did not
+at once fall upon him. His first sensation was of awakening from a
+sleep that had been filled with pain and horror.
+
+Then he saw a black rock wall opposite him; he heard the sullen roar of
+the stream; his eyes fell upon a vivid patch of light reflected from
+the setting sun. He dragged himself up until he was on his knees, and
+all at once a thing that was like an iron hoop--choking his
+senses--seemed to break in his head, and he staggered to his feet,
+crying out Marette's name. Understanding inundated him with its horror,
+deadening his tongue after that first cry, filling his throat with a
+moaning, sobbing agony. Marette was gone. She was lost. She was dead.
+
+Swiftly, as reason came, his eyes took in his environment. For a
+quarter of a mile above him he could see the white spume between the
+chasm walls, darkening with the approach of night. He could hear more
+clearly the roar of the death-floods. But close to him was smooth
+water, and he stood now on a shelving tongue of rock and shale, upon
+which the current had flung him. In front of him was a rock wall.
+Behind him was another. There was no footing except where he stood. And
+Marette was not with him.
+
+Only the truth could batter at his brain as he stood there. But his
+physical self refused to accept that truth. If he had lived, she must
+live! She was there--somewhere--along the shore--among the rocks--
+
+The moaning in his throat gave way to the voicing of her name. He
+shouted, and listened. He swayed back along the tongue of rock to the
+boulder-strewn edge of the chasm wall. A hundred yards farther on was
+the opening of the Chute. He came out of this, his clothes torn from
+him, his body bleeding, unrecognizable, half a madman,--shouting her
+name more and more loudly. The glow of the setting sun struck him at
+last. He was out from between the chasm walls, and it lighted up the
+green world for him. Ahead of him the river widened and swept on in
+tranquil quiet.
+
+And now it was no longer fear that possessed him. It was the horrible,
+overwhelming certainty of the thing. The years fell from him, and he
+sobbed--sobbed like a boy stricken by some great childish grief, as he
+searched along the edge of the shore. Over and over again he cried and
+whispered Marette's name.
+
+But he did not shout it again, for he knew that she was dead. She was
+gone from him forever. Yet he did not cease to search. The last of the
+sun went out. Twilight came, and then darkness. Even in that darkness
+he continued to search for a mile below the Chute, calling her name
+more loudly now, and listening always for the answer which he knew
+would never come. The moon came out after a time, and hour after hour
+he kept up his hopeless quest. He did not know how badly the rocks had
+battered and hurt him, and he scarcely knew when it was that exhaustion
+dropped him like a dead man in his tracks. When dawn came, it found him
+wandering away from the river, and toward noon of that day, he was
+found by André Boileau, the old white-haired half-breed who trapped on
+Burntwood Creek. André was shocked at the sight of his wounds and half
+dragged and half carried him to his shack hidden away in the forest.
+
+For six days thereafter Kent remained at old André's place, simply
+because he had neither the strength nor the reason to move. André
+wondered that there were no broken bones in him. But his head was
+terribly hurt, and it was that hurt that for three days and three
+nights made Kent hover with nerve-racking indecision between life and
+death. The fourth day reason came back to him, and Boileau fed him
+venison broth. The fifth day he stood up. The sixth he thanked André,
+and said that he was ready to go.
+
+André outfitted him with old clothes, gave him a supply of food and
+God's blessing. And Kent returned to the Chute, giving André to
+understand that his destination was Athabasca Landing.
+
+Kent knew that it was not wise for him to return to the river. He knew
+that it would have been better for him both in mind and body had he
+gone in the opposite direction. But he no longer had in him the desire
+to fight, even for himself. He followed the lines of least resistance,
+and these led him back to the scene of the tragedy. His grief, when he
+returned, was no longer the heartbreaking agony of that first night. It
+was a deep-seated, consuming fire that had already burned him out,
+heart and soul. Even caution was dead in him. He feared nothing,
+avoided nothing. Had the police boat been at the Chute, he would have
+revealed himself without any thought of self-preservation. A ray of
+hope would have been precious medicine to him. But there was no hope.
+Marette was dead. Her tender body was destroyed. And he was alone,
+unfathomably and hopelessly alone.
+
+And now, after he had reached the river again, something held him
+there. From the head of the Chute to a bend in the river two miles
+below, his feet wore a beaten trail. Three or four times a day he would
+make the trip, and along the path he set a few snares in which he
+caught rabbits for food. Each night he made his bed in a crevice among
+the rocks at the foot of the Chute. At the end of a week the old Jim
+Kent was dead. Even O'Connor would not have recognized him with his
+shaggy growth of beard, his hollow eyes, and the sunken cheeks which
+the beard failed to hide.
+
+And the fighting spirit in him also was dead. Once or twice there
+leaped up in him a sudden passion demanding vengeance upon the accursed
+Law that was accountable for the death of Marette, but even this flame
+snuffed itself out quickly.
+
+And then, on the eighth day, he saw the edge of a thing that was almost
+hidden under an overhanging bank. He fished it out. It was Marette's
+little pack, and for many minutes before he opened it Kent crushed the
+sodden treasure to his breast, staring with half-mad eyes down where he
+had found it, as if Marette must be there, too. Then he ran with it to
+an open space, where the sun fell warmly on a great, flat rock that was
+level with the ground, and with sobbing breath he opened it. It was
+filled with the things she had picked up quickly in her room the night
+of their flight from Kedsty's bungalow, and as he drew them out one by
+one and placed them in the sun on the rock, a new and sudden rush of
+life swept through his veins, and he sprang to his feet and faced the
+river again, as if at last a hope had come to him. Then he looked down
+again upon what she had treasured, and reaching out his arms to them,
+he whispered,
+
+"Marette--my little goddess--"
+
+Even in his grief the overwhelming mastery of his love for the one who
+was dead brought a smile to his haggard and bearded face. For Marette,
+in filling her little pack on that night of hurried flight, had chosen
+strange things. On the sunlit rock, where he had placed them, were a
+pair of the little pumps which he had fallen on his knees to worship in
+her room, and with these she had crowded into the pack one of the
+billowing, sweet-smelling dresses which had made his heart stand still
+for a moment when he first looked into their hiding-place. It was no
+longer soft and cobwebby as it had been then, like down fluttering
+against his cheeks, but sodden and discolored, as it lay on the rock
+with little rivulets of water running from it.
+
+With the shoes and the dress were the intimate necessities which
+Marette had taken with her. But it was one of the pumps that Kent
+picked up and crushed close to his ragged breast--one of the two she
+had worn that first wonderful day she had come to see him at Cardigan's
+place.
+
+This hour was the beginning of another change in Kent. It seemed to him
+that a message had come to him from Marette herself, that the spirit of
+her had returned to him and was with him now, stirring strange things
+in his soul and warming his blood with a new heat. She was gone
+forever, and yet she had come back to him, and the truth grew upon him
+that this spirit of her would never leave him again as long as he
+lived. He felt her nearness. Unconsciously he reached out his arms, and
+a strange happiness entered Into him to battle with grief and
+loneliness. His eyes shone with a new glow as they looked at her little
+belongings on the sunlit rock. It was as if they were flesh and blood
+of her, a part of her heart and soul. They were the voice of her faith
+in him, her promise that she would be with him always. For the first
+time in many days Kent felt a new force within him, and he knew that
+she was not quite gone, that he had something of her left to fight for.
+
+That night he made his bed for a last time in the crevice between the
+rocks, and his treasure was gathered within the protecting circle of
+his arms as he slept.
+
+The next day he struck out north and east. On the fifth day after he
+left the country of André Boileau he traded his watch to a half-breed
+for a cheap gun, ammunition, a blanket, flour, and a cooking outfit.
+After that he had no hesitation in burying himself still deeper into
+the forests.
+
+A month later no one would have recognized Kent as the one-time crack
+man of N Division. Bearded, ragged, long-haired, he wandered with no
+other purpose than to be alone and to get still farther away from the
+river. Occasionally he talked with an Indian or a half-breed. Each
+night, though the weather was very warm, he made himself a small
+camp-fire, for it was always in these hours, with the fire-light about
+him, that he felt Marette was very near. It was then that he took out
+one by one the precious things that were in Marette's little pack. He
+worshipped these things. The dress and each of the little shoes he had
+wrapped in the velvety inner bark of the birch tree. He protected them
+from wet and storm. Had emergency called for it, he would have fought
+for them. They became, after a time, more precious than his own life,
+and in a vague sort of way at first he began to thank God that the
+river had not robbed him of everything.
+
+Kent's inclination was not to fight himself into forgetfulness. He
+wanted to remember every act, every word, every treasured caress that
+chained him for all time to the love he had lost. Marette became more a
+part of him every day. Dead in the flesh, she was always at his side,
+nestling close in the shelter of his arms at night, walking with her
+hand in his during the day. And in this belief his grief was softened
+by the sweet and merciful comfort of a possession of which neither man
+nor fate could rob him--a beloved Presence always with him.
+
+It was this Presence that rebuilt Kent. It urged him to throw up his
+head again, to square his shoulders, to look life once more straight in
+the face. It was both inspiration and courage to him and grew nearer
+and dearer to him as time passed. Early Autumn found him in the Fond du
+Lac country, two hundred miles east of Fort Chippewyan. That Winter he
+joined a Frenchman, and until February they trapped along the edges of
+the lower fingers of the Barrens.
+
+He came to think a great deal of Picard, his comrade. But he revealed
+nothing of his secret to him, or of the new desire that was growing in
+him. And as the Winter lengthened this desire became a deep and abiding
+yearning. It was with him night and day. He dreamed of it when he
+slept, and it was never out of his thoughts when awake. He wanted to go
+HOME. And when he thought of home, it was not of the Landing, and not
+of the country south. For him home meant only one place in the world
+now--the place where Marette had lived. Somewhere, hidden in the
+mountains far north and west, was that mysterious Valley of Silent Men
+where they had been going when her body died. And the spirit of her
+wanted him to go to it now. It was like a voice pleading with him,
+urging him to go, to live there always where she had lived. He began to
+plan, and in this planning he found new joy and new life. He would find
+her home, her people, the valley that was to have been their paradise.
+So late in February, with his share of the Winter catch in his pack, he
+said good-by to Picard and faced the River again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+
+Kent had not forgotten that he was an outlaw, but he was not afraid.
+Now that he had something new and thrilling to fight for, he fell back
+again upon what he called "the finesse of the game." He approached
+Chippewyan cautiously, although he was sure that even his old friends
+at the Landing would fail to recognize him now. His beard was four or
+five inches long, and his hair was shaggy and uncut. Picard had made
+him a coat, that winter, of young caribou skin, and it was fringed like
+an Indian's. Kent chose his time and entered Chippewyan just before
+dusk.
+
+Oil lamps were burning in the Hudson's Bay Company's store when he went
+in with his furs. The place was empty, except for the factor's clerk,
+and for an hour he bartered. He bought a new outfit, a Winchester
+rifle, and all the supplies he could carry. He did not forget a razor
+and a pair of shears, and when he was done he still had the value of
+two silver fox skins in cash. He left Chippewyan that same night, and
+by the light of a Winter moon made his camp half a dozen miles
+northward toward Smith Landing.
+
+He was on the Slave River now and for weeks traveled slowly but
+steadily northward on snowshoes. He avoided Fort Smith and Smith
+Landing and struck westward before he came to Fort Resolution. It was
+in April that he struck Hay River Post, where the Hay River empties
+into Great Slave Lake. Until the ice broke up, Kent worked at Hay
+River. When it was safe, he started down the Mackenzie in a canoe. It
+was late in June when he turned up the Liard to the South Nahani.
+
+"You go straight through between the sources of the North and the South
+Nahani," Marette had told him. "It is there you find the Sulphur
+Country, and beyond the Sulphur Country is the Valley of Silent Men."
+
+At last he came to the edge of this country. He camped with the stink
+of it in his nostrils. The moon rose, and he saw that desolate world as
+through the fumes of a yellow smoke. With dawn he went on.
+
+He passed through broad, low morasses out of which rose sulphurous
+fogs. Mile after mile he buried himself deeper in it, and it became
+more and more a dead country, a lost hell. There were berry bushes on
+which there grew no berries. There were forests and swamps, but without
+a living creature to inhabit them.
+
+It was a country of water in which there were no fish, of air in which
+there were no birds, of plants without flowers--a reeking, stinking
+country still with the stillness of death. He began to turn yellow. His
+clothing, his canoe, his hands, face--everything turned yellow. He
+could not get the filthy taste of sulphur out of his mouth. Yet he kept
+on, straight west by the compass Gowen had given him at Hay River. Even
+this compass became yellow in his pocket. It was impossible for him to
+eat. Only twice that day did he drink from his flask of water.
+
+And Marette had made this journey! He kept telling himself that. It was
+the secret way in and out of their hidden world, a region accursed by
+devils, a forbidden country to both Indian and white man. It was hard
+for him to believe that she had come this way, that she had drunk in
+the air that was filling his own lungs, nauseating him a dozen times to
+the point of sickness. He worked desperately. He felt neither fatigue
+nor the heat of the warm water about him.
+
+Night came, and the moon rose, lighting up with a sickly glow the
+diseased world that had swallowed him. He lay in the bottom of his
+canoe, covering his face with his caribou coat, and tried to sleep. But
+sleep would not come. Before dawn he struck on, watching his compass by
+the light of matches. All that day he made no effort to swallow food.
+But with the coming of the second night he found the air easier to
+breathe. He fought his way on by the light of the moon which was
+clearer now. And at last, in a resting spell, he heard far ahead of him
+the howl of a wolf.
+
+In his joy he cried out. A western breeze brought him air that he drank
+in as a desert-stricken man drinks water. He did not look at his
+compass again, but worked steadily in the face of that fresh air. An
+hour later he found that he was paddling again a slow current, and when
+he tasted the water it was only slightly tainted with sulphur. By
+midnight the water was cool and clean. He landed on a shore of sand and
+pebbles, stripped to the skin, and gave himself such a scouring as he
+had never before experienced. He had worn his old trapping shirt and
+trousers, and after his bath he changed to the outfit which he had kept
+clean in his pack. Then he built a fire and ate his first meal in two
+days.
+
+The next morning he climbed a tall spruce and surveyed the country
+about him. Westward there was a broad low country shut in fifteen or
+twenty miles away by the foothills. Beyond these foothills rose the
+snow-capped peaks of the Rockies. He shaved himself, cut his hair, and
+went on. That night he camped only when he could drive his canoe no
+farther. The waterway had narrowed to a creek, and he was among the
+first green shoulders of the hills when he stopped. With another dawn
+he concealed his canoe in a sheltered place and went on with his pack.
+
+For a week he picked his way slowly westward. It was a splendid country
+into which he had come, and yet he found no sign of human life. The
+foothills changed to mountains, and he believed he was in the Campbell
+Range. Also he knew that he had followed the logical trail from the
+sulphur country. Yet it was the eighth day before he came upon a sign
+which told him that another living being had at some time passed that
+way. What he found were the charred remnants of an old camp-fire. It
+had been a white man's fire. He knew that by the size of it. It had
+been an all-night fire of green logs cut with an axe.
+
+On the tenth day he came to the westward slope of the first range and
+looked down upon one of the most wonderful valleys his eyes had ever
+beheld. It was more than a valley. It was a broad plain. Fifty miles
+across it rose the towering majesty of the mightiest of all the Yukon
+mountains.
+
+And now, though he saw a paradise about him, his heart began to sink
+within him. It seemed to him inconceivable that in a country so vast he
+could find the spot for which he was seeking. His one hope lay in
+finding white men or Indians, some one who might guide him.
+
+He traveled slowly over the fifty-mile plain rich with a verdure of
+green, covered with flowers, a game paradise. Few hunters had come so
+far out of the Yukon mountains, he told himself. And none had come from
+out of the sulphur country. It was a new and undiscovered world. On his
+map it was a blank space. And there were no signs of people. Ahead of
+him the Yukon mountains rose in an impenetrable wall, peak after peak,
+crested with snow, towering like mighty watchdogs above the clouds. He
+knew what lay beyond them--the great rivers of the Western slope,
+Dawson City, the gold country and its civilization. But those things
+were on the other side of the mountains. On his side there was only the
+vast and undisputed silence of a paradise as yet unclaimed by man.
+
+As he went on into this valley there grew upon him a strange and
+comforting peace. Yet with it there was a steadily increasing belief
+that he would not find that for which he had come in search. He did not
+attempt to analyze this belief. It became a part of him, just as his
+mental tranquillity had grown upon him. His one hope of success was
+that nearer the mountains he might find white men or Indians.
+
+He no longer used his compass, but guided himself by a cluster of three
+gigantic peaks. One of these was taller than the other two. As he
+journeyed, his eyes were always returning to it. It fascinated him,
+impinged itself upon him as the watcher of a million years, guarding
+the valley. He began to think of it as the Watcher. Each hour of his
+progress seemed to bring it a little more intimately to his vision.
+From his first night's camp in the valley he saw the moon sink behind
+it. Within him a voice that never died kept whispering to him that this
+mountain, greater than all the others, had been Marette's guardian. Ten
+thousand times she must have looked at it, as he had looked at it that
+day--if her home was anywhere this side of the Campbell Range. A
+hundred miles away she could have seen the Watcher on a clear day.
+
+On the second day the mountain continued to grow upon Kent. By
+mid-afternoon it began to take on a new character. The peak of it was
+in the form of a mighty castle that changed as he advanced. And the two
+lesser peaks were forming into definite contours. Before the haze of
+twilight dimmed his vision, he knew that what he had seen was not a
+whimsical invention of his imagination. The Watcher had grown into the
+shape of a mighty human head facing south. A restless excitement
+possessed him, and he traveled on long after dusk. At dawn he was on
+the trail again. Westward the sky cleared, and suddenly he stopped, and
+a cry came from him.
+
+The Watcher's head was there, as if chiseled by the hands of giants.
+The two smaller peaks had unveiled their mystery. Startling and weird,
+their crests had taken on the form of human heads. One of them was
+looking north. The other faced the valley. And Kent, his heart
+pounding, cried to himself,
+
+"The Silent Men!"
+
+He did not hear himself, but the thought itself was a tumultuous thing
+within him. It came upon him like an inundation, a sudden and thrilling
+inspiration backed by the forces of a visual truth. _The Valley of
+Silent Men_. He repeated the words, staring at the three colossal heads
+in the sky. Somewhere near them, under them,--one side or the
+other--was Marette's hidden valley!
+
+He went on. A strange joy consumed him. In it, at times, his grief was
+obliterated, and it seemed to him in these moments that Marette must
+surely be at the valley to greet him when he came to it. But always the
+tragedy of the Death Chute came back to him, and with it the thought
+that the three giant heads were watching--and would always watch--for a
+beloved lost one who would never return. As the sun went down that day,
+the face bowed to the valley seemed alive with the fire of a living
+question sent directly to Kent.
+
+"Where is she?" it asked. "Where is she? Where is she?"
+
+That night Kent did not sleep.
+
+The next day there lay ahead of him a low and broken range, the first
+of the deeper mountains. He climbed this steadily, and at noon had
+reached the crest. And he knew that at last he was looking down into
+the Valley of Silent Men. It was not a wide valley, like the other. On
+the far side of it, three or four miles away, rose the huge mountain
+whose face was looking down upon the green meadows at its foot.
+Southward Kent could see for a long distance, and in the vivid sunlight
+he saw the shimmer of creeks and little lakes, and the rich glow of
+thick patches of cedar and spruce and balsam, scattered like great rugs
+of velvety luster amid the flowering green of the valley. Northward,
+three or four miles away the range which he had climbed made a sharp
+twist to the east, and that part of the valley--following the swing of
+the range--was lost to him. He turned in this direction after he had
+rested. It was four o'clock when he came to the elbow in the valley,
+and could look down into the hidden part of it.
+
+What he saw at first was a giant cup hollowed out of the surrounding
+mountains, a cup two miles from brim to brim, the end of the valley
+itself. It took him a few moments to focus his vision so that it would
+pick up the smaller and more intimate things half a mile under him, and
+yet, before he had done this, a sound came up to him that set aquiver
+every nerve in his body. It was the far-down, hollow-sounding barking
+of a dog.
+
+The warm, golden haze that precedes sunset in the mountains, was
+gathering between him and the valley, but through this he made out
+after a time evidences of human habitation almost straight under him.
+There was a small lake out of which ran a shimmering creek, and close
+to this lake, yet equally near to the base of the mountain on which he
+was standing, were a number of buildings and a stockade which looked
+like a toy. He could see no animals, no movement of any kind.
+
+Without seeking for a downward trail he began to descend. Again he did
+not question himself. An overwhelming certainty possessed him. Of all
+places in the world this must be the Valley of Silent Men.
+
+And below him, flooded and half-hidden in the illusive sun-mist, was
+Marette's old home. It seemed to him now that it belonged to him, that
+he was a part of it, that in going to it he was achieving his last
+great resting place, his final refuge, his own home. And the thought
+became strangely a part of him that a welcome must be waiting for him
+there. He hurried until his breath came pantingly between his lips and
+he was forced to rest. And at last he found himself where his progress
+was made a foot at a time, and again and again he was forced to climb
+back and detour around treacherous slides and precipitous breaks which
+left sheer falls at his feet. The mist thickened in the valley. The sun
+sank behind the western peaks, and swiftly after that the gloom of
+twilight deepened. It was seven o'clock when he came to the edge of the
+plain, at least a mile below the elbow which shut out the cup in the
+valley. He was exhausted. His hands were bruised and bleeding. Darkness
+shut him in when he went on.
+
+When he rounded the elbow of the mountain, he did not try to keep back
+the joyous cry that came to his lips. Ahead of him there were lights. A
+few of them were scattered, but nearest to him he saw a cluster of
+them, like the glow that comes from a number of illumined windows. He
+quickened his pace as he drew nearer to them, and at last he wanted to
+run. And then something stopped him, and it seemed to him that his
+heart had risen into his throat and was choking him until he could not
+breathe.
+
+It was a man's voice he heard, calling through the twilight gloom a
+name. "Marette--Marette--Marette--"
+
+Kent tried to cry out, but his breath came only in a gasp. He felt
+himself trembling. He reached out his arms, and a strange madness
+rushed like fire into his brain.
+
+Again the voice called, "Marette--Marette--Marette--"
+
+The cup in the valley echoed the name. It rolled softly up the
+mountainside. The air trembled with it, whispered it, passed it on--and
+suddenly the madness in Kent found voice, and he shouted,
+
+"Marette--Marette--"
+
+He ran on. His knees felt weak. He shouted the name again, and the
+other voice was silent. Things loomed up out of the mist ahead of him,
+between him and the glowing windows. Some one--two people--were
+advancing to meet him, doubtfully, wonderingly. Kent was staggering,
+but he cried the name again, and this time it was a woman's cry that
+answered, and one of the two came toward him swift as a flash of light.
+
+Three paces apart they stood, and in that gloom of the after-twilight
+their burning eyes looked at each other, while for a space their bodies
+remained stricken in the face of this miracle of a great and merciful
+God.
+
+The dead had risen. By a mighty effort Kent reached out his arms, and
+Marette swayed to him. When the other man came up, he found them
+crumpled to their knees on the earth, clasped like children in each
+other's arms. And as Kent raised his face, he saw that it was Sandy
+McTrigger who was looking down at him, the man whose life he had saved
+at Athabasca Landing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+
+How long it was before his brain cleared, Kent never could have told.
+It might have been a minute or an hour. Every vital force that was in
+him had concentrated into a single consciousness--that the dead had
+come to life, that it was Marette Radisson, the flesh and blood and
+living warmth of her, he held in his arms. Like the flash of a picture
+on a screen he had seen McTrigger's face close to him, and then his own
+head was crushed down again, and if the valley had been filled with the
+roar of cannon, he would have heard only one sound, a sobbing voice
+crying over and over again, "Jeems--Jeems--Jeems--"
+
+It was McTrigger, in the beginning of the starlight, who alone looked
+with clear vision upon the wonder of the thing that was happening.
+After a little Kent realized that McTrigger was talking, that a hand
+was on his shoulder, that the voice was both joyous and insistent. He
+rose to his feet, still holding Marette, her arms clinging to him. Her
+breath was sobbing and broken. And it was impossible for Kent to speak.
+He seemed to stumble over the distance between them and the lights,
+with McTrigger on the other side of Marette. It was McTrigger who
+opened a door, and they came into a glow of lamplight. It was a great,
+strange-looking room they entered. And over the threshold Marette's
+hands dropped from Kent, and Kent stepped back, so that in the light
+they faced each other, and in that moment came the marvelous
+readjustment from shock and disbelief to a glorious certainty.
+
+Again Kent's brain was as clear as the day he faced death at the head
+of the Chute. And swift as a hot barb a fear leaped into him as his
+eyes met the eyes of the girl. She was terribly changed. Her face was
+white with a whiteness that startled him. It was thin. Her eyes were
+great, slumbering pools of violet, almost black in the lamp glow, and
+her hair--piled high on her head as he had seen it that first day at
+Cardigan's--added to the telltale pallor in her cheeks. A hand trembled
+at her throat, and its thinness frightened him. For a space--a flash of
+seconds--she looked at him as if possessed of the subconscious fear
+that he was not Jim Kent, and then slowly her arms opened, and she
+reached them out to him. She did not smile, she did not cry out, she
+did not speak his name now; but her arms went round his neck as he took
+her to him, and her face dropped on his breast. He looked at McTrigger.
+A woman was standing beside him, a dark-haired, dark-eyed woman, and
+she had laid a hand on McTrigger's arm, Kent, looking at them,
+understood.
+
+The woman came to him. "I had better take her now, m'sieu," she said.
+"Malcolm--will tell you. And a little later,--you may see her again."
+
+Her voice was low and soft. At the sound of it Marette raised her head,
+and her two hands stole to Kent's cheeks in their old sweet way, and
+she whispered,
+
+"Kiss me, Jeems--my Jeems--kiss me--"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+
+A little later, clasping hands in the lamp glow, Kent and Sandy
+McTrigger stood alone in the big room. In their handclasp was the warm
+thrill of strong men met in an immutable brotherhood. Each had faced
+death for the other. Yet this thought, subconsciously and forever a
+part of them, expressed itself only in the grip of their fingers and in
+the understanding that lay deep in their eyes.
+
+In Kent's face the great question was of Marette. McTrigger saw the
+fear of it, and slowly he smiled, a glad and yet an anxious smile, as
+he looked toward the door through which Marette and the older woman had
+gone.
+
+"Thank God you have come in time!" he said, still holding Kent's hand.
+"She thought you were dead. And I know, Kent, that it was killing her.
+We had to watch her at night. Sometimes she would wander out into the
+valley. She said she was looking for you. It was that way tonight."
+
+Kent gulped hard. "I understand now," he said. "It was the living soul
+of her that was pulling me here. I--"
+
+He took his pack with its precious contents from his shoulders,
+listening to McTrigger. They sat down. What McTrigger was saying seemed
+of trifling consequence beside the fact that Marette was somewhere
+beyond the other door, alive, and that he would see her again very
+soon. He did not see why McTrigger should tell him that the older woman
+was his wife. Even the fact that a splendid chance had thrown Marette
+upon a log wedged between two rocks in the Chute, and that this log,
+breaking away, had carried her to the opposite side of the river miles
+below, was trivial with the thought that only a door separated them
+now. But he listened. He heard McTrigger tell how Marette had searched
+for him those days when he was lost in fever at André Boileau's cabin,
+how she had given him up for dead, and how in those same days Laselle's
+brigade had floated down, and she had come north with it. Later he
+would marvel over these things, but now he listened, and his eyes
+turned toward the door. It was then that McTrigger drove something
+home. It was like a shot piercing Kent's brain. McTrigger was speaking
+quietly of O'Connor. He said:
+
+"But you probably came by way of Fort Simpson, Kent, and O'Connor has
+told you all this. It was he who brought Marette back home through the
+Sulphur Country."
+
+"O'Connor!"
+
+Kent sprang to his feet. It took McTrigger but a moment to read the
+truth in his face.
+
+"Good God, do you mean to tell me you don't know, Kent?" he whispered
+tensely, rising in front of the other. "Haven't you seen O'Connor?
+Haven't you come in touch with the Police anywhere within the last
+year? Don't you know--?"
+
+"I know nothing," breathed Kent.
+
+For a space McTrigger stared at him in amazement
+
+"I have been in hiding," said Kent. "All this time I have been keeping
+away from the Police."
+
+McTrigger drew a deep breath. Again his hands gripped Kent's, and his
+voice was incredulous, filled with a great wonder. "And you have come
+to her, to her old home, believing that Marette killed Kedsty! It is
+hard to believe. And yet--" Into his face came suddenly a look of
+grief, almost of pain, and Kent, following his eyes, saw that he was
+looking at a big stone fireplace in the end of the room.
+
+"It was O'Connor who worked the thing out last Winter," he said,
+speaking with, an effort. "I must tell you before you see her again.
+You must understand everything. It will not do to have her tell you.
+See--"
+
+Kent followed him to the fireplace. From the shelf over the stonework
+McTrigger took a picture and gave it to him. It was a snapshot, the
+picture of a bare-headed man standing in the open with the sun shining
+on him.
+
+A low cry broke from Kent's lips. It was the great, gray ghost of a man
+he had seen in the lightning flare that night from the window of his
+hiding-place in Kedsty's bungalow.
+
+"My brother," said McTrigger chokingly. "I loved him. For forty years
+we were comrades. And Marette belonged to us, half and half. It was
+he--who killed--John Barkley." And then, after a moment in which
+McTrigger fought to speak steadily, he added, "And it was he--my
+brother--who also killed Inspector Kedsty."
+
+For a matter of seconds there was a dead silence between them.
+McTrigger looked into the fireplace instead of at Kent. Then he said:
+
+"He killed those men, but he didn't murder them, Kent. It couldn't be
+called that. It was justice, single-man justice, without going to law.
+If it wasn't for Marette, I wouldn't tell you about it--not the
+horrible part of it. I don't like to bring it up in my memory. ... It
+happened years ago. I was not married then, but my brother was ten
+years older than I and had a wife. I think that Marette loves you as
+Marie loved Donald. And Donald's love was more than that. It was
+worship. We came into the new mountain country, the three of us, even
+before the big strikes at Dawson and Bonanza. It was a wild country, a
+savage country, and there were few women in it, but Marie came with
+Donald. She was beautiful, with hair and eyes like Marette's. That was
+the tragedy of it.
+
+"I won't tell you the details. They were terrible. It happened while
+Donald and I were out on a hunt. Three men--white men--remember that,
+Kent; WHITE MEN--came out of the North and stopped at the cabin. When
+we returned, what we found there drove us mad. Marie died in Donald's
+arms. And leaving her there, alone, we set out after the white-skinned
+brutes who had destroyed her. Only a blizzard saved them, Kent. Their
+trail was fresh when the storm came. Had it held off another two hours,
+I, too, would have killed.
+
+"From that day Donald and I became man-hunters. We traced the back
+trail of the three fiends and discovered who they were. Two years later
+Donald found one of the three on the Yukon, and before he killed him he
+made him verify the names of the other two. It was a long search after
+that, Kent. It has covered thirty years. Donald grew old faster than I,
+and I knew, after a time, that he was strangely mad. He would be gone
+for months at a time, always searching for the two men. Ten years
+passed, and then, one day, in the deep of Winter, we came on a cabin
+home that had been stricken with the plague--the smallpox. It was the
+home of Pierre Radisson and his wife Andrea. Both were dead. But there
+was a little child still living, almost a babe in arms. We took her,
+Donald and I. The child was--Marette."
+
+McTrigger had spoken almost in a monotone. He had not raised his eyes
+from the ash of the fireplace. But now he looked up suddenly at Kent.
+
+"We worshipped her from the beginning," he said, his voice a bit husky.
+"I hoped that love for her would save Donald. It did, in a way. But it
+did not cure his madness, his desire for vengeance. We came farther
+east. We found this marvelous valley, and gold in the mountains,
+untouched by other men. We built here, and I hoped even more that the
+glory of this new world we had discovered would help Donald to forget.
+I married, and my wife loved Marette. We had a child, and then another,
+and both died. We loved Marette more than ever after that. Anne, my
+wife, was the daughter of a missioner and capable of educating Marette
+up to a certain point. You will find this place filled with all kinds
+of books, and reading, and music. But the time came when we thought we
+must send Marette to Montreal. It broke her heart. And then--a long
+time after--"
+
+McTrigger paused a moment, looking into Kent's eyes. "And then--one day
+Donald came in from Dawson City, terrible in his madness, and told us
+that he had found his men. One of them was John Barkley, the rich
+timber man, and the other was Kedsty, Inspector of Police at Athabasca
+Landing."
+
+Kent made no effort to speak. His amazement, as McTrigger had gone on,
+was beyond the expression of words. The night held for him a cumulative
+shock--the discovery that Marette was not dead, but alive, and now the
+discovery that he, Jim Kent, was no longer a hunted man, and that it
+was O'Connor, his old comrade, who had run the truth down. With dry
+lips he simply nodded, urging McTrigger to continue.
+
+"I knew what would happen if Donald went after Barkley and Kedsty,"
+said the older man. "And it was impossible to hold him back. He was
+mad, clean mad. There was just one thing for me to do. I left here
+first, with the intention of warning the two brutes who had killed
+Donald's wife. I knew, with the evidence in our hands, they could do
+nothing but make a getaway. No matter how rich or powerful they were,
+our evidence was complete, and through many years we had kept track of
+the movements of our witnesses. I tried to explain to Donald that we
+could send them to prison, but there was but one thought in his poor
+sick mind--to kill. I was younger and beat him south. And after that I
+made my fatal mistake. I thought I was far enough ahead of him to get
+down to the line of rail and back before he arrived. You see, I figured
+his love for Marette would take him to Montreal first, and I had made
+up my mind to tell her everything so that she might understand the
+necessity of holding him if he went to her. I wrote everything to her
+and told her to remain in Montreal. How she did that, you know. She set
+out for the North as soon as she received my letter."
+
+McTrigger's shoulders hunched lower. "Well, you know what happened,
+Kent. Donald got ahead of me, after all. I came the day after Barkley
+was killed. I took it as a kind fate that the day preceding the killing
+I shot a grouse for my dinner, and as the bird was only wounded when I
+picked it up, I got blood on the sleeves of my coat. I was arrested.
+Kedsty, every one, was sure they had the real man. And I kept quiet,
+except to maintain my innocence. I could say nothing that would turn
+the law on Donald's trail.
+
+"After that, things happened quickly. You, my friend, made your false
+confession to save one who had done you a poor service years ago.
+Almost simultaneously with that, Marette had come. She came quietly, in
+the night, and went straight to Kedsty. She told him everything, showed
+him the written evidence, telling him this evidence was in the hands of
+others and would be used if anything happened to her. Her power over
+him was complete. As the price of her secrecy she demanded my release,
+and in that black hour your confession gave Kedsty his opportunity.
+
+"He knew you were lying. He knew it was Donald who had killed Barkley.
+Yet he was willing to sacrifice you to save himself. And Marette
+remained in his house, waiting and watching for Donald, while I
+searched for him on the trails. That is why she secretly lived in
+Kedsty's house. She knew that Donald would come there sooner or later,
+if I did not find him and get him away. And she was plotting how to
+save you.
+
+"She loved you, Kent--from that first hour she came to you in the
+hospital. And she tried to exact your freedom also as an added price
+for her secrecy. But Kedsty had become like a cornered tiger. If he
+freed you, he saw his whole world crumbling under his feet. He, too,
+went a little mad, I think. He told Marette that he would not free you,
+that he would go to the hangman first. Then, Kent, came the night of
+your freedom, and a little later--Donald came to Kedsty's home. It was
+he whom you saw that night out in the storm. He entered and killed
+Kedsty.
+
+"Something dragged Marette down to the room that night. She found
+Kedsty in his chair--dead. Donald was gone. It was then that you found
+her there. Kent, she loved you--and you will never know how her heart
+bled when she let you think she had killed Kedsty. She has told me
+everything. It was her fear for Donald, her desire to keep all possible
+suspicion from him until he was safe, that compelled her not to confide
+even in you. Later, when she knew that Donald must be safe, she was
+going to tell you. And then--you were separated at the Chute."
+McTrigger paused, and Kent saw him choke back a grief that was still
+like the fresh cut of a knife in his heart.
+
+"And O'Connor found out all this?"
+
+McTrigger nodded. "Yes. He defied Kedsty's command to go to Fort
+Simpson and was on his way back to Athabasca Landing when he found my
+brother. It is strange how all things happened, Kent. But I guess God
+must have meant it that way. Donald was dying. And in dying, for a
+space, his old reason returned to him. It was from him, before he died,
+that O'Connor learned everything. The story is known everywhere now. It
+is marvelous that you did not hear--"
+
+There came an interruption, the opening of a door. Anne McTrigger stood
+looking at them where a little time before she had disappeared with
+Marette. There was a glad smile in her face. Her dark eyes were glowing
+with a new happiness. First they rested on McTrigger's face, and then
+on Kent's.
+
+"Marette is much better," she said in her soft voice. "She is waiting
+to see you, M'sieu Kent. Will you come now?"
+
+Like one in a dream Kent went toward her. He picked up his pack, for
+with its precious contents it had become to him like his own flesh and
+blood. And as the woman led the way and Kent followed her, McTrigger
+did not move from the fireplace. In a little while Anne McTrigger came
+back into the room. Her beautiful eyes were aglow. She was smiling
+softly, and putting her arms about the shoulders of the man at the
+fireplace, she whispered:
+
+"I have looked at the night through the window, Malcolm. I think that
+the stars are bigger and brighter than they have been in a long time.
+And the Watcher seems like a living god up in the sky. Come, please."
+
+She took his hand, and Malcolm went with her. Over their heads burned a
+glory of stars. The wind came gently up the valley, cool with the
+freshness of the mountain-tops, sweet with the smell of meadow and
+flowers. And when the woman pointed through the glow, Malcolm McTrigger
+looked up at the Watcher, and for an instant he fancied that he saw
+what she had seen--something that was life instead of death, a glow of
+understanding and of triumph in the mighty face of stone above the lace
+mists of the clouds. For a long time they walked on, and deep in the
+heart of the woman a voice cried out again and again that the Watcher
+knew, and that it was a living joy she saw up there, for up to that
+unmoving and voiceless god of the mountains she had cried and laughed
+and sung--and even prayed; and with her Marette had also done these
+things, until at last the pulse and beat of women's souls had given a
+spirit to a form of rock.
+
+Back in the chateau which Malcolm McTrigger and his brother Donald had
+built of logs, in a room whose windows faced the Watcher himself,
+Marette was unveiling the last of mystery for Jim Kent. And this, too,
+was her hour of triumph. Her lips were red and warm with the flush
+brought there by Kent's love.
+
+Her face was like the wild roses he had crushed under his feet all that
+day. For in this hour the world had come to her, and had prostrated
+itself at her feet. The sacred contents of the pack were in her lap as
+she leaned back in the great blanketed and pillowed chair that had been
+her invalid's nest for many days. But it was an invalid's nest no
+longer. The floods of life were pounding through her body again, and in
+that hour when Malcolm McTrigger and his wife were gone, Kent looked
+upon the miracle of its change. And now Marette gave to him a little
+packet, and while Kent opened it she raised both hands to her head and
+unbound her hair so that it fell about her in shining and glorious
+confusion.
+
+Kent, unwrapping a last bit of tissue-paper, found in his hands a long
+tress of hair.
+
+"See, Jeems, it has grown fast since I cut it that night."
+
+She leaned a little toward him, parting her hair with slim, white
+fingers so that he saw again where the hair had been clipped the night
+of Kedsty's death.
+
+And then she said: "You may keep it always if you want to, Jeems, for I
+cut it from my head when I left you in the room below, and when
+you--almost--believed I had killed Kedsty. It was this--"
+
+She gave him another packet, and her lips tightened a little as Kent
+unwrapped it, and another tress of hair shimmered in the lamp glow.
+
+"That was father Donald's," she whispered.
+
+"It--it was all he had left of Marie, his wife. And that night--when
+Kedsty died--"
+
+"I understand," cried Kent, stopping her. "He choked Kedsty with it
+until he was dead. And when I found it around Kedsty's neck--you--you
+let me think it was yours--to save father Donald!"
+
+She nodded. "Yes, Jeems. If the police had come, they would have
+thought I was guilty. I planned to let them think so until father
+Donald was safe. But all the time I had here in my breast this other
+tress, which would prove that I was innocent--when the time came. And
+now, Jeems--"
+
+She smiled at him again and reached out her hands. "Oh, I feel so
+strong! And I want to take you out now--and show you my
+valley--Jeems--our valley--yours and mine--in the starlight. Not
+tomorrow, Jeems. But tonight. Now."
+
+A little later the Watcher looked down on them, even as it had looked
+down on another man and another woman who had preceded them. But the
+stars were bigger and brighter, and the white cap of snow that rested
+on the Watcher's head like a crown caught the faint gleam of a far-away
+light; and after that, slowly and wonderfully, other snow-crested
+mountain-tops caught that greeting radiance of the moon. But it was the
+Watcher who stood out like a mighty god among them all, and when they
+came to the elbow in the plain, Marette drew Kent down beside her on a
+great flat rock and laughed softly as she held his hand tightly in her
+lap.
+
+"Always, from a little child, I have sat and played on this rock, with
+the Watcher looking, like that," she said in a low voice. "I have grown
+to love him, Jeems. And I have always believed that he was gazing off
+there, night and day, into the east, watching for something that was
+coming to me. Now I know. It was you, Jeems. And, Jeems, when I was
+away--down there in the big city--"
+
+Her fingers gripped his thumb in their old way, and Kent waited.
+
+"It was the Watcher that made me want to come home most of all," she
+went on, a bit of tremble in her voice. "Oh, I grew lonely for him, and
+I could see him in my dreams at night, watching, watching, watching,
+and sometimes even calling me. Jeems, do you see that hump on his left
+shoulder, like a great epaulet?"
+
+"Yes, I see," said Kent.
+
+"Beyond that, on a straight line from here--hundreds of miles away--are
+Dawson City, the Yukon, the big gold country, men, women, civilization.
+Father Malcolm and father Donald have never found but one trail to this
+side of the mountains, and I have been over it three times--to Dawson.
+But the Watcher's back is on those things. Sometimes I imagine it was
+he who built those great ramparts through which few men come. He wants
+this valley alone. And so do I. Alone--with you, and with my people."
+
+Kent drew her close in his arms. "When you are stronger," he whispered,
+"we will go over that hidden trail together, past the Watcher, toward
+Dawson. For it must be that over there--we will find--a missioner--" He
+paused.
+
+"Please go on, Jeems."
+
+"And you will be--my wife."
+
+"Yes, yes, Jeems--forever and ever. But, Jeems"--her arms crept up
+about his neck--"very soon it will be the first of August."
+
+"Yes--?"
+
+"And in that month there come through the mountains, each year, a man
+and a woman to visit us--mother Anne's father and mother. And mother
+Anne's father--"
+
+"Yes--?"
+
+"Is a missioner, Jeems."
+
+And Kent, looking up in this hour of his triumph and joy, believed that
+in the Watcher's face he caught for an instant the passing radiance of
+a smile.
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Valley of Silent Men, by James Oliver Curwood
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+Project Gutenberg's The Valley of Silent Men, by James Oliver Curwood
+
+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 Valley of Silent Men
+
+Author: James Oliver Curwood
+
+Release Date: July 14, 2009 [EBook #29407]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VALLEY OF SILENT MEN ***
+
+
+
+
+Thanks to Al Haines, based on the
+non-illustrated version, at
+<A HREF="https://www.gutenberg.org/etext/4707">www.gutenberg.org/etext/4707</A>
+
+Thanks to Robert Rowe, Charles Franks and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<CENTER>
+<IMG SRC="images/img-front.jpg" ALT="From the girl's revolver leaped forth a sudden spurt of smoke and flame." BORDER="2" WIDTH="420" HEIGHT="610">
+<H5>
+From the girl's revolver leaped forth a sudden spurt of
+smoke and flame.
+</H5>
+</CENTER>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H1 ALIGN="center">
+THE VALLEY OF SILENT MEN
+</H1>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+A STORY OF THE THREE RIVER COUNTRY
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+BY
+</H3>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD
+</H2>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H4 ALIGN="center">
+AUTHOR OF "THE RIVER'S END," ETC.
+</H4>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<TABLE ALIGN="center" WIDTH="100%">
+<TR>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="20%">
+<A HREF="#chap01">CHAPTER I</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="20%">
+<A HREF="#chap02">CHAPTER II</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="20%">
+<A HREF="#chap03">CHAPTER III</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="20%">
+<A HREF="#chap04">CHAPTER IV</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="20%">
+<A HREF="#chap05">CHAPTER V</A>
+</TD>
+</TR>
+
+<TR>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap06">CHAPTER VI</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap07">CHAPTER VII</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap08">CHAPTER VIII</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap09">CHAPTER IX</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap10">CHAPTER X</A>
+</TD>
+</TR>
+
+<TR>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap11">CHAPTER XI</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap12">CHAPTER XII</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap13">CHAPTER XIII</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap14">CHAPTER XIV</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap15">CHAPTER XV</A>
+</TD>
+</TR>
+
+<TR>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap16">CHAPTER XVI</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap17">CHAPTER XVII</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap18">CHAPTER XVIII</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap19">CHAPTER XIX</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap20">CHAPTER XX</A>
+</TD>
+</TR>
+
+<TR>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap21">CHAPTER XXI</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap22">CHAPTER XXII</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap23">CHAPTER XXIII</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap24">CHAPTER XXIV</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap25">CHAPTER XXV</A>
+</TD>
+</TR>
+
+<TR>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap26">CHAPTER XXVI</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+&nbsp;
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+&nbsp;
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+&nbsp;
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+&nbsp;
+</TD>
+</TR>
+
+</TABLE>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H1 ALIGN="center">
+THE VALLEY OF SILENT MEN
+</H1>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+Before the railroad's thin lines of steel bit their way up through the
+wilderness, Athabasca Landing was the picturesque threshold over which
+one must step who would enter into the mystery and adventure of the
+great white North. It is still <I>Iskwatam</I>&mdash;the "door" which opens to the
+lower reaches of the Athabasca, the Slave, and the Mackenzie. It is
+somewhat difficult to find on the map, yet it is there, because its
+history is written in more than a hundred and forty years of romance
+and tragedy and adventure in the lives of men, and is not easily
+forgotten. Over the old trail it was about a hundred and fifty miles
+north of Edmonton. The railroad has brought it nearer to that base of
+civilization, but beyond it the wilderness still howls as it has howled
+for a thousand years, and the waters of a continent flow north and into
+the Arctic Ocean. It is possible that the beautiful dream of the
+real-estate dealers may come true, for the most avid of all the
+sportsmen of the earth, the money-hunters, have come up on the bumpy
+railroad that sometimes lights its sleeping cars with lanterns, and
+with them have come typewriters, and stenographers, and the art of
+printing advertisements, and the Golden Rule of those who sell handfuls
+of earth to hopeful purchasers thousands of miles away&mdash;"Do others as
+they would do you." And with it, too, has come the legitimate business
+of barter and trade, with eyes on all that treasure of the North which
+lies between the Grand Rapids of the Athabasca and the edge of the
+polar sea. But still more beautiful than the dream of fortunes quickly
+made is the deep-forest superstition that the spirits of the wilderness
+dead move onward as steam and steel advance, and if this is so, the
+ghosts of a thousand Pierres and Jacquelines have risen uneasily from
+their graves at Athabasca Landing, hunting a new quiet farther north.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For it was Pierre and Jacqueline, Henri and Marie, Jacques and his
+Jeanne, whose brown hands for a hundred and forty years opened and
+closed this door. And those hands still master a savage world for two
+thousand miles north of that threshold of Athabasca Landing. South of
+it a wheezy engine drags up the freight that came not so many months
+ago by boat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It is over this threshold that the dark eyes of Pierre and Jacqueline,
+Henri and Marie, Jacques and his Jeanne, look into the blue and the
+gray and the sometimes watery ones of a destroying civilization. And
+there it is that the shriek of a mad locomotive mingles with their
+age-old river chants; the smut of coal drifts over their forests; the
+phonograph screeches its reply to <I>le violon</I>; and Pierre and Henri and
+Jacques no longer find themselves the kings of the earth when they come
+in from far countries with their precious cargoes of furs. And they no
+longer swagger and tell loud-voiced adventure, or sing their wild river
+songs in the same old abandon, for there are streets at Athabasca
+Landing now, and hotels, and schools, and rules and regulations of a
+kind new and terrifying to the bold of the old <I>voyageurs</I>.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It seems only yesterday that the railroad was not there, and a great
+world of wilderness lay between the Landing and the upper rim of
+civilization. And when word first came that a steam thing was eating
+its way up foot by foot through forest and swamp and impassable muskeg,
+that word passed up and down the water-ways for two thousand miles, a
+colossal joke, a stupendous bit of drollery, the funniest thing that
+Pierre and Henri and Jacques had heard in all their lives. And when
+Jacques wanted to impress upon Pierre his utter disbelief of a thing,
+he would say:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It will happen, m'sieu, when the steam thing comes to the Landing,
+when cow-beasts eat with the moose, and when our bread is found for us
+in yonder swamps!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And the steam thing came, and cows grazed where moose had fed, and
+bread WAS gathered close to the edge of the great swamps. Thus did
+civilization break into Athabasca Landing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Northward from the Landing, for two thousand miles, reached the domain
+of the rivermen. And the Landing, with its two hundred and twenty-seven
+souls before the railroad came, was the wilderness clearing-house which
+sat at the beginning of things. To it came from the south all the
+freight which must go into the north; on its flat river front were
+built the great scows which carried this freight to the end of the
+earth. It was from the Landing that the greatest of all river brigades
+set forth upon their long adventures, and it was back to the Landing,
+perhaps a year or more later, that still smaller scows and huge canoes
+brought as the price of exchange their cargoes of furs.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thus for nearly a century and a half the larger craft, with their great
+sweeps and their wild-throated crews, had gone <I>down</I> the river toward
+the Arctic Ocean, and the smaller craft, with their still wilder crews,
+had come <I>up</I> the river toward civilization. The River, as the Landing
+speaks of it, is the Athabasca, with its headwaters away off in the
+British Columbian mountains, where Baptiste and McLeod, explorers of
+old, gave up their lives to find where the cradle of it lay. And it
+sweeps past the Landing, a slow and mighty giant, unswervingly on its
+way to the northern sea. With it the river brigades set forth. For
+Pierre and Henri and Jacques it is going from one end to the other of
+the earth. The Athabasca ends and is replaced by the Slave, and the
+Slave empties into Great Slave Lake, and from the narrow tip of that
+Lake the Mackenzie carries on for more than a thousand miles to the sea.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In this distance of the long water trail one sees and hears many
+things. It is life. It is adventure. It is mystery and romance and
+hazard. Its tales are so many that books could not hold them. In the
+faces of men and women they are written. They lie buried in graves so
+old that the forest trees grow over them. Epics of tragedy, of love, of
+the fight to live! And as one goes farther north, and still farther,
+just so do the stories of things that have happened change.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For the world is changing, the sun is changing, and the breeds of men
+are changing. At the Landing in July there are seventeen hours of
+sunlight; at Fort Chippewyan there are eighteen; at Fort Resolution,
+Fort Simpson, and Fort Providence there are nineteen; at the Great Bear
+twenty-one, and at Fort McPherson, close to the polar sea, from
+twenty-two to twenty-three. And in December there are also these hours
+of darkness. With light and darkness men change, women change, and life
+changes. And Pierre and Henri and Jacques meet them all, but always
+THEY are the same, chanting the old songs, enshrining the old loves,
+dreaming the same dreams, and worshiping always the same gods. They
+meet a thousand perils with eyes that glisten with the love of
+adventure.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The thunder of rapids and the howlings of storm do not frighten them.
+Death has no fear for them. They grapple with it, wrestle joyously with
+it, and are glorious when they win. Their blood is red and strong.
+Their hearts are big. Their souls chant themselves up to the skies. Yet
+they are simple as children, and when they are afraid, it is of things
+which children fear. For in those hearts of theirs is superstition&mdash;and
+also, perhaps, royal blood. For princes and the sons of princes and the
+noblest aristocracy of France were the first of the gentlemen
+adventurers who came with ruffles on their sleeves and rapiers at their
+sides to seek furs worth many times their weight in gold two hundred
+and fifty years ago, and of these ancient forebears Pierre and Henri
+and Jacques, with their Maries and Jeannes and Jacquelines, are the
+living voices of today.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And these voices tell many stories. Sometimes they whisper them, as the
+wind would whisper, for there are stories weird and strange that must
+be spoken softly. They darken no printed pages. The trees listen to
+them beside red camp-fires at night. Lovers tell them in the glad
+sunshine of day. Some of them are chanted in song. Some of them come
+down through the generations, epics of the wilderness, remembered from
+father to son. And each year there are the new things to pass from
+mouth to mouth, from cabin to cabin, from the lower reaches of the
+Mackenzie to the far end of the world at Athabasca Landing. For the
+three rivers are always makers of romance, of tragedy, of adventure.
+The story will never be forgotten of how Follette and Ladouceur swam
+their mad race through the Death Chute for love of the girl who waited
+at the other end, or of how Campbell O'Doone, the red-headed giant at
+Fort Resolution, fought the whole of a great brigade in his effort to
+run away with a scow captain's daughter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And the brigade loved O'Doone, though it beat him, for these men of the
+strong north love courage and daring. The epic of the lost scow&mdash;how
+there were men who saw it disappear from under their very eyes,
+floating upward and afterward riding swiftly away in the skies&mdash;is told
+and retold by strong-faced men, deep in whose eyes are the smoldering
+flames of an undying superstition, and these same men thrill as they
+tell over again the strange and unbelievable story of Hartshope, the
+aristocratic Englishman who set off into the North in all the glory of
+monocle and unprecedented luggage, and how he joined in a tribal war,
+became a chief of the Dog Ribs, and married a dark-eyed, sleek-haired,
+little Indian beauty, who is now the mother of his children.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But deepest and most thrilling of all the stories they tell are the
+stories of the long arm of the Law&mdash;that arm which reaches for two
+thousand miles from Athabasca Landing to the polar sea, the arm Of the
+Royal Northwest Mounted Police.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And of these it is the story of Jim Kent we are going to tell, of Jim
+Kent and of Marette, that wonderful little goddess of the Valley of
+Silent Men, in whose veins there must have run the blood of fighting
+men&mdash;and of ancient queens. A story of the days before the railroad
+came.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap01"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER I
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+In the mind of James Grenfell Kent, sergeant in the Royal Northwest
+Mounted Police, there remained no shadow of a doubt. He knew that he
+was dying. He had implicit faith in Cardigan, his surgeon friend, and
+Cardigan had told him that what was left of his life would be measured
+out in hours&mdash;perhaps in minutes or seconds. It was an unusual case.
+There was one chance in fifty that he might live two or three days, but
+there was no chance at all that he would live more than three. The end
+might come with any breath he drew into his lungs. That was the
+pathological history of the thing, as far as medical and surgical
+science knew of cases similar to his own.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Personally, Kent did not feel like a dying man. His vision and his
+brain were clear. He felt no pain, and only at infrequent intervals was
+his temperature above normal. His voice was particularly calm and
+natural.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At first he had smiled incredulously when Cardigan broke the news. That
+the bullet which a drunken half-breed had sent into his chest two weeks
+before had nicked the arch of the aorta, thus forming an aneurism, was
+a statement by Cardigan which did not sound especially wicked or
+convincing to him. "Aorta" and "aneurism" held about as much
+significance for him as his perichondrium or the process of his
+stylomastoid. But Kent possessed an unswerving passion to grip at facts
+in detail, a characteristic that had largely helped him to earn the
+reputation of being the best man-hunter in all the northland service.
+So he had insisted, and his surgeon friend had explained.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The aorta, he found, was the main blood-vessel arching over and leading
+from the heart, and in nicking it the bullet had so weakened its outer
+wall that it bulged out in the form of a sack, just as the inner tube
+of an automobile tire bulges through the outer casing when there is a
+blowout.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And when that sack gives way inside you," Cardigan had explained,
+"you'll go like that!" He snapped a forefinger and thumb to drive the
+fact home.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After that it was merely a matter of common sense to believe, and now,
+sure that he was about to die. Kent had acted. He was acting in the
+full health of his mind and in extreme cognizance of the paralyzing
+shock he was contributing as a final legacy to the world at large, or
+at least to that part of it which knew him or was interested. The
+tragedy of the thing did not oppress him. A thousand times in his life
+he had discovered that humor and tragedy were very closely related, and
+that there were times when only the breadth of a hair separated the
+two. Many times he had seen a laugh change suddenly to tears, and tears
+to laughter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The tableau, as it presented itself about his bedside now, amused him.
+Its humor was grim, but even in these last hours of his life he
+appreciated it. He had always more or less regarded life as a joke&mdash;a
+very serious joke, but a joke for all that&mdash;a whimsical and trickful
+sort of thing played by the Great Arbiter on humanity at large; and
+this last count in his own life, as it was solemnly and tragically
+ticking itself off, was the greatest joke of all. The amazed faces that
+stared at him, their passing moments of disbelief, their repressed but
+at times visible betrayals of horror, the steadiness of their eyes, the
+tenseness of their lips&mdash;all added to what he might have called, at
+another time, the dramatic artistry of his last great adventure.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That he was dying did not chill him, or make him afraid, or put a
+tremble into his voice. The contemplation of throwing off the mere
+habit of breathing had never at any stage of his thirty-six years of
+life appalled him. Those years, because he had spent a sufficient
+number of them in the raw places of the earth, had given him a
+philosophy and viewpoint of his own, both of which he kept unto himself
+without effort to impress them on other people. He believed that life
+itself was the cheapest thing on the face of all the earth. All other
+things had their limitations.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was so much water and so much land, so many mountains and so many
+plains, so many square feet to live on and so many square feet to be
+buried in. All things could be measured, and stood up, and
+catalogued&mdash;except life itself. "Given time," he would say, "a single
+pair of humans can populate all creation." Therefore, being the
+cheapest of all things, it was true philosophy that life should be the
+easiest of all things to give up when the necessity came.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Which is only another way of emphasizing that Kent was not, and never
+had been, afraid to die. But it does not say that he treasured life a
+whit less than the man in another room, who, a day or so before, had
+fought like a lunatic before going under an anesthetic for the
+amputation of a bad finger. No man had loved life more than he. No man
+had lived nearer it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It had been a passion with him. Full of dreams, and always with
+anticipations ahead, no matter how far short realizations fell, he was
+an optimist, a lover of the sun and the moon and the stars, a worshiper
+of the forests and of the mountains, a man who loved his life, and who
+had fought for it, and yet who was ready&mdash;at the last&mdash;to yield it up
+without a whimper when the fates asked for it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bolstered up against his pillows, he did not look the part of the fiend
+he was confessing himself to be to the people about him. Sickness had
+not emaciated him. The bronze of his lean, clean-cut face had faded a
+little, but the tanning of wind and sun and campfire was still there.
+His blue eyes were perhaps dulled somewhat by the nearness of death.
+One would not have judged him to be thirty-six, even though over one
+temple there was a streak of gray in his blond hair&mdash;a heritage from
+his mother, who was dead. Looking at him, as his lips quietly and
+calmly confessed himself beyond the pale of men's sympathy or
+forgiveness, one would have said that his crime was impossible.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Through his window, as he sat bolstered up in his cot, Kent could see
+the slow-moving shimmer of the great Athabasca River as it moved on its
+way toward the Arctic Ocean. The sun was shining, and he saw the cool,
+thick masses of the spruce and cedar forests beyond, the rising
+undulations of wilderness ridges and hills, and through that open
+window he caught the sweet scents that came with a soft wind from out
+of the forests he had loved for so many years.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They've been my best friends," he had said to Cardigan, "and when this
+nice little thing you're promising happens to me, old man, I want to go
+with my eyes on them."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So his cot was close to the window.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Nearest to him sat Cardigan. In his face, more than in any of the
+others, was disbelief. Kedsty, Inspector of the Royal Northwest Mounted
+Police, in charge of N Division during an indefinite leave of absence
+of the superintendent, was paler even than the girl whose nervous
+fingers were swiftly putting upon paper every word that was spoken by
+those in the room. O'Connor, staff-sergeant, was like one struck dumb.
+The little, smooth-faced Catholic missioner whose presence as a witness
+Kent had requested, sat with his thin fingers tightly interlaced,
+silently placing this among all the other strange tragedies that the
+wilderness had given up to him. They had all been Kent's friends, his
+intimate friends, with the exception of the girl, whom Inspector Kedsty
+had borrowed for the occasion. With the little missioner he had spent
+many an evening, exchanging in mutual confidence the strange and
+mysterious happenings of the deep forests, and of the great north
+beyond the forests. O'Connor's friendship was a friendship bred of the
+brotherhood of the trails. It was Kent and O'Connor who had brought
+down the two Eskimo murderers from the mouth of the Mackenzie, and the
+adventure had taken them fourteen months. Kent loved O'Connor, with his
+red face, his red hair, and his big heart, and to him the most tragic
+part of it all was that he was breaking this friendship now.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But it was Inspector Kedsty, commanding N Division, the biggest and
+wildest division in all the Northland, that roused in Kent an unusual
+emotion, even as he waited for that explosion just over his heart which
+the surgeon had told him might occur at any moment. On his death-bed
+his mind still worked analytically. And Kedsty, since the moment he had
+entered the room, had puzzled Kent. The commander of N Division was an
+unusual man. He was sixty, with iron-gray hair, cold, almost colorless
+eyes in which one would search long for a gleam of either mercy or
+fear, and a nerve that Kent had never seen even slightly disturbed. It
+took such a man, an iron man, to run N Division according to law, for N
+Division covered an area of six hundred and twenty thousand square
+miles of wildest North America, extending more than two thousand miles
+north of the 70th parallel of latitude, with its farthest limit three
+and one-half degrees within the Arctic Circle. To police this area
+meant upholding the law in a country fourteen times the size of the
+state of Ohio. And Kedsty was the man who had performed this duty as
+only one other man had ever succeeded in doing it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Yet Kedsty, of the five about Kent, was most disturbed. His face was
+ash-gray. A number of times Kent had detected a broken note in his
+voice. He had seen his hands grip at the arms of the chair he sat in
+until the cords stood out on them as if about to burst. He had never
+seen Kedsty sweat until now.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Twice the Inspector had wiped his forehead with a handkerchief. He was
+no longer <I>Minisak</I>&mdash;"The Rock"&mdash;a name given to him by the Crees. The
+armor that no shaft had ever penetrated seemed to have dropped from
+him. He had ceased to be Kedsty, the most dreaded inquisitor in the
+service. He was nervous, and Kent could see that he was fighting to
+repossess himself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course you know what this means to the Service," he said in a hard,
+low voice. "It means&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Disgrace," nodded Kent. "I know. It means a black spot on the
+otherwise bright escutcheon of N Division. But it can't be helped. I
+killed John Barkley. The man you've got in the guard-house, condemned
+to be hanged by the neck until he is dead, is innocent. I understand.
+It won't be nice for the Service to let it be known that a sergeant in
+His Majesty's Royal Mounted is an ordinary murderer, but&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not an <I>ordinary</I> murderer," interrupted Kedsty. "As you have described
+it, the crime was deliberate&mdash;horrible and inexcusable to its last
+detail. You were not moved by a sudden passion. You tortured your
+victim. It is inconceivable!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And yet true," said Kent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was looking at the stenographer's slim fingers as they put down his
+words and Kedsty's. A bit of sunshine touched her bowed head, and he
+observed the red lights in her hair. His eyes swept to O'Connor, and in
+that moment the commander of N Division bent over him, so close that
+his face almost touched Kent's, and he whispered, in a voice so low
+that no one of the other four could hear,
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"<I>Kent&mdash;you lie</I>!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, it is true," replied Kent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kedsty drew back, again wiping the moisture from his forehead.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I killed Barkley, and I killed him as I planned that he should die,"
+Kent went on. "It was my desire that he should suffer. The one thing
+which I shall not tell you is <I>why</I> I killed him. But it was a sufficient
+reason."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He saw the shuddering tremor that swept through the shoulders of the
+girl who was putting down the condemning notes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you refuse to confess your motive?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Absolutely&mdash;except that he had wronged me in a way that deserved
+death."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you make this confession knowing that you are about to die?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The flicker of a smile passed over Kent's lips. He looked at O'Connor
+and for an instant saw in O'Connor's eyes a flash of their old
+comradeship.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. Dr. Cardigan has told me. Otherwise I should have let the man in
+the guard-house hang. It's simply that this accursed bullet has spoiled
+my luck&mdash;and saved him!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kedsty spoke to the girl. For half an hour she read her notes, and
+after that Kent wrote his name on the last page. Then Kedsty rose from
+his chair.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We have finished, gentlemen," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They trailed out, the girl hurrying through the door first in her
+desire to free herself of an ordeal that had strained every nerve in
+her body. The commander of N Division was last to go. Cardigan
+hesitated, as if to remain, but Kedsty motioned him on. It was Kedsty
+who closed the door, and as he closed it he looked back, and for a
+flash Kent met his eyes squarely. In that moment he received an
+impression which he had not caught while the Inspector was in the room.
+It was like an electrical shock in its unexpectedness, and Kedsty must
+have seen the effect of it in his face, for he moved back quickly and
+closed the door. In that instant Kent had seen in Kedsty's eyes and
+face a look that was not only of horror, but what in the face and eyes
+of another man he would have sworn was fear.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was a gruesome moment in which to smile, but Kent smiled. The shock
+was over. By the rules of the Criminal Code he knew that Kedsty even
+now was instructing Staff-Sergeant O'Connor to detail an officer to
+guard his door. The fact that he was ready to pop off at any moment
+would make no difference in the regulations of the law. And Kedsty was
+a stickler for the law as it was written. Through the closed door he
+heard voices indistinctly. Then there were footsteps, dying away. He
+could hear the heavy thump, thump of O'Connor's big feet. O'Connor had
+always walked like that, even on the trail.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Softly then the door reopened, and Father Layonne, the little
+missioner, came in. Kent knew that this would be so, for Father Layonne
+knew neither code nor creed that did not reach all the hearts of the
+wilderness. He came back, and sat down close to Kent, and took one of
+his hands and held it closely in both of his own. They were not the
+soft, smooth hands of the priestly hierarchy, but were hard with the
+callosity of toil, yet gentle with the gentleness of a great sympathy.
+He had loved Kent yesterday, when Kent had stood clean in the eyes of
+both God and men, and he still loved him today, when his soul was
+stained with a thing that must be washed away with his own life.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm sorry, lad," he said. "I'm sorry."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Something rose up in Kent's throat that was not the blood he had been
+wiping away since morning. His fingers returned the pressure of the
+little missioner's hands. Then he pointed out through the window to the
+panorama of shimmering river and green forests.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is hard to say good-by to all that, Father," he said. "But, if you
+don't mind, I'd rather not talk about it. I'm not afraid of it. And why
+be unhappy because one has only a little while to live? Looking back
+over your life, does it seem so very long ago that you were a boy, a
+small boy?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The time has gone swiftly, very swiftly."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It seems only yesterday&mdash;or so?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, only yesterday&mdash;or so."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent's face lit up with the whimsical smile that long ago had reached
+the little missioner's heart. "Well, that's the way I'm looking at it,
+Father. There is only a yesterday, a today, and a tomorrow in the
+longest of our lives. Looking back from seventy years isn't much
+different from looking back from thirty-six <I>when</I> you're looking back
+and not ahead. Do you think what I have just said will free Sandy
+McTrigger?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There is no doubt. Your statements have been accepted as a death-bed
+confession."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The little missioner, instead of Kent, was betraying a bit of
+nervousness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There are matters, my son&mdash;some few matters&mdash;which you will want
+attended to. Shall we not talk about them?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You mean&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your people, first. I remember that once you told me there was no one.
+But surely there is some one somewhere."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent shook his head. "There is no one now. For ten years those forests
+out there have been father, mother, and home to me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But there must be personal affairs, affairs which you would like to
+entrust, perhaps, to me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent's face brightened, and for an instant a flash of humor leaped into
+his eyes. "It is funny," he chuckled. "Since you remind me of it,
+Father, it is quite in form to make my will. I've bought a few little
+pieces of land here. Now that the railroad has almost reached us from
+Edmonton, they've jumped up from the seven or eight hundred dollars I
+gave for them to about ten thousand. I want you to sell the lots and
+use the money in your work. Put as much of it on the Indians as you
+can. They've always been good brothers to me. And I wouldn't waste much
+time in getting my signature on some sort of paper to that effect."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Father Layonne's eyes shone softly. "God will bless you for that,
+Jimmy," he said, using the intimate name by which he had known him.
+"And I think He is going to pardon you for something else, if you have
+the courage to ask Him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am pardoned," replied Kent, looking out through the window. "I feel
+it. I know it, Father."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In his soul the little missioner was praying. He knew that Kent's
+religion was not his religion, and he did not press the service which
+he would otherwise have rendered. After a moment he rose to his feet,
+and it was the old Kent who looked up into his face, the clean-faced,
+gray-eyed, unafraid Kent, smiling in the old way.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have one big favor to ask of you, Father," he said. "If I've got a
+day to live, I don't want every one forcing the fact on me that I'm
+dying. If I've any friends left, I want them to come in and see me, and
+talk, and crack jokes. I want to smoke my pipe. I'll appreciate a box
+of cigars if you'll send 'em up. Cardigan can't object now. Will you
+arrange these things for me? They'll listen to you&mdash;and please shove my
+cot a little nearer the window before you go."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Father Layonne performed the service in silence. Then at last the
+yearning overcame him to have the soul speak out, that his God might be
+more merciful, and he said: "My boy, you are sorry? You repent that you
+killed John Barkley?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, I'm not sorry. It had to be done. And please don't forget the
+cigars, will you, Father?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, I won't forget," said the little missioner, and turned away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As the door opened and closed behind him, the flash of humor leaped
+into Kent's eyes again, and he chuckled even as he wiped another of the
+telltale stains of blood from his lips. He had played the game. And the
+funny part about it was that no one in all the world would ever know,
+except himself&mdash;and perhaps one other.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap02"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER II
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Outside Kent's window was Spring, the glorious Spring of the Northland,
+and in spite of the death-grip that was tightening in his chest he
+drank it in deeply and leaned over so that his eyes traveled over wide
+spaces of the world that had been his only a short time before.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It occurred to him that he had suggested this knoll that overlooked
+both settlement and river as the site for the building which Dr.
+Cardigan called his hospital. It was a structure rough and unadorned,
+unpainted, and sweetly smelling with the aroma of the spruce trees from
+the heart of which its unplaned lumber was cut. The breath of it was a
+thing to bring cheer and hope. Its silvery walls, in places golden and
+brown with pitch and freckled with knots, spoke joyously of life that
+would not die, and the woodpeckers came and hammered on it as though it
+were still a part of the forest, and red squirrels chattered on the
+roof and scampered about in play with a soft patter of feet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's a pretty poor specimen of man that would die up here with all
+that under his eyes," Kent had said a year before, when he and Cardigan
+had picked out the site. "If he died looking at that, why, he just
+simply ought to die, Cardigan," he had laughed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And now he was that poor specimen, looking out on the glory of the
+world!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His vision took in the South and a part of the East and West, and in
+all those directions there was no end of the forest. It was like a
+vast, many-colored sea with uneven billows rising and falling until the
+blue sky came down to meet them many miles away. More than once his
+heart ached at the thought of the two thin ribs of steel creeping up
+foot by foot and mile by mile from Edmonton, a hundred and fifty miles
+away. It was, to him, a desecration, a crime against Nature, the murder
+of his beloved wilderness. For in his soul that wilderness had grown to
+be more than a thing of spruce and cedar and balsam, of poplar and
+birch; more than a great, unused world of river and lake and swamp. It
+was an individual, a thing. His love for it was greater than his love
+for man. It was his inarticulate God. It held him as no religion in the
+world could have held him, and deeper and deeper it had drawn him into
+the soul of itself, delivering up to him one by one its guarded secrets
+and its mysteries, opening for him page by page the book that was the
+greatest of all books. And it was the wonder of it now, the fact that
+it was near him, about him, embracing him, glowing for him in the
+sunshine, whispering to him in the soft breath of the air, nodding and
+talking to him from the crest of every ridge, that gave to him a
+strange happiness even in these hours when he knew that he was dying.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then his eyes fell nearer to the settlement which nestled along the
+edge of the shining river a quarter of a mile away. That, too, had been
+the wilderness, in the days before the railroad came. The poison of
+speculation was stirring, but it had not yet destroyed. Athabasca
+Landing was still the door that opened and closed on the great North.
+Its buildings were scattered and few, and built of logs and rough
+lumber. Even now he could hear the drowsy hum of the distant sawmill
+that was lazily turning out its grist. Not far away the wind-worn flag
+of the British Empire was floating over a Hudson Bay Company's post
+that had bartered in the trades of the North for more than a hundred
+years. Through that hundred years Athabasca Landing had pulsed with the
+heart-beats of strong men bred to the wilderness. Through it, working
+its way by river and dog sledge from the South, had gone the precious
+freight for which the farther North gave in exchange its still more
+precious furs. And today, as Kent looked down upon it, he saw that same
+activity as it had existed through the years of a century. A brigade of
+scows, laden to their gunwales, was just sweeping out into the river
+and into its current. Kent had watched the loading of them; now he saw
+them drifting lazily out from the shore, their long sweeps glinting in
+the sun, their crews singing wildly and fiercely their beloved Chanson
+des Voyageurs as their faces turned to the adventure of the North.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In Kent's throat rose a thing which he tried to choke back, but which
+broke from his lips in a low cry, almost a sob. He heard the distant
+singing, wild and free as the forests themselves, and he wanted to lean
+out of his window and shout a last good-by. For the brigade&mdash;a Company
+brigade, the brigade that had chanted its songs up and down the water
+reaches of the land for more than two hundred and fifty years&mdash;was
+starting north. And he knew where it was going&mdash;north, and still
+farther north; a hundred miles, five hundred, a thousand&mdash;and then
+another thousand before the last of the scows unburdened itself of its
+precious freight. For the lean and brown-visaged men who went with them
+there would be many months of clean living and joyous thrill under the
+open skies. Overwhelmed by the yearning that swept over him, Kent
+leaned back against his pillows and covered his eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In those moments his brain painted for him swiftly and vividly the
+things he was losing. Tomorrow or next day he would be dead, and the
+river brigade would still be sweeping on&mdash;on into the Grand Rapids of
+the Athabasca, fighting the Death Chute, hazarding valiantly the rocks
+and rapids of the Grand Cascade, the whirlpools of the Devil's Mouth,
+the thundering roar and boiling dragon teeth of the Black Run&mdash;on to
+the end of the Athabasca, to the Slave, and into the Mackenzie, until
+the last rock-blunted nose of the outfit drank the tide-water of the
+Arctic Ocean. And he, James Kent, would be DEAD!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He uncovered his eyes, and there was a wan smile on his lips as he
+looked forth once more. There were sixteen scows in the brigade, and
+the biggest, he knew, was captained by Pierre Rossand. He could fancy
+Pierre's big red throat swelling in mighty song, for Pierre's wife was
+waiting for him a thousand miles away. The scows were caught steadily
+now in the grip of the river, and it seemed to Kent, as he watched them
+go, that they were the last fugitives fleeing from the encroaching
+monsters of steel. Unconscious of the act, he reached out his arms, and
+his soul cried out its farewell, even though his lips were silent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was glad when they were gone and when the voices of the chanting
+oarsmen were lost in the distance. Again he listened to the lazy hum of
+the sawmill, and over his head he heard the velvety run of a red
+squirrel and then its reckless chattering. The forests came back to
+him. Across his cot fell a patch of golden sunlight. A stronger breath
+of air came laden with the perfume of balsam and cedar through his
+window, and when the door opened and Cardigan entered, he found the old
+Kent facing him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was no change in Cardigan's voice or manner as he greeted him.
+But there was a tenseness in his face which he could not conceal. He
+had brought in Kent's pipe and tobacco. These he laid on a table until
+he had placed his head close to Kent's hearty listening to what he
+called the <I>bruit</I>&mdash;the rushing of blood through the aneurismal sac.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Seems to me that I can hear it myself now and then," said Kent.
+"Worse, isn't it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Cardigan nodded. "Smoking may hurry it up a bit," he said. "Still, if
+you want to&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent held out his hand for the pipe and tobacco. "It's worth it.
+Thanks, old man."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent loaded the pipe, and Cardigan lighted a match. For the first time
+in two weeks a cloud of smoke issued from between Kent's lips.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The brigade is starting north," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mostly Mackenzie River freight," replied Cardigan. "A long run."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The finest in all the North. Three years ago O'Connor and I made it
+with the Follette outfit. Remember Follette&mdash;and Ladouceur? They both
+loved the same girl, and being good friends they decided to settle the
+matter by a swim through the Death Chute. The man who came through
+first was to have her. Gawd, Cardigan, what funny things happen!
+Follette came out first, but he was dead. He'd brained himself on a
+rock. And to this day Ladouceur hasn't married the girl, because he
+says Follette beat him; and that Follette's something-or-other would
+haunt him if he didn't play fair. It's a queer&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He stopped and listened. In the hall was the approaching tread of
+unmistakable feet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"O'Connor," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Cardigan went to the door and opened it as O'Connor was about to knock.
+When the door closed again, the staff-sergeant was in the room alone
+with Kent. In one of his big hands he clutched a box of cigars, and in
+the other he held a bunch of vividly red fire-flowers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Father Layonne shoved these into my hands as I was coming up," he
+explained, dropping them on the table. "And I&mdash;well&mdash;I'm breaking
+regulations to come up an' tell you something, Jimmy. I never called
+you a liar in my life, but I'm calling you one now!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was gripping Kent's hands in the fierce clasp of a friendship that
+nothing could kill. Kent winced, but the pain of it was joy. He had
+feared that O'Connor, like Kedsty, must of necessity turn against him.
+Then he noticed something unusual in O'Connor's face and eyes. The
+staff-sergeant was not easily excited, yet he was visibly disturbed now.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't know what the others saw, when you were making that
+confession, Kent. Mebby my eyesight was better because I spent a year
+and a half with you on the trail. You were lying. What's your game, old
+man?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent groaned. "Have I got to go all over it again?" he appealed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+O'Connor began thumping back and forth over the floor. Kent had seen
+him that way sometimes in camp when there were perplexing problems
+ahead of them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You didn't kill John Barkley," he insisted. "I don't believe you did,
+and Inspector Kedsty doesn't believe it&mdash;yet the mighty queer part of
+it is&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That Kedsty is acting on your confession in a big hurry. I don't
+believe it's according to Hoyle, as the regulations are written. But
+he's doing it. And I want to know&mdash;it's the biggest thing I EVER wanted
+to know&mdash;did you kill Barkley?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"O'Connor, if you don't believe a dying man's word&mdash;you haven't much
+respect for death, have you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's the theory on which the law works, but sometimes it ain't
+human. Confound it, man, <I>did you</I>?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+O'Connor sat down and with his finger-nails pried open the box of
+cigars. "Mind if I smoke with you?" he asked. "I need it. I'm shot up
+with unexpected things this morning. Do you care if I ask you about the
+girl?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The girl!" exclaimed Kent. He sat up straighter, staring at O'Connor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The staff-sergeant's eyes were on him with questioning steadiness. "I
+see&mdash;you don't know her," he said, lighting his cigar. "Neither do I.
+Never saw her before. That's why I am wondering about Inspector Kedsty.
+I tell you, it's queer. He didn't believe you this morning, yet he was
+all shot up. He wanted me to go with him to his house. The cords stood
+out on his neck like that&mdash;like my little finger.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then suddenly he changed his mind and said we'd go to the office. That
+took us along the road that runs through the poplar grove. It happened
+there. I'm not much of a girl's man, Kent, and I'd be a fool to try to
+tell you what she looked like. But there she was, standing in the path
+not ten feet ahead of us, and she stopped me in my tracks as quick as
+though she'd sent a shot into me. And she stopped Kedsty, too. I heard
+him give a sort of grunt&mdash;a funny sound, as though some one had hit
+him. I don't believe I could tell whether she had a dress on or not,
+for I never saw anything like her face, and her eyes, and her hair, and
+I stared at them like a thunder-struck fool. She didn't seem to notice
+me any more than if I'd been thin air, a ghost she couldn't see.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She looked straight at Kedsty, and she kept looking at him&mdash;and then
+she passed us. Never said a word, mind you. She came so near I could
+have touched her with my hand, and not until she was that close did she
+take her eyes from Kedsty and look at me. And when she'd passed I
+thought what a couple of cursed idiots we were, standing there
+paralyzed, as if we'd never seen a beautiful girl before in our lives.
+I went to remark that much to the Old Man when&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+O'Connor bit his cigar half in two as he leaned nearer to the cot.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Kent, I swear that Kedsty was as white as chalk when I looked at him!
+There wasn't a drop of blood left in his face, and he was staring
+straight ahead, as though the girl still stood there, and he gave
+another of those grunts&mdash;it wasn't a laugh&mdash;as if something was choking
+him. And then he said:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'Sergeant, I've forgotten something important. I must go back to see
+Dr. Cardigan. You have my authority to give McTrigger his liberty at
+once!'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+O'Connor paused, as if expecting some expression of disbelief from
+Kent. When none came, he demanded,
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Was that according to the Criminal Code? Was it, Kent?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not exactly. But, coming from the S.O.D., it was law."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And I obeyed it," grunted the staff-sergeant. "And if you could have
+seen McTrigger! When I told him he was free, and unlocked his cell, he
+came out of it gropingly, like a blind man. And he would go no farther
+than the Inspector's office. He said he would wait there for him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And Kedsty?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+O'Connor jumped from his chair and began thumping back and forth across
+the room again. "Followed the girl," he exploded. "He couldn't have
+done anything else. He lied to me about Cardigan. There wouldn't be
+anything mysterious about it if he wasn't sixty and she less than
+twenty. She was pretty enough! But it wasn't her beauty that made him
+turn white there in the path. Not on your life it wasn't! I tell you he
+aged ten years in as many seconds. There was something in that girl's
+eyes more terrifying to him than a leveled gun, and after he'd looked
+into them, his first thought was of McTrigger, the man you're saving
+from the hangman. It's queer, Kent. The whole business is queer. And
+the queerest of it all is your confession."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, it's all very funny," agreed Kent. "That's what I've been telling
+myself right along, old man. You see, a little thing like a bullet
+changed it all. For if the bullet hadn't got me, I assure you I
+wouldn't have given Kedsty that confession, and an innocent man would
+have been hanged. As it is, Kedsty is shocked, demoralized. I'm the
+first man to soil the honor of the finest Service on the face of the
+earth, and I'm in Kedsty's division. Quite natural that he should be
+upset. And as for the girl&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He shrugged his shoulders and tried to laugh. "Perhaps she came in this
+morning with one of the up-river scows and was merely taking a little
+constitutional," he suggested. "Didn't you ever notice, O'Connor, that
+in a certain light under poplar trees one's face is sometimes ghastly?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I've noticed it, when the trees are in full leaf, but not when
+they're just opening, Jimmy. It was the girl. Her eyes shattered every
+nerve in him. And his first words were an order for me to free
+McTrigger, coupled with the lie that he was coming back to see
+Cardigan. And if you could have seen her eyes when she turned them on
+me! They were blue&mdash;blue as violets&mdash;but shooting fire. I could imagine
+black eyes like that, but not blue ones. Kedsty simply wilted in their
+blaze. And there was a reason&mdash;I know it&mdash;a reason that sent his mind
+like lightning to the man in the cell!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now, that you leave me out of it, the thing begins to get
+interesting," said Kent. "It's a matter of the relationship of this
+blonde girl and&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She isn't blonde&mdash;and I'm not leaving you out of it," interrupted
+O'Connor. "I never saw anything so black in my life as her hair. It was
+magnificent. If you saw that girl once, you would never forget her
+again as long as you lived. She has never been in Athabasca Landing
+before, or anywhere near here. If she had, we surely would have heard
+about her. She came for a purpose, and I believe that purpose was
+accomplished when Kedsty gave me the order to free McTrigger."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's possible, and probable," agreed Kent. "I always said you were
+the best clue-analyst in the force, Bucky. But I don't see where I come
+in."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+O'Connor smiled grimly. "You don't? Well, I may be both blind and a
+fool, and perhaps a little excited. But it seemed to me that from the
+moment Inspector Kedsty laid his eyes on that girl he was a little too
+anxious to let McTrigger go and hang you in his place. A little too
+anxious, Kent."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The irony of the thing brought a hard smile to Kent's lips as he nodded
+for the cigars. "I'll try one of these on top of the pipe," he said,
+nipping off the end of the cigar with his teeth. "And you forget that
+I'm not going to hang, Bucky. Cardigan has given me until tomorrow
+night. Perhaps until the next day. Did you see Rossand's fleet leaving
+for up north? It made me think of three years ago!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+O'Connor was gripping his hand again. The coldness of it sent a chill
+into the staff-sergeant's heart. He rose and looked through the upper
+part of the window, so that the twitching in his throat was hidden from
+Kent. Then he went to the door.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll see you again tomorrow," he said. "And if I find out anything
+more about the girl, I'll report."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He tried to laugh, but there was a tremble in his voice, a break in the
+humor he attempted to force.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent listened to the tramp of his heavy feet as they went down the hall.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap03"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER III
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Again the world came back to Kent, the world that lay just beyond his
+open window. But scarcely had O'Connor gone when it began to change,
+and in spite of his determination to keep hold of his nerve Kent felt
+creeping up with that change a thing that was oppressive and
+smothering. Swiftly the distant billowings of the forests were changing
+their tones and colors under the darkening approach of storm. The
+laughter of the hills and ridges went out. The shimmer of spruce and
+cedar and balsam turned to a somber black. The flashing gold and silver
+of birch and poplar dissolved into a ghostly and unanimated gray that
+was almost invisible. A deepening and somber gloom spread itself like a
+veil over the river that only a short time before had reflected the
+glory of the sun in the faces of dark-visaged men of the Company
+brigade. And with the gloom came steadily nearer a low rumbling of
+thunder.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For the first time since the mental excitement of his confession Kent
+felt upon him an appalling loneliness. He still was not afraid of
+death, but a part of his philosophy was gone. It was, after all, a
+difficult thing to die alone. He felt that the pressure in his chest
+was perceptible greater than it had been an hour or two before, and the
+thought grew upon him that it would be a terrible thing for the
+"explosion" to come when the sun was not shining. He wanted O'Connor
+back again. He had the desire to call out for Cardigan. He would have
+welcomed Father Layonne with a glad cry. Yet more than all else would
+he have had at his side in these moments of distress a woman. For the
+storm, as it massed heavier and nearer, filling the earth with its
+desolation, bridged vast spaces for him, and he found himself suddenly
+face to face with the might-have-beens of yesterday.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He saw, as he had never guessed before, the immeasurable gulf between
+helplessness and the wild, brute freedom of man, and his soul cried
+out&mdash;not for adventure, not for the savage strength of life&mdash;but for
+the presence of a creature frailer than himself, yet in the gentle
+touch of whose hand lay the might of all humanity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He struggled with himself. He remembered that Dr. Cardigan had told him
+there would be moments of deep depression, and he tried to fight
+himself out of the grip of this that was on him. There was a bell at
+hand, but he refused to use it, for he sensed his own cowardice. His
+cigar had gone out, and he relighted it. He made an effort to bring his
+mind back to O'Connor, and the mystery girl, and Kedsty. He tried to
+visualize McTrigger, the man he had saved from the hangman, waiting for
+Kedsty in the office at barracks. He pictured the girl, as O'Connor had
+described her, with her black hair and blue eyes&mdash;and then the storm
+broke.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The rain came down in a deluge, and scarcely had it struck when the
+door opened and Cardigan hurried in to close the window. He remained
+for half an hour, and after that young Mercer, one of his two
+assistants, came in at intervals. Late in the afternoon it began to
+clear up, and Father Layonne returned with papers properly made out for
+Kent's signature. He was with Kent until sundown, when Mercer came in
+with supper.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Between that hour and ten o'clock Kent observed a vigilance on the part
+of Dr. Cardigan which struck him as being unusual. Four times he
+listened with the stethoscope at his chest, but when Kent asked the
+question which was in his mind, Cardigan shook his head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's no worse, Kent. I don't think it will happen tonight."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In spite of this assurance Kent was positive there was in Cardigan's
+manner an anxiety of a different quality than he had perceived earlier
+in the day. The thought was a definite and convincing one. He believed
+that Cardigan was smoothing the way with a professional lie.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had no desire to sleep. His light was turned low, and his window was
+open again, for the night had cleared. Never had air tasted sweeter to
+him than that which came in through his window. The little bell in his
+watch tinkled the hour of eleven, when he heard Cardigan's door close
+for a last time across the hall. After that everything was quiet. He
+drew himself nearer to the window, so that by leaning forward he could
+rest himself partly on the sill. He loved the night. The mystery and
+lure of those still hours of darkness when the world slept had never
+ceased to hold their fascination for him. Night and he were friends. He
+had discovered many of its secrets. A thousand times he had walked hand
+in hand with the spirit of it, approaching each time a little nearer to
+the heart of it, mastering its life, its sound, the whispering
+languages of that "other side of life" which rises quietly and as if in
+fear to live and breathe long after the sun has gone out. To him it was
+more wonderful than day.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And this night that lay outside his window now was magnificent. Storm
+had washed the atmosphere between earth and sky, and it seemed as
+though the stars had descended nearer to his forests, shining in golden
+constellations. The moon was coming up late, and he watched the ruddy
+glow of it as it rode up over the wilderness, a splendid queen entering
+upon a stage already prepared by the lesser satellites for her coming.
+No longer was Kent oppressed or afraid. In still deeper inhalations he
+drank the night air into his lungs, and in him there seemed to grow
+slowly a new strength. His eyes and ears were wide open and attentive.
+The town was asleep, but a few lights burned dimly here and there along
+the river's edge, and occasionally a lazy sound came up to him&mdash;the
+clink of a scow chain, the bark of a dog, the rooster crowing. In spite
+of himself he smiled at that. Old Duperow's rooster was a foolish bird
+and always crowed himself hoarse when the moon was bright. And in front
+of him, not far away, were two white, lightning-shriven spruce stubs
+standing like ghosts in the night. In one of these a pair of owls had
+nested, and Kent listened to the queer, chuckling notes of their
+honeymooning and the flutter of their wings as they darted out now and
+then in play close to his window. And then suddenly he heard the sharp
+snap of their beaks. An enemy was prowling near, and the owls were
+giving warning. He thought he heard a step. In another moment or two
+the step was unmistakable. Some one was approaching his window from the
+end of the building. He leaned over the sill and found himself staring
+into O'Connor's face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"These confounded feet of mine!" grunted the staff-sergeant. "Were you
+asleep, Kent?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wide-awake as those owls," assured Kent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+O'Connor drew up to the window. "I saw your light and thought you were
+awake," he said. "I wanted to make sure Cardigan wasn't with you. I
+don't want him to know I am here. And&mdash;if you don't mind&mdash;will you turn
+off the light? Kedsty is awake, too&mdash;as wide-awake as the owls."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent reached out a hand, and his room was in darkness except for the
+glow of moon and stars. O'Connor's bulk at the window shut out a part
+of this. His face was half in gloom.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's a crime to come to you like this, Kent," he said, keeping his big
+voice down to a whisper. "But I had to. It's my last chance. And I know
+there's something wrong. Kedsty is getting me out of the way&mdash;because I
+was with him when he met the girl over in the poplar bush. I'm detailed
+on special duty up at Fort Simpson, two thousand miles by water if it's
+a foot! It means six months or a year. We leave in the motor boat at
+dawn to overtake Rossand and his outfit, so I had to take this chance
+of seeing you. I hesitated until I knew that some one was awake in your
+room."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm glad you came," said Kent warmly. "And&mdash;good God, how I would like
+to go with you, Bucky! If it wasn't for this thing in my chest,
+ballooning up for an explosion&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I wouldn't be going," interrupted O'Connor in a low voice. "If you
+were on your feet, Kent, there are a number of things that wouldn't be
+happening. Something mighty queer has come over Kedsty since this
+morning. He isn't the Kedsty you knew yesterday or for the last ten
+years. He's nervous, and I miss my guess if he isn't constantly on the
+watch for some one. And he's afraid of me. I know it. He's afraid of me
+because I saw him go to pieces when he met that girl. Fort Simpson is
+simply a frame-up to get me away for a time. He tried to smooth the
+edge off the thing by promising me an inspectorship within the year.
+That was this afternoon, just before the storm. Since then&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+O'Connor turned and faced the moonlight for a moment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Since then I've been on a still-hunt for the girl and Sandy
+McTrigger," he added. "And they've disappeared, Kent. I guess McTrigger
+just melted away into the woods. But it's the girl that puzzles me.
+I've questioned every scow <I>cheman</I> at the Landing. I've investigated
+every place where she might have got food or lodging, and I bribed
+Mooie, the old trailer, to search the near-by timber. The unbelievable
+part of it isn't her disappearance. It's the fact that not a soul in
+Athabasca Landing has seen her! Sounds incredible, doesn't it? And
+then, Kent, the big hunch came to me. Remember how we've always played
+up to the big hunch? And this one struck me strong. I think I know
+where the girl is."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent, forgetful of his own impending doom, was deeply interested in the
+thrill of O'Connor's mystery. He had begun to visualize the situation.
+More than once they had worked out enigmas of this kind together, and
+the staff-sergeant saw the old, eager glow in his eyes. And Kent
+chuckled joyously in that thrill of the game of man-hunting, and said:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Kedsty is a bachelor and doesn't even so much as look at a woman. But
+he likes home life&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And has built himself a log bungalow somewhat removed from the town,"
+added O'Connor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And his Chinaman cook and housekeeper is away."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And the bungalow is closed, or supposed to be."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Except at night, when Kedsty goes there to sleep."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+O'Connor's hand gripped Kent's. "Jimmy, there never was a team in N
+Division that could beat us, The girl is hiding at Kedsty's place!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But why <I>hiding</I>?" insisted Kent. "She hasn't committed a crime."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+O'Connor sat silent for a moment. Kent could hear him stuffing the bowl
+of his pipe.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's simply the big hunch," he grunted. "It's got hold of me, Kent,
+and I can't throw it off. Why, man&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He lighted a match in the cup of his hands, and Kent saw his face.
+There was more than uncertainty in the hard, set lines of it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You see, I went back to the poplars again after I left you today,"
+O'Connor went on. "I found her footprints. She had turned off the
+trail, and in places they were very clear.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She had on high-heeled shoes, Kent&mdash;those Frenchy things&mdash;and I swear
+her feet can't be much bigger than a baby's! I found where Kedsty
+caught up with her, and the moss was pretty well beaten down. He
+returned through the poplars, but the girl went on and into the edge of
+the spruce. I lost her trail there. By traveling in that timber it was
+possible for her to reach Kedsty's bungalow without being seen. It must
+have been difficult going, with shoes half as big as my hand and heels
+two inches high! And I've been wondering, why didn't she wear
+bush-country shoes or moccasins?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because she came from the South and not the North," suggested Kent.
+"Probably up from Edmonton."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Exactly. And Kedsty wasn't expecting her, was he? If he had been, that
+first sight of her wouldn't have shattered every nerve in his body.
+That's why the big hunch won't let loose of me, Kent. From the moment
+he saw her, he was a different man. His attitude toward you changed
+instantly. If he could save you now by raising his little finger, he
+wouldn't do it, simply because it's absolutely necessary for him to
+have an excuse for freeing McTrigger. Your confession came at just the
+psychological moment. The girl's unspoken demand there in the poplars
+was that he free McTrigger, and it was backed up by a threat which
+Kedsty understood and which terrified him to his marrow. McTrigger must
+have seen him afterward, for he waited at the office until Kedsty came.
+I don't know what passed between them. Constable Doyle says they were
+together for half an hour. Then McTrigger walked out of barracks, and
+no one has seen him since. It's mighty queer. The whole thing is queer.
+And the queerest part of the whole business is this sudden commission
+of mine at Fort Simpson."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent leaned back against his pillows. His breath came in a series of
+short, hacking coughs. In the star glow O'Connor saw his face grow
+suddenly haggard and tired-looking, and he leaned far in so that in
+both his own hands he held one of Kent's.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm tiring you, Jimmy," he said huskily. "Good-by, old pal! I&mdash;I&mdash;" He
+hesitated and then lied steadily. "I'm going up to take a look around
+Kedsty's place. I won't be gone more than half an hour and will stop on
+my way back. If you're asleep&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I won't be asleep," said Kent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+O'Connor's hands gripped closer. "Good-by, Jimmy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good-by." And then, as O'Connor stepped back into the night, Kent's
+voice called after him softly: "I'll be with you on the long trip,
+Bucky. Take care of yourself&mdash;always."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+O'Connor's answer was a sob, a sob that rose in his throat like a great
+fist, and choked him, and filled his eyes with scalding tears that shut
+out the glow of moon and stars. And he did not go toward Kedsty's, but
+trudged heavily in the direction of the river, for he knew that Kent
+had called his lie, and that they had said their last farewell.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap04"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER IV
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+It was a long time after O'Connor had gone before Kent at last fell
+asleep. It was a slumber weighted with the restlessness of a brain
+fighting to the last against exhaustion and the inevitable end. A
+strange spirit seemed whirling Kent back through the years he had
+lived, even to the days of his boyhood, leaping from crest to crest,
+giving to him swift and passing visions of valleys almost forgotten, of
+happenings and things long ago faded and indistinct in his memory.
+Vividly his dreams were filled with ghosts&mdash;ghosts that were
+transformed, as his spirit went back to them, until they were riotous
+with life and pulsating with the red blood of reality. He was a boy
+again, playing three-old-cat in front of the little old red brick
+schoolhouse half a mile from the farm where he was born, and where his
+mother had died.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Skinny Hill, dead many years ago, was his partner at the
+bat&mdash;lovable Skinny, with his smirking grin and his breath that always
+smelled of the most delicious onions ever raised in Ohio. And then, at
+dinner hour, he was trading some of his mother's cucumber pickles for
+some of Skinny's onions&mdash;two onions for a pickle, and never a change in
+the price. And he played old-fashioned casino with his mother, and they
+were picking blackberries together in the woods, and he killed over
+again a snake that he had clubbed to death more than twenty years ago,
+while his mother ran away and screamed and then sat down and cried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had worshiped that mother, and the spirit of his dreams did not let
+him look down into the valley where she lay dead, under a little white
+stone in the country cemetery a thousand miles away, with his father
+close beside her. But it gave him a passing thrill of the days in which
+he had fought his way through college&mdash;and then it brought him into the
+North, his beloved North.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For hours the wilderness was heavy about Kent. He moved restlessly, at
+times he seemed about to awaken, but always he slipped back into the
+slumberous arms of his forests. He was on the trail in the cold, gray
+beginning of Winter, and the glow of his campfire made a radiant patch
+of red glory in the heart of the night, and close to him in that glow
+sat O'Connor. He was behind dogs and sledge, fighting storm; dark and
+mysterious streams rippled under his canoe; he was on the Big River,
+O'Connor with him again&mdash;and then, suddenly, he was holding a blazing
+gun in his hand, and he and O'Connor stood with their backs to a rack,
+facing the bloodthirsty rage of McCaw and his free-traders. The roar of
+the guns half roused him, and after that came pleasanter things&mdash;the
+droning of wind in the spruce tops, the singing of swollen streams in
+Springtime, the songs of birds, the sweet smells of life, the glory of
+life as he had lived it, he and O'Connor. In the end, half between
+sleep and wakefulness, he was fighting a smothering pressure on his
+chest. It was an oppressive and torturing thing, like the tree that had
+fallen on him over in the Jackfish country, and he felt himself
+slipping off into darkness. Suddenly there was a gleam of light. He
+opened his eyes. The sun was flooding in at his window, and the weight
+on his chest was the gentle pressure of Cardigan's stethoscope.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In spite of the physical stress of the phantoms which his mind has
+conceived, Kent awakened so quietly that Cardigan was not conscious of
+the fact until he raised his head. There was something in his face
+which he tried to conceal, but Kent caught it before it was gone. There
+were dark hollows under his eyes. He was a bit haggard, as though he
+had spent a sleepless night. Kent pulled himself up, squinting at the
+sun and grinning apologetically. He had slept well along into the day,
+and&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He caught himself with a sudden grimace of pain. A flash of something
+hot and burning swept through his chest. It was like a knife. He opened
+his mouth to breathe in the air. The pressure inside him was no longer
+the pressure of a stethoscope. It was real.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Cardigan, standing over him, was trying to look cheerful. "Too much of
+the night air, Kent," he explained. "That will pass away&mdash;soon."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It seemed to Kent that Cardigan gave an almost imperceptible emphasis
+to the word "soon," but he asked no question. He was quite sure that he
+understood, and he knew how unpleasant for Cardigan the answer to it
+would be. He fumbled under his pillow for his watch. It was nine
+o'clock. Cardigan was moving about uneasily, arranging the things on
+the table and adjusting the shade at the window. For a few moments,
+with his back to Kent, he stood without moving. Then he turned, and
+said:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Which will you have, Kent&mdash;a wash-up and breakfast, or a visitor?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am not hungry, and I don't feel like soap and water just now. Who's
+the visitor? Father Layonne or&mdash;Kedsty?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Neither. It's a lady."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then I'd better have the soap and water! Do you mind telling me who it
+is?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Cardigan shook his head. "I don't know. I've never seen her before. She
+came this morning while I was still in pajamas, and has been waiting
+ever since. I told her to come back again, but she insisted that she
+would remain until you were awake. She has been very patient for two
+hours."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A thrill which he made no effort to conceal leaped through Kent. "Is
+she a young woman?" he demanded eagerly. "Wonderful black hair, blue
+eyes, wears high-heeled shoes just about half as big as your hand&mdash;and
+very beautiful?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All of that," nodded Cardigan. "I even noticed the shoes, Jimmy. A
+very beautiful young woman!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Please let her come in," said Kent. "Mercer scrubbed me last night,
+and I feel fairly fit. She'll forgive this beard, and I'll apologize
+for your sake. What is her name?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I asked her, and she didn't seem to hear. A little later Mercer asked
+her, and he said she just looked at him for a moment and he froze. She
+is reading a volume of my Plutarch's 'Lives'&mdash;actually reading it. I
+know it by the way she turns the pages!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent drew himself up higher against his pillows and faced the door when
+Cardigan went out. In a flash all that O'Connor had said swept back
+upon him&mdash;this girl, Kedsty, the mystery of it all. Why had she come to
+see him? What could be the motive of her visit&mdash;unless it was to thank
+him for the confession that had given Sandy McTrigger his freedom?
+O'Connor was right. She was deeply concerned in McTrigger and had come
+to express her gratitude. He listened. Distant footsteps sounded in the
+hall. They approached quickly and paused outside his door. A hand moved
+the latch, but for a moment the door did not open. He heard Cardigan's
+voice, then Cardigan's footsteps retreating down the hall. His heart
+thumped. He could not remember when he had been so upset over an
+unimportant thing.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap05"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER V
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+The latch moved slowly, and with its movement came a gentle tap on the
+panel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come in," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next instant he was staring. The girl had entered and closed the
+door behind her. O'Connor's picture stood in flesh and blood before
+him. The girl's eyes met his own. They were like glorious violets, as
+O'Connor had said, but they were not the eyes he had expected to see.
+They were the wide-open, curious eyes of a child. He had visualized
+them as pools of slumbering flame&mdash;the idea O'Connor had given him&mdash;and
+they were the opposite of that. Their one emotion seemed to be the
+emotion roused by an overwhelming, questioning curiosity. They were
+apparently not regarding him as a dying human being, but as a creature
+immensely interesting to look upon. In place of the gratitude he had
+anticipated, they were filled with a great, wondering interrogation,
+and there was not the slightest hint of embarrassment in their gaze.
+For a space it seemed to Kent that he saw nothing but those wonderful,
+dispassionate eyes looking at him. Then he saw the rest of her&mdash;her
+amazing hair, her pale, exquisite face, the slimness and beauty of her
+as she stood with her back to the door, one hand still resting on the
+latch. He had never seen anything quite like her. He might have guessed
+that she was eighteen, or twenty, or twenty-two. Her hair, wreathed in
+shimmering, velvety coils from the back to the crown of her head,
+struck him as it had struck O'Connor, as unbelievable. The glory of it
+gave to her an appearance of height which she did not possess, for she
+was not tall, and her slimness added to the illusion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then, greatly to his embarrassment in the next instant, his eyes
+went to her feet. Again O'Connor was right&mdash;tiny feet, high-heeled
+pumps, ravishingly turned ankles showing under a skirt of some fluffy
+brown stuff or other&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Correcting himself, his face flushed red. The faintest tremble of a
+smile was on the girl's lips. She looked down, and for the first time
+he saw what O'Connor had seen, the sunlight kindling slumberous fires
+in her hair.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent tried to say something, but before he succeeded she had taken
+possession of the chair near his bedside.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have been waiting a long time to see you," she said. "You are James
+Kent, aren't you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I'm Jim Kent. I'm sorry Dr. Cardigan kept you waiting. If I had
+known&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was getting a grip on himself again, and smiled at her. He noticed
+the amazing length of her dark lashes, but the violet eyes behind them
+did not smile back at him. The tranquillity of their gaze was
+disconcerting. It was as if she had not quite made up her mind about
+him yet and was still trying to classify him in the museum of things
+she had known.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He should have awakened me," Kent went on, trying to keep himself from
+slipping once more. "It isn't polite to keep a young lady waiting two
+hours!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This time the blue eyes made him feel that his smile was a maudlin grin.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes&mdash;you are different." She spoke softly, as if expressing the
+thought to herself. "That is what I came to find out, if you were
+different. You are dying?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My God&mdash;yes&mdash;I'm dying!" gasped Kent. "According to Dr. Cardigan I'm
+due to pop off this minute. Aren't you a little nervous, sitting so
+near to a man who's ready to explode while you're looking at him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For the first time the eyes changed. She was not facing the window, yet
+a glow like the glow of sunlight flashed into them, soft, luminous,
+almost laughing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, it doesn't frighten me," she assured him. "I have always thought I
+should like to see a man die&mdash;not quickly, like drowning or being shot,
+but slowly, an inch at a time. But I shouldn't like to see YOU die."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm glad," breathed Kent. "It's a great satisfaction to me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yet I shouldn't be frightened if you did."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent drew himself up straighter against his pillows. He had been a man
+of many adventures. He had faced almost every conceivable kind of
+shock. But this was a new one. He stared into the blue eyes, tongueless
+and mentally dazed. They were cool and sweet and not at all excited.
+And he knew that she spoke the truth. Not by a quiver of those lovely
+lashes would she betray either fear or horror if he popped off right
+there. It was astonishing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Something like resentment shot for an instant into his bewildered
+brain. Then it was gone, and in a flash it came upon him that she was
+but uttering his own philosophy of life, showing him life's cheapness,
+life's littleness, the absurdity of being distressed by looking upon
+the light as it flickered out. And she was doing it, not as a
+philosopher, but with the beautiful unconcern of a child.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly, as if impelled by an emotion in direct contradiction to her
+apparent lack of sympathy, she reached out a hand and placed it on
+Kent's forehead. It was another shock. It was not a professional touch,
+but a soft, cool little pressure that sent a comforting thrill through
+him. The hand was there for only a moment, and she withdrew it to
+entwine the slim fingers with those of the others in her lap.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You have no fever," she said. "What makes you think you are dying?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent explained what was happening inside him. He was completely shunted
+off his original track of thought and anticipation. He had expected to
+ask for at least a mutual introduction when his visitor came into his
+room, and had anticipated taking upon himself the position of a polite
+inquisitor. In spite of O'Connor, he had not thought she would be quite
+so pretty. He had not believed her eyes would be so beautiful, or their
+lashes so long, or the touch of her hand so pleasantly unnerving. And
+now, in place of asking for her name and the reason for her visit, he
+became an irrational idiot, explaining to her certain matters of
+physiology that had to do with aortas and aneurismal sacs. He had
+finished before the absurdity of the situation dawned upon him, and
+with absurdity came the humor of it. Even dying, Kent could not fail to
+see the funny side of a thing It struck him as suddenly as had the
+girl's beauty and her bewildering and unaffected ingenuousness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Looking at him, that same glow of mysterious questioning in her eyes,
+the girl found him suddenly laughing straight into her face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"This is funny. It's very funny, Miss&mdash;Miss&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Marette," she supplied, answering his hesitation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's funny, Miss Marette."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not Miss Marette. Just Marette," she corrected.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I say, it's funny," he tried again. "You see, it's not so terribly
+pleasant as you might think to&mdash;er&mdash;be here, where I am, dying. And
+last night I thought about the finest thing in the world would be to
+have a woman beside me, a woman who'd be sort of sympathetic, you know,
+ease the thing off a little, maybe say she was sorry. And then the Lord
+answers my prayer, and <I>you</I> come&mdash;and you sort of give me the impression
+that you made the appointment with yourself to see how a fellow looks
+when he pops off."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The shimmer of light came into the blue eyes again. She seemed to have
+done with her mental analysis of him, and he saw that a bit of color
+was creeping into her cheeks, pale when she had entered the room.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You wouldn't be the first I've seen pop off," she assured him. "There
+have been a number, and I've never cried very much. I'd rather see a
+man die than some animals. But I shouldn't like to see YOU do it. Does
+that comfort you&mdash;like the woman you prayed the Lord for?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It does," gasped Kent. "But why the devil, Miss Marette&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Marette," she corrected again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, Marette&mdash;why the devil have you come to see me at just the moment
+I'm due to explode? And what's your other name, and how old are you,
+and what do you want of me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I haven't any other name, I'm twenty, and I came to get acquainted
+with you and see what you are like."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bully!" exclaimed Kent. "We're getting there fast! And now, why?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The girl drew her chair a few inches nearer, and for a moment Kent
+thought that her lovely mouth was trembling on the edge of a smile.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because you have lied so splendidly to save another man who was about
+to die."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"<I>Et tu, Brute</I>!" sighed Kent, leaning back against his pillows. "Isn't
+it possible for a decent man to kill another man and not be called a
+liar when he tells about it? Why do so many believe that I lie?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They don't," said the girl. "They believe you&mdash;now. You have gone so
+completely into the details of the murder in your confession that they
+are quite convinced. It would be too bad if you lived, for you surely
+would be hanged. Your lie sounds and reads like the truth. But I know
+it is a lie. You did not kill John Barkley."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And the reason for your suspicion?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For fully half a minute the girl's eyes rested on, his own. Again they
+seemed to be looking through him and into him. "Because I know the man
+who DID kill him," she said quietly, "and it was not you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent made a mighty effort to appear calm. He reached for a cigar from
+the box that Cardigan had placed on his bed, and nibbled the end of it.
+"Has some one else been confessing?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She shook her head the slightest bit.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Did you&mdash;er&mdash;see this other gentleman kill John Barkley?" he insisted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then I must answer you as I have answered at least one other. I killed
+John Barkley. If you suspect some other person, your suspicion is
+wrong."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What a splendid liar!" she breathed softly. "Don't you believe in God?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent winced. "In a large, embracing sense, yes," he said. "I believe in
+Him, for instance, as revealed to our senses in all that living,
+growing glory you see out there through the window Nature and I have
+become pretty good pals, and you see I've sort of built up a mother
+goddess to worship instead of a he-god. Sacrilege, maybe, but it's a
+great comfort at times. But you didn't come to talk religion?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The lovely head bent still nearer him. He felt an impelling desire to
+put up his hand and touch her shining hair, as she laid her hand on his
+forehead.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know who killed John Barkley," she insisted. "I know how and when
+and why he was killed. Please tell me the truth. I want to know. Why
+did you confess to a crime which you did not commit?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent took time to light his cigar. The girl watched him closely, almost
+eagerly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I may be mad," he said. "It is possible for any human being to be mad
+and not know it. That's the funny part about insanity. But if I'm not
+insane, I killed Barkley; if I didn't kill him, I must be insane, for
+I'm very well convinced that I did. Either that, or you are insane. I
+have my suspicions that you are. Would a sane person wear pumps with
+heels like those up here?" He pointed accusingly to the floor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For the first time the girl smiled, openly, frankly, gloriously. It was
+as if her heart had leaped forth for an instant and had greeted him.
+And then, like sunlight shadowed by cloud, the smile was gone. "You are
+a brave man," she said. "You are splendid. I hate men. But I think if
+you lived very long, I should love you. I will believe that you killed
+Barkley. You compel me to believe it. You confessed, when you found you
+were going to die, that an innocent man might be saved. Wasn't that it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent nodded weakly. "That's it. I hate to think of it that way, but I
+guess it's true. I confessed because I knew I was going to die.
+Otherwise I am quite sure that I should have let the other fellow take
+my medicine for me. You must think I am a beast."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All men are beasts," she agreed quickly. "But you are&mdash;a different
+kind of beast. I like you. If there were a chance, I might fight for
+you. I can fight." She held up her two small hands, half smiling at him
+again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But not with those," he exclaimed. "I think you would fight with your
+eyes. O'Connor told me they half killed Kedsty when you met them in the
+poplar grove yesterday."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had expected that the mention of Inspector Kedsty's name would
+disturb her. It had no effect that he could perceive.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"O'Connor was the big, red-faced man with Mr. Kedsty?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, my trail partner. He came to me yesterday and raved about your
+eyes. They ARE beautiful; I've never seen eyes half so lovely. But that
+wasn't what struck Bucky so hard. It was the effect they had on Kedsty.
+He said they shattered every nerve in Kedsty's body, and Kedsty isn't
+the sort to get easily frightened. And the queer part of it was that
+the instant you had gone, he gave O'Connor an order to free
+McTrigger&mdash;and then turned and followed you. All the rest of that day
+O'Connor tried to discover something about you at the Landing. He
+couldn't find hide nor hair&mdash;I beg pardon!&mdash;I mean he couldn't find out
+anything about you at all. We made up our minds that for some reason or
+other you were hiding up at Kedsty's bungalow. You don't mind a fellow
+saying all this&mdash;when he is going to pop off soon&mdash;do you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was half frightened at the directness with which he had expressed
+the thing. He would gladly have buried his own curiosity and all of
+O'Connor's suspicions for another moment of her hand on his forehead.
+But it was out, and he waited.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was looking down, her fingers twisting some sort of tasseled dress
+ornament in her lap, and Kent mentally measured the length of her
+lashes with a foot rule in mind. They were superb, and in the thrill of
+his admiration he would have sworn they were an inch long. She looked
+up suddenly and caught the glow in his eyes and the flush that lay
+under the tan of his cheeks. Her own color had deepened a little.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What if you shouldn't die?" she asked him bluntly, as if she had not
+heard a word of all he had said about Kedsty. "What would you do?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm going to."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But if you shouldn't?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent shrugged his shoulders. "I suppose I'd have to take my medicine.
+You're not going?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She had straightened up and was sitting on the edge of her chair. "Yes,
+I'm going. I'm afraid of my eyes. I may look at you as I looked at Mr.
+Kedsty, and then&mdash;pop you'd go, quick! And I don't want to be here when
+you die!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He heard a soft little note of laughter in her throat. It sent a chill
+through him. What an adorable, blood-thirsty little wretch she was! He
+stared at her bent head, at the shining coils of her wonderful hair.
+Undone, he could see it completely hiding her. And it was so soft and
+warm that again he was tempted to reach out and touch it. She was
+wonderful, and yet it was not possible that she had a heart. Her
+apparent disregard of the fact that he was a dying man was almost
+diabolic. There was no sympathy in the expression of her violet eyes as
+she looked at him. She was even making fun of the fact that he was
+about to die!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She stood up, surveying for the first time the room in which she had
+been sitting. Then she turned to the window and looked out. She
+reminded Kent of a beautiful young willow that had grown at the edge of
+a stream, exquisite, slender, strong. He could have picked her up in
+his arms as easily as a child, yet he sensed in the lithe beauty of her
+body forces that could endure magnificently. The careless poise of her
+head fascinated him. For that head and the hair that crowned it he knew
+that half the women of the earth would have traded precious years of
+their lives.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then, without turning toward him, she said, "Some day, when I die,
+I wish I might have as pleasant a room as this."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I hope you never die," he replied devoutly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She came back and stood for a moment beside him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have had a very pleasant time," she said, as though he had given her
+a special sort of entertainment. "It's too bad you are going to die.
+I'm sure we should have been good friends. Aren't you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, very sure. If you had only arrived sooner&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And I shall always think of you as a different kind of man-beast," she
+interrupted him. "It is really true that I shouldn't like to see you
+die. I want to get away before it happens. Would you care to have me
+kiss you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For an instant Kent felt that his aorta was about to give away. "I&mdash;I
+would," he gasped huskily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then&mdash;close your eyes, please."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He obeyed. She bent over him. He felt the soft touch of her hands and
+caught for an instant the perfume of her face and hair, and then the
+thrill of her lips pressed warm and soft upon his.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was not flushed or embarrassed when he looked at her again. It was
+as if she had kissed a baby and was wondering at its red face. "I've
+only kissed three men before you," she avowed. "It is strange. I never
+thought I should do it again. And now, good-by!" She moved quickly to
+the door.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wait," he cried plaintively. "Please wait. I want to know your name.
+It is Marette&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Radisson," she finished for him. "Marette Radisson, and I come from
+away off there, from a place we call the Valley of Silent Men." She was
+pointing into the north.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The North!" he exclaimed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, it is far north. Very far."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her hand was on the latch. The door opened slowly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wait," he pleaded again. "You must not go."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I must go. I have remained too long. I am sorry I kissed you. I
+shouldn't have done that. But I had to because you are such a splendid
+liar!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The door opened quickly and closed behind her. He heard her steps
+almost running down the hall, where not long ago he had listened to the
+last of O'Connor's.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then there was silence, and in that silence he heard her words
+again, drumming like little hammers in his head, <I>Because you are such
+a splendid liar</I>!"
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap06"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER VI
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+James Kent, among his other qualities good and bad, possessed a
+merciless opinion of his own shortcomings, but never, in that opinion,
+had he fallen so low as in the interval which immediately followed the
+closing of his door behind the mysterious girl who had told him that
+her name was Marette Radisson. No sooner was she gone than the
+overwhelming superiority of her childlike cleverness smote him until,
+ashamed of himself, he burned red in his aloneness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He, Sergeant Kent, the coolest man on the force next to Inspector
+Kedsty, the most dreaded of catechists when questioning criminals, the
+man who had won the reputation of facing quietly and with deadly
+sureness the most menacing of dangers, had been beaten&mdash;horribly
+beaten&mdash;by a girl! And yet, in defeat, an irrepressible and at times
+distorted sense of humor made him give credit to the victor. The shame
+of the thing was his acknowledgment that a bit of feminine beauty had
+done the trick. He had made fun of O'Connor when the big staff-sergeant
+had described the effect of the girl's eyes on Inspector Kedsty. And,
+now, if O'Connor could know of what had happened here&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then, like a rubber ball, that saving sense of humor bounced up out
+of the mess, and Kent found himself chuckling as his face grew cooler.
+His visitor had come, and she had gone, and he knew no more about her
+than when she had entered his room, except that her very pretty name
+was Marette Radisson. He was just beginning to think of the questions
+he had wanted to ask, a dozen, half a hundred of them&mdash;more definitely
+who she was; how and why she had come to Athabasca Landing; her
+interest in Sandy McTrigger; the mysterious relationship that must
+surely exist between her and Inspector Kedsty; and, chiefly, her real
+motive in coming to him when she knew that he was dying. He comforted
+himself by the assurance that he would have learned these things had
+she not left him so suddenly. He had not expected that.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The question which seated itself most insistently in his mind was, why
+had she come? Was it, after all, merely a matter of curiosity? Was her
+relationship to Sandy McTrigger such that inquisitiveness alone had
+brought her to see the man who had saved him? Surely she had not been
+urged by a sense of gratitude, for in no way had she given expression
+to that. On his death-bed she had almost made fun of him. And she could
+not have come as a messenger from McTrigger, or she would have left her
+message. For the first time he began to doubt that she knew the man at
+all, in spite of the strange thing that had happened under O'Connor's
+eyes. But she must know Kedsty. She had made no answer to his
+half-accusation that she was hiding up at the Inspector's bungalow. He
+had used that word&mdash;"hiding." It should have had an effect. And she was
+as beautifully unconscious of it as though she had not heard him, and
+he knew that she had heard him very distinctly. It was then that she
+had given him that splendid view of her amazingly long lashes and had
+countered softly,
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What if you shouldn't die?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent felt himself suddenly aglow with an irresistible appreciation of
+the genius of her subtlety, and with that appreciation came a thrill of
+deeper understanding. He believed that he knew why she had left him so
+suddenly. It was because she had seen herself close to the danger-line.
+There were things which she did not want him to know or question her
+about, and his daring intimation that she was hiding in Kedsty's
+bungalow had warned her. Was it possible that Kedsty himself had sent
+her for some reason which he could not even guess at? Positively it was
+not because of McTrigger, the man he had saved. At least she would have
+thanked him in some way. She would not have appeared quite so adorably
+cold-blooded, quite so sweetly unconscious of the fact that he was
+dying. If McTrigger's freedom had meant anything to her, she could not
+have done less than reveal to him a bit of sympathy. And her greatest
+compliment, if he excepted the kiss, was that she had called him a
+splendid liar!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent grimaced and drew in a deep breath because of the tightness in his
+chest. Why was it that every one seemed to disbelieve him? Why was it
+that even this mysterious girl, whom he had never seen before in his
+life, politely called him a liar when he insisted that he had killed
+John Barkley? Was the fact of murder necessarily branded in one's face?
+If so, he had never observed it. Some of the hardest criminals he had
+brought in from the down-river country were likable-looking men. There
+was Horrigan, for instance, who for seven long weeks kept him in good
+humor with his drollery, though he was bringing him in to be hanged.
+And there were McTab, and <I>le Bête Noir</I>&mdash;the Black Beast&mdash;a lovable
+vagabond in spite of his record, and Le Beau, the gentlemanly robber of
+the wilderness mail, and half a dozen others he could recall without
+any effort at all. No one called them liars when, like real men, they
+confessed their crimes when they saw their game was up. To a man they
+had given up the ghost with their boots on, and Kent respected their
+memory because of it. And he was dying&mdash;and even this stranger girl
+called him a liar? And no case had ever been more complete than his
+own. He had gone mercilessly into the condemning detail of it all. It
+was down in black and white. He had signed it. And still he was
+disbelieved. It was funny, deuced funny, thought Kent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Until young Mercer opened the door and came in with his late breakfast,
+he had forgotten that he had really been hungry when he awakened with
+Cardigan's stethoscope at his chest. Mercer had amused him from the
+first. The pink-faced young Englishman, fresh from the old country,
+could not conceal in his face and attitude the fact that he was walking
+in the presence of the gallows whenever he entered the room. He was, as
+he had confided in Cardigan, "beastly hit up" over the thing. To feed
+and wash a man who would undoubtedly die, but who would be hanged by
+the neck until he was dead if he lived, filled him with peculiar and at
+times conspicuous emotions. It was like attending to a living corpse,
+if such a thing could be conceived. And Mercer had conceived it. Kent
+had come to regard him as more or less of a barometer giving away
+Cardigan's secrets. He had not told Cardigan, but had kept the
+discovery for his own amusement.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This morning Mercer's face was less pink, and his pale eyes were paler,
+Kent thought. Also he started to sprinkle sugar on his eggs in place of
+salt.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent laughed and stopped his hand. "You may sugar my eggs when I'm
+dead, Mercer," he said, "but while I'm alive I want salt on 'em! Do you
+know, old man, you look bad this morning. Is it because this is my last
+breakfast?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I hope not, sir, I hope not," replied Mercer quickly. "Indeed, I hope
+you are going to live, sir."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thanks!" said Kent dryly. "Where is Cardigan?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Inspector sent a messenger for him, sir. I think he has gone to
+see him. Are your eggs properly done, sir?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mercer, if you ever worked in a butler's pantry, for the love of
+heaven forget it now!" exploded Kent, "I want you to tell me something
+straight out. How long have I got?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mercer fidgeted for a moment, and a shade or two more of the red went
+out of his face. "I can't say, sir. Doctor Cardigan hasn't told me. But
+I think not very long, sir. Doctor Cardigan is cut up all in rags this
+morning. And Father Layonne is coming to see you at any moment."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Much obliged," nodded Kent, calmly beginning his second egg. "And, by
+the way, what did you think of the young lady?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ripping, positively ripping!" exclaimed Mercer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's the word," agreed Kent. "Ripping. It sounds like the calico
+counter in a dry-goods store, but means a lot. Don't happen to know
+where she is staying or why she is at the Landing, do you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He knew that he was asking a foolish question and scarcely expected an
+answer from Mercer. He was astonished when the other said:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I heard Doctor Cardigan ask her if we might expect her to honor us
+with another visit, and she told him it would be impossible, because
+she was leaving on a down-river scow tonight. Fort Simpson, I think she
+said she was going to, sir."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The deuce you say!" cried Kent, spilling a bit of his coffee in the
+thrill of the moment. "Why, that's where Staff-Sergeant O'Connor is
+bound for!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So I heard Doctor Cardigan tell her. But she didn't reply to that. She
+just&mdash;went. If you don't mind a little joke in your present condition,
+sir, I might say that Doctor Cardigan was considerably flayed up over
+her. A deuced pretty girl, sir, deuced pretty! And I think he was shot
+through!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now you're human, Mercer. She was pretty, wasn't she?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Er&mdash;yes&mdash;stunningly so, Mr. Kent," agreed Mercer, reddening suddenly
+to the roots of his pasty, blond hair. "I don't mind confessing that in
+this unusual place her appearance was quite upsetting."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I agree with you, friend Mercer," nodded Kent. "She upset me. And&mdash;see
+here, old man!&mdash;will you do a dying man the biggest favor he ever asked
+in his life?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I should be most happy, sir, most happy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's this," said Kent. "I want to know if that girl actually leaves on
+the down-river scow tonight. If I'm alive tomorrow morning, will you
+tell me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I shall do my best, sir."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good. It's simply the silly whim of a dying man, Mercer. But I want to
+be humored in it. And I'm sensitive&mdash;like yourself. I don't want
+Cardigan to know. There's an old Indian named Mooie, who lives in a
+shack just beyond the sawmill. Give him ten dollars and tell him there
+is another ten in it if he sees the business through, and reports
+properly to you, and keeps his mouth shut afterward. Here&mdash;the money is
+under my pillow."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent pulled out a wallet and put fifty dollars in Mercer's hands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Buy cigars with the rest of it, old man. It's of no more use to me.
+And this little trick you are going to pull off is worth it. It's my
+last fling on earth, you might say."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thank you, sir. It is very kind of you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mercer belonged to a class of wandering Englishmen typical of the
+Canadian West, the sort that sometimes made real Canadians wonder why a
+big and glorious country like their own should cling to the mother
+country. Ingratiating and obsequiously polite at all times, he gave one
+the impression of having had splendid training as a servant, yet had
+this intimation been made to him, he would have become highly
+indignant. Kent had learned their ways pretty well. He had met them in
+all sorts of places, for one of their inexplicable characteristics was
+the recklessness and apparent lack of judgment with which they located
+themselves. Mercer, for instance, should have held a petty clerical job
+of some kind in a city, and here he was acting as nurse in the heart of
+a wilderness!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After Mercer had gone with the breakfast things and the money, Kent
+recalled a number of his species. And he knew that under their veneer
+of apparent servility was a thing of courage and daring which needed
+only the right kind of incentive to rouse it. And when roused, it was
+peculiarly efficient in a secretive, artful-dodger sort of way. It
+would not stand up before a gun. But it would creep under the mouths of
+guns on a black night. And Kent was positive his fifty dollars would
+bring him results&mdash;if he lived.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Just why he wanted the information he was after, he could not have told
+himself. It was a pet aphorism between O'Connor and him that they had
+often traveled to success on the backs of their hunches. And his
+proposition to Mercer was made on the spur of one of those moments when
+the spirit of a hunch possessed him. His morning had been one of
+unexpected excitement, and now he leaned back in an effort to review it
+and to forget, if he could, the distressing thing that was bound to
+happen to him within the next few hours. But he could not get away from
+the thickening in his chest. It seemed growing on him. Now and then he
+was compelled to make quite an effort to get sufficient air into his
+lungs.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He found himself wondering if there was a possibility that the girl
+might return. For a long time he lay thinking about her, and it struck
+him as incongruous and in bad taste that fate should have left this
+adventure for his last. If he had met her six months ago&mdash;or even
+three&mdash;it was probable that she would so have changed the events of
+life for him that he would not have got the half-breed's bullet in his
+chest. He confessed the thing unblushingly. The wilderness had taken
+the place of woman for him. It had claimed him, body and soul. He had
+desired nothing beyond its wild freedom and its never-ending games of
+chance. He had dreamed, as every man dreams, but realities and not the
+dreams had been the red pulse of his life. And yet, if this girl had
+come sooner&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He revisioned for himself over and over again her hair and eyes, the
+slimness of her as she had stood at the window, the freedom and
+strength of that slender body, the poise of her exquisite head, and he
+felt again the thrill of her hand and the still more wonderful thrill
+of her lips as she had pressed them warmly upon his.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+<I>And she was of the North</I>! That was the thought that overwhelmed him. He
+did not permit himself to believe that she might have told him an
+untruth. He was confident, if he lived until tomorrow, that Mercer
+would corroborate his faith in her. He had never heard of a place
+called the Valley of Silent Men, but it was a big country, and Fort
+Simpson with its Hudson Bay Company's post and its half-dozen shacks
+was a thousand miles away. He was not sure that such a place as that
+valley really existed. It was easier to believe that the girl's home
+was at Fort Providence, Fort Simpson, Fort Good Hope, or even at Fort
+McPherson. It was not difficult for him to picture her as the daughter
+of one of the factor lords of the North. Yet this, upon closer
+consideration, he gave up as unreasonable. The word "Fort" did not
+stand for population, and there were probably not more than fifty white
+people at all the posts between the Great Slave and the Arctic. She was
+not one of these, or the fact would have been known at the Landing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Neither could she be a riverman's daughter, for it was inconceivable
+that either a riverman or a trapper would have sent this girl down into
+civilization, where this girl had undoubtedly been. It was that point
+chiefly which puzzled Kent. She was not only beautiful. She had been
+tutored in schools that were not taught by wilderness missioners. In
+her, it seemed to him, he had seen the beauty and the wild freedom of
+the forests as they had come to him straight out of the heart of an
+ancient aristocracy that was born nearly two hundred years ago in the
+old cities of Quebec and Montreal.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His mind flashed back at that thought: he remembered the time when he
+had sought out every nook and cranny of that ancient town of Quebec,
+and had stood over graves two centuries old, and deep in his soul had
+envied the dead the lives they had lived. He had always thought of
+Quebec as a rare old bit of time-yellowed lace among cities&mdash;the heart
+of the New World as it had once been, still beating, still whispering
+of its one-time power, still living in the memory of its mellowed
+romance, its almost forgotten tragedies&mdash;a ghost that lived, that still
+beat back defiantly the destroying modernism that would desecrate its
+sacred things. And it pleased him to think of Marette Radisson as the
+spirit of it, wandering north, and still farther north&mdash;even as the
+spirits of the profaned dead had risen from the Landing to go farther
+on.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And feeling that the way had at last been made easy for him, Kent
+smiled out into the glorious day and whispered softly, as if she were
+standing there, listening to him:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If I had lived&mdash;I would have called you&mdash;my Quebec. It's pretty, that
+name. It stands for a lot. And so do you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And out in the hall, as Kent whispered those words, stood Father
+Layonne, with a face that was whiter than the mere presence of death
+had ever made it before. At his side stood Cardigan, aged ten years
+since he had placed his stethoscope at Kent's chest that morning. And
+behind these two were Kedsty, with a face like gray rock, and young
+Mercer, in whose staring eyes was the horror of a thing he could not
+yet quite comprehend. Cardigan made an effort to speak and failed.
+Kedsty wiped his forehead, as he had wiped it the morning of Kent's
+confession. And Father Layonne, as he went to Kent's door, was
+breathing softly to himself a prayer.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap07"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER VII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+From the window, the glorious day outside, and the vision he had made
+for himself of Marette Radisson, Kent turned at the sound of a hand at
+his door and saw it slowly open. He was expecting it. He had read young
+Mercer like a book. Mercer's nervousness and the increased tightening
+of the thing in his chest had given him warning. The thing was going to
+happen soon, and Father Layonne had come. He tried to smile, that he
+might greet his wilderness friend cheerfully and unafraid. But the
+smile froze when the door opened and he saw the missioner standing
+there.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+More than once he had accompanied Father Layonne over the threshold of
+life into the presence of death, but he had never before seen in his
+face what he saw there now. He stared. The missioner remained in the
+doorway, hesitating, as if at the last moment a great fear held him
+back. For an interval the eyes of the two men rested upon each other in
+a silence that was like the grip of a living thing. Then Father Layonne
+came quietly into the room and closed the door behind him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent drew a deep breath and tried to grin. "You woke me out of a
+dream," he said, "a day-dream. I've had a very pleasant experience this
+morning, <I>mon père</I>."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So some one was trying to tell me, Jimmy," replied the little
+missioner with an effort to smile back.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mercer?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. He told me about it confidentially. The poor boy must have fallen
+in love with the young lady."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So have I, <I>mon père</I>. I don't mind confessing it to you. I'm rather
+glad. And if Cardigan hadn't scheduled me to die&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Jimmy," interrupted the missioner quickly, but a bit huskily, "has it
+ever occurred to you that Doctor Cardigan may be mistaken?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had taken one of Kent's hands. His grip tightened. It began to hurt.
+And Kent, looking into his eyes, found his brain all at once like a
+black room suddenly illuminated by a flash of fire. Drop by drop the
+blood went out of his face until it was whiter than Father Layonne's.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You&mdash;you don't&mdash;mean&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, yes, boy, I mean just that," said the missioner, in a voice so
+strange that it did not seem to be his own. "You are not going to die,
+Jimmy. You are going to live!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Live!" Kent dropped back against his pillows. "<I>Live</I>!" His lips gasped
+the one word.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He closed his eyes for an instant, and it seemed to him that the world
+was aflame. And he repeated the word again, but only his lips formed
+it, and there came no sound. His senses, strained to the breaking-point
+to meet the ordeal of death, gave way slowly to the mighty reaction. He
+felt in those moments like a reeling man. He opened his eyes, and there
+was a meaningless green haze through the window where the world should
+have been. But he heard Father Layonne's voice. It seemed a great
+distance off, but it was very clear. Doctor Cardigan had made an error,
+it was saying. And Doctor Cardigan, because of that error, was like a
+man whose heart had been taken out of him. But it was an excusable
+error.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If there had been an X-ray&mdash;But there had been none. And Doctor
+Cardigan had made the diagnosis that nine out of ten good surgeons
+would probably have made. What he had taken to be the aneurismal
+blood-rush was an exaggerated heart murmur, and the increased
+thickening in his chest was a simple complication brought about by too
+much night air. It was too bad the error had happened. But he must not
+blame Cardigan!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+<I>He must not blame Cardigan</I>! Those last words pounded like an endless
+series of little waves in Kent's brain. He must not blame Cardigan! He
+laughed, laughed before his dazed senses readjusted themselves, before
+the world through the window pieced itself into shape again. At least
+he thought he was laughing. He must&mdash;not&mdash;blame&mdash;Cardigan! What an
+amazingly stupid thing for Father Layonne to say! Blame Cardigan for
+giving him back his life? Blame him for the glorious knowledge that he
+was not going to die? Blame him for&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Things were coming clearer. Like a bolt slipping into its groove his
+brain found itself. He saw Father Layonne again, with his white, tense
+face and eyes in which were still seated the fear and the horror he had
+seen in the doorway. It was not until then that he gripped fully at the
+truth.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I&mdash;I see," he said. "You and Cardigan think it would have been better
+if I had died!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The missioner was still holding his hand. "I don't know, Jimmy, I don't
+know. What has happened is terrible."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But not so terrible as death," cried Kent, suddenly growing rigid
+against his pillows. "Great God, <I>mon père</I>, I want to live! Oh&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He snatched his hand free and stretched forth both arms to the open
+window. "Look at it out there! My world again! MY WORLD! I want to go
+back to it. It's ten times more precious to me now than it was. Why
+should I blame Cardigan? <I>Mon père</I>--<I>mon père</I>--listen to me. I can say it
+now, because I've got a right to say it. <I>I lied</I>. I didn't kill John
+Barkley!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A strange cry fell from Father Layonne's lips. It was a choking cry, a
+cry, not of rejoicing, but of a grief-stung thing. "Jimmy!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I swear it! Great heaven, <I>mon père</I>, don't you believe me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The missioner had risen. In his eyes and face was another look. It was
+as if in all his life he had never seen James Kent before. It was a
+look born suddenly of shock, the shock of amazement, of incredulity, of
+a new kind of horror. Then swiftly again his countenance changed, and
+he put a hand on Kent's head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"God forgive you, Jimmy," he said. "And God help you, too!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Where a moment before Kent had felt the hot throb of an inundating joy,
+his heart was chilled now by the thing he sensed in Father Layonne's
+voice and saw in his face and eyes. It was not entirely disbelief. It
+was a more hopeless thing than that.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You do not believe me!" he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is my religion to believe, Jimmy," replied Father Layonne in a
+gentle voice into which the old calmness had returned. "I must believe,
+for your sake. But it is not a matter of human sentiment now, lad. It
+is the Law! Whatever my heart feels toward you can do you no good. You
+are&mdash;" He hesitated to speak the words.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then it was that Kent saw fully and clearly the whole monstrous
+situation. It had taken time for it to fasten itself upon him. In a
+general way it had been clear to him a few moments before; now, detail
+by detail, it closed in upon him, and his muscles tightened, and Father
+Layonne saw his jaw set hard and his hands clench. Death was gone. But
+the mockery of it, the grim exultation of the thing over the colossal
+trick it had played, seemed to din an infernal laughter in his ears.
+But&mdash;he was going to live! That was the one fact that rose above all
+others. No matter what happened to him a month or six months from now,
+he was not going to die today. He would live to receive Mercer's
+report. He would live to stand on his feet again and to fight for the
+life which he had thrown away. He was, above everything else, a
+fighting man. It was born in him to fight, not so much against his
+fellow men as against the overwhelming odds of adventure as they came
+to him. And now he was up against the deadliest game of all. He saw it.
+He felt it. The thing gripped him. In the eyes of that Law of which he
+had so recently been a part he was a murderer. And in the province of
+Alberta the penalty for killing a man was hanging. Because horror and
+fear did not seize upon him, he wondered if he still realized the
+situation. He believed that he did. It was merely a matter of human
+nature. Death, he had supposed, was a fixed and foregone thing. He had
+believed that only a few hours of life were left for him. And now it
+was given back to him, for months at least. It was a glorious reprieve,
+and&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly his heart stood still in the thrill of the thought that came
+to him. Marette Radisson had known that he was not going to die! She
+had hinted the fact, and he, like a blundering idiot, had failed to
+catch the significance of it. She had given him no sympathy, had
+laughed at him, had almost made fun of him, simply because she knew
+that he was going to live!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He turned suddenly on Father Layonne.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They shall believe me!" he cried. "I shall make them believe me! <I>Mon
+père</I>, I lied! I lied to save Sandy McTrigger, and I shall tell them
+why. If Doctor Cardigan has not made another mistake, I want them all
+here again. Will you arrange it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Inspector Kedsty is waiting outside," said Father Layonne quietly,
+"but I should not act in haste, Jimmy. I should wait. I should
+think&mdash;think."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You mean take time to think up a story that will hold water, <I>mon père</I>?
+I have that. I have the story. And yet&mdash;" He smiled a bit dismally. "I
+did make one pretty thorough confession, didn't I, Father?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It was very convincing, Jimmy. It went so particularly into the
+details, and those details, coupled with the facts that you were seen
+at John Barkley's earlier in the evening, and that it was you who found
+him dead a number of hours later&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All make a strong case against me," agreed Kent. "As a matter of fact,
+I was up at Barkley's to look over an old map he had made of the
+Porcupine country twenty years ago. He couldn't find it. Later he sent
+word he had run across it. I returned and found him dead."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The little missioner nodded, but did not speak.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is embarrassing," Kent went on. "It almost seems as though I ought
+to go through with it, like a sport. When a man loses, it isn't good
+taste to set up a howl. It makes him sort of yellow-backed, you know.
+To play the game according to rules, I suppose I ought to keep quiet
+and allow myself to be hung without making any disturbance. Die game,
+and all that, you know. Then there is the other way of looking at it.
+This poor neck of mine depends on me. It has given me a lot of good
+service. It has been mighty loyal. It has even swallowed eggs on the
+day it thought it was going to die. And I'd be a poor specimen of
+humanity to go back on it now. I want to do that neck a good turn. I
+want to save it. And I'm going to&mdash;if I can!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In spite of the unpleasant tension of the moment, it cheered Father
+Layonne to see this old humor returning into the heart of his friend.
+With him love was an enduring thing. He might grieve for James Kent, he
+might pray for the salvation of his soul, he might believe him guilty,
+yet he still bore for him the affection which was too deeply rooted in
+his heart to be uptorn by physical things or the happenings of chance.
+So the old cheer of his smile came back, and he said:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"To fight for his life is a privilege which God gives to every man,
+Jimmy. I was terrified when I came to you. I believed it would have
+been better if you had died. I can see my error. It will be a terrible
+fight. If you win, I shall be glad. If you lose, I know that you will
+lose bravely. Perhaps you are right. It may be best to see Inspector
+Kedsty before you have had time to think. That point will have its
+psychological effect. Shall I tell him you are prepared to see him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent nodded. "Yes. Now."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Father Layonne went to the door. Even there he seemed to hesitate an
+instant, as if again to call upon Kent to reconsider. Then he opened it
+and went out.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent waited impatiently. His hand, fumbling at his bedclothes, seized
+upon the cloth with which he had wiped his lips, and it suddenly
+occurred to him that it had been a long time since it had shown a fresh
+stain of blood. Now that he knew it was not a deadly thing, the
+tightening in his chest was less uncomfortable. He felt like getting up
+and meeting his visitors on his feet. Every nerve in his body wanted
+action, and the minutes of silence which followed the closing of the
+door after the missioner were drawn out and tedious to him. A quarter
+of an hour passed before he heard returning footsteps, and by the sound
+of them he knew Kedsty was not coming alone. Probably <I>le pere</I> would
+return with him. And possibly Cardigan.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What happened in the next few seconds was somewhat of a shock to him.
+Father Layonne entered first, and then came Inspector Kedsty. Kent's
+eyes shot to the face of the commander of N Division. There was
+scarcely recognition in it. A mere inclination of the head, not enough
+to call a greeting, was the reply to Kent's nod and salute. Never had
+he seen Kedsty's face more like the face of an emotionless sphinx. But
+what disturbed him most was the presence of people he had not expected.
+Close behind Kedsty was McDougal, the magistrate, and behind McDougal
+entered Constables Felly and Brant, stiffly erect and clearly under
+orders. Cardigan, pale and uneasy, came in last, with the stenographer.
+Scarcely had they entered the room when Constable Pelly pronounced the
+formal warning of the Criminal Code of the Royal Northwest Mounted
+Police, and Kent was legally under arrest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had not looked for this. He knew, of course, that the process of the
+Law would take its course, but he had not anticipated this bloodthirsty
+suddenness. He had expected, first of all, to talk with Kedsty as man
+to man. And yet&mdash;it was the Law. He realized this as his eyes traveled
+from Kedsty's rock-like face to the expressionless immobility of his
+old friends, Constables Pelly and Brant. If there was sympathy, it was
+hidden except in the faces of Cardigan and Father Layonne. And Kent,
+exultantly hopeful a little while before, felt his heart grow heavy
+within him as he waited for the moment when he would begin the fight to
+repossess himself of the life and freed which he had lost.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap08"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER VIII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+For some time after the door to Kent's room had closed upon the ominous
+visitation of the Law, young Mercer remained standing in the hall,
+debating with himself whether his own moment had not arrived. In the
+end he decided that it had, and with Kent's fifty dollars in his pocket
+he made for the shack of the old Indian trailer, Mooie. It was an hour
+later when he returned, just in time to see Kent's door open again.
+Doctor Cardigan and Father Layonne reappeared first, followed in turn
+by the blonde stenographer, the magistrate, and Constables Pelly and
+Brant. Then the door closed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Within the room, sweating from the ordeal through which he had passed,
+Kent sat bolstered against his pillows, facing Inspector Kedsty with
+blazing eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've asked for these few moments alone with you, Kedsty, because I
+wanted to talk to you as a man, and not as my superior officer. I am, I
+take it, no longer a member of the force. That being the case, I owe
+you no more respect than I owe to any other man. And I am pleased to
+have the very great privilege of calling you a cursed scoundrel!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kedsty's face was hot, but as his hands clenched slowly, it turned
+redder. Before he could speak, Kent went on.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You have not shown me the courtesy or the sympathy you have had for
+the worst criminals that ever faced you. You amazed every man that was
+in this room, because at one time&mdash;if not now&mdash;they were my friends. It
+wasn't what you said. It was how you said it. Whenever there was an
+inclination on their part to believe, you killed it&mdash;not honestly and
+squarely, by giving me a chance. Whenever you saw a chance for me to
+win a point, you fell back upon the law. And you don't believe that I
+killed John Barkley. I know it. You called me a liar the day I made
+that fool confession. You still believe that I lied. And I have waited
+until we were alone to ask you certain things, for I still have
+something of courtesy left in me, if you haven't. What is your game?
+What has brought about the change in you? Is it&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His right hand clenched hard as a rock as he leaned toward Kedsty.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Is it because of the girl hiding up at your bungalow, Kedsty?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Even in that moment, when he had the desire to strike the man before
+him, it was impossible for him not to admire the stone-like
+invulnerability of Kedsty. He had never heard of another man calling
+Kedsty a scoundrel or dishonest. And yet, except that his faced burned
+more dully red, the Inspector was as impassively calm as ever. Even
+Kent's intimation that he was playing a game, and his direct accusation
+that he was keeping Marette Radisson in hiding at his bungalow, seemed
+to have no disturbing effect on him. For a space he looked at Kent, as
+if measuring the poise of the other's mind. When he spoke, it was in a
+voice so quiet and calm that Kent stared at him in amazement.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't blame you, Kent," he said. "I don't blame you for calling me a
+scoundrel, or anything else you want to. I think I should do the same
+if I were in your place. You think it is incredible, because of our
+previous association, that I should not make every effort to save you.
+I would, if I thought you were innocent. But I don't. I believe you are
+guilty. I cannot see where there is a loophole in the evidence against
+you, as given in your own confession. Why, man, even if I could help to
+prove you innocent of killing John Barkley&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He paused and twisted one of his gray mustaches, half facing the window
+for a moment. "Even if I did that," he went on, "you would still have
+twenty years of prison ahead of you for the worst kind of perjury on
+the face of the earth, perjury committed at a time when you thought you
+were dying! You are guilty, Kent. If not of one thing, then of the
+other. I am not playing a game. And as for the girl&mdash;there is no girl
+at my bungalow."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He turned to the door; and Kent made no effort to stop him. Words came
+to his lips and died there, and for a space after Kedsty had gone he
+stared out into the green forest world beyond his window, seeing
+nothing. Inspector Kedsty, quietly and calmly, had spoken words that
+sent his hopes crashing in ruin about him. For even if he escaped the
+hangman, he was still a criminal&mdash;a criminal of the worst sort,
+perhaps, next to the man who kills another. If he proved that he had
+not killed John Barkley, he would convict himself, at the same time, of
+having made solemn oath to a lie on what he supposed was his death-bed.
+And for that, a possible twenty years in the Edmonton penitentiary! At
+best he could not expect less than ten. Ten years&mdash;twenty years&mdash;in
+prison! That, or hang.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sweat broke out on his face. He did not curse Kedsty now. His anger
+was gone. Kedsty had seen all the time what he, like a fool, had not
+thought of. No matter how the Inspector might feel in that deeply
+buried heart of his, he could not do otherwise than he was doing. He,
+James Kent, who hated a lie above all the things on the earth, was
+kin-as-kisew&mdash;the blackest liar of all, a man who lied when he was
+dying.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And for that lie there was a great punishment. The Law saw with its own
+eyes. It was a single-track affair, narrow-visioned, caring nothing for
+what was to the right or the left. It would tolerate no excuse which he
+might find for himself. He had lied to save a human life, but that life
+the Law itself had wanted. So he had both robbed and outraged the Law,
+even though a miracle saved him the greatest penalty of all.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The weight of the thing crushed him. It was as if for the first time a
+window had opened for him, and he saw what Kedsty had seen. And then,
+as the minutes passed, the fighting spirit in him rose again. He was
+not of the sort to go under easily. Personal danger had always stirred
+him to his greatest depths, and he had never confronted a danger
+greater than this he was facing now. It was not a matter of leaping
+quickly and on the spur of the moment. For ten years his training had
+been that of a hunter of men, and the psychology of the man hunt had
+been his strong point. Always, in seeking his quarry, he had tried
+first to bring himself into a mental sympathy and understanding with
+that quarry. To analyze what an outlaw would do under certain
+conditions and with certain environments and racial inheritances behind
+him was to Kent the premier move in the thrilling game. He had evolved
+rules of great importance for himself, but always he had worked them
+out from the vantage point of the huntsman. Now he began to turn them
+around. He, James Kent, was no longer the hunter, but the hunted, and
+all the tricks which he had mastered must now be worked the other way.
+His woodcraft, his cunning, the fine points he had learned of the game
+of one-against-one would avail him but little when it came to the
+witness chair and a trial.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The open window was his first inspiration. Adventure had been the blood
+of his life. And out there, behind the green forests rolling away like
+the billows of an ocean, lay the greatest adventure of all. Once in
+those beloved forests covering almost the half of a continent, he would
+be willing to die if the world beat him. He could see himself playing
+the game of the hunted as no other man had ever played it before. Let
+him once have his guns and his freedom, with all that world waiting for
+him&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Eagerness gleamed in his eyes, and then, slowly, it died out. The open
+window, after all, was but a mockery. He rolled sideways from his bed
+and partly balanced himself on his feet. The effort made him dizzy. He
+doubted if he could have walked a hundred yards after climbing through
+the window. Instantly another thought leaped into his brain. His head
+was clearing. He swayed across the room and back again, the first time
+he had been on his feet since the half-breed's bullet had laid him out.
+He would fool Cardigan. He would fool Kedsty. As he recovered his
+strength, he would keep it to himself. He would play sick man to the
+limit, and then some night he would take advantage of the open window!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The thought thrilled him as no other thing in the world had ever
+thrilled him before. For the first time he sensed the vast difference
+between the hunter and the hunted, between the man who played the game
+of life and death alone and the one who played it with the Law and all
+its might behind him. To hunt was thrilling. To be hunted was more
+thrilling. Every nerve in his body tingled. A different kind of fire
+burned in his brain. He was the creature who was at bay. The other
+fellow was the hunter now.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He went back to the window and leaned far out. He looked at the forest
+and saw it with new eyes. The gleam of the slowly moving river held a
+meaning for him that it had never held before. Doctor Cardigan, seeing
+him then, would have sworn the fever had returned. His eyes held a
+slumbering fire. His face was flushed. In these moments Kent did not
+see death. He was not visioning the iron bars of a prison. His blood
+pulsed only to the stir of that greatest of all adventures which lay
+ahead of him. He, the best man-hunter in two thousand miles of
+wilderness, would beat the hunters themselves. The hound had turned
+fox, and that fox knew the tricks of both the hunter and the hunted. He
+would win! A world beckoned to him, and he would reach the heart of
+that world. Already there began to flash through his mind memory of the
+places where he could find safety and freedom for all time. No man in
+all the Northland knew its out-of-the-way corners better than he&mdash;its
+unmapped and unexplored places, the far and mysterious patches of <I>terra
+incognita</I>, where the sun still rose and set without permission of the
+Law, and God laughed as in the days when prehistoric monsters fed from
+the tops of trees no taller than themselves. Once through that window,
+with the strength to travel, and the Law might seek him for a hundred
+years without profit to itself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was not bravado in his blood that stirred these thoughts. It was not
+panic or an unsound excitement. He was measuring things even as he
+visioned them. He would go down-river way, toward the Arctic. And he
+would find Marette Radisson! Yes, even though she lived at Barracks at
+Fort Simpson, he would find her! And after that? The question blurred
+all other questions in his mind. There were many answers to it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Knowing that it would be fatal to his scheme if he were found on his
+feet, he returned to his bed. The flush of his exertion and excitement
+was still in his face when Doctor Cardigan came half an hour later.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Within the next few minutes he put Cardigan more at his ease than he
+had been during the preceding day and night. It was, after all, an
+error which made him happier the more he thought about it, he told the
+surgeon. He admitted that at first the discovery that he was going to
+live had horrified him. But now the whole thing bore a different aspect
+for him. As soon as he was sufficiently strong, he would begin
+gathering the evidences for his alibi, and he was confident of proving
+himself innocent of John Barkley's murder.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He anticipated ten years in the Edmonton penitentiary. But what were
+ten years there as compared with forty or fifty under the sod? He wrung
+Cardigan's hand. He thanked him for the splendid care he had given him.
+It was he, Cardigan, who had saved him from the grave, he said&mdash;and
+Cardigan grew younger under his eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I thought you'd look at it differently, Kent," he said, drawing in a
+deep breath. "My God, when I found I had made that mistake&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You figured you were handing me over to the hangman," smiled Kent.
+"It's true I shouldn't have made that confession, old man, if I hadn't
+rated you right next to God Almighty when it came to telling whether a
+man was going to live or die. But we all make slips. I've made 'em. And
+you've got no apology to make. I may ask you to send me good cigars now
+and then while I'm in retirement at Edmonton, and I shall probably
+insist that you come to smoke with me occasionally and tell me the news
+of the rivers. But I'm afraid, old chap, that I'm going to worry you a
+bit more here. I feel queer today, queer inside me. Now it would be a
+topping joke if some other complication should set in and fool us all
+again, wouldn't it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He could see the impression he was making on Cardigan. Again his faith
+in the psychology of the mind found its absolute verification.
+Cardigan, lifted unexpectedly out of the slough of despond by the very
+man whom he expected to condemn him, became from that moment, in the
+face of the mental reaction, almost hypersympathetic. When finally he
+left the room, Kent was inwardly rejoicing. For Cardigan had told him
+it would be some time before he was strong enough to stand on his feet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He did not see Mercer all the rest of that day. It was Cardigan who
+personally brought his dinner and his supper and attended him last at
+night. He asked not to be interrupted again, as he felt that he wanted
+to sleep. There was a guard outside his door now.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Cardigan scowled when he volunteered this information. It was sheer
+nonsense in Kedsty taking such a silly precaution. But he would give
+the guard rubber-soled shoes and insist that he make no sound that
+would disturb him. Kent thanked him, and grinned exultantly when he was
+gone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He waited until his watch told him it was ten o'clock before he began
+the exercise which he had prescribed for himself. Noiselessly he rolled
+out of bed. There was no sensation of dizziness when he stood on his
+feet this time. His head was as clear as a bell. He began experimenting
+by inhaling deeper and still deeper breaths and by straightening his
+chest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was no pain, as he had expected there would be. He felt like
+crying out in his joy. One after the other he stretched up his arms. He
+bent over until the tips of his fingers touched the floor. He crooked
+his knees, leaned from side to side, changed from one attitude to
+another, amazed at the strength and elasticity of his body. Twenty
+times, before he returned to his bed, he walked back and forth across
+his room.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was sleepless. Lying with his back to the pillows he looked out into
+the starlight, watching for the first glow of the moon and listening
+again to the owls that had nested in the lightning-shriven tree. An
+hour later he resumed his exercise.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was on his feet when through his window he heard the sound of
+approaching voices and then of running feet. A moment later some one
+was pounding at a door, and a loud voice shouted for Doctor Cardigan.
+Kent drew cautiously nearer the window. The moon had risen, and he saw
+figures approaching, slowly, as if weighted under a burden. Before they
+turned out of his vision, he made out two men bearing some heavy object
+between them. Then came the opening of a door, other voices, and after
+that an interval of quiet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He returned to his bed, wondering who the new patient could be.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was breathing easier after his exertion. The fact that he was
+feeling keenly alive, and that the thickening in his chest was
+disappearing, flushed him with elation. An unbounded optimism possessed
+him. It was late when he fell asleep, and he slept late. It was
+Mercer's entrance into his room that roused him. He came in softly,
+closed the door softly, yet Kent heard him. The moment he pulled
+himself up, he knew that Mercer had a report to make, and he also saw
+that something upsetting had happened to him. Mercer was a bit excited.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I beg pardon for waking you, sir," he said, leaning close over Kent,
+as though fearing the guard might be listening at the door. "But I
+thought it best for you to hear about the Indian, sir."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Indian?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, sir&mdash;Mooie, sir. I am quite upset over it, Mr. Kent. He told me
+early last evening that he had found the scow on which the girl was
+going down-river. He said it was hidden in Kim's Bayou."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Kim's Bayou! That was a good hiding-place, Mercer!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A very good place of concealment indeed, sir. As soon as it was dark,
+Mooie returned to watch. What happened to him I haven't fully
+discovered, sir. But it must have been near midnight when he staggered
+up to Crossen's place, bleeding and half out of his senses. They
+brought him here, and I watched over him most of the night. He says the
+girl went aboard the scow and that the scow started down-river. That
+much I learned, sir. But all the rest he mumbles in a tongue I can not
+understand. Crossen says it's Cree, and that old Mooie believes devils
+jumped on him with clubs down at Kim's Bayou. Of course they must have
+been men. I don't believe in Mooie's devils, sir."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nor I," said Kent, the blood stirring strangely in his veins. "Mercer,
+it simply means there was some one cleverer than old Mooie watching
+that trail."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With a curiously tense face Mercer was looking cautiously toward the
+door. Then he leaned still lower over Kent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"During his mumblings, when I was alone with him, I heard him speak a
+name, sir. Half a dozen times, sir&mdash;and it was&mdash;<I>Kedsty</I>!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent's fingers gripped the young Englishman's hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You heard <I>that</I>, Mercer?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am sure I could not have been mistaken, sir. It was repeated a
+number of times."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent fell back against his pillows. His mind was working swiftly. He
+knew that behind an effort to appear calm Mercer was uneasy over what
+had happened.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We mustn't let this get out, Mercer," he said. "If Mooie should be
+badly hurt&mdash;should die, for instance&mdash;and it was discovered that you
+and I&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He knew he had gone far enough to give effect to his words. He did not
+even look at Mercer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Watch him closely, old man, and report to me everything that happens.
+Find out more about Kedsty, if you can. I shall advise you how to act.
+It is rather ticklish, you know&mdash;for you! And"&mdash;he smiled at
+Mercer&mdash;"I'm unusually hungry this morning. Add another egg, will you,
+Mercer? Three instead of two, and a couple of extra slices of toast.
+And don't let any one know that my appetite is improving. It may be
+best for both of us&mdash;especially if Mooie should happen to die.
+Understand, old man?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I&mdash;I think I do, sir," replied Mercer, paling at the grimly smiling
+thing he saw in Kent's eyes. "I shall do as you say, sir."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When he had gone, Kent knew that he had accurately measured his man.
+True to a certain type, Mercer would do a great deal for fifty
+dollars&mdash;under cover. In the open he was a coward. And Kent knew the
+value of such a man under certain conditions. The present was one of
+those conditions. From this hour Mercer would be a priceless asset to
+his scheme for personal salvation.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap09"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER IX
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+That morning Kent ate a breakfast that would have amazed Doctor
+Cardigan and would have roused a greater caution in Inspector Kedsty
+had he known of it. While eating he strengthened the bonds already
+welded between himself and Mercer. He feigned great uneasiness over the
+condition of Mooie, who he knew was not fatally hurt because Mercer had
+told him there was no fracture. But if he should happen to die, he told
+Mercer, it would mean something pretty bad for them, if their part in
+the affair leaked out.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As for himself, it would make little difference, as he was "in bad"
+anyway. But he did not want to see a good friend get into trouble on
+his account. Mercer was impressed. He saw himself an instrument in a
+possible murder affair, and the thought terrified him. Even at best,
+Kent told him, they had given and taken bribes, a fact that would go
+hard with them unless Mooie kept his mouth shut. And if the Indian knew
+anything out of the way about Kedsty, it was mighty important that he,
+Mercer, get hold of it, for it might prove a trump card with them in
+the event of a showdown with the Inspector of Police. As a matter of
+form, Mercer took his temperature. It was perfectly normal, but it was
+easy for Kent to persuade a notation on the chart a degree above.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Better keep them thinking I'm still pretty sick," he assured Mercer.
+"They won't suspect there is anything between us then."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mercer was so much in sympathy with the idea that he suggested adding
+another half-degree.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was a splendid day for Kent. He could feel himself growing stronger
+with each hour that passed. Yet not once during the day did he get out
+of his bed, fearing that he might be discovered. Cardigan visited him
+twice and had no suspicion of Mercer's temperature chart. He dressed
+his wound, which was healing fast. It was the fever which depressed
+him. There must be, he said, some internal disarrangement which would
+soon clear itself up. Otherwise there seemed to be no very great reason
+why Kent should not get on his feet. He smiled apologetically.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Seems queer to say that, when a little while ago I was telling you it
+was time to die," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That night, after ten o'clock, Kent went through his setting-up
+exercises four times. He marveled even more than the preceding night at
+the swiftness with which his strength was returning. Half a dozen times
+the little devils of eagerness working in his blood prompted him to
+take to the window at once.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For three days and nights thereafter he kept his secret and added to
+his strength. Doctor Cardigan came in to see him at intervals, and
+Father Layonne visited him regularly every afternoon. Mercer was his
+most frequent visitor. On the third day two things happened to create a
+little excitement. Doctor Cardigan left on a four-day journey to a
+settlement fifty miles south, leaving Mercer in charge&mdash;and Mooie came
+suddenly out of his fever into his normal senses again. The first event
+filled Kent with joy. With Cardigan out of the way there would be no
+immediate danger of the discovery that he was no longer a sick man. But
+it was the recovery of Mooie from the thumping he had received about
+the head that delighted Mercer. He was exultant. With the quick
+reaction of his kind he gloated over the fact before Kent. He let it be
+known that he was no longer afraid, and from the moment Mooie was out
+of danger his attitude was such that more than once Kent would have
+taken keen pleasure in kicking him from the room. Also, from the hour
+he was safely in charge of Doctor Cardigan's place, Mercer began to
+swell with importance. Kent saw the new danger and began to humor him.
+He flattered him. He assured him that it was a burning shame Cardigan
+had not taken him into partnership. He deserved it. And, in justice to
+himself, Mercer should demand that partnership when Cardigan returned.
+He, Kent, would talk to Father Layonne about it, and the missioner
+would spread the gospel of what ought to be among others who were
+influential at the Landing. For two days he played with Mercer as an
+angler plays with a treacherous fish. He tried to get Mercer to
+discover more about Mooie's reference to Kedsty. But the old Indian had
+shut up like a clam.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He was frightened when I told him he had said things about the
+Inspector," Mercer reported. "He disavowed everything. He shook his
+head&mdash;no, no, no. He had not seen Kedsty. He knew nothing about him. I
+can do nothing with him, Kent."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had dropped his "sirs," also his servant-like servility. He helped
+to smoke Kent's cigars with the intimacy of proprietorship, and with
+offensive freedom called him "Kent." He spoke of the Inspector as
+"Kedsty," and of Father Layonne as "the little preacher." He swelled
+perceptibly, and Kent knew that each hour of that swelling added to his
+own danger.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He believed that Mercer was talking. Several times a day he heard him
+in conversation with the guard, and not infrequently Mercer went down
+to the Landing, twirling a little reed cane that he had not dared to
+use before. He began to drop opinions and information to Kent in a
+superior sort of way. On the fourth day word came that Doctor Cardigan
+would not return for another forty-eight hours, and with unblushing
+conceit Mercer intimated that when he did return he would find big
+changes. Then it was that in the stupidity of his egotism he said:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Kedsty has taken a great fancy to me, Kent. He's a square old top,
+when you take him right. Had me over this afternoon, and we smoked a
+cigar together. When I told him that I looked in at your window last
+night and saw you going through a lot of exercises, he jumped up as if
+some one had stuck a pin in him. 'Why, I thought he was sick&mdash;<I>bad</I>!' he
+said. And I let him know there were better ways of making a sick man
+well than Cardigan's. 'Give them plenty to eat,' I said. 'Let 'em live
+normal,' I argued. 'Look at Kent, for instance,' I told him. 'He's been
+eating like a bear for a week, and he can turn somersaults this
+minute!' That topped him over, Kent. I knew it would be a bit of a
+surprise for him, that I should do what Cardigan couldn't do. He walked
+back and forth, black as a hat&mdash;thinking of Cardigan, I suppose. Then
+he called in that Pelly chap and gave him something which he wrote on a
+piece of paper. After that he shook hands with me, slapped me on the
+shoulder most intimately, and gave me another cigar. He's a keen old
+blade, Kent. He doesn't need more than one pair of eyes to see what
+I've done since Cardigan went away!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If ever Kent's hands had itched to get at the throat of a human being,
+the yearning convulsed his fingers now. At the moment when he was about
+to act Mercer had betrayed him to Kedsty! He turned his face away so
+that Mercer could not see what was in his eyes. Under his body he
+concealed his clenched hands. Within himself he fought against the
+insane desire that was raging in his blood, the desire to leap on
+Mercer and kill him. If Cardigan had reported his condition to Kedsty,
+it would have been different. He would have accepted the report as a
+matter of honorable necessity on Cardigan's part. But Mercer&mdash;a toad
+blown up by his own wind, a consummate fiend who would sell his best
+friend, a fool, an ass&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a space he held himself rigid as a stone, his face turned away from
+Mercer. His better sense won. He knew that his last chance depended
+upon his coolness now. And Mercer unwittingly helped him to win by
+slyly pocketing a couple of his cigars and leaving the room. For a
+minute or two Kent heard him talking to the guard outside the door.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He sat up then. It was five o'clock. How long ago was it that Mercer
+had seen Kedsty? What was the order that the Inspector had written on a
+sheet of paper for Constable Pelly? Was it simply that he should be
+more closely watched, or was it a command to move him to one of the
+cells close to the detachment office? If it was the latter, all his
+hopes and plans were destroyed. His mind flew to those cells.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Landing had no jail, not even a guard-house, though the members of
+the force sometimes spoke of the cells just behind Inspector Kedsty's
+office by that name. The cells were of cement, and Kent himself had
+helped to plan them! The irony of the thing did not strike him just
+then. He was recalling the fact that no prisoner had ever escaped from
+those cement cells. If no action were taken before six o'clock, he was
+sure that it would be postponed until the following morning. It was
+possible that Kedsty's order was for Pelly to prepare a cell for him.
+Deep in his soul he prayed fervently that it was only a matter of
+preparation. If they would give him one more night&mdash;just one!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His watch tinkled the half-hour. Then a quarter of six. Then six. His
+blood ran feverishly, in spite of the fact that he possessed the
+reputation of being the coolest man in N Division. He lighted his last
+cigar and smoked it slowly to cover the suspense which he feared
+revealed itself in his face, should any one come into his room. His
+supper was due at seven. At eight it would begin to get dusk. The moon
+was rising later each night, and it would not appear over the forests
+until after eleven. He would go through his window at ten o'clock. His
+mind worked swiftly and surely as to the method of his first night's
+flight. There were always a number of boats down at Crossen's place. He
+would start in one of these, and by the time Mercer discovered he was
+gone, he would be forty miles on his way to freedom. Then he would set
+his boat adrift, or hide it, and start cross-country until his trail
+was lost. Somewhere and in some way he would find both guns and food.
+It was fortunate that he had not given Mercer the other fifty dollars
+under his pillow.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At seven Mercer came with his supper. A little gleam of disappointment
+shot into his pale eyes when he found the last cigar gone from the box.
+Kent saw the expression and tried to grin good-humoredly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm going to have Father Layonne bring me up another box in the
+morning, Mercer," he said. "That is, if I can get hold of him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You probably can," snapped Mercer. "He doesn't live far from barracks,
+and that's where you are going. I've got orders to have you ready to
+move in the morning."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent's blood seemed for an instant to flash into living flame. He drank
+a part of his cup of coffee and said then, with a shrug of his
+shoulders: "I'm glad of it, Mercer. I'm anxious to have the thing over.
+The sooner they get me down there, the quicker they will take action.
+And I'm not afraid, not a bit of it. I'm bound to win. There isn't a
+chance in a hundred that they can convict me." Then he added: "And I'm
+going to have a box of cigars sent up to you, Mercer. I'm grateful to
+you for the splendid treatment you have given me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+No sooner had Mercer gone with the supper things than Kent's knotted
+fist shook itself fiercely in the direction of the door.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My God, how I'd like to have you out in the woods&mdash;alone&mdash;for just one
+hour!" he whispered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Eight o'clock came, and nine. Two or three times he heard voices in the
+hall, probably Mercer talking with the guard. Once he thought he heard
+a rumble of thunder, and his heart throbbed joyously. Never had he
+welcomed a storm as he would have welcomed it tonight. But the skies
+remained clear. Not only that, but the stars as they began to appear
+seemed to him more brilliant than he had ever seen them before. And it
+was very still. The rattle of a scow-chain came up to him from the
+river as though it were only a hundred yards away. He knew that it was
+one of Mooie's dogs he heard howling over near the sawmill. The owls,
+flitting past his window, seemed to click their beaks more loudly than
+last night. A dozen times he fancied he could hear the rippling voice
+of the river that very soon was to carry him on toward freedom.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The river! Every dream and aspiration found its voice for him in that
+river now. Down it Marette Radisson had gone. And somewhere along it,
+or on the river beyond, or the third river still beyond that, he would
+find her. In the long, tense wait between the hours of nine and ten he
+brought the girl back into his room again. He recalled every gesture
+she had made, every word she had spoken. He felt the thrill of her hand
+on his forehead, her kiss, and in his brain her softly spoken words
+repeated themselves over and over again, "I think that if you lived
+very long I should love you." And as she had spoken those words <I>she
+knew that he was not going to die</I>!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Why, then, had she gone away? Knowing that he was going to live, why
+had she not remained to help him if she could? Either she had spoken
+the words in jest, or&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A new thought flashed into his mind. It almost drew a cry from his
+lips. It brought him up tense, erect, his heart pounding. Had she gone
+away? Was it not possible that she, too, was playing a game in giving
+the impression that she was leaving down-river on the hidden scow? Was
+it conceivable that she was playing that game against Kedsty? A
+picture, clean-cut as the stars in the sky, began to outline itself in
+his mental vision. It was clear, now, what Mooie's mumblings about
+Kedsty had signified. Kedsty had accompanied Marette to the scow. Mooie
+had seen him and had given the fact away in his fever. Afterward he had
+clamped his mouth shut through fear of the "big man" of the Law. But
+why, still later, had he almost been done to death? Mooie was a
+harmless creature. He had no enemies.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was no one at the Landing who would have assaulted the old
+trailer, whose hair was white with age. No one, unless it was Kedsty
+himself&mdash;Kedsty at bay, Kedsty in a rage. Even that was inconceivable.
+Whatever the motive of the assault might be, and no matter who had
+committed it, Mooie had most certainly seen the Inspector of Police
+accompany Marette Radisson to the scow. And the question which Kent
+found it impossible to answer was, had Marette Radisson really gone
+down the river on that scow?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was almost with a feeling of disappointment that he told himself it
+was possible she had not. He wanted her on the river. He wanted her
+going north and still farther north. The thought that she was mixed up
+in some affair that had to do with Kedsty was displeasing to him. If
+she was still in the Landing or near the Landing, it could no longer be
+on account of Sandy McTrigger, the man his confession had saved. In his
+heart he prayed that she was many days down the Athabasca, for it was
+there&mdash;and only there&mdash;that he would ever see her again. And his
+greatest desire, next to his desire for his freedom, was to find her.
+He was frank with himself in making that confession. He was more than
+that. He knew that not a day or night would pass that he would not
+think or dream of Marette Radisson. The wonder of her had grown more
+vivid for him with each hour that passed, and he was sorry now that he
+had not dared to touch her hair. She would not have been offended with
+him, for she had kissed him&mdash;after he had killed the impulse to lay his
+hand on that soft glory that had crowned her head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then the little bell in his watch tinkled the hour of ten! He sat
+up with a jerk. For a space he held his breath while he listened. In
+the hall outside his room there was no sound. An inch at a time he drew
+himself off his bed until he stood on his feet. His clothes hung on
+hooks in the wall, and he groped his way to them so quietly that one
+listening at the crack of his door would not have heard him. He dressed
+swiftly. Then he made his way to the window, looked out, and listened.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the brilliant starlight he saw nothing but the two white stubs of
+the lightning-shattered trees in which the owls lived. And it was very
+still. The air was fresh and sweet in his face. In it he caught the
+scent of the distant balsams and cedars. The world, wonderful in its
+night silence, waited for him. It was impossible for him to conceive of
+failure or death out there, and it seemed unreal and trivial that the
+Law should expect to hold him, with that world reaching out its arms to
+him and calling him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Assured that the moment for action was at hand, he moved quickly. In
+another ten seconds he was through the window, and his feet were on the
+ground. For a space he stood out clear in the starlight. Then he
+hurried to the end of the building and hid himself in the shadow. The
+swiftness of his movement had brought him no physical discomfort, and
+his blood danced with the thrill of the earth under his feet and the
+thought that his wound must be even more completely healed than he had
+supposed. A wild exultation swept over him. He was free! He could see
+the river now, shimmering and talking to him in the starlight, urging
+him to hurry, telling him that only a little while ago another had gone
+north on the breast of it, and that if he hastened it would help him to
+overtake her. He felt the throb of new life in his body. His eyes shone
+strangely in the semi-gloom.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It seemed to him that only yesterday Marette had gone. She could not be
+far away, even now. And in these moments, with the breath of freedom
+stirring him with the glory of new life, she was different for him from
+what she had ever been. She was a part of him. He could not think of
+escape without thinking of her. She became, in these precious moments,
+the living soul of his wilderness. He felt her presence. The thought
+possessed him that somewhere down the river she was thinking of him,
+waiting, expecting him. And in that same flash he made up his mind that
+he would not discard the boat, as he had planned; he would conceal
+himself by day, and float downstream by night, until at last he came to
+Marette Radisson. And then he would tell her why he had come. And after
+that&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He looked toward Crossen's place. He would make straight for it,
+openly, like a man bent on a mission there was no reason to conceal. If
+luck went right, and Crossen was abed, he would be on the river within
+fifteen minutes. His blood ran faster as he took his first step out
+into the open starlight. Fifty yards ahead of him was the building
+which Cardigan used for his fuel. Safely beyond that, no one could see
+him from the windows of the hospital. He walked swiftly. Twenty paces,
+thirty, forty&mdash;and he stopped as suddenly as the half-breed's bullet
+had stopped him weeks before. Round the end of Cardigan's fuel house
+came a figure. It was Mercer. He was twirling his little cane and
+traveling quietly as a cat. They were not ten feet apart, yet Kent had
+not heard him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mercer stopped. The cane dropped from his hand. Even in the starlight
+Kent could see his face turn white.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't make a sound, Mercer," he warned. "I'm taking a little exercise
+in the open air. If you cry out, I'll kill you!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He advanced slowly, speaking in a voice that could not have been heard
+at the windows behind him. And then a thing happened that froze the
+blood in his veins. He had heard the scream of every beast of the great
+forests, but never a scream like that which came from Mercer's lips
+now. It was not the cry of a man. To Kent it was the voice of a fiend,
+a devil. It did not call for help. It was wordless. And as the horrible
+sound issued from Mercer's mouth he could see the swelling throat and
+bulging eyes that accompanied the effort. They made him think of a
+snake, a cobra.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The chill went out of his blood, replaced by a flame of hottest fire.
+He forgot everything but that this serpent was in his path. Twice he
+had stood in his way. And he hated him. He hated him with a virulency
+that was death. Neither the call of freedom nor the threat of prison
+could keep him from wreaking vengeance now. Without a sound he was at
+Mercer's throat, and the scream ended in a choking shriek. His fingers
+dug into flabby flesh, and his clenched fist beat again and again into
+Mercer's face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He went to the ground, crushing the human serpent under him. And he
+continued to strike and choke as he had never struck or choked another
+man, all other things overwhelmed by his mad desire to tear into pieces
+this two-legged English vermin who was too foul to exist on the face of
+the earth.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And he still continued to strike&mdash;even after the path lay clear once
+more between him and the river.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap10"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER X
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+What a terrible and inexcusable madness had possessed him, Kent
+realized the instant he rose from Mercer's prostrate body. Never had
+his brain flamed to that madness before. He believed at first that he
+had killed Mercer. It was neither pity nor regret that brought him to
+his senses. Mercer, a coward and a traitor, a sneak of the lowest type,
+had no excuse for living. It was the thought that he had lost his
+chance to reach the river that cleared his head as he swayed over
+Mercer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He heard running feet. He saw figures approaching swiftly through the
+starlight. And he was too weak to fight or run. The little strength he
+had saved up, and which he had planned to use so carefully in his
+flight, was gone. His wound, weeks in bed, muscles unaccustomed to the
+terrific exertion he had made in these moments of his vengeance, left
+him now panting and swaying as the running footsteps came nearer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His head swam. For a space he was sickeningly dizzy, and in the first
+moment of that dizziness, when every drop of blood in his body seemed
+rushing to his brain, his vision was twisted and his sense of direction
+gone. In his rage he had overexerted himself. He knew that something
+had gone wrong inside him and that he was helpless. Even then his
+impulse was to stagger toward the inanimate Mercer and kick him, but
+hands caught him and held him. He heard an amazed voice, then
+another&mdash;and something hard and cold shut round his wrists like a pair
+of toothless jaws.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was Constable Carter, Inspector Kedsty's right-hand man about
+barracks, that he saw first; then old Sands, the caretaker at
+Cardigan's place. Swiftly as he had turned sick, his brain grew clear,
+and his blood distributed itself evenly again through his body. He held
+up his hands. Carter had slipped a pair of irons on him, and the
+starlight glinted on the shining steel. Sands was bending over Mercer,
+and Carter was saying in a low voice:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's too bad, Kent. But I've got to do it. I saw you from the window
+just as Mercer screamed. Why did you stop for <I>him</I>?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mercer was getting up with the assistance of Sands. He turned a bloated
+and unseeing face toward Kent and Carter. He was blubbering and
+moaning, as though entreating for mercy in the fear that Kent had not
+finished with him. Carter pulled Kent away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There's only one thing for me to do now," he said. "It isn't pleasant.
+But the law says I must take you to barracks."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the sky Kent saw the stars clearly again, and his lungs were
+drinking in the cool air as in the wonderful moments before his
+encounter with Mercer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had lost. And it was Mercer who had made him lose. Carter felt the
+sudden tightening of his muscles as he walked with a hand on his arm.
+And Kent shut his teeth close and made no answer to what Carter had
+said, except that Carter heard something which he thought was a sob
+choked to death in the other's throat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Carter, too, was a man bred of the red blood of the North, and he knew
+what was in Kent's heart. For only by the breadth of a hair had Kent
+failed in his flight.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Pelly was on duty at barracks, and it was Pelly who locked him in one
+of the three cells behind the detachment office. When he was gone, Kent
+sat down on the edge of his prison cot and for the first time let the
+agony of his despair escape in a gasping breath from between his lips.
+Half an hour ago the world had reached out its arms to him, and he had
+gone forth to its welcome, only to have the grimmest tragedy of all his
+life descend upon him like the sword of Damocles. For this was real
+tragedy. Here there was no hope. The tentacles of the law had him in
+their grip, and he could no longer dream of escape.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Ghastly was the thought that it was he, James Kent, who had supervised
+the building of these cells! Acquainted with every trick and stratagem
+of the prisoner plotting for his freedom, he had left no weak point in
+their structure. Again he clenched his hands, and in his soul he cursed
+Mercer as he went to the little barred window that overlooked the river
+from his cell. The river was near now. He could hear the murmur of it.
+He could see its movement, and that movement, played upon by the stars,
+seemed now a writhing sort of almost noiseless laughter taunting him in
+his folly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He went back to his cot, and in his despair buried his face in his
+hands. In the half-hour after that he did not raise his head. For the
+first time in his life he knew that he was beaten, so utterly beaten
+that he no more had the desire to fight, and his soul was dark with the
+chaos of the things he had lost.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At last he opened his eyes to the blackness of his prison room, and he
+beheld a marvelous thing. Across the gloom of the cell lay a shaft of
+golden fire. It was the light of the rising moon coming through his
+little, steel-barred window. To Kent it had crept into his cell like a
+living thing. He watched it, fascinated. His eyes followed it to the
+foot-square aperture, and there, red and glorious as it rose over the
+forests, the moon itself filled the world. For a space he saw nothing
+but that moon crowding the frame of his window. And as he rose to his
+feet and stood where his face was flooded in the light of it, he felt
+stirring within him the ghosts of his old hopes. One by one they rose
+up and came to life. He held out his hands, as if to fill them with the
+liquid glow; his heart beat faster in that glory of the moonrise. The
+taunting murmur of the river changed once more into hopeful song, his
+fingers closed tightly around the bars, and the fighting spirit rose in
+him again. As that spirit surged stronger, beating down his despair,
+driving the chaos out of his brain, he watched the moon as it climbed
+higher, changing from the red of the lower atmosphere to the yellow
+gold of the greater heights, marveling at the miracle of light and
+color that had never failed to stir him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then he laughed. If Pelly or Carter had heard him, they would have
+wondered if he was mad. It was madness of a sort&mdash;the madness of
+restored confidence, of an unlimited faith, of an optimism that was
+bound to make dreams come true. Again he looked beyond the bars of his
+cell. The world was still there; the river was there; all the things
+that were worth fighting for were there. And he would fight. Just how,
+he did not try to tell himself now. And then he laughed again, softly,
+a bit grimly, for he saw the melancholy humour of the fact that he had
+built his own prison.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He sat down again on the edge of his cot, and the whimsical thought
+struck him that all those he had brought to this same cell, and who had
+paid the first of their penance here, must be laughing at him now in
+the spirit way. In his mental fancy a little army of faces trooped
+before him, faces dark and white, faces filled with hatred and despair,
+faces brave with the cheer of hope and faces pallid with the dread of
+death. And of these ghosts of his man-hunting prowess it was Anton
+Fournet's face that came out of the crowd and remained with him. For he
+had brought Anton to this same cell&mdash;Anton, the big Frenchman, with his
+black hair, his black beard, and his great, rolling laugh that even in
+the days when he was waiting for death had rattled the paper-weights on
+Kedsty's desk.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Anton rose up like a god before Kent now. He had killed a man, and like
+a brave man he had not denied it. With a heart in his great body as
+gentle as a girl's, Anton had taken pride in the killing. In his prison
+days he sang songs to glorify it. He had killed the white man from
+Chippewyan who had stolen his neighbor's wife! Not <I>his</I> wife, but his
+neighbor's! For Anton's creed was, "Do unto others as you would have
+others do unto you," and he had loved his neighbor with the great
+forest love of man for man. His neighbor was weak, and Anton was strong
+with the strength of a bull, so that when the hour came, it was Anton
+who had measured out vengeance. When Kent brought Anton in, the giant
+had laughed first at the littleness of his cell, then at the
+unsuspected strength of it, and after that he had laughed and sung
+great, roaring songs every day of the brief tenure of life that was
+given him. When he died, it was with the smiling glory in his face of
+one who had cheaply righted a great wrong.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent would never forget Anton Fournet. He had never ceased to grieve
+that it had been his misfortune to bring Anton in, and always, in close
+moments, the thought of Anton, the stout-hearted, rallied him back to
+courage. Never would he be the man that Anton Fournet had been, he told
+himself many times. Never would his heart be as great or as big, though
+the Law had hanged Anton by the neck until the soul was choked out of
+his splendid body, for it was history that Anton Fournet had never
+harmed man, woman, or child until he set out to kill a human snake and
+the Law placed its heel upon him and crushed him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And tonight Anton Fournet came into the cell again and sat with Kent on
+the cot where he had slept many nights, and the ghosts of his laughter
+and his song filled Kent's ears, and his great courage poured itself
+out in the moonlit prison room so that at last, when Kent stretched
+himself on the cot to sleep, it was with the knowledge that the soul of
+the splendid dead had given him a strength which it was impossible to
+have gained from the living. For Anton Fournet had died smiling,
+laughing, singing&mdash;and it was of Anton Fournet that he dreamed when he
+fell asleep. And in that dream came also the vision of a man called
+Dirty Fingers&mdash;and with it inspiration.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap11"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XI
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Where a bit of the big river curved inward like the tongue of a
+friendly dog, lapping the shore at Athabasca Landing, there still
+remained Fingers' Row&mdash;nine dilapidated, weather-worn, and
+crazily-built shacks put there by the eccentric genius who had foreseen
+a boom ten years ahead of its time. And the fifth of these nine,
+counting from either one end or the other, was named by its owner,
+Dirty Fingers himself, the Good Old Queen Bess. It was a shack covered
+with black tar paper, with two windows, like square eyes, fronting the
+river as if always on the watch for something. Across the front of this
+shack Dirty Fingers had built a porch to protect himself from the rain
+in springtime, from the sun in Summer time, and from the snow in the
+months of Winter. For it was here that Dirty Fingers sat out all of
+that part of his life which was not spent in bed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Up and down two thousand miles of the Three Rivers was Dirty Fingers
+known, and there were superstitious ones who believed that little gods
+and devils came to sit and commune with him in the front of the
+tar-papered shack. No one was so wise along those rivers, no one was so
+satisfied with himself, that he would not have given much to possess
+the many things that were hidden away in Dirty Fingers' brain. One
+would not have suspected the workings of that brain by a look at Dirty
+Fingers on the porch of his Good Old Queen Bess. He was a great soft
+lump of a man, a giant of flabbiness. Sitting in his smooth-worn,
+wooden armchair, he was almost formless. His head was huge, his hair
+uncut and scraggy, his face smooth as a baby's, fat as a cherub's, and
+as expressionless as an apple. His folded arms always rested on a huge
+stomach, whose conspicuousness was increased by an enormous watch-chain
+made from beaten nuggets of Klondike gold, and Dirty Fingers' thumb and
+forefinger were always twiddling at this chain. How he had come by the
+name of Dirty Fingers, when his right name was Alexander Toppet
+Fingers, no one could definitely say, unless it was that he always bore
+an unkempt and unwashed appearance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Whatever the quality of the two hundred and forty-odd pounds of flesh
+in Dirty Fingers' body, it was the quality of his brain that made
+people hold him in a sort of awe. For Dirty Fingers was a lawyer, a
+wilderness lawyer, a forest bencher, a legal strategist of the trail,
+of the river, of the great timber-lands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Stored away in his brain was every rule of equity and common law of the
+great North country. For his knowledge he went back two hundred years.
+He knew that a law did not die of age, that it must be legislated to
+death, and out of the moldering past he had dug up every trick and trap
+of his trade. He had no law-books. His library was in his head, and his
+facts were marshaled in pile after pile of closely-written,
+dust-covered papers in his shack. He did not go to court as other
+lawyers; and there were barristers in Edmonton who blessed him for that.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His shack was his tabernacle of justice. There he sat, hands folded,
+and gave out his decisions, his advice, his sentences. He sat until
+other men would have gone mad. From morning until night, moving only
+for his meals or to get out of heat or storm, he was a fixture on the
+porch of the Good Old Queen Bess. For hours he would stare at the
+river, his pale eyes never seeming to blink. For hours he would remain
+without a move or a word. One constant companion he had, a dog, fat,
+emotionless, lazy, like his master. Always this dog was sleeping at his
+feet or dragging himself wearily at his heels when Dirty Fingers
+elected to make a journey to the little store where he bartered for
+food and necessities.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was Father Layonne who came first to see Kent in his cell the
+morning after Kent's unsuccessful attempt at flight. An hour later it
+was Father Layonne who traveled the beaten path to the door of Dirty
+Fingers' shack. If a visible emotion of pleasure ever entered into
+Dirty Fingers' face, it was when the little missioner came occasionally
+to see him. It was then that his tongue let itself loose, and until
+late at night they talked of many things of which other men knew but
+little. This morning Father Layonne did not come casually, but
+determinedly on business, and when Dirty Fingers learned what that
+business was, he shook his head disconsolately, folded his fat arms
+more tightly over his stomach, and stated the sheer impossibility of
+his going to see Kent. It was not his custom. People must come to him.
+And he did not like to walk. It was fully a third of a mile from his
+shack to barracks, possibly half a mile. And it was mostly upgrade! If
+Kent could be brought to him&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In his cell Kent waited. It was not difficult for him to hear voices in
+Kedsty's office when the door was open, and he knew that the Inspector
+did not come in until after the missioner had gone on his mission to
+Dirty Fingers. Usually he was at the barracks an hour or so earlier.
+Kent made no effort to figure out a reason for Kedsty's lateness, but
+he did observe that after his arrival there was more than the usual
+movement between the office door and the outside of the barracks. Once
+he was positive that he heard Cardigan's voice, and then he was equally
+sure that he heard Mercer's. He grinned at that. He must be wrong, for
+Mercer would be in no condition to talk for several days. He was glad
+that a turn in the hall hid the door of the detachment office from him,
+and that the three cells were in an alcove, safely out of sight of the
+curious eyes of visitors. He was also glad that he had no other
+prisoner for company. His situation was one in which he wanted to be
+alone. To the plan that was forming itself in his mind, solitude was as
+vital as the cooperation of Alexander Toppet Fingers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Just how far he could win that cooperation was the problem which
+confronted him now, and he waited anxiously for the return of Father
+Layonne, listening for the sound of his footsteps in the outer hall.
+If, after all, that inspirational thought of last night came to
+nothing, if Fingers should fail him&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He shrugged his shoulders. If that happened, he could see no other
+chance. He would have to go on and take his medicine at the hands of a
+jury. But if Fingers played up to the game&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He looked out on the river again, and again it was the river that
+seemed to answer him. If Fingers played with him, they would beat
+Kedsty and the whole of N Division! And in winning he would prove out
+the greatest psychological experiment he had ever dared to make. The
+magnitude of the thing, when he stopped to think of it, was a little
+appalling, but his faith was equally large. He did not consider his
+philosophy at all supernatural. He had brought it down to the level of
+the average man and woman.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He believed that every man and woman possessed a subliminal
+consciousness which it was possible to rouse to tremendous heights if
+the right psychological key was found to fit its particular lock, and
+he believed he possessed the key which fitted the deeply-buried and
+long-hidden thing in Dirty Fingers' remarkable brain. Because he
+believed in this metaphysics which he had not read out of Aristotle, he
+had faith that Fingers would prove his salvation. He felt growing in
+him stronger than ever a strange kind of elation. He felt better
+physically than last night. The few minutes of strenuous action in
+which he had half killed Mercer had been a pretty good test, he told
+himself. It had left no bad effect, and he need no longer fear the
+reopening of his wound.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A dozen times he had heard a far door open and close. Now he heard it
+again, and a few moments later it was followed by a sound which drew a
+low cry of satisfaction from him. Dirty Fingers, because of overweight
+and lack of exercise, had what he called an "asthmatic wind," and it
+was this strenuous working of his lungs that announced his approach to
+Kent. His dog was also afflicted and for the same reasons, so that when
+they traveled together there was some rivalry between them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We're both bad put out for wind, thank God," Dirty Fingers would say
+sometimes. "It's a good thing, for if we had more of it, we'd walk
+farther, and we don't like walking."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The dog was with Fingers now, also Father Layonne, and Pelly. Pelly
+unlocked the cell, then relocked it again after Fingers and the dog
+entered. With a nod and a hopeful look the missioner returned with
+Pelly to the detachment office. Fingers wiped his red face with a big
+handkerchief, gasping deeply for breath. Togs, his dog, was panting as
+if he had just finished the race of his life.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A difficult climb," wheezed Fingers. "A most difficult climb."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He sat down, rolling out like a great bag of jelly in the one chair in
+the cell, and began to fan himself with his hat. Kent had already taken
+stock of the situation. In Fingers' florid countenance and in his
+almost colorless eyes he detected a bit of excitement which Fingers was
+trying to hide. Kent knew what it meant. Father Layonne had found it
+necessary to play his full hand to lure Fingers up the hill, and had
+given him a hint of what it was that Kent had in store for him. Already
+the psychological key had begun to work.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent sat down on the edge of his cot and grinned sympathetically. "It
+hasn't always been like this, has it, Fingers?" he said then, leaning a
+bit forward and speaking with a sudden, low-voiced seriousness. "There
+was a time, twenty years ago, when you didn't puff after climbing a
+hill. Twenty years make a big difference, sometimes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, sometimes," agreed Fingers in a wheezy whisper.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Twenty years ago you were&mdash;a fighter."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It seemed to Kent that a deeper color came into Dirty Fingers' pale
+eyes in the few seconds that followed these words.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A fighter," he repeated. "Most men were fighters in those days of the
+gold rushes, weren't they, Fingers? I've heard a lot of the old stories
+about them in my wanderings, and some of them have made me thrill. They
+weren't afraid to die. And most of them were pretty white when it came
+to a show-down. You were one of them, Fingers. I heard the story one
+Winter far north. I've kept it to myself, because I've sort of had the
+idea that you didn't want people to know or you would have told it
+yourself. That's why I wanted you to come to see me, Fingers. You know
+the situation. It's either the noose or iron bars for me. Naturally one
+would seek for assistance among those who have been his friends. But I
+do not, with the exception of Father Layonne. Just friendship won't
+save me, not the sort of friendship we have today. That's why I sent
+for you. Don't think that I am prying into secrets that are sacred to
+you, Fingers. God knows I don't mean it that way. But I've got to tell
+you of a thing that happened a long time ago, before you can
+understand. You haven't forgotten&mdash;you will never forget&mdash;Ben Tatman?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Kent spoke the name, a name which Dirty Fingers had heard no lips
+but his own speak aloud in nearly a quarter of a century, a strange and
+potent force seemed suddenly to take possession of the forest bencher's
+huge and flabby body. It rippled over and through him like an
+electrical voltaism, making his body rigid, stiffening what had seemed
+to be fat into muscle, tensing his hands until they knotted themselves
+slowly into fists. The wheeze went out of his breath, and it was the
+voice of another man who answered Kent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You have heard&mdash;about&mdash;Ben Tatman?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. I heard it away up in the Porcupine country. They say it happened
+twenty years ago or more. This Tatman, so I was told, was a young
+fellow green from San Francisco&mdash;a bank clerk, I think&mdash;who came into
+the gold country and brought his wife with him. They were both
+chuck-full of courage, and the story was that each worshiped the ground
+the other walked on, and that the girl had insisted on being her
+husband's comrade in adventure. Of course neither guessed the sort of
+thing that was ahead of them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then came that death Winter in Lost City. You know better than I what
+the laws were in those days, Fingers. Food failed to come up. Snow came
+early, the thermometer never rose over fifty below zero for three
+straight months, and Lost City was an inferno of starvation and death.
+You could go out and kill a man, then, and perhaps get away with it,
+Fingers. But if you stole so much as a crust of bread or a single bean,
+you were taken to the edge of the camp and told to go! And that meant
+certain death&mdash;death from hunger and cold, more terrible than shooting
+or hanging, and for that reason it was the penalty for theft.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Tatman wasn't a thief. It was seeing his young wife slowly dying of
+hunger, and his horror at the thought of seeing her fall, as others
+were falling, a victim to scurvy, that made him steal. He broke into a
+cabin in the dead of night and stole two cans of beans and a pan of
+potatoes, more precious than a thousand times their weight in gold. And
+he was caught. Of course, there was the wife. But those were the days
+when a woman couldn't save a man, no matter how lovely she was. Tatman
+was taken to the edge of camp and given his pack and his gun&mdash;but no
+food. And the girl, hooded and booted, was at his side, for she was
+determined to die with him. For her sake Tatman had lied up to the last
+minute, protesting his innocence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But the beans and the potatoes were found in his cabin, and that was
+evidence enough. And then, just as they were about to go straight out
+into the blizzard that meant death within a few hours, then&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent rose to his feet, and walked to the little window, and stood
+there, looking out. "Fingers, now and then a superman is born on earth.
+And a superman was there in that crowd of hunger-stricken and
+embittered men. At the last moment he stepped out and in a loud voice
+declared that Tatman was innocent and that he was guilty. Unafraid, he
+made a remarkable confession. He had stolen the beans and the potatoes
+and had slipped them into the Tatman cabin when they were asleep. Why?
+Because he wanted to save the woman from hunger! Yes, he lied, Fingers.
+He lied because he loved the wife that belonged to another man&mdash;lied
+because in him there was a heart as true as any heart God ever made. He
+lied! And his lie was a splendid thing. He went out into that blizzard,
+strengthened by a love that was greater than his fear of death, and the
+camp never heard of him again. Tatman and his wife returned to their
+cabin and lived. Fingers&mdash;" Kent whirled suddenly from the window.
+"Fingers&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Fingers, like a sphynx, sat and stared at Kent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You were that man," Kent went on, coming nearer to him. "You lied,
+because you loved a woman, and you went out to face death because of
+that woman. The men at Lost City didn't know it, Fingers. The husband
+didn't know it. And the girl, that girl-wife you worshiped in secret,
+didn't dream of it! But that was the truth, and you know it deep down
+in your soul. You fought your way out. You lived! And all these years,
+down here on your porch, you've been dreaming of a woman, of the girl
+you were willing to die for a long time ago. Fingers, am I right? And
+if I am, will you shake hands?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slowly Fingers had risen from his chair. No longer were his eyes dull
+and lifeless, but flaming with a fire that Kent had lighted again after
+many years. And he reached out a hand and gripped Kent's, still staring
+at him as though something had come back to him from the dead.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I thank you, Kent, for your opinion of that man," he said. "Somehow,
+you haven't made me&mdash;ashamed. But it was only the shell of a man that
+won out after that day when I took Tatman's place. Something happened.
+I don't know what. But&mdash;you see me now. I never went back into the
+diggings. I degenerated. I became what I am."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you are today just what you were when you went out to die for Mary
+Tatman," cried Kent. "The same heart and the same soul are in you.
+Wouldn't you fight again today for her?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A stifled cry came from Fingers' lips. "My God, yes, Kent&mdash;I would!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And that's why I wanted you, of all men, to come to me, Fingers," Kent
+went on swiftly. "To you, of all the men on earth, I wanted to tell my
+story. And now, will you listen to it? Will you forgive me for bringing
+up this memory that must be precious to you, only that you might more
+fully understand what I am going to say? I don't want you to think of
+it as a subterfuge on my part. It is more than that. It is&mdash;Fingers, is
+it inspiration? Listen, and tell me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And for a long time after that James Kent talked, and Fingers listened,
+the soul within him writhing and dragging itself back into fierce life,
+demanding for the first time in many years the something which it had
+once possessed, but which it had lost. It was not the lazy, mysterious,
+silent Dirty Fingers who sat in the cell with Kent. In him the spirit
+of twenty years ago had roused itself from long slumber, and the thrill
+of it pounded in his blood. Two-Fisted Fingers they had called him
+then, and he was Two-Fisted Fingers in this hour with Kent. Twice
+Father Layonne came to the head of the cell alcove, but turned back
+when he heard the low and steady murmur of Kent's voice. Nothing did
+Kent keep hidden, and when he had finished, something that was like the
+fire of a revelation had come into Fingers' face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My God!" he breathed deeply. "Kent, I've been sitting down there on my
+porch a long time, and a good many strange things have come to me, but
+never anything like this. Oh, if it wasn't for this accursed flesh of
+mine!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He jumped from his chair more quickly than he had moved in ten years,
+and he laughed as he had not laughed in all that time. He thrust out a
+great arm and doubled it up, like a prizefighter testing his muscle.
+"Old? I'm not old! I was only twenty-eight when that happened up there,
+and I'm forty-eight now. That isn't old. It's what is in me that's
+grown old. I'll do it, Kent! I'll do it, if I hang for it!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent fairly leaped upon him. "God bless you!" he cried huskily. "God
+bless you, Fingers! Look! Look at that!" He pulled Fingers to the
+little window, and together they looked out upon the river, shimmering
+gloriously under a sun-filled sky of blue. "Two thousand miles of it,"
+he breathed. "Two thousand miles of it, running straight through the
+heart of that world we both have known! No, you're not old, Fingers.
+The things you used to know are calling you again, as they are calling
+me, for somewhere off there are the ghosts of Lost City, ghosts&mdash;and
+realities!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ghosts&mdash;and hopes," said Fingers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hopes make life," softly whispered Kent, as if to himself. And then,
+without turning from the window, his hand found Fingers' and clasped it
+tight. "It may be that mine, like yours, will never come true. But
+they're fine to think about, Fingers. Funny, isn't it, that their names
+should be so strangely alike&mdash;Mary and Marette? I say, Fingers&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Heavy footsteps sounded in the hall. Both turned from the window as
+Constable Pelly came to the door of the cell. They recognized this
+intimation that their time was up, and with his foot Fingers roused his
+sleeping dog.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was a new Fingers who walked back to the river five minutes later,
+and it was an amazed and discomfited dog who followed at his heels, for
+at times the misshapen and flesh-ridden Togs was compelled to trot for
+a few steps to keep up. And Fingers did not sink into the chair on the
+shady porch when he reached his shack. He threw off his coat and
+waistcoat and rolled up his sleeves, and for hours after that he was
+buried deep in the accumulated masses of dust-covered legal treasures
+stored away in hidden corners of the Good Old Queen Bess.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap12"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+That morning Kent had heard wild songs floating up from the river, and
+now he felt like shouting forth his own joy and exultation in song. He
+wondered if he could hide the truth from the eyes of others, and
+especially from Kedsty if he came to see him. It seemed that some
+glimmer of the hope blazing within him must surely reveal itself, no
+matter how he tried to hold it back. He felt the vital forces of that
+hope more powerful within him now than in the hour when he had crept
+from the hospital window with freedom in his face. For then he was not
+sure of himself. He had not tested his physical strength. And in the
+present moment, fanned by his unbounded optimism, the thought came to
+him that perhaps it was good luck and not bad that had thrown Mercer in
+his way. For with Fingers behind him now, his chances for a clean
+get-away were better. He would not be taking a hazardous leap chanced
+on the immediate smiles of fortune. He would be going deliberately,
+prepared.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He blessed the man who had been known as Dirty Fingers, but whom he
+could not think of now in the terms of that name. He blessed the day he
+had heard that chance story of Fingers, far north. He no longer
+regarded him as the fat pig of a man he had been for so many years. For
+he looked upon the miracle of a great awakening. He had seen the soul
+of Fingers lift itself up out of its tabernacle of flesh and grow young
+again; he had seen stagnant blood race with new fire. He had seen
+emotions roused that had slept for long years. And he felt toward
+Fingers, in the face of that awakening, differently than he had felt
+toward any other living man. His emotion was one of deep and embracing
+comradeship.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Father Layonne did not come again until afternoon, and then he brought
+information that thrilled Kent. The missioner had walked down to see
+Fingers, and Fingers was not on his porch. Neither was the dog. He had
+knocked loudly on the door, but there was no answer. Where was Fingers?
+Kent shook his head, feigning an anxious questioning, but inside him
+his heart was leaping. He knew! He told Father Layonne he was afraid
+all Fingers' knowledge of the law could do him but little good, that
+Fingers had told him as much, and the little missioner went away
+considerably depressed. He would talk with Fingers again, he said, and
+offer certain suggestions he had in mind. Kent chuckled when he was
+gone. How shocked <I>le Pere</I> would be if he, too, could know!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next morning Father Layonne came again, and his information was
+even more thrilling to Kent. The missioner was displeased with Fingers.
+Last night, noticing a light in his shack, he had walked down to see
+him. And he had found three men closely drawn up about a table with
+Dirty Fingers. One of them was Ponte, the half-breed; another was Kinoo
+the outcast Dog Rib from over on Sand Creek; the third was Mooie, the
+old Indian trailer. Kent wanted to jump up and shout, for those three
+were the three greatest trailers in all that part of the Northland.
+Fingers had lost no time, and he wanted to voice his approbation like a
+small boy on the Fourth of July.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But his face, seen by Father Layonne, betrayed none of the excitement
+that was in his blood. Fingers had told him he was going into a timber
+deal with these men, a long-distance deal where there would be much
+traveling, and that he could not interrupt himself just then to talk
+about Kent. Would Father Layonne come again in the morning? And he had
+gone again that morning, and Fingers' place was locked up!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All the rest of the day Kent waited eagerly for Fingers. For the first
+time Kedsty came to see him, and as a matter of courtesy said he hoped
+Fingers might be of assistance to him. He did not mention Mercer and
+remained no longer than a couple of minutes, standing outside the cell.
+In the afternoon Doctor Cardigan came and shook hands warmly with Kent.
+He had found a tough job waiting for him, he said. Mercer was all cut
+up, in a literal as well as a mental way. He had five teeth missing,
+and he had to have seventeen stitches taken in his face. It was
+Cardigan's opinion that some one had given him a considerable
+beating&mdash;and he grinned at Kent. Then he added in a whisper,
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My God, Kent, how I wish you had made it!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was four o'clock when Fingers came. Even less than yesterday did he
+look like the old Fingers. He was not wheezing. He seemed to have lost
+flesh. His face was alive. That was what struck Kent&mdash;the new life in
+it. There was color in his eyes. And Togs, the dog, was not with him.
+He smiled when he shook hands with Kent, and nodded, and chuckled. And
+Kent, after that, gripped him by the shoulders and shook him in his
+silent joy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I was up all last night," said Fingers in a low voice. "I don't dare
+move much in the day, or people will wonder. But, God bless my soul!&mdash;I
+did move last night, Kent. I must have walked ten miles, more or less.
+And things are coming&mdash;coming!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And Ponte, Kinoo, Mooie&mdash;?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Are working like devils," whispered Fingers. "It's the only way, Kent.
+I've gone through all my law, and there's nothing in man-made law that
+can save you. I've read your confession, and I don't think you could
+even get off with the penitentiary. A noose is already tied around your
+neck. I think you'd hang. We've simply got to get you out some other
+way. I've had a talk with Kedsty. He has made arrangements to have you
+sent to Edmonton two weeks from tomorrow. We'll need all that time, but
+it's enough."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For three days thereafter Fingers came to Kent's cell each afternoon,
+and each time was looking better. Something was swiftly putting
+hardness into his flesh and form into his body. The second day he told
+Kent that he had found the way at last, and that when the hour came,
+escape would be easy, but he thought it best not to let Kent in on the
+little secret just yet. He must be patient and have faith. That was the
+chief thing, to have faith at all times, no matter what happened.
+Several times he emphasized that "no matter what happens." The third
+day he puzzled Kent. He was restless, a bit nervous. He still thought
+it best not to tell Kent what his scheme was, until to-morrow. He was
+in the cell not more than five or ten minutes, and there was an unusual
+pressure in the grip of his hand when he bade Kent good-by. Somehow
+Kent did not feel so well when he had gone. He waited impatiently for
+the next day. It came, and hour after hour he listened for Fingers'
+heavy tread in the hall. The morning passed. The afternoon lengthened.
+Night came, and Fingers had not come. Kent did not sleep much between
+the hour when he went to bed and morning. It was eleven o'clock when
+the missioner made his call. Before he left, Kent gave him a brief note
+for Fingers. He had just finished his dinner, and Carter had taken the
+dishes away, when Father Layonne returned. A look at his face, and Kent
+knew that he bore unpleasant tidings.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Fingers is an&mdash;an apostate," he said, his lips twitching as if to keep
+back a denunciation still more emphatic. "He was sitting on his porch
+again this morning, half asleep, and says that after a great deal of
+thought he has come to the definite opinion that he can do nothing for
+you. He read your note and burned it with a match. He asked me to tell
+you that the scheme he had in mind was too risky&mdash;for him. He says he
+won't come up again. And&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The missioner was rubbing his brown, knotted hands together raspingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Go on," said Kent a little thickly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He has also sent Inspector Kedsty the same word," finished Father
+Layonne. "His word to Kedsty is that he can see no fighting chance for
+you, and that it is useless effort on his part to put up a defense for
+you. Jimmy!" His hand touched Kent's arm gently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent's face was white. He faced the window, and for a space he did not
+see. Then with pencil and paper he wrote again to Fingers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was late in the afternoon before Father Layonne returned with an
+answer. Again it was verbal. Fingers had read his note and had burned
+it with a match. He was particular that the last scrap of it was turned
+into ash, the missioner said. And he had nothing to say to Kent that he
+had not previously said. He simply could not go on with their plans.
+And he requested Kent not to write to him again. He was sorry, but that
+was his definite stand in the matter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Even then Kent could not bring himself to believe. All the rest of the
+day he tried to put himself in Fingers' brain, but his old trick of
+losing his personality in that of another failed him this time. He
+could find no reason for the sudden change in Fingers, unless it was
+what Fingers had frankly confessed to Father Layonne&mdash;fear. The
+influence of mind, in this instance, had failed in its assault upon a
+mass of matter. Fingers' nerve had gone back on him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The fifth day Kent rose from his cot with hope still not quite dead in
+his heart. But that day passed and the sixth, and the missioner brought
+word that Fingers was the old Dirty Fingers again, sitting from morning
+till night on his porch.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the seventh day came the final crash to Kent's hopes. Kedsty's
+program had changed. He, Kent, was to start for Edmonton the following
+morning under charge of Pelly and a special constable!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After this Kent felt a strange change come over him. Years seemed to
+multiply themselves in his body. His mind, beaten back, no longer
+continued in its old channels of thought. The thing pressed upon him
+now as fatalistic. Fingers had failed him. Fortune had failed him.
+Everything had failed, and for the first time in the weeks of his
+struggle against death and a thing worse than death, he cursed himself.
+There was a limit to optimism and a limit to hope. His limit was
+reached.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the afternoon of this seventh day came a depressing gloom. It was
+filled with a drizzling rain. Hour after hour this drizzle kept up,
+thickening as the night came. He ate his supper by the light of a cell
+lamp. By eight o'clock it was black outside. In that blackness there
+was an occasional flash of lightning and rumble of thunder. On the roof
+of the barracks the rain beat steadily and monotonously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His watch was in his hand&mdash;it was a quarter after nine o'clock, when he
+heard the door at the far exit of the hall open and close. He had heard
+it a dozen times since supper and paid no attention to it, but this
+time it was followed by a voice at the detachment office that hit him
+like an electrical shock. Then, a moment later, came low laughter. It
+was a woman who laughed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He stood up. He heard the detachment office door close, and silence
+followed. The watch in his hand seemed ticking off the seconds with
+frantic noise. He shoved it into his pocket and stood staring out into
+the prison alcove. A few minutes later the office door opened again.
+This time it was not closed. He heard distinctly a few light,
+hesitating footsteps, and his heart seemed to stop its beating. They
+came to the head of the lighted alcove, and for perhaps the space of a
+dozen seconds there was silence again. Then they advanced.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Another moment, and Kent was staring through the bars into the glorious
+eyes of Marette Radisson!
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap13"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XIII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+In that moment Kent did not speak. He made no sound. He gave no sign of
+welcome, but stood in the middle of his cell, staring. If life had hung
+upon speech in those few seconds, he would have died, but everything he
+would have said, and more, was in his face. The girl must have seen it.
+With her two hands she was gripping at the bars of the cell and looking
+through at him. Kent saw that her face was pale in the lamp glow. In
+that pallor her violet eyes were like pools of black. The hood of her
+dripping raincoat was thrown partly back, and against the whiteness of
+her cheeks her hair glistened wet, and her long lashes were heavy with
+the rain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent, without moving over the narrow space between them, reached out
+his hands and found his voice. "Marette!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her hands had tightened about the bars until they were bloodless. Her
+lips were parted. She was breathing quickly, but she did not smile; she
+made no response to his greeting, gave no sign even of recognition.
+What happened after that was so sudden and amazing that his heart
+stopped dead still. Without warning she stepped back from the cell and
+began to scream and then drew away from him, still facing him and still
+screaming, as if something had terrified her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent heard the crash of a chair in the detachment office, excited
+voices, and the running of feet. Marette Radisson had withdrawn to the
+far corner of the alcove, and as Carter and Pelly ran toward her, she
+stood, a picture of horror, pointing at Kent's cell. The two constables
+rushed past her. Close behind them followed the special officer
+detailed to take Kent to Edmonton.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent had not moved. He was like one petrified. Close up against the
+bars came the faces of Pelly, Carter, and the special constable, filled
+with the expressions of men who had expected to look in upon tragedy.
+And then, behind their backs, Kent saw the other thing happen. Swift as
+a flash Marette Radisson's hand went in and out of her raincoat, and at
+the backs of the three men she was leveling a revolver! Not only did
+Kent see that swift change, but the still swifter change that came into
+her face. Her eyes shot to his just once, and they were filled with a
+laughing, exultant fire. With one mighty throb Kent's heart seemed to
+leap out through the bars of his prison, and at the look in his face
+and eyes Carter swung suddenly around.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Please don't make any disturbance, gentlemen," said Marette Radisson.
+"The first man that makes a suspicious move, I shall kill!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her voice was calm and thrilling. It had a deadly ring in it. The
+revolver in her hand was held steadily. It was a slim-barreled, black
+thing. The very color of it was menacing. And behind it were the girl's
+eyes, pools of flame. The three men were facing them now, shocked to
+speechlessness. Automatically they seemed to obey her command to throw
+up their hands. Then she leveled her grim little gun straight at
+Pelly's heart.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You have the key," she said. "Unlock the cell!" Felly fumbled and
+produced the key. She watched him closely. Then suddenly the special
+constable dropped his arms with a coarse laugh. "A pretty trick," he
+said, "but the bluff won't work!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, but it will!" came the reply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The little black gun was shifted to him, even as the constable's
+fingers touched his revolver holster. With half-smiling lips, Marette's
+eyes blazed at him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Please put up your hands," she commanded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The constable hesitated; then his fingers gripped the butt of his gun.
+Kent, holding his breath, saw the almost imperceptible tensing of
+Marette's body and the wavering of Pelly's arms over his head. Another
+moment and he, too, would have called the bluff if it were that. But
+that moment did not come. From the slim, black barrel of the girl's
+revolver leaped forth a sudden spurt of smoke and flame, and the
+special constable lurched back against the cell bars, caught himself as
+he half fell, and then stood with his pistol arm hanging limp and
+useless at his side. He had not made a sound, but his face was twisted
+in pain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Open the cell door!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A second time the deadly-looking little gun was pointed straight at
+Pelly's heart. The half-smile was gone from the girl's lips now. Her
+eyes blazed a deeper fire. She was breathing quickly, and she leaned a
+little toward Pelly, repeating her command. The words were partly
+drowned in a sudden crash of thunder. But Pelly understood. He saw her
+lips form the words, and half heard,
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Open the door, or I shall kill you!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He no longer hesitated. The key grated in the lock, and Kent himself
+flung the door wide open and sprang out. He was quick to see and seize
+upon opportunity and swift to act. The astounding audacity of the
+girl's ruse, her clever acting in feigning horror to line the guards up
+at the cell door and the thrilling decisiveness with which she had used
+the little black gun in her hand set every drop of blood in his body
+afire. No sooner was he outside his cell than he was the old Jim Kent,
+fighting man. He whipped Carter's automatic out of its holster and,
+covering Pelly and the special constable, relieved them of their guns.
+Behind him he heard Marette's voice, calm and triumphant,
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lock them in the cell, Mr. Kent!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He did not look at her, but swung his gun on Pelly and the special
+constable, and they backed through the door into the cell. Carter had
+not moved. He was looking straight at the girl, and the little black
+gun was leveled at his breast. Pelly and the wounded man did not see,
+but on Carter's lips was a strange smile. His eyes met Kent's, and
+there was revealed for an instant a silent flash of comradeship and an
+unmistakable something else. Carter was glad! It made Kent want to
+reach out and grip his hand, but in place of that he backed him into
+the cell, turned the key in the lock, and with the key in his hand
+faced Marette Radisson. Her eyes were shining gloriously. He had never
+seen such splendid, fighting eyes, nor the birdlike swiftness with
+which she turned and ran down the hall, calling him to follow her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was only a step behind her in passing Kedsty's office. She reached
+the outer door and opened it. It was pitch-dark outside, and a deluge
+of rain beat into their faces. He observed that she did not replace the
+hood of her raincoat when she darted out. As he closed the door, her
+hand groped to his arm and from that found his hand. Her fingers clung
+to his tightly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He did not ask questions as they faced the black chaos of rain. A
+rending streak of lightning revealed her for an instant, her bare head
+bowed to the wind. Then came a crash of thunder that shook the earth
+under their feet, and her fingers closed more tightly about his hand.
+And in that crash he heard her voice, half laughing, half broken,
+saying,
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm afraid&mdash;of thunder!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In that storm his laugh rang out, a great, free, joyous laugh. He
+wanted to stop in that instant, sweep her up into his arms, and carry
+her. He wanted to shout like an insane man in his mad joy. And a moment
+before she had risked everything in facing three of the bravest men in
+the service and had shot one of them! He started to say something, but
+she increased her speed until she was almost running.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was not leading Jim in the direction of the river, but toward the
+forest beyond Kedsty's bungalow. Not for an instant did she falter in
+that drenched and impenetrable darkness. There was something imperative
+in the clasp of her fingers, even though they tightened perceptibly
+when the thunder crashed. They gave Kent the conviction that there was
+no doubt in her mind as to the point she was striving for. He took
+advantage of the lightning, for each time it gave him a glimpse of her
+bare, wet head bowed to the storm, her white profile, and her slim
+figure fighting over the sticky earth under her feet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was this presence of her, and not the thought of escape, that
+exalted him now. She was at his side. Her hand lay close in his. The
+lightning gave him glimpses of her. He felt the touch of her shoulder,
+her arm, her body, as they drew close together. The life and warmth and
+thrill of her seemed to leap into his own veins through the hand he
+held. He had dreamed of her. And now suddenly she had become a part of
+him, and the glory of it rode overwhelmingly over all other emotions
+that were struggling in his brain&mdash;the glory of the thought that it was
+she who had come to him in the last moment, who had saved him, and who
+was now leading him to freedom through the crash of storm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At the crest of a low knoll between barracks and Kedsty's bungalow she
+stopped for the first time. He had there, again, the almost
+irresistible impulse to reach out in the darkness and take her into his
+arms, crying out to her of his joy, of a happiness that had come to him
+greater even than the happiness of freedom. But he stood, holding her
+hand, his tongue speechless, and he was looking at her when the
+lightning revealed her again. In a rending flash it cut open the night
+so close that the hiss of it was like the passing of a giant rocket,
+and involuntarily she shrank against him, and her free hand caught his
+arm at the instant thunder crashed low over their heads. His own hand
+groped out, and in the blackness it touched for an instant her wet face
+and then her drenched hair.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Marette," he cried, "where are we going?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Down there," came her voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her hand had left his arm, and he sensed that she was pointing, though
+he could not see. Ahead of them was a chaotic pit of gloom, a sea of
+blackness, and in the heart of that sea he saw a light. He knew that it
+was a lamp in one of Kedsty's windows and that Marette was guiding
+herself by that light when she started down the slope with her hand
+still in his. That she had made no effort to withdraw it made him
+unconscious of the almost drowning discomfort of the fresh deluge of
+rain that beat their faces. One of her fingers had gripped itself
+convulsively about his thumb, like a child afraid of falling. And each
+time the thunder crashed that soft hold on his thumb tightened, and
+Kent's soul acclaimed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They drew swiftly nearer to the light, for it was not far from the
+knoll to Kedsty's place. Kent's mind leaped ahead. A little west by
+north from the inspector's bungalow was Kim's Bayou and it was
+undoubtedly to the forest trail over which she had gone at least once
+before, on the night of the mysterious assault upon Mooie, that Marette
+was leading him. Questions began to rush upon him now, immediate
+demanding questions. They were going to the river. They must be going
+to the river. It was the quickest and surest way of escape. Had Marette
+prepared for that? And was she going with him?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had no time to answer. Their feet struck the gravel path leading to
+the door of Kedsty's place, and straight up this path the girl turned,
+straight toward the light blazing in the window. Then, to his
+amazement, he heard in the sweep of storm her voice crying out in glad
+triumph,
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We're home!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Home! His breath came in a sudden gulp. He was more than astounded. He
+was shocked. Was she mad or playing an amazingly improper joke? She had
+freed him from a cell to lead him to the home of the Inspector of
+Police, the deadliest enemy the world now held for him. He stopped, and
+Marette Radisson tugged at his hand, pulling him after her, insisting
+that he follow. She was clutching his thumb as though she thought he
+might attempt to escape.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is safe, M'sieu Jeems," she cried. "Don't be afraid!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+M'sieu Jeems! And the laughing note of mockery in her voice! He rallied
+himself and followed her up the three steps to the door. Her hand found
+the latch, the door opened, and swiftly they were inside. The lamp in
+the window was close to them, but for a space he could not see because
+of the water in his eyes. He blinked it out, drew a hand across his
+face, and looked at Marette. She stood three or four paces from him.
+Her face was very white, and she was panting as if hard-run for breath,
+but her eyes were shining, and she was smiling at him. The water was
+running from her in streams.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are wet," she said. "And I am afraid you will catch cold. Come
+with me!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again she was making fun of him just as she had made fun of him at
+Cardigan's! She turned, and he ran upstairs behind her. At the top she
+waited for him, and as he came up, she reached out her hand, as if
+apologizing for having taken it from him when they entered the
+bungalow. He held it again as she led him down the hall to a door
+farthest from the stair. This she opened, and they entered. It was dark
+inside, and the girl withdrew her hand again, and Kent heard her moving
+across the room. In that darkness a new and thrilling emotion possessed
+him. The air he was breathing was not the air he had breathed in the
+hall. In it was the sweet scent of flowers, and of something else&mdash;the
+faint and intangible perfume of a woman's room. He waited, staring. His
+eyes were wide when a match leaped into flame in Marette's fingers.
+Then he stood in the glow of a lamp.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He continued to stare in the stupidity of a shock to which he was not
+accustomed. Marette, as if to give him time to acquaint himself with
+his environment, was taking off her raincoat. Under it her slim little
+figure was dry, except where the water had run down from her uncovered
+head to her shoulders. He noticed that she wore a short skirt, and
+boots, adorably small boots of splendidly worked caribou. And then
+suddenly she came toward him with both hands reaching out to him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Please shake hands and say you're glad," she said. "Don't look
+so&mdash;so&mdash;frightened. This is my room and you are safe here."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He held her hands tight, staring into the wonderful, violet eyes that
+were looking at him with the frank and unembarrassed directness of a
+child's. "I&mdash;I don't understand," he struggled. "Marette, where is
+Kedsty?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He should be returning very soon."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And he knows you are here, of course?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She nodded. "I have been here for a month."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent's hands closed tighter about hers. "I&mdash;I don't understand," he
+repeated. "Tonight Kedsty will know that it was you who rescued me and
+you who shot Constable Willis. Good God, we must lose no time in
+getting away!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There is great reason why Kedsty dare not betray my presence in his
+house," she said quietly. "He would die first! And he will not suspect
+that I have brought you to my room, that an escaped murderer is hiding
+under the very roof of the Inspector of Police! They will search for
+you everywhere but here! Isn't it splendid? He planned it all, every
+move, even to the screaming in front of your cell&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You mean&mdash;Kedsty?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She withdrew her hands and stepped back from him, and again he saw in
+her eyes a flash of the fire that had come into them when she leveled
+her gun at the three men in the prison alcove. "No, not Kedsty. He
+would hang you, and he would kill me, if he dared. I mean that great,
+big, funny-looking friend of yours, M'sieu Fingers!"
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap14"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XIV
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+The manner in which Kent stared at Marette Radisson after her
+announcement that it was Dirty Fingers who had planned his escape must
+have been, he thought afterward, little less than imbecile. He had
+wronged Fingers, he believed. He had called him a coward and a
+backslider. In his mind he had reviled him for helping to raise his
+hopes to the highest pitch, only to smash them in the end. And all the
+time Dirty Fingers had been planning this! Kent began to grin. The
+thing was clear in a moment&mdash;that is, the immediate situation was
+clear&mdash;or he thought it was. But there were questions&mdash;one, ten, a
+hundred of them. They wanted to pile over the end of his tongue,
+questions that had little or nothing to do with Kedsty. He saw nothing
+now but Marette.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She had begun to take down her hair. It fell about her in wet, shining
+masses. Kent had never seen anything like it. It clung to her face, her
+neck, her shoulders and arms, and shrouded her slender body to her
+hips, lovely in its confusion. Little drops of water glistened in it
+like diamonds in the lamp glow, trickling down and dropping to the
+floor. It was like a glowing coat of velvety sable beaten by storm.
+Marette ran her arms up through it, shaking it out in clouds, and a
+mist of rain leaped out from it, some of it striking Kent in the face.
+He forgot Fingers. He forgot Kedsty. His brain flamed only with the
+electrifying nearness of her. It was the thought of her that had
+inspired the greatest hope in him. It was his dreams of her, somewhere
+on the Big River, that had given him his great courage to believe in
+the ultimate of things. And now time and space had taken a leap
+backward. She was not four or five hundred miles north. There was no
+long quest ahead of him. She was here, within a few feet of him,
+tossing the wet from that glorious hair he had yearned to touch,
+brushing it out now, with her back toward him, in front of her mirror.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And as he sat there, uttering no word, looking at her, the demands of
+the immense responsibility that had fallen upon him and of the great
+fight that lay ahead pounded within him with naked fists. Fingers had
+planned. She had executed. It was up to him to finish.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He saw her, not as a creature to win, but as a priceless possession.
+Her fight had now become his fight. The rain was beating against the
+window near him. Out there was blackness, the river, the big world. His
+blood leaped with the old fighting fire. They were going tonight; they
+must be going tonight! Why should they wait? Why should they waste time
+under Kedsty's roof when freedom lay out there for the taking? He
+watched the swift movements of her hand, listened to the silken rustle
+of the brush as it smoothed out her long hair. Bewilderment, reason,
+desire for action fought inside him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly she faced him again. "It has just this moment occurred to me,"
+she said, "that you haven't said 'Thank you.'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So suddenly that he startled her he was at her side. He did not
+hesitate this time, as he had hesitated in his room at Cardigan's
+place. He caught her two hands in his, and with them he felt the soft,
+damp crush of her hair between his fingers. Words tumbled from his
+lips. He could not remember afterward all that he said. Her eyes
+widened, and they never for an instant left his own. Thank her! He told
+her what had happened to him&mdash;in the heart and soul of him&mdash;from the
+hour she had come to him at Cardigan's. He told her of dreams and
+plans, of his determination to find her again after he had escaped, if
+it took him all his life. He told her of Mercer, of his discovery of
+her visit to Kim's Bayou, of his scheme to follow her down the Three
+Rivers, to seek for her at Fort Simpson, to follow her to the Valley of
+Silent Men, wherever it was. Thank her! He held her hands so tight they
+hurt, and his voice trembled. Under the cloud of her hair a slow fire
+burned in Marette Radisson's cheeks. But it did not show in her eyes.
+They looked at him so steadily, so unfalteringly, that his own face
+burned before he had finished what was in his mind to say, and he freed
+her hands and stepped back from her again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Forgive me for saying all that," he entreated. "But it's true. You
+came to me there, at Cardigan's place, like something I'd always
+dreamed about, but never expected to find. And you came to me again, at
+the cell, like&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I know how I came," she interrupted him. "Through the mud and the
+rain, Mr. Kent. And it was so black I lost my way and was terrified to
+think that I might not find barracks. I was half an hour behind Mr.
+Fingers' schedule. For that reason I think Inspector Kedsty may return
+at any moment, and you must not talk so loud&mdash;or so much."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lord!" he breathed in a whisper. "I have said a lot in a short time,
+haven't I? But it isn't a hundredth part of what I want to get out of
+my system. I won't ask the million questions that want to be asked. But
+I must know why we are here. Why have we come to Kedsty's? Why didn't
+we make for the river? There couldn't be a better night to get away."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But it is not so good as the fifth night from now will be," she said,
+resuming the task of drying her hair. "On that night you may go to the
+river. Our plans were a little upset, you know, by Inspector Kedsty's
+change in the date on which you were to leave for Edmonton.
+Arrangements have been made so that on the fifth night you may leave
+safely."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I shall remain here." And then she added in a low voice that struck
+his heart cold, "I shall remain to pay Kedsty the price which he will
+ask for what has happened tonight."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good God!" he cried. "Marette!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She turned on him swiftly. "No, no, I don't mean that he will hurt me,"
+she cried, a fierce little note in her voice. "I would kill him before
+that! I'm sorry I told you. But you must not question me. You shall
+not!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was trembling. He had never seen her excited like that before, and
+as she stood there before him, he knew that he was not afraid for her
+in the way that had flashed into his mind. She had not spoken empty
+words. She would fight. She would kill, if it was necessary to kill.
+And he saw her, all at once, as he had not seen her before. He
+remembered a painting which he had seen a long time ago in Montreal. It
+was <I>L'Esprit de la Solitude</I>&mdash;The Spirit of the Wild&mdash;painted by Conné,
+the picturesque French-Canadian friend of Lord Strathcona and Mount
+Royal, and a genius of the far backwoods who had drawn his inspiration
+from the heart of the wilderness itself. And that painting stood before
+him now in flesh and blood, its crudeness gone, but the marvelous
+spirit it had breathed remaining. Shrouded in her tumbled hair, her
+lips a little parted, every line of her slender body vibrant with an
+emotion which seemed consuming her, her beautiful eyes aglow with its
+fire, he saw in her, as Conné must have seen at another time, the soul
+of the great North itself. She seemed to him to breathe of the God's
+country far down the Three Rivers; of its almost savage fearlessness;
+its beauty, its sunshine, and its storm; its tragedy, its pathos, and
+its song. In her was the courage and the glory of that North. He had
+seen; and now he felt these things, and the thrill of them swept over
+him like an inundation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had heard her soft laugh, she had made fun of him when he thought he
+was dying; she had kissed him, she had fought for him, she had clung in
+terror to his hand when the lightning flashed; and now she stood with
+her little hands clenched in her hair, like a storm about to break. A
+moment ago she was so near that he had almost taken her in his arms.
+Now, in an instant, she had placed something so vast between them that
+he would not have dared to touch her hand or her hair. Like sun and
+cloud and wind she changed, and for him each change added to the wonder
+of her. And now it was storm. He saw it in her eyes, her hands, her
+body. He felt the electrical nearness of it in those low-spoken,
+trembling words, "<I>You shall not</I>!" The room seemed surcharged for a
+moment with impending shock. And then his physical eyes took in again
+the slimness of her, seized upon the alluring smallness of her and the
+fact that he could have tossed her to the ceiling without great effort.
+And yet he saw her as one sees a goddess.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, I won't ask you questions, when you look at me like that," he
+said, finding his tongue. "I won't ask you what this price is that
+Kedsty may demand, because you're not going to pay it. If you won't go
+with me, I won't go. I'd rather stay here and be hung. I'm not asking
+you questions, so please don't shoot, but if you told me the truth, and
+you belong in the North, you're going back with me&mdash;or I'm not going.
+I'll not budge an inch."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She drew a deep breath, as if something had greatly relieved her. Again
+her violet eyes came out from the shadow into sunlight, and her
+trembling mouth suddenly broke into a smile. It was not apologetic.
+There was about it a quick and spontaneous gladness which she made no
+effort at all to conceal.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That is nice of you," she said. "I'm glad to hear you say it. I never
+knew how pleasant it was to have some one who was willing to be hung
+for me. But you will go. And I will not go. There isn't time to explain
+all about it just now, for Inspector Kedsty will be here very soon, and
+I must dry my hair and show you your hiding-place&mdash;if you have to hide."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She began to brush her hair again. In the mirror Kent caught a glimpse
+of the smile still trembling on her lips.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm not questioning you," he guarded himself again, "but if you could
+only understand how anxious I am to know where Kedsty is, how Fingers
+found you, why you made us believe you were leaving the Landing and
+then returned&mdash;and&mdash;how badly I want to know something about you&mdash;I
+almost believe you'd talk a little while you are drying your hair."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It was Mooie, the old Indian," she said. "It was he who found out in
+some way that I was here, and then M'sieu Fingers came himself one
+night when the Inspector was away&mdash;got in through a window and simply
+said that you had sent him, when I was just about to shoot him. You
+see, I knew you weren't going to die. Kedsty had told me that. I was
+going to help you in another way, if M'sieu Fingers hadn't come.
+Inspector Kedsty was over there tonight, at his cabin, when the thing
+happened down there. It was a part of Fingers' scheme&mdash;to keep him out
+of the way."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly she grew rigid. The brush remained poised in her hair. Kent,
+too, heard the sound that she had heard. It was a loud tapping at one
+of the curtained windows, the tapping of some metallic object. And that
+window was fifteen feet above the ground!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With a little cry the girl threw down her brush, ran to the window, and
+raised and lowered the curtain once. Then she turned to Kent, swiftly
+dividing her hair into thick strands and weaving them into a braid.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is Mooie," she cried. "Kedsty is coming!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She caught his hand and hurried him toward the head of the bed, where
+two long curtains were strung on a wire. She drew these apart. Behind
+them were what seemed to Kent an innumerable number of feminine
+garments.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You must hide in them, if you have to," she said, the excited little
+tremble in her voice again. "I don't think it will come to that, but if
+it does, you must! Bury yourself way back in them, and keep quiet. If
+Kedsty finds you are here&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She looked into his eyes, and it seemed to Kent that there was
+something which was very near to fear in them now.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If he should find you here, it would mean something terrible for me,"
+she went on, her hands creeping to his arms. "I can not tell you what
+it is now, but it would be worse than death. Will you promise to stay
+here, no matter what happens down there, no matter what you may hear?
+Will you&mdash;Mr. Kent?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not if you call me Mr. Kent," he said, something thickening in his
+throat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Will you&mdash;Jeems? Will you&mdash;no matter what happens&mdash;if I promise&mdash;when
+I come back&mdash;to kiss you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her hands slipped almost caressingly from his arms, and then she had
+turned swiftly and was gone through the partly open door, closing it
+after her, before he could give his promise.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap15"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XV
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+For a space he stood where she had left him, staring at the door
+through which she had gone. The nearness of her in those last few
+seconds of her presence, the caressing touch of her hands, what he had
+seen in her eyes, her promise to kiss him if he did not reveal
+himself&mdash;these things, and the thought of the splendid courage that
+must be inspiring her to face Kedsty now, made him blind even to the
+door and the wall at which he was apparently looking. He saw only her
+face, as he had seen it in that last moment&mdash;her eyes, the tremble of
+her lips, and the fear which she had not quite hidden from him. She was
+afraid of Kedsty. He was sure of it. For she had not smiled; there was
+no flicker of humor in her eyes, when she called him Jeems, an intimate
+use of the names Jim and James in the far North. It was not facetiously
+that she had promised to kiss him. An almost tragic seriousness had
+possessed her. And it was that seriousness that thrilled him&mdash;that, and
+the amazing frankness with which she had coupled the name Jeems with
+the promise of her lips. Once before she had called him Jeems. But it
+was M'sieu Jeems then, and there had been a bit of taunting laughter in
+her voice. Jim or James meant nothing, but Jeems&mdash;He had heard mothers
+call little children that, in moments of endearment. He knew that wives
+and sweethearts used it in that same way. For Jim and James were not
+uncommon names up and down the Three Rivers, even among the half-breeds
+and French, and Jeems was the closer and more intimate thing bred of it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His heart was thumping riotously as he went to the door and listened. A
+little while ago, when she faced him with flashing eyes, commanding him
+not to question her, he had felt an abyss under his feet. Now he was on
+a mountain. And he knew that no matter what he heard, unless it was her
+cry for help, he would not go down.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After a little he opened the door a mere crack so that sound might come
+to him. She had not forbidden that. Through the crack he could see a
+dim glow of light in the lower hall. But he heard no sound, and it
+occurred to him that old Mooie could still run swiftly, and that it
+might be some time before Kedsty would arrive.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As he waited, he looked about the room. His first impression was that
+Marette must have lived in it for a long time. It was a woman's room,
+without the newness of sudden and unpremeditated occupancy. He knew
+that formerly it had been Kedsty's room, but nothing of Kedsty remained
+in it now. And then, as his wondering eyes beheld the miracle, a number
+of things struck him with amazing significance. He no longer doubted
+that Marette Radisson was of the far Northland. His faith in that was
+absolute. If there had been a last question in his mind, it was wiped
+away because she called him Jeems. Yet this room seemed to give the lie
+to his faith. Fascinated by his discovery of things, he drew away from
+the door and stood over the dressing-table in front of the mirror.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marette had not prepared the room for him, and her possessions were
+there. It did not strike him as sacrilege to look at them, the many
+intimate little things that are mysteriously used in the process of a
+lady's toilette. It was their number and variety that astounded him. He
+might have expected them in the boudoir of the Governor General's
+daughter at Ottawa, but not here&mdash;and much less farther north. What he
+saw was of exquisite material and workmanship. And then, as if
+attracted by a magnet, his eyes were drawn to something else. It was a
+row of shoes neatly and carefully arranged on the floor at one side of
+the dressing-table.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He stared at them, astounded. Never had he seen such an array of
+feminine footwear intended for the same pair of feet. And it was not
+Northern footwear. Every individual little beauty in that amazing row
+stood on a high heel! Their variety was something to which he had long
+been a stranger. There were buttoned boots, laced boots, brown boots,
+black boots, and white boots, with dangerously high and fragile looking
+heels; there were dainty little white kid slippers, slippers with bows,
+slippers with cut steel buckles, and slippers with dainty ribbon ties;
+there were high-heeled oxfords and high-heeled patent leather pumps! He
+gasped. He reached over, moved by an automatic sort of impulse, and
+took a satiny little pump in his hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The size of it gave him a decidedly pleasant mental shock, and,
+beginning to feel like one prying into a sleeper's secrets, he looked
+inside it. The size was there&mdash;number three. And it had come from
+Favre's in Montreal! One after another he looked inside half a dozen
+others. And all of them had come from Favre's in Montreal. The little
+shoes, more than all else that he had seen or that had happened, sent a
+question pounding through his brain. Who was Marette Radisson?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And that question was followed by other questions, until they tumbled
+over one another in his head. If she was from Montreal, why was she
+going north? If she belonged in the North, if she was a part of it, why
+was she taking all of this apparently worthless footwear with her? Why
+had she come to Athabasca Landing? What was she to Kedsty? Why was she
+hiding under his roof? Why&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He stopped himself, trying to find some one answer in all that chaos of
+questions. It was impossible for him to take his eyes from the shoes. A
+thought seized him. Ludicrously he dropped upon his knees in front of
+the row and with a face growing hotter each moment examined them all.
+But he wanted to know. And the discovery he made was that most of the
+footwear had been worn, some of it so slightly, however, that the
+impression of the foot was barely visible.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He rose to his feet and continued his inquiry. Of course she had
+expected him to look about. One couldn't help seeing, unless one were
+blind. He would have cut off a hand before opening one of the
+dressing-table drawers. But Marette herself had told him to hide behind
+the curtains if it became necessary, and it was an excusable caution
+for him to look behind those curtains now, to see what sort of
+hiding-place he had. He returned to the door first and listened. There
+was still no sound from below. Then he drew the curtains apart, as
+Marette had drawn them. Only he looked longer. He would tell her about
+it when she returned, if the act needed an apology.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His impression was a man's impression. What he saw was a billowing,
+filmy mass of soft stuff, and out of it there greeted him the faintest
+possible scent of lilac sachet powder. He closed the curtains with a
+deep breath of utter joy and of consternation. The two emotions were a
+jumble to him. The shoes, all that mass of soft stuff behind the
+curtains, were exquisitely feminine. The breath of perfume had come to
+him straight out of a woman's soul. There were seduction and witchery
+to it. He saw Marette, an enrapturing vision of loveliness, floating
+before his eyes in that sacred and mysterious vestment of which he had
+stolen a half-frightened glimpse. In white&mdash;the white, cobwebby thing
+of laces and embroidery that had hung straight before his eyes&mdash;in
+white&mdash;with her glorious black hair, her violet eyes, her&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then it was that the incongruity of the thing, the almost sheer
+impossibility of it, clashed in upon his vision. Yet his faith was not
+shaken. Marette Radisson was of the North. He could not disbelieve
+that, even in the face of these amazing things that confronted him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly he heard a sound that was like the explosion of a gun under
+his feet. It was the opening and closing of the hall door&mdash;but mostly
+the closing. The slam of it shook the house and rattled the glass in
+the windows. Kedsty had returned, and he was in a rage. Kent
+extinguished the light so that the room was in darkness. Then he went
+to the door. He could hear the quick, heavy tread of Kedsty's feet
+After that came the closing of a second door, followed by the rumble of
+Kedsty's voice. Kent was disappointed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Inspector of Police and Marette were in a room too far distant for
+him to distinguish what was said. But he knew that Kedsty had returned
+to barracks and had discovered what had happened there. After an
+interval his voice was a steady rumble. It rose higher. He heard the
+crash of a chair. Then the voice ceased, and after it came the tramping
+of Kedsty's feet. Not once did he catch the sound of Marette's voice,
+but he was sure that in the interval of silence she was talking. Then
+Kedsty's voice broke forth more furiously than before. Kent's fingers
+dug into the sill of the door. Each moment added to his conviction that
+Marette was in danger. It was not physical violence he feared. He did
+not believe Kedsty capable of perpetrating that upon a woman. It was
+fear that he would take her to barracks. The fact that Marette had told
+him there was a powerful reason why Kedsty would not do this failed to
+assure him. For she had also told him that Kedsty would kill her, if he
+dared. He held himself in readiness. At a cry from her, or the first
+move on Kedsty's part to take her from the bungalow, he would give
+battle in spite of Marette's warning.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He almost hoped one of these two things would happen. As he stood
+there, listening, waiting, the thought became almost a prayer. He had
+Pelly's revolver. Within twenty seconds he could have Kedsty looking
+down the barrel of it. The night was ideal for escape. Within half an
+hour they would be on the river. They could even load up with
+provisions from Kedsty's place. He opened the door a little more,
+scarcely making an effort to combat the impulse that dragged him out.
+Marette must be in danger, or she would not have confessed to him that
+she was in the house of a man who would like to see her dead. Why she
+was there did not interest him deeply now. It was the fact of the
+moment that was moving him swiftly toward action.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The door below opened again, and Kent's body grew rigid. He heard
+Kedsty charging through the lower hall like a mad bull. The outer door
+opened, slammed shut, and he was gone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent drew back into the darkness of his room. It was some moments
+before he heard Marette coming slowly up the stairs. She seemed to be
+groping her way, though there was a dim illumination out there. Then
+she came through the door into the blackness of her room.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Jeems," she whispered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He went to her. Her hands reached out, and again they rested on his
+arms.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You&mdash;you didn't come down the stair?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You&mdash;didn't hear?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I heard no words. Only Kedsty's voice."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It seemed to him that her voice, when she spoke again, trembled with an
+immeasurable relief. "You were good, Jeems. I am glad."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In that darkness he could not see. Yet something reached into him,
+thrilling him, quickening his pulse with a thing to which his eyes were
+blind. He bent down. He found her lips upturned, offering him the
+sweetness of the kiss which was to be his reward; and as he felt their
+warmth upon his own, he felt also the slightest pressure of her hands
+upon his arms.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He is gone. We will light the lamp again," she said then.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap16"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XVI
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Kent stood still while Marette moved in that gloom, found matches, and
+lighted the lamp. He had not spoken a word after the kiss. He had not
+taken advantage of it. The gentle pressure of her hands had restrained
+him from taking her in his arms. But the kiss itself fired him with a
+wild and glorious thrill that was like a vibrant music to which every
+atom of life in his body responded. If he claimed his reward at all, he
+had expected her kiss to be perhaps indifferent, at least neutral. But
+the lips she had given him there in the darkness of the room were warm,
+living, breathing lips. They had not been snatched away from him too
+quickly. Their sweetness, for an instant, had lingered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then, in the lamp glow, he was looking into Marette Radisson's face. He
+knew that his own was aflame. He had no desire to hide its confession,
+and he was eager to find what lay in her own eyes. And he was
+astonished, and then startled. The kiss had not disturbed Marette. It
+was as if it had never happened.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was not embarrassed, and there was no hint of color in her face. It
+was her deathly whiteness that startled him, a pallor emphasized by the
+dark masses of her hair, and a strange glow in her eyes. It was not a
+glow brought there by the kiss. It was fear, fading slowly out of them
+as he looked, until at last it was gone, and her lips trembled with an
+apologetic smile.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He was very angry," she said. "How easily some men lose their tempers,
+don't they&mdash;Jeems?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The little break in her voice, her brave effort to control herself, and
+the whimsical bit of smile that accompanied her words made him want to
+do what the gentle pressure of her hands had kept him from doing a few
+moments before&mdash;pick her up in his arms. What she was trying to hide he
+saw plainly. She had been in danger, a danger greater than that which
+she had quietly and fearlessly faced at barracks. And she was still
+afraid of that menace. It was the last thing which she wanted him to
+know, and yet he knew it. A new force swept through him. It was the
+force which comes of mastery, of possessorship, of fighting grimly
+against odds. It rose in a mighty triumph. It told him this girl
+belonged to him, that she was his to fight for. And he was going to
+fight. Marette saw the change that came into his face. For a moment
+after she had spoken there was silence between them. Outside the storm
+beat in a fiercer blast. A roll of thunder crashed over the bungalow.
+The windows rattled in a sweep of wind and rain. Kent, looking at her,
+his muscles hardening, his face growing grimmer, nodded toward the
+window at which Mooie's signal had come.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is a splendid night&mdash;for us," he said. "And we must go."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She did not answer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"In the eyes of the law I am a murderer," he went on. "You saved me.
+You shot a man. In those same eyes you are a criminal. It is folly to
+remain here. It is sheer suicide for both of us. If Kedsty&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If Kedsty does not do what I told him to do to-night, I shall kill
+him!" she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The quietness of her words, the steadiness of her eyes, held him
+speechless. Again it seemed to him, as it had seemed to him in his room
+at Cardigan's place, that it was a child who was looking at him and
+speaking to him. If she had shown fear a few moments before, that fear
+was not revealed in her face now. She was not excited. Her eyes were
+softly and quietly beautiful. She amazed him and discomfited him.
+Against that child-like sureness he felt himself helpless. Its potency
+was greater than his strength and greater than his determination. It
+placed between them instantly a vast gulf, a gulf that might be bridged
+by prayer and entreaty, but never by force. There was no hint of
+excitement in her threat against Kedsty, and yet in the very calmness
+of it he felt its deadliness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A whimsical half-smile was trembling on her lips again, and a warmer
+glow came into her eyes. "Do you know," she said, "that according to an
+old and sacred code of the North you belong to me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have heard of that code," he replied. "A hundred years ago I should
+have been your slave. If it exists today, I am happy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, you see the point, Jeems, don't you? You were about to die,
+probably. I think they would have hanged you. And I saved your life.
+Therefore your life belongs to me, for I insist that the code still
+lives. You are my property, and I am going to do with you as I please,
+until I turn you over to the Rivers. And you are not going tonight. You
+shall wait here for Laselle and his brigade."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Laselle&mdash;Jean Laselle?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She nodded. "Yes, that is why you must wait. We have made a splendid
+arrangement. When Laselle and his brigade start north, you go with
+them. And no one will ever know. You are safe here. No one will think
+of looking for you under the roof of the Inspector of Police."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you, Marette!" He caught himself, remembering her injunction not
+to question her. Marette shrugged her slim shoulders the slightest bit
+and nodded for him to look upon what she knew he had already seen, her
+room.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is not uncomfortable," she said. "I have been here for a number of
+weeks, and nothing has happened to me. I am quite safe. Inspector
+Kedsty has not looked inside that door since the day your big
+red-headed friend saw me down in the poplars. He has not put a foot on
+the stair. That is the dead-line. And&mdash;I know&mdash;you are wondering. You
+are asking yourself a great many questions&mdash;<I>a bon droit</I>, M'sieu Jeems.
+You are burning up with them. I can see it. And I&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was something suddenly pathetic about her, as she sank into the
+big-armed, upholstered chair which had been Kedsty's favorite reading
+chair. She was tired, and for a moment it seemed to Kent that she was
+almost ready to cry. Her ringers twisted nervously at the shining end
+of the braid in her lap, and more than ever he thought how slim and
+helpless, she was, yet how gloriously unafraid, how unconquerable with
+that something within her that burned like the fire of a dynamo. The
+flame of that force had gone down now, as though the fire itself was
+dying out; but when she raised her eyes to him, looking up at him from
+out of the big chair, he knew that back of the yearning, child-like
+glow that lay in them the heart of that fire was living and
+unquenchable. Again, for him, she had ceased to be a woman. It was the
+soul of a child that lay in her wide-open, wonderfully blue eyes. Twice
+before he had seen that miracle, and it held him now, as it had held
+him that first time when she had stood with her back at Cardigan's
+door. And as it had changed then, so it changed now, slowly, and she
+was a woman again, with that great gulf of unapproachableness between
+them. But the yearning was still there, revealing itself to him, and
+yet, like the sun, infinitely remote from him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I wish that I might answer those questions for you," she said, in a
+voice that was low and tired. "I should like to have you know, because
+I&mdash;I have great faith in you, Jeems. But I cannot. It is impossible. It
+is inconceivable. If I did&mdash;" She made a hopeless little gesture. "If I
+told you everything, you would not like me any more. And I want you to
+like me&mdash;until you go north with M'sieu Jean and his brigade."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And when I do that," cried Kent, almost savagely, "I shall find this
+place you call the Valley of Silent Men, if it takes me all my life."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was becoming a joy for him to see the sudden flashes of pleasure
+that leaped into her eyes. She attempted no concealment. Whatever her
+emotions were they revealed themselves unaffectedly and with a simple
+freedom from embarrassment that swept him with an almost reverential
+worship. And what he had just said pleased her. Unreservedly her
+glowing eyes and her partly smiling lips told him that, and she said:
+"I am glad you feel that way, Jeems. And I think you would find it&mdash;in
+time. Because&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her little trick of looking at him so steadily, as if there was
+something inside him which she was trying to see more clearly, made him
+feel more helplessly than ever her slave. It was as if, in those
+moments, she forgot that he was of flesh and blood, and was looking
+into his heart to see what was there before she gave voice to things.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then she said, still twisting her braid between her slim fingers,
+"You would find it&mdash;perhaps&mdash;because you are one who would not give up
+easily. Shall I tell you why I came to see you at Doctor Cardigan's? It
+was curiosity, at first&mdash;largely that. Just why or how I was interested
+in the man you freed is one of the things I can not tell you. And I can
+not tell you why I came to the Landing. Nor can I say a word about
+Kedsty. It may be, some day, that you will know. And then you will not
+like me. For nearly four years before I saw you that day I had been in
+a desolation. It was a terrible place. It ate my heart and soul out
+with its ugliness, its loneliness, its emptiness. A little while longer
+and I would have died. Then the thing happened that brought me away.
+Can you guess where it was?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He shook his head, "No."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"To all the others it was a beautiful place, Montreal."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You were at school there?" he guessed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, the Villa Maria. I wasn't quite sixteen then. They were kind. I
+think they liked me. But each night I prayed one prayer. You know what
+the Three Rivers are to us, to the people of the North. The Athabasca
+is Grandmother, the Slave is Mother, the Mackenzie is Daughter, and
+over them watches always the goddess Niska, the Gray Goose. And my
+prayer was that I might go back to them. In Montreal there were people,
+people everywhere, thousands and tens of thousands of them, so many
+that I was lonely and heartsick and wanted to get away. For the Gray
+Goose blood is in me, Jeems. I love the forests. And Niska's God
+doesn't live in Montreal. Her sun doesn't rise there. Her moon isn't
+the same there. The flowers are not hers. The winds tell different
+stories. The air is another air. People, when they look at you, look in
+another way. Away down the Three Rivers I had loved men. There I was
+learning to hate them. Then, something happened. I came to Athabasca
+Landing. I went to see you because&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She clasped her two hands tightly in her lap. "Because, after those
+four terrible years, you were the first man I found who was playing a
+great, big, square game to the end. Don't ask me how I found it out.
+Please don't ask me anything. I am telling you all you can know, all
+you <I>shall</I> know. But I did find it out. And then I learned that you were
+not going to die. Kedsty told me that. And when I had talked with you I
+knew that you would play any game square, and I made up my mind to help
+you. That is why I am telling you all this&mdash;just to let you know that I
+have faith in you, and that you must not break that faith. You must not
+insist on knowing more about me. You must still play the game. I am
+playing mine, and you must play yours. And to play yours clean, you
+must go with Laselle's brigade and leave me with Kedsty. You must
+forget what has happened. You must forget what MAY happen. You can not
+help me. You can only harm me. And if&mdash;some day, a long time from
+now&mdash;you should happen to find the Valley of Silent Men&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He waited, his heart pounding like a fist.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I may&mdash;be there," she finished, in a voice so low that it was scarcely
+above a whisper.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It seemed to him that she was looking a long way off, and it was not in
+his direction. And then she smiled, not at him, but in a half-hopeless
+little way.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I think I shall be disappointed if you don't find it," she said then,
+and her eyes were pure as the blue flowers from which they had stolen
+their color, as she looked at him. "You know the great Sulphur Country
+beyond Fort Simpson, westward between the Two Nahannis?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. That is where Kilbane and his patrol were lost. The Indians call
+it the Devil Country. Is that it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She nodded. "They say no living thing has ever been through the Sulphur
+Country," she said. "But that is not true. I have been through it. It
+is beyond the Sulphur Country you must go to find the Valley of Silent
+Men, straight through that gap between the North and the South Nahanni.
+That is the way <I>you</I> must go if you should ever find it, Jeems, for
+otherwise you would have to come down from Dawson or up from Skagway,
+and the country is so great that you would never come upon it in a
+thousand years. The police will not find you there. You will always be
+safe. Perhaps I shall tell you more before the Brigade comes. But that
+is all tonight. I may never tell you anything more. And you must not
+question me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Speechless he had stood, all the life of his soul burning like a fire
+in his eyes as he looked at her and listened to her, and now, quietly
+and unexcitedly, he said:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Marette, I am going to play this game as you want me to play it,
+because I love you. It is only honest for me to tell you in words what
+you must already know. And I am going to fight for you as long as there
+is a drop of blood in my body. If I go with Jean Laselle's brigade,
+will you promise me&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His voice trembled. He was repressing a mighty emotion. But not by the
+quiver of one of her long lashes did Marette Radisson give evidence
+that she had even heard his confession of love. She interrupted him
+before he had finished.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I can promise you nothing, no matter what you do. Jeems, Jeems, you
+are not like those other men I learned to hate? You will not INSIST? If
+you do&mdash;if you are like them&mdash;yes, you may go away from here tonight
+and not wait for Jean Laselle. Listen! The storm will not break for
+hours. If you are going to demand a price for playing the game as I
+want you to play it, you may go. You have my permission."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was very white. She rose from the big chair and stood before him.
+There was no anger in her voice or gesture, but her eyes glowed like
+luminous stars. There was something in them which he had not seen
+before, and suddenly a thought struck his heart cold as ice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With a low cry he stretched out his hands, "My God, Marette, I am not a
+murderer! I did not kill John Barkley!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She did not answer him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You don't believe me," he cried. "You believe that I killed Barkley,
+and that now&mdash;a murderer&mdash;I dare to tell you that I love you!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was trembling. It was like a little shiver running through her. For
+only a flash it seemed to him that he had caught a glimpse of something
+terrible, a thing she was hiding, a thing she was fighting as she stood
+there with her two little clenched hands. For in her face, in her eyes,
+in the beating throb of her white throat he saw, in that moment, the
+almost hidden agony of a hurt thing. And then it was gone, even as he
+entreated again, pleading for her faith.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I did not kill John Barkley!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am not thinking of that, Jeems," she said. "It is of something&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They had forgotten the storm. It was howling and beating at the windows
+outside. But suddenly there came a sound that rose above the monotonous
+tumult of it, and Marette started as if it had sent an electric shock
+through her. Kent, too, turned toward the window.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was the metallic tap, tap, tapping which once before had warned them
+of approaching danger. And this time it was insistent. It was as if a
+voice was crying out to them from beyond the window. It was more than
+premonition&mdash;it was the alarm of a near and impending menace. And in
+that moment Kent saw Marette Radisson's hands go swiftly to her throat
+and her eyes leap with sudden fire, and she gave a little cry as she
+listened to the sound.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap17"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XVII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+In ten seconds, it seemed to Kent, Marette Radisson was again the
+splendid creature who had held the three men at bay over the end of her
+little black gun at barracks. The sound of Mooie's second warning came
+at first as a shock. Accompanying it there was a moment of fear, of
+fear driven almost to the point of actual terror. Following it came a
+reaction so swift that Kent was dazed. Within those ten seconds the
+girl's slender body seemed to grow taller; a new light flamed in her
+face; her eyes, turning swiftly to him, were filled with the same fire
+with which they had faced the three constables. She was unafraid. She
+was ready to fight.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In such moments as these it was the quiet and dispassionate composure
+of her voice that amazed him most. It was musical in its softness now.
+Yet in that softness was a hidden thing. It was like velvet covering
+steel. She had spoken of Niska, the Gray Goose, the goddess of the
+Three Rivers. And he thought that something of the spirit of a goddess
+must be in Marette Radisson to give her the courage with which she
+faced him, even as the metallic thing outside tapped its warning again
+at the window.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Inspector Kedsty is coming back," she said. "I did not think he would
+do that&mdash;tonight."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He has not had time to go to barracks," said Kent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No. Possibly he has forgotten something. Before he arrives, I want to
+show you the nest I have made for you, Jeems. Come quickly!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was her first intimation that he was not to remain in her room, a
+possibility that had already caused him some inward embarrassment. She
+seized a number of matches, turned down her light, and hurried into the
+hall. Kent followed her to the end of this hall, where she paused
+before a low half-door that apparently opened into some sort of a space
+close under the sloping roof of the bungalow.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is an old storeroom," she whispered. "I have made it quite
+comfortable, I think. I have covered the window, so you may light the
+lamp. But you must see that no light shows under this door. Lock it on
+the inside, and be very quiet. For whatever you find in there you must
+thank M'sieu Fingers."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She pulled the door slightly open and gave him the matches. The
+illumination in the lower hall made its way only dimly to where they
+stood. In the gloom he found himself close to the soft glow of her
+eyes. His fingers closed about her hand as he took the matches.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Marette, you believe me?" he entreated. "You believe that I love you,
+that I didn't kill John Barkley, that I am going to fight for you as
+long as God gives me breath to fight?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a moment there was silence. Her hand withdrew gently from his.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I think that I believe. Good-night, Jeems."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She went from him quickly. At her door she turned. "Go in now, please,"
+she called back softly. "If you care as you say you do, <I>go in</I>."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She did not wait for his reply. Her own door closed behind her, and
+Kent, striking a match, stooped low and entered his hiding-place. In a
+moment he saw directly ahead of him a lamp on a box. He lighted this,
+and his first movement then was to close the door and turn the key that
+was in the lock. After that he looked about him. The storeroom was not
+more than ten feet square, and the roof was so close over his head that
+he could not stand upright. It was not the smallness of the place that
+struck him first, but the preparations which Marette had made for him.
+In a corner was a bed of blankets, and the rough floor of the place was
+carpeted with blankets, except for a two-or-three-foot space around the
+edge of it. Beyond the box was a table and a chair, and it was the
+burden of this table that made his pulse jump quickest. Marette had not
+forgotten that he might grow hungry. It was laid sumptuously, with a
+plate for one, but with food for half a dozen. There were a brace of
+roasted grouse, brown as nuts; a cold roast of moose meat or beef; a
+dish piled high with golden potato salad; olives, pickles, an open can
+of cherries, a loaf of bread, butter, cheese&mdash;and one of Kedsty's
+treasured thermos bottles, which undoubtedly held hot coffee or tea.
+And then he noticed what was on the chair&mdash;a belt and holster and a
+Colt automatic forty-five! Marette had not figured on securing a gun in
+the affair at barracks, and her foresight had not forgotten a weapon.
+She had placed it conspicuously where he could not fail to see it at
+once. And just beyond the chair, on the floor, was a shoulder-pack. It
+was of the regulation service sort, partly filled. Resting against the
+pack was a Winchester. He recognized the gun. He had seen it hanging in
+Dirty Fingers' shack.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a matter of five minutes he scarcely moved from where he stood
+beside the table. Nothing but an unplastered roof was between him and
+the storm, and over his head the thunder crashed, and the rain beat in
+torrents. He saw where the window was, carefully covered with a
+blanket. Even through the blanket he caught faintly the illumination of
+lightning. This window overlooked the entrance to Kedsty's bungalow,
+and the idea came to him of turning out the light and opening it. In
+darkness he took down the blanket. But the window itself was not
+movable, and after assuring himself of this fact he flattened his face
+against it, peering out into the chaos of the night.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In that instant came a flare of lightning, and to Kent, looking down,
+was revealed a sight that tightened every muscle in his body. More
+vividly than if it had been day he saw a man standing below in the
+deluge. It was not Mooie. It was not Kedsty. It was no one that he had
+ever seen. Even more like a ghost than a man was that apparition of the
+lightning flare. A great, gaunt giant of a ghost, bare-headed, with
+long, dripping hair and a long, storm-twisted beard. The picture shot
+to his brain with the swiftness of the lightning itself. It was like
+the sudden throwing of a cinema picture on a screen. Then blackness
+shut it out. Kent stared harder. He waited.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again came the lightning, and again he saw that tragic, ghost-like
+figure waiting in the storm. Three times he saw it. And he knew that
+the mysterious, bearded giant was an old man. The fourth time the
+lightning came, the figure was gone. And in that flare it was the bowed
+figure of Kedsty he saw hurrying up the gravel path to the door.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Quickly Kent covered the window, but he did not relight the lamp.
+Before Kedsty could have reached the foot of the stair, he had unlocked
+the door. Cautiously he opened it three or four inches and sat down
+with his back against the wall, listening. He heard Kedsty pass through
+into the big room where Marette had waited for him a short time before.
+After that there was silence except for the tumult of the storm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For an hour Kent listened. In all that time he did not hear a sound
+from the lower hall or from Marette's room. He wondered if she was
+sleeping, and if Kedsty had gone to bed, waiting for morning before he
+set in action his bloodhounds of the law.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent had no intention of disturbing the comfortable looking bed of
+blankets. He was not only sleepless, but filled with a premonition of
+events about to happen. He felt impinging itself more and more upon him
+a sense of watchfulness. That Inspector Kedsty and Marette Radisson
+were under the same roof, and that there was some potent and mysterious
+reason which kept Kedsty from betraying the girl's presence, was the
+thought which troubled him most. He was not developing further the
+plans for his own escape.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was thinking of Marette. What was her power over Kedsty? Why was it
+that Kedsty would like to see her dead? Why was she in his house? Again
+and again he asked himself the questions and found no answers to them.
+And yet, even in this purgatory of mystery that environed him, he felt
+himself happier than he had ever been in his life. For Marette was not
+four or five hundred miles down the river. She was in the same house
+with him. And he had told her that he loved her. He was glad that he
+had been given courage to let her know that. He relighted the lamp, and
+opened his watch and placed it on the table, where frequently he could
+look at the time. He wanted to smoke his pipe, but the odor of tobacco,
+he was sure, would reach Kedsty, unless the Inspector had actually
+retired into his bedroom for the night.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Half a dozen times he questioned himself as to the identity of the
+ghostly apparition he had seen in the lightning flare of the storm.
+Perhaps it was some one of Fingers' strange friends from out of the
+wilderness, Mooie's partner in watching the bungalow. The picture of
+that giant of a man with his great beard and long hair, as his eyes had
+caught him in a sea of electrical fire, was indelibly burned into his
+brain. It was a tragic picture.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again he put out the light and bared the blanketed window, but he saw
+nothing but the sodden gleam of the earth when the lightning flashed. A
+second time he opened the door a few inches and sat down with his back
+to the wall, listening.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+How long it was before drowsiness stole upon him he did not know, but
+it came, and for a few moments at a time, as his eyes closed, it robbed
+him of his caution. And then, for a space, he slept. A sound brought
+him suddenly into wide wakefulness. His first impression was that the
+sound had been a cry. For a moment or two, as his senses adjusted
+themselves, he was not sure. Then swiftly the thing grew upon him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He rose to his feet and widened the crack of his door. A bar of light
+shot across the upper hall. It was from Marette's room. He had taken
+off his boots to deaden the sound of his feet, and he stepped outside
+his door. He was positive he heard a low cry, a choking, sobbing cry,
+only barely audible, and that it came from down the stair.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+No longer hesitating, he moved quickly to Marette's room and looked in.
+His first glimpse was of the bed. It had not been used. The room was
+empty.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Something cold and chilling gripped at his heart, and an impulse which
+he no longer made an effort to resist pulled him to the head of the
+stair. It was more than an impulse&mdash;it was a demand. Step by step he
+went down, his hand on the butt of his Colt.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He reached the lower hall, which was still lighted, and a step or two
+brought him to a view of the door that opened into the big living-room
+beyond. That door was partly open, and the room itself was filled with
+light. Soundlessly Kent approached. He looked in.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What he saw first brought him relief together with shock. At one end of
+the long desk table over which hung a great brass lamp stood Marette.
+She was in profile to him. He could not see her face. Her hair fell
+loose about her, glowing like a rich, sable cape in the light of the
+lamp. She was safe, alive, and yet the attitude of her as she looked
+down was the thing that gave him shock. He was compelled to move a few
+inches more before he could see what she was staring at. And then his
+heart stopped dead still.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Huddled down in his chair, with his head flung back so that the
+terrible ghastliness of his face fronted Kent, was Kedsty. And Kent, in
+an instant, knew. Only a dead man could look like that.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With a cry he entered the room. Marette did not start, but an answering
+cry came into her throat as she turned her eyes from Kedsty to him. To
+Kent it was like looking upon the dead in two ways. Marette Radisson,
+living and breathing, was whiter than Kedsty, who was white with the
+unbreathing pallor of the actually dead. She did not speak. She made no
+sound after that answering cry in her throat. She simply looked. And
+Kent spoke her name gently as he saw her great, wide eyes blazing dully
+their agony and despair. Then, like one stunned and fascinated, she
+stared down upon Kedsty again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Every instinct of the man-hunter became alive in Kent's brain as he,
+too, turned toward the Inspector of Police. Kedsty's arms hung limp
+over the side of his chair. On the floor under his right hand was his
+Colt automatic. His head was strained so far over the back of the chair
+that it looked as though his neck had been broken. On his forehead,
+close up against his short-cropped, iron-gray hair, was a red stain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent approached and bent over him. He had seen death too many times not
+to recognize it now, but seldom had he seen a face twisted and
+distorted as Kedsty's was. His eyes were open and bulging in a glassy
+stare. His jaws hung loose. His&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was then Kent's blood froze in his veins. Kedsty had received a
+blow, but it was not the blow that had killed him. Afterward he had
+been choked to death. And the thing that had choked him was <I>a tress
+of woman's hair</I>.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the seconds that followed that discovery Kent could not have moved
+if his own life had paid the penalty of inaction. For the story was
+told&mdash;there about Kedsty's throat and on his chest. The tress of hair
+was long and soft and shining and black. It was twisted twice around
+Kedsty's neck, and the loose end rippled down over his shoulder,
+<I>glowing like a bit of rich sable in the lamplight</I>. It was that thought
+of velvety sable that had come to him at the doorway, looking at
+Marette. It was the thought that came to him now. He touched it; he
+took it in his fingers; he unwound it from about Kedsty's neck, where
+it had made two deep rings in the flesh. From his fingers it rippled
+out full length. And he turned slowly and faced Marette Radisson.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Never had human eyes looked at him as she was looking at him now. She
+reached out a hand, her lips mute, and Kent gave her the tress of hair.
+And the next instant she turned, with a hand clasped at her own throat,
+and passed through the door.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After that he heard her going unsteadily up the stairs.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap18"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XVIII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Kent did not move. His senses for a space were stunned. He was almost
+physically insensible to all emotions but that one of shock and horror.
+He was staring at Kedsty's gray-white, twisted face when he heard
+Marette's door close. A cry came from his lips, but he did not hear
+it&mdash;was unconscious that he had made a sound. His body shook with a
+sudden tremor. He could not disbelieve, for the evidence was there.
+From behind, as he had sat in his chair Marette Radisson had struck the
+Inspector of Police with some blunt object. The blow had stunned him.
+And after that&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He drew a hand across his eyes, as if to clear his vision. What he had
+seen was impossible. The evidence was impossible. Assaulted, in deadly
+peril, defending either honor or love, Marette Radisson was of the
+blood to kill. But to creep up behind her victim&mdash;it was inconceivable!
+Yet there had been no struggle. Even the automatic on the floor gave no
+evidence of that. Kent picked it up. He looked at it closely, and again
+the unconscious cry of despair came in a half groan from his lips. For
+on the butt of the Colt was a stain of blood and a few gray hairs.
+Kedsty had been stunned by a blow from his own gun!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Kent placed it on the table, his eyes caught suddenly a gleam of
+steel under the edge of a newspaper, and he drew out from their
+hiding-place the long-bladed clipping scissors which Kedsty had used in
+the preparation of his scrap-books and official reports. It was the
+last link in the deadly evidence&mdash;the automatic with its telltale
+stain, the scissors, the tress of hair, and Marette Radisson. He felt a
+sensation of sudden dizziness. Every nerve-center in his body had
+received its shock, and when the shock had passed it left him sweating.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Swiftly the reaction came. It was a lie, he told himself. The evidence
+was false. Marette could not have committed that crime, as the crime
+had visualized itself before his eyes. There was something which he had
+not seen, something which he could not see, something that was hiding
+itself from him. He became, in an instant, the old James Kent. The
+instinctive processes of the man-hunter leaped to their stations like
+trained soldiers. He saw Marette again, as she had looked at him when
+he entered the room. It was not murder he had caught in her wide-open
+eyes. It was not hatred. It was not madness. It was a quivering,
+bleeding soul crying out to him in an agony that no other human eyes
+had ever revealed to him before. And suddenly a great voice cried out
+in his brain, drowning all other things, telling him how contemptible a
+thing was love unless in that love was faith.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With his heart choking him, he turned again to Kedsty. The futility of
+the thing which he had told himself was faith gripped at him
+sickeningly, yet he fought for that faith, even as his eyes looked
+again upon the ghastly torture that was in Kedsty's face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was becoming calmer. He touched the dead man's cheek and found that
+it was no longer warm. The tragedy must have occurred an hour before.
+He examined more closely the abrasion on Kedsty's forehead. It was not
+a deep wound, and the blow that had made it must have stunned the
+Inspector of Police for only a short time. In that space the other
+thing had happened. In spite of his almost superhuman effort to keep
+the picture away from him, Kent saw it vividly&mdash;the swift turning to
+the table, the inspiration of the scissors, the clipping of the long
+tress of hair, the choking to death of Kedsty as he regained
+consciousness. Over and over again he whispered to himself the
+impossibility of it, the absurdity of it, the utter incongruity of it.
+Only a brain gone mad would have conceived that monstrous way of
+killing Kedsty. And Marette was not mad. She was sane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Like the eyes of a hunting ferret his own eyes swept quickly about the
+room. At the four windows there were long curtain cords. On the walls,
+hung there as trophies, were a number of weapons. On one end of
+Kedsty's desk, used as a paperweight, was a stone tomahawk. Still
+nearer to the dead man's hands, unhidden by papers, was a boot-lace.
+Under his limp right hand was the automatic. With these possible
+instruments of death close at hand, ready to be snatched up without
+trouble or waste of time, why had the murderer used a tress of woman's
+hair?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The boot-lace drew Kent's eyes. It was impossible not to see it,
+forty-eight inches long and quarter-inch-wide buckskin. He began
+seeking for its mate, and found it on the floor where Marette Radisson
+had been standing. And again the unanswerable question pounded in
+Kent's brain&mdash;why had Kedsty's murderer used a tress of hair instead of
+a buckskin lace or one of the curtain cords hanging conspicuously at
+the windows?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He went to each of these windows and found them locked. Then, a last
+time, he bent over Kedsty. He knew that in the final moments of his
+life Kedsty had suffered a slow and torturing agony. His twisted face
+left the story. And the Inspector of Police was a powerful man. He had
+struggled, still partly dazed by the blow. But it had taken strength to
+overcome him even then, to hold his head back, to choke life out of him
+slowly with the noose of hair. And Kent, now that the significance of
+what he saw began to grow upon him more clearly, felt triumphing over
+all other things in his soul a slow and mighty joy. It was
+inconceivable that with the strength of her own hands and body Marette
+Radisson had killed Kedsty. A greater strength than hers had held him
+in the death-chair, and a greater strength than hers had choked life
+from the Inspector of Police!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He drew slowly out of the room, closing the door noiselessly behind
+him. He found that the front door was as Kedsty had left it, unlocked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Close to that door he stood for a space, scarcely allowing himself to
+breathe. He listened, but no sound came down the dimly illumined
+stairway.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A new thing was pressing upon him now. It rode over the shock of
+tragedy, over the first-roused instincts of the man-hunter,
+overwhelming him with the realization of a horror such as had never
+confronted him before. It gripped him more fiercely than the mere
+killing of Kedsty. His thought was of Marette, of the fate which dawn
+and discovery would bring for her. His hands clenched and his jaws
+tightened. The world was against him, and tomorrow it would be against
+her. Only he, in the face of all that condemning evidence in the room
+beyond, would disbelieve her guilty of Kedsty's death. And he, Jim
+Kent, was already a murderer in the eyes of the law.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He felt within him the slow-growing inspiration of a new spirit, the
+gathering might of a new force. A few hours ago he was an outcast. He
+was condemned. Life, for him, had been robbed of its last hope. And in
+that hour of his grimmest despair Marette Radisson had come to him.
+Through storm that had rocked the earth under her feet and set ablaze
+the chaotic blackness of the sky over her head she had struggled&mdash;for
+him. She had counted no cost. She had measured no chances. She had
+simply come&mdash;<I>because she believed in him</I>. And now, upstairs, she was
+the victim of the terrible price that was the first cost of his
+freedom. For he believed, now that the thought came to him like a
+dagger stroke, that this was so. Her act in freeing him had brought
+about the final climax, and as a result of it, Kedsty was dead.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He went to the foot of the stair. Quietly, in his shoeless feet, he
+began to climb them. He wanted to cry out Marette's name even before he
+came to the top. He wanted to reach up to her with his arms
+outstretched. But he came silently to her door and looked in.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She lay in a crumpled, huddled heap on her bed. Her face was hidden,
+and all about her lay her smothering hair. For a moment he was
+frightened. He could not see that she was breathing. So still was she
+that she was like one dead.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His footsteps were unheard as he moved across the room. He knelt down
+beside her, reached out his arms, and gathered her into them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Marette!" he cried in a low voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He felt the sudden quiver, like a little shock, that ran through her.
+He crushed his face down, so that it lay in her hair, still damp from
+its wetting. He drew her closer, tightening his arms about her slender
+body, and a little cry came from her a cry that was a broken thing, a
+sob without tears.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Marette!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was all he said. It was all he could say in that moment when his
+heart was beating like a drum against her breast. And then he felt the
+slow pressure of her hands against him, saw her white face, her wide,
+staring eyes within a few inches of his own, and she drew away from
+him, back against the wall, still huddled like a child on the bed, with
+her eyes fixed on him in a way that frightened him. There were no tears
+in them. She had not been crying. But her face was as white as he had
+seen it down in Kedsty's room. Some of the horror and shock had gone
+out of it. In it was another look as her eyes glowed upon Kent. It was
+a look of incredulity, of disbelief, a thing slowly fading away under
+the miracle of an amazing revelation. The truth thrust itself upon him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marette had not expected that he would come to her like this. She had
+believed that he would take flight into the night, escaping from her as
+he would have run from a plague. She put up her two hands, in the trick
+they had of groping at her white throat, and her lips formed a word
+which she did not speak.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent, to his own amazement, was smiling and still on his knees. He
+pulled himself to his feet, and stood up straight, looking down at her
+in that same strange, comforting, all-powerful way. The thrill of it
+was passing into her veins. A flush of color was driving the deathly
+pallor from her face. Her lips were parted, and she breathed quickly, a
+little excitedly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I thought&mdash;you would go!" she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not without you," he said. "I have come to take you with me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He drew out his watch. It was two o'clock. He held it down so that she
+could look at the dial.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If the storm keeps up, we have three hours before dawn," he said. "How
+soon can you be ready, Marette?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was fighting to make his voice quiet and unexcited. It was a
+terrific struggle. And Marette was not blind to it. She drew herself
+from the bed and stood up before him, her two hands still clasped at
+her throbbing throat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You believe&mdash;that I killed Kedsty," she said in a voice that was
+forced from her lips. "And you have come to help me&mdash;to pay me for what
+I tried to do for you? That is it&mdash;Jeems?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Pay you?" he cried. "I couldn't pay you in a million years! From that
+day you first came to Cardigan's place you gave me life. You came when
+the last spark of hope in me had died. I shall always believe that I
+would have died that night. But you saved me.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"From the moment I saw you I loved you, and I believe it was that love
+that kept me alive. And then you came to me again, down there, through
+this storm. Pay you! I can't. I never shall be able to. Because you
+thought I had killed a man made no difference You came just the same.
+And you came ready to kill, if necessary&mdash;for me. I'm not trying to
+tell myself <I>why</I>! But you did. You were ready to kill. And I am ready to
+kill&mdash;tonight&mdash;for you! I haven't got time to think about Kedsty. I'm
+thinking about you. If you killed him, I'm just telling myself there
+was a mighty good reason for it. But I don't believe it was you who
+killed him. You couldn't do it&mdash;with those hands!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He reached out suddenly and seized them, slipping his grip to her
+wrists, so that her hands lay upward in his own, hands that were small,
+slim-fingered, soft-palmed, beautiful.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They couldn't!" he cried, almost fiercely. "I swear to God they
+couldn't!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her eyes and face flamed at his words. "You believe that, Jeems?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, just as you believe that I did not kill John Barkley. But the
+world is against us. It is against us both now. And we've got to hunt
+that hidden valley of yours together. Understand, Marette? And
+I'm&mdash;rather glad."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He turned toward the door. "Will you be ready in ten minutes?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She nodded. "Yes, in ten minutes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He ran out into the hall and down the stair, locking the front door.
+Then he returned to his hiding-place under the roof. He knew that a
+strange sort of madness was in his blood, for in the face of tonight's
+tragedy only madness could inspire him with the ecstatic thrill that
+was in his veins. Kedsty's death seemed far removed from a more
+important thing&mdash;the fact that from this hour Marette was his to fight
+for, that she belonged to him, that she must go with him. He loved her.
+In spite of whoever she was and whatever she had done, he loved her.
+Very soon she would tell him what had happened in the room below, and
+the thing would be clear.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was one little corner of his brain that fought him. It kept
+telling him, like a parrot, that it was a tress of Marette's hair about
+Kedsty's throat, and that it was the hair that had choked him. But
+Marette would explain that, too. He was sure of it. In the face of the
+facts below he was illogical and unreasonable. He knew it. But his love
+for this girl, who had come strangely and tragically into his life, was
+like an intoxicant. And his faith was illimitable. She did not kill
+Kedsty. Another part of his brain kept repeating that over and over,
+even as he recalled that only a few hours before she had told him quite
+calmly that she would kill the Inspector of Police&mdash;if a certain thing
+should happen.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His hands worked as swiftly as his thoughts. He laced up his service
+boots. All the food and dishes on the table he made into a compact
+bundle and placed in the shoulder-pack. He carried this and the rifle
+out into the hall. Then he returned to Marette's room. The door was
+closed. At his knock the girl's voice told him that she was not quite
+ready.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He waited. He could hear her moving about quickly in her room. An
+interval of silence followed. Another five minutes
+passed&mdash;ten&mdash;fifteen. He tapped at the door again. This time it was
+opened.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He stared, amazed at the change in Marette. She had stepped back from
+the door to let him enter, and stood full in the lamp-glow. Her slim,
+beautiful body was dressed in a velvety blue corduroy; the coat was
+close-fitting and boyish; the skirt came only a little below her knees.
+On her feet were high-topped caribou boots. About her waist was a
+holster and the little black gun. Her hair was done up and crowded
+under a close-fitting turban. She was exquisitely lovely, as she stood
+there waiting for him, and in that loveliness Kent saw there was not
+one thing out of place. The corduroy, the turban, the short skirt, and
+the high, laced boots were made for the wilderness. She was not a
+tenderfoot. She was a little <I>sourdough</I>&mdash;clear through! Gladness leaped
+into Kent's face. But it was not the transformation of her dress alone
+that amazed him. She was changed in another way. Her cheeks were
+flushed. Her eyes glowed with a strange and wonderful radiance as she
+looked at him. Her lips were red, as he had seen them that first time
+at Cardigan's place. Her pallor, her fear, her horror were gone, and in
+their place was the repressed excitement of one about to enter upon a
+strange adventure.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the floor was a pack only half as large as Kent's and when he picked
+it up, he found it of almost no weight. He fastened it to his own pack
+while Marette put on her raincoat and went down the stair ahead of him.
+In the hall below she was waiting, when he came down, with Kedsty's big
+rubber slicker in her hands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You must put it on," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She shuddered slightly as she held the garment. The color was almost
+gone from her cheeks, as she faced the door beyond which the dead man
+sat in his chair, but the marvelous glow was still in her eyes as she
+helped Kent with his pack and the slicker and afterward stood for an
+instant with her hands touching his breast and her lips as if about to
+speak something which she held back.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A few steps beyond them they heard the storm. It seemed to rush upon
+the bungalow in a new fury, beating at the door, crashing over their
+heads in thunder, daring them to come out. Kent reached up and turned
+out the hall light.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In darkness he opened the door. Rain and wind swept in. With his free
+hand he groped out, found Marette, drew her after him, and closed the
+door again. Entering from the lighted hall into the storm was like
+being swallowed in a pit of blackness. It engulfed and smothered them.
+Then came suddenly a flash of lightning, and he saw Marette's face,
+white and drenched, but looking at him with that same strange glow in
+her eyes. It thrilled him. Even in the darkness it was there. It had
+been there since he had returned to her from Kedsty and had knelt at
+her bedside, with his arms about her for a moment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Only now, in the beat of the storm, did an answer to the miracle of it
+come to him. It was because of <I>him</I>. It was because of his <I>faith</I> in her.
+Even death and horror could not keep it from her eyes. He wanted to cry
+out the joy of his discovery, to give wild voice to it in the teeth of
+the wind and the rain. He felt sweeping through him a force mightier
+than that of the night. Her hands were on his arm, as if she was afraid
+of losing him in that pit of blackness; the soft cling of them was like
+a contact through which came a warm thrill of electrical life. He put
+out his arm and drew her to him, so that for a moment his face pressed
+against the top of her wet little turban.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then he heard her say: "There is a scow at the bayou, Jeems. It is
+close to the end of the path. M'sieu Fingers has kept it there,
+waiting, ready."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had been thinking of Crossen's place and an open boat. He blessed
+Fingers again, as he took Marette's hand in his own and started for the
+trail that led through the poplar thicket.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Their feet slopped deep in wet and mud, and with the rain there was a
+wind that took their breath away. It was impossible to see a tree an
+arm's length away, and Kent hoped that the lightning would come
+frequently enough to guide him. In the first flare of it he looked down
+the slope that led riverward. Little rivulets of water were running
+down it. Rocks and stumps were in their way, and underfoot it was
+slippery. Marette's fingers were clinging to his again, as she had held
+to them on the wild race up to Kedsty's bungalow from the barracks. He
+had tingled then in the sheer joy of their thrill, but it was a
+different thrill that stirred him now&mdash;an overwhelming emotion of
+possessorship. This night, with its storm and its blackness, was the
+most wonderful of all his nights.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He sensed nothing of its discomfort. It could not beat back the joyous
+racing of the blood in his body. Sun and stars, day and night, sunshine
+and cloud, were trivial and inconsequential to him now. For close to
+him, struggling with him, fighting through the night with him, trusting
+him, helpless without him, was the living, breathing thing he loved
+more than he loved his own life. For many years, without knowing it, he
+had waited for this night, and now that it was upon him, it inundated
+and swept away his old life. He was no longer the huntsman, but the
+hunted. He was no longer alone, but had a priceless thing to fight for,
+a priceless and helpless thing that was clinging to his fingers in the
+darkness. He did not feel like a fugitive, but as one who has come into
+a great triumph. He sensed no uncertainty or doubt.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The river lay ahead, and for him the river had become the soul and the
+promise of life. It was Marette's river and his river, and in a little
+while they would be on it. And Marette would then tell him about
+Kedsty. He was sure of that. She would tell him what had happened while
+he slept. His faith was illimitable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They came into the sodden dip at the foot of the ridge, and the
+lightning revealed to him the edge of the poplar growth in which
+O'Connor had seen Marette many weeks ago. The bayou trail wound through
+this, and Kent struck out for it blindly in the darkness. He did not
+try to talk, but he freed his companion's hand and put his arm about
+her when they came to the level ground, so that she was sheltered by
+him from the beat of the storm. Then brush swished in their faces, and
+they stopped, waiting for the lightning again. Kent was not anxious for
+it to come. He drew the girl still closer, and in that pit of
+blackness, with the deluge about her and the crash of thunder over her
+head, she snuggled up against his breast, the throb of her body against
+him, waiting, watching, with him. Her frailty, the helplessness of her,
+the slimness of her in the crook of his arm, filled him with an
+exquisite exultation. He did not think of her now as the splendid,
+fearless creature who had leveled her little black gun at the three men
+in barracks. She was no longer the mysterious, defiant, unafraid person
+who had held him in a sort of awe that first hour in Kedsty's place.
+For she was crumpled against him now, utterly dependent and afraid. In
+that chaos of storm something told him that her nerve was broken, that
+without him she would be lost and would cry out in fear. <I>And he was
+glad</I>! He held her tighter; he bent his head until his face touched the
+wet, crushed hair under the edge of her turban. And then the lightning
+split open the night again, and he saw the way ahead of him to the
+trail.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Even in darkness it was not difficult to follow in the clean-cut wagon
+path. Over their heads the tops of the poplars swished and wailed.
+Under their feet the roadway in places was a running stream or
+inundated until it became a pool. In pitch blackness they struck such a
+pool, and in spite of the handicap of his packs and rifle Kent stopped
+suddenly, and picked Marette up in his arms, and carried her until they
+reached high ground. He did not ask permission. And Marette, for a
+minute or two, lay crumpled up close in his arms, and for a thrilling
+instant his face touched her rain-wet cheek.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The miracle of their adventure was that neither spoke. To Kent the
+silence between them had become a thing which he had no desire to
+break. In that silence, excused and abetted by the tumult of the storm,
+he felt that a wonderful something was drawing them closer and closer
+together, and that words might spoil the indescribable magic of the
+thing that was happening. When he set Marette on her feet again, her
+hand accidentally fell upon his, and for a moment her fingers closed
+upon it in a soft pressure that meant more to him than a thousand words
+of gratitude.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A quarter of a mile beyond the poplar thicket they came to the edge of
+the spruce and cedar timber, and Soon the thick walls of the forest
+shut them in, sheltering them from the wind, but the blackness was even
+more like that of a bottomless pit. Kent had noticed that the thunder
+and lightning were drifting steadily eastward, and now the occasional
+flashes of electrical fire scarcely illumined the trail ahead of them.
+The rain was not beating so fiercely. They could hear the wail of the
+spruce and cedar tops and the slush of their boots in mud and water. An
+interval came, where the spruce-tops met overhead, when it was almost
+calm. It was then that Kent threw out of him a great, deep breath and
+laughed joyously and exultantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Are you wet, little Gray Goose?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Only outside, Big Otter. My feathers have kept me dry."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her voice had a trembling, half-sobbing, half-rejoicing note in it. It
+was not the voice of one who had recently killed a man. In it was a
+pathos which Kent knew she was trying to hide behind brave words. Her
+hands clung to the arm of his rubber slicker even as they stood there,
+close together, as if she was afraid something might drag them apart in
+that treacherous gloom. Kent, fumbling for a moment, drew from an inner
+pocket a dry handkerchief. Then he found her face, tilted it a bit
+upward, and wiped it dry. He might have done the same thing to a child
+who had been crying. After that he scrubbed his own, and they went on,
+his arm about her again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was half a mile from the edge of the forest to the bayou, and half a
+dozen times in that distance Kent took the girl in his arms and carried
+her through water that almost reached his boot tops. The lightning no
+longer served them. The rain still fell steadily, but the wind had gone
+with the eastward sweep of the storm. Close-hung with the forest walls,
+the bayou itself was indiscernible in the blackness. Marette guided him
+now, though Kent walked ahead of her, holding firmly to her hand.
+Unless Fingers had changed its location, the scow should be somewhere
+within forty or fifty paces of the end of the trail. It was small, a
+two-man scow, with a tight little house built amidships. And it was
+tied close up against the shore. Marette told him this as they felt
+their way through brush and reeds. Then he stumbled against something
+taut and knee-high, and he found it was the tie-rope.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Leaving Marette with her back to the anchor tree, he went aboard. The
+water was three or four inches deep in the bottom of the scow, but the
+cabin was built on a platform raised above the floor of the boat, and
+Kent hoped it was still dry. He groped until he found the twisted wire
+which held the door shut. Opening it, he ducked his head low and
+entered. The little room was not more than four feet high, and for
+greater convenience he fell upon his knees while fumbling under his
+slicker for his water-proof box of matches. The water had not yet risen
+above the floor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The first light he struck revealed the interior to him. It was a tiny
+cabin, scarcely larger than some boxes he had seen. It was about eight
+feet long by six in width, and the ceiling was so low that, even
+kneeling, his head touched it. His match burned out, and he lighted
+another. This time he saw a candle stuck in a bit of split birch that
+projected from the wall. He crept to it and lighted it. For a moment he
+looked about him, and again he blessed Fingers. The little scow was
+prepared for a voyage. Two narrow bunks were built at the far end, one
+so close above the other that Kent grinned as he thought of squeezing
+between. There were blankets. Within reach of his arm was a tiny stove,
+and close to the stove a supply of kindling and dry wood. The whole
+thing made him think of a child's playhouse. Yet there was still room
+for a wide, comfortable, cane-bottomed chair, a stool, and a
+smooth-planed board fastened under a window, so that it answered the
+purpose of a table. This table was piled with many packages.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He stripped off his packs and returned for Marette. She had come to the
+edge of the scow and called to him softly as she heard him splashing
+through the water. Her arms were reaching toward him, to meet him in
+the darkness. He carried her through the shallow sea about his feet and
+laughed as he put her down on the edge of the platform at the door. It
+was a low, joyous laugh. The yellow light of the candle sputtered in
+their wet faces. Only dimly could he see her, but her eyes were shining.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your nest, little Gray Goose," he cried gently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her hand reached up and touched his face. "You have been good to me,
+Jeems," she said, a little tremble in her voice. "You may&mdash;kiss me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Out in the beat of the rain Kent's heart choked him with song. His soul
+swelled with the desire to shout forth a paean of joy and triumph at
+the world he was leaving this night for all time. With the warm thrill
+of Marette's lips he had become the superman, and as he leaped ashore
+in the darkness and cut the tie-rope with a single slash of his knife,
+he wanted to give voice to the thing that was in him as the rivermen
+had chanted in the glory of their freedom the day the big brigade
+started north. And he <I>did</I> sing, under his laughing, sobbing breath.
+With a giant's strength he sent the scow out into the bayou, and then
+back and forth he swung the long one-man sweep, twisting the craft
+riverward with the force of two pairs of arms instead of one. Behind
+the closed door of the tiny cabin was all that the world now held worth
+fighting for. By turning his head he could see the faint illumination
+of the candle at the window. The light&mdash;the cabin&mdash;Marette!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He laughed inanely, foolishly, like a boy. He began to hear a dull,
+droning murmur, a sound that with each stroke of the sweep grew into a
+more distinct, cataract-like roar. It was the river. Swollen by flood,
+it was a terrifying sound. But Kent did not dread it. It was <I>his</I> river;
+it was his friend. It was the pulse and throb of life to him now. The
+growing tumult of it was not menace, but the joyous thunder of many
+voices calling to him, rejoicing at his coming. It grew in his ears.
+Over his head the black sky opened again, and a deluge of rain fell
+straight down. But above the sound of it the rush of the river drew
+nearer, and still nearer. He felt the first eddying swirl of it against
+the scow head, and powerful hands seemed to reach in out of the
+darkness. He knew that the nose of the current had caught him and was
+carrying him out on the breast of the stream. He shipped the sweep and
+straightened himself, facing the utter chaos of blackness ahead. He
+felt under him the slow and mighty pulse of the great flood as it swept
+toward the Slave, the Mackenzie, and the Arctic. And he cried out at
+last in the downpour of storm, a cry of joy, of exultation, of hope
+that reached beyond the laws of men&mdash;and then he turned toward the
+little cabin, where through the thickness of sodden night the tiny
+window was glowing yellow with candle-light.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap19"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XIX
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+To the cabin Kent groped his way, and knocked, and it was Marette who
+opened the door for him and stepped back for him to enter. Like a great
+wet dog he came in, doubling until his hands almost touched the floor.
+He sensed the incongruity of it, the misplacement of his overgrown body
+in this playhouse thing, and he grinned through the trickles of wet
+that ran down his face, and tried to see. Marette had taken off her
+turban and rain-coat, and she, too, stooped low in the four-feet space
+of the cabin&mdash;but not so ridiculously low as Kent. He dropped on his
+knees again. And then he saw that in the tiny stove a fire was burning.
+The crackle of it rose above the beat of the rain on the roof, and the
+air was already mellowing with the warmth of it. He looked at Marette.
+Her wet hair was still clinging to her face, her feet and arms and part
+of her body were wet; but her eyes were shining, and she was smiling at
+him. She seemed to him, in this moment, like a child that was glad it
+had found refuge. He had thought that the terror of the night would
+show in her face, but it was gone. She was not thinking of the thunder
+and the lightning, the black trail, or of Kedsty lying dead in his
+bungalow. She was thinking of him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He laughed outright. It was a joyous, thrilling thing, this black night
+with the storm over their heads and the roll of the great river under
+them&mdash;they two&mdash;alone&mdash;in this cockleshell cabin that was not high
+enough to stand in and scarcely big enough in any direction to turn
+round in. The snug cheer of it, the warmth of the fire beginning to
+reach their chilled bodies, and the inspiring crackle of the birch in
+the little stove filled Kent, for a space, with other thoughts than
+those of the world they were leaving. And Marette, whose eyes and lips
+were smiling at him softly in the candle-glow, seemed also to have
+forgotten. It was the little window that brought them back to the
+tragedy of their flight. Kent visioned it as it must look from the
+shore&mdash;a telltale blotch of light traveling through the darkness. There
+were occasional cabins for several miles below the Landing, and eyes
+turned riverward in the storm might see it. He made his way to the
+window and fastened his slicker over it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We're off, Gray Goose," he said then, rubbing his hands. "Would it
+seem more homelike if I smoked?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She nodded, her eyes on the slicker at the window.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's pretty safe," said Kent, fishing out his pipe, and beginning to
+fill it. "Everybody asleep, probably. But we won't take any chances."
+The scow was swinging sideways in the current. Kent felt the change in
+its movement, and added: "No danger of being wrecked, either. There
+isn't a rock or rapids for thirty miles. River clear as a floor. If we
+bump ashore, don't get frightened."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm not afraid&mdash;of the river," she said. Then, with rather startling
+unexpectedness, she asked him, "Where will they look for us tomorrow?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent lighted his pipe, eyeing her a bit speculatively as she seated
+herself on the stool, leaning toward him as she waited for an answer to
+her question.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The woods, the river, everywhere," he said. "They'll look for a
+missing boat, of course. We've simply got to watch behind us and take
+advantage of a good start."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Will the rain wipe out our footprints, Jeems?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. Everything in the open."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But&mdash;perhaps&mdash;in a sheltered place&mdash;?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We were in no sheltered place," he assured her. "Can you remember that
+we were, Gray Goose?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She shook her head slowly. "No. But there was Mooie, under the window."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"His footprints will be wiped out."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am glad. I would not have him, or M'sieu Fingers, or any of our
+friends brought into this trouble."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She made no effort to hide the relief his words brought her. He was a
+little amazed that she should worry over Fingers and the old Indian in
+this hour of their own peril. That danger he had decided to keep as far
+from her mind as possible. But she could not help realizing the
+impending menace of it. She must know that within a few hours Kedsty
+would be found, and the long arm of the wilderness police would begin
+its work. And if it caught them&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She had thrust her feet toward him and was wriggling them inside her
+boots, so that he heard the slushing sound of water. "Ugh, but they are
+wet!" she shivered. "Will you unlace them and pull them off for me,
+Jeems?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He laid his pipe aside and knelt close to her. It took him five minutes
+to get the boots off. Then he held one of her sodden little feet close
+between his two big hands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Cold&mdash;cold as ice," he said. "You must take off your stockings,
+Marette. Please."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He arranged a pile of wood in front of the stove and covered it with a
+blanket which he pulled from one of the bunks. Then, still on his
+knees, he drew the cane chair close to the fire and covered it with a
+second blanket. A few moments later Marette was tucked comfortably in
+this chair, with her bare feet on the blanketed pile of wood. Kent
+opened the stove door. Then he extinguished one of the smoking candles,
+and after that, the other. The flaming birch illumined the little cabin
+with a mellower light. It gave a subdued flush to the girl's face. Her
+eyes seemed to Kent wonderfully soft and beautiful in that changed
+light. And when he had finished, she reached out a hand, and for an
+instant it touched his face and his wet hair so lightly that he sensed
+the thrilling caress of it without feeling its weight.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are so good to me, Jeems," she said, and he thought there was a
+little choking note in her throat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had seated himself on the floor, close to her chair, with his back
+to the wall. "It is because I love you, Gray Goose," he replied
+quietly, looking straight into the fire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was silent. She, too, was looking into the fire. Close over their
+heads they heard the beating of the rain, like a thousand soft little
+fists pounding the top of the cabin. Under them they could feel the
+slow swinging of the scow as it responded to the twists and vagaries of
+the current that was carrying them on. And Kent, unseen by the girl who
+was looking away from him, raised his eyes. The birch light was glowing
+in her hair; it trembled on her white throat; her long lashes were
+caught in the shimmer of it. And, looking at her, Kent thought of
+Kedsty lying back in his bungalow room, choked to death by a tress of
+that glorious hair, so near to him now that, by leaning a little
+forward, he might have touched it with his lips. The thought brought
+him no horror. For even as he looked, one of her hands crept up to her
+cheek&mdash;the small, soft hand that had touched his face and hair as
+lightly as a bit of thistle-down&mdash;and he knew that two hands like that
+could not have killed a man who was fighting for life when he died.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Kent reached up, and took the hand, and held it close in his own,
+as he said, "Little Gray Goose, please tell me now&mdash;what happened in
+Kedsty's room?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His voice thrilled with an immeasurable faith. He wanted her to know,
+no matter what had happened, that this faith and his love for her could
+not be shaken. He believed in her, and would always believe in her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Already he was sure that he knew how Kedsty had died. The picture of
+the tragedy had pieced itself together in his mind, bit by bit. While
+he slept, Marette and a man were down in the big room with the
+Inspector of Police. The climax had come, and Kedsty was struck a
+blow&mdash;in some unaccountable way&mdash;with his own gun. Then, just as Kedsty
+was recovering sufficiently from the shock of the blow to fight,
+Marette's companion had killed him. Horrified, dazed by what had
+already happened, perhaps unconscious, she had been powerless to
+prevent the use of a tress of her hair in the murderer's final work.
+Kent, in this picture, eliminated the boot-laces and the curtain cords.
+He knew that the unusual and the least expected happened frequently in
+crime. And Marette's long hair was flowing loose about her. To use it
+had simply been the first inspiration of the murderer. And Kent
+believed, as he waited for her answer now, that Marette would tell him
+this.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And as he waited, he felt her fingers tighten in his hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Tell me, Gray Goose&mdash;what happened?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I&mdash;don't&mdash;know&mdash;Jeems&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His eyes went to her suddenly from the fire, as if he was not quite
+sure he had heard what she had said. She did not move her head, but
+continued to gaze unseeingly into the flames. Inside his palm her
+fingers worked to his thumb and held it tightly again, as they had
+clung to it when she was frightened by the thunder and lightning.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't know what happened, Jeems."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This time he did not feel the clinging thrill of her little fingers and
+soft palm. Deep within him he experienced something that was like a
+sudden and unexpected blow. He was ready to fight for her until his
+last breath was gone. He was ready to believe anything she told
+him&mdash;anything except this impossible thing which she had just spoken.
+For she did know what had happened in Kedsty's room. She knew&mdash;unless&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly his heart leaped with joyous hope. "You mean&mdash;you were
+unconscious?" he cried in a low voice that trembled with his eagerness.
+"You fainted&mdash;and it happened then?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She shook her head. "No. I was asleep in my room. I didn't intend to
+sleep, but&mdash;I did. Something awakened me. I thought I had been
+dreaming. But something kept pulling me, pulling me downstairs. And
+when I went, I found Kedsty like that. He was dead. I was paralyzed,
+standing there, when you came."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She drew her, hand away from him, gently, but significantly. "I know
+you can't believe me, Jeems. It is impossible for you to believe me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you don't want me to believe you, Marette."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes&mdash;I do. You must believe me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But the tress of hair&mdash;your hair&mdash;round Kedsty's neck&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He stopped. His words, spoken gently as they were, seemed brutal to
+him. Yet he could not see that they affected her. She did not flinch.
+He saw no tremor of horror. Steadily she continued to look into the
+fire. And his brain grew confused. Never in all his experience had he
+seen such absolute and unaffected self-control. And somehow, it chilled
+him. It chilled him even as he wanted to reach out and gather her close
+in his arms, and pour his love into her ears, entreating her to tell
+him everything, to keep nothing back from him that might help in the
+fight he was going to make.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then she said, "Jeems, if we should be caught by the Police&mdash;it
+would probably be quite soon, wouldn't it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They won't catch us."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But our greatest danger of being caught is right now, isn't it?" she
+insisted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent took out his watch and leaned over to look at it in the fireglow.
+"It is three o'clock," he said. "Give me another day and night, Gray
+Goose, and the Police will never find us."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a moment or two more she was silent. Then her hand reached out, and
+her fingers twined softly round his thumb again. "Jeems&mdash;when we are
+safe&mdash;when we are sure the Police won't find us&mdash;I will tell you all
+that I know&mdash;about what happened in Kedsty's room. And I will tell
+you&mdash;about&mdash;the hair. I will tell you&mdash;everything." Her fingers
+tightened almost fiercely. "Everything," she repeated. "I will tell you
+about that in Kedsty's room&mdash;and I will tell you about myself&mdash;and
+after that&mdash;I am afraid&mdash;you won't like me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I love you," he said, making no movement to touch her. "No matter what
+you tell me, Gray Goose, I shall love you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She gave a little cry, scarcely more than a broken note in her throat,
+and Kent&mdash;had her face been turned toward him then&mdash;would have seen the
+glory that came into it, and into her eyes, like a swift flash of
+light&mdash;and passed as swiftly away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What he did see, when she turned her head, were eyes caught suddenly by
+something at the cabin door. He looked. Water was trickling in slowly
+over the sill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I expected that," he said cheerfully. "Our scow is turning into a
+rain-barrel, Marette. Unless I bail out, we'll soon be flooded."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He reached for his slicker and put it on. "It won't take me long to
+throw the water overboard," he added. "And while I'm doing that I want
+you to take <I>off</I> your wet things and tuck yourself into bed. Will you,
+Gray Goose?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm not tired, but if you think it is best&mdash;" Her hand touched his arm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is best," he said, and for a moment he bent over her until his lips
+touched her hair.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then he seized a pail, and went out into the rain.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap20"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XX
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+It was that hour when, with clear skies, the gray northern dawn would
+have been breaking faintly over the eastern forests. Kent found the
+darkness more fog-like; about him was a grayer, ghostlier sort of
+gloom. But he could not see the water under his feet. Nor could he see
+the rail of the scow, or the river. From the stern, ten feet from the
+cabin door, the cabin itself was swallowed up and invisible.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With the steady, swinging motion of the riverman he began bailing. So
+regular became his movements that they ran in a sort of rhythmic
+accompaniment to his thoughts. The monotonous <I>splash, splash, splash</I> of
+the outflung pails of water assumed, after a few minutes, the character
+of a mechanical thing. He could smell the nearness of the shore. Even
+in the rain the tang of cedar and balsam came to him faintly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But it was the river that impressed itself most upon his senses. It
+seemed to him, as the minutes passed, like a living thing. He could
+hear it gurgling and playing under the end of the scow. And with that
+sound there was another and more indescribable thing, the tremble of
+it, the pulse of it, the thrill of it in the impenetrable gloom, the
+life of it as it swept on in a slow and mighty flood between its
+wilderness walls. Kent had always said, "You can hear the river's heart
+beat&mdash;if you know how to listen for it." And he heard it now. He felt
+it. The rain could not beat it out, nor could the splash of the water
+he was throwing overboard drown it, and the darkness could not hide it
+from the vision that was burning like a living coal within him. Always
+it was the river that had given him consolation in times of loneliness.
+For him it had grown into a thing with a soul, a thing that personified
+hope, courage, comradeship, everything that was big and great in final
+achievement. And tonight&mdash;for he still thought of the darkness as
+night&mdash;the soul of it seemed whispering to him a sort of paean.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He could not lose. That was the thought that filled him. Never had his
+pulse beat with greater assurance, never had a more positive sense of
+the inevitable possessed him. It was inconceivable, he thought, even to
+fear the possibility of being taken by the Police. He was more than a
+man fighting for his freedom alone, more than an individual struggling
+for the right to exist. A thing vastly more priceless than either
+freedom or life, if they were to be accepted alone, waited for him in
+the little cabin, shut in by its sea of darkness. And ahead of them lay
+their world. He emphasized that. <I>Their</I> world&mdash;the world which, in an
+illusive and unreal sort of way, had been a part of his dreams all his
+life. In that world they would shut themselves in. No one would ever
+find them. And the glory of the sun and the stars and God's open
+country would be with them always.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marette was the very heart of that reality which impinged itself upon
+him now. He did not worry about what it was she would tell him
+tomorrow, or day after tomorrow. He believed that it was then&mdash;when she
+had told him what there was to tell, and he still reached, out his arms
+to her&mdash;that she would come into those arms. And he knew that nothing
+that might have happened in Kedsty's room would keep his arms from
+reaching, to her. Such was his faith, potent as the mighty flood hidden
+in the gray-ghost gloom of approaching dawn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Yet he did not expect to win easily. As he worked, his mind swept up
+and down the Three Rivers from the Landing to Fort Simpson, and
+mentally he pictured the situations that might arise, and how he would
+triumph over them. He figured that the men at Barracks would not enter
+Kedsty's bungalow until noon at the earliest. The Police gasoline
+launch would probably set out on a river search soon after. By
+mid-afternoon the scow would have a fifty-mile start.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before darkness came again they would be through the Death Chute, where
+Follette and Ladouceur swam their mad race for the love of a girl. And
+not many miles below the Chute was a swampy country where he could hide
+the scow. Then they would start overland, west and north. Given until
+another sunset, and they would be safe. This was what he expected. But
+if it came to fighting&mdash;he would fight.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The rain had slackened to a thin drizzle by the time he finished his
+bailing. The aroma of cedar and balsam came to him more clearly, and he
+heard more distinctly the murmuring surge of the river. He tapped again
+at the door of the cabin, and Marette answered him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The fire had burned down to a bed of glowing coals when he entered.
+Again he fell on his knees, and took off his dripping slicker.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The girl greeted him from the berth. "You look like a great bear,
+Jeems." There was a glad, welcoming note in her voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He laughed, and drew the stool beside her, and managed to sit on it,
+the roof compelling him to bend his head over a little. "I feel like an
+elephant in a birdcage," he replied. "Are you comfortable, little Gray
+Goose?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. But you, Jeems? You are wet!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But so happy that I don't feel it, Gray Goose."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He could make her out only dimly there in the darkness of the berth.
+Her face was a pale shadow, and she had loosened her damp hair so that
+the warmth and dry air might reach it more easily. Kent wondered if she
+could hear the beating of his heart. He forgot the fire, and the
+darkness grew thicker. He could no longer see the pale outline of her
+face, and he drew back a little, possessed by the thought that it was
+sacrilegious to bend nearer to her, like a thief, in that gloom. She
+sensed his movement, and her hand reached to him and lay lightly with
+its fingertips touching his arm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Jeems," she said softly. "I'm not sorry&mdash;now&mdash;that I came up to
+Cardigan's place that day&mdash;when you thought you were dying. I wasn't
+wrong. You are different. And I made fun of you then, and laughed at
+you, because I knew that you were not going to die. Will you forgive
+me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He laughed happily. "It's funny how little things work out, sometimes,"
+he said. "Wasn't a kingdom lost once upon a time because some fellow
+didn't have a horseshoe? Anyway, I knew of a man whose life was saved
+because of a broken pipe-stem. And you came to me, and I'm here with
+you now, because&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of what?" she whispered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because of something that happened a long time ago," he said.
+"Something you wouldn't dream could have anything to do with you or
+with me. Shall I tell you about it, Marette?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her fingers pressed slightly upon his arm. "Yes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course, it's a story of the Police," he began. "And I won't mention
+this fellow's name. You may think of him as that red-headed O'Connor,
+if you want to. But I don't say that it was he. He was a constable in
+the Service and had been away North looking up some Indians who were
+brewing an intoxicating liquor from roots. That was six years ago. And
+he caught something. Le Mort Rouge, we sometimes call it&mdash;the Red
+Death&mdash;or smallpox. And he was alone when the fever knocked him down,
+three hundred miles from anywhere. His Indian ran away at the first
+sign of it, and he had just time to get up his tent before he was flat
+on his back. I won't try to tell you of the days he went through. It
+was a living death. And he would have died, there is no doubt of it, if
+it hadn't been for a stranger who came along. He was a white man.
+Marette, it doesn't take a great deal of nerve to go up against a man
+with a gun, when you've got a gun of your own; and it doesn't take such
+a lot of nerve to go into battle when a thousand others are going with
+you. But it does take nerve to face what that stranger faced. And the
+sick man was nothing to him. He went into that tent and nursed the
+other back to life. Then the sickness got him, and for ten weeks those
+two were together, each fighting to save the other's life, and they won
+out. But the glory of it was with the stranger. He was going west. The
+constable was going south. They shook hands and parted."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marette's fingers tightened on Kent's arm. And Kent went on.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And the constable never forgot, Gray Goose. He wanted the day to come
+when he might repay. And the time came. It was years later, and it
+worked out in a curious way. A man was murdered. And the constable, who
+had become a sergeant now, had talked with the dead man only a little
+while before he was killed. Returning for something he had forgotten,
+it was the sergeant who found him dead. Very shortly afterward a man
+was arrested. There was blood on his clothing. The evidence was
+convincing, deadly. And this man&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent paused, and in the darkness Marette's hand crept down his arm to
+his hand, and her fingers closed round it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Was the man you lied to save," she whispered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. When the halfbreed's bullet got me, I thought it was a good
+chance to repay Sandy McTrigger for what he did for me in that tent
+years before. But it wasn't heroic. It wasn't even brave. I thought I
+was going to die and that I was risking nothing."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then there came a soft, joyous little laugh from where her head lay
+on the pillow. "And all the time you were lying so splendidly, Jeems&mdash;I
+KNEW," she cried. "I knew that you didn't kill Barkley, and I knew that
+you weren't going to die, and I knew what happened in that tent ten
+years ago. And&mdash;Jeems&mdash;Jeems&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She raised herself from the pillow. Her breath was coming a little
+excitedly. Both her hands, instead of one, were gripping his hand now.
+"I knew that you didn't kill John Barkley," she repeated. "And&mdash;<I>Sandy
+McTrigger didn't kill him</I>!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He <I>didn't</I>," she interrupted him, almost fiercely. "He was innocent, as
+innocent as you were. Jeems&mdash;I Jeems&mdash;I know who killed Barkley. Oh, I
+<I>know</I>&mdash;I <I>know</I>!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A choking sob came into her throat, and then she added, in a voice
+which she was straining to make calm, "Don't think that I haven't faith
+in you because I can't tell you more now, Jeems," she said. "You will
+understand&mdash;quite soon. When we are safe from the Police, I shall tell
+you. I shall keep nothing from you then. I shall tell you about
+Barkley, and Kedsty&mdash;everything. But I can't now. It won't be long.
+When you tell me we are safe, I shall believe you. And then&mdash;" She
+withdrew her hands from his and dropped back on her pillow.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And then&mdash;what?" he asked, leaning far over.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You may not like me, Jeems."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I love you," he whispered. "Nothing in the world can stop my loving
+you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Even if I tell you&mdash;soon&mdash;that I killed Barkley?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No. You would be lying."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Or&mdash;if I told you&mdash;that I&mdash;killed&mdash;Kedsty?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No matter what you said, or what proof there might be back there, I
+would not believe you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was silent. And then, "Jeems&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, Niska, Little Goddess&mdash;?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm going to tell you something&mdash;now!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He waited.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is going to&mdash;shock you&mdash;Jeems."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He felt her arms reaching up. Her two hands touched his shoulders.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Are you listening?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I am listening."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because I'm not going to say it very loud." And then she whispered,
+"Jeems&mdash;<I>I love you</I>!"
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap21"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XXI
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+In the slowly breaking gloom of the cabin, with Marette's arms round
+his neck, her soft lips given him to kiss, Kent for many minutes was
+conscious of nothing but the thrill of his one great hope on earth come
+true. What he had prayed for was no longer a prayer, and what he had
+dreamed of was no longer a dream; yet for a space the reality of it
+seemed unreal. What he said in those first moments of his exaltation he
+would probably never remember.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His own physical existence seemed a thing trivial and almost lost, a
+thing submerged and swallowed up by the warm beat and throb of that
+other life, a thousand times more precious than his own, which he held
+in his arms. Yet with the mad thrill that possessed him, in the embrace
+of his arms, there was an infinite tenderness, a gentleness, that drew
+from Marette's lips a low, glad whispering of his name. She drew his
+head down and kissed him, and Kent fell upon his knees at her side and
+crushed his face close down to her&mdash;while outside the patter of rain on
+the roof had ceased, and the fog-like darkness was breaking with gray
+dawn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In that dawn of the new day Kent came at last out of the cabin and
+looked upon a splendid world. In his breast was the glory of a thing
+new-born, and the world, like himself, was changed. Storm had passed.
+The gray river lay under his eyes. Shoreward he made out the dark
+outlines of the deep spruce and cedar and balsam forests. About him
+there was a great stillness, broken only by the murmur of the river and
+the ripple of water under the scow. Wind had gone with the black
+rainclouds, and Kent, as he looked about him, saw the swift dissolution
+of the last shadows of night, and the breaking in the East of a new
+paradise. In the East, as the minutes passed, there came a soft and
+luminous gray, and after that, swiftly, with the miracle of far
+Northern dawn, a vast, low-burning fire seemed to start far beyond the
+forests, tinting the sky with a delicate pink that crept higher and
+higher as Kent watched it. The river, all at once, came out of its last
+drifting haze of fog and night. The scow was about in the middle of the
+channel. Two hundred yards on either side were thick green walls of
+forest glistening fresh and cool with the wet of storm and breathing
+forth the perfume which Kent was drawing deep into his lungs.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the cabin he heard sound. Marette was up, and he was eager to have
+her come out and stand with him in this glory of their first day. He
+watched the smoke of the fire he had built, hardwood smoke that drifted
+up white and clean into the rain-washed air.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The smell of it, like the smell of balsam and cedar, was to Kent the
+aroma of life. And then he began to clean out what was left of the
+water in the bottom of the scow, and as he worked he whistled. He
+wanted Marette to hear that whistle. He wanted her to know that day had
+brought with it no doubt for him. A great and glorious world was about
+them and ahead of them. And they were safe.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As he worked, his mind became more than ever set upon the resolution to
+take no chances. He paused in his whistling for a moment to laugh
+softly and exultantly as he thought of the years of experience which
+were his surest safeguard now. He had become almost uncannily expert in
+all the finesse and trickery of his craft of hunting human game, and he
+knew what the man-hunters would do and what they would not do. He had
+them checkmated at the start. And, besides&mdash;with Kedsty, O'Connor, and
+himself gone&mdash;the Landing was short-handed just at present. There was
+an enormous satisfaction in that. But even with a score of men behind
+him Kent knew that he would beat them. His hazard, if there was peril
+at all, lay in this first day. Only the Police gasoline launch could
+possibly overtake them. And with the start they had, he was sure they
+would pass the Death Chute, conceal the scow, and take to the untracked
+forests north and west before the launch could menace them. After that
+he would keep always west and north, deeper and deeper into that wild
+and untraveled country which would be the last place in which the Law
+would seek for them. He straightened himself and looked at the smoke
+again, drifting like gray-white lace between him and the blue of the
+sky, and in that moment the sun capped the tall green tops of the
+highest cedars, and day broke gloriously over the earth.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a quarter of an hour longer Kent mopped at the floor of the scow,
+and then&mdash;with a suddenness that drew him up as if a whip-lash had
+snapped behind him&mdash;he caught another aroma in the clean,
+forest-scented air. It was bacon and coffee! He had believed that
+Marette was taking her time in putting on dry footwear and making some
+sort of morning toilet. Instead of that, she was getting breakfast. It
+was not an extraordinary thing to do. To fry bacon and make coffee was
+not, in any sense, a remarkable achievement. But at the present moment
+it was the crowning touch to Kent's paradise. She was getting HIS
+breakfast! And&mdash;coffee and bacon&mdash;To Kent those two things had always
+stood for home. They were intimate and companionable. Where there were
+coffee and bacon, he had known children who laughed, women who sang,
+and men with happy, welcoming faces. They were home-builders.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Whenever you smell coffee and bacon at a cabin," O'Connor had always
+said, "they'll ask you in to breakfast if you knock at the door."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But Kent was not recalling his old trail mate's words. In the present
+moment all other thoughts were lost in the discovery that Marette was
+getting breakfast&mdash;for him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He went to the door and listened. Then he opened it and looked in.
+Marette was on her knees before the open door of the stove, toasting
+bread on two forks. Her face was flushed pink. She had not taken time
+to brush her hair, but had woven it carelessly into a thick braid that
+fell down her back. She gave a little exclamation of mock
+disappointment when she saw Kent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why didn't you wait?" she remonstrated. "I wanted to surprise you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You have," he said. "And I couldn't wait. I had to come in and help."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was inside the door and on his knees beside her. As he reached for
+the two forks, his lips pressed against her hair. The pink deepened in
+Marette's face, and the soft little note that was like laughter came
+into her throat. Her hand caressed his cheek as she rose to her feet,
+and Kent laughed back. And after that, as she arranged things on the
+shelf table, her hand now and then touched his shoulder, or his hair,
+and two or three times he heard that wonderful little throat-note that
+sent through him a wild pulse of happiness. And then, he sitting in the
+low chair and she on the stool, they drew close together before the
+board that answered as a table, and ate their breakfast. Marette poured
+his coffee and stirred sugar and condensed milk in it, and so happy was
+Kent that he did not tell her he used neither milk nor sugar in his
+coffee. The morning sun burst through the little window, and through
+the open door Kent pointed to the glory of it on the river and in the
+shimmering green of the forests slipping away behind. When they had
+finished, Marette went outside with him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a space she stood silent and without movement, looking upon the
+marvelous world that encompassed them. It seemed to Kent that for a few
+moments she did not breathe. With her head thrown back and her white
+throat bare to the soft, balsam-laden air she faced the forests. Her
+eyes became suddenly filled with the luminous glow of stars. Her face
+reflected the radiance of the rising sun, and Kent, looking at her,
+knew that he had never seen her so beautiful as in these wonderful
+moments. He held his own breath, for he also knew that Niska, his
+goddess, was looking upon her own world again after a long time away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her world&mdash;and his. Different from all the other worlds God had ever
+made; different, even, from the world only a few miles behind them at
+the Landing. For here was no sound or whisper of destroying human life.
+They were in the embrace of the Great North, and it was drawing them
+closer, and with each minute nearer to the mighty, pulsing heart of it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The forests hung heavy and green and glistening with the wet of storm;
+out of them came the tremulous breath of life and the glory of living;
+they hugged the shores like watchful hosts guarding the river from
+civilization&mdash;and suddenly the girl held out her arms, and Kent heard
+the low, thrilling cry that came to her lips.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She had forgotten him. She had forgotten everything but the river, the
+forests, and the untrod worlds beyond them, and he was glad. For this
+world that she was welcoming, that her soul was crying out to, was his
+world, for ever and ever. It held his dreams, his hopes, all the
+desires that he had in life. And when at last Marette turned toward him
+slowly, his arms were reaching out to her, and in his face she saw that
+same glory which filled her own.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm glad&mdash;glad," she cried softly. "Oh, Jeems&mdash;I'm glad!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She came into his arms without hesitation; her hands stroked his face;
+and then she stood with her head against his shoulder, looking ahead,
+breathing deeply now of the sweet, clear air filled with the elixir of
+the hovering forests. She did not speak, or move, and Kent remained
+quiet. The scow drifted around a bend. Shoreward a great moose splashed
+up out of the water, and they could hear him afterward, crashing
+through the forest. Her body tensed, but she did not speak. After a
+little he heard her whisper,
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It has been a long time, Jeems. I have been away four years."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And now we are going home, little Gray Goose. You will not be lonely?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No. I was lonely down there. There were so many people, and so many
+things, that I was homesick for the woods and mountains. I believe I
+would have died soon. There were only two things I loved, Jeems&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Pretty dresses&mdash;and shoes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His arms closed about her a little more tightly. "I&mdash;I understand," he
+laughed softly. "That is why you came, that first time, with pretty
+high-heeled pumps."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He bowed his head, and she turned her face to him. On her upturned
+mouth he kissed her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"More than any other man ever loved a woman I love you, Niska, little
+goddess," he cried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The minutes and the hours of that day stood out ever afterward in
+Kent's life as unforgettable memories. There were times when they
+seemed illusory and unreal, as though he lived and breathed in an
+insubstantial world made up of gossamer things which must be the fabric
+of dream. These were moments when the black shadow of the tragedy from
+which they were fleeing pressed upon him, when the thought came to him
+that they were criminals racing with the law; that they were not on
+enchanted ground, but in deadly peril; that it was all a fools'
+paradise from which some terrible shock would shortly awaken him. But
+these periods of apprehension were, in themselves, mere shadows thrown
+for a moment upon his happiness. Again and again the subconscious force
+within him pounded home to his physical brain the great truth, that it
+was all extraordinarily real.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was Marette who made him doubt himself at times. He could not, quite
+yet, comprehend the fulness of that love which she had given him. More
+than ever, in the glory of this love that had come to them she was like
+a child to him. It seemed to him in the first hours of the morning that
+she had forgotten yesterday, and the day before, and ill the days
+before that. She was going home. She whispered that to him so often
+that it became a little song in his brain. Yet she told him nothing of
+that home, and he waited, knowing that the fulfilment of her promise
+was not far away. And there was no embarrassment in the manner of her
+surrender when he held her in his arms, and she held her face up, so
+that he could kiss her mouth and look into her glowing, lovely eyes.
+What he saw was the flush of a great happiness, the almost childish
+confession of it along with the woman's joy of possession. And he
+thought of Kedsty, and of the Law that was rousing itself into life
+back at Athabasca Landing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then she ran her fingers through his own and told him to wait, and
+ran into the cabin and came out a moment later with her brush; and
+after that she seated herself at the fulcrum of the big sweep and began
+to brush out her hair in the sun.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm glad you love it, Jeems," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She unbound the thick braid and let the silken strands of it run
+caressingly between her fingers. She smoothed it out, brushed it until
+it was more beautiful than he had ever seen it, in that glow of the
+sun. She held it up so that it rippled out in shimmering cascades about
+her&mdash;and then, suddenly, Kent saw the short tress from which had been
+clipped the rope of hair that he had taken from Kedsty's neck. And as
+his lips tightened, crushing fiercely the exclamation of his horror,
+there came a trembling happiness from Marette's lips, scarcely more
+than the whisper of a song, the low, thrilling melody of <I>Le Chaudière</I>.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her arms reached up, and she drew his head down to her, so that for a
+time his visions were blinded in that sweet smother of her hair.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The intimacy of that day was in itself like a dream. Hour after hour
+they drifted deeper into the great North. The sun shone. The
+forest-walled shores of the river grew mightier in their stillness and
+their grandeur, and the vast silence of unpeopled places brooded over
+the world. To Kent it was as if they were drifting through Paradise.
+Occasionally he found it necessary to work the big sweep, for still
+water was gradually giving way to a swifter current.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Beyond that there was no labor for him to perform. It seemed to him
+that with each of these wonderful hours danger was being left farther
+and still farther behind them. Watching the shores, looking ahead,
+listening for sound that might come from behind&mdash;at times possessed of
+the exquisite thrills of children in their happiness&mdash;Kent and Marette
+found the gulf of strangeness passing swiftly away from between them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They did not speak of Kedsty, or the tragedy, or again of the death of
+John Barkley. But Kent told of his days in the North, of his aloneness,
+of the wild, weird love in his soul for the deepest wildernesses. And
+from that he went away back into dim and distant yesterdays, alive with
+mellowed memories of boyhood days spent on a farm. To all these things
+Marette listened with glowing eyes, with low laughter, or with breath
+that rose or fell with his own emotions.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She told of her own days down at school and of their appalling
+loneliness; of childhood spent in the forests; of the desire to live
+there always. But she did not speak intimately of herself or her life
+in its more vital aspects; she said nothing of the home in the Valley
+of Silent Men, nothing of father or mother, sisters or brothers. There
+was no embarrassment in her omissions. And Kent did not question. He
+knew that those were among the things she would tell him when that
+promised hour came, the hour when he would tell her they were safe.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There began to possess him now a growing eagerness for this hour, when
+they should leave the river and take to the forests. He explained to
+Marette why they could not float on indefinitely. The river was the one
+great artery through which ran the blood of all traffic to the far
+North. It was patrolled. Sooner or later they would be discovered. In
+the forests, with a thousand untrod trails to choose, they would be
+safe. He had only one reason for keeping to the river until they passed
+through the Death Chute. It would carry them beyond a great swampy
+region to the westward through which it would be impossible for them to
+make their way at this season of the year. Otherwise he would have gone
+ashore now. He loved the river, had faith in it, but he knew that not
+until the deep forests swallowed them, as a vast ocean swallows a ship,
+would they be beyond the peril that threatened them from the Landing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Three or four times between sunrise and noon they saw life ashore and
+on the stream; once a scow tied to a tree, then an Indian camp, and
+twice trappers' shacks built in the edge of little clearings. With the
+beginning of afternoon Kent felt growing within him something that was
+not altogether eagerness. It was, at times, a disturbing emotion, a
+foreshadowing of evil, a warning for him to be on his guard. He used
+the sweep more, to help their progress in the current, and he began to
+measure time and distance with painstaking care. He recognized many
+landmarks.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+By four o'clock, or five at the latest, they would strike the head of
+the Chute. Ten minutes of its thrilling passage and he would work the
+scow into the concealment he had in mind ashore, and no longer would he
+fear the arm of the law that reached out from the Landing. As he
+planned, he listened. From noon on he never ceased to listen for that
+distant <I>putt, putt, putt</I>, that would give them a mile's warning of the
+approach of the patrol launch.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He did not keep his plans to himself. Marette sensed his growing
+uneasiness, and he made her a partner of his thoughts.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If we hear the patrol before we reach the Chute, we'll still have time
+to run ashore," he assured her. "And they won't catch us. We'll be
+harder to find than two needles in a haystack. But it's best to be
+prepared."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So he brought out his pack and Marette's smaller bundle, and laid his
+rifle and pistol holster across them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was three o'clock when the character of the river began to change,
+and Kent smiled happily. They were entering upon swifter waters. There
+were places where the channel narrowed, and they sped through rapids.
+Only where unbroken straight waters stretched out ahead of them did
+Kent give his arms a rest at the sweep. And through most of the
+straight water he added to the speed of the scow. Marette helped him.
+In him the exquisite thrill of watching her slender, glorious body as
+it worked with his own never grew old. She laughed at him over the big
+oar between them. The wind and sun played riot in her hair. Her parted
+lips were rose-red, her cheeks flushed, her eyes like sun-warmed rock
+violets. More than once, in the thrill of that afternoon flight, as he
+looked at the marvelous beauty of her, he asked himself if it could be
+anything but a dream. And more than once he laughed joyously, and
+paused in his swinging of the sweep, and proved that it was real and
+true. And Kent thanked God, and worked harder.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Once, a long time ago, Marette told him, she had been through the
+Chute. It had horrified her then. She remembered it as a sort of death
+monster, roaring for its victims. As they drew nearer to it, Kent told
+her more about it. Only now and then was a life lost there now, he
+said. At the mouth of the Chute there was a great, knife-like rock,
+like a dragon's tooth, that cut the Chute into two roaring channels. If
+a scow kept to the left-hand channel it was safe. There would be a
+mighty roaring and thundering as it swept on its passage, but that
+roaring of the Chute, he told her, was like the barking of a harmless
+dog.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Only when a scow became unmanageable, or hit the Dragon's Tooth, or
+made the right-hand channel instead of the left, was there tragedy.
+There was that delightful little note of laughter in Marette's throat
+when Kent told her that.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You mean, Jeems, that if one of three possible things doesn't happen,
+we'll get through safely?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"None of them is possible&mdash;with us," he corrected himself quickly.
+"We've a tight little scow, we're not going to hit the rock, and we'll
+make the left-hand channel so smoothly you won't know when it happens."
+He smiled at her with splendid confidence. "I've been through it a
+hundred times," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He listened. Then, suddenly, he drew out his watch. It was a quarter of
+four. Marette's ears caught what he heard. In the air was a low,
+trembling murmur. It was growing slowly but steadily. He nodded when
+she looked at him, the question in her eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The rapids at the head of the Chute!" he cried, his voice vibrant with
+joy. "We've beat them out. <I>We're safe</I>!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They swung around a bend, and the white spume of the rapids lay half a
+mile ahead of them. The current began to race with them now. Kent put
+his whole weight on the sweep to keep the scow in mid-channel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We're safe," he repeated. "Do you understand, Marette? _We're safe_!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was speaking the words for which she had waited, was telling her
+that at last the hour had come when she could keep her promise to him.
+The words, as he gave them voice, thrilled him. He felt like shouting
+them. And then all at once he saw the change that had come into her
+face. Her wide, startled eyes were not looking at him, but beyond. She
+was looking back in the direction from which they had come, and even as
+he stared her face grew white.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"<I>Listen</I>!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was tense, rigid. He turned his head. And in that moment it came to
+him above the growing murmur of the river&mdash;the <I>putt, putt, putt</I> of the
+Police patrol boat from Athabasca Landing!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A deep breath came from between his lips. When Marette took her eyes
+from the river and looked at him, his face was like carven rock. He was
+staring dead ahead.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We can't make the Chute," he said, his voice sounding hard and unreal
+to her. "If we do, they'll be up with us before we can land at the
+other end. We must let this current drive us ashore&mdash;<I>now</I>."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As he made his decision, he put the strength of his body into action.
+He knew there was not the hundredth part of a second to lose. The
+outreaching suction of the rapids was already gripping the scow, and
+with mighty strokes he fought to work the head of his craft toward the
+westward shore. With swift understanding Marette saw the priceless
+value of a few seconds of time. If they were caught in the stronger
+swirl of the rapids before the shore was reached, they would be forced
+to run the Chute, and in that event the launch would be upon them
+before they could make a landing farther on. She sprang to Kent's side
+and added her own strength in the working of the sweep. Foot by foot
+and yard by yard the scow made precious westing, and Kent's face
+lighted up with triumph as he nodded ahead to a timbered point that
+thrust itself out like a stubby thumb into the river. Beyond that point
+the rapids were frothing white, and they could see the first black
+walls of rock that marked the beginning of the Chute.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We'll make it," he smiled confidently. "We'll hit that timbered point
+close inshore. I don't see where the launch can make a landing anywhere
+within a mile of the Chute. And once ashore we'll make trail about five
+times as fast they can follow it." Marette's face was no longer pale,
+but flushed with excitement. He caught the white gleam of teeth between
+her parted lips. Her eyes shone gloriously, and he laughed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You beautiful little fighter," he cried exultantly. "You&mdash;you&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His words were cut short by a snap that was like the report of a pistol
+close to his ears. He pitched forward and crashed to the bottom of the
+scow, Marette's slim body clutched in his arms as he fell. In a flash
+they were up, and mutely they stared where the sweep had been. The
+blade of it was gone. Kent was conscious of hearing a little cry from
+the girl at his side, and then her fingers were gripping tightly again
+about his thumb. No longer possessed of the power of guidance, the scow
+swung sideways. It swept past the wooded point. The white maelstrom of
+the lower rapids seized upon it. And Kent, looking ahead to the black
+maw of the death-trap that was waiting for them, drew Marette close in
+his arms and held her tight.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap22"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XXII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+For a brief space after the breaking of the scow-sweep Kent did not
+move. He felt Marette's arms closing tighter and tighter around his
+neck. He caught a flash of her upturned face, the flush of a few
+moments before replaced by a deathly pallor, and he knew that without
+explanation on his part she understood the almost hopeless situation
+they were in. He was glad of that. It gave him a sense of relief to
+know that she would not go into a panic, no matter what happened. He
+bowed his face to hers, so that he felt the velvety smoothness of her
+cheek. She turned her mouth to him, and they kissed. His embrace was
+crushing for a moment, fierce with his love for her, desperate with his
+determination to keep her from harm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His brain was working swiftly. There was possibly one chance in ten
+that the scow&mdash;rudderless and without human guidance&mdash;would sweep
+safely between the black walls and jagged teeth of the Chute. Even if
+the scow made this passage, they would be in the power of the Police,
+unless some splendid whimsicality of Fate sent it ashore before the
+launch came through.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the other hand, if it was carried far enough through the lower
+rapids, they might swim. And&mdash;there was the rifle laying across the
+pack. That, after all, was his greatest hope&mdash;if the scow made the
+passage of the Chute. The bulwarks of the scow would give them greater
+protection than the thinner walls of the launch would give to their
+pursuers. In his heart there raged suddenly a hatred for that Law of
+which he had been a part. It was running them to destruction, and he
+would fight. There would not be more than three men in the launch, and
+he would kill them, if killing became a necessity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They were speeding like an unbridled race-horse through the boiling
+rapids now. The clumsy craft under their feet twisted and turned. The
+dripping tops of great rocks shot past a little out of their channel.
+And Marette, with one arm still about his neck, was facing the peril
+ahead with him. They could see the Dragon's Tooth, black and grim,
+waiting squarely in their path. In another hundred and twenty seconds
+they would be upon it&mdash;or past it. There was no time for Kent to
+explain. He sprang to his pack, whipped a knife from his pocket, and
+cut the stout babiche rope that reenforced its straps. In another
+instant he was back at Marette's side, fastening the babiche about her
+waist. The other end he gave to her, and she tied it about his wrist.
+She smiled as she finished the knot. It was a strange, tense little
+smile, but it told him that she was not afraid, that she had great
+faith in him, and knew what the babiche meant.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I can swim, Jeems," she cried. "If we strike the rock."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She did not finish because of the sudden cry that came to his lips. He
+had almost forgotten the most vital of all things. There was not time
+to unlace his boots. With his knife he cut the laces in a single
+downward thrust. Swiftly he freed his own feet, and Marette's. Even in
+this hour of their peril it thrilled him to see how quickly Marette
+responded to the thoughts that moved him. She tore at her outer
+garments and slipped them off as he wriggled out of his heavy shirt. A
+slim, white-underskirted little thing, her glorious hair flying in the
+wind that came through the Chute, her throat and arms bare, her eyes
+shining at Kent, she came again close within his arms, and her lips
+framed softly his name. And a moment later she turned her face up, and
+cried quickly,
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Kiss me, Jeems&mdash;kiss me&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her warm lips clung to his, and her bare arms encircled his neck with
+the choking grip of a child's. He looked ahead and braced himself on
+his feet, and after that he buried one of his hands in the soft mass of
+her hair and pressed her face against his naked breast.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Ten seconds later the crash came. Squarely amidships the scow struck
+the Dragon's Tooth. Kent was prepared for the shock, but his attempt to
+hold his feet, with Marette in his arms, was futile. The bulwark saved
+them from crashing against the slippery face of the rock itself. Amid
+the roar of water that filled his ears he was conscious of the rending
+of timbers. The scow bulged up with the mighty force beneath, and for a
+second or two it seemed as though that force was going to overturn and
+submerge it. Then slowly it began to slip off the nose of the rock.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holding to the rail with one hand and clinging to Marette with his
+other arm, Kent was gripped in the horror of what was happening. The
+scow was slipping <I>into the right hand channel</I>! In that channel there
+was no hope&mdash;only death.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marette was squarely facing the thing ahead. In this hour when each
+second held a lifetime of suspense Kent saw that she understood. Yet
+she did not cry out. Her face was dead white. Her hair and arms and
+shoulders were dripping with the splash of water. But she was not
+terrified as he had seen terror. When she turned her eyes to him, he
+was amazed by the quiet, calm look that was in them. Her lips trembled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His soul expressed itself in a wordless cry that was drowned in another
+crash of timber as a jutting snag of the Tooth crumpled up the little
+cabin as if it had been pasteboard. He felt overwhelming him the surge
+of a thing mightier than the menace of the Chute. He could not lose! It
+was inconceivable. Impossible! With <I>her</I> to fight for&mdash;this slim,
+wonderful creature who smiled at him even as she saw death.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then, as his arm closed still more tightly about her, the monsters
+of power and death gave him their answer. The scow swung free of the
+Dragon's Tooth, half-filled with water. Its cracked and broken carcass
+was caught in the rock jaws of the eastern channel. It ceased to be a
+floating thing. It was inundation, dissolution, utter obliteration
+almost without shock. And Kent found himself in the thundering rush of
+waters, holding to Marette.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a space they were under. Black water and white froth fumed and
+exploded over them. It seemed an age before fresh air filled Kent's
+nostrils. He thrust Marette upward and cried out to her. He heard her
+answer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm all right&mdash;Jeems!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His swimming prowess was of little avail now. He was like a chip. All
+his effort was to make of himself a barrier between Marette's soft body
+and the rocks. It was not the water itself that he feared, but the
+rocks.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There were scores and hundreds of them, like the teeth of a mighty
+grinding machine. And the jaw was a quarter of a mile in length. He
+felt the first shock, the second, the third. He was not thinking of
+time or distance, but was fighting solely to keep himself between
+Marette and death. The first time he failed, a blind sort of rage
+burned in his brain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He saw her white body strained over a slippery, deluge-worn rock. Her
+head was flung back, and he saw the long masses of her hair streaming
+out in the white froth, and he thought for an instant that her fragile
+body had been broken. He fought still more fiercely after that. And she
+knew for what he was fighting. Only in an unreal sort of way was he
+conscious of shock and hurt. It gave him no physical pain. Yet he
+sensed the growing dizziness in his head, an increasing lack of
+strength in his arms and body.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They were halfway through the Chute when he shot against a rock with
+terrific force. The contact tore Marette from him. He plunged for her,
+missed his grip, and then saw her opposite him, clinging to the same
+rock. The babiche rope had saved her. Fastened about her waist and tied
+to his wrist, it still held them together&mdash;with the five feet of rock
+between them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Panting, their life half beaten out of them, their eyes met over that
+rock. Now that he was out of the water, the blood began streaming from
+Kent's arms and shoulders and face, but he smiled at her as a few
+moments before she had smiled at him. Her eyes were filled with the
+pain of his hurts. He nodded back in the direction from which they had
+come.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We're out of the worst of it," he tried to shout. "As soon as we've
+got our wind, I will climb over the rock to you. It won't take us
+longer than a couple of minutes, perhaps less, to make the quiet water
+at the end of the channel."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She heard him and nodded her reply. He wanted to give her confidence.
+And he had no intention of resting, for her position filled him with a
+terror which he fought to hide. The babiche rope, not half as large
+around as his little finger, had swung her to the downstream side of
+the rock. It was the slender thread of buckskin and his own weight that
+were holding her. If the buckskin should break&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He thanked God that it was the tough babiche that had been around his
+pack. An inch at a time he began to draw himself up on the rock. The
+undertow behind the rock had flung a mass of Marette's long hair toward
+him, so that it was a foot or two nearer to him than her clinging
+hands. He worked himself toward that, for he saw that he could reach it
+more quickly than he could reach her. At the same time he had to keep
+his end of the babiche taut. It was, from the beginning, an almost
+superhuman task. The rock was slippery as oil. Twice his eyes shot
+down-stream, with the thought that it might be better to cast himself
+bodily into the water, and after that draw Marette to him by means of
+the babiche. What he saw convinced him that such action would be fatal.
+He must have Marette in his arms. If he lost her&mdash;even for a few
+seconds&mdash;the life would be beaten from her body in that rock-strewn
+maelstrom below.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then, suddenly, the babiche cord about his wrist grew loose. The
+reaction almost threw him back. With the loosening of it a cry came
+from Marette. It all happened in an instant, in almost less time than
+his brain could seize upon the significance of it&mdash;the slipping of her
+hands from the rock, the shooting of her white body away from him in
+the still whiter spume of the rapids, The rock had cut the babiche, and
+she was gone! With a cry that was like the cry of a madman he plunged
+after her. The water engulfed him. He twisted himself up, freeing
+himself from the undertow. Twenty feet ahead of him&mdash;thirty&mdash;he caught
+a glimpse of a white arm and then of Marette's face, before she
+disappeared in a wall of froth.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Into that froth he shot after her. He came out of it blinded, groping
+wildly for her, crying out her name. His fingers caught the end of the
+babiche that was fastened about his own wrist, and he clutched it
+savagely, believing for a moment that he had found her. Thicker and
+more deadly the rocks of the lower passage rose in his way. They seemed
+like living things, like devils filled with the desire to torture and
+destroy. They struck and beat at him. Their laughter was the roar of a
+Niagara. He no longer cried out. His brain grew heavy, and clubs were
+beating him&mdash;beating and breaking him into a formless thing. The
+rock-drifts of spume, lather-white, like the frosting of a monster
+cake, turned gray and then black.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He did not know when he ceased fighting. The day went out. Night came.
+The world was oblivion. And for a space he ceased to live.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap23"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XXIII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+An hour later the fighting forces in his body dragged Kent back into
+existence. He opened his eyes. The shock of what had happened did not
+at once fall upon him. His first sensation was of awakening from a
+sleep that had been filled with pain and horror.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then he saw a black rock wall opposite him; he heard the sullen roar of
+the stream; his eyes fell upon a vivid patch of light reflected from
+the setting sun. He dragged himself up until he was on his knees, and
+all at once a thing that was like an iron hoop&mdash;choking his
+senses&mdash;seemed to break in his head, and he staggered to his feet,
+crying out Marette's name. Understanding inundated him with its horror,
+deadening his tongue after that first cry, filling his throat with a
+moaning, sobbing agony. Marette was gone. She was lost. She was dead.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Swiftly, as reason came, his eyes took in his environment. For a
+quarter of a mile above him he could see the white spume between the
+chasm walls, darkening with the approach of night. He could hear more
+clearly the roar of the death-floods. But close to him was smooth
+water, and he stood now on a shelving tongue of rock and shale, upon
+which the current had flung him. In front of him was a rock wall.
+Behind him was another. There was no footing except where he stood. And
+Marette was not with him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Only the truth could batter at his brain as he stood there. But his
+physical self refused to accept that truth. If he had lived, she must
+live! She was there&mdash;somewhere&mdash;along the shore&mdash;among the rocks&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The moaning in his throat gave way to the voicing of her name. He
+shouted, and listened. He swayed back along the tongue of rock to the
+boulder-strewn edge of the chasm wall. A hundred yards farther on was
+the opening of the Chute. He came out of this, his clothes torn from
+him, his body bleeding, unrecognizable, half a madman,&mdash;shouting her
+name more and more loudly. The glow of the setting sun struck him at
+last. He was out from between the chasm walls, and it lighted up the
+green world for him. Ahead of him the river widened and swept on in
+tranquil quiet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And now it was no longer fear that possessed him. It was the horrible,
+overwhelming certainty of the thing. The years fell from him, and he
+sobbed&mdash;sobbed like a boy stricken by some great childish grief, as he
+searched along the edge of the shore. Over and over again he cried and
+whispered Marette's name.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But he did not shout it again, for he knew that she was dead. She was
+gone from him forever. Yet he did not cease to search. The last of the
+sun went out. Twilight came, and then darkness. Even in that darkness
+he continued to search for a mile below the Chute, calling her name
+more loudly now, and listening always for the answer which he knew
+would never come. The moon came out after a time, and hour after hour
+he kept up his hopeless quest. He did not know how badly the rocks had
+battered and hurt him, and he scarcely knew when it was that exhaustion
+dropped him like a dead man in his tracks. When dawn came, it found him
+wandering away from the river, and toward noon of that day, he was
+found by André Boileau, the old white-haired half-breed who trapped on
+Burntwood Creek. André was shocked at the sight of his wounds and half
+dragged and half carried him to his shack hidden away in the forest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For six days thereafter Kent remained at old André's place, simply
+because he had neither the strength nor the reason to move. André
+wondered that there were no broken bones in him. But his head was
+terribly hurt, and it was that hurt that for three days and three
+nights made Kent hover with nerve-racking indecision between life and
+death. The fourth day reason came back to him, and Boileau fed him
+venison broth. The fifth day he stood up. The sixth he thanked André,
+and said that he was ready to go.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+André outfitted him with old clothes, gave him a supply of food and
+God's blessing. And Kent returned to the Chute, giving André to
+understand that his destination was Athabasca Landing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent knew that it was not wise for him to return to the river. He knew
+that it would have been better for him both in mind and body had he
+gone in the opposite direction. But he no longer had in him the desire
+to fight, even for himself. He followed the lines of least resistance,
+and these led him back to the scene of the tragedy. His grief, when he
+returned, was no longer the heartbreaking agony of that first night. It
+was a deep-seated, consuming fire that had already burned him out,
+heart and soul. Even caution was dead in him. He feared nothing,
+avoided nothing. Had the police boat been at the Chute, he would have
+revealed himself without any thought of self-preservation. A ray of
+hope would have been precious medicine to him. But there was no hope.
+Marette was dead. Her tender body was destroyed. And he was alone,
+unfathomably and hopelessly alone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And now, after he had reached the river again, something held him
+there. From the head of the Chute to a bend in the river two miles
+below, his feet wore a beaten trail. Three or four times a day he would
+make the trip, and along the path he set a few snares in which he
+caught rabbits for food. Each night he made his bed in a crevice among
+the rocks at the foot of the Chute. At the end of a week the old Jim
+Kent was dead. Even O'Connor would not have recognized him with his
+shaggy growth of beard, his hollow eyes, and the sunken cheeks which
+the beard failed to hide.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And the fighting spirit in him also was dead. Once or twice there
+leaped up in him a sudden passion demanding vengeance upon the accursed
+Law that was accountable for the death of Marette, but even this flame
+snuffed itself out quickly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then, on the eighth day, he saw the edge of a thing that was almost
+hidden under an overhanging bank. He fished it out. It was Marette's
+little pack, and for many minutes before he opened it Kent crushed the
+sodden treasure to his breast, staring with half-mad eyes down where he
+had found it, as if Marette must be there, too. Then he ran with it to
+an open space, where the sun fell warmly on a great, flat rock that was
+level with the ground, and with sobbing breath he opened it. It was
+filled with the things she had picked up quickly in her room the night
+of their flight from Kedsty's bungalow, and as he drew them out one by
+one and placed them in the sun on the rock, a new and sudden rush of
+life swept through his veins, and he sprang to his feet and faced the
+river again, as if at last a hope had come to him. Then he looked down
+again upon what she had treasured, and reaching out his arms to them,
+he whispered,
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Marette&mdash;my little goddess&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Even in his grief the overwhelming mastery of his love for the one who
+was dead brought a smile to his haggard and bearded face. For Marette,
+in filling her little pack on that night of hurried flight, had chosen
+strange things. On the sunlit rock, where he had placed them, were a
+pair of the little pumps which he had fallen on his knees to worship in
+her room, and with these she had crowded into the pack one of the
+billowing, sweet-smelling dresses which had made his heart stand still
+for a moment when he first looked into their hiding-place. It was no
+longer soft and cobwebby as it had been then, like down fluttering
+against his cheeks, but sodden and discolored, as it lay on the rock
+with little rivulets of water running from it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With the shoes and the dress were the intimate necessities which
+Marette had taken with her. But it was one of the pumps that Kent
+picked up and crushed close to his ragged breast&mdash;one of the two she
+had worn that first wonderful day she had come to see him at Cardigan's
+place.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This hour was the beginning of another change in Kent. It seemed to him
+that a message had come to him from Marette herself, that the spirit of
+her had returned to him and was with him now, stirring strange things
+in his soul and warming his blood with a new heat. She was gone
+forever, and yet she had come back to him, and the truth grew upon him
+that this spirit of her would never leave him again as long as he
+lived. He felt her nearness. Unconsciously he reached out his arms, and
+a strange happiness entered Into him to battle with grief and
+loneliness. His eyes shone with a new glow as they looked at her little
+belongings on the sunlit rock. It was as if they were flesh and blood
+of her, a part of her heart and soul. They were the voice of her faith
+in him, her promise that she would be with him always. For the first
+time in many days Kent felt a new force within him, and he knew that
+she was not quite gone, that he had something of her left to fight for.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That night he made his bed for a last time in the crevice between the
+rocks, and his treasure was gathered within the protecting circle of
+his arms as he slept.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next day he struck out north and east. On the fifth day after he
+left the country of André Boileau he traded his watch to a half-breed
+for a cheap gun, ammunition, a blanket, flour, and a cooking outfit.
+After that he had no hesitation in burying himself still deeper into
+the forests.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A month later no one would have recognized Kent as the one-time crack
+man of N Division. Bearded, ragged, long-haired, he wandered with no
+other purpose than to be alone and to get still farther away from the
+river. Occasionally he talked with an Indian or a half-breed. Each
+night, though the weather was very warm, he made himself a small
+camp-fire, for it was always in these hours, with the fire-light about
+him, that he felt Marette was very near. It was then that he took out
+one by one the precious things that were in Marette's little pack. He
+worshipped these things. The dress and each of the little shoes he had
+wrapped in the velvety inner bark of the birch tree. He protected them
+from wet and storm. Had emergency called for it, he would have fought
+for them. They became, after a time, more precious than his own life,
+and in a vague sort of way at first he began to thank God that the
+river had not robbed him of everything.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent's inclination was not to fight himself into forgetfulness. He
+wanted to remember every act, every word, every treasured caress that
+chained him for all time to the love he had lost. Marette became more a
+part of him every day. Dead in the flesh, she was always at his side,
+nestling close in the shelter of his arms at night, walking with her
+hand in his during the day. And in this belief his grief was softened
+by the sweet and merciful comfort of a possession of which neither man
+nor fate could rob him&mdash;a beloved Presence always with him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was this Presence that rebuilt Kent. It urged him to throw up his
+head again, to square his shoulders, to look life once more straight in
+the face. It was both inspiration and courage to him and grew nearer
+and dearer to him as time passed. Early Autumn found him in the Fond du
+Lac country, two hundred miles east of Fort Chippewyan. That Winter he
+joined a Frenchman, and until February they trapped along the edges of
+the lower fingers of the Barrens.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He came to think a great deal of Picard, his comrade. But he revealed
+nothing of his secret to him, or of the new desire that was growing in
+him. And as the Winter lengthened this desire became a deep and abiding
+yearning. It was with him night and day. He dreamed of it when he
+slept, and it was never out of his thoughts when awake. He wanted to go
+HOME. And when he thought of home, it was not of the Landing, and not
+of the country south. For him home meant only one place in the world
+now&mdash;the place where Marette had lived. Somewhere, hidden in the
+mountains far north and west, was that mysterious Valley of Silent Men
+where they had been going when her body died. And the spirit of her
+wanted him to go to it now. It was like a voice pleading with him,
+urging him to go, to live there always where she had lived. He began to
+plan, and in this planning he found new joy and new life. He would find
+her home, her people, the valley that was to have been their paradise.
+So late in February, with his share of the Winter catch in his pack, he
+said good-by to Picard and faced the River again.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap24"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XXIV
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Kent had not forgotten that he was an outlaw, but he was not afraid.
+Now that he had something new and thrilling to fight for, he fell back
+again upon what he called "the finesse of the game." He approached
+Chippewyan cautiously, although he was sure that even his old friends
+at the Landing would fail to recognize him now. His beard was four or
+five inches long, and his hair was shaggy and uncut. Picard had made
+him a coat, that winter, of young caribou skin, and it was fringed like
+an Indian's. Kent chose his time and entered Chippewyan just before
+dusk.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Oil lamps were burning in the Hudson's Bay Company's store when he went
+in with his furs. The place was empty, except for the factor's clerk,
+and for an hour he bartered. He bought a new outfit, a Winchester
+rifle, and all the supplies he could carry. He did not forget a razor
+and a pair of shears, and when he was done he still had the value of
+two silver fox skins in cash. He left Chippewyan that same night, and
+by the light of a Winter moon made his camp half a dozen miles
+northward toward Smith Landing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was on the Slave River now and for weeks traveled slowly but
+steadily northward on snowshoes. He avoided Fort Smith and Smith
+Landing and struck westward before he came to Fort Resolution. It was
+in April that he struck Hay River Post, where the Hay River empties
+into Great Slave Lake. Until the ice broke up, Kent worked at Hay
+River. When it was safe, he started down the Mackenzie in a canoe. It
+was late in June when he turned up the Liard to the South Nahani.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You go straight through between the sources of the North and the South
+Nahani," Marette had told him. "It is there you find the Sulphur
+Country, and beyond the Sulphur Country is the Valley of Silent Men."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At last he came to the edge of this country. He camped with the stink
+of it in his nostrils. The moon rose, and he saw that desolate world as
+through the fumes of a yellow smoke. With dawn he went on.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He passed through broad, low morasses out of which rose sulphurous
+fogs. Mile after mile he buried himself deeper in it, and it became
+more and more a dead country, a lost hell. There were berry bushes on
+which there grew no berries. There were forests and swamps, but without
+a living creature to inhabit them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was a country of water in which there were no fish, of air in which
+there were no birds, of plants without flowers&mdash;a reeking, stinking
+country still with the stillness of death. He began to turn yellow. His
+clothing, his canoe, his hands, face&mdash;everything turned yellow. He
+could not get the filthy taste of sulphur out of his mouth. Yet he kept
+on, straight west by the compass Gowen had given him at Hay River. Even
+this compass became yellow in his pocket. It was impossible for him to
+eat. Only twice that day did he drink from his flask of water.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Marette had made this journey! He kept telling himself that. It was
+the secret way in and out of their hidden world, a region accursed by
+devils, a forbidden country to both Indian and white man. It was hard
+for him to believe that she had come this way, that she had drunk in
+the air that was filling his own lungs, nauseating him a dozen times to
+the point of sickness. He worked desperately. He felt neither fatigue
+nor the heat of the warm water about him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Night came, and the moon rose, lighting up with a sickly glow the
+diseased world that had swallowed him. He lay in the bottom of his
+canoe, covering his face with his caribou coat, and tried to sleep. But
+sleep would not come. Before dawn he struck on, watching his compass by
+the light of matches. All that day he made no effort to swallow food.
+But with the coming of the second night he found the air easier to
+breathe. He fought his way on by the light of the moon which was
+clearer now. And at last, in a resting spell, he heard far ahead of him
+the howl of a wolf.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In his joy he cried out. A western breeze brought him air that he drank
+in as a desert-stricken man drinks water. He did not look at his
+compass again, but worked steadily in the face of that fresh air. An
+hour later he found that he was paddling again a slow current, and when
+he tasted the water it was only slightly tainted with sulphur. By
+midnight the water was cool and clean. He landed on a shore of sand and
+pebbles, stripped to the skin, and gave himself such a scouring as he
+had never before experienced. He had worn his old trapping shirt and
+trousers, and after his bath he changed to the outfit which he had kept
+clean in his pack. Then he built a fire and ate his first meal in two
+days.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next morning he climbed a tall spruce and surveyed the country
+about him. Westward there was a broad low country shut in fifteen or
+twenty miles away by the foothills. Beyond these foothills rose the
+snow-capped peaks of the Rockies. He shaved himself, cut his hair, and
+went on. That night he camped only when he could drive his canoe no
+farther. The waterway had narrowed to a creek, and he was among the
+first green shoulders of the hills when he stopped. With another dawn
+he concealed his canoe in a sheltered place and went on with his pack.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a week he picked his way slowly westward. It was a splendid country
+into which he had come, and yet he found no sign of human life. The
+foothills changed to mountains, and he believed he was in the Campbell
+Range. Also he knew that he had followed the logical trail from the
+sulphur country. Yet it was the eighth day before he came upon a sign
+which told him that another living being had at some time passed that
+way. What he found were the charred remnants of an old camp-fire. It
+had been a white man's fire. He knew that by the size of it. It had
+been an all-night fire of green logs cut with an axe.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the tenth day he came to the westward slope of the first range and
+looked down upon one of the most wonderful valleys his eyes had ever
+beheld. It was more than a valley. It was a broad plain. Fifty miles
+across it rose the towering majesty of the mightiest of all the Yukon
+mountains.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And now, though he saw a paradise about him, his heart began to sink
+within him. It seemed to him inconceivable that in a country so vast he
+could find the spot for which he was seeking. His one hope lay in
+finding white men or Indians, some one who might guide him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He traveled slowly over the fifty-mile plain rich with a verdure of
+green, covered with flowers, a game paradise. Few hunters had come so
+far out of the Yukon mountains, he told himself. And none had come from
+out of the sulphur country. It was a new and undiscovered world. On his
+map it was a blank space. And there were no signs of people. Ahead of
+him the Yukon mountains rose in an impenetrable wall, peak after peak,
+crested with snow, towering like mighty watchdogs above the clouds. He
+knew what lay beyond them&mdash;the great rivers of the Western slope,
+Dawson City, the gold country and its civilization. But those things
+were on the other side of the mountains. On his side there was only the
+vast and undisputed silence of a paradise as yet unclaimed by man.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As he went on into this valley there grew upon him a strange and
+comforting peace. Yet with it there was a steadily increasing belief
+that he would not find that for which he had come in search. He did not
+attempt to analyze this belief. It became a part of him, just as his
+mental tranquillity had grown upon him. His one hope of success was
+that nearer the mountains he might find white men or Indians.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He no longer used his compass, but guided himself by a cluster of three
+gigantic peaks. One of these was taller than the other two. As he
+journeyed, his eyes were always returning to it. It fascinated him,
+impinged itself upon him as the watcher of a million years, guarding
+the valley. He began to think of it as the Watcher. Each hour of his
+progress seemed to bring it a little more intimately to his vision.
+From his first night's camp in the valley he saw the moon sink behind
+it. Within him a voice that never died kept whispering to him that this
+mountain, greater than all the others, had been Marette's guardian. Ten
+thousand times she must have looked at it, as he had looked at it that
+day&mdash;if her home was anywhere this side of the Campbell Range. A
+hundred miles away she could have seen the Watcher on a clear day.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the second day the mountain continued to grow upon Kent. By
+mid-afternoon it began to take on a new character. The peak of it was
+in the form of a mighty castle that changed as he advanced. And the two
+lesser peaks were forming into definite contours. Before the haze of
+twilight dimmed his vision, he knew that what he had seen was not a
+whimsical invention of his imagination. The Watcher had grown into the
+shape of a mighty human head facing south. A restless excitement
+possessed him, and he traveled on long after dusk. At dawn he was on
+the trail again. Westward the sky cleared, and suddenly he stopped, and
+a cry came from him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Watcher's head was there, as if chiseled by the hands of giants.
+The two smaller peaks had unveiled their mystery. Startling and weird,
+their crests had taken on the form of human heads. One of them was
+looking north. The other faced the valley. And Kent, his heart
+pounding, cried to himself,
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Silent Men!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He did not hear himself, but the thought itself was a tumultuous thing
+within him. It came upon him like an inundation, a sudden and thrilling
+inspiration backed by the forces of a visual truth. <I>The Valley of
+Silent Men</I>. He repeated the words, staring at the three colossal heads
+in the sky. Somewhere near them, under them,&mdash;one side or the
+other&mdash;was Marette's hidden valley!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He went on. A strange joy consumed him. In it, at times, his grief was
+obliterated, and it seemed to him in these moments that Marette must
+surely be at the valley to greet him when he came to it. But always the
+tragedy of the Death Chute came back to him, and with it the thought
+that the three giant heads were watching&mdash;and would always watch&mdash;for a
+beloved lost one who would never return. As the sun went down that day,
+the face bowed to the valley seemed alive with the fire of a living
+question sent directly to Kent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Where is she?" it asked. "Where is she? Where is she?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That night Kent did not sleep.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next day there lay ahead of him a low and broken range, the first
+of the deeper mountains. He climbed this steadily, and at noon had
+reached the crest. And he knew that at last he was looking down into
+the Valley of Silent Men. It was not a wide valley, like the other. On
+the far side of it, three or four miles away, rose the huge mountain
+whose face was looking down upon the green meadows at its foot.
+Southward Kent could see for a long distance, and in the vivid sunlight
+he saw the shimmer of creeks and little lakes, and the rich glow of
+thick patches of cedar and spruce and balsam, scattered like great rugs
+of velvety luster amid the flowering green of the valley. Northward,
+three or four miles away the range which he had climbed made a sharp
+twist to the east, and that part of the valley&mdash;following the swing of
+the range&mdash;was lost to him. He turned in this direction after he had
+rested. It was four o'clock when he came to the elbow in the valley,
+and could look down into the hidden part of it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What he saw at first was a giant cup hollowed out of the surrounding
+mountains, a cup two miles from brim to brim, the end of the valley
+itself. It took him a few moments to focus his vision so that it would
+pick up the smaller and more intimate things half a mile under him, and
+yet, before he had done this, a sound came up to him that set aquiver
+every nerve in his body. It was the far-down, hollow-sounding barking
+of a dog.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The warm, golden haze that precedes sunset in the mountains, was
+gathering between him and the valley, but through this he made out
+after a time evidences of human habitation almost straight under him.
+There was a small lake out of which ran a shimmering creek, and close
+to this lake, yet equally near to the base of the mountain on which he
+was standing, were a number of buildings and a stockade which looked
+like a toy. He could see no animals, no movement of any kind.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Without seeking for a downward trail he began to descend. Again he did
+not question himself. An overwhelming certainty possessed him. Of all
+places in the world this must be the Valley of Silent Men.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And below him, flooded and half-hidden in the illusive sun-mist, was
+Marette's old home. It seemed to him now that it belonged to him, that
+he was a part of it, that in going to it he was achieving his last
+great resting place, his final refuge, his own home. And the thought
+became strangely a part of him that a welcome must be waiting for him
+there. He hurried until his breath came pantingly between his lips and
+he was forced to rest. And at last he found himself where his progress
+was made a foot at a time, and again and again he was forced to climb
+back and detour around treacherous slides and precipitous breaks which
+left sheer falls at his feet. The mist thickened in the valley. The sun
+sank behind the western peaks, and swiftly after that the gloom of
+twilight deepened. It was seven o'clock when he came to the edge of the
+plain, at least a mile below the elbow which shut out the cup in the
+valley. He was exhausted. His hands were bruised and bleeding. Darkness
+shut him in when he went on.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When he rounded the elbow of the mountain, he did not try to keep back
+the joyous cry that came to his lips. Ahead of him there were lights. A
+few of them were scattered, but nearest to him he saw a cluster of
+them, like the glow that comes from a number of illumined windows. He
+quickened his pace as he drew nearer to them, and at last he wanted to
+run. And then something stopped him, and it seemed to him that his
+heart had risen into his throat and was choking him until he could not
+breathe.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was a man's voice he heard, calling through the twilight gloom a
+name. "Marette&mdash;Marette&mdash;Marette&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent tried to cry out, but his breath came only in a gasp. He felt
+himself trembling. He reached out his arms, and a strange madness
+rushed like fire into his brain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again the voice called, "Marette&mdash;Marette&mdash;Marette&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The cup in the valley echoed the name. It rolled softly up the
+mountainside. The air trembled with it, whispered it, passed it on&mdash;and
+suddenly the madness in Kent found voice, and he shouted,
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Marette&mdash;Marette&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He ran on. His knees felt weak. He shouted the name again, and the
+other voice was silent. Things loomed up out of the mist ahead of him,
+between him and the glowing windows. Some one&mdash;two people&mdash;were
+advancing to meet him, doubtfully, wonderingly. Kent was staggering,
+but he cried the name again, and this time it was a woman's cry that
+answered, and one of the two came toward him swift as a flash of light.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Three paces apart they stood, and in that gloom of the after-twilight
+their burning eyes looked at each other, while for a space their bodies
+remained stricken in the face of this miracle of a great and merciful
+God.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The dead had risen. By a mighty effort Kent reached out his arms, and
+Marette swayed to him. When the other man came up, he found them
+crumpled to their knees on the earth, clasped like children in each
+other's arms. And as Kent raised his face, he saw that it was Sandy
+McTrigger who was looking down at him, the man whose life he had saved
+at Athabasca Landing.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap25"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XXV
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+How long it was before his brain cleared, Kent never could have told.
+It might have been a minute or an hour. Every vital force that was in
+him had concentrated into a single consciousness&mdash;that the dead had
+come to life, that it was Marette Radisson, the flesh and blood and
+living warmth of her, he held in his arms. Like the flash of a picture
+on a screen he had seen McTrigger's face close to him, and then his own
+head was crushed down again, and if the valley had been filled with the
+roar of cannon, he would have heard only one sound, a sobbing voice
+crying over and over again, "Jeems&mdash;Jeems&mdash;Jeems&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was McTrigger, in the beginning of the starlight, who alone looked
+with clear vision upon the wonder of the thing that was happening.
+After a little Kent realized that McTrigger was talking, that a hand
+was on his shoulder, that the voice was both joyous and insistent. He
+rose to his feet, still holding Marette, her arms clinging to him. Her
+breath was sobbing and broken. And it was impossible for Kent to speak.
+He seemed to stumble over the distance between them and the lights,
+with McTrigger on the other side of Marette. It was McTrigger who
+opened a door, and they came into a glow of lamplight. It was a great,
+strange-looking room they entered. And over the threshold Marette's
+hands dropped from Kent, and Kent stepped back, so that in the light
+they faced each other, and in that moment came the marvelous
+readjustment from shock and disbelief to a glorious certainty.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again Kent's brain was as clear as the day he faced death at the head
+of the Chute. And swift as a hot barb a fear leaped into him as his
+eyes met the eyes of the girl. She was terribly changed. Her face was
+white with a whiteness that startled him. It was thin. Her eyes were
+great, slumbering pools of violet, almost black in the lamp glow, and
+her hair&mdash;piled high on her head as he had seen it that first day at
+Cardigan's&mdash;added to the telltale pallor in her cheeks. A hand trembled
+at her throat, and its thinness frightened him. For a space&mdash;a flash of
+seconds&mdash;she looked at him as if possessed of the subconscious fear
+that he was not Jim Kent, and then slowly her arms opened, and she
+reached them out to him. She did not smile, she did not cry out, she
+did not speak his name now; but her arms went round his neck as he took
+her to him, and her face dropped on his breast. He looked at McTrigger.
+A woman was standing beside him, a dark-haired, dark-eyed woman, and
+she had laid a hand on McTrigger's arm, Kent, looking at them,
+understood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The woman came to him. "I had better take her now, m'sieu," she said.
+"Malcolm&mdash;will tell you. And a little later,&mdash;you may see her again."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her voice was low and soft. At the sound of it Marette raised her head,
+and her two hands stole to Kent's cheeks in their old sweet way, and
+she whispered,
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Kiss me, Jeems&mdash;my Jeems&mdash;kiss me&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap26"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XXVI
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+A little later, clasping hands in the lamp glow, Kent and Sandy
+McTrigger stood alone in the big room. In their handclasp was the warm
+thrill of strong men met in an immutable brotherhood. Each had faced
+death for the other. Yet this thought, subconsciously and forever a
+part of them, expressed itself only in the grip of their fingers and in
+the understanding that lay deep in their eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In Kent's face the great question was of Marette. McTrigger saw the
+fear of it, and slowly he smiled, a glad and yet an anxious smile, as
+he looked toward the door through which Marette and the older woman had
+gone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thank God you have come in time!" he said, still holding Kent's hand.
+"She thought you were dead. And I know, Kent, that it was killing her.
+We had to watch her at night. Sometimes she would wander out into the
+valley. She said she was looking for you. It was that way tonight."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent gulped hard. "I understand now," he said. "It was the living soul
+of her that was pulling me here. I&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He took his pack with its precious contents from his shoulders,
+listening to McTrigger. They sat down. What McTrigger was saying seemed
+of trifling consequence beside the fact that Marette was somewhere
+beyond the other door, alive, and that he would see her again very
+soon. He did not see why McTrigger should tell him that the older woman
+was his wife. Even the fact that a splendid chance had thrown Marette
+upon a log wedged between two rocks in the Chute, and that this log,
+breaking away, had carried her to the opposite side of the river miles
+below, was trivial with the thought that only a door separated them
+now. But he listened. He heard McTrigger tell how Marette had searched
+for him those days when he was lost in fever at André Boileau's cabin,
+how she had given him up for dead, and how in those same days Laselle's
+brigade had floated down, and she had come north with it. Later he
+would marvel over these things, but now he listened, and his eyes
+turned toward the door. It was then that McTrigger drove something
+home. It was like a shot piercing Kent's brain. McTrigger was speaking
+quietly of O'Connor. He said:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you probably came by way of Fort Simpson, Kent, and O'Connor has
+told you all this. It was he who brought Marette back home through the
+Sulphur Country."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"O'Connor!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent sprang to his feet. It took McTrigger but a moment to read the
+truth in his face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good God, do you mean to tell me you don't know, Kent?" he whispered
+tensely, rising in front of the other. "Haven't you seen O'Connor?
+Haven't you come in touch with the Police anywhere within the last
+year? Don't you know&mdash;?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know nothing," breathed Kent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a space McTrigger stared at him in amazement
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have been in hiding," said Kent. "All this time I have been keeping
+away from the Police."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+McTrigger drew a deep breath. Again his hands gripped Kent's, and his
+voice was incredulous, filled with a great wonder. "And you have come
+to her, to her old home, believing that Marette killed Kedsty! It is
+hard to believe. And yet&mdash;" Into his face came suddenly a look of
+grief, almost of pain, and Kent, following his eyes, saw that he was
+looking at a big stone fireplace in the end of the room.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It was O'Connor who worked the thing out last Winter," he said,
+speaking with, an effort. "I must tell you before you see her again.
+You must understand everything. It will not do to have her tell you.
+See&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent followed him to the fireplace. From the shelf over the stonework
+McTrigger took a picture and gave it to him. It was a snapshot, the
+picture of a bare-headed man standing in the open with the sun shining
+on him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A low cry broke from Kent's lips. It was the great, gray ghost of a man
+he had seen in the lightning flare that night from the window of his
+hiding-place in Kedsty's bungalow.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My brother," said McTrigger chokingly. "I loved him. For forty years
+we were comrades. And Marette belonged to us, half and half. It was
+he&mdash;who killed&mdash;John Barkley." And then, after a moment in which
+McTrigger fought to speak steadily, he added, "And it was he&mdash;my
+brother&mdash;who also killed Inspector Kedsty."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a matter of seconds there was a dead silence between them.
+McTrigger looked into the fireplace instead of at Kent. Then he said:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He killed those men, but he didn't murder them, Kent. It couldn't be
+called that. It was justice, single-man justice, without going to law.
+If it wasn't for Marette, I wouldn't tell you about it&mdash;not the
+horrible part of it. I don't like to bring it up in my memory. ... It
+happened years ago. I was not married then, but my brother was ten
+years older than I and had a wife. I think that Marette loves you as
+Marie loved Donald. And Donald's love was more than that. It was
+worship. We came into the new mountain country, the three of us, even
+before the big strikes at Dawson and Bonanza. It was a wild country, a
+savage country, and there were few women in it, but Marie came with
+Donald. She was beautiful, with hair and eyes like Marette's. That was
+the tragedy of it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I won't tell you the details. They were terrible. It happened while
+Donald and I were out on a hunt. Three men&mdash;white men&mdash;remember that,
+Kent; WHITE MEN&mdash;came out of the North and stopped at the cabin. When
+we returned, what we found there drove us mad. Marie died in Donald's
+arms. And leaving her there, alone, we set out after the white-skinned
+brutes who had destroyed her. Only a blizzard saved them, Kent. Their
+trail was fresh when the storm came. Had it held off another two hours,
+I, too, would have killed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"From that day Donald and I became man-hunters. We traced the back
+trail of the three fiends and discovered who they were. Two years later
+Donald found one of the three on the Yukon, and before he killed him he
+made him verify the names of the other two. It was a long search after
+that, Kent. It has covered thirty years. Donald grew old faster than I,
+and I knew, after a time, that he was strangely mad. He would be gone
+for months at a time, always searching for the two men. Ten years
+passed, and then, one day, in the deep of Winter, we came on a cabin
+home that had been stricken with the plague&mdash;the smallpox. It was the
+home of Pierre Radisson and his wife Andrea. Both were dead. But there
+was a little child still living, almost a babe in arms. We took her,
+Donald and I. The child was&mdash;Marette."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+McTrigger had spoken almost in a monotone. He had not raised his eyes
+from the ash of the fireplace. But now he looked up suddenly at Kent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We worshipped her from the beginning," he said, his voice a bit husky.
+"I hoped that love for her would save Donald. It did, in a way. But it
+did not cure his madness, his desire for vengeance. We came farther
+east. We found this marvelous valley, and gold in the mountains,
+untouched by other men. We built here, and I hoped even more that the
+glory of this new world we had discovered would help Donald to forget.
+I married, and my wife loved Marette. We had a child, and then another,
+and both died. We loved Marette more than ever after that. Anne, my
+wife, was the daughter of a missioner and capable of educating Marette
+up to a certain point. You will find this place filled with all kinds
+of books, and reading, and music. But the time came when we thought we
+must send Marette to Montreal. It broke her heart. And then&mdash;a long
+time after&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+McTrigger paused a moment, looking into Kent's eyes. "And then&mdash;one day
+Donald came in from Dawson City, terrible in his madness, and told us
+that he had found his men. One of them was John Barkley, the rich
+timber man, and the other was Kedsty, Inspector of Police at Athabasca
+Landing."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent made no effort to speak. His amazement, as McTrigger had gone on,
+was beyond the expression of words. The night held for him a cumulative
+shock&mdash;the discovery that Marette was not dead, but alive, and now the
+discovery that he, Jim Kent, was no longer a hunted man, and that it
+was O'Connor, his old comrade, who had run the truth down. With dry
+lips he simply nodded, urging McTrigger to continue.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I knew what would happen if Donald went after Barkley and Kedsty,"
+said the older man. "And it was impossible to hold him back. He was
+mad, clean mad. There was just one thing for me to do. I left here
+first, with the intention of warning the two brutes who had killed
+Donald's wife. I knew, with the evidence in our hands, they could do
+nothing but make a getaway. No matter how rich or powerful they were,
+our evidence was complete, and through many years we had kept track of
+the movements of our witnesses. I tried to explain to Donald that we
+could send them to prison, but there was but one thought in his poor
+sick mind&mdash;to kill. I was younger and beat him south. And after that I
+made my fatal mistake. I thought I was far enough ahead of him to get
+down to the line of rail and back before he arrived. You see, I figured
+his love for Marette would take him to Montreal first, and I had made
+up my mind to tell her everything so that she might understand the
+necessity of holding him if he went to her. I wrote everything to her
+and told her to remain in Montreal. How she did that, you know. She set
+out for the North as soon as she received my letter."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+McTrigger's shoulders hunched lower. "Well, you know what happened,
+Kent. Donald got ahead of me, after all. I came the day after Barkley
+was killed. I took it as a kind fate that the day preceding the killing
+I shot a grouse for my dinner, and as the bird was only wounded when I
+picked it up, I got blood on the sleeves of my coat. I was arrested.
+Kedsty, every one, was sure they had the real man. And I kept quiet,
+except to maintain my innocence. I could say nothing that would turn
+the law on Donald's trail.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"After that, things happened quickly. You, my friend, made your false
+confession to save one who had done you a poor service years ago.
+Almost simultaneously with that, Marette had come. She came quietly, in
+the night, and went straight to Kedsty. She told him everything, showed
+him the written evidence, telling him this evidence was in the hands of
+others and would be used if anything happened to her. Her power over
+him was complete. As the price of her secrecy she demanded my release,
+and in that black hour your confession gave Kedsty his opportunity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He knew you were lying. He knew it was Donald who had killed Barkley.
+Yet he was willing to sacrifice you to save himself. And Marette
+remained in his house, waiting and watching for Donald, while I
+searched for him on the trails. That is why she secretly lived in
+Kedsty's house. She knew that Donald would come there sooner or later,
+if I did not find him and get him away. And she was plotting how to
+save you.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She loved you, Kent&mdash;from that first hour she came to you in the
+hospital. And she tried to exact your freedom also as an added price
+for her secrecy. But Kedsty had become like a cornered tiger. If he
+freed you, he saw his whole world crumbling under his feet. He, too,
+went a little mad, I think. He told Marette that he would not free you,
+that he would go to the hangman first. Then, Kent, came the night of
+your freedom, and a little later&mdash;Donald came to Kedsty's home. It was
+he whom you saw that night out in the storm. He entered and killed
+Kedsty.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Something dragged Marette down to the room that night. She found
+Kedsty in his chair&mdash;dead. Donald was gone. It was then that you found
+her there. Kent, she loved you&mdash;and you will never know how her heart
+bled when she let you think she had killed Kedsty. She has told me
+everything. It was her fear for Donald, her desire to keep all possible
+suspicion from him until he was safe, that compelled her not to confide
+even in you. Later, when she knew that Donald must be safe, she was
+going to tell you. And then&mdash;you were separated at the Chute."
+McTrigger paused, and Kent saw him choke back a grief that was still
+like the fresh cut of a knife in his heart.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And O'Connor found out all this?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+McTrigger nodded. "Yes. He defied Kedsty's command to go to Fort
+Simpson and was on his way back to Athabasca Landing when he found my
+brother. It is strange how all things happened, Kent. But I guess God
+must have meant it that way. Donald was dying. And in dying, for a
+space, his old reason returned to him. It was from him, before he died,
+that O'Connor learned everything. The story is known everywhere now. It
+is marvelous that you did not hear&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There came an interruption, the opening of a door. Anne McTrigger stood
+looking at them where a little time before she had disappeared with
+Marette. There was a glad smile in her face. Her dark eyes were glowing
+with a new happiness. First they rested on McTrigger's face, and then
+on Kent's.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Marette is much better," she said in her soft voice. "She is waiting
+to see you, M'sieu Kent. Will you come now?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Like one in a dream Kent went toward her. He picked up his pack, for
+with its precious contents it had become to him like his own flesh and
+blood. And as the woman led the way and Kent followed her, McTrigger
+did not move from the fireplace. In a little while Anne McTrigger came
+back into the room. Her beautiful eyes were aglow. She was smiling
+softly, and putting her arms about the shoulders of the man at the
+fireplace, she whispered:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have looked at the night through the window, Malcolm. I think that
+the stars are bigger and brighter than they have been in a long time.
+And the Watcher seems like a living god up in the sky. Come, please."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She took his hand, and Malcolm went with her. Over their heads burned a
+glory of stars. The wind came gently up the valley, cool with the
+freshness of the mountain-tops, sweet with the smell of meadow and
+flowers. And when the woman pointed through the glow, Malcolm McTrigger
+looked up at the Watcher, and for an instant he fancied that he saw
+what she had seen&mdash;something that was life instead of death, a glow of
+understanding and of triumph in the mighty face of stone above the lace
+mists of the clouds. For a long time they walked on, and deep in the
+heart of the woman a voice cried out again and again that the Watcher
+knew, and that it was a living joy she saw up there, for up to that
+unmoving and voiceless god of the mountains she had cried and laughed
+and sung&mdash;and even prayed; and with her Marette had also done these
+things, until at last the pulse and beat of women's souls had given a
+spirit to a form of rock.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Back in the chateau which Malcolm McTrigger and his brother Donald had
+built of logs, in a room whose windows faced the Watcher himself,
+Marette was unveiling the last of mystery for Jim Kent. And this, too,
+was her hour of triumph. Her lips were red and warm with the flush
+brought there by Kent's love.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her face was like the wild roses he had crushed under his feet all that
+day. For in this hour the world had come to her, and had prostrated
+itself at her feet. The sacred contents of the pack were in her lap as
+she leaned back in the great blanketed and pillowed chair that had been
+her invalid's nest for many days. But it was an invalid's nest no
+longer. The floods of life were pounding through her body again, and in
+that hour when Malcolm McTrigger and his wife were gone, Kent looked
+upon the miracle of its change. And now Marette gave to him a little
+packet, and while Kent opened it she raised both hands to her head and
+unbound her hair so that it fell about her in shining and glorious
+confusion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent, unwrapping a last bit of tissue-paper, found in his hands a long
+tress of hair.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"See, Jeems, it has grown fast since I cut it that night."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She leaned a little toward him, parting her hair with slim, white
+fingers so that he saw again where the hair had been clipped the night
+of Kedsty's death.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then she said: "You may keep it always if you want to, Jeems, for I
+cut it from my head when I left you in the room below, and when
+you&mdash;almost&mdash;believed I had killed Kedsty. It was this&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She gave him another packet, and her lips tightened a little as Kent
+unwrapped it, and another tress of hair shimmered in the lamp glow.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That was father Donald's," she whispered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It&mdash;it was all he had left of Marie, his wife. And that night&mdash;when
+Kedsty died&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I understand," cried Kent, stopping her. "He choked Kedsty with it
+until he was dead. And when I found it around Kedsty's neck&mdash;you&mdash;you
+let me think it was yours&mdash;to save father Donald!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She nodded. "Yes, Jeems. If the police had come, they would have
+thought I was guilty. I planned to let them think so until father
+Donald was safe. But all the time I had here in my breast this other
+tress, which would prove that I was innocent&mdash;when the time came. And
+now, Jeems&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She smiled at him again and reached out her hands. "Oh, I feel so
+strong! And I want to take you out now&mdash;and show you my
+valley&mdash;Jeems&mdash;our valley&mdash;yours and mine&mdash;in the starlight. Not
+tomorrow, Jeems. But tonight. Now."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A little later the Watcher looked down on them, even as it had looked
+down on another man and another woman who had preceded them. But the
+stars were bigger and brighter, and the white cap of snow that rested
+on the Watcher's head like a crown caught the faint gleam of a far-away
+light; and after that, slowly and wonderfully, other snow-crested
+mountain-tops caught that greeting radiance of the moon. But it was the
+Watcher who stood out like a mighty god among them all, and when they
+came to the elbow in the plain, Marette drew Kent down beside her on a
+great flat rock and laughed softly as she held his hand tightly in her
+lap.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Always, from a little child, I have sat and played on this rock, with
+the Watcher looking, like that," she said in a low voice. "I have grown
+to love him, Jeems. And I have always believed that he was gazing off
+there, night and day, into the east, watching for something that was
+coming to me. Now I know. It was you, Jeems. And, Jeems, when I was
+away&mdash;down there in the big city&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her fingers gripped his thumb in their old way, and Kent waited.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It was the Watcher that made me want to come home most of all," she
+went on, a bit of tremble in her voice. "Oh, I grew lonely for him, and
+I could see him in my dreams at night, watching, watching, watching,
+and sometimes even calling me. Jeems, do you see that hump on his left
+shoulder, like a great epaulet?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I see," said Kent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Beyond that, on a straight line from here&mdash;hundreds of miles away&mdash;are
+Dawson City, the Yukon, the big gold country, men, women, civilization.
+Father Malcolm and father Donald have never found but one trail to this
+side of the mountains, and I have been over it three times&mdash;to Dawson.
+But the Watcher's back is on those things. Sometimes I imagine it was
+he who built those great ramparts through which few men come. He wants
+this valley alone. And so do I. Alone&mdash;with you, and with my people."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Kent drew her close in his arms. "When you are stronger," he whispered,
+"we will go over that hidden trail together, past the Watcher, toward
+Dawson. For it must be that over there&mdash;we will find&mdash;a missioner&mdash;" He
+paused.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Please go on, Jeems."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you will be&mdash;my wife."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, yes, Jeems&mdash;forever and ever. But, Jeems"&mdash;her arms crept up
+about his neck&mdash;"very soon it will be the first of August."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes&mdash;?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And in that month there come through the mountains, each year, a man
+and a woman to visit us&mdash;mother Anne's father and mother. And mother
+Anne's father&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes&mdash;?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Is a missioner, Jeems."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Kent, looking up in this hour of his triumph and joy, believed that
+in the Watcher's face he caught for an instant the passing radiance of
+a smile.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<P CLASS="finis">
+THE END
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Valley of Silent Men, by James Oliver Curwood
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+Project Gutenberg's The Valley of Silent Men, by James Oliver Curwood
+
+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 Valley of Silent Men
+
+Author: James Oliver Curwood
+
+Release Date: July 14, 2009 [EBook #29407]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VALLEY OF SILENT MEN ***
+
+
+
+
+Thanks to Al Haines, based on the
+non-illustrated version, at
+https://www.gutenberg.org/etext/4707
+
+Thanks to Robert Rowe, Dianne Bean, Charles Franks and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Frontispiece: From the girl's revolver leaped forth a sudden spurt of
+smoke and flame.]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE VALLEY OF SILENT MEN
+
+A STORY OF THE THREE RIVER COUNTRY
+
+
+BY
+
+JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD
+
+
+
+AUTHOR OF "THE RIVER'S END," ETC.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE VALLEY OF SILENT MEN
+
+
+Before the railroad's thin lines of steel bit their way up through the
+wilderness, Athabasca Landing was the picturesque threshold over which
+one must step who would enter into the mystery and adventure of the
+great white North. It is still _Iskwatam_--the "door" which opens to the
+lower reaches of the Athabasca, the Slave, and the Mackenzie. It is
+somewhat difficult to find on the map, yet it is there, because its
+history is written in more than a hundred and forty years of romance
+and tragedy and adventure in the lives of men, and is not easily
+forgotten. Over the old trail it was about a hundred and fifty miles
+north of Edmonton. The railroad has brought it nearer to that base of
+civilization, but beyond it the wilderness still howls as it has howled
+for a thousand years, and the waters of a continent flow north and into
+the Arctic Ocean. It is possible that the beautiful dream of the
+real-estate dealers may come true, for the most avid of all the
+sportsmen of the earth, the money-hunters, have come up on the bumpy
+railroad that sometimes lights its sleeping cars with lanterns, and
+with them have come typewriters, and stenographers, and the art of
+printing advertisements, and the Golden Rule of those who sell handfuls
+of earth to hopeful purchasers thousands of miles away--"Do others as
+they would do you." And with it, too, has come the legitimate business
+of barter and trade, with eyes on all that treasure of the North which
+lies between the Grand Rapids of the Athabasca and the edge of the
+polar sea. But still more beautiful than the dream of fortunes quickly
+made is the deep-forest superstition that the spirits of the wilderness
+dead move onward as steam and steel advance, and if this is so, the
+ghosts of a thousand Pierres and Jacquelines have risen uneasily from
+their graves at Athabasca Landing, hunting a new quiet farther north.
+
+For it was Pierre and Jacqueline, Henri and Marie, Jacques and his
+Jeanne, whose brown hands for a hundred and forty years opened and
+closed this door. And those hands still master a savage world for two
+thousand miles north of that threshold of Athabasca Landing. South of
+it a wheezy engine drags up the freight that came not so many months
+ago by boat.
+
+It is over this threshold that the dark eyes of Pierre and Jacqueline,
+Henri and Marie, Jacques and his Jeanne, look into the blue and the
+gray and the sometimes watery ones of a destroying civilization. And
+there it is that the shriek of a mad locomotive mingles with their
+age-old river chants; the smut of coal drifts over their forests; the
+phonograph screeches its reply to _le violon_; and Pierre and Henri and
+Jacques no longer find themselves the kings of the earth when they come
+in from far countries with their precious cargoes of furs. And they no
+longer swagger and tell loud-voiced adventure, or sing their wild river
+songs in the same old abandon, for there are streets at Athabasca
+Landing now, and hotels, and schools, and rules and regulations of a
+kind new and terrifying to the bold of the old _voyageurs_.
+
+It seems only yesterday that the railroad was not there, and a great
+world of wilderness lay between the Landing and the upper rim of
+civilization. And when word first came that a steam thing was eating
+its way up foot by foot through forest and swamp and impassable muskeg,
+that word passed up and down the water-ways for two thousand miles, a
+colossal joke, a stupendous bit of drollery, the funniest thing that
+Pierre and Henri and Jacques had heard in all their lives. And when
+Jacques wanted to impress upon Pierre his utter disbelief of a thing,
+he would say:
+
+"It will happen, m'sieu, when the steam thing comes to the Landing,
+when cow-beasts eat with the moose, and when our bread is found for us
+in yonder swamps!"
+
+And the steam thing came, and cows grazed where moose had fed, and
+bread WAS gathered close to the edge of the great swamps. Thus did
+civilization break into Athabasca Landing.
+
+Northward from the Landing, for two thousand miles, reached the domain
+of the rivermen. And the Landing, with its two hundred and twenty-seven
+souls before the railroad came, was the wilderness clearing-house which
+sat at the beginning of things. To it came from the south all the
+freight which must go into the north; on its flat river front were
+built the great scows which carried this freight to the end of the
+earth. It was from the Landing that the greatest of all river brigades
+set forth upon their long adventures, and it was back to the Landing,
+perhaps a year or more later, that still smaller scows and huge canoes
+brought as the price of exchange their cargoes of furs.
+
+Thus for nearly a century and a half the larger craft, with their great
+sweeps and their wild-throated crews, had gone _down_ the river toward
+the Arctic Ocean, and the smaller craft, with their still wilder crews,
+had come _up_ the river toward civilization. The River, as the Landing
+speaks of it, is the Athabasca, with its headwaters away off in the
+British Columbian mountains, where Baptiste and McLeod, explorers of
+old, gave up their lives to find where the cradle of it lay. And it
+sweeps past the Landing, a slow and mighty giant, unswervingly on its
+way to the northern sea. With it the river brigades set forth. For
+Pierre and Henri and Jacques it is going from one end to the other of
+the earth. The Athabasca ends and is replaced by the Slave, and the
+Slave empties into Great Slave Lake, and from the narrow tip of that
+Lake the Mackenzie carries on for more than a thousand miles to the sea.
+
+In this distance of the long water trail one sees and hears many
+things. It is life. It is adventure. It is mystery and romance and
+hazard. Its tales are so many that books could not hold them. In the
+faces of men and women they are written. They lie buried in graves so
+old that the forest trees grow over them. Epics of tragedy, of love, of
+the fight to live! And as one goes farther north, and still farther,
+just so do the stories of things that have happened change.
+
+For the world is changing, the sun is changing, and the breeds of men
+are changing. At the Landing in July there are seventeen hours of
+sunlight; at Fort Chippewyan there are eighteen; at Fort Resolution,
+Fort Simpson, and Fort Providence there are nineteen; at the Great Bear
+twenty-one, and at Fort McPherson, close to the polar sea, from
+twenty-two to twenty-three. And in December there are also these hours
+of darkness. With light and darkness men change, women change, and life
+changes. And Pierre and Henri and Jacques meet them all, but always
+THEY are the same, chanting the old songs, enshrining the old loves,
+dreaming the same dreams, and worshiping always the same gods. They
+meet a thousand perils with eyes that glisten with the love of
+adventure.
+
+The thunder of rapids and the howlings of storm do not frighten them.
+Death has no fear for them. They grapple with it, wrestle joyously with
+it, and are glorious when they win. Their blood is red and strong.
+Their hearts are big. Their souls chant themselves up to the skies. Yet
+they are simple as children, and when they are afraid, it is of things
+which children fear. For in those hearts of theirs is superstition--and
+also, perhaps, royal blood. For princes and the sons of princes and the
+noblest aristocracy of France were the first of the gentlemen
+adventurers who came with ruffles on their sleeves and rapiers at their
+sides to seek furs worth many times their weight in gold two hundred
+and fifty years ago, and of these ancient forebears Pierre and Henri
+and Jacques, with their Maries and Jeannes and Jacquelines, are the
+living voices of today.
+
+And these voices tell many stories. Sometimes they whisper them, as the
+wind would whisper, for there are stories weird and strange that must
+be spoken softly. They darken no printed pages. The trees listen to
+them beside red camp-fires at night. Lovers tell them in the glad
+sunshine of day. Some of them are chanted in song. Some of them come
+down through the generations, epics of the wilderness, remembered from
+father to son. And each year there are the new things to pass from
+mouth to mouth, from cabin to cabin, from the lower reaches of the
+Mackenzie to the far end of the world at Athabasca Landing. For the
+three rivers are always makers of romance, of tragedy, of adventure.
+The story will never be forgotten of how Follette and Ladouceur swam
+their mad race through the Death Chute for love of the girl who waited
+at the other end, or of how Campbell O'Doone, the red-headed giant at
+Fort Resolution, fought the whole of a great brigade in his effort to
+run away with a scow captain's daughter.
+
+And the brigade loved O'Doone, though it beat him, for these men of the
+strong north love courage and daring. The epic of the lost scow--how
+there were men who saw it disappear from under their very eyes,
+floating upward and afterward riding swiftly away in the skies--is told
+and retold by strong-faced men, deep in whose eyes are the smoldering
+flames of an undying superstition, and these same men thrill as they
+tell over again the strange and unbelievable story of Hartshope, the
+aristocratic Englishman who set off into the North in all the glory of
+monocle and unprecedented luggage, and how he joined in a tribal war,
+became a chief of the Dog Ribs, and married a dark-eyed, sleek-haired,
+little Indian beauty, who is now the mother of his children.
+
+But deepest and most thrilling of all the stories they tell are the
+stories of the long arm of the Law--that arm which reaches for two
+thousand miles from Athabasca Landing to the polar sea, the arm Of the
+Royal Northwest Mounted Police.
+
+And of these it is the story of Jim Kent we are going to tell, of Jim
+Kent and of Marette, that wonderful little goddess of the Valley of
+Silent Men, in whose veins there must have run the blood of fighting
+men--and of ancient queens. A story of the days before the railroad
+came.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+In the mind of James Grenfell Kent, sergeant in the Royal Northwest
+Mounted Police, there remained no shadow of a doubt. He knew that he
+was dying. He had implicit faith in Cardigan, his surgeon friend, and
+Cardigan had told him that what was left of his life would be measured
+out in hours--perhaps in minutes or seconds. It was an unusual case.
+There was one chance in fifty that he might live two or three days, but
+there was no chance at all that he would live more than three. The end
+might come with any breath he drew into his lungs. That was the
+pathological history of the thing, as far as medical and surgical
+science knew of cases similar to his own.
+
+Personally, Kent did not feel like a dying man. His vision and his
+brain were clear. He felt no pain, and only at infrequent intervals was
+his temperature above normal. His voice was particularly calm and
+natural.
+
+At first he had smiled incredulously when Cardigan broke the news. That
+the bullet which a drunken half-breed had sent into his chest two weeks
+before had nicked the arch of the aorta, thus forming an aneurism, was
+a statement by Cardigan which did not sound especially wicked or
+convincing to him. "Aorta" and "aneurism" held about as much
+significance for him as his perichondrium or the process of his
+stylomastoid. But Kent possessed an unswerving passion to grip at facts
+in detail, a characteristic that had largely helped him to earn the
+reputation of being the best man-hunter in all the northland service.
+So he had insisted, and his surgeon friend had explained.
+
+The aorta, he found, was the main blood-vessel arching over and leading
+from the heart, and in nicking it the bullet had so weakened its outer
+wall that it bulged out in the form of a sack, just as the inner tube
+of an automobile tire bulges through the outer casing when there is a
+blowout.
+
+"And when that sack gives way inside you," Cardigan had explained,
+"you'll go like that!" He snapped a forefinger and thumb to drive the
+fact home.
+
+After that it was merely a matter of common sense to believe, and now,
+sure that he was about to die. Kent had acted. He was acting in the
+full health of his mind and in extreme cognizance of the paralyzing
+shock he was contributing as a final legacy to the world at large, or
+at least to that part of it which knew him or was interested. The
+tragedy of the thing did not oppress him. A thousand times in his life
+he had discovered that humor and tragedy were very closely related, and
+that there were times when only the breadth of a hair separated the
+two. Many times he had seen a laugh change suddenly to tears, and tears
+to laughter.
+
+The tableau, as it presented itself about his bedside now, amused him.
+Its humor was grim, but even in these last hours of his life he
+appreciated it. He had always more or less regarded life as a joke--a
+very serious joke, but a joke for all that--a whimsical and trickful
+sort of thing played by the Great Arbiter on humanity at large; and
+this last count in his own life, as it was solemnly and tragically
+ticking itself off, was the greatest joke of all. The amazed faces that
+stared at him, their passing moments of disbelief, their repressed but
+at times visible betrayals of horror, the steadiness of their eyes, the
+tenseness of their lips--all added to what he might have called, at
+another time, the dramatic artistry of his last great adventure.
+
+That he was dying did not chill him, or make him afraid, or put a
+tremble into his voice. The contemplation of throwing off the mere
+habit of breathing had never at any stage of his thirty-six years of
+life appalled him. Those years, because he had spent a sufficient
+number of them in the raw places of the earth, had given him a
+philosophy and viewpoint of his own, both of which he kept unto himself
+without effort to impress them on other people. He believed that life
+itself was the cheapest thing on the face of all the earth. All other
+things had their limitations.
+
+There was so much water and so much land, so many mountains and so many
+plains, so many square feet to live on and so many square feet to be
+buried in. All things could be measured, and stood up, and
+catalogued--except life itself. "Given time," he would say, "a single
+pair of humans can populate all creation." Therefore, being the
+cheapest of all things, it was true philosophy that life should be the
+easiest of all things to give up when the necessity came.
+
+Which is only another way of emphasizing that Kent was not, and never
+had been, afraid to die. But it does not say that he treasured life a
+whit less than the man in another room, who, a day or so before, had
+fought like a lunatic before going under an anesthetic for the
+amputation of a bad finger. No man had loved life more than he. No man
+had lived nearer it.
+
+It had been a passion with him. Full of dreams, and always with
+anticipations ahead, no matter how far short realizations fell, he was
+an optimist, a lover of the sun and the moon and the stars, a worshiper
+of the forests and of the mountains, a man who loved his life, and who
+had fought for it, and yet who was ready--at the last--to yield it up
+without a whimper when the fates asked for it.
+
+Bolstered up against his pillows, he did not look the part of the fiend
+he was confessing himself to be to the people about him. Sickness had
+not emaciated him. The bronze of his lean, clean-cut face had faded a
+little, but the tanning of wind and sun and campfire was still there.
+His blue eyes were perhaps dulled somewhat by the nearness of death.
+One would not have judged him to be thirty-six, even though over one
+temple there was a streak of gray in his blond hair--a heritage from
+his mother, who was dead. Looking at him, as his lips quietly and
+calmly confessed himself beyond the pale of men's sympathy or
+forgiveness, one would have said that his crime was impossible.
+
+Through his window, as he sat bolstered up in his cot, Kent could see
+the slow-moving shimmer of the great Athabasca River as it moved on its
+way toward the Arctic Ocean. The sun was shining, and he saw the cool,
+thick masses of the spruce and cedar forests beyond, the rising
+undulations of wilderness ridges and hills, and through that open
+window he caught the sweet scents that came with a soft wind from out
+of the forests he had loved for so many years.
+
+"They've been my best friends," he had said to Cardigan, "and when this
+nice little thing you're promising happens to me, old man, I want to go
+with my eyes on them."
+
+So his cot was close to the window.
+
+Nearest to him sat Cardigan. In his face, more than in any of the
+others, was disbelief. Kedsty, Inspector of the Royal Northwest Mounted
+Police, in charge of N Division during an indefinite leave of absence
+of the superintendent, was paler even than the girl whose nervous
+fingers were swiftly putting upon paper every word that was spoken by
+those in the room. O'Connor, staff-sergeant, was like one struck dumb.
+The little, smooth-faced Catholic missioner whose presence as a witness
+Kent had requested, sat with his thin fingers tightly interlaced,
+silently placing this among all the other strange tragedies that the
+wilderness had given up to him. They had all been Kent's friends, his
+intimate friends, with the exception of the girl, whom Inspector Kedsty
+had borrowed for the occasion. With the little missioner he had spent
+many an evening, exchanging in mutual confidence the strange and
+mysterious happenings of the deep forests, and of the great north
+beyond the forests. O'Connor's friendship was a friendship bred of the
+brotherhood of the trails. It was Kent and O'Connor who had brought
+down the two Eskimo murderers from the mouth of the Mackenzie, and the
+adventure had taken them fourteen months. Kent loved O'Connor, with his
+red face, his red hair, and his big heart, and to him the most tragic
+part of it all was that he was breaking this friendship now.
+
+But it was Inspector Kedsty, commanding N Division, the biggest and
+wildest division in all the Northland, that roused in Kent an unusual
+emotion, even as he waited for that explosion just over his heart which
+the surgeon had told him might occur at any moment. On his death-bed
+his mind still worked analytically. And Kedsty, since the moment he had
+entered the room, had puzzled Kent. The commander of N Division was an
+unusual man. He was sixty, with iron-gray hair, cold, almost colorless
+eyes in which one would search long for a gleam of either mercy or
+fear, and a nerve that Kent had never seen even slightly disturbed. It
+took such a man, an iron man, to run N Division according to law, for N
+Division covered an area of six hundred and twenty thousand square
+miles of wildest North America, extending more than two thousand miles
+north of the 70th parallel of latitude, with its farthest limit three
+and one-half degrees within the Arctic Circle. To police this area
+meant upholding the law in a country fourteen times the size of the
+state of Ohio. And Kedsty was the man who had performed this duty as
+only one other man had ever succeeded in doing it.
+
+Yet Kedsty, of the five about Kent, was most disturbed. His face was
+ash-gray. A number of times Kent had detected a broken note in his
+voice. He had seen his hands grip at the arms of the chair he sat in
+until the cords stood out on them as if about to burst. He had never
+seen Kedsty sweat until now.
+
+Twice the Inspector had wiped his forehead with a handkerchief. He was
+no longer _Minisak_--"The Rock"--a name given to him by the Crees. The
+armor that no shaft had ever penetrated seemed to have dropped from
+him. He had ceased to be Kedsty, the most dreaded inquisitor in the
+service. He was nervous, and Kent could see that he was fighting to
+repossess himself.
+
+"Of course you know what this means to the Service," he said in a hard,
+low voice. "It means--"
+
+"Disgrace," nodded Kent. "I know. It means a black spot on the
+otherwise bright escutcheon of N Division. But it can't be helped. I
+killed John Barkley. The man you've got in the guard-house, condemned
+to be hanged by the neck until he is dead, is innocent. I understand.
+It won't be nice for the Service to let it be known that a sergeant in
+His Majesty's Royal Mounted is an ordinary murderer, but--"
+
+"Not an _ordinary_ murderer," interrupted Kedsty. "As you have described
+it, the crime was deliberate--horrible and inexcusable to its last
+detail. You were not moved by a sudden passion. You tortured your
+victim. It is inconceivable!"
+
+"And yet true," said Kent.
+
+He was looking at the stenographer's slim fingers as they put down his
+words and Kedsty's. A bit of sunshine touched her bowed head, and he
+observed the red lights in her hair. His eyes swept to O'Connor, and in
+that moment the commander of N Division bent over him, so close that
+his face almost touched Kent's, and he whispered, in a voice so low
+that no one of the other four could hear,
+
+"_Kent--you lie_!"
+
+"No, it is true," replied Kent.
+
+Kedsty drew back, again wiping the moisture from his forehead.
+
+"I killed Barkley, and I killed him as I planned that he should die,"
+Kent went on. "It was my desire that he should suffer. The one thing
+which I shall not tell you is _why_ I killed him. But it was a sufficient
+reason."
+
+He saw the shuddering tremor that swept through the shoulders of the
+girl who was putting down the condemning notes.
+
+"And you refuse to confess your motive?"
+
+"Absolutely--except that he had wronged me in a way that deserved
+death."
+
+"And you make this confession knowing that you are about to die?"
+
+The flicker of a smile passed over Kent's lips. He looked at O'Connor
+and for an instant saw in O'Connor's eyes a flash of their old
+comradeship.
+
+"Yes. Dr. Cardigan has told me. Otherwise I should have let the man in
+the guard-house hang. It's simply that this accursed bullet has spoiled
+my luck--and saved him!"
+
+Kedsty spoke to the girl. For half an hour she read her notes, and
+after that Kent wrote his name on the last page. Then Kedsty rose from
+his chair.
+
+"We have finished, gentlemen," he said.
+
+They trailed out, the girl hurrying through the door first in her
+desire to free herself of an ordeal that had strained every nerve in
+her body. The commander of N Division was last to go. Cardigan
+hesitated, as if to remain, but Kedsty motioned him on. It was Kedsty
+who closed the door, and as he closed it he looked back, and for a
+flash Kent met his eyes squarely. In that moment he received an
+impression which he had not caught while the Inspector was in the room.
+It was like an electrical shock in its unexpectedness, and Kedsty must
+have seen the effect of it in his face, for he moved back quickly and
+closed the door. In that instant Kent had seen in Kedsty's eyes and
+face a look that was not only of horror, but what in the face and eyes
+of another man he would have sworn was fear.
+
+It was a gruesome moment in which to smile, but Kent smiled. The shock
+was over. By the rules of the Criminal Code he knew that Kedsty even
+now was instructing Staff-Sergeant O'Connor to detail an officer to
+guard his door. The fact that he was ready to pop off at any moment
+would make no difference in the regulations of the law. And Kedsty was
+a stickler for the law as it was written. Through the closed door he
+heard voices indistinctly. Then there were footsteps, dying away. He
+could hear the heavy thump, thump of O'Connor's big feet. O'Connor had
+always walked like that, even on the trail.
+
+Softly then the door reopened, and Father Layonne, the little
+missioner, came in. Kent knew that this would be so, for Father Layonne
+knew neither code nor creed that did not reach all the hearts of the
+wilderness. He came back, and sat down close to Kent, and took one of
+his hands and held it closely in both of his own. They were not the
+soft, smooth hands of the priestly hierarchy, but were hard with the
+callosity of toil, yet gentle with the gentleness of a great sympathy.
+He had loved Kent yesterday, when Kent had stood clean in the eyes of
+both God and men, and he still loved him today, when his soul was
+stained with a thing that must be washed away with his own life.
+
+"I'm sorry, lad," he said. "I'm sorry."
+
+Something rose up in Kent's throat that was not the blood he had been
+wiping away since morning. His fingers returned the pressure of the
+little missioner's hands. Then he pointed out through the window to the
+panorama of shimmering river and green forests.
+
+"It is hard to say good-by to all that, Father," he said. "But, if you
+don't mind, I'd rather not talk about it. I'm not afraid of it. And why
+be unhappy because one has only a little while to live? Looking back
+over your life, does it seem so very long ago that you were a boy, a
+small boy?"
+
+"The time has gone swiftly, very swiftly."
+
+"It seems only yesterday--or so?"
+
+"Yes, only yesterday--or so."
+
+Kent's face lit up with the whimsical smile that long ago had reached
+the little missioner's heart. "Well, that's the way I'm looking at it,
+Father. There is only a yesterday, a today, and a tomorrow in the
+longest of our lives. Looking back from seventy years isn't much
+different from looking back from thirty-six _when_ you're looking back
+and not ahead. Do you think what I have just said will free Sandy
+McTrigger?"
+
+"There is no doubt. Your statements have been accepted as a death-bed
+confession."
+
+The little missioner, instead of Kent, was betraying a bit of
+nervousness.
+
+"There are matters, my son--some few matters--which you will want
+attended to. Shall we not talk about them?"
+
+"You mean--"
+
+"Your people, first. I remember that once you told me there was no one.
+But surely there is some one somewhere."
+
+Kent shook his head. "There is no one now. For ten years those forests
+out there have been father, mother, and home to me."
+
+"But there must be personal affairs, affairs which you would like to
+entrust, perhaps, to me?"
+
+Kent's face brightened, and for an instant a flash of humor leaped into
+his eyes. "It is funny," he chuckled. "Since you remind me of it,
+Father, it is quite in form to make my will. I've bought a few little
+pieces of land here. Now that the railroad has almost reached us from
+Edmonton, they've jumped up from the seven or eight hundred dollars I
+gave for them to about ten thousand. I want you to sell the lots and
+use the money in your work. Put as much of it on the Indians as you
+can. They've always been good brothers to me. And I wouldn't waste much
+time in getting my signature on some sort of paper to that effect."
+
+Father Layonne's eyes shone softly. "God will bless you for that,
+Jimmy," he said, using the intimate name by which he had known him.
+"And I think He is going to pardon you for something else, if you have
+the courage to ask Him."
+
+"I am pardoned," replied Kent, looking out through the window. "I feel
+it. I know it, Father."
+
+In his soul the little missioner was praying. He knew that Kent's
+religion was not his religion, and he did not press the service which
+he would otherwise have rendered. After a moment he rose to his feet,
+and it was the old Kent who looked up into his face, the clean-faced,
+gray-eyed, unafraid Kent, smiling in the old way.
+
+"I have one big favor to ask of you, Father," he said. "If I've got a
+day to live, I don't want every one forcing the fact on me that I'm
+dying. If I've any friends left, I want them to come in and see me, and
+talk, and crack jokes. I want to smoke my pipe. I'll appreciate a box
+of cigars if you'll send 'em up. Cardigan can't object now. Will you
+arrange these things for me? They'll listen to you--and please shove my
+cot a little nearer the window before you go."
+
+Father Layonne performed the service in silence. Then at last the
+yearning overcame him to have the soul speak out, that his God might be
+more merciful, and he said: "My boy, you are sorry? You repent that you
+killed John Barkley?"
+
+"No, I'm not sorry. It had to be done. And please don't forget the
+cigars, will you, Father?"
+
+"No, I won't forget," said the little missioner, and turned away.
+
+As the door opened and closed behind him, the flash of humor leaped
+into Kent's eyes again, and he chuckled even as he wiped another of the
+telltale stains of blood from his lips. He had played the game. And the
+funny part about it was that no one in all the world would ever know,
+except himself--and perhaps one other.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+Outside Kent's window was Spring, the glorious Spring of the Northland,
+and in spite of the death-grip that was tightening in his chest he
+drank it in deeply and leaned over so that his eyes traveled over wide
+spaces of the world that had been his only a short time before.
+
+It occurred to him that he had suggested this knoll that overlooked
+both settlement and river as the site for the building which Dr.
+Cardigan called his hospital. It was a structure rough and unadorned,
+unpainted, and sweetly smelling with the aroma of the spruce trees from
+the heart of which its unplaned lumber was cut. The breath of it was a
+thing to bring cheer and hope. Its silvery walls, in places golden and
+brown with pitch and freckled with knots, spoke joyously of life that
+would not die, and the woodpeckers came and hammered on it as though it
+were still a part of the forest, and red squirrels chattered on the
+roof and scampered about in play with a soft patter of feet.
+
+"It's a pretty poor specimen of man that would die up here with all
+that under his eyes," Kent had said a year before, when he and Cardigan
+had picked out the site. "If he died looking at that, why, he just
+simply ought to die, Cardigan," he had laughed.
+
+And now he was that poor specimen, looking out on the glory of the
+world!
+
+His vision took in the South and a part of the East and West, and in
+all those directions there was no end of the forest. It was like a
+vast, many-colored sea with uneven billows rising and falling until the
+blue sky came down to meet them many miles away. More than once his
+heart ached at the thought of the two thin ribs of steel creeping up
+foot by foot and mile by mile from Edmonton, a hundred and fifty miles
+away. It was, to him, a desecration, a crime against Nature, the murder
+of his beloved wilderness. For in his soul that wilderness had grown to
+be more than a thing of spruce and cedar and balsam, of poplar and
+birch; more than a great, unused world of river and lake and swamp. It
+was an individual, a thing. His love for it was greater than his love
+for man. It was his inarticulate God. It held him as no religion in the
+world could have held him, and deeper and deeper it had drawn him into
+the soul of itself, delivering up to him one by one its guarded secrets
+and its mysteries, opening for him page by page the book that was the
+greatest of all books. And it was the wonder of it now, the fact that
+it was near him, about him, embracing him, glowing for him in the
+sunshine, whispering to him in the soft breath of the air, nodding and
+talking to him from the crest of every ridge, that gave to him a
+strange happiness even in these hours when he knew that he was dying.
+
+And then his eyes fell nearer to the settlement which nestled along the
+edge of the shining river a quarter of a mile away. That, too, had been
+the wilderness, in the days before the railroad came. The poison of
+speculation was stirring, but it had not yet destroyed. Athabasca
+Landing was still the door that opened and closed on the great North.
+Its buildings were scattered and few, and built of logs and rough
+lumber. Even now he could hear the drowsy hum of the distant sawmill
+that was lazily turning out its grist. Not far away the wind-worn flag
+of the British Empire was floating over a Hudson Bay Company's post
+that had bartered in the trades of the North for more than a hundred
+years. Through that hundred years Athabasca Landing had pulsed with the
+heart-beats of strong men bred to the wilderness. Through it, working
+its way by river and dog sledge from the South, had gone the precious
+freight for which the farther North gave in exchange its still more
+precious furs. And today, as Kent looked down upon it, he saw that same
+activity as it had existed through the years of a century. A brigade of
+scows, laden to their gunwales, was just sweeping out into the river
+and into its current. Kent had watched the loading of them; now he saw
+them drifting lazily out from the shore, their long sweeps glinting in
+the sun, their crews singing wildly and fiercely their beloved Chanson
+des Voyageurs as their faces turned to the adventure of the North.
+
+In Kent's throat rose a thing which he tried to choke back, but which
+broke from his lips in a low cry, almost a sob. He heard the distant
+singing, wild and free as the forests themselves, and he wanted to lean
+out of his window and shout a last good-by. For the brigade--a Company
+brigade, the brigade that had chanted its songs up and down the water
+reaches of the land for more than two hundred and fifty years--was
+starting north. And he knew where it was going--north, and still
+farther north; a hundred miles, five hundred, a thousand--and then
+another thousand before the last of the scows unburdened itself of its
+precious freight. For the lean and brown-visaged men who went with them
+there would be many months of clean living and joyous thrill under the
+open skies. Overwhelmed by the yearning that swept over him, Kent
+leaned back against his pillows and covered his eyes.
+
+In those moments his brain painted for him swiftly and vividly the
+things he was losing. Tomorrow or next day he would be dead, and the
+river brigade would still be sweeping on--on into the Grand Rapids of
+the Athabasca, fighting the Death Chute, hazarding valiantly the rocks
+and rapids of the Grand Cascade, the whirlpools of the Devil's Mouth,
+the thundering roar and boiling dragon teeth of the Black Run--on to
+the end of the Athabasca, to the Slave, and into the Mackenzie, until
+the last rock-blunted nose of the outfit drank the tide-water of the
+Arctic Ocean. And he, James Kent, would be DEAD!
+
+He uncovered his eyes, and there was a wan smile on his lips as he
+looked forth once more. There were sixteen scows in the brigade, and
+the biggest, he knew, was captained by Pierre Rossand. He could fancy
+Pierre's big red throat swelling in mighty song, for Pierre's wife was
+waiting for him a thousand miles away. The scows were caught steadily
+now in the grip of the river, and it seemed to Kent, as he watched them
+go, that they were the last fugitives fleeing from the encroaching
+monsters of steel. Unconscious of the act, he reached out his arms, and
+his soul cried out its farewell, even though his lips were silent.
+
+He was glad when they were gone and when the voices of the chanting
+oarsmen were lost in the distance. Again he listened to the lazy hum of
+the sawmill, and over his head he heard the velvety run of a red
+squirrel and then its reckless chattering. The forests came back to
+him. Across his cot fell a patch of golden sunlight. A stronger breath
+of air came laden with the perfume of balsam and cedar through his
+window, and when the door opened and Cardigan entered, he found the old
+Kent facing him.
+
+There was no change in Cardigan's voice or manner as he greeted him.
+But there was a tenseness in his face which he could not conceal. He
+had brought in Kent's pipe and tobacco. These he laid on a table until
+he had placed his head close to Kent's hearty listening to what he
+called the _bruit_--the rushing of blood through the aneurismal sac.
+
+"Seems to me that I can hear it myself now and then," said Kent.
+"Worse, isn't it?"
+
+Cardigan nodded. "Smoking may hurry it up a bit," he said. "Still, if
+you want to--"
+
+Kent held out his hand for the pipe and tobacco. "It's worth it.
+Thanks, old man."
+
+Kent loaded the pipe, and Cardigan lighted a match. For the first time
+in two weeks a cloud of smoke issued from between Kent's lips.
+
+"The brigade is starting north," he said.
+
+"Mostly Mackenzie River freight," replied Cardigan. "A long run."
+
+"The finest in all the North. Three years ago O'Connor and I made it
+with the Follette outfit. Remember Follette--and Ladouceur? They both
+loved the same girl, and being good friends they decided to settle the
+matter by a swim through the Death Chute. The man who came through
+first was to have her. Gawd, Cardigan, what funny things happen!
+Follette came out first, but he was dead. He'd brained himself on a
+rock. And to this day Ladouceur hasn't married the girl, because he
+says Follette beat him; and that Follette's something-or-other would
+haunt him if he didn't play fair. It's a queer--"
+
+He stopped and listened. In the hall was the approaching tread of
+unmistakable feet.
+
+"O'Connor," he said.
+
+Cardigan went to the door and opened it as O'Connor was about to knock.
+When the door closed again, the staff-sergeant was in the room alone
+with Kent. In one of his big hands he clutched a box of cigars, and in
+the other he held a bunch of vividly red fire-flowers.
+
+"Father Layonne shoved these into my hands as I was coming up," he
+explained, dropping them on the table. "And I--well--I'm breaking
+regulations to come up an' tell you something, Jimmy. I never called
+you a liar in my life, but I'm calling you one now!"
+
+He was gripping Kent's hands in the fierce clasp of a friendship that
+nothing could kill. Kent winced, but the pain of it was joy. He had
+feared that O'Connor, like Kedsty, must of necessity turn against him.
+Then he noticed something unusual in O'Connor's face and eyes. The
+staff-sergeant was not easily excited, yet he was visibly disturbed now.
+
+"I don't know what the others saw, when you were making that
+confession, Kent. Mebby my eyesight was better because I spent a year
+and a half with you on the trail. You were lying. What's your game, old
+man?"
+
+Kent groaned. "Have I got to go all over it again?" he appealed.
+
+O'Connor began thumping back and forth over the floor. Kent had seen
+him that way sometimes in camp when there were perplexing problems
+ahead of them.
+
+"You didn't kill John Barkley," he insisted. "I don't believe you did,
+and Inspector Kedsty doesn't believe it--yet the mighty queer part of
+it is--"
+
+"What?"
+
+"That Kedsty is acting on your confession in a big hurry. I don't
+believe it's according to Hoyle, as the regulations are written. But
+he's doing it. And I want to know--it's the biggest thing I EVER wanted
+to know--did you kill Barkley?"
+
+"O'Connor, if you don't believe a dying man's word--you haven't much
+respect for death, have you?"
+
+"That's the theory on which the law works, but sometimes it ain't
+human. Confound it, man, _did you_?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+O'Connor sat down and with his finger-nails pried open the box of
+cigars. "Mind if I smoke with you?" he asked. "I need it. I'm shot up
+with unexpected things this morning. Do you care if I ask you about the
+girl?"
+
+"The girl!" exclaimed Kent. He sat up straighter, staring at O'Connor.
+
+The staff-sergeant's eyes were on him with questioning steadiness. "I
+see--you don't know her," he said, lighting his cigar. "Neither do I.
+Never saw her before. That's why I am wondering about Inspector Kedsty.
+I tell you, it's queer. He didn't believe you this morning, yet he was
+all shot up. He wanted me to go with him to his house. The cords stood
+out on his neck like that--like my little finger.
+
+"Then suddenly he changed his mind and said we'd go to the office. That
+took us along the road that runs through the poplar grove. It happened
+there. I'm not much of a girl's man, Kent, and I'd be a fool to try to
+tell you what she looked like. But there she was, standing in the path
+not ten feet ahead of us, and she stopped me in my tracks as quick as
+though she'd sent a shot into me. And she stopped Kedsty, too. I heard
+him give a sort of grunt--a funny sound, as though some one had hit
+him. I don't believe I could tell whether she had a dress on or not,
+for I never saw anything like her face, and her eyes, and her hair, and
+I stared at them like a thunder-struck fool. She didn't seem to notice
+me any more than if I'd been thin air, a ghost she couldn't see.
+
+"She looked straight at Kedsty, and she kept looking at him--and then
+she passed us. Never said a word, mind you. She came so near I could
+have touched her with my hand, and not until she was that close did she
+take her eyes from Kedsty and look at me. And when she'd passed I
+thought what a couple of cursed idiots we were, standing there
+paralyzed, as if we'd never seen a beautiful girl before in our lives.
+I went to remark that much to the Old Man when--"
+
+O'Connor bit his cigar half in two as he leaned nearer to the cot.
+
+"Kent, I swear that Kedsty was as white as chalk when I looked at him!
+There wasn't a drop of blood left in his face, and he was staring
+straight ahead, as though the girl still stood there, and he gave
+another of those grunts--it wasn't a laugh--as if something was choking
+him. And then he said:
+
+"'Sergeant, I've forgotten something important. I must go back to see
+Dr. Cardigan. You have my authority to give McTrigger his liberty at
+once!'"
+
+O'Connor paused, as if expecting some expression of disbelief from
+Kent. When none came, he demanded,
+
+"Was that according to the Criminal Code? Was it, Kent?"
+
+"Not exactly. But, coming from the S.O.D., it was law."
+
+"And I obeyed it," grunted the staff-sergeant. "And if you could have
+seen McTrigger! When I told him he was free, and unlocked his cell, he
+came out of it gropingly, like a blind man. And he would go no farther
+than the Inspector's office. He said he would wait there for him."
+
+"And Kedsty?"
+
+O'Connor jumped from his chair and began thumping back and forth across
+the room again. "Followed the girl," he exploded. "He couldn't have
+done anything else. He lied to me about Cardigan. There wouldn't be
+anything mysterious about it if he wasn't sixty and she less than
+twenty. She was pretty enough! But it wasn't her beauty that made him
+turn white there in the path. Not on your life it wasn't! I tell you he
+aged ten years in as many seconds. There was something in that girl's
+eyes more terrifying to him than a leveled gun, and after he'd looked
+into them, his first thought was of McTrigger, the man you're saving
+from the hangman. It's queer, Kent. The whole business is queer. And
+the queerest of it all is your confession."
+
+"Yes, it's all very funny," agreed Kent. "That's what I've been telling
+myself right along, old man. You see, a little thing like a bullet
+changed it all. For if the bullet hadn't got me, I assure you I
+wouldn't have given Kedsty that confession, and an innocent man would
+have been hanged. As it is, Kedsty is shocked, demoralized. I'm the
+first man to soil the honor of the finest Service on the face of the
+earth, and I'm in Kedsty's division. Quite natural that he should be
+upset. And as for the girl--"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders and tried to laugh. "Perhaps she came in this
+morning with one of the up-river scows and was merely taking a little
+constitutional," he suggested. "Didn't you ever notice, O'Connor, that
+in a certain light under poplar trees one's face is sometimes ghastly?"
+
+"Yes, I've noticed it, when the trees are in full leaf, but not when
+they're just opening, Jimmy. It was the girl. Her eyes shattered every
+nerve in him. And his first words were an order for me to free
+McTrigger, coupled with the lie that he was coming back to see
+Cardigan. And if you could have seen her eyes when she turned them on
+me! They were blue--blue as violets--but shooting fire. I could imagine
+black eyes like that, but not blue ones. Kedsty simply wilted in their
+blaze. And there was a reason--I know it--a reason that sent his mind
+like lightning to the man in the cell!"
+
+"Now, that you leave me out of it, the thing begins to get
+interesting," said Kent. "It's a matter of the relationship of this
+blonde girl and--"
+
+"She isn't blonde--and I'm not leaving you out of it," interrupted
+O'Connor. "I never saw anything so black in my life as her hair. It was
+magnificent. If you saw that girl once, you would never forget her
+again as long as you lived. She has never been in Athabasca Landing
+before, or anywhere near here. If she had, we surely would have heard
+about her. She came for a purpose, and I believe that purpose was
+accomplished when Kedsty gave me the order to free McTrigger."
+
+"That's possible, and probable," agreed Kent. "I always said you were
+the best clue-analyst in the force, Bucky. But I don't see where I come
+in."
+
+O'Connor smiled grimly. "You don't? Well, I may be both blind and a
+fool, and perhaps a little excited. But it seemed to me that from the
+moment Inspector Kedsty laid his eyes on that girl he was a little too
+anxious to let McTrigger go and hang you in his place. A little too
+anxious, Kent."
+
+The irony of the thing brought a hard smile to Kent's lips as he nodded
+for the cigars. "I'll try one of these on top of the pipe," he said,
+nipping off the end of the cigar with his teeth. "And you forget that
+I'm not going to hang, Bucky. Cardigan has given me until tomorrow
+night. Perhaps until the next day. Did you see Rossand's fleet leaving
+for up north? It made me think of three years ago!"
+
+O'Connor was gripping his hand again. The coldness of it sent a chill
+into the staff-sergeant's heart. He rose and looked through the upper
+part of the window, so that the twitching in his throat was hidden from
+Kent. Then he went to the door.
+
+"I'll see you again tomorrow," he said. "And if I find out anything
+more about the girl, I'll report."
+
+He tried to laugh, but there was a tremble in his voice, a break in the
+humor he attempted to force.
+
+Kent listened to the tramp of his heavy feet as they went down the hall.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+Again the world came back to Kent, the world that lay just beyond his
+open window. But scarcely had O'Connor gone when it began to change,
+and in spite of his determination to keep hold of his nerve Kent felt
+creeping up with that change a thing that was oppressive and
+smothering. Swiftly the distant billowings of the forests were changing
+their tones and colors under the darkening approach of storm. The
+laughter of the hills and ridges went out. The shimmer of spruce and
+cedar and balsam turned to a somber black. The flashing gold and silver
+of birch and poplar dissolved into a ghostly and unanimated gray that
+was almost invisible. A deepening and somber gloom spread itself like a
+veil over the river that only a short time before had reflected the
+glory of the sun in the faces of dark-visaged men of the Company
+brigade. And with the gloom came steadily nearer a low rumbling of
+thunder.
+
+For the first time since the mental excitement of his confession Kent
+felt upon him an appalling loneliness. He still was not afraid of
+death, but a part of his philosophy was gone. It was, after all, a
+difficult thing to die alone. He felt that the pressure in his chest
+was perceptible greater than it had been an hour or two before, and the
+thought grew upon him that it would be a terrible thing for the
+"explosion" to come when the sun was not shining. He wanted O'Connor
+back again. He had the desire to call out for Cardigan. He would have
+welcomed Father Layonne with a glad cry. Yet more than all else would
+he have had at his side in these moments of distress a woman. For the
+storm, as it massed heavier and nearer, filling the earth with its
+desolation, bridged vast spaces for him, and he found himself suddenly
+face to face with the might-have-beens of yesterday.
+
+He saw, as he had never guessed before, the immeasurable gulf between
+helplessness and the wild, brute freedom of man, and his soul cried
+out--not for adventure, not for the savage strength of life--but for
+the presence of a creature frailer than himself, yet in the gentle
+touch of whose hand lay the might of all humanity.
+
+He struggled with himself. He remembered that Dr. Cardigan had told him
+there would be moments of deep depression, and he tried to fight
+himself out of the grip of this that was on him. There was a bell at
+hand, but he refused to use it, for he sensed his own cowardice. His
+cigar had gone out, and he relighted it. He made an effort to bring his
+mind back to O'Connor, and the mystery girl, and Kedsty. He tried to
+visualize McTrigger, the man he had saved from the hangman, waiting for
+Kedsty in the office at barracks. He pictured the girl, as O'Connor had
+described her, with her black hair and blue eyes--and then the storm
+broke.
+
+The rain came down in a deluge, and scarcely had it struck when the
+door opened and Cardigan hurried in to close the window. He remained
+for half an hour, and after that young Mercer, one of his two
+assistants, came in at intervals. Late in the afternoon it began to
+clear up, and Father Layonne returned with papers properly made out for
+Kent's signature. He was with Kent until sundown, when Mercer came in
+with supper.
+
+Between that hour and ten o'clock Kent observed a vigilance on the part
+of Dr. Cardigan which struck him as being unusual. Four times he
+listened with the stethoscope at his chest, but when Kent asked the
+question which was in his mind, Cardigan shook his head.
+
+"It's no worse, Kent. I don't think it will happen tonight."
+
+In spite of this assurance Kent was positive there was in Cardigan's
+manner an anxiety of a different quality than he had perceived earlier
+in the day. The thought was a definite and convincing one. He believed
+that Cardigan was smoothing the way with a professional lie.
+
+He had no desire to sleep. His light was turned low, and his window was
+open again, for the night had cleared. Never had air tasted sweeter to
+him than that which came in through his window. The little bell in his
+watch tinkled the hour of eleven, when he heard Cardigan's door close
+for a last time across the hall. After that everything was quiet. He
+drew himself nearer to the window, so that by leaning forward he could
+rest himself partly on the sill. He loved the night. The mystery and
+lure of those still hours of darkness when the world slept had never
+ceased to hold their fascination for him. Night and he were friends. He
+had discovered many of its secrets. A thousand times he had walked hand
+in hand with the spirit of it, approaching each time a little nearer to
+the heart of it, mastering its life, its sound, the whispering
+languages of that "other side of life" which rises quietly and as if in
+fear to live and breathe long after the sun has gone out. To him it was
+more wonderful than day.
+
+And this night that lay outside his window now was magnificent. Storm
+had washed the atmosphere between earth and sky, and it seemed as
+though the stars had descended nearer to his forests, shining in golden
+constellations. The moon was coming up late, and he watched the ruddy
+glow of it as it rode up over the wilderness, a splendid queen entering
+upon a stage already prepared by the lesser satellites for her coming.
+No longer was Kent oppressed or afraid. In still deeper inhalations he
+drank the night air into his lungs, and in him there seemed to grow
+slowly a new strength. His eyes and ears were wide open and attentive.
+The town was asleep, but a few lights burned dimly here and there along
+the river's edge, and occasionally a lazy sound came up to him--the
+clink of a scow chain, the bark of a dog, the rooster crowing. In spite
+of himself he smiled at that. Old Duperow's rooster was a foolish bird
+and always crowed himself hoarse when the moon was bright. And in front
+of him, not far away, were two white, lightning-shriven spruce stubs
+standing like ghosts in the night. In one of these a pair of owls had
+nested, and Kent listened to the queer, chuckling notes of their
+honeymooning and the flutter of their wings as they darted out now and
+then in play close to his window. And then suddenly he heard the sharp
+snap of their beaks. An enemy was prowling near, and the owls were
+giving warning. He thought he heard a step. In another moment or two
+the step was unmistakable. Some one was approaching his window from the
+end of the building. He leaned over the sill and found himself staring
+into O'Connor's face.
+
+"These confounded feet of mine!" grunted the staff-sergeant. "Were you
+asleep, Kent?"
+
+"Wide-awake as those owls," assured Kent.
+
+O'Connor drew up to the window. "I saw your light and thought you were
+awake," he said. "I wanted to make sure Cardigan wasn't with you. I
+don't want him to know I am here. And--if you don't mind--will you turn
+off the light? Kedsty is awake, too--as wide-awake as the owls."
+
+Kent reached out a hand, and his room was in darkness except for the
+glow of moon and stars. O'Connor's bulk at the window shut out a part
+of this. His face was half in gloom.
+
+"It's a crime to come to you like this, Kent," he said, keeping his big
+voice down to a whisper. "But I had to. It's my last chance. And I know
+there's something wrong. Kedsty is getting me out of the way--because I
+was with him when he met the girl over in the poplar bush. I'm detailed
+on special duty up at Fort Simpson, two thousand miles by water if it's
+a foot! It means six months or a year. We leave in the motor boat at
+dawn to overtake Rossand and his outfit, so I had to take this chance
+of seeing you. I hesitated until I knew that some one was awake in your
+room."
+
+"I'm glad you came," said Kent warmly. "And--good God, how I would like
+to go with you, Bucky! If it wasn't for this thing in my chest,
+ballooning up for an explosion--"
+
+"I wouldn't be going," interrupted O'Connor in a low voice. "If you
+were on your feet, Kent, there are a number of things that wouldn't be
+happening. Something mighty queer has come over Kedsty since this
+morning. He isn't the Kedsty you knew yesterday or for the last ten
+years. He's nervous, and I miss my guess if he isn't constantly on the
+watch for some one. And he's afraid of me. I know it. He's afraid of me
+because I saw him go to pieces when he met that girl. Fort Simpson is
+simply a frame-up to get me away for a time. He tried to smooth the
+edge off the thing by promising me an inspectorship within the year.
+That was this afternoon, just before the storm. Since then--"
+
+O'Connor turned and faced the moonlight for a moment.
+
+"Since then I've been on a still-hunt for the girl and Sandy
+McTrigger," he added. "And they've disappeared, Kent. I guess McTrigger
+just melted away into the woods. But it's the girl that puzzles me.
+I've questioned every scow _cheman_ at the Landing. I've investigated
+every place where she might have got food or lodging, and I bribed
+Mooie, the old trailer, to search the near-by timber. The unbelievable
+part of it isn't her disappearance. It's the fact that not a soul in
+Athabasca Landing has seen her! Sounds incredible, doesn't it? And
+then, Kent, the big hunch came to me. Remember how we've always played
+up to the big hunch? And this one struck me strong. I think I know
+where the girl is."
+
+Kent, forgetful of his own impending doom, was deeply interested in the
+thrill of O'Connor's mystery. He had begun to visualize the situation.
+More than once they had worked out enigmas of this kind together, and
+the staff-sergeant saw the old, eager glow in his eyes. And Kent
+chuckled joyously in that thrill of the game of man-hunting, and said:
+
+"Kedsty is a bachelor and doesn't even so much as look at a woman. But
+he likes home life--"
+
+"And has built himself a log bungalow somewhat removed from the town,"
+added O'Connor.
+
+"And his Chinaman cook and housekeeper is away."
+
+"And the bungalow is closed, or supposed to be."
+
+"Except at night, when Kedsty goes there to sleep."
+
+O'Connor's hand gripped Kent's. "Jimmy, there never was a team in N
+Division that could beat us, The girl is hiding at Kedsty's place!"
+
+"But why _hiding_?" insisted Kent. "She hasn't committed a crime."
+
+O'Connor sat silent for a moment. Kent could hear him stuffing the bowl
+of his pipe.
+
+"It's simply the big hunch," he grunted. "It's got hold of me, Kent,
+and I can't throw it off. Why, man--"
+
+He lighted a match in the cup of his hands, and Kent saw his face.
+There was more than uncertainty in the hard, set lines of it.
+
+"You see, I went back to the poplars again after I left you today,"
+O'Connor went on. "I found her footprints. She had turned off the
+trail, and in places they were very clear.
+
+"She had on high-heeled shoes, Kent--those Frenchy things--and I swear
+her feet can't be much bigger than a baby's! I found where Kedsty
+caught up with her, and the moss was pretty well beaten down. He
+returned through the poplars, but the girl went on and into the edge of
+the spruce. I lost her trail there. By traveling in that timber it was
+possible for her to reach Kedsty's bungalow without being seen. It must
+have been difficult going, with shoes half as big as my hand and heels
+two inches high! And I've been wondering, why didn't she wear
+bush-country shoes or moccasins?"
+
+"Because she came from the South and not the North," suggested Kent.
+"Probably up from Edmonton."
+
+"Exactly. And Kedsty wasn't expecting her, was he? If he had been, that
+first sight of her wouldn't have shattered every nerve in his body.
+That's why the big hunch won't let loose of me, Kent. From the moment
+he saw her, he was a different man. His attitude toward you changed
+instantly. If he could save you now by raising his little finger, he
+wouldn't do it, simply because it's absolutely necessary for him to
+have an excuse for freeing McTrigger. Your confession came at just the
+psychological moment. The girl's unspoken demand there in the poplars
+was that he free McTrigger, and it was backed up by a threat which
+Kedsty understood and which terrified him to his marrow. McTrigger must
+have seen him afterward, for he waited at the office until Kedsty came.
+I don't know what passed between them. Constable Doyle says they were
+together for half an hour. Then McTrigger walked out of barracks, and
+no one has seen him since. It's mighty queer. The whole thing is queer.
+And the queerest part of the whole business is this sudden commission
+of mine at Fort Simpson."
+
+Kent leaned back against his pillows. His breath came in a series of
+short, hacking coughs. In the star glow O'Connor saw his face grow
+suddenly haggard and tired-looking, and he leaned far in so that in
+both his own hands he held one of Kent's.
+
+"I'm tiring you, Jimmy," he said huskily. "Good-by, old pal! I--I--" He
+hesitated and then lied steadily. "I'm going up to take a look around
+Kedsty's place. I won't be gone more than half an hour and will stop on
+my way back. If you're asleep--"
+
+"I won't be asleep," said Kent.
+
+O'Connor's hands gripped closer. "Good-by, Jimmy."
+
+"Good-by." And then, as O'Connor stepped back into the night, Kent's
+voice called after him softly: "I'll be with you on the long trip,
+Bucky. Take care of yourself--always."
+
+O'Connor's answer was a sob, a sob that rose in his throat like a great
+fist, and choked him, and filled his eyes with scalding tears that shut
+out the glow of moon and stars. And he did not go toward Kedsty's, but
+trudged heavily in the direction of the river, for he knew that Kent
+had called his lie, and that they had said their last farewell.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+It was a long time after O'Connor had gone before Kent at last fell
+asleep. It was a slumber weighted with the restlessness of a brain
+fighting to the last against exhaustion and the inevitable end. A
+strange spirit seemed whirling Kent back through the years he had
+lived, even to the days of his boyhood, leaping from crest to crest,
+giving to him swift and passing visions of valleys almost forgotten, of
+happenings and things long ago faded and indistinct in his memory.
+Vividly his dreams were filled with ghosts--ghosts that were
+transformed, as his spirit went back to them, until they were riotous
+with life and pulsating with the red blood of reality. He was a boy
+again, playing three-old-cat in front of the little old red brick
+schoolhouse half a mile from the farm where he was born, and where his
+mother had died.
+
+And Skinny Hill, dead many years ago, was his partner at the
+bat--lovable Skinny, with his smirking grin and his breath that always
+smelled of the most delicious onions ever raised in Ohio. And then, at
+dinner hour, he was trading some of his mother's cucumber pickles for
+some of Skinny's onions--two onions for a pickle, and never a change in
+the price. And he played old-fashioned casino with his mother, and they
+were picking blackberries together in the woods, and he killed over
+again a snake that he had clubbed to death more than twenty years ago,
+while his mother ran away and screamed and then sat down and cried.
+
+He had worshiped that mother, and the spirit of his dreams did not let
+him look down into the valley where she lay dead, under a little white
+stone in the country cemetery a thousand miles away, with his father
+close beside her. But it gave him a passing thrill of the days in which
+he had fought his way through college--and then it brought him into the
+North, his beloved North.
+
+For hours the wilderness was heavy about Kent. He moved restlessly, at
+times he seemed about to awaken, but always he slipped back into the
+slumberous arms of his forests. He was on the trail in the cold, gray
+beginning of Winter, and the glow of his campfire made a radiant patch
+of red glory in the heart of the night, and close to him in that glow
+sat O'Connor. He was behind dogs and sledge, fighting storm; dark and
+mysterious streams rippled under his canoe; he was on the Big River,
+O'Connor with him again--and then, suddenly, he was holding a blazing
+gun in his hand, and he and O'Connor stood with their backs to a rack,
+facing the bloodthirsty rage of McCaw and his free-traders. The roar of
+the guns half roused him, and after that came pleasanter things--the
+droning of wind in the spruce tops, the singing of swollen streams in
+Springtime, the songs of birds, the sweet smells of life, the glory of
+life as he had lived it, he and O'Connor. In the end, half between
+sleep and wakefulness, he was fighting a smothering pressure on his
+chest. It was an oppressive and torturing thing, like the tree that had
+fallen on him over in the Jackfish country, and he felt himself
+slipping off into darkness. Suddenly there was a gleam of light. He
+opened his eyes. The sun was flooding in at his window, and the weight
+on his chest was the gentle pressure of Cardigan's stethoscope.
+
+In spite of the physical stress of the phantoms which his mind has
+conceived, Kent awakened so quietly that Cardigan was not conscious of
+the fact until he raised his head. There was something in his face
+which he tried to conceal, but Kent caught it before it was gone. There
+were dark hollows under his eyes. He was a bit haggard, as though he
+had spent a sleepless night. Kent pulled himself up, squinting at the
+sun and grinning apologetically. He had slept well along into the day,
+and--
+
+He caught himself with a sudden grimace of pain. A flash of something
+hot and burning swept through his chest. It was like a knife. He opened
+his mouth to breathe in the air. The pressure inside him was no longer
+the pressure of a stethoscope. It was real.
+
+Cardigan, standing over him, was trying to look cheerful. "Too much of
+the night air, Kent," he explained. "That will pass away--soon."
+
+It seemed to Kent that Cardigan gave an almost imperceptible emphasis
+to the word "soon," but he asked no question. He was quite sure that he
+understood, and he knew how unpleasant for Cardigan the answer to it
+would be. He fumbled under his pillow for his watch. It was nine
+o'clock. Cardigan was moving about uneasily, arranging the things on
+the table and adjusting the shade at the window. For a few moments,
+with his back to Kent, he stood without moving. Then he turned, and
+said:
+
+"Which will you have, Kent--a wash-up and breakfast, or a visitor?"
+
+"I am not hungry, and I don't feel like soap and water just now. Who's
+the visitor? Father Layonne or--Kedsty?"
+
+"Neither. It's a lady."
+
+"Then I'd better have the soap and water! Do you mind telling me who it
+is?"
+
+Cardigan shook his head. "I don't know. I've never seen her before. She
+came this morning while I was still in pajamas, and has been waiting
+ever since. I told her to come back again, but she insisted that she
+would remain until you were awake. She has been very patient for two
+hours."
+
+A thrill which he made no effort to conceal leaped through Kent. "Is
+she a young woman?" he demanded eagerly. "Wonderful black hair, blue
+eyes, wears high-heeled shoes just about half as big as your hand--and
+very beautiful?"
+
+"All of that," nodded Cardigan. "I even noticed the shoes, Jimmy. A
+very beautiful young woman!"
+
+"Please let her come in," said Kent. "Mercer scrubbed me last night,
+and I feel fairly fit. She'll forgive this beard, and I'll apologize
+for your sake. What is her name?"
+
+"I asked her, and she didn't seem to hear. A little later Mercer asked
+her, and he said she just looked at him for a moment and he froze. She
+is reading a volume of my Plutarch's 'Lives'--actually reading it. I
+know it by the way she turns the pages!"
+
+Kent drew himself up higher against his pillows and faced the door when
+Cardigan went out. In a flash all that O'Connor had said swept back
+upon him--this girl, Kedsty, the mystery of it all. Why had she come to
+see him? What could be the motive of her visit--unless it was to thank
+him for the confession that had given Sandy McTrigger his freedom?
+O'Connor was right. She was deeply concerned in McTrigger and had come
+to express her gratitude. He listened. Distant footsteps sounded in the
+hall. They approached quickly and paused outside his door. A hand moved
+the latch, but for a moment the door did not open. He heard Cardigan's
+voice, then Cardigan's footsteps retreating down the hall. His heart
+thumped. He could not remember when he had been so upset over an
+unimportant thing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+The latch moved slowly, and with its movement came a gentle tap on the
+panel.
+
+"Come in," he said.
+
+The next instant he was staring. The girl had entered and closed the
+door behind her. O'Connor's picture stood in flesh and blood before
+him. The girl's eyes met his own. They were like glorious violets, as
+O'Connor had said, but they were not the eyes he had expected to see.
+They were the wide-open, curious eyes of a child. He had visualized
+them as pools of slumbering flame--the idea O'Connor had given him--and
+they were the opposite of that. Their one emotion seemed to be the
+emotion roused by an overwhelming, questioning curiosity. They were
+apparently not regarding him as a dying human being, but as a creature
+immensely interesting to look upon. In place of the gratitude he had
+anticipated, they were filled with a great, wondering interrogation,
+and there was not the slightest hint of embarrassment in their gaze.
+For a space it seemed to Kent that he saw nothing but those wonderful,
+dispassionate eyes looking at him. Then he saw the rest of her--her
+amazing hair, her pale, exquisite face, the slimness and beauty of her
+as she stood with her back to the door, one hand still resting on the
+latch. He had never seen anything quite like her. He might have guessed
+that she was eighteen, or twenty, or twenty-two. Her hair, wreathed in
+shimmering, velvety coils from the back to the crown of her head,
+struck him as it had struck O'Connor, as unbelievable. The glory of it
+gave to her an appearance of height which she did not possess, for she
+was not tall, and her slimness added to the illusion.
+
+And then, greatly to his embarrassment in the next instant, his eyes
+went to her feet. Again O'Connor was right--tiny feet, high-heeled
+pumps, ravishingly turned ankles showing under a skirt of some fluffy
+brown stuff or other--
+
+Correcting himself, his face flushed red. The faintest tremble of a
+smile was on the girl's lips. She looked down, and for the first time
+he saw what O'Connor had seen, the sunlight kindling slumberous fires
+in her hair.
+
+Kent tried to say something, but before he succeeded she had taken
+possession of the chair near his bedside.
+
+"I have been waiting a long time to see you," she said. "You are James
+Kent, aren't you?"
+
+"Yes, I'm Jim Kent. I'm sorry Dr. Cardigan kept you waiting. If I had
+known--"
+
+He was getting a grip on himself again, and smiled at her. He noticed
+the amazing length of her dark lashes, but the violet eyes behind them
+did not smile back at him. The tranquillity of their gaze was
+disconcerting. It was as if she had not quite made up her mind about
+him yet and was still trying to classify him in the museum of things
+she had known.
+
+"He should have awakened me," Kent went on, trying to keep himself from
+slipping once more. "It isn't polite to keep a young lady waiting two
+hours!"
+
+This time the blue eyes made him feel that his smile was a maudlin grin.
+
+"Yes--you are different." She spoke softly, as if expressing the
+thought to herself. "That is what I came to find out, if you were
+different. You are dying?"
+
+"My God--yes--I'm dying!" gasped Kent. "According to Dr. Cardigan I'm
+due to pop off this minute. Aren't you a little nervous, sitting so
+near to a man who's ready to explode while you're looking at him?"
+
+For the first time the eyes changed. She was not facing the window, yet
+a glow like the glow of sunlight flashed into them, soft, luminous,
+almost laughing.
+
+"No, it doesn't frighten me," she assured him. "I have always thought I
+should like to see a man die--not quickly, like drowning or being shot,
+but slowly, an inch at a time. But I shouldn't like to see YOU die."
+
+"I'm glad," breathed Kent. "It's a great satisfaction to me."
+
+"Yet I shouldn't be frightened if you did."
+
+"Oh!"
+
+Kent drew himself up straighter against his pillows. He had been a man
+of many adventures. He had faced almost every conceivable kind of
+shock. But this was a new one. He stared into the blue eyes, tongueless
+and mentally dazed. They were cool and sweet and not at all excited.
+And he knew that she spoke the truth. Not by a quiver of those lovely
+lashes would she betray either fear or horror if he popped off right
+there. It was astonishing.
+
+Something like resentment shot for an instant into his bewildered
+brain. Then it was gone, and in a flash it came upon him that she was
+but uttering his own philosophy of life, showing him life's cheapness,
+life's littleness, the absurdity of being distressed by looking upon
+the light as it flickered out. And she was doing it, not as a
+philosopher, but with the beautiful unconcern of a child.
+
+Suddenly, as if impelled by an emotion in direct contradiction to her
+apparent lack of sympathy, she reached out a hand and placed it on
+Kent's forehead. It was another shock. It was not a professional touch,
+but a soft, cool little pressure that sent a comforting thrill through
+him. The hand was there for only a moment, and she withdrew it to
+entwine the slim fingers with those of the others in her lap.
+
+"You have no fever," she said. "What makes you think you are dying?"
+
+Kent explained what was happening inside him. He was completely shunted
+off his original track of thought and anticipation. He had expected to
+ask for at least a mutual introduction when his visitor came into his
+room, and had anticipated taking upon himself the position of a polite
+inquisitor. In spite of O'Connor, he had not thought she would be quite
+so pretty. He had not believed her eyes would be so beautiful, or their
+lashes so long, or the touch of her hand so pleasantly unnerving. And
+now, in place of asking for her name and the reason for her visit, he
+became an irrational idiot, explaining to her certain matters of
+physiology that had to do with aortas and aneurismal sacs. He had
+finished before the absurdity of the situation dawned upon him, and
+with absurdity came the humor of it. Even dying, Kent could not fail to
+see the funny side of a thing It struck him as suddenly as had the
+girl's beauty and her bewildering and unaffected ingenuousness.
+
+Looking at him, that same glow of mysterious questioning in her eyes,
+the girl found him suddenly laughing straight into her face.
+
+"This is funny. It's very funny, Miss--Miss--"
+
+"Marette," she supplied, answering his hesitation.
+
+"It's funny, Miss Marette."
+
+"Not Miss Marette. Just Marette," she corrected.
+
+"I say, it's funny," he tried again. "You see, it's not so terribly
+pleasant as you might think to--er--be here, where I am, dying. And
+last night I thought about the finest thing in the world would be to
+have a woman beside me, a woman who'd be sort of sympathetic, you know,
+ease the thing off a little, maybe say she was sorry. And then the Lord
+answers my prayer, and _you_ come--and you sort of give me the impression
+that you made the appointment with yourself to see how a fellow looks
+when he pops off."
+
+The shimmer of light came into the blue eyes again. She seemed to have
+done with her mental analysis of him, and he saw that a bit of color
+was creeping into her cheeks, pale when she had entered the room.
+
+"You wouldn't be the first I've seen pop off," she assured him. "There
+have been a number, and I've never cried very much. I'd rather see a
+man die than some animals. But I shouldn't like to see YOU do it. Does
+that comfort you--like the woman you prayed the Lord for?"
+
+"It does," gasped Kent. "But why the devil, Miss Marette--"
+
+"Marette," she corrected again.
+
+"Yes, Marette--why the devil have you come to see me at just the moment
+I'm due to explode? And what's your other name, and how old are you,
+and what do you want of me?"
+
+"I haven't any other name, I'm twenty, and I came to get acquainted
+with you and see what you are like."
+
+"Bully!" exclaimed Kent. "We're getting there fast! And now, why?"
+
+The girl drew her chair a few inches nearer, and for a moment Kent
+thought that her lovely mouth was trembling on the edge of a smile.
+
+"Because you have lied so splendidly to save another man who was about
+to die."
+
+"_Et tu, Brute_!" sighed Kent, leaning back against his pillows. "Isn't
+it possible for a decent man to kill another man and not be called a
+liar when he tells about it? Why do so many believe that I lie?"
+
+"They don't," said the girl. "They believe you--now. You have gone so
+completely into the details of the murder in your confession that they
+are quite convinced. It would be too bad if you lived, for you surely
+would be hanged. Your lie sounds and reads like the truth. But I know
+it is a lie. You did not kill John Barkley."
+
+"And the reason for your suspicion?"
+
+For fully half a minute the girl's eyes rested on, his own. Again they
+seemed to be looking through him and into him. "Because I know the man
+who DID kill him," she said quietly, "and it was not you."
+
+Kent made a mighty effort to appear calm. He reached for a cigar from
+the box that Cardigan had placed on his bed, and nibbled the end of it.
+"Has some one else been confessing?" he asked.
+
+She shook her head the slightest bit.
+
+"Did you--er--see this other gentleman kill John Barkley?" he insisted.
+
+"No."
+
+"Then I must answer you as I have answered at least one other. I killed
+John Barkley. If you suspect some other person, your suspicion is
+wrong."
+
+"What a splendid liar!" she breathed softly. "Don't you believe in God?"
+
+Kent winced. "In a large, embracing sense, yes," he said. "I believe in
+Him, for instance, as revealed to our senses in all that living,
+growing glory you see out there through the window Nature and I have
+become pretty good pals, and you see I've sort of built up a mother
+goddess to worship instead of a he-god. Sacrilege, maybe, but it's a
+great comfort at times. But you didn't come to talk religion?"
+
+The lovely head bent still nearer him. He felt an impelling desire to
+put up his hand and touch her shining hair, as she laid her hand on his
+forehead.
+
+"I know who killed John Barkley," she insisted. "I know how and when
+and why he was killed. Please tell me the truth. I want to know. Why
+did you confess to a crime which you did not commit?"
+
+Kent took time to light his cigar. The girl watched him closely, almost
+eagerly.
+
+"I may be mad," he said. "It is possible for any human being to be mad
+and not know it. That's the funny part about insanity. But if I'm not
+insane, I killed Barkley; if I didn't kill him, I must be insane, for
+I'm very well convinced that I did. Either that, or you are insane. I
+have my suspicions that you are. Would a sane person wear pumps with
+heels like those up here?" He pointed accusingly to the floor.
+
+For the first time the girl smiled, openly, frankly, gloriously. It was
+as if her heart had leaped forth for an instant and had greeted him.
+And then, like sunlight shadowed by cloud, the smile was gone. "You are
+a brave man," she said. "You are splendid. I hate men. But I think if
+you lived very long, I should love you. I will believe that you killed
+Barkley. You compel me to believe it. You confessed, when you found you
+were going to die, that an innocent man might be saved. Wasn't that it?"
+
+Kent nodded weakly. "That's it. I hate to think of it that way, but I
+guess it's true. I confessed because I knew I was going to die.
+Otherwise I am quite sure that I should have let the other fellow take
+my medicine for me. You must think I am a beast."
+
+"All men are beasts," she agreed quickly. "But you are--a different
+kind of beast. I like you. If there were a chance, I might fight for
+you. I can fight." She held up her two small hands, half smiling at him
+again.
+
+"But not with those," he exclaimed. "I think you would fight with your
+eyes. O'Connor told me they half killed Kedsty when you met them in the
+poplar grove yesterday."
+
+He had expected that the mention of Inspector Kedsty's name would
+disturb her. It had no effect that he could perceive.
+
+"O'Connor was the big, red-faced man with Mr. Kedsty?"
+
+"Yes, my trail partner. He came to me yesterday and raved about your
+eyes. They ARE beautiful; I've never seen eyes half so lovely. But that
+wasn't what struck Bucky so hard. It was the effect they had on Kedsty.
+He said they shattered every nerve in Kedsty's body, and Kedsty isn't
+the sort to get easily frightened. And the queer part of it was that
+the instant you had gone, he gave O'Connor an order to free
+McTrigger--and then turned and followed you. All the rest of that day
+O'Connor tried to discover something about you at the Landing. He
+couldn't find hide nor hair--I beg pardon!--I mean he couldn't find out
+anything about you at all. We made up our minds that for some reason or
+other you were hiding up at Kedsty's bungalow. You don't mind a fellow
+saying all this--when he is going to pop off soon--do you?"
+
+He was half frightened at the directness with which he had expressed
+the thing. He would gladly have buried his own curiosity and all of
+O'Connor's suspicions for another moment of her hand on his forehead.
+But it was out, and he waited.
+
+She was looking down, her fingers twisting some sort of tasseled dress
+ornament in her lap, and Kent mentally measured the length of her
+lashes with a foot rule in mind. They were superb, and in the thrill of
+his admiration he would have sworn they were an inch long. She looked
+up suddenly and caught the glow in his eyes and the flush that lay
+under the tan of his cheeks. Her own color had deepened a little.
+
+"What if you shouldn't die?" she asked him bluntly, as if she had not
+heard a word of all he had said about Kedsty. "What would you do?"
+
+"I'm going to."
+
+"But if you shouldn't?"
+
+Kent shrugged his shoulders. "I suppose I'd have to take my medicine.
+You're not going?"
+
+She had straightened up and was sitting on the edge of her chair. "Yes,
+I'm going. I'm afraid of my eyes. I may look at you as I looked at Mr.
+Kedsty, and then--pop you'd go, quick! And I don't want to be here when
+you die!"
+
+He heard a soft little note of laughter in her throat. It sent a chill
+through him. What an adorable, blood-thirsty little wretch she was! He
+stared at her bent head, at the shining coils of her wonderful hair.
+Undone, he could see it completely hiding her. And it was so soft and
+warm that again he was tempted to reach out and touch it. She was
+wonderful, and yet it was not possible that she had a heart. Her
+apparent disregard of the fact that he was a dying man was almost
+diabolic. There was no sympathy in the expression of her violet eyes as
+she looked at him. She was even making fun of the fact that he was
+about to die!
+
+She stood up, surveying for the first time the room in which she had
+been sitting. Then she turned to the window and looked out. She
+reminded Kent of a beautiful young willow that had grown at the edge of
+a stream, exquisite, slender, strong. He could have picked her up in
+his arms as easily as a child, yet he sensed in the lithe beauty of her
+body forces that could endure magnificently. The careless poise of her
+head fascinated him. For that head and the hair that crowned it he knew
+that half the women of the earth would have traded precious years of
+their lives.
+
+And then, without turning toward him, she said, "Some day, when I die,
+I wish I might have as pleasant a room as this."
+
+"I hope you never die," he replied devoutly.
+
+She came back and stood for a moment beside him.
+
+"I have had a very pleasant time," she said, as though he had given her
+a special sort of entertainment. "It's too bad you are going to die.
+I'm sure we should have been good friends. Aren't you?"
+
+"Yes, very sure. If you had only arrived sooner--"
+
+"And I shall always think of you as a different kind of man-beast," she
+interrupted him. "It is really true that I shouldn't like to see you
+die. I want to get away before it happens. Would you care to have me
+kiss you?"
+
+For an instant Kent felt that his aorta was about to give away. "I--I
+would," he gasped huskily.
+
+"Then--close your eyes, please."
+
+He obeyed. She bent over him. He felt the soft touch of her hands and
+caught for an instant the perfume of her face and hair, and then the
+thrill of her lips pressed warm and soft upon his.
+
+She was not flushed or embarrassed when he looked at her again. It was
+as if she had kissed a baby and was wondering at its red face. "I've
+only kissed three men before you," she avowed. "It is strange. I never
+thought I should do it again. And now, good-by!" She moved quickly to
+the door.
+
+"Wait," he cried plaintively. "Please wait. I want to know your name.
+It is Marette--"
+
+"Radisson," she finished for him. "Marette Radisson, and I come from
+away off there, from a place we call the Valley of Silent Men." She was
+pointing into the north.
+
+"The North!" he exclaimed.
+
+"Yes, it is far north. Very far."
+
+Her hand was on the latch. The door opened slowly.
+
+"Wait," he pleaded again. "You must not go."
+
+"Yes, I must go. I have remained too long. I am sorry I kissed you. I
+shouldn't have done that. But I had to because you are such a splendid
+liar!"
+
+The door opened quickly and closed behind her. He heard her steps
+almost running down the hall, where not long ago he had listened to the
+last of O'Connor's.
+
+And then there was silence, and in that silence he heard her words
+again, drumming like little hammers in his head, "_Because you are such
+a splendid liar_!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+James Kent, among his other qualities good and bad, possessed a
+merciless opinion of his own shortcomings, but never, in that opinion,
+had he fallen so low as in the interval which immediately followed the
+closing of his door behind the mysterious girl who had told him that
+her name was Marette Radisson. No sooner was she gone than the
+overwhelming superiority of her childlike cleverness smote him until,
+ashamed of himself, he burned red in his aloneness.
+
+He, Sergeant Kent, the coolest man on the force next to Inspector
+Kedsty, the most dreaded of catechists when questioning criminals, the
+man who had won the reputation of facing quietly and with deadly
+sureness the most menacing of dangers, had been beaten--horribly
+beaten--by a girl! And yet, in defeat, an irrepressible and at times
+distorted sense of humor made him give credit to the victor. The shame
+of the thing was his acknowledgment that a bit of feminine beauty had
+done the trick. He had made fun of O'Connor when the big staff-sergeant
+had described the effect of the girl's eyes on Inspector Kedsty. And,
+now, if O'Connor could know of what had happened here--
+
+And then, like a rubber ball, that saving sense of humor bounced up out
+of the mess, and Kent found himself chuckling as his face grew cooler.
+His visitor had come, and she had gone, and he knew no more about her
+than when she had entered his room, except that her very pretty name
+was Marette Radisson. He was just beginning to think of the questions
+he had wanted to ask, a dozen, half a hundred of them--more definitely
+who she was; how and why she had come to Athabasca Landing; her
+interest in Sandy McTrigger; the mysterious relationship that must
+surely exist between her and Inspector Kedsty; and, chiefly, her real
+motive in coming to him when she knew that he was dying. He comforted
+himself by the assurance that he would have learned these things had
+she not left him so suddenly. He had not expected that.
+
+The question which seated itself most insistently in his mind was, why
+had she come? Was it, after all, merely a matter of curiosity? Was her
+relationship to Sandy McTrigger such that inquisitiveness alone had
+brought her to see the man who had saved him? Surely she had not been
+urged by a sense of gratitude, for in no way had she given expression
+to that. On his death-bed she had almost made fun of him. And she could
+not have come as a messenger from McTrigger, or she would have left her
+message. For the first time he began to doubt that she knew the man at
+all, in spite of the strange thing that had happened under O'Connor's
+eyes. But she must know Kedsty. She had made no answer to his
+half-accusation that she was hiding up at the Inspector's bungalow. He
+had used that word--"hiding." It should have had an effect. And she was
+as beautifully unconscious of it as though she had not heard him, and
+he knew that she had heard him very distinctly. It was then that she
+had given him that splendid view of her amazingly long lashes and had
+countered softly,
+
+"What if you shouldn't die?"
+
+Kent felt himself suddenly aglow with an irresistible appreciation of
+the genius of her subtlety, and with that appreciation came a thrill of
+deeper understanding. He believed that he knew why she had left him so
+suddenly. It was because she had seen herself close to the danger-line.
+There were things which she did not want him to know or question her
+about, and his daring intimation that she was hiding in Kedsty's
+bungalow had warned her. Was it possible that Kedsty himself had sent
+her for some reason which he could not even guess at? Positively it was
+not because of McTrigger, the man he had saved. At least she would have
+thanked him in some way. She would not have appeared quite so adorably
+cold-blooded, quite so sweetly unconscious of the fact that he was
+dying. If McTrigger's freedom had meant anything to her, she could not
+have done less than reveal to him a bit of sympathy. And her greatest
+compliment, if he excepted the kiss, was that she had called him a
+splendid liar!
+
+Kent grimaced and drew in a deep breath because of the tightness in his
+chest. Why was it that every one seemed to disbelieve him? Why was it
+that even this mysterious girl, whom he had never seen before in his
+life, politely called him a liar when he insisted that he had killed
+John Barkley? Was the fact of murder necessarily branded in one's face?
+If so, he had never observed it. Some of the hardest criminals he had
+brought in from the down-river country were likable-looking men. There
+was Horrigan, for instance, who for seven long weeks kept him in good
+humor with his drollery, though he was bringing him in to be hanged.
+And there were McTab, and _le Bete Noir_--the Black Beast--a lovable
+vagabond in spite of his record, and Le Beau, the gentlemanly robber of
+the wilderness mail, and half a dozen others he could recall without
+any effort at all. No one called them liars when, like real men, they
+confessed their crimes when they saw their game was up. To a man they
+had given up the ghost with their boots on, and Kent respected their
+memory because of it. And he was dying--and even this stranger girl
+called him a liar? And no case had ever been more complete than his
+own. He had gone mercilessly into the condemning detail of it all. It
+was down in black and white. He had signed it. And still he was
+disbelieved. It was funny, deuced funny, thought Kent.
+
+Until young Mercer opened the door and came in with his late breakfast,
+he had forgotten that he had really been hungry when he awakened with
+Cardigan's stethoscope at his chest. Mercer had amused him from the
+first. The pink-faced young Englishman, fresh from the old country,
+could not conceal in his face and attitude the fact that he was walking
+in the presence of the gallows whenever he entered the room. He was, as
+he had confided in Cardigan, "beastly hit up" over the thing. To feed
+and wash a man who would undoubtedly die, but who would be hanged by
+the neck until he was dead if he lived, filled him with peculiar and at
+times conspicuous emotions. It was like attending to a living corpse,
+if such a thing could be conceived. And Mercer had conceived it. Kent
+had come to regard him as more or less of a barometer giving away
+Cardigan's secrets. He had not told Cardigan, but had kept the
+discovery for his own amusement.
+
+This morning Mercer's face was less pink, and his pale eyes were paler,
+Kent thought. Also he started to sprinkle sugar on his eggs in place of
+salt.
+
+Kent laughed and stopped his hand. "You may sugar my eggs when I'm
+dead, Mercer," he said, "but while I'm alive I want salt on 'em! Do you
+know, old man, you look bad this morning. Is it because this is my last
+breakfast?"
+
+"I hope not, sir, I hope not," replied Mercer quickly. "Indeed, I hope
+you are going to live, sir."
+
+"Thanks!" said Kent dryly. "Where is Cardigan?"
+
+"The Inspector sent a messenger for him, sir. I think he has gone to
+see him. Are your eggs properly done, sir?"
+
+"Mercer, if you ever worked in a butler's pantry, for the love of
+heaven forget it now!" exploded Kent, "I want you to tell me something
+straight out. How long have I got?"
+
+Mercer fidgeted for a moment, and a shade or two more of the red went
+out of his face. "I can't say, sir. Doctor Cardigan hasn't told me. But
+I think not very long, sir. Doctor Cardigan is cut up all in rags this
+morning. And Father Layonne is coming to see you at any moment."
+
+"Much obliged," nodded Kent, calmly beginning his second egg. "And, by
+the way, what did you think of the young lady?"
+
+"Ripping, positively ripping!" exclaimed Mercer.
+
+"That's the word," agreed Kent. "Ripping. It sounds like the calico
+counter in a dry-goods store, but means a lot. Don't happen to know
+where she is staying or why she is at the Landing, do you?"
+
+He knew that he was asking a foolish question and scarcely expected an
+answer from Mercer. He was astonished when the other said:
+
+"I heard Doctor Cardigan ask her if we might expect her to honor us
+with another visit, and she told him it would be impossible, because
+she was leaving on a down-river scow tonight. Fort Simpson, I think she
+said she was going to, sir."
+
+"The deuce you say!" cried Kent, spilling a bit of his coffee in the
+thrill of the moment. "Why, that's where Staff-Sergeant O'Connor is
+bound for!"
+
+"So I heard Doctor Cardigan tell her. But she didn't reply to that. She
+just--went. If you don't mind a little joke in your present condition,
+sir, I might say that Doctor Cardigan was considerably flayed up over
+her. A deuced pretty girl, sir, deuced pretty! And I think he was shot
+through!"
+
+"Now you're human, Mercer. She was pretty, wasn't she?"
+
+"Er--yes--stunningly so, Mr. Kent," agreed Mercer, reddening suddenly
+to the roots of his pasty, blond hair. "I don't mind confessing that in
+this unusual place her appearance was quite upsetting."
+
+"I agree with you, friend Mercer," nodded Kent. "She upset me. And--see
+here, old man!--will you do a dying man the biggest favor he ever asked
+in his life?"
+
+"I should be most happy, sir, most happy."
+
+"It's this," said Kent. "I want to know if that girl actually leaves on
+the down-river scow tonight. If I'm alive tomorrow morning, will you
+tell me?"
+
+"I shall do my best, sir."
+
+"Good. It's simply the silly whim of a dying man, Mercer. But I want to
+be humored in it. And I'm sensitive--like yourself. I don't want
+Cardigan to know. There's an old Indian named Mooie, who lives in a
+shack just beyond the sawmill. Give him ten dollars and tell him there
+is another ten in it if he sees the business through, and reports
+properly to you, and keeps his mouth shut afterward. Here--the money is
+under my pillow."
+
+Kent pulled out a wallet and put fifty dollars in Mercer's hands.
+
+"Buy cigars with the rest of it, old man. It's of no more use to me.
+And this little trick you are going to pull off is worth it. It's my
+last fling on earth, you might say."
+
+"Thank you, sir. It is very kind of you."
+
+Mercer belonged to a class of wandering Englishmen typical of the
+Canadian West, the sort that sometimes made real Canadians wonder why a
+big and glorious country like their own should cling to the mother
+country. Ingratiating and obsequiously polite at all times, he gave one
+the impression of having had splendid training as a servant, yet had
+this intimation been made to him, he would have become highly
+indignant. Kent had learned their ways pretty well. He had met them in
+all sorts of places, for one of their inexplicable characteristics was
+the recklessness and apparent lack of judgment with which they located
+themselves. Mercer, for instance, should have held a petty clerical job
+of some kind in a city, and here he was acting as nurse in the heart of
+a wilderness!
+
+After Mercer had gone with the breakfast things and the money, Kent
+recalled a number of his species. And he knew that under their veneer
+of apparent servility was a thing of courage and daring which needed
+only the right kind of incentive to rouse it. And when roused, it was
+peculiarly efficient in a secretive, artful-dodger sort of way. It
+would not stand up before a gun. But it would creep under the mouths of
+guns on a black night. And Kent was positive his fifty dollars would
+bring him results--if he lived.
+
+Just why he wanted the information he was after, he could not have told
+himself. It was a pet aphorism between O'Connor and him that they had
+often traveled to success on the backs of their hunches. And his
+proposition to Mercer was made on the spur of one of those moments when
+the spirit of a hunch possessed him. His morning had been one of
+unexpected excitement, and now he leaned back in an effort to review it
+and to forget, if he could, the distressing thing that was bound to
+happen to him within the next few hours. But he could not get away from
+the thickening in his chest. It seemed growing on him. Now and then he
+was compelled to make quite an effort to get sufficient air into his
+lungs.
+
+He found himself wondering if there was a possibility that the girl
+might return. For a long time he lay thinking about her, and it struck
+him as incongruous and in bad taste that fate should have left this
+adventure for his last. If he had met her six months ago--or even
+three--it was probable that she would so have changed the events of
+life for him that he would not have got the half-breed's bullet in his
+chest. He confessed the thing unblushingly. The wilderness had taken
+the place of woman for him. It had claimed him, body and soul. He had
+desired nothing beyond its wild freedom and its never-ending games of
+chance. He had dreamed, as every man dreams, but realities and not the
+dreams had been the red pulse of his life. And yet, if this girl had
+come sooner--
+
+He revisioned for himself over and over again her hair and eyes, the
+slimness of her as she had stood at the window, the freedom and
+strength of that slender body, the poise of her exquisite head, and he
+felt again the thrill of her hand and the still more wonderful thrill
+of her lips as she had pressed them warmly upon his.
+
+_And she was of the North_! That was the thought that overwhelmed him. He
+did not permit himself to believe that she might have told him an
+untruth. He was confident, if he lived until tomorrow, that Mercer
+would corroborate his faith in her. He had never heard of a place
+called the Valley of Silent Men, but it was a big country, and Fort
+Simpson with its Hudson Bay Company's post and its half-dozen shacks
+was a thousand miles away. He was not sure that such a place as that
+valley really existed. It was easier to believe that the girl's home
+was at Fort Providence, Fort Simpson, Fort Good Hope, or even at Fort
+McPherson. It was not difficult for him to picture her as the daughter
+of one of the factor lords of the North. Yet this, upon closer
+consideration, he gave up as unreasonable. The word "Fort" did not
+stand for population, and there were probably not more than fifty white
+people at all the posts between the Great Slave and the Arctic. She was
+not one of these, or the fact would have been known at the Landing.
+
+Neither could she be a riverman's daughter, for it was inconceivable
+that either a riverman or a trapper would have sent this girl down into
+civilization, where this girl had undoubtedly been. It was that point
+chiefly which puzzled Kent. She was not only beautiful. She had been
+tutored in schools that were not taught by wilderness missioners. In
+her, it seemed to him, he had seen the beauty and the wild freedom of
+the forests as they had come to him straight out of the heart of an
+ancient aristocracy that was born nearly two hundred years ago in the
+old cities of Quebec and Montreal.
+
+His mind flashed back at that thought: he remembered the time when he
+had sought out every nook and cranny of that ancient town of Quebec,
+and had stood over graves two centuries old, and deep in his soul had
+envied the dead the lives they had lived. He had always thought of
+Quebec as a rare old bit of time-yellowed lace among cities--the heart
+of the New World as it had once been, still beating, still whispering
+of its one-time power, still living in the memory of its mellowed
+romance, its almost forgotten tragedies--a ghost that lived, that still
+beat back defiantly the destroying modernism that would desecrate its
+sacred things. And it pleased him to think of Marette Radisson as the
+spirit of it, wandering north, and still farther north--even as the
+spirits of the profaned dead had risen from the Landing to go farther
+on.
+
+And feeling that the way had at last been made easy for him, Kent
+smiled out into the glorious day and whispered softly, as if she were
+standing there, listening to him:
+
+"If I had lived--I would have called you--my Quebec. It's pretty, that
+name. It stands for a lot. And so do you."
+
+And out in the hall, as Kent whispered those words, stood Father
+Layonne, with a face that was whiter than the mere presence of death
+had ever made it before. At his side stood Cardigan, aged ten years
+since he had placed his stethoscope at Kent's chest that morning. And
+behind these two were Kedsty, with a face like gray rock, and young
+Mercer, in whose staring eyes was the horror of a thing he could not
+yet quite comprehend. Cardigan made an effort to speak and failed.
+Kedsty wiped his forehead, as he had wiped it the morning of Kent's
+confession. And Father Layonne, as he went to Kent's door, was
+breathing softly to himself a prayer.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+From the window, the glorious day outside, and the vision he had made
+for himself of Marette Radisson, Kent turned at the sound of a hand at
+his door and saw it slowly open. He was expecting it. He had read young
+Mercer like a book. Mercer's nervousness and the increased tightening
+of the thing in his chest had given him warning. The thing was going to
+happen soon, and Father Layonne had come. He tried to smile, that he
+might greet his wilderness friend cheerfully and unafraid. But the
+smile froze when the door opened and he saw the missioner standing
+there.
+
+More than once he had accompanied Father Layonne over the threshold of
+life into the presence of death, but he had never before seen in his
+face what he saw there now. He stared. The missioner remained in the
+doorway, hesitating, as if at the last moment a great fear held him
+back. For an interval the eyes of the two men rested upon each other in
+a silence that was like the grip of a living thing. Then Father Layonne
+came quietly into the room and closed the door behind him.
+
+Kent drew a deep breath and tried to grin. "You woke me out of a
+dream," he said, "a day-dream. I've had a very pleasant experience this
+morning, _mon pere_."
+
+"So some one was trying to tell me, Jimmy," replied the little
+missioner with an effort to smile back.
+
+"Mercer?"
+
+"Yes. He told me about it confidentially. The poor boy must have fallen
+in love with the young lady."
+
+"So have I, _mon pere_. I don't mind confessing it to you. I'm rather
+glad. And if Cardigan hadn't scheduled me to die--"
+
+"Jimmy," interrupted the missioner quickly, but a bit huskily, "has it
+ever occurred to you that Doctor Cardigan may be mistaken?"
+
+He had taken one of Kent's hands. His grip tightened. It began to hurt.
+And Kent, looking into his eyes, found his brain all at once like a
+black room suddenly illuminated by a flash of fire. Drop by drop the
+blood went out of his face until it was whiter than Father Layonne's.
+
+"You--you don't--mean--"
+
+"Yes, yes, boy, I mean just that," said the missioner, in a voice so
+strange that it did not seem to be his own. "You are not going to die,
+Jimmy. You are going to live!"
+
+"Live!" Kent dropped back against his pillows. "_Live_!" His lips gasped
+the one word.
+
+He closed his eyes for an instant, and it seemed to him that the world
+was aflame. And he repeated the word again, but only his lips formed
+it, and there came no sound. His senses, strained to the breaking-point
+to meet the ordeal of death, gave way slowly to the mighty reaction. He
+felt in those moments like a reeling man. He opened his eyes, and there
+was a meaningless green haze through the window where the world should
+have been. But he heard Father Layonne's voice. It seemed a great
+distance off, but it was very clear. Doctor Cardigan had made an error,
+it was saying. And Doctor Cardigan, because of that error, was like a
+man whose heart had been taken out of him. But it was an excusable
+error.
+
+If there had been an X-ray--But there had been none. And Doctor
+Cardigan had made the diagnosis that nine out of ten good surgeons
+would probably have made. What he had taken to be the aneurismal
+blood-rush was an exaggerated heart murmur, and the increased
+thickening in his chest was a simple complication brought about by too
+much night air. It was too bad the error had happened. But he must not
+blame Cardigan!
+
+_He must not blame Cardigan_! Those last words pounded like an endless
+series of little waves in Kent's brain. He must not blame Cardigan! He
+laughed, laughed before his dazed senses readjusted themselves, before
+the world through the window pieced itself into shape again. At least
+he thought he was laughing. He must--not--blame--Cardigan! What an
+amazingly stupid thing for Father Layonne to say! Blame Cardigan for
+giving him back his life? Blame him for the glorious knowledge that he
+was not going to die? Blame him for--
+
+Things were coming clearer. Like a bolt slipping into its groove his
+brain found itself. He saw Father Layonne again, with his white, tense
+face and eyes in which were still seated the fear and the horror he had
+seen in the doorway. It was not until then that he gripped fully at the
+truth.
+
+"I--I see," he said. "You and Cardigan think it would have been better
+if I had died!"
+
+The missioner was still holding his hand. "I don't know, Jimmy, I don't
+know. What has happened is terrible."
+
+"But not so terrible as death," cried Kent, suddenly growing rigid
+against his pillows. "Great God, _mon pere_, I want to live! Oh--"
+
+He snatched his hand free and stretched forth both arms to the open
+window. "Look at it out there! My world again! MY WORLD! I want to go
+back to it. It's ten times more precious to me now than it was. Why
+should I blame Cardigan? _Mon pere_--_mon pere_--listen to me. I can say it
+now, because I've got a right to say it. _I lied_. I didn't kill John
+Barkley!"
+
+A strange cry fell from Father Layonne's lips. It was a choking cry, a
+cry, not of rejoicing, but of a grief-stung thing. "Jimmy!"
+
+"I swear it! Great heaven, _mon pere_, don't you believe me?"
+
+The missioner had risen. In his eyes and face was another look. It was
+as if in all his life he had never seen James Kent before. It was a
+look born suddenly of shock, the shock of amazement, of incredulity, of
+a new kind of horror. Then swiftly again his countenance changed, and
+he put a hand on Kent's head.
+
+"God forgive you, Jimmy," he said. "And God help you, too!"
+
+Where a moment before Kent had felt the hot throb of an inundating joy,
+his heart was chilled now by the thing he sensed in Father Layonne's
+voice and saw in his face and eyes. It was not entirely disbelief. It
+was a more hopeless thing than that.
+
+"You do not believe me!" he said.
+
+"It is my religion to believe, Jimmy," replied Father Layonne in a
+gentle voice into which the old calmness had returned. "I must believe,
+for your sake. But it is not a matter of human sentiment now, lad. It
+is the Law! Whatever my heart feels toward you can do you no good. You
+are--" He hesitated to speak the words.
+
+Then it was that Kent saw fully and clearly the whole monstrous
+situation. It had taken time for it to fasten itself upon him. In a
+general way it had been clear to him a few moments before; now, detail
+by detail, it closed in upon him, and his muscles tightened, and Father
+Layonne saw his jaw set hard and his hands clench. Death was gone. But
+the mockery of it, the grim exultation of the thing over the colossal
+trick it had played, seemed to din an infernal laughter in his ears.
+But--he was going to live! That was the one fact that rose above all
+others. No matter what happened to him a month or six months from now,
+he was not going to die today. He would live to receive Mercer's
+report. He would live to stand on his feet again and to fight for the
+life which he had thrown away. He was, above everything else, a
+fighting man. It was born in him to fight, not so much against his
+fellow men as against the overwhelming odds of adventure as they came
+to him. And now he was up against the deadliest game of all. He saw it.
+He felt it. The thing gripped him. In the eyes of that Law of which he
+had so recently been a part he was a murderer. And in the province of
+Alberta the penalty for killing a man was hanging. Because horror and
+fear did not seize upon him, he wondered if he still realized the
+situation. He believed that he did. It was merely a matter of human
+nature. Death, he had supposed, was a fixed and foregone thing. He had
+believed that only a few hours of life were left for him. And now it
+was given back to him, for months at least. It was a glorious reprieve,
+and--
+
+Suddenly his heart stood still in the thrill of the thought that came
+to him. Marette Radisson had known that he was not going to die! She
+had hinted the fact, and he, like a blundering idiot, had failed to
+catch the significance of it. She had given him no sympathy, had
+laughed at him, had almost made fun of him, simply because she knew
+that he was going to live!
+
+He turned suddenly on Father Layonne.
+
+"They shall believe me!" he cried. "I shall make them believe me! _Mon
+pere_, I lied! I lied to save Sandy McTrigger, and I shall tell them
+why. If Doctor Cardigan has not made another mistake, I want them all
+here again. Will you arrange it?"
+
+"Inspector Kedsty is waiting outside," said Father Layonne quietly,
+"but I should not act in haste, Jimmy. I should wait. I should
+think--think."
+
+"You mean take time to think up a story that will hold water, _mon pere_?
+I have that. I have the story. And yet--" He smiled a bit dismally. "I
+did make one pretty thorough confession, didn't I, Father?"
+
+"It was very convincing, Jimmy. It went so particularly into the
+details, and those details, coupled with the facts that you were seen
+at John Barkley's earlier in the evening, and that it was you who found
+him dead a number of hours later--"
+
+"All make a strong case against me," agreed Kent. "As a matter of fact,
+I was up at Barkley's to look over an old map he had made of the
+Porcupine country twenty years ago. He couldn't find it. Later he sent
+word he had run across it. I returned and found him dead."
+
+The little missioner nodded, but did not speak.
+
+"It is embarrassing," Kent went on. "It almost seems as though I ought
+to go through with it, like a sport. When a man loses, it isn't good
+taste to set up a howl. It makes him sort of yellow-backed, you know.
+To play the game according to rules, I suppose I ought to keep quiet
+and allow myself to be hung without making any disturbance. Die game,
+and all that, you know. Then there is the other way of looking at it.
+This poor neck of mine depends on me. It has given me a lot of good
+service. It has been mighty loyal. It has even swallowed eggs on the
+day it thought it was going to die. And I'd be a poor specimen of
+humanity to go back on it now. I want to do that neck a good turn. I
+want to save it. And I'm going to--if I can!"
+
+In spite of the unpleasant tension of the moment, it cheered Father
+Layonne to see this old humor returning into the heart of his friend.
+With him love was an enduring thing. He might grieve for James Kent, he
+might pray for the salvation of his soul, he might believe him guilty,
+yet he still bore for him the affection which was too deeply rooted in
+his heart to be uptorn by physical things or the happenings of chance.
+So the old cheer of his smile came back, and he said:
+
+"To fight for his life is a privilege which God gives to every man,
+Jimmy. I was terrified when I came to you. I believed it would have
+been better if you had died. I can see my error. It will be a terrible
+fight. If you win, I shall be glad. If you lose, I know that you will
+lose bravely. Perhaps you are right. It may be best to see Inspector
+Kedsty before you have had time to think. That point will have its
+psychological effect. Shall I tell him you are prepared to see him?"
+
+Kent nodded. "Yes. Now."
+
+Father Layonne went to the door. Even there he seemed to hesitate an
+instant, as if again to call upon Kent to reconsider. Then he opened it
+and went out.
+
+Kent waited impatiently. His hand, fumbling at his bedclothes, seized
+upon the cloth with which he had wiped his lips, and it suddenly
+occurred to him that it had been a long time since it had shown a fresh
+stain of blood. Now that he knew it was not a deadly thing, the
+tightening in his chest was less uncomfortable. He felt like getting up
+and meeting his visitors on his feet. Every nerve in his body wanted
+action, and the minutes of silence which followed the closing of the
+door after the missioner were drawn out and tedious to him. A quarter
+of an hour passed before he heard returning footsteps, and by the sound
+of them he knew Kedsty was not coming alone. Probably _le pere_ would
+return with him. And possibly Cardigan.
+
+What happened in the next few seconds was somewhat of a shock to him.
+Father Layonne entered first, and then came Inspector Kedsty. Kent's
+eyes shot to the face of the commander of N Division. There was
+scarcely recognition in it. A mere inclination of the head, not enough
+to call a greeting, was the reply to Kent's nod and salute. Never had
+he seen Kedsty's face more like the face of an emotionless sphinx. But
+what disturbed him most was the presence of people he had not expected.
+Close behind Kedsty was McDougal, the magistrate, and behind McDougal
+entered Constables Felly and Brant, stiffly erect and clearly under
+orders. Cardigan, pale and uneasy, came in last, with the stenographer.
+Scarcely had they entered the room when Constable Pelly pronounced the
+formal warning of the Criminal Code of the Royal Northwest Mounted
+Police, and Kent was legally under arrest.
+
+He had not looked for this. He knew, of course, that the process of the
+Law would take its course, but he had not anticipated this bloodthirsty
+suddenness. He had expected, first of all, to talk with Kedsty as man
+to man. And yet--it was the Law. He realized this as his eyes traveled
+from Kedsty's rock-like face to the expressionless immobility of his
+old friends, Constables Pelly and Brant. If there was sympathy, it was
+hidden except in the faces of Cardigan and Father Layonne. And Kent,
+exultantly hopeful a little while before, felt his heart grow heavy
+within him as he waited for the moment when he would begin the fight to
+repossess himself of the life and freed which he had lost.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+For some time after the door to Kent's room had closed upon the ominous
+visitation of the Law, young Mercer remained standing in the hall,
+debating with himself whether his own moment had not arrived. In the
+end he decided that it had, and with Kent's fifty dollars in his pocket
+he made for the shack of the old Indian trailer, Mooie. It was an hour
+later when he returned, just in time to see Kent's door open again.
+Doctor Cardigan and Father Layonne reappeared first, followed in turn
+by the blonde stenographer, the magistrate, and Constables Pelly and
+Brant. Then the door closed.
+
+Within the room, sweating from the ordeal through which he had passed,
+Kent sat bolstered against his pillows, facing Inspector Kedsty with
+blazing eyes.
+
+"I've asked for these few moments alone with you, Kedsty, because I
+wanted to talk to you as a man, and not as my superior officer. I am, I
+take it, no longer a member of the force. That being the case, I owe
+you no more respect than I owe to any other man. And I am pleased to
+have the very great privilege of calling you a cursed scoundrel!"
+
+Kedsty's face was hot, but as his hands clenched slowly, it turned
+redder. Before he could speak, Kent went on.
+
+"You have not shown me the courtesy or the sympathy you have had for
+the worst criminals that ever faced you. You amazed every man that was
+in this room, because at one time--if not now--they were my friends. It
+wasn't what you said. It was how you said it. Whenever there was an
+inclination on their part to believe, you killed it--not honestly and
+squarely, by giving me a chance. Whenever you saw a chance for me to
+win a point, you fell back upon the law. And you don't believe that I
+killed John Barkley. I know it. You called me a liar the day I made
+that fool confession. You still believe that I lied. And I have waited
+until we were alone to ask you certain things, for I still have
+something of courtesy left in me, if you haven't. What is your game?
+What has brought about the change in you? Is it--"
+
+His right hand clenched hard as a rock as he leaned toward Kedsty.
+
+"Is it because of the girl hiding up at your bungalow, Kedsty?"
+
+Even in that moment, when he had the desire to strike the man before
+him, it was impossible for him not to admire the stone-like
+invulnerability of Kedsty. He had never heard of another man calling
+Kedsty a scoundrel or dishonest. And yet, except that his faced burned
+more dully red, the Inspector was as impassively calm as ever. Even
+Kent's intimation that he was playing a game, and his direct accusation
+that he was keeping Marette Radisson in hiding at his bungalow, seemed
+to have no disturbing effect on him. For a space he looked at Kent, as
+if measuring the poise of the other's mind. When he spoke, it was in a
+voice so quiet and calm that Kent stared at him in amazement.
+
+"I don't blame you, Kent," he said. "I don't blame you for calling me a
+scoundrel, or anything else you want to. I think I should do the same
+if I were in your place. You think it is incredible, because of our
+previous association, that I should not make every effort to save you.
+I would, if I thought you were innocent. But I don't. I believe you are
+guilty. I cannot see where there is a loophole in the evidence against
+you, as given in your own confession. Why, man, even if I could help to
+prove you innocent of killing John Barkley--"
+
+He paused and twisted one of his gray mustaches, half facing the window
+for a moment. "Even if I did that," he went on, "you would still have
+twenty years of prison ahead of you for the worst kind of perjury on
+the face of the earth, perjury committed at a time when you thought you
+were dying! You are guilty, Kent. If not of one thing, then of the
+other. I am not playing a game. And as for the girl--there is no girl
+at my bungalow."
+
+He turned to the door; and Kent made no effort to stop him. Words came
+to his lips and died there, and for a space after Kedsty had gone he
+stared out into the green forest world beyond his window, seeing
+nothing. Inspector Kedsty, quietly and calmly, had spoken words that
+sent his hopes crashing in ruin about him. For even if he escaped the
+hangman, he was still a criminal--a criminal of the worst sort,
+perhaps, next to the man who kills another. If he proved that he had
+not killed John Barkley, he would convict himself, at the same time, of
+having made solemn oath to a lie on what he supposed was his death-bed.
+And for that, a possible twenty years in the Edmonton penitentiary! At
+best he could not expect less than ten. Ten years--twenty years--in
+prison! That, or hang.
+
+The sweat broke out on his face. He did not curse Kedsty now. His anger
+was gone. Kedsty had seen all the time what he, like a fool, had not
+thought of. No matter how the Inspector might feel in that deeply
+buried heart of his, he could not do otherwise than he was doing. He,
+James Kent, who hated a lie above all the things on the earth, was
+kin-as-kisew--the blackest liar of all, a man who lied when he was
+dying.
+
+And for that lie there was a great punishment. The Law saw with its own
+eyes. It was a single-track affair, narrow-visioned, caring nothing for
+what was to the right or the left. It would tolerate no excuse which he
+might find for himself. He had lied to save a human life, but that life
+the Law itself had wanted. So he had both robbed and outraged the Law,
+even though a miracle saved him the greatest penalty of all.
+
+The weight of the thing crushed him. It was as if for the first time a
+window had opened for him, and he saw what Kedsty had seen. And then,
+as the minutes passed, the fighting spirit in him rose again. He was
+not of the sort to go under easily. Personal danger had always stirred
+him to his greatest depths, and he had never confronted a danger
+greater than this he was facing now. It was not a matter of leaping
+quickly and on the spur of the moment. For ten years his training had
+been that of a hunter of men, and the psychology of the man hunt had
+been his strong point. Always, in seeking his quarry, he had tried
+first to bring himself into a mental sympathy and understanding with
+that quarry. To analyze what an outlaw would do under certain
+conditions and with certain environments and racial inheritances behind
+him was to Kent the premier move in the thrilling game. He had evolved
+rules of great importance for himself, but always he had worked them
+out from the vantage point of the huntsman. Now he began to turn them
+around. He, James Kent, was no longer the hunter, but the hunted, and
+all the tricks which he had mastered must now be worked the other way.
+His woodcraft, his cunning, the fine points he had learned of the game
+of one-against-one would avail him but little when it came to the
+witness chair and a trial.
+
+The open window was his first inspiration. Adventure had been the blood
+of his life. And out there, behind the green forests rolling away like
+the billows of an ocean, lay the greatest adventure of all. Once in
+those beloved forests covering almost the half of a continent, he would
+be willing to die if the world beat him. He could see himself playing
+the game of the hunted as no other man had ever played it before. Let
+him once have his guns and his freedom, with all that world waiting for
+him--
+
+Eagerness gleamed in his eyes, and then, slowly, it died out. The open
+window, after all, was but a mockery. He rolled sideways from his bed
+and partly balanced himself on his feet. The effort made him dizzy. He
+doubted if he could have walked a hundred yards after climbing through
+the window. Instantly another thought leaped into his brain. His head
+was clearing. He swayed across the room and back again, the first time
+he had been on his feet since the half-breed's bullet had laid him out.
+He would fool Cardigan. He would fool Kedsty. As he recovered his
+strength, he would keep it to himself. He would play sick man to the
+limit, and then some night he would take advantage of the open window!
+
+The thought thrilled him as no other thing in the world had ever
+thrilled him before. For the first time he sensed the vast difference
+between the hunter and the hunted, between the man who played the game
+of life and death alone and the one who played it with the Law and all
+its might behind him. To hunt was thrilling. To be hunted was more
+thrilling. Every nerve in his body tingled. A different kind of fire
+burned in his brain. He was the creature who was at bay. The other
+fellow was the hunter now.
+
+He went back to the window and leaned far out. He looked at the forest
+and saw it with new eyes. The gleam of the slowly moving river held a
+meaning for him that it had never held before. Doctor Cardigan, seeing
+him then, would have sworn the fever had returned. His eyes held a
+slumbering fire. His face was flushed. In these moments Kent did not
+see death. He was not visioning the iron bars of a prison. His blood
+pulsed only to the stir of that greatest of all adventures which lay
+ahead of him. He, the best man-hunter in two thousand miles of
+wilderness, would beat the hunters themselves. The hound had turned
+fox, and that fox knew the tricks of both the hunter and the hunted. He
+would win! A world beckoned to him, and he would reach the heart of
+that world. Already there began to flash through his mind memory of the
+places where he could find safety and freedom for all time. No man in
+all the Northland knew its out-of-the-way corners better than he--its
+unmapped and unexplored places, the far and mysterious patches of _terra
+incognita_, where the sun still rose and set without permission of the
+Law, and God laughed as in the days when prehistoric monsters fed from
+the tops of trees no taller than themselves. Once through that window,
+with the strength to travel, and the Law might seek him for a hundred
+years without profit to itself.
+
+It was not bravado in his blood that stirred these thoughts. It was not
+panic or an unsound excitement. He was measuring things even as he
+visioned them. He would go down-river way, toward the Arctic. And he
+would find Marette Radisson! Yes, even though she lived at Barracks at
+Fort Simpson, he would find her! And after that? The question blurred
+all other questions in his mind. There were many answers to it.
+
+Knowing that it would be fatal to his scheme if he were found on his
+feet, he returned to his bed. The flush of his exertion and excitement
+was still in his face when Doctor Cardigan came half an hour later.
+
+Within the next few minutes he put Cardigan more at his ease than he
+had been during the preceding day and night. It was, after all, an
+error which made him happier the more he thought about it, he told the
+surgeon. He admitted that at first the discovery that he was going to
+live had horrified him. But now the whole thing bore a different aspect
+for him. As soon as he was sufficiently strong, he would begin
+gathering the evidences for his alibi, and he was confident of proving
+himself innocent of John Barkley's murder.
+
+He anticipated ten years in the Edmonton penitentiary. But what were
+ten years there as compared with forty or fifty under the sod? He wrung
+Cardigan's hand. He thanked him for the splendid care he had given him.
+It was he, Cardigan, who had saved him from the grave, he said--and
+Cardigan grew younger under his eyes.
+
+"I thought you'd look at it differently, Kent," he said, drawing in a
+deep breath. "My God, when I found I had made that mistake--"
+
+"You figured you were handing me over to the hangman," smiled Kent.
+"It's true I shouldn't have made that confession, old man, if I hadn't
+rated you right next to God Almighty when it came to telling whether a
+man was going to live or die. But we all make slips. I've made 'em. And
+you've got no apology to make. I may ask you to send me good cigars now
+and then while I'm in retirement at Edmonton, and I shall probably
+insist that you come to smoke with me occasionally and tell me the news
+of the rivers. But I'm afraid, old chap, that I'm going to worry you a
+bit more here. I feel queer today, queer inside me. Now it would be a
+topping joke if some other complication should set in and fool us all
+again, wouldn't it?"
+
+He could see the impression he was making on Cardigan. Again his faith
+in the psychology of the mind found its absolute verification.
+Cardigan, lifted unexpectedly out of the slough of despond by the very
+man whom he expected to condemn him, became from that moment, in the
+face of the mental reaction, almost hypersympathetic. When finally he
+left the room, Kent was inwardly rejoicing. For Cardigan had told him
+it would be some time before he was strong enough to stand on his feet.
+
+He did not see Mercer all the rest of that day. It was Cardigan who
+personally brought his dinner and his supper and attended him last at
+night. He asked not to be interrupted again, as he felt that he wanted
+to sleep. There was a guard outside his door now.
+
+Cardigan scowled when he volunteered this information. It was sheer
+nonsense in Kedsty taking such a silly precaution. But he would give
+the guard rubber-soled shoes and insist that he make no sound that
+would disturb him. Kent thanked him, and grinned exultantly when he was
+gone.
+
+He waited until his watch told him it was ten o'clock before he began
+the exercise which he had prescribed for himself. Noiselessly he rolled
+out of bed. There was no sensation of dizziness when he stood on his
+feet this time. His head was as clear as a bell. He began experimenting
+by inhaling deeper and still deeper breaths and by straightening his
+chest.
+
+There was no pain, as he had expected there would be. He felt like
+crying out in his joy. One after the other he stretched up his arms. He
+bent over until the tips of his fingers touched the floor. He crooked
+his knees, leaned from side to side, changed from one attitude to
+another, amazed at the strength and elasticity of his body. Twenty
+times, before he returned to his bed, he walked back and forth across
+his room.
+
+He was sleepless. Lying with his back to the pillows he looked out into
+the starlight, watching for the first glow of the moon and listening
+again to the owls that had nested in the lightning-shriven tree. An
+hour later he resumed his exercise.
+
+He was on his feet when through his window he heard the sound of
+approaching voices and then of running feet. A moment later some one
+was pounding at a door, and a loud voice shouted for Doctor Cardigan.
+Kent drew cautiously nearer the window. The moon had risen, and he saw
+figures approaching, slowly, as if weighted under a burden. Before they
+turned out of his vision, he made out two men bearing some heavy object
+between them. Then came the opening of a door, other voices, and after
+that an interval of quiet.
+
+He returned to his bed, wondering who the new patient could be.
+
+He was breathing easier after his exertion. The fact that he was
+feeling keenly alive, and that the thickening in his chest was
+disappearing, flushed him with elation. An unbounded optimism possessed
+him. It was late when he fell asleep, and he slept late. It was
+Mercer's entrance into his room that roused him. He came in softly,
+closed the door softly, yet Kent heard him. The moment he pulled
+himself up, he knew that Mercer had a report to make, and he also saw
+that something upsetting had happened to him. Mercer was a bit excited.
+
+"I beg pardon for waking you, sir," he said, leaning close over Kent,
+as though fearing the guard might be listening at the door. "But I
+thought it best for you to hear about the Indian, sir."
+
+"The Indian?"
+
+"Yes, sir--Mooie, sir. I am quite upset over it, Mr. Kent. He told me
+early last evening that he had found the scow on which the girl was
+going down-river. He said it was hidden in Kim's Bayou."
+
+"Kim's Bayou! That was a good hiding-place, Mercer!"
+
+"A very good place of concealment indeed, sir. As soon as it was dark,
+Mooie returned to watch. What happened to him I haven't fully
+discovered, sir. But it must have been near midnight when he staggered
+up to Crossen's place, bleeding and half out of his senses. They
+brought him here, and I watched over him most of the night. He says the
+girl went aboard the scow and that the scow started down-river. That
+much I learned, sir. But all the rest he mumbles in a tongue I can not
+understand. Crossen says it's Cree, and that old Mooie believes devils
+jumped on him with clubs down at Kim's Bayou. Of course they must have
+been men. I don't believe in Mooie's devils, sir."
+
+"Nor I," said Kent, the blood stirring strangely in his veins. "Mercer,
+it simply means there was some one cleverer than old Mooie watching
+that trail."
+
+With a curiously tense face Mercer was looking cautiously toward the
+door. Then he leaned still lower over Kent.
+
+"During his mumblings, when I was alone with him, I heard him speak a
+name, sir. Half a dozen times, sir--and it was--_Kedsty_!"
+
+Kent's fingers gripped the young Englishman's hand.
+
+"You heard _that_, Mercer?"
+
+"I am sure I could not have been mistaken, sir. It was repeated a
+number of times."
+
+Kent fell back against his pillows. His mind was working swiftly. He
+knew that behind an effort to appear calm Mercer was uneasy over what
+had happened.
+
+"We mustn't let this get out, Mercer," he said. "If Mooie should be
+badly hurt--should die, for instance--and it was discovered that you
+and I--"
+
+He knew he had gone far enough to give effect to his words. He did not
+even look at Mercer.
+
+"Watch him closely, old man, and report to me everything that happens.
+Find out more about Kedsty, if you can. I shall advise you how to act.
+It is rather ticklish, you know--for you! And"--he smiled at
+Mercer--"I'm unusually hungry this morning. Add another egg, will you,
+Mercer? Three instead of two, and a couple of extra slices of toast.
+And don't let any one know that my appetite is improving. It may be
+best for both of us--especially if Mooie should happen to die.
+Understand, old man?"
+
+"I--I think I do, sir," replied Mercer, paling at the grimly smiling
+thing he saw in Kent's eyes. "I shall do as you say, sir."
+
+When he had gone, Kent knew that he had accurately measured his man.
+True to a certain type, Mercer would do a great deal for fifty
+dollars--under cover. In the open he was a coward. And Kent knew the
+value of such a man under certain conditions. The present was one of
+those conditions. From this hour Mercer would be a priceless asset to
+his scheme for personal salvation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+That morning Kent ate a breakfast that would have amazed Doctor
+Cardigan and would have roused a greater caution in Inspector Kedsty
+had he known of it. While eating he strengthened the bonds already
+welded between himself and Mercer. He feigned great uneasiness over the
+condition of Mooie, who he knew was not fatally hurt because Mercer had
+told him there was no fracture. But if he should happen to die, he told
+Mercer, it would mean something pretty bad for them, if their part in
+the affair leaked out.
+
+As for himself, it would make little difference, as he was "in bad"
+anyway. But he did not want to see a good friend get into trouble on
+his account. Mercer was impressed. He saw himself an instrument in a
+possible murder affair, and the thought terrified him. Even at best,
+Kent told him, they had given and taken bribes, a fact that would go
+hard with them unless Mooie kept his mouth shut. And if the Indian knew
+anything out of the way about Kedsty, it was mighty important that he,
+Mercer, get hold of it, for it might prove a trump card with them in
+the event of a showdown with the Inspector of Police. As a matter of
+form, Mercer took his temperature. It was perfectly normal, but it was
+easy for Kent to persuade a notation on the chart a degree above.
+
+"Better keep them thinking I'm still pretty sick," he assured Mercer.
+"They won't suspect there is anything between us then."
+
+Mercer was so much in sympathy with the idea that he suggested adding
+another half-degree.
+
+It was a splendid day for Kent. He could feel himself growing stronger
+with each hour that passed. Yet not once during the day did he get out
+of his bed, fearing that he might be discovered. Cardigan visited him
+twice and had no suspicion of Mercer's temperature chart. He dressed
+his wound, which was healing fast. It was the fever which depressed
+him. There must be, he said, some internal disarrangement which would
+soon clear itself up. Otherwise there seemed to be no very great reason
+why Kent should not get on his feet. He smiled apologetically.
+
+"Seems queer to say that, when a little while ago I was telling you it
+was time to die," he said.
+
+That night, after ten o'clock, Kent went through his setting-up
+exercises four times. He marveled even more than the preceding night at
+the swiftness with which his strength was returning. Half a dozen times
+the little devils of eagerness working in his blood prompted him to
+take to the window at once.
+
+For three days and nights thereafter he kept his secret and added to
+his strength. Doctor Cardigan came in to see him at intervals, and
+Father Layonne visited him regularly every afternoon. Mercer was his
+most frequent visitor. On the third day two things happened to create a
+little excitement. Doctor Cardigan left on a four-day journey to a
+settlement fifty miles south, leaving Mercer in charge--and Mooie came
+suddenly out of his fever into his normal senses again. The first event
+filled Kent with joy. With Cardigan out of the way there would be no
+immediate danger of the discovery that he was no longer a sick man. But
+it was the recovery of Mooie from the thumping he had received about
+the head that delighted Mercer. He was exultant. With the quick
+reaction of his kind he gloated over the fact before Kent. He let it be
+known that he was no longer afraid, and from the moment Mooie was out
+of danger his attitude was such that more than once Kent would have
+taken keen pleasure in kicking him from the room. Also, from the hour
+he was safely in charge of Doctor Cardigan's place, Mercer began to
+swell with importance. Kent saw the new danger and began to humor him.
+He flattered him. He assured him that it was a burning shame Cardigan
+had not taken him into partnership. He deserved it. And, in justice to
+himself, Mercer should demand that partnership when Cardigan returned.
+He, Kent, would talk to Father Layonne about it, and the missioner
+would spread the gospel of what ought to be among others who were
+influential at the Landing. For two days he played with Mercer as an
+angler plays with a treacherous fish. He tried to get Mercer to
+discover more about Mooie's reference to Kedsty. But the old Indian had
+shut up like a clam.
+
+"He was frightened when I told him he had said things about the
+Inspector," Mercer reported. "He disavowed everything. He shook his
+head--no, no, no. He had not seen Kedsty. He knew nothing about him. I
+can do nothing with him, Kent."
+
+He had dropped his "sirs," also his servant-like servility. He helped
+to smoke Kent's cigars with the intimacy of proprietorship, and with
+offensive freedom called him "Kent." He spoke of the Inspector as
+"Kedsty," and of Father Layonne as "the little preacher." He swelled
+perceptibly, and Kent knew that each hour of that swelling added to his
+own danger.
+
+He believed that Mercer was talking. Several times a day he heard him
+in conversation with the guard, and not infrequently Mercer went down
+to the Landing, twirling a little reed cane that he had not dared to
+use before. He began to drop opinions and information to Kent in a
+superior sort of way. On the fourth day word came that Doctor Cardigan
+would not return for another forty-eight hours, and with unblushing
+conceit Mercer intimated that when he did return he would find big
+changes. Then it was that in the stupidity of his egotism he said:
+
+"Kedsty has taken a great fancy to me, Kent. He's a square old top,
+when you take him right. Had me over this afternoon, and we smoked a
+cigar together. When I told him that I looked in at your window last
+night and saw you going through a lot of exercises, he jumped up as if
+some one had stuck a pin in him. 'Why, I thought he was sick--_bad_!' he
+said. And I let him know there were better ways of making a sick man
+well than Cardigan's. 'Give them plenty to eat,' I said. 'Let 'em live
+normal,' I argued. 'Look at Kent, for instance,' I told him. 'He's been
+eating like a bear for a week, and he can turn somersaults this
+minute!' That topped him over, Kent. I knew it would be a bit of a
+surprise for him, that I should do what Cardigan couldn't do. He walked
+back and forth, black as a hat--thinking of Cardigan, I suppose. Then
+he called in that Pelly chap and gave him something which he wrote on a
+piece of paper. After that he shook hands with me, slapped me on the
+shoulder most intimately, and gave me another cigar. He's a keen old
+blade, Kent. He doesn't need more than one pair of eyes to see what
+I've done since Cardigan went away!"
+
+If ever Kent's hands had itched to get at the throat of a human being,
+the yearning convulsed his fingers now. At the moment when he was about
+to act Mercer had betrayed him to Kedsty! He turned his face away so
+that Mercer could not see what was in his eyes. Under his body he
+concealed his clenched hands. Within himself he fought against the
+insane desire that was raging in his blood, the desire to leap on
+Mercer and kill him. If Cardigan had reported his condition to Kedsty,
+it would have been different. He would have accepted the report as a
+matter of honorable necessity on Cardigan's part. But Mercer--a toad
+blown up by his own wind, a consummate fiend who would sell his best
+friend, a fool, an ass--
+
+For a space he held himself rigid as a stone, his face turned away from
+Mercer. His better sense won. He knew that his last chance depended
+upon his coolness now. And Mercer unwittingly helped him to win by
+slyly pocketing a couple of his cigars and leaving the room. For a
+minute or two Kent heard him talking to the guard outside the door.
+
+He sat up then. It was five o'clock. How long ago was it that Mercer
+had seen Kedsty? What was the order that the Inspector had written on a
+sheet of paper for Constable Pelly? Was it simply that he should be
+more closely watched, or was it a command to move him to one of the
+cells close to the detachment office? If it was the latter, all his
+hopes and plans were destroyed. His mind flew to those cells.
+
+The Landing had no jail, not even a guard-house, though the members of
+the force sometimes spoke of the cells just behind Inspector Kedsty's
+office by that name. The cells were of cement, and Kent himself had
+helped to plan them! The irony of the thing did not strike him just
+then. He was recalling the fact that no prisoner had ever escaped from
+those cement cells. If no action were taken before six o'clock, he was
+sure that it would be postponed until the following morning. It was
+possible that Kedsty's order was for Pelly to prepare a cell for him.
+Deep in his soul he prayed fervently that it was only a matter of
+preparation. If they would give him one more night--just one!
+
+His watch tinkled the half-hour. Then a quarter of six. Then six. His
+blood ran feverishly, in spite of the fact that he possessed the
+reputation of being the coolest man in N Division. He lighted his last
+cigar and smoked it slowly to cover the suspense which he feared
+revealed itself in his face, should any one come into his room. His
+supper was due at seven. At eight it would begin to get dusk. The moon
+was rising later each night, and it would not appear over the forests
+until after eleven. He would go through his window at ten o'clock. His
+mind worked swiftly and surely as to the method of his first night's
+flight. There were always a number of boats down at Crossen's place. He
+would start in one of these, and by the time Mercer discovered he was
+gone, he would be forty miles on his way to freedom. Then he would set
+his boat adrift, or hide it, and start cross-country until his trail
+was lost. Somewhere and in some way he would find both guns and food.
+It was fortunate that he had not given Mercer the other fifty dollars
+under his pillow.
+
+At seven Mercer came with his supper. A little gleam of disappointment
+shot into his pale eyes when he found the last cigar gone from the box.
+Kent saw the expression and tried to grin good-humoredly.
+
+"I'm going to have Father Layonne bring me up another box in the
+morning, Mercer," he said. "That is, if I can get hold of him."
+
+"You probably can," snapped Mercer. "He doesn't live far from barracks,
+and that's where you are going. I've got orders to have you ready to
+move in the morning."
+
+Kent's blood seemed for an instant to flash into living flame. He drank
+a part of his cup of coffee and said then, with a shrug of his
+shoulders: "I'm glad of it, Mercer. I'm anxious to have the thing over.
+The sooner they get me down there, the quicker they will take action.
+And I'm not afraid, not a bit of it. I'm bound to win. There isn't a
+chance in a hundred that they can convict me." Then he added: "And I'm
+going to have a box of cigars sent up to you, Mercer. I'm grateful to
+you for the splendid treatment you have given me."
+
+No sooner had Mercer gone with the supper things than Kent's knotted
+fist shook itself fiercely in the direction of the door.
+
+"My God, how I'd like to have you out in the woods--alone--for just one
+hour!" he whispered.
+
+Eight o'clock came, and nine. Two or three times he heard voices in the
+hall, probably Mercer talking with the guard. Once he thought he heard
+a rumble of thunder, and his heart throbbed joyously. Never had he
+welcomed a storm as he would have welcomed it tonight. But the skies
+remained clear. Not only that, but the stars as they began to appear
+seemed to him more brilliant than he had ever seen them before. And it
+was very still. The rattle of a scow-chain came up to him from the
+river as though it were only a hundred yards away. He knew that it was
+one of Mooie's dogs he heard howling over near the sawmill. The owls,
+flitting past his window, seemed to click their beaks more loudly than
+last night. A dozen times he fancied he could hear the rippling voice
+of the river that very soon was to carry him on toward freedom.
+
+The river! Every dream and aspiration found its voice for him in that
+river now. Down it Marette Radisson had gone. And somewhere along it,
+or on the river beyond, or the third river still beyond that, he would
+find her. In the long, tense wait between the hours of nine and ten he
+brought the girl back into his room again. He recalled every gesture
+she had made, every word she had spoken. He felt the thrill of her hand
+on his forehead, her kiss, and in his brain her softly spoken words
+repeated themselves over and over again, "I think that if you lived
+very long I should love you." And as she had spoken those words _she
+knew that he was not going to die_!
+
+Why, then, had she gone away? Knowing that he was going to live, why
+had she not remained to help him if she could? Either she had spoken
+the words in jest, or--
+
+A new thought flashed into his mind. It almost drew a cry from his
+lips. It brought him up tense, erect, his heart pounding. Had she gone
+away? Was it not possible that she, too, was playing a game in giving
+the impression that she was leaving down-river on the hidden scow? Was
+it conceivable that she was playing that game against Kedsty? A
+picture, clean-cut as the stars in the sky, began to outline itself in
+his mental vision. It was clear, now, what Mooie's mumblings about
+Kedsty had signified. Kedsty had accompanied Marette to the scow. Mooie
+had seen him and had given the fact away in his fever. Afterward he had
+clamped his mouth shut through fear of the "big man" of the Law. But
+why, still later, had he almost been done to death? Mooie was a
+harmless creature. He had no enemies.
+
+There was no one at the Landing who would have assaulted the old
+trailer, whose hair was white with age. No one, unless it was Kedsty
+himself--Kedsty at bay, Kedsty in a rage. Even that was inconceivable.
+Whatever the motive of the assault might be, and no matter who had
+committed it, Mooie had most certainly seen the Inspector of Police
+accompany Marette Radisson to the scow. And the question which Kent
+found it impossible to answer was, had Marette Radisson really gone
+down the river on that scow?
+
+It was almost with a feeling of disappointment that he told himself it
+was possible she had not. He wanted her on the river. He wanted her
+going north and still farther north. The thought that she was mixed up
+in some affair that had to do with Kedsty was displeasing to him. If
+she was still in the Landing or near the Landing, it could no longer be
+on account of Sandy McTrigger, the man his confession had saved. In his
+heart he prayed that she was many days down the Athabasca, for it was
+there--and only there--that he would ever see her again. And his
+greatest desire, next to his desire for his freedom, was to find her.
+He was frank with himself in making that confession. He was more than
+that. He knew that not a day or night would pass that he would not
+think or dream of Marette Radisson. The wonder of her had grown more
+vivid for him with each hour that passed, and he was sorry now that he
+had not dared to touch her hair. She would not have been offended with
+him, for she had kissed him--after he had killed the impulse to lay his
+hand on that soft glory that had crowned her head.
+
+And then the little bell in his watch tinkled the hour of ten! He sat
+up with a jerk. For a space he held his breath while he listened. In
+the hall outside his room there was no sound. An inch at a time he drew
+himself off his bed until he stood on his feet. His clothes hung on
+hooks in the wall, and he groped his way to them so quietly that one
+listening at the crack of his door would not have heard him. He dressed
+swiftly. Then he made his way to the window, looked out, and listened.
+
+In the brilliant starlight he saw nothing but the two white stubs of
+the lightning-shattered trees in which the owls lived. And it was very
+still. The air was fresh and sweet in his face. In it he caught the
+scent of the distant balsams and cedars. The world, wonderful in its
+night silence, waited for him. It was impossible for him to conceive of
+failure or death out there, and it seemed unreal and trivial that the
+Law should expect to hold him, with that world reaching out its arms to
+him and calling him.
+
+Assured that the moment for action was at hand, he moved quickly. In
+another ten seconds he was through the window, and his feet were on the
+ground. For a space he stood out clear in the starlight. Then he
+hurried to the end of the building and hid himself in the shadow. The
+swiftness of his movement had brought him no physical discomfort, and
+his blood danced with the thrill of the earth under his feet and the
+thought that his wound must be even more completely healed than he had
+supposed. A wild exultation swept over him. He was free! He could see
+the river now, shimmering and talking to him in the starlight, urging
+him to hurry, telling him that only a little while ago another had gone
+north on the breast of it, and that if he hastened it would help him to
+overtake her. He felt the throb of new life in his body. His eyes shone
+strangely in the semi-gloom.
+
+It seemed to him that only yesterday Marette had gone. She could not be
+far away, even now. And in these moments, with the breath of freedom
+stirring him with the glory of new life, she was different for him from
+what she had ever been. She was a part of him. He could not think of
+escape without thinking of her. She became, in these precious moments,
+the living soul of his wilderness. He felt her presence. The thought
+possessed him that somewhere down the river she was thinking of him,
+waiting, expecting him. And in that same flash he made up his mind that
+he would not discard the boat, as he had planned; he would conceal
+himself by day, and float downstream by night, until at last he came to
+Marette Radisson. And then he would tell her why he had come. And after
+that--
+
+He looked toward Crossen's place. He would make straight for it,
+openly, like a man bent on a mission there was no reason to conceal. If
+luck went right, and Crossen was abed, he would be on the river within
+fifteen minutes. His blood ran faster as he took his first step out
+into the open starlight. Fifty yards ahead of him was the building
+which Cardigan used for his fuel. Safely beyond that, no one could see
+him from the windows of the hospital. He walked swiftly. Twenty paces,
+thirty, forty--and he stopped as suddenly as the half-breed's bullet
+had stopped him weeks before. Round the end of Cardigan's fuel house
+came a figure. It was Mercer. He was twirling his little cane and
+traveling quietly as a cat. They were not ten feet apart, yet Kent had
+not heard him.
+
+Mercer stopped. The cane dropped from his hand. Even in the starlight
+Kent could see his face turn white.
+
+"Don't make a sound, Mercer," he warned. "I'm taking a little exercise
+in the open air. If you cry out, I'll kill you!"
+
+He advanced slowly, speaking in a voice that could not have been heard
+at the windows behind him. And then a thing happened that froze the
+blood in his veins. He had heard the scream of every beast of the great
+forests, but never a scream like that which came from Mercer's lips
+now. It was not the cry of a man. To Kent it was the voice of a fiend,
+a devil. It did not call for help. It was wordless. And as the horrible
+sound issued from Mercer's mouth he could see the swelling throat and
+bulging eyes that accompanied the effort. They made him think of a
+snake, a cobra.
+
+The chill went out of his blood, replaced by a flame of hottest fire.
+He forgot everything but that this serpent was in his path. Twice he
+had stood in his way. And he hated him. He hated him with a virulency
+that was death. Neither the call of freedom nor the threat of prison
+could keep him from wreaking vengeance now. Without a sound he was at
+Mercer's throat, and the scream ended in a choking shriek. His fingers
+dug into flabby flesh, and his clenched fist beat again and again into
+Mercer's face.
+
+He went to the ground, crushing the human serpent under him. And he
+continued to strike and choke as he had never struck or choked another
+man, all other things overwhelmed by his mad desire to tear into pieces
+this two-legged English vermin who was too foul to exist on the face of
+the earth.
+
+And he still continued to strike--even after the path lay clear once
+more between him and the river.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+What a terrible and inexcusable madness had possessed him, Kent
+realized the instant he rose from Mercer's prostrate body. Never had
+his brain flamed to that madness before. He believed at first that he
+had killed Mercer. It was neither pity nor regret that brought him to
+his senses. Mercer, a coward and a traitor, a sneak of the lowest type,
+had no excuse for living. It was the thought that he had lost his
+chance to reach the river that cleared his head as he swayed over
+Mercer.
+
+He heard running feet. He saw figures approaching swiftly through the
+starlight. And he was too weak to fight or run. The little strength he
+had saved up, and which he had planned to use so carefully in his
+flight, was gone. His wound, weeks in bed, muscles unaccustomed to the
+terrific exertion he had made in these moments of his vengeance, left
+him now panting and swaying as the running footsteps came nearer.
+
+His head swam. For a space he was sickeningly dizzy, and in the first
+moment of that dizziness, when every drop of blood in his body seemed
+rushing to his brain, his vision was twisted and his sense of direction
+gone. In his rage he had overexerted himself. He knew that something
+had gone wrong inside him and that he was helpless. Even then his
+impulse was to stagger toward the inanimate Mercer and kick him, but
+hands caught him and held him. He heard an amazed voice, then
+another--and something hard and cold shut round his wrists like a pair
+of toothless jaws.
+
+It was Constable Carter, Inspector Kedsty's right-hand man about
+barracks, that he saw first; then old Sands, the caretaker at
+Cardigan's place. Swiftly as he had turned sick, his brain grew clear,
+and his blood distributed itself evenly again through his body. He held
+up his hands. Carter had slipped a pair of irons on him, and the
+starlight glinted on the shining steel. Sands was bending over Mercer,
+and Carter was saying in a low voice:
+
+"It's too bad, Kent. But I've got to do it. I saw you from the window
+just as Mercer screamed. Why did you stop for _him_?"
+
+Mercer was getting up with the assistance of Sands. He turned a bloated
+and unseeing face toward Kent and Carter. He was blubbering and
+moaning, as though entreating for mercy in the fear that Kent had not
+finished with him. Carter pulled Kent away.
+
+"There's only one thing for me to do now," he said. "It isn't pleasant.
+But the law says I must take you to barracks."
+
+In the sky Kent saw the stars clearly again, and his lungs were
+drinking in the cool air as in the wonderful moments before his
+encounter with Mercer.
+
+He had lost. And it was Mercer who had made him lose. Carter felt the
+sudden tightening of his muscles as he walked with a hand on his arm.
+And Kent shut his teeth close and made no answer to what Carter had
+said, except that Carter heard something which he thought was a sob
+choked to death in the other's throat.
+
+Carter, too, was a man bred of the red blood of the North, and he knew
+what was in Kent's heart. For only by the breadth of a hair had Kent
+failed in his flight.
+
+Pelly was on duty at barracks, and it was Pelly who locked him in one
+of the three cells behind the detachment office. When he was gone, Kent
+sat down on the edge of his prison cot and for the first time let the
+agony of his despair escape in a gasping breath from between his lips.
+Half an hour ago the world had reached out its arms to him, and he had
+gone forth to its welcome, only to have the grimmest tragedy of all his
+life descend upon him like the sword of Damocles. For this was real
+tragedy. Here there was no hope. The tentacles of the law had him in
+their grip, and he could no longer dream of escape.
+
+Ghastly was the thought that it was he, James Kent, who had supervised
+the building of these cells! Acquainted with every trick and stratagem
+of the prisoner plotting for his freedom, he had left no weak point in
+their structure. Again he clenched his hands, and in his soul he cursed
+Mercer as he went to the little barred window that overlooked the river
+from his cell. The river was near now. He could hear the murmur of it.
+He could see its movement, and that movement, played upon by the stars,
+seemed now a writhing sort of almost noiseless laughter taunting him in
+his folly.
+
+He went back to his cot, and in his despair buried his face in his
+hands. In the half-hour after that he did not raise his head. For the
+first time in his life he knew that he was beaten, so utterly beaten
+that he no more had the desire to fight, and his soul was dark with the
+chaos of the things he had lost.
+
+At last he opened his eyes to the blackness of his prison room, and he
+beheld a marvelous thing. Across the gloom of the cell lay a shaft of
+golden fire. It was the light of the rising moon coming through his
+little, steel-barred window. To Kent it had crept into his cell like a
+living thing. He watched it, fascinated. His eyes followed it to the
+foot-square aperture, and there, red and glorious as it rose over the
+forests, the moon itself filled the world. For a space he saw nothing
+but that moon crowding the frame of his window. And as he rose to his
+feet and stood where his face was flooded in the light of it, he felt
+stirring within him the ghosts of his old hopes. One by one they rose
+up and came to life. He held out his hands, as if to fill them with the
+liquid glow; his heart beat faster in that glory of the moonrise. The
+taunting murmur of the river changed once more into hopeful song, his
+fingers closed tightly around the bars, and the fighting spirit rose in
+him again. As that spirit surged stronger, beating down his despair,
+driving the chaos out of his brain, he watched the moon as it climbed
+higher, changing from the red of the lower atmosphere to the yellow
+gold of the greater heights, marveling at the miracle of light and
+color that had never failed to stir him.
+
+And then he laughed. If Pelly or Carter had heard him, they would have
+wondered if he was mad. It was madness of a sort--the madness of
+restored confidence, of an unlimited faith, of an optimism that was
+bound to make dreams come true. Again he looked beyond the bars of his
+cell. The world was still there; the river was there; all the things
+that were worth fighting for were there. And he would fight. Just how,
+he did not try to tell himself now. And then he laughed again, softly,
+a bit grimly, for he saw the melancholy humour of the fact that he had
+built his own prison.
+
+He sat down again on the edge of his cot, and the whimsical thought
+struck him that all those he had brought to this same cell, and who had
+paid the first of their penance here, must be laughing at him now in
+the spirit way. In his mental fancy a little army of faces trooped
+before him, faces dark and white, faces filled with hatred and despair,
+faces brave with the cheer of hope and faces pallid with the dread of
+death. And of these ghosts of his man-hunting prowess it was Anton
+Fournet's face that came out of the crowd and remained with him. For he
+had brought Anton to this same cell--Anton, the big Frenchman, with his
+black hair, his black beard, and his great, rolling laugh that even in
+the days when he was waiting for death had rattled the paper-weights on
+Kedsty's desk.
+
+Anton rose up like a god before Kent now. He had killed a man, and like
+a brave man he had not denied it. With a heart in his great body as
+gentle as a girl's, Anton had taken pride in the killing. In his prison
+days he sang songs to glorify it. He had killed the white man from
+Chippewyan who had stolen his neighbor's wife! Not _his_ wife, but his
+neighbor's! For Anton's creed was, "Do unto others as you would have
+others do unto you," and he had loved his neighbor with the great
+forest love of man for man. His neighbor was weak, and Anton was strong
+with the strength of a bull, so that when the hour came, it was Anton
+who had measured out vengeance. When Kent brought Anton in, the giant
+had laughed first at the littleness of his cell, then at the
+unsuspected strength of it, and after that he had laughed and sung
+great, roaring songs every day of the brief tenure of life that was
+given him. When he died, it was with the smiling glory in his face of
+one who had cheaply righted a great wrong.
+
+Kent would never forget Anton Fournet. He had never ceased to grieve
+that it had been his misfortune to bring Anton in, and always, in close
+moments, the thought of Anton, the stout-hearted, rallied him back to
+courage. Never would he be the man that Anton Fournet had been, he told
+himself many times. Never would his heart be as great or as big, though
+the Law had hanged Anton by the neck until the soul was choked out of
+his splendid body, for it was history that Anton Fournet had never
+harmed man, woman, or child until he set out to kill a human snake and
+the Law placed its heel upon him and crushed him.
+
+And tonight Anton Fournet came into the cell again and sat with Kent on
+the cot where he had slept many nights, and the ghosts of his laughter
+and his song filled Kent's ears, and his great courage poured itself
+out in the moonlit prison room so that at last, when Kent stretched
+himself on the cot to sleep, it was with the knowledge that the soul of
+the splendid dead had given him a strength which it was impossible to
+have gained from the living. For Anton Fournet had died smiling,
+laughing, singing--and it was of Anton Fournet that he dreamed when he
+fell asleep. And in that dream came also the vision of a man called
+Dirty Fingers--and with it inspiration.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+Where a bit of the big river curved inward like the tongue of a
+friendly dog, lapping the shore at Athabasca Landing, there still
+remained Fingers' Row--nine dilapidated, weather-worn, and
+crazily-built shacks put there by the eccentric genius who had foreseen
+a boom ten years ahead of its time. And the fifth of these nine,
+counting from either one end or the other, was named by its owner,
+Dirty Fingers himself, the Good Old Queen Bess. It was a shack covered
+with black tar paper, with two windows, like square eyes, fronting the
+river as if always on the watch for something. Across the front of this
+shack Dirty Fingers had built a porch to protect himself from the rain
+in springtime, from the sun in Summer time, and from the snow in the
+months of Winter. For it was here that Dirty Fingers sat out all of
+that part of his life which was not spent in bed.
+
+Up and down two thousand miles of the Three Rivers was Dirty Fingers
+known, and there were superstitious ones who believed that little gods
+and devils came to sit and commune with him in the front of the
+tar-papered shack. No one was so wise along those rivers, no one was so
+satisfied with himself, that he would not have given much to possess
+the many things that were hidden away in Dirty Fingers' brain. One
+would not have suspected the workings of that brain by a look at Dirty
+Fingers on the porch of his Good Old Queen Bess. He was a great soft
+lump of a man, a giant of flabbiness. Sitting in his smooth-worn,
+wooden armchair, he was almost formless. His head was huge, his hair
+uncut and scraggy, his face smooth as a baby's, fat as a cherub's, and
+as expressionless as an apple. His folded arms always rested on a huge
+stomach, whose conspicuousness was increased by an enormous watch-chain
+made from beaten nuggets of Klondike gold, and Dirty Fingers' thumb and
+forefinger were always twiddling at this chain. How he had come by the
+name of Dirty Fingers, when his right name was Alexander Toppet
+Fingers, no one could definitely say, unless it was that he always bore
+an unkempt and unwashed appearance.
+
+Whatever the quality of the two hundred and forty-odd pounds of flesh
+in Dirty Fingers' body, it was the quality of his brain that made
+people hold him in a sort of awe. For Dirty Fingers was a lawyer, a
+wilderness lawyer, a forest bencher, a legal strategist of the trail,
+of the river, of the great timber-lands.
+
+Stored away in his brain was every rule of equity and common law of the
+great North country. For his knowledge he went back two hundred years.
+He knew that a law did not die of age, that it must be legislated to
+death, and out of the moldering past he had dug up every trick and trap
+of his trade. He had no law-books. His library was in his head, and his
+facts were marshaled in pile after pile of closely-written,
+dust-covered papers in his shack. He did not go to court as other
+lawyers; and there were barristers in Edmonton who blessed him for that.
+
+His shack was his tabernacle of justice. There he sat, hands folded,
+and gave out his decisions, his advice, his sentences. He sat until
+other men would have gone mad. From morning until night, moving only
+for his meals or to get out of heat or storm, he was a fixture on the
+porch of the Good Old Queen Bess. For hours he would stare at the
+river, his pale eyes never seeming to blink. For hours he would remain
+without a move or a word. One constant companion he had, a dog, fat,
+emotionless, lazy, like his master. Always this dog was sleeping at his
+feet or dragging himself wearily at his heels when Dirty Fingers
+elected to make a journey to the little store where he bartered for
+food and necessities.
+
+It was Father Layonne who came first to see Kent in his cell the
+morning after Kent's unsuccessful attempt at flight. An hour later it
+was Father Layonne who traveled the beaten path to the door of Dirty
+Fingers' shack. If a visible emotion of pleasure ever entered into
+Dirty Fingers' face, it was when the little missioner came occasionally
+to see him. It was then that his tongue let itself loose, and until
+late at night they talked of many things of which other men knew but
+little. This morning Father Layonne did not come casually, but
+determinedly on business, and when Dirty Fingers learned what that
+business was, he shook his head disconsolately, folded his fat arms
+more tightly over his stomach, and stated the sheer impossibility of
+his going to see Kent. It was not his custom. People must come to him.
+And he did not like to walk. It was fully a third of a mile from his
+shack to barracks, possibly half a mile. And it was mostly upgrade! If
+Kent could be brought to him--
+
+In his cell Kent waited. It was not difficult for him to hear voices in
+Kedsty's office when the door was open, and he knew that the Inspector
+did not come in until after the missioner had gone on his mission to
+Dirty Fingers. Usually he was at the barracks an hour or so earlier.
+Kent made no effort to figure out a reason for Kedsty's lateness, but
+he did observe that after his arrival there was more than the usual
+movement between the office door and the outside of the barracks. Once
+he was positive that he heard Cardigan's voice, and then he was equally
+sure that he heard Mercer's. He grinned at that. He must be wrong, for
+Mercer would be in no condition to talk for several days. He was glad
+that a turn in the hall hid the door of the detachment office from him,
+and that the three cells were in an alcove, safely out of sight of the
+curious eyes of visitors. He was also glad that he had no other
+prisoner for company. His situation was one in which he wanted to be
+alone. To the plan that was forming itself in his mind, solitude was as
+vital as the cooperation of Alexander Toppet Fingers.
+
+Just how far he could win that cooperation was the problem which
+confronted him now, and he waited anxiously for the return of Father
+Layonne, listening for the sound of his footsteps in the outer hall.
+If, after all, that inspirational thought of last night came to
+nothing, if Fingers should fail him--
+
+He shrugged his shoulders. If that happened, he could see no other
+chance. He would have to go on and take his medicine at the hands of a
+jury. But if Fingers played up to the game--
+
+He looked out on the river again, and again it was the river that
+seemed to answer him. If Fingers played with him, they would beat
+Kedsty and the whole of N Division! And in winning he would prove out
+the greatest psychological experiment he had ever dared to make. The
+magnitude of the thing, when he stopped to think of it, was a little
+appalling, but his faith was equally large. He did not consider his
+philosophy at all supernatural. He had brought it down to the level of
+the average man and woman.
+
+He believed that every man and woman possessed a subliminal
+consciousness which it was possible to rouse to tremendous heights if
+the right psychological key was found to fit its particular lock, and
+he believed he possessed the key which fitted the deeply-buried and
+long-hidden thing in Dirty Fingers' remarkable brain. Because he
+believed in this metaphysics which he had not read out of Aristotle, he
+had faith that Fingers would prove his salvation. He felt growing in
+him stronger than ever a strange kind of elation. He felt better
+physically than last night. The few minutes of strenuous action in
+which he had half killed Mercer had been a pretty good test, he told
+himself. It had left no bad effect, and he need no longer fear the
+reopening of his wound.
+
+A dozen times he had heard a far door open and close. Now he heard it
+again, and a few moments later it was followed by a sound which drew a
+low cry of satisfaction from him. Dirty Fingers, because of overweight
+and lack of exercise, had what he called an "asthmatic wind," and it
+was this strenuous working of his lungs that announced his approach to
+Kent. His dog was also afflicted and for the same reasons, so that when
+they traveled together there was some rivalry between them.
+
+"We're both bad put out for wind, thank God," Dirty Fingers would say
+sometimes. "It's a good thing, for if we had more of it, we'd walk
+farther, and we don't like walking."
+
+The dog was with Fingers now, also Father Layonne, and Pelly. Pelly
+unlocked the cell, then relocked it again after Fingers and the dog
+entered. With a nod and a hopeful look the missioner returned with
+Pelly to the detachment office. Fingers wiped his red face with a big
+handkerchief, gasping deeply for breath. Togs, his dog, was panting as
+if he had just finished the race of his life.
+
+"A difficult climb," wheezed Fingers. "A most difficult climb."
+
+He sat down, rolling out like a great bag of jelly in the one chair in
+the cell, and began to fan himself with his hat. Kent had already taken
+stock of the situation. In Fingers' florid countenance and in his
+almost colorless eyes he detected a bit of excitement which Fingers was
+trying to hide. Kent knew what it meant. Father Layonne had found it
+necessary to play his full hand to lure Fingers up the hill, and had
+given him a hint of what it was that Kent had in store for him. Already
+the psychological key had begun to work.
+
+Kent sat down on the edge of his cot and grinned sympathetically. "It
+hasn't always been like this, has it, Fingers?" he said then, leaning a
+bit forward and speaking with a sudden, low-voiced seriousness. "There
+was a time, twenty years ago, when you didn't puff after climbing a
+hill. Twenty years make a big difference, sometimes."
+
+"Yes, sometimes," agreed Fingers in a wheezy whisper.
+
+"Twenty years ago you were--a fighter."
+
+It seemed to Kent that a deeper color came into Dirty Fingers' pale
+eyes in the few seconds that followed these words.
+
+"A fighter," he repeated. "Most men were fighters in those days of the
+gold rushes, weren't they, Fingers? I've heard a lot of the old stories
+about them in my wanderings, and some of them have made me thrill. They
+weren't afraid to die. And most of them were pretty white when it came
+to a show-down. You were one of them, Fingers. I heard the story one
+Winter far north. I've kept it to myself, because I've sort of had the
+idea that you didn't want people to know or you would have told it
+yourself. That's why I wanted you to come to see me, Fingers. You know
+the situation. It's either the noose or iron bars for me. Naturally one
+would seek for assistance among those who have been his friends. But I
+do not, with the exception of Father Layonne. Just friendship won't
+save me, not the sort of friendship we have today. That's why I sent
+for you. Don't think that I am prying into secrets that are sacred to
+you, Fingers. God knows I don't mean it that way. But I've got to tell
+you of a thing that happened a long time ago, before you can
+understand. You haven't forgotten--you will never forget--Ben Tatman?"
+
+As Kent spoke the name, a name which Dirty Fingers had heard no lips
+but his own speak aloud in nearly a quarter of a century, a strange and
+potent force seemed suddenly to take possession of the forest bencher's
+huge and flabby body. It rippled over and through him like an
+electrical voltaism, making his body rigid, stiffening what had seemed
+to be fat into muscle, tensing his hands until they knotted themselves
+slowly into fists. The wheeze went out of his breath, and it was the
+voice of another man who answered Kent.
+
+"You have heard--about--Ben Tatman?"
+
+"Yes. I heard it away up in the Porcupine country. They say it happened
+twenty years ago or more. This Tatman, so I was told, was a young
+fellow green from San Francisco--a bank clerk, I think--who came into
+the gold country and brought his wife with him. They were both
+chuck-full of courage, and the story was that each worshiped the ground
+the other walked on, and that the girl had insisted on being her
+husband's comrade in adventure. Of course neither guessed the sort of
+thing that was ahead of them.
+
+"Then came that death Winter in Lost City. You know better than I what
+the laws were in those days, Fingers. Food failed to come up. Snow came
+early, the thermometer never rose over fifty below zero for three
+straight months, and Lost City was an inferno of starvation and death.
+You could go out and kill a man, then, and perhaps get away with it,
+Fingers. But if you stole so much as a crust of bread or a single bean,
+you were taken to the edge of the camp and told to go! And that meant
+certain death--death from hunger and cold, more terrible than shooting
+or hanging, and for that reason it was the penalty for theft.
+
+"Tatman wasn't a thief. It was seeing his young wife slowly dying of
+hunger, and his horror at the thought of seeing her fall, as others
+were falling, a victim to scurvy, that made him steal. He broke into a
+cabin in the dead of night and stole two cans of beans and a pan of
+potatoes, more precious than a thousand times their weight in gold. And
+he was caught. Of course, there was the wife. But those were the days
+when a woman couldn't save a man, no matter how lovely she was. Tatman
+was taken to the edge of camp and given his pack and his gun--but no
+food. And the girl, hooded and booted, was at his side, for she was
+determined to die with him. For her sake Tatman had lied up to the last
+minute, protesting his innocence.
+
+"But the beans and the potatoes were found in his cabin, and that was
+evidence enough. And then, just as they were about to go straight out
+into the blizzard that meant death within a few hours, then--"
+
+Kent rose to his feet, and walked to the little window, and stood
+there, looking out. "Fingers, now and then a superman is born on earth.
+And a superman was there in that crowd of hunger-stricken and
+embittered men. At the last moment he stepped out and in a loud voice
+declared that Tatman was innocent and that he was guilty. Unafraid, he
+made a remarkable confession. He had stolen the beans and the potatoes
+and had slipped them into the Tatman cabin when they were asleep. Why?
+Because he wanted to save the woman from hunger! Yes, he lied, Fingers.
+He lied because he loved the wife that belonged to another man--lied
+because in him there was a heart as true as any heart God ever made. He
+lied! And his lie was a splendid thing. He went out into that blizzard,
+strengthened by a love that was greater than his fear of death, and the
+camp never heard of him again. Tatman and his wife returned to their
+cabin and lived. Fingers--" Kent whirled suddenly from the window.
+"Fingers--"
+
+And Fingers, like a sphynx, sat and stared at Kent.
+
+"You were that man," Kent went on, coming nearer to him. "You lied,
+because you loved a woman, and you went out to face death because of
+that woman. The men at Lost City didn't know it, Fingers. The husband
+didn't know it. And the girl, that girl-wife you worshiped in secret,
+didn't dream of it! But that was the truth, and you know it deep down
+in your soul. You fought your way out. You lived! And all these years,
+down here on your porch, you've been dreaming of a woman, of the girl
+you were willing to die for a long time ago. Fingers, am I right? And
+if I am, will you shake hands?"
+
+Slowly Fingers had risen from his chair. No longer were his eyes dull
+and lifeless, but flaming with a fire that Kent had lighted again after
+many years. And he reached out a hand and gripped Kent's, still staring
+at him as though something had come back to him from the dead.
+
+"I thank you, Kent, for your opinion of that man," he said. "Somehow,
+you haven't made me--ashamed. But it was only the shell of a man that
+won out after that day when I took Tatman's place. Something happened.
+I don't know what. But--you see me now. I never went back into the
+diggings. I degenerated. I became what I am."
+
+"And you are today just what you were when you went out to die for Mary
+Tatman," cried Kent. "The same heart and the same soul are in you.
+Wouldn't you fight again today for her?"
+
+A stifled cry came from Fingers' lips. "My God, yes, Kent--I would!"
+
+"And that's why I wanted you, of all men, to come to me, Fingers," Kent
+went on swiftly. "To you, of all the men on earth, I wanted to tell my
+story. And now, will you listen to it? Will you forgive me for bringing
+up this memory that must be precious to you, only that you might more
+fully understand what I am going to say? I don't want you to think of
+it as a subterfuge on my part. It is more than that. It is--Fingers, is
+it inspiration? Listen, and tell me."
+
+And for a long time after that James Kent talked, and Fingers listened,
+the soul within him writhing and dragging itself back into fierce life,
+demanding for the first time in many years the something which it had
+once possessed, but which it had lost. It was not the lazy, mysterious,
+silent Dirty Fingers who sat in the cell with Kent. In him the spirit
+of twenty years ago had roused itself from long slumber, and the thrill
+of it pounded in his blood. Two-Fisted Fingers they had called him
+then, and he was Two-Fisted Fingers in this hour with Kent. Twice
+Father Layonne came to the head of the cell alcove, but turned back
+when he heard the low and steady murmur of Kent's voice. Nothing did
+Kent keep hidden, and when he had finished, something that was like the
+fire of a revelation had come into Fingers' face.
+
+"My God!" he breathed deeply. "Kent, I've been sitting down there on my
+porch a long time, and a good many strange things have come to me, but
+never anything like this. Oh, if it wasn't for this accursed flesh of
+mine!"
+
+He jumped from his chair more quickly than he had moved in ten years,
+and he laughed as he had not laughed in all that time. He thrust out a
+great arm and doubled it up, like a prizefighter testing his muscle.
+"Old? I'm not old! I was only twenty-eight when that happened up there,
+and I'm forty-eight now. That isn't old. It's what is in me that's
+grown old. I'll do it, Kent! I'll do it, if I hang for it!"
+
+Kent fairly leaped upon him. "God bless you!" he cried huskily. "God
+bless you, Fingers! Look! Look at that!" He pulled Fingers to the
+little window, and together they looked out upon the river, shimmering
+gloriously under a sun-filled sky of blue. "Two thousand miles of it,"
+he breathed. "Two thousand miles of it, running straight through the
+heart of that world we both have known! No, you're not old, Fingers.
+The things you used to know are calling you again, as they are calling
+me, for somewhere off there are the ghosts of Lost City, ghosts--and
+realities!"
+
+"Ghosts--and hopes," said Fingers.
+
+"Hopes make life," softly whispered Kent, as if to himself. And then,
+without turning from the window, his hand found Fingers' and clasped it
+tight. "It may be that mine, like yours, will never come true. But
+they're fine to think about, Fingers. Funny, isn't it, that their names
+should be so strangely alike--Mary and Marette? I say, Fingers--"
+
+Heavy footsteps sounded in the hall. Both turned from the window as
+Constable Pelly came to the door of the cell. They recognized this
+intimation that their time was up, and with his foot Fingers roused his
+sleeping dog.
+
+It was a new Fingers who walked back to the river five minutes later,
+and it was an amazed and discomfited dog who followed at his heels, for
+at times the misshapen and flesh-ridden Togs was compelled to trot for
+a few steps to keep up. And Fingers did not sink into the chair on the
+shady porch when he reached his shack. He threw off his coat and
+waistcoat and rolled up his sleeves, and for hours after that he was
+buried deep in the accumulated masses of dust-covered legal treasures
+stored away in hidden corners of the Good Old Queen Bess.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+That morning Kent had heard wild songs floating up from the river, and
+now he felt like shouting forth his own joy and exultation in song. He
+wondered if he could hide the truth from the eyes of others, and
+especially from Kedsty if he came to see him. It seemed that some
+glimmer of the hope blazing within him must surely reveal itself, no
+matter how he tried to hold it back. He felt the vital forces of that
+hope more powerful within him now than in the hour when he had crept
+from the hospital window with freedom in his face. For then he was not
+sure of himself. He had not tested his physical strength. And in the
+present moment, fanned by his unbounded optimism, the thought came to
+him that perhaps it was good luck and not bad that had thrown Mercer in
+his way. For with Fingers behind him now, his chances for a clean
+get-away were better. He would not be taking a hazardous leap chanced
+on the immediate smiles of fortune. He would be going deliberately,
+prepared.
+
+He blessed the man who had been known as Dirty Fingers, but whom he
+could not think of now in the terms of that name. He blessed the day he
+had heard that chance story of Fingers, far north. He no longer
+regarded him as the fat pig of a man he had been for so many years. For
+he looked upon the miracle of a great awakening. He had seen the soul
+of Fingers lift itself up out of its tabernacle of flesh and grow young
+again; he had seen stagnant blood race with new fire. He had seen
+emotions roused that had slept for long years. And he felt toward
+Fingers, in the face of that awakening, differently than he had felt
+toward any other living man. His emotion was one of deep and embracing
+comradeship.
+
+Father Layonne did not come again until afternoon, and then he brought
+information that thrilled Kent. The missioner had walked down to see
+Fingers, and Fingers was not on his porch. Neither was the dog. He had
+knocked loudly on the door, but there was no answer. Where was Fingers?
+Kent shook his head, feigning an anxious questioning, but inside him
+his heart was leaping. He knew! He told Father Layonne he was afraid
+all Fingers' knowledge of the law could do him but little good, that
+Fingers had told him as much, and the little missioner went away
+considerably depressed. He would talk with Fingers again, he said, and
+offer certain suggestions he had in mind. Kent chuckled when he was
+gone. How shocked _le Pere_ would be if he, too, could know!
+
+The next morning Father Layonne came again, and his information was
+even more thrilling to Kent. The missioner was displeased with Fingers.
+Last night, noticing a light in his shack, he had walked down to see
+him. And he had found three men closely drawn up about a table with
+Dirty Fingers. One of them was Ponte, the half-breed; another was Kinoo
+the outcast Dog Rib from over on Sand Creek; the third was Mooie, the
+old Indian trailer. Kent wanted to jump up and shout, for those three
+were the three greatest trailers in all that part of the Northland.
+Fingers had lost no time, and he wanted to voice his approbation like a
+small boy on the Fourth of July.
+
+But his face, seen by Father Layonne, betrayed none of the excitement
+that was in his blood. Fingers had told him he was going into a timber
+deal with these men, a long-distance deal where there would be much
+traveling, and that he could not interrupt himself just then to talk
+about Kent. Would Father Layonne come again in the morning? And he had
+gone again that morning, and Fingers' place was locked up!
+
+All the rest of the day Kent waited eagerly for Fingers. For the first
+time Kedsty came to see him, and as a matter of courtesy said he hoped
+Fingers might be of assistance to him. He did not mention Mercer and
+remained no longer than a couple of minutes, standing outside the cell.
+In the afternoon Doctor Cardigan came and shook hands warmly with Kent.
+He had found a tough job waiting for him, he said. Mercer was all cut
+up, in a literal as well as a mental way. He had five teeth missing,
+and he had to have seventeen stitches taken in his face. It was
+Cardigan's opinion that some one had given him a considerable
+beating--and he grinned at Kent. Then he added in a whisper,
+
+"My God, Kent, how I wish you had made it!"
+
+It was four o'clock when Fingers came. Even less than yesterday did he
+look like the old Fingers. He was not wheezing. He seemed to have lost
+flesh. His face was alive. That was what struck Kent--the new life in
+it. There was color in his eyes. And Togs, the dog, was not with him.
+He smiled when he shook hands with Kent, and nodded, and chuckled. And
+Kent, after that, gripped him by the shoulders and shook him in his
+silent joy.
+
+"I was up all last night," said Fingers in a low voice. "I don't dare
+move much in the day, or people will wonder. But, God bless my soul!--I
+did move last night, Kent. I must have walked ten miles, more or less.
+And things are coming--coming!"
+
+"And Ponte, Kinoo, Mooie--?"
+
+"Are working like devils," whispered Fingers. "It's the only way, Kent.
+I've gone through all my law, and there's nothing in man-made law that
+can save you. I've read your confession, and I don't think you could
+even get off with the penitentiary. A noose is already tied around your
+neck. I think you'd hang. We've simply got to get you out some other
+way. I've had a talk with Kedsty. He has made arrangements to have you
+sent to Edmonton two weeks from tomorrow. We'll need all that time, but
+it's enough."
+
+For three days thereafter Fingers came to Kent's cell each afternoon,
+and each time was looking better. Something was swiftly putting
+hardness into his flesh and form into his body. The second day he told
+Kent that he had found the way at last, and that when the hour came,
+escape would be easy, but he thought it best not to let Kent in on the
+little secret just yet. He must be patient and have faith. That was the
+chief thing, to have faith at all times, no matter what happened.
+Several times he emphasized that "no matter what happens." The third
+day he puzzled Kent. He was restless, a bit nervous. He still thought
+it best not to tell Kent what his scheme was, until to-morrow. He was
+in the cell not more than five or ten minutes, and there was an unusual
+pressure in the grip of his hand when he bade Kent good-by. Somehow
+Kent did not feel so well when he had gone. He waited impatiently for
+the next day. It came, and hour after hour he listened for Fingers'
+heavy tread in the hall. The morning passed. The afternoon lengthened.
+Night came, and Fingers had not come. Kent did not sleep much between
+the hour when he went to bed and morning. It was eleven o'clock when
+the missioner made his call. Before he left, Kent gave him a brief note
+for Fingers. He had just finished his dinner, and Carter had taken the
+dishes away, when Father Layonne returned. A look at his face, and Kent
+knew that he bore unpleasant tidings.
+
+"Fingers is an--an apostate," he said, his lips twitching as if to keep
+back a denunciation still more emphatic. "He was sitting on his porch
+again this morning, half asleep, and says that after a great deal of
+thought he has come to the definite opinion that he can do nothing for
+you. He read your note and burned it with a match. He asked me to tell
+you that the scheme he had in mind was too risky--for him. He says he
+won't come up again. And--"
+
+The missioner was rubbing his brown, knotted hands together raspingly.
+
+"Go on," said Kent a little thickly.
+
+"He has also sent Inspector Kedsty the same word," finished Father
+Layonne. "His word to Kedsty is that he can see no fighting chance for
+you, and that it is useless effort on his part to put up a defense for
+you. Jimmy!" His hand touched Kent's arm gently.
+
+Kent's face was white. He faced the window, and for a space he did not
+see. Then with pencil and paper he wrote again to Fingers.
+
+It was late in the afternoon before Father Layonne returned with an
+answer. Again it was verbal. Fingers had read his note and had burned
+it with a match. He was particular that the last scrap of it was turned
+into ash, the missioner said. And he had nothing to say to Kent that he
+had not previously said. He simply could not go on with their plans.
+And he requested Kent not to write to him again. He was sorry, but that
+was his definite stand in the matter.
+
+Even then Kent could not bring himself to believe. All the rest of the
+day he tried to put himself in Fingers' brain, but his old trick of
+losing his personality in that of another failed him this time. He
+could find no reason for the sudden change in Fingers, unless it was
+what Fingers had frankly confessed to Father Layonne--fear. The
+influence of mind, in this instance, had failed in its assault upon a
+mass of matter. Fingers' nerve had gone back on him.
+
+The fifth day Kent rose from his cot with hope still not quite dead in
+his heart. But that day passed and the sixth, and the missioner brought
+word that Fingers was the old Dirty Fingers again, sitting from morning
+till night on his porch.
+
+On the seventh day came the final crash to Kent's hopes. Kedsty's
+program had changed. He, Kent, was to start for Edmonton the following
+morning under charge of Pelly and a special constable!
+
+After this Kent felt a strange change come over him. Years seemed to
+multiply themselves in his body. His mind, beaten back, no longer
+continued in its old channels of thought. The thing pressed upon him
+now as fatalistic. Fingers had failed him. Fortune had failed him.
+Everything had failed, and for the first time in the weeks of his
+struggle against death and a thing worse than death, he cursed himself.
+There was a limit to optimism and a limit to hope. His limit was
+reached.
+
+In the afternoon of this seventh day came a depressing gloom. It was
+filled with a drizzling rain. Hour after hour this drizzle kept up,
+thickening as the night came. He ate his supper by the light of a cell
+lamp. By eight o'clock it was black outside. In that blackness there
+was an occasional flash of lightning and rumble of thunder. On the roof
+of the barracks the rain beat steadily and monotonously.
+
+His watch was in his hand--it was a quarter after nine o'clock, when he
+heard the door at the far exit of the hall open and close. He had heard
+it a dozen times since supper and paid no attention to it, but this
+time it was followed by a voice at the detachment office that hit him
+like an electrical shock. Then, a moment later, came low laughter. It
+was a woman who laughed.
+
+He stood up. He heard the detachment office door close, and silence
+followed. The watch in his hand seemed ticking off the seconds with
+frantic noise. He shoved it into his pocket and stood staring out into
+the prison alcove. A few minutes later the office door opened again.
+This time it was not closed. He heard distinctly a few light,
+hesitating footsteps, and his heart seemed to stop its beating. They
+came to the head of the lighted alcove, and for perhaps the space of a
+dozen seconds there was silence again. Then they advanced.
+
+Another moment, and Kent was staring through the bars into the glorious
+eyes of Marette Radisson!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+In that moment Kent did not speak. He made no sound. He gave no sign of
+welcome, but stood in the middle of his cell, staring. If life had hung
+upon speech in those few seconds, he would have died, but everything he
+would have said, and more, was in his face. The girl must have seen it.
+With her two hands she was gripping at the bars of the cell and looking
+through at him. Kent saw that her face was pale in the lamp glow. In
+that pallor her violet eyes were like pools of black. The hood of her
+dripping raincoat was thrown partly back, and against the whiteness of
+her cheeks her hair glistened wet, and her long lashes were heavy with
+the rain.
+
+Kent, without moving over the narrow space between them, reached out
+his hands and found his voice. "Marette!"
+
+Her hands had tightened about the bars until they were bloodless. Her
+lips were parted. She was breathing quickly, but she did not smile; she
+made no response to his greeting, gave no sign even of recognition.
+What happened after that was so sudden and amazing that his heart
+stopped dead still. Without warning she stepped back from the cell and
+began to scream and then drew away from him, still facing him and still
+screaming, as if something had terrified her.
+
+Kent heard the crash of a chair in the detachment office, excited
+voices, and the running of feet. Marette Radisson had withdrawn to the
+far corner of the alcove, and as Carter and Pelly ran toward her, she
+stood, a picture of horror, pointing at Kent's cell. The two constables
+rushed past her. Close behind them followed the special officer
+detailed to take Kent to Edmonton.
+
+Kent had not moved. He was like one petrified. Close up against the
+bars came the faces of Pelly, Carter, and the special constable, filled
+with the expressions of men who had expected to look in upon tragedy.
+And then, behind their backs, Kent saw the other thing happen. Swift as
+a flash Marette Radisson's hand went in and out of her raincoat, and at
+the backs of the three men she was leveling a revolver! Not only did
+Kent see that swift change, but the still swifter change that came into
+her face. Her eyes shot to his just once, and they were filled with a
+laughing, exultant fire. With one mighty throb Kent's heart seemed to
+leap out through the bars of his prison, and at the look in his face
+and eyes Carter swung suddenly around.
+
+"Please don't make any disturbance, gentlemen," said Marette Radisson.
+"The first man that makes a suspicious move, I shall kill!"
+
+Her voice was calm and thrilling. It had a deadly ring in it. The
+revolver in her hand was held steadily. It was a slim-barreled, black
+thing. The very color of it was menacing. And behind it were the girl's
+eyes, pools of flame. The three men were facing them now, shocked to
+speechlessness. Automatically they seemed to obey her command to throw
+up their hands. Then she leveled her grim little gun straight at
+Pelly's heart.
+
+"You have the key," she said. "Unlock the cell!" Felly fumbled and
+produced the key. She watched him closely. Then suddenly the special
+constable dropped his arms with a coarse laugh. "A pretty trick," he
+said, "but the bluff won't work!"
+
+"Oh, but it will!" came the reply.
+
+The little black gun was shifted to him, even as the constable's
+fingers touched his revolver holster. With half-smiling lips, Marette's
+eyes blazed at him.
+
+"Please put up your hands," she commanded.
+
+The constable hesitated; then his fingers gripped the butt of his gun.
+Kent, holding his breath, saw the almost imperceptible tensing of
+Marette's body and the wavering of Pelly's arms over his head. Another
+moment and he, too, would have called the bluff if it were that. But
+that moment did not come. From the slim, black barrel of the girl's
+revolver leaped forth a sudden spurt of smoke and flame, and the
+special constable lurched back against the cell bars, caught himself as
+he half fell, and then stood with his pistol arm hanging limp and
+useless at his side. He had not made a sound, but his face was twisted
+in pain.
+
+"Open the cell door!"
+
+A second time the deadly-looking little gun was pointed straight at
+Pelly's heart. The half-smile was gone from the girl's lips now. Her
+eyes blazed a deeper fire. She was breathing quickly, and she leaned a
+little toward Pelly, repeating her command. The words were partly
+drowned in a sudden crash of thunder. But Pelly understood. He saw her
+lips form the words, and half heard,
+
+"Open the door, or I shall kill you!"
+
+He no longer hesitated. The key grated in the lock, and Kent himself
+flung the door wide open and sprang out. He was quick to see and seize
+upon opportunity and swift to act. The astounding audacity of the
+girl's ruse, her clever acting in feigning horror to line the guards up
+at the cell door and the thrilling decisiveness with which she had used
+the little black gun in her hand set every drop of blood in his body
+afire. No sooner was he outside his cell than he was the old Jim Kent,
+fighting man. He whipped Carter's automatic out of its holster and,
+covering Pelly and the special constable, relieved them of their guns.
+Behind him he heard Marette's voice, calm and triumphant,
+
+"Lock them in the cell, Mr. Kent!"
+
+He did not look at her, but swung his gun on Pelly and the special
+constable, and they backed through the door into the cell. Carter had
+not moved. He was looking straight at the girl, and the little black
+gun was leveled at his breast. Pelly and the wounded man did not see,
+but on Carter's lips was a strange smile. His eyes met Kent's, and
+there was revealed for an instant a silent flash of comradeship and an
+unmistakable something else. Carter was glad! It made Kent want to
+reach out and grip his hand, but in place of that he backed him into
+the cell, turned the key in the lock, and with the key in his hand
+faced Marette Radisson. Her eyes were shining gloriously. He had never
+seen such splendid, fighting eyes, nor the birdlike swiftness with
+which she turned and ran down the hall, calling him to follow her.
+
+He was only a step behind her in passing Kedsty's office. She reached
+the outer door and opened it. It was pitch-dark outside, and a deluge
+of rain beat into their faces. He observed that she did not replace the
+hood of her raincoat when she darted out. As he closed the door, her
+hand groped to his arm and from that found his hand. Her fingers clung
+to his tightly.
+
+He did not ask questions as they faced the black chaos of rain. A
+rending streak of lightning revealed her for an instant, her bare head
+bowed to the wind. Then came a crash of thunder that shook the earth
+under their feet, and her fingers closed more tightly about his hand.
+And in that crash he heard her voice, half laughing, half broken,
+saying,
+
+"I'm afraid--of thunder!"
+
+In that storm his laugh rang out, a great, free, joyous laugh. He
+wanted to stop in that instant, sweep her up into his arms, and carry
+her. He wanted to shout like an insane man in his mad joy. And a moment
+before she had risked everything in facing three of the bravest men in
+the service and had shot one of them! He started to say something, but
+she increased her speed until she was almost running.
+
+She was not leading Jim in the direction of the river, but toward the
+forest beyond Kedsty's bungalow. Not for an instant did she falter in
+that drenched and impenetrable darkness. There was something imperative
+in the clasp of her fingers, even though they tightened perceptibly
+when the thunder crashed. They gave Kent the conviction that there was
+no doubt in her mind as to the point she was striving for. He took
+advantage of the lightning, for each time it gave him a glimpse of her
+bare, wet head bowed to the storm, her white profile, and her slim
+figure fighting over the sticky earth under her feet.
+
+It was this presence of her, and not the thought of escape, that
+exalted him now. She was at his side. Her hand lay close in his. The
+lightning gave him glimpses of her. He felt the touch of her shoulder,
+her arm, her body, as they drew close together. The life and warmth and
+thrill of her seemed to leap into his own veins through the hand he
+held. He had dreamed of her. And now suddenly she had become a part of
+him, and the glory of it rode overwhelmingly over all other emotions
+that were struggling in his brain--the glory of the thought that it was
+she who had come to him in the last moment, who had saved him, and who
+was now leading him to freedom through the crash of storm.
+
+At the crest of a low knoll between barracks and Kedsty's bungalow she
+stopped for the first time. He had there, again, the almost
+irresistible impulse to reach out in the darkness and take her into his
+arms, crying out to her of his joy, of a happiness that had come to him
+greater even than the happiness of freedom. But he stood, holding her
+hand, his tongue speechless, and he was looking at her when the
+lightning revealed her again. In a rending flash it cut open the night
+so close that the hiss of it was like the passing of a giant rocket,
+and involuntarily she shrank against him, and her free hand caught his
+arm at the instant thunder crashed low over their heads. His own hand
+groped out, and in the blackness it touched for an instant her wet face
+and then her drenched hair.
+
+"Marette," he cried, "where are we going?"
+
+"Down there," came her voice.
+
+Her hand had left his arm, and he sensed that she was pointing, though
+he could not see. Ahead of them was a chaotic pit of gloom, a sea of
+blackness, and in the heart of that sea he saw a light. He knew that it
+was a lamp in one of Kedsty's windows and that Marette was guiding
+herself by that light when she started down the slope with her hand
+still in his. That she had made no effort to withdraw it made him
+unconscious of the almost drowning discomfort of the fresh deluge of
+rain that beat their faces. One of her fingers had gripped itself
+convulsively about his thumb, like a child afraid of falling. And each
+time the thunder crashed that soft hold on his thumb tightened, and
+Kent's soul acclaimed.
+
+They drew swiftly nearer to the light, for it was not far from the
+knoll to Kedsty's place. Kent's mind leaped ahead. A little west by
+north from the inspector's bungalow was Kim's Bayou and it was
+undoubtedly to the forest trail over which she had gone at least once
+before, on the night of the mysterious assault upon Mooie, that Marette
+was leading him. Questions began to rush upon him now, immediate
+demanding questions. They were going to the river. They must be going
+to the river. It was the quickest and surest way of escape. Had Marette
+prepared for that? And was she going with him?
+
+He had no time to answer. Their feet struck the gravel path leading to
+the door of Kedsty's place, and straight up this path the girl turned,
+straight toward the light blazing in the window. Then, to his
+amazement, he heard in the sweep of storm her voice crying out in glad
+triumph,
+
+"We're home!"
+
+Home! His breath came in a sudden gulp. He was more than astounded. He
+was shocked. Was she mad or playing an amazingly improper joke? She had
+freed him from a cell to lead him to the home of the Inspector of
+Police, the deadliest enemy the world now held for him. He stopped, and
+Marette Radisson tugged at his hand, pulling him after her, insisting
+that he follow. She was clutching his thumb as though she thought he
+might attempt to escape.
+
+"It is safe, M'sieu Jeems," she cried. "Don't be afraid!"
+
+M'sieu Jeems! And the laughing note of mockery in her voice! He rallied
+himself and followed her up the three steps to the door. Her hand found
+the latch, the door opened, and swiftly they were inside. The lamp in
+the window was close to them, but for a space he could not see because
+of the water in his eyes. He blinked it out, drew a hand across his
+face, and looked at Marette. She stood three or four paces from him.
+Her face was very white, and she was panting as if hard-run for breath,
+but her eyes were shining, and she was smiling at him. The water was
+running from her in streams.
+
+"You are wet," she said. "And I am afraid you will catch cold. Come
+with me!"
+
+Again she was making fun of him just as she had made fun of him at
+Cardigan's! She turned, and he ran upstairs behind her. At the top she
+waited for him, and as he came up, she reached out her hand, as if
+apologizing for having taken it from him when they entered the
+bungalow. He held it again as she led him down the hall to a door
+farthest from the stair. This she opened, and they entered. It was dark
+inside, and the girl withdrew her hand again, and Kent heard her moving
+across the room. In that darkness a new and thrilling emotion possessed
+him. The air he was breathing was not the air he had breathed in the
+hall. In it was the sweet scent of flowers, and of something else--the
+faint and intangible perfume of a woman's room. He waited, staring. His
+eyes were wide when a match leaped into flame in Marette's fingers.
+Then he stood in the glow of a lamp.
+
+He continued to stare in the stupidity of a shock to which he was not
+accustomed. Marette, as if to give him time to acquaint himself with
+his environment, was taking off her raincoat. Under it her slim little
+figure was dry, except where the water had run down from her uncovered
+head to her shoulders. He noticed that she wore a short skirt, and
+boots, adorably small boots of splendidly worked caribou. And then
+suddenly she came toward him with both hands reaching out to him.
+
+"Please shake hands and say you're glad," she said. "Don't look
+so--so--frightened. This is my room and you are safe here."
+
+He held her hands tight, staring into the wonderful, violet eyes that
+were looking at him with the frank and unembarrassed directness of a
+child's. "I--I don't understand," he struggled. "Marette, where is
+Kedsty?"
+
+"He should be returning very soon."
+
+"And he knows you are here, of course?"
+
+She nodded. "I have been here for a month."
+
+Kent's hands closed tighter about hers. "I--I don't understand," he
+repeated. "Tonight Kedsty will know that it was you who rescued me and
+you who shot Constable Willis. Good God, we must lose no time in
+getting away!"
+
+"There is great reason why Kedsty dare not betray my presence in his
+house," she said quietly. "He would die first! And he will not suspect
+that I have brought you to my room, that an escaped murderer is hiding
+under the very roof of the Inspector of Police! They will search for
+you everywhere but here! Isn't it splendid? He planned it all, every
+move, even to the screaming in front of your cell--"
+
+"You mean--Kedsty?"
+
+She withdrew her hands and stepped back from him, and again he saw in
+her eyes a flash of the fire that had come into them when she leveled
+her gun at the three men in the prison alcove. "No, not Kedsty. He
+would hang you, and he would kill me, if he dared. I mean that great,
+big, funny-looking friend of yours, M'sieu Fingers!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+The manner in which Kent stared at Marette Radisson after her
+announcement that it was Dirty Fingers who had planned his escape must
+have been, he thought afterward, little less than imbecile. He had
+wronged Fingers, he believed. He had called him a coward and a
+backslider. In his mind he had reviled him for helping to raise his
+hopes to the highest pitch, only to smash them in the end. And all the
+time Dirty Fingers had been planning this! Kent began to grin. The
+thing was clear in a moment--that is, the immediate situation was
+clear--or he thought it was. But there were questions--one, ten, a
+hundred of them. They wanted to pile over the end of his tongue,
+questions that had little or nothing to do with Kedsty. He saw nothing
+now but Marette.
+
+She had begun to take down her hair. It fell about her in wet, shining
+masses. Kent had never seen anything like it. It clung to her face, her
+neck, her shoulders and arms, and shrouded her slender body to her
+hips, lovely in its confusion. Little drops of water glistened in it
+like diamonds in the lamp glow, trickling down and dropping to the
+floor. It was like a glowing coat of velvety sable beaten by storm.
+Marette ran her arms up through it, shaking it out in clouds, and a
+mist of rain leaped out from it, some of it striking Kent in the face.
+He forgot Fingers. He forgot Kedsty. His brain flamed only with the
+electrifying nearness of her. It was the thought of her that had
+inspired the greatest hope in him. It was his dreams of her, somewhere
+on the Big River, that had given him his great courage to believe in
+the ultimate of things. And now time and space had taken a leap
+backward. She was not four or five hundred miles north. There was no
+long quest ahead of him. She was here, within a few feet of him,
+tossing the wet from that glorious hair he had yearned to touch,
+brushing it out now, with her back toward him, in front of her mirror.
+
+And as he sat there, uttering no word, looking at her, the demands of
+the immense responsibility that had fallen upon him and of the great
+fight that lay ahead pounded within him with naked fists. Fingers had
+planned. She had executed. It was up to him to finish.
+
+He saw her, not as a creature to win, but as a priceless possession.
+Her fight had now become his fight. The rain was beating against the
+window near him. Out there was blackness, the river, the big world. His
+blood leaped with the old fighting fire. They were going tonight; they
+must be going tonight! Why should they wait? Why should they waste time
+under Kedsty's roof when freedom lay out there for the taking? He
+watched the swift movements of her hand, listened to the silken rustle
+of the brush as it smoothed out her long hair. Bewilderment, reason,
+desire for action fought inside him.
+
+Suddenly she faced him again. "It has just this moment occurred to me,"
+she said, "that you haven't said 'Thank you.'"
+
+So suddenly that he startled her he was at her side. He did not
+hesitate this time, as he had hesitated in his room at Cardigan's
+place. He caught her two hands in his, and with them he felt the soft,
+damp crush of her hair between his fingers. Words tumbled from his
+lips. He could not remember afterward all that he said. Her eyes
+widened, and they never for an instant left his own. Thank her! He told
+her what had happened to him--in the heart and soul of him--from the
+hour she had come to him at Cardigan's. He told her of dreams and
+plans, of his determination to find her again after he had escaped, if
+it took him all his life. He told her of Mercer, of his discovery of
+her visit to Kim's Bayou, of his scheme to follow her down the Three
+Rivers, to seek for her at Fort Simpson, to follow her to the Valley of
+Silent Men, wherever it was. Thank her! He held her hands so tight they
+hurt, and his voice trembled. Under the cloud of her hair a slow fire
+burned in Marette Radisson's cheeks. But it did not show in her eyes.
+They looked at him so steadily, so unfalteringly, that his own face
+burned before he had finished what was in his mind to say, and he freed
+her hands and stepped back from her again.
+
+"Forgive me for saying all that," he entreated. "But it's true. You
+came to me there, at Cardigan's place, like something I'd always
+dreamed about, but never expected to find. And you came to me again, at
+the cell, like--"
+
+"Yes, I know how I came," she interrupted him. "Through the mud and the
+rain, Mr. Kent. And it was so black I lost my way and was terrified to
+think that I might not find barracks. I was half an hour behind Mr.
+Fingers' schedule. For that reason I think Inspector Kedsty may return
+at any moment, and you must not talk so loud--or so much."
+
+"Lord!" he breathed in a whisper. "I have said a lot in a short time,
+haven't I? But it isn't a hundredth part of what I want to get out of
+my system. I won't ask the million questions that want to be asked. But
+I must know why we are here. Why have we come to Kedsty's? Why didn't
+we make for the river? There couldn't be a better night to get away."
+
+"But it is not so good as the fifth night from now will be," she said,
+resuming the task of drying her hair. "On that night you may go to the
+river. Our plans were a little upset, you know, by Inspector Kedsty's
+change in the date on which you were to leave for Edmonton.
+Arrangements have been made so that on the fifth night you may leave
+safely."
+
+"And you?"
+
+"I shall remain here." And then she added in a low voice that struck
+his heart cold, "I shall remain to pay Kedsty the price which he will
+ask for what has happened tonight."
+
+"Good God!" he cried. "Marette!"
+
+She turned on him swiftly. "No, no, I don't mean that he will hurt me,"
+she cried, a fierce little note in her voice. "I would kill him before
+that! I'm sorry I told you. But you must not question me. You shall
+not!"
+
+She was trembling. He had never seen her excited like that before, and
+as she stood there before him, he knew that he was not afraid for her
+in the way that had flashed into his mind. She had not spoken empty
+words. She would fight. She would kill, if it was necessary to kill.
+And he saw her, all at once, as he had not seen her before. He
+remembered a painting which he had seen a long time ago in Montreal. It
+was _L'Esprit de la Solitude_--The Spirit of the Wild--painted by Conne,
+the picturesque French-Canadian friend of Lord Strathcona and Mount
+Royal, and a genius of the far backwoods who had drawn his inspiration
+from the heart of the wilderness itself. And that painting stood before
+him now in flesh and blood, its crudeness gone, but the marvelous
+spirit it had breathed remaining. Shrouded in her tumbled hair, her
+lips a little parted, every line of her slender body vibrant with an
+emotion which seemed consuming her, her beautiful eyes aglow with its
+fire, he saw in her, as Conne must have seen at another time, the soul
+of the great North itself. She seemed to him to breathe of the God's
+country far down the Three Rivers; of its almost savage fearlessness;
+its beauty, its sunshine, and its storm; its tragedy, its pathos, and
+its song. In her was the courage and the glory of that North. He had
+seen; and now he felt these things, and the thrill of them swept over
+him like an inundation.
+
+He had heard her soft laugh, she had made fun of him when he thought he
+was dying; she had kissed him, she had fought for him, she had clung in
+terror to his hand when the lightning flashed; and now she stood with
+her little hands clenched in her hair, like a storm about to break. A
+moment ago she was so near that he had almost taken her in his arms.
+Now, in an instant, she had placed something so vast between them that
+he would not have dared to touch her hand or her hair. Like sun and
+cloud and wind she changed, and for him each change added to the wonder
+of her. And now it was storm. He saw it in her eyes, her hands, her
+body. He felt the electrical nearness of it in those low-spoken,
+trembling words, "_You shall not_!" The room seemed surcharged for a
+moment with impending shock. And then his physical eyes took in again
+the slimness of her, seized upon the alluring smallness of her and the
+fact that he could have tossed her to the ceiling without great effort.
+And yet he saw her as one sees a goddess.
+
+"No, I won't ask you questions, when you look at me like that," he
+said, finding his tongue. "I won't ask you what this price is that
+Kedsty may demand, because you're not going to pay it. If you won't go
+with me, I won't go. I'd rather stay here and be hung. I'm not asking
+you questions, so please don't shoot, but if you told me the truth, and
+you belong in the North, you're going back with me--or I'm not going.
+I'll not budge an inch."
+
+She drew a deep breath, as if something had greatly relieved her. Again
+her violet eyes came out from the shadow into sunlight, and her
+trembling mouth suddenly broke into a smile. It was not apologetic.
+There was about it a quick and spontaneous gladness which she made no
+effort at all to conceal.
+
+"That is nice of you," she said. "I'm glad to hear you say it. I never
+knew how pleasant it was to have some one who was willing to be hung
+for me. But you will go. And I will not go. There isn't time to explain
+all about it just now, for Inspector Kedsty will be here very soon, and
+I must dry my hair and show you your hiding-place--if you have to hide."
+
+She began to brush her hair again. In the mirror Kent caught a glimpse
+of the smile still trembling on her lips.
+
+"I'm not questioning you," he guarded himself again, "but if you could
+only understand how anxious I am to know where Kedsty is, how Fingers
+found you, why you made us believe you were leaving the Landing and
+then returned--and--how badly I want to know something about you--I
+almost believe you'd talk a little while you are drying your hair."
+
+"It was Mooie, the old Indian," she said. "It was he who found out in
+some way that I was here, and then M'sieu Fingers came himself one
+night when the Inspector was away--got in through a window and simply
+said that you had sent him, when I was just about to shoot him. You
+see, I knew you weren't going to die. Kedsty had told me that. I was
+going to help you in another way, if M'sieu Fingers hadn't come.
+Inspector Kedsty was over there tonight, at his cabin, when the thing
+happened down there. It was a part of Fingers' scheme--to keep him out
+of the way."
+
+Suddenly she grew rigid. The brush remained poised in her hair. Kent,
+too, heard the sound that she had heard. It was a loud tapping at one
+of the curtained windows, the tapping of some metallic object. And that
+window was fifteen feet above the ground!
+
+With a little cry the girl threw down her brush, ran to the window, and
+raised and lowered the curtain once. Then she turned to Kent, swiftly
+dividing her hair into thick strands and weaving them into a braid.
+
+"It is Mooie," she cried. "Kedsty is coming!"
+
+She caught his hand and hurried him toward the head of the bed, where
+two long curtains were strung on a wire. She drew these apart. Behind
+them were what seemed to Kent an innumerable number of feminine
+garments.
+
+"You must hide in them, if you have to," she said, the excited little
+tremble in her voice again. "I don't think it will come to that, but if
+it does, you must! Bury yourself way back in them, and keep quiet. If
+Kedsty finds you are here--"
+
+She looked into his eyes, and it seemed to Kent that there was
+something which was very near to fear in them now.
+
+"If he should find you here, it would mean something terrible for me,"
+she went on, her hands creeping to his arms. "I can not tell you what
+it is now, but it would be worse than death. Will you promise to stay
+here, no matter what happens down there, no matter what you may hear?
+Will you--Mr. Kent?"
+
+"Not if you call me Mr. Kent," he said, something thickening in his
+throat.
+
+"Will you--Jeems? Will you--no matter what happens--if I promise--when
+I come back--to kiss you?"
+
+Her hands slipped almost caressingly from his arms, and then she had
+turned swiftly and was gone through the partly open door, closing it
+after her, before he could give his promise.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+For a space he stood where she had left him, staring at the door
+through which she had gone. The nearness of her in those last few
+seconds of her presence, the caressing touch of her hands, what he had
+seen in her eyes, her promise to kiss him if he did not reveal
+himself--these things, and the thought of the splendid courage that
+must be inspiring her to face Kedsty now, made him blind even to the
+door and the wall at which he was apparently looking. He saw only her
+face, as he had seen it in that last moment--her eyes, the tremble of
+her lips, and the fear which she had not quite hidden from him. She was
+afraid of Kedsty. He was sure of it. For she had not smiled; there was
+no flicker of humor in her eyes, when she called him Jeems, an intimate
+use of the names Jim and James in the far North. It was not facetiously
+that she had promised to kiss him. An almost tragic seriousness had
+possessed her. And it was that seriousness that thrilled him--that, and
+the amazing frankness with which she had coupled the name Jeems with
+the promise of her lips. Once before she had called him Jeems. But it
+was M'sieu Jeems then, and there had been a bit of taunting laughter in
+her voice. Jim or James meant nothing, but Jeems--He had heard mothers
+call little children that, in moments of endearment. He knew that wives
+and sweethearts used it in that same way. For Jim and James were not
+uncommon names up and down the Three Rivers, even among the half-breeds
+and French, and Jeems was the closer and more intimate thing bred of it.
+
+His heart was thumping riotously as he went to the door and listened. A
+little while ago, when she faced him with flashing eyes, commanding him
+not to question her, he had felt an abyss under his feet. Now he was on
+a mountain. And he knew that no matter what he heard, unless it was her
+cry for help, he would not go down.
+
+After a little he opened the door a mere crack so that sound might come
+to him. She had not forbidden that. Through the crack he could see a
+dim glow of light in the lower hall. But he heard no sound, and it
+occurred to him that old Mooie could still run swiftly, and that it
+might be some time before Kedsty would arrive.
+
+As he waited, he looked about the room. His first impression was that
+Marette must have lived in it for a long time. It was a woman's room,
+without the newness of sudden and unpremeditated occupancy. He knew
+that formerly it had been Kedsty's room, but nothing of Kedsty remained
+in it now. And then, as his wondering eyes beheld the miracle, a number
+of things struck him with amazing significance. He no longer doubted
+that Marette Radisson was of the far Northland. His faith in that was
+absolute. If there had been a last question in his mind, it was wiped
+away because she called him Jeems. Yet this room seemed to give the lie
+to his faith. Fascinated by his discovery of things, he drew away from
+the door and stood over the dressing-table in front of the mirror.
+
+Marette had not prepared the room for him, and her possessions were
+there. It did not strike him as sacrilege to look at them, the many
+intimate little things that are mysteriously used in the process of a
+lady's toilette. It was their number and variety that astounded him. He
+might have expected them in the boudoir of the Governor General's
+daughter at Ottawa, but not here--and much less farther north. What he
+saw was of exquisite material and workmanship. And then, as if
+attracted by a magnet, his eyes were drawn to something else. It was a
+row of shoes neatly and carefully arranged on the floor at one side of
+the dressing-table.
+
+He stared at them, astounded. Never had he seen such an array of
+feminine footwear intended for the same pair of feet. And it was not
+Northern footwear. Every individual little beauty in that amazing row
+stood on a high heel! Their variety was something to which he had long
+been a stranger. There were buttoned boots, laced boots, brown boots,
+black boots, and white boots, with dangerously high and fragile looking
+heels; there were dainty little white kid slippers, slippers with bows,
+slippers with cut steel buckles, and slippers with dainty ribbon ties;
+there were high-heeled oxfords and high-heeled patent leather pumps! He
+gasped. He reached over, moved by an automatic sort of impulse, and
+took a satiny little pump in his hand.
+
+The size of it gave him a decidedly pleasant mental shock, and,
+beginning to feel like one prying into a sleeper's secrets, he looked
+inside it. The size was there--number three. And it had come from
+Favre's in Montreal! One after another he looked inside half a dozen
+others. And all of them had come from Favre's in Montreal. The little
+shoes, more than all else that he had seen or that had happened, sent a
+question pounding through his brain. Who was Marette Radisson?
+
+And that question was followed by other questions, until they tumbled
+over one another in his head. If she was from Montreal, why was she
+going north? If she belonged in the North, if she was a part of it, why
+was she taking all of this apparently worthless footwear with her? Why
+had she come to Athabasca Landing? What was she to Kedsty? Why was she
+hiding under his roof? Why--
+
+He stopped himself, trying to find some one answer in all that chaos of
+questions. It was impossible for him to take his eyes from the shoes. A
+thought seized him. Ludicrously he dropped upon his knees in front of
+the row and with a face growing hotter each moment examined them all.
+But he wanted to know. And the discovery he made was that most of the
+footwear had been worn, some of it so slightly, however, that the
+impression of the foot was barely visible.
+
+He rose to his feet and continued his inquiry. Of course she had
+expected him to look about. One couldn't help seeing, unless one were
+blind. He would have cut off a hand before opening one of the
+dressing-table drawers. But Marette herself had told him to hide behind
+the curtains if it became necessary, and it was an excusable caution
+for him to look behind those curtains now, to see what sort of
+hiding-place he had. He returned to the door first and listened. There
+was still no sound from below. Then he drew the curtains apart, as
+Marette had drawn them. Only he looked longer. He would tell her about
+it when she returned, if the act needed an apology.
+
+His impression was a man's impression. What he saw was a billowing,
+filmy mass of soft stuff, and out of it there greeted him the faintest
+possible scent of lilac sachet powder. He closed the curtains with a
+deep breath of utter joy and of consternation. The two emotions were a
+jumble to him. The shoes, all that mass of soft stuff behind the
+curtains, were exquisitely feminine. The breath of perfume had come to
+him straight out of a woman's soul. There were seduction and witchery
+to it. He saw Marette, an enrapturing vision of loveliness, floating
+before his eyes in that sacred and mysterious vestment of which he had
+stolen a half-frightened glimpse. In white--the white, cobwebby thing
+of laces and embroidery that had hung straight before his eyes--in
+white--with her glorious black hair, her violet eyes, her--
+
+And then it was that the incongruity of the thing, the almost sheer
+impossibility of it, clashed in upon his vision. Yet his faith was not
+shaken. Marette Radisson was of the North. He could not disbelieve
+that, even in the face of these amazing things that confronted him.
+
+Suddenly he heard a sound that was like the explosion of a gun under
+his feet. It was the opening and closing of the hall door--but mostly
+the closing. The slam of it shook the house and rattled the glass in
+the windows. Kedsty had returned, and he was in a rage. Kent
+extinguished the light so that the room was in darkness. Then he went
+to the door. He could hear the quick, heavy tread of Kedsty's feet
+After that came the closing of a second door, followed by the rumble of
+Kedsty's voice. Kent was disappointed.
+
+The Inspector of Police and Marette were in a room too far distant for
+him to distinguish what was said. But he knew that Kedsty had returned
+to barracks and had discovered what had happened there. After an
+interval his voice was a steady rumble. It rose higher. He heard the
+crash of a chair. Then the voice ceased, and after it came the tramping
+of Kedsty's feet. Not once did he catch the sound of Marette's voice,
+but he was sure that in the interval of silence she was talking. Then
+Kedsty's voice broke forth more furiously than before. Kent's fingers
+dug into the sill of the door. Each moment added to his conviction that
+Marette was in danger. It was not physical violence he feared. He did
+not believe Kedsty capable of perpetrating that upon a woman. It was
+fear that he would take her to barracks. The fact that Marette had told
+him there was a powerful reason why Kedsty would not do this failed to
+assure him. For she had also told him that Kedsty would kill her, if he
+dared. He held himself in readiness. At a cry from her, or the first
+move on Kedsty's part to take her from the bungalow, he would give
+battle in spite of Marette's warning.
+
+He almost hoped one of these two things would happen. As he stood
+there, listening, waiting, the thought became almost a prayer. He had
+Pelly's revolver. Within twenty seconds he could have Kedsty looking
+down the barrel of it. The night was ideal for escape. Within half an
+hour they would be on the river. They could even load up with
+provisions from Kedsty's place. He opened the door a little more,
+scarcely making an effort to combat the impulse that dragged him out.
+Marette must be in danger, or she would not have confessed to him that
+she was in the house of a man who would like to see her dead. Why she
+was there did not interest him deeply now. It was the fact of the
+moment that was moving him swiftly toward action.
+
+The door below opened again, and Kent's body grew rigid. He heard
+Kedsty charging through the lower hall like a mad bull. The outer door
+opened, slammed shut, and he was gone.
+
+Kent drew back into the darkness of his room. It was some moments
+before he heard Marette coming slowly up the stairs. She seemed to be
+groping her way, though there was a dim illumination out there. Then
+she came through the door into the blackness of her room.
+
+"Jeems," she whispered.
+
+He went to her. Her hands reached out, and again they rested on his
+arms.
+
+"You--you didn't come down the stair?"
+
+"No."
+
+"You--didn't hear?"
+
+"I heard no words. Only Kedsty's voice."
+
+It seemed to him that her voice, when she spoke again, trembled with an
+immeasurable relief. "You were good, Jeems. I am glad."
+
+In that darkness he could not see. Yet something reached into him,
+thrilling him, quickening his pulse with a thing to which his eyes were
+blind. He bent down. He found her lips upturned, offering him the
+sweetness of the kiss which was to be his reward; and as he felt their
+warmth upon his own, he felt also the slightest pressure of her hands
+upon his arms.
+
+"He is gone. We will light the lamp again," she said then.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+Kent stood still while Marette moved in that gloom, found matches, and
+lighted the lamp. He had not spoken a word after the kiss. He had not
+taken advantage of it. The gentle pressure of her hands had restrained
+him from taking her in his arms. But the kiss itself fired him with a
+wild and glorious thrill that was like a vibrant music to which every
+atom of life in his body responded. If he claimed his reward at all, he
+had expected her kiss to be perhaps indifferent, at least neutral. But
+the lips she had given him there in the darkness of the room were warm,
+living, breathing lips. They had not been snatched away from him too
+quickly. Their sweetness, for an instant, had lingered.
+
+Then, in the lamp glow, he was looking into Marette Radisson's face. He
+knew that his own was aflame. He had no desire to hide its confession,
+and he was eager to find what lay in her own eyes. And he was
+astonished, and then startled. The kiss had not disturbed Marette. It
+was as if it had never happened.
+
+She was not embarrassed, and there was no hint of color in her face. It
+was her deathly whiteness that startled him, a pallor emphasized by the
+dark masses of her hair, and a strange glow in her eyes. It was not a
+glow brought there by the kiss. It was fear, fading slowly out of them
+as he looked, until at last it was gone, and her lips trembled with an
+apologetic smile.
+
+"He was very angry," she said. "How easily some men lose their tempers,
+don't they--Jeems?"
+
+The little break in her voice, her brave effort to control herself, and
+the whimsical bit of smile that accompanied her words made him want to
+do what the gentle pressure of her hands had kept him from doing a few
+moments before--pick her up in his arms. What she was trying to hide he
+saw plainly. She had been in danger, a danger greater than that which
+she had quietly and fearlessly faced at barracks. And she was still
+afraid of that menace. It was the last thing which she wanted him to
+know, and yet he knew it. A new force swept through him. It was the
+force which comes of mastery, of possessorship, of fighting grimly
+against odds. It rose in a mighty triumph. It told him this girl
+belonged to him, that she was his to fight for. And he was going to
+fight. Marette saw the change that came into his face. For a moment
+after she had spoken there was silence between them. Outside the storm
+beat in a fiercer blast. A roll of thunder crashed over the bungalow.
+The windows rattled in a sweep of wind and rain. Kent, looking at her,
+his muscles hardening, his face growing grimmer, nodded toward the
+window at which Mooie's signal had come.
+
+"It is a splendid night--for us," he said. "And we must go."
+
+She did not answer.
+
+"In the eyes of the law I am a murderer," he went on. "You saved me.
+You shot a man. In those same eyes you are a criminal. It is folly to
+remain here. It is sheer suicide for both of us. If Kedsty--"
+
+"If Kedsty does not do what I told him to do to-night, I shall kill
+him!" she said.
+
+The quietness of her words, the steadiness of her eyes, held him
+speechless. Again it seemed to him, as it had seemed to him in his room
+at Cardigan's place, that it was a child who was looking at him and
+speaking to him. If she had shown fear a few moments before, that fear
+was not revealed in her face now. She was not excited. Her eyes were
+softly and quietly beautiful. She amazed him and discomfited him.
+Against that child-like sureness he felt himself helpless. Its potency
+was greater than his strength and greater than his determination. It
+placed between them instantly a vast gulf, a gulf that might be bridged
+by prayer and entreaty, but never by force. There was no hint of
+excitement in her threat against Kedsty, and yet in the very calmness
+of it he felt its deadliness.
+
+A whimsical half-smile was trembling on her lips again, and a warmer
+glow came into her eyes. "Do you know," she said, "that according to an
+old and sacred code of the North you belong to me?"
+
+"I have heard of that code," he replied. "A hundred years ago I should
+have been your slave. If it exists today, I am happy."
+
+"Yes, you see the point, Jeems, don't you? You were about to die,
+probably. I think they would have hanged you. And I saved your life.
+Therefore your life belongs to me, for I insist that the code still
+lives. You are my property, and I am going to do with you as I please,
+until I turn you over to the Rivers. And you are not going tonight. You
+shall wait here for Laselle and his brigade."
+
+"Laselle--Jean Laselle?"
+
+She nodded. "Yes, that is why you must wait. We have made a splendid
+arrangement. When Laselle and his brigade start north, you go with
+them. And no one will ever know. You are safe here. No one will think
+of looking for you under the roof of the Inspector of Police."
+
+"But you, Marette!" He caught himself, remembering her injunction not
+to question her. Marette shrugged her slim shoulders the slightest bit
+and nodded for him to look upon what she knew he had already seen, her
+room.
+
+"It is not uncomfortable," she said. "I have been here for a number of
+weeks, and nothing has happened to me. I am quite safe. Inspector
+Kedsty has not looked inside that door since the day your big
+red-headed friend saw me down in the poplars. He has not put a foot on
+the stair. That is the dead-line. And--I know--you are wondering. You
+are asking yourself a great many questions--_a bon droit_, M'sieu Jeems.
+You are burning up with them. I can see it. And I--"
+
+There was something suddenly pathetic about her, as she sank into the
+big-armed, upholstered chair which had been Kedsty's favorite reading
+chair. She was tired, and for a moment it seemed to Kent that she was
+almost ready to cry. Her ringers twisted nervously at the shining end
+of the braid in her lap, and more than ever he thought how slim and
+helpless, she was, yet how gloriously unafraid, how unconquerable with
+that something within her that burned like the fire of a dynamo. The
+flame of that force had gone down now, as though the fire itself was
+dying out; but when she raised her eyes to him, looking up at him from
+out of the big chair, he knew that back of the yearning, child-like
+glow that lay in them the heart of that fire was living and
+unquenchable. Again, for him, she had ceased to be a woman. It was the
+soul of a child that lay in her wide-open, wonderfully blue eyes. Twice
+before he had seen that miracle, and it held him now, as it had held
+him that first time when she had stood with her back at Cardigan's
+door. And as it had changed then, so it changed now, slowly, and she
+was a woman again, with that great gulf of unapproachableness between
+them. But the yearning was still there, revealing itself to him, and
+yet, like the sun, infinitely remote from him.
+
+"I wish that I might answer those questions for you," she said, in a
+voice that was low and tired. "I should like to have you know, because
+I--I have great faith in you, Jeems. But I cannot. It is impossible. It
+is inconceivable. If I did--" She made a hopeless little gesture. "If I
+told you everything, you would not like me any more. And I want you to
+like me--until you go north with M'sieu Jean and his brigade."
+
+"And when I do that," cried Kent, almost savagely, "I shall find this
+place you call the Valley of Silent Men, if it takes me all my life."
+
+It was becoming a joy for him to see the sudden flashes of pleasure
+that leaped into her eyes. She attempted no concealment. Whatever her
+emotions were they revealed themselves unaffectedly and with a simple
+freedom from embarrassment that swept him with an almost reverential
+worship. And what he had just said pleased her. Unreservedly her
+glowing eyes and her partly smiling lips told him that, and she said:
+"I am glad you feel that way, Jeems. And I think you would find it--in
+time. Because--"
+
+Her little trick of looking at him so steadily, as if there was
+something inside him which she was trying to see more clearly, made him
+feel more helplessly than ever her slave. It was as if, in those
+moments, she forgot that he was of flesh and blood, and was looking
+into his heart to see what was there before she gave voice to things.
+
+And then she said, still twisting her braid between her slim fingers,
+"You would find it--perhaps--because you are one who would not give up
+easily. Shall I tell you why I came to see you at Doctor Cardigan's? It
+was curiosity, at first--largely that. Just why or how I was interested
+in the man you freed is one of the things I can not tell you. And I can
+not tell you why I came to the Landing. Nor can I say a word about
+Kedsty. It may be, some day, that you will know. And then you will not
+like me. For nearly four years before I saw you that day I had been in
+a desolation. It was a terrible place. It ate my heart and soul out
+with its ugliness, its loneliness, its emptiness. A little while longer
+and I would have died. Then the thing happened that brought me away.
+Can you guess where it was?"
+
+He shook his head, "No."
+
+"To all the others it was a beautiful place, Montreal."
+
+"You were at school there?" he guessed.
+
+"Yes, the Villa Maria. I wasn't quite sixteen then. They were kind. I
+think they liked me. But each night I prayed one prayer. You know what
+the Three Rivers are to us, to the people of the North. The Athabasca
+is Grandmother, the Slave is Mother, the Mackenzie is Daughter, and
+over them watches always the goddess Niska, the Gray Goose. And my
+prayer was that I might go back to them. In Montreal there were people,
+people everywhere, thousands and tens of thousands of them, so many
+that I was lonely and heartsick and wanted to get away. For the Gray
+Goose blood is in me, Jeems. I love the forests. And Niska's God
+doesn't live in Montreal. Her sun doesn't rise there. Her moon isn't
+the same there. The flowers are not hers. The winds tell different
+stories. The air is another air. People, when they look at you, look in
+another way. Away down the Three Rivers I had loved men. There I was
+learning to hate them. Then, something happened. I came to Athabasca
+Landing. I went to see you because--"
+
+She clasped her two hands tightly in her lap. "Because, after those
+four terrible years, you were the first man I found who was playing a
+great, big, square game to the end. Don't ask me how I found it out.
+Please don't ask me anything. I am telling you all you can know, all
+you _shall_ know. But I did find it out. And then I learned that you were
+not going to die. Kedsty told me that. And when I had talked with you I
+knew that you would play any game square, and I made up my mind to help
+you. That is why I am telling you all this--just to let you know that I
+have faith in you, and that you must not break that faith. You must not
+insist on knowing more about me. You must still play the game. I am
+playing mine, and you must play yours. And to play yours clean, you
+must go with Laselle's brigade and leave me with Kedsty. You must
+forget what has happened. You must forget what MAY happen. You can not
+help me. You can only harm me. And if--some day, a long time from
+now--you should happen to find the Valley of Silent Men--"
+
+He waited, his heart pounding like a fist.
+
+"I may--be there," she finished, in a voice so low that it was scarcely
+above a whisper.
+
+It seemed to him that she was looking a long way off, and it was not in
+his direction. And then she smiled, not at him, but in a half-hopeless
+little way.
+
+"I think I shall be disappointed if you don't find it," she said then,
+and her eyes were pure as the blue flowers from which they had stolen
+their color, as she looked at him. "You know the great Sulphur Country
+beyond Fort Simpson, westward between the Two Nahannis?"
+
+"Yes. That is where Kilbane and his patrol were lost. The Indians call
+it the Devil Country. Is that it?"
+
+She nodded. "They say no living thing has ever been through the Sulphur
+Country," she said. "But that is not true. I have been through it. It
+is beyond the Sulphur Country you must go to find the Valley of Silent
+Men, straight through that gap between the North and the South Nahanni.
+That is the way _you_ must go if you should ever find it, Jeems, for
+otherwise you would have to come down from Dawson or up from Skagway,
+and the country is so great that you would never come upon it in a
+thousand years. The police will not find you there. You will always be
+safe. Perhaps I shall tell you more before the Brigade comes. But that
+is all tonight. I may never tell you anything more. And you must not
+question me."
+
+Speechless he had stood, all the life of his soul burning like a fire
+in his eyes as he looked at her and listened to her, and now, quietly
+and unexcitedly, he said:
+
+"Marette, I am going to play this game as you want me to play it,
+because I love you. It is only honest for me to tell you in words what
+you must already know. And I am going to fight for you as long as there
+is a drop of blood in my body. If I go with Jean Laselle's brigade,
+will you promise me--"
+
+His voice trembled. He was repressing a mighty emotion. But not by the
+quiver of one of her long lashes did Marette Radisson give evidence
+that she had even heard his confession of love. She interrupted him
+before he had finished.
+
+"I can promise you nothing, no matter what you do. Jeems, Jeems, you
+are not like those other men I learned to hate? You will not INSIST? If
+you do--if you are like them--yes, you may go away from here tonight
+and not wait for Jean Laselle. Listen! The storm will not break for
+hours. If you are going to demand a price for playing the game as I
+want you to play it, you may go. You have my permission."
+
+She was very white. She rose from the big chair and stood before him.
+There was no anger in her voice or gesture, but her eyes glowed like
+luminous stars. There was something in them which he had not seen
+before, and suddenly a thought struck his heart cold as ice.
+
+With a low cry he stretched out his hands, "My God, Marette, I am not a
+murderer! I did not kill John Barkley!"
+
+She did not answer him.
+
+"You don't believe me," he cried. "You believe that I killed Barkley,
+and that now--a murderer--I dare to tell you that I love you!"
+
+She was trembling. It was like a little shiver running through her. For
+only a flash it seemed to him that he had caught a glimpse of something
+terrible, a thing she was hiding, a thing she was fighting as she stood
+there with her two little clenched hands. For in her face, in her eyes,
+in the beating throb of her white throat he saw, in that moment, the
+almost hidden agony of a hurt thing. And then it was gone, even as he
+entreated again, pleading for her faith.
+
+"I did not kill John Barkley!"
+
+"I am not thinking of that, Jeems," she said. "It is of something--"
+
+They had forgotten the storm. It was howling and beating at the windows
+outside. But suddenly there came a sound that rose above the monotonous
+tumult of it, and Marette started as if it had sent an electric shock
+through her. Kent, too, turned toward the window.
+
+It was the metallic tap, tap, tapping which once before had warned them
+of approaching danger. And this time it was insistent. It was as if a
+voice was crying out to them from beyond the window. It was more than
+premonition--it was the alarm of a near and impending menace. And in
+that moment Kent saw Marette Radisson's hands go swiftly to her throat
+and her eyes leap with sudden fire, and she gave a little cry as she
+listened to the sound.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+In ten seconds, it seemed to Kent, Marette Radisson was again the
+splendid creature who had held the three men at bay over the end of her
+little black gun at barracks. The sound of Mooie's second warning came
+at first as a shock. Accompanying it there was a moment of fear, of
+fear driven almost to the point of actual terror. Following it came a
+reaction so swift that Kent was dazed. Within those ten seconds the
+girl's slender body seemed to grow taller; a new light flamed in her
+face; her eyes, turning swiftly to him, were filled with the same fire
+with which they had faced the three constables. She was unafraid. She
+was ready to fight.
+
+In such moments as these it was the quiet and dispassionate composure
+of her voice that amazed him most. It was musical in its softness now.
+Yet in that softness was a hidden thing. It was like velvet covering
+steel. She had spoken of Niska, the Gray Goose, the goddess of the
+Three Rivers. And he thought that something of the spirit of a goddess
+must be in Marette Radisson to give her the courage with which she
+faced him, even as the metallic thing outside tapped its warning again
+at the window.
+
+"Inspector Kedsty is coming back," she said. "I did not think he would
+do that--tonight."
+
+"He has not had time to go to barracks," said Kent.
+
+"No. Possibly he has forgotten something. Before he arrives, I want to
+show you the nest I have made for you, Jeems. Come quickly!"
+
+It was her first intimation that he was not to remain in her room, a
+possibility that had already caused him some inward embarrassment. She
+seized a number of matches, turned down her light, and hurried into the
+hall. Kent followed her to the end of this hall, where she paused
+before a low half-door that apparently opened into some sort of a space
+close under the sloping roof of the bungalow.
+
+"It is an old storeroom," she whispered. "I have made it quite
+comfortable, I think. I have covered the window, so you may light the
+lamp. But you must see that no light shows under this door. Lock it on
+the inside, and be very quiet. For whatever you find in there you must
+thank M'sieu Fingers."
+
+She pulled the door slightly open and gave him the matches. The
+illumination in the lower hall made its way only dimly to where they
+stood. In the gloom he found himself close to the soft glow of her
+eyes. His fingers closed about her hand as he took the matches.
+
+"Marette, you believe me?" he entreated. "You believe that I love you,
+that I didn't kill John Barkley, that I am going to fight for you as
+long as God gives me breath to fight?"
+
+For a moment there was silence. Her hand withdrew gently from his.
+
+"Yes, I think that I believe. Good-night, Jeems."
+
+She went from him quickly. At her door she turned. "Go in now, please,"
+she called back softly. "If you care as you say you do, _go in_."
+
+She did not wait for his reply. Her own door closed behind her, and
+Kent, striking a match, stooped low and entered his hiding-place. In a
+moment he saw directly ahead of him a lamp on a box. He lighted this,
+and his first movement then was to close the door and turn the key that
+was in the lock. After that he looked about him. The storeroom was not
+more than ten feet square, and the roof was so close over his head that
+he could not stand upright. It was not the smallness of the place that
+struck him first, but the preparations which Marette had made for him.
+In a corner was a bed of blankets, and the rough floor of the place was
+carpeted with blankets, except for a two-or-three-foot space around the
+edge of it. Beyond the box was a table and a chair, and it was the
+burden of this table that made his pulse jump quickest. Marette had not
+forgotten that he might grow hungry. It was laid sumptuously, with a
+plate for one, but with food for half a dozen. There were a brace of
+roasted grouse, brown as nuts; a cold roast of moose meat or beef; a
+dish piled high with golden potato salad; olives, pickles, an open can
+of cherries, a loaf of bread, butter, cheese--and one of Kedsty's
+treasured thermos bottles, which undoubtedly held hot coffee or tea.
+And then he noticed what was on the chair--a belt and holster and a
+Colt automatic forty-five! Marette had not figured on securing a gun in
+the affair at barracks, and her foresight had not forgotten a weapon.
+She had placed it conspicuously where he could not fail to see it at
+once. And just beyond the chair, on the floor, was a shoulder-pack. It
+was of the regulation service sort, partly filled. Resting against the
+pack was a Winchester. He recognized the gun. He had seen it hanging in
+Dirty Fingers' shack.
+
+For a matter of five minutes he scarcely moved from where he stood
+beside the table. Nothing but an unplastered roof was between him and
+the storm, and over his head the thunder crashed, and the rain beat in
+torrents. He saw where the window was, carefully covered with a
+blanket. Even through the blanket he caught faintly the illumination of
+lightning. This window overlooked the entrance to Kedsty's bungalow,
+and the idea came to him of turning out the light and opening it. In
+darkness he took down the blanket. But the window itself was not
+movable, and after assuring himself of this fact he flattened his face
+against it, peering out into the chaos of the night.
+
+In that instant came a flare of lightning, and to Kent, looking down,
+was revealed a sight that tightened every muscle in his body. More
+vividly than if it had been day he saw a man standing below in the
+deluge. It was not Mooie. It was not Kedsty. It was no one that he had
+ever seen. Even more like a ghost than a man was that apparition of the
+lightning flare. A great, gaunt giant of a ghost, bare-headed, with
+long, dripping hair and a long, storm-twisted beard. The picture shot
+to his brain with the swiftness of the lightning itself. It was like
+the sudden throwing of a cinema picture on a screen. Then blackness
+shut it out. Kent stared harder. He waited.
+
+Again came the lightning, and again he saw that tragic, ghost-like
+figure waiting in the storm. Three times he saw it. And he knew that
+the mysterious, bearded giant was an old man. The fourth time the
+lightning came, the figure was gone. And in that flare it was the bowed
+figure of Kedsty he saw hurrying up the gravel path to the door.
+
+Quickly Kent covered the window, but he did not relight the lamp.
+Before Kedsty could have reached the foot of the stair, he had unlocked
+the door. Cautiously he opened it three or four inches and sat down
+with his back against the wall, listening. He heard Kedsty pass through
+into the big room where Marette had waited for him a short time before.
+After that there was silence except for the tumult of the storm.
+
+For an hour Kent listened. In all that time he did not hear a sound
+from the lower hall or from Marette's room. He wondered if she was
+sleeping, and if Kedsty had gone to bed, waiting for morning before he
+set in action his bloodhounds of the law.
+
+Kent had no intention of disturbing the comfortable looking bed of
+blankets. He was not only sleepless, but filled with a premonition of
+events about to happen. He felt impinging itself more and more upon him
+a sense of watchfulness. That Inspector Kedsty and Marette Radisson
+were under the same roof, and that there was some potent and mysterious
+reason which kept Kedsty from betraying the girl's presence, was the
+thought which troubled him most. He was not developing further the
+plans for his own escape.
+
+He was thinking of Marette. What was her power over Kedsty? Why was it
+that Kedsty would like to see her dead? Why was she in his house? Again
+and again he asked himself the questions and found no answers to them.
+And yet, even in this purgatory of mystery that environed him, he felt
+himself happier than he had ever been in his life. For Marette was not
+four or five hundred miles down the river. She was in the same house
+with him. And he had told her that he loved her. He was glad that he
+had been given courage to let her know that. He relighted the lamp, and
+opened his watch and placed it on the table, where frequently he could
+look at the time. He wanted to smoke his pipe, but the odor of tobacco,
+he was sure, would reach Kedsty, unless the Inspector had actually
+retired into his bedroom for the night.
+
+Half a dozen times he questioned himself as to the identity of the
+ghostly apparition he had seen in the lightning flare of the storm.
+Perhaps it was some one of Fingers' strange friends from out of the
+wilderness, Mooie's partner in watching the bungalow. The picture of
+that giant of a man with his great beard and long hair, as his eyes had
+caught him in a sea of electrical fire, was indelibly burned into his
+brain. It was a tragic picture.
+
+Again he put out the light and bared the blanketed window, but he saw
+nothing but the sodden gleam of the earth when the lightning flashed. A
+second time he opened the door a few inches and sat down with his back
+to the wall, listening.
+
+How long it was before drowsiness stole upon him he did not know, but
+it came, and for a few moments at a time, as his eyes closed, it robbed
+him of his caution. And then, for a space, he slept. A sound brought
+him suddenly into wide wakefulness. His first impression was that the
+sound had been a cry. For a moment or two, as his senses adjusted
+themselves, he was not sure. Then swiftly the thing grew upon him.
+
+He rose to his feet and widened the crack of his door. A bar of light
+shot across the upper hall. It was from Marette's room. He had taken
+off his boots to deaden the sound of his feet, and he stepped outside
+his door. He was positive he heard a low cry, a choking, sobbing cry,
+only barely audible, and that it came from down the stair.
+
+No longer hesitating, he moved quickly to Marette's room and looked in.
+His first glimpse was of the bed. It had not been used. The room was
+empty.
+
+Something cold and chilling gripped at his heart, and an impulse which
+he no longer made an effort to resist pulled him to the head of the
+stair. It was more than an impulse--it was a demand. Step by step he
+went down, his hand on the butt of his Colt.
+
+He reached the lower hall, which was still lighted, and a step or two
+brought him to a view of the door that opened into the big living-room
+beyond. That door was partly open, and the room itself was filled with
+light. Soundlessly Kent approached. He looked in.
+
+What he saw first brought him relief together with shock. At one end of
+the long desk table over which hung a great brass lamp stood Marette.
+She was in profile to him. He could not see her face. Her hair fell
+loose about her, glowing like a rich, sable cape in the light of the
+lamp. She was safe, alive, and yet the attitude of her as she looked
+down was the thing that gave him shock. He was compelled to move a few
+inches more before he could see what she was staring at. And then his
+heart stopped dead still.
+
+Huddled down in his chair, with his head flung back so that the
+terrible ghastliness of his face fronted Kent, was Kedsty. And Kent, in
+an instant, knew. Only a dead man could look like that.
+
+With a cry he entered the room. Marette did not start, but an answering
+cry came into her throat as she turned her eyes from Kedsty to him. To
+Kent it was like looking upon the dead in two ways. Marette Radisson,
+living and breathing, was whiter than Kedsty, who was white with the
+unbreathing pallor of the actually dead. She did not speak. She made no
+sound after that answering cry in her throat. She simply looked. And
+Kent spoke her name gently as he saw her great, wide eyes blazing dully
+their agony and despair. Then, like one stunned and fascinated, she
+stared down upon Kedsty again.
+
+Every instinct of the man-hunter became alive in Kent's brain as he,
+too, turned toward the Inspector of Police. Kedsty's arms hung limp
+over the side of his chair. On the floor under his right hand was his
+Colt automatic. His head was strained so far over the back of the chair
+that it looked as though his neck had been broken. On his forehead,
+close up against his short-cropped, iron-gray hair, was a red stain.
+
+Kent approached and bent over him. He had seen death too many times not
+to recognize it now, but seldom had he seen a face twisted and
+distorted as Kedsty's was. His eyes were open and bulging in a glassy
+stare. His jaws hung loose. His--
+
+It was then Kent's blood froze in his veins. Kedsty had received a
+blow, but it was not the blow that had killed him. Afterward he had
+been choked to death. And the thing that had choked him was _a tress
+of woman's hair_.
+
+In the seconds that followed that discovery Kent could not have moved
+if his own life had paid the penalty of inaction. For the story was
+told--there about Kedsty's throat and on his chest. The tress of hair
+was long and soft and shining and black. It was twisted twice around
+Kedsty's neck, and the loose end rippled down over his shoulder,
+_glowing like a bit of rich sable in the lamplight_. It was that thought
+of velvety sable that had come to him at the doorway, looking at
+Marette. It was the thought that came to him now. He touched it; he
+took it in his fingers; he unwound it from about Kedsty's neck, where
+it had made two deep rings in the flesh. From his fingers it rippled
+out full length. And he turned slowly and faced Marette Radisson.
+
+Never had human eyes looked at him as she was looking at him now. She
+reached out a hand, her lips mute, and Kent gave her the tress of hair.
+And the next instant she turned, with a hand clasped at her own throat,
+and passed through the door.
+
+After that he heard her going unsteadily up the stairs.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+Kent did not move. His senses for a space were stunned. He was almost
+physically insensible to all emotions but that one of shock and horror.
+He was staring at Kedsty's gray-white, twisted face when he heard
+Marette's door close. A cry came from his lips, but he did not hear
+it--was unconscious that he had made a sound. His body shook with a
+sudden tremor. He could not disbelieve, for the evidence was there.
+From behind, as he had sat in his chair Marette Radisson had struck the
+Inspector of Police with some blunt object. The blow had stunned him.
+And after that--
+
+He drew a hand across his eyes, as if to clear his vision. What he had
+seen was impossible. The evidence was impossible. Assaulted, in deadly
+peril, defending either honor or love, Marette Radisson was of the
+blood to kill. But to creep up behind her victim--it was inconceivable!
+Yet there had been no struggle. Even the automatic on the floor gave no
+evidence of that. Kent picked it up. He looked at it closely, and again
+the unconscious cry of despair came in a half groan from his lips. For
+on the butt of the Colt was a stain of blood and a few gray hairs.
+Kedsty had been stunned by a blow from his own gun!
+
+As Kent placed it on the table, his eyes caught suddenly a gleam of
+steel under the edge of a newspaper, and he drew out from their
+hiding-place the long-bladed clipping scissors which Kedsty had used in
+the preparation of his scrap-books and official reports. It was the
+last link in the deadly evidence--the automatic with its telltale
+stain, the scissors, the tress of hair, and Marette Radisson. He felt a
+sensation of sudden dizziness. Every nerve-center in his body had
+received its shock, and when the shock had passed it left him sweating.
+
+Swiftly the reaction came. It was a lie, he told himself. The evidence
+was false. Marette could not have committed that crime, as the crime
+had visualized itself before his eyes. There was something which he had
+not seen, something which he could not see, something that was hiding
+itself from him. He became, in an instant, the old James Kent. The
+instinctive processes of the man-hunter leaped to their stations like
+trained soldiers. He saw Marette again, as she had looked at him when
+he entered the room. It was not murder he had caught in her wide-open
+eyes. It was not hatred. It was not madness. It was a quivering,
+bleeding soul crying out to him in an agony that no other human eyes
+had ever revealed to him before. And suddenly a great voice cried out
+in his brain, drowning all other things, telling him how contemptible a
+thing was love unless in that love was faith.
+
+With his heart choking him, he turned again to Kedsty. The futility of
+the thing which he had told himself was faith gripped at him
+sickeningly, yet he fought for that faith, even as his eyes looked
+again upon the ghastly torture that was in Kedsty's face.
+
+He was becoming calmer. He touched the dead man's cheek and found that
+it was no longer warm. The tragedy must have occurred an hour before.
+He examined more closely the abrasion on Kedsty's forehead. It was not
+a deep wound, and the blow that had made it must have stunned the
+Inspector of Police for only a short time. In that space the other
+thing had happened. In spite of his almost superhuman effort to keep
+the picture away from him, Kent saw it vividly--the swift turning to
+the table, the inspiration of the scissors, the clipping of the long
+tress of hair, the choking to death of Kedsty as he regained
+consciousness. Over and over again he whispered to himself the
+impossibility of it, the absurdity of it, the utter incongruity of it.
+Only a brain gone mad would have conceived that monstrous way of
+killing Kedsty. And Marette was not mad. She was sane.
+
+Like the eyes of a hunting ferret his own eyes swept quickly about the
+room. At the four windows there were long curtain cords. On the walls,
+hung there as trophies, were a number of weapons. On one end of
+Kedsty's desk, used as a paperweight, was a stone tomahawk. Still
+nearer to the dead man's hands, unhidden by papers, was a boot-lace.
+Under his limp right hand was the automatic. With these possible
+instruments of death close at hand, ready to be snatched up without
+trouble or waste of time, why had the murderer used a tress of woman's
+hair?
+
+The boot-lace drew Kent's eyes. It was impossible not to see it,
+forty-eight inches long and quarter-inch-wide buckskin. He began
+seeking for its mate, and found it on the floor where Marette Radisson
+had been standing. And again the unanswerable question pounded in
+Kent's brain--why had Kedsty's murderer used a tress of hair instead of
+a buckskin lace or one of the curtain cords hanging conspicuously at
+the windows?
+
+He went to each of these windows and found them locked. Then, a last
+time, he bent over Kedsty. He knew that in the final moments of his
+life Kedsty had suffered a slow and torturing agony. His twisted face
+left the story. And the Inspector of Police was a powerful man. He had
+struggled, still partly dazed by the blow. But it had taken strength to
+overcome him even then, to hold his head back, to choke life out of him
+slowly with the noose of hair. And Kent, now that the significance of
+what he saw began to grow upon him more clearly, felt triumphing over
+all other things in his soul a slow and mighty joy. It was
+inconceivable that with the strength of her own hands and body Marette
+Radisson had killed Kedsty. A greater strength than hers had held him
+in the death-chair, and a greater strength than hers had choked life
+from the Inspector of Police!
+
+He drew slowly out of the room, closing the door noiselessly behind
+him. He found that the front door was as Kedsty had left it, unlocked.
+
+Close to that door he stood for a space, scarcely allowing himself to
+breathe. He listened, but no sound came down the dimly illumined
+stairway.
+
+A new thing was pressing upon him now. It rode over the shock of
+tragedy, over the first-roused instincts of the man-hunter,
+overwhelming him with the realization of a horror such as had never
+confronted him before. It gripped him more fiercely than the mere
+killing of Kedsty. His thought was of Marette, of the fate which dawn
+and discovery would bring for her. His hands clenched and his jaws
+tightened. The world was against him, and tomorrow it would be against
+her. Only he, in the face of all that condemning evidence in the room
+beyond, would disbelieve her guilty of Kedsty's death. And he, Jim
+Kent, was already a murderer in the eyes of the law.
+
+He felt within him the slow-growing inspiration of a new spirit, the
+gathering might of a new force. A few hours ago he was an outcast. He
+was condemned. Life, for him, had been robbed of its last hope. And in
+that hour of his grimmest despair Marette Radisson had come to him.
+Through storm that had rocked the earth under her feet and set ablaze
+the chaotic blackness of the sky over her head she had struggled--for
+him. She had counted no cost. She had measured no chances. She had
+simply come--_because she believed in him_. And now, upstairs, she was
+the victim of the terrible price that was the first cost of his
+freedom. For he believed, now that the thought came to him like a
+dagger stroke, that this was so. Her act in freeing him had brought
+about the final climax, and as a result of it, Kedsty was dead.
+
+He went to the foot of the stair. Quietly, in his shoeless feet, he
+began to climb them. He wanted to cry out Marette's name even before he
+came to the top. He wanted to reach up to her with his arms
+outstretched. But he came silently to her door and looked in.
+
+She lay in a crumpled, huddled heap on her bed. Her face was hidden,
+and all about her lay her smothering hair. For a moment he was
+frightened. He could not see that she was breathing. So still was she
+that she was like one dead.
+
+His footsteps were unheard as he moved across the room. He knelt down
+beside her, reached out his arms, and gathered her into them.
+
+"Marette!" he cried in a low voice.
+
+He felt the sudden quiver, like a little shock, that ran through her.
+He crushed his face down, so that it lay in her hair, still damp from
+its wetting. He drew her closer, tightening his arms about her slender
+body, and a little cry came from her a cry that was a broken thing, a
+sob without tears.
+
+"Marette!"
+
+It was all he said. It was all he could say in that moment when his
+heart was beating like a drum against her breast. And then he felt the
+slow pressure of her hands against him, saw her white face, her wide,
+staring eyes within a few inches of his own, and she drew away from
+him, back against the wall, still huddled like a child on the bed, with
+her eyes fixed on him in a way that frightened him. There were no tears
+in them. She had not been crying. But her face was as white as he had
+seen it down in Kedsty's room. Some of the horror and shock had gone
+out of it. In it was another look as her eyes glowed upon Kent. It was
+a look of incredulity, of disbelief, a thing slowly fading away under
+the miracle of an amazing revelation. The truth thrust itself upon him.
+
+Marette had not expected that he would come to her like this. She had
+believed that he would take flight into the night, escaping from her as
+he would have run from a plague. She put up her two hands, in the trick
+they had of groping at her white throat, and her lips formed a word
+which she did not speak.
+
+Kent, to his own amazement, was smiling and still on his knees. He
+pulled himself to his feet, and stood up straight, looking down at her
+in that same strange, comforting, all-powerful way. The thrill of it
+was passing into her veins. A flush of color was driving the deathly
+pallor from her face. Her lips were parted, and she breathed quickly, a
+little excitedly.
+
+"I thought--you would go!" she said.
+
+"Not without you," he said. "I have come to take you with me."
+
+He drew out his watch. It was two o'clock. He held it down so that she
+could look at the dial.
+
+"If the storm keeps up, we have three hours before dawn," he said. "How
+soon can you be ready, Marette?"
+
+He was fighting to make his voice quiet and unexcited. It was a
+terrific struggle. And Marette was not blind to it. She drew herself
+from the bed and stood up before him, her two hands still clasped at
+her throbbing throat.
+
+"You believe--that I killed Kedsty," she said in a voice that was
+forced from her lips. "And you have come to help me--to pay me for what
+I tried to do for you? That is it--Jeems?"
+
+"Pay you?" he cried. "I couldn't pay you in a million years! From that
+day you first came to Cardigan's place you gave me life. You came when
+the last spark of hope in me had died. I shall always believe that I
+would have died that night. But you saved me.
+
+"From the moment I saw you I loved you, and I believe it was that love
+that kept me alive. And then you came to me again, down there, through
+this storm. Pay you! I can't. I never shall be able to. Because you
+thought I had killed a man made no difference You came just the same.
+And you came ready to kill, if necessary--for me. I'm not trying to
+tell myself _why_! But you did. You were ready to kill. And I am ready to
+kill--tonight--for you! I haven't got time to think about Kedsty. I'm
+thinking about you. If you killed him, I'm just telling myself there
+was a mighty good reason for it. But I don't believe it was you who
+killed him. You couldn't do it--with those hands!"
+
+He reached out suddenly and seized them, slipping his grip to her
+wrists, so that her hands lay upward in his own, hands that were small,
+slim-fingered, soft-palmed, beautiful.
+
+"They couldn't!" he cried, almost fiercely. "I swear to God they
+couldn't!"
+
+Her eyes and face flamed at his words. "You believe that, Jeems?"
+
+"Yes, just as you believe that I did not kill John Barkley. But the
+world is against us. It is against us both now. And we've got to hunt
+that hidden valley of yours together. Understand, Marette? And
+I'm--rather glad."
+
+He turned toward the door. "Will you be ready in ten minutes?" he asked.
+
+She nodded. "Yes, in ten minutes."
+
+He ran out into the hall and down the stair, locking the front door.
+Then he returned to his hiding-place under the roof. He knew that a
+strange sort of madness was in his blood, for in the face of tonight's
+tragedy only madness could inspire him with the ecstatic thrill that
+was in his veins. Kedsty's death seemed far removed from a more
+important thing--the fact that from this hour Marette was his to fight
+for, that she belonged to him, that she must go with him. He loved her.
+In spite of whoever she was and whatever she had done, he loved her.
+Very soon she would tell him what had happened in the room below, and
+the thing would be clear.
+
+There was one little corner of his brain that fought him. It kept
+telling him, like a parrot, that it was a tress of Marette's hair about
+Kedsty's throat, and that it was the hair that had choked him. But
+Marette would explain that, too. He was sure of it. In the face of the
+facts below he was illogical and unreasonable. He knew it. But his love
+for this girl, who had come strangely and tragically into his life, was
+like an intoxicant. And his faith was illimitable. She did not kill
+Kedsty. Another part of his brain kept repeating that over and over,
+even as he recalled that only a few hours before she had told him quite
+calmly that she would kill the Inspector of Police--if a certain thing
+should happen.
+
+His hands worked as swiftly as his thoughts. He laced up his service
+boots. All the food and dishes on the table he made into a compact
+bundle and placed in the shoulder-pack. He carried this and the rifle
+out into the hall. Then he returned to Marette's room. The door was
+closed. At his knock the girl's voice told him that she was not quite
+ready.
+
+He waited. He could hear her moving about quickly in her room. An
+interval of silence followed. Another five minutes
+passed--ten--fifteen. He tapped at the door again. This time it was
+opened.
+
+He stared, amazed at the change in Marette. She had stepped back from
+the door to let him enter, and stood full in the lamp-glow. Her slim,
+beautiful body was dressed in a velvety blue corduroy; the coat was
+close-fitting and boyish; the skirt came only a little below her knees.
+On her feet were high-topped caribou boots. About her waist was a
+holster and the little black gun. Her hair was done up and crowded
+under a close-fitting turban. She was exquisitely lovely, as she stood
+there waiting for him, and in that loveliness Kent saw there was not
+one thing out of place. The corduroy, the turban, the short skirt, and
+the high, laced boots were made for the wilderness. She was not a
+tenderfoot. She was a little _sourdough_--clear through! Gladness leaped
+into Kent's face. But it was not the transformation of her dress alone
+that amazed him. She was changed in another way. Her cheeks were
+flushed. Her eyes glowed with a strange and wonderful radiance as she
+looked at him. Her lips were red, as he had seen them that first time
+at Cardigan's place. Her pallor, her fear, her horror were gone, and in
+their place was the repressed excitement of one about to enter upon a
+strange adventure.
+
+On the floor was a pack only half as large as Kent's and when he picked
+it up, he found it of almost no weight. He fastened it to his own pack
+while Marette put on her raincoat and went down the stair ahead of him.
+In the hall below she was waiting, when he came down, with Kedsty's big
+rubber slicker in her hands.
+
+"You must put it on," she said.
+
+She shuddered slightly as she held the garment. The color was almost
+gone from her cheeks, as she faced the door beyond which the dead man
+sat in his chair, but the marvelous glow was still in her eyes as she
+helped Kent with his pack and the slicker and afterward stood for an
+instant with her hands touching his breast and her lips as if about to
+speak something which she held back.
+
+A few steps beyond them they heard the storm. It seemed to rush upon
+the bungalow in a new fury, beating at the door, crashing over their
+heads in thunder, daring them to come out. Kent reached up and turned
+out the hall light.
+
+In darkness he opened the door. Rain and wind swept in. With his free
+hand he groped out, found Marette, drew her after him, and closed the
+door again. Entering from the lighted hall into the storm was like
+being swallowed in a pit of blackness. It engulfed and smothered them.
+Then came suddenly a flash of lightning, and he saw Marette's face,
+white and drenched, but looking at him with that same strange glow in
+her eyes. It thrilled him. Even in the darkness it was there. It had
+been there since he had returned to her from Kedsty and had knelt at
+her bedside, with his arms about her for a moment.
+
+Only now, in the beat of the storm, did an answer to the miracle of it
+come to him. It was because of _him_. It was because of his _faith_ in her.
+Even death and horror could not keep it from her eyes. He wanted to cry
+out the joy of his discovery, to give wild voice to it in the teeth of
+the wind and the rain. He felt sweeping through him a force mightier
+than that of the night. Her hands were on his arm, as if she was afraid
+of losing him in that pit of blackness; the soft cling of them was like
+a contact through which came a warm thrill of electrical life. He put
+out his arm and drew her to him, so that for a moment his face pressed
+against the top of her wet little turban.
+
+And then he heard her say: "There is a scow at the bayou, Jeems. It is
+close to the end of the path. M'sieu Fingers has kept it there,
+waiting, ready."
+
+He had been thinking of Crossen's place and an open boat. He blessed
+Fingers again, as he took Marette's hand in his own and started for the
+trail that led through the poplar thicket.
+
+Their feet slopped deep in wet and mud, and with the rain there was a
+wind that took their breath away. It was impossible to see a tree an
+arm's length away, and Kent hoped that the lightning would come
+frequently enough to guide him. In the first flare of it he looked down
+the slope that led riverward. Little rivulets of water were running
+down it. Rocks and stumps were in their way, and underfoot it was
+slippery. Marette's fingers were clinging to his again, as she had held
+to them on the wild race up to Kedsty's bungalow from the barracks. He
+had tingled then in the sheer joy of their thrill, but it was a
+different thrill that stirred him now--an overwhelming emotion of
+possessorship. This night, with its storm and its blackness, was the
+most wonderful of all his nights.
+
+He sensed nothing of its discomfort. It could not beat back the joyous
+racing of the blood in his body. Sun and stars, day and night, sunshine
+and cloud, were trivial and inconsequential to him now. For close to
+him, struggling with him, fighting through the night with him, trusting
+him, helpless without him, was the living, breathing thing he loved
+more than he loved his own life. For many years, without knowing it, he
+had waited for this night, and now that it was upon him, it inundated
+and swept away his old life. He was no longer the huntsman, but the
+hunted. He was no longer alone, but had a priceless thing to fight for,
+a priceless and helpless thing that was clinging to his fingers in the
+darkness. He did not feel like a fugitive, but as one who has come into
+a great triumph. He sensed no uncertainty or doubt.
+
+The river lay ahead, and for him the river had become the soul and the
+promise of life. It was Marette's river and his river, and in a little
+while they would be on it. And Marette would then tell him about
+Kedsty. He was sure of that. She would tell him what had happened while
+he slept. His faith was illimitable.
+
+They came into the sodden dip at the foot of the ridge, and the
+lightning revealed to him the edge of the poplar growth in which
+O'Connor had seen Marette many weeks ago. The bayou trail wound through
+this, and Kent struck out for it blindly in the darkness. He did not
+try to talk, but he freed his companion's hand and put his arm about
+her when they came to the level ground, so that she was sheltered by
+him from the beat of the storm. Then brush swished in their faces, and
+they stopped, waiting for the lightning again. Kent was not anxious for
+it to come. He drew the girl still closer, and in that pit of
+blackness, with the deluge about her and the crash of thunder over her
+head, she snuggled up against his breast, the throb of her body against
+him, waiting, watching, with him. Her frailty, the helplessness of her,
+the slimness of her in the crook of his arm, filled him with an
+exquisite exultation. He did not think of her now as the splendid,
+fearless creature who had leveled her little black gun at the three men
+in barracks. She was no longer the mysterious, defiant, unafraid person
+who had held him in a sort of awe that first hour in Kedsty's place.
+For she was crumpled against him now, utterly dependent and afraid. In
+that chaos of storm something told him that her nerve was broken, that
+without him she would be lost and would cry out in fear. _And he was
+glad_! He held her tighter; he bent his head until his face touched the
+wet, crushed hair under the edge of her turban. And then the lightning
+split open the night again, and he saw the way ahead of him to the
+trail.
+
+Even in darkness it was not difficult to follow in the clean-cut wagon
+path. Over their heads the tops of the poplars swished and wailed.
+Under their feet the roadway in places was a running stream or
+inundated until it became a pool. In pitch blackness they struck such a
+pool, and in spite of the handicap of his packs and rifle Kent stopped
+suddenly, and picked Marette up in his arms, and carried her until they
+reached high ground. He did not ask permission. And Marette, for a
+minute or two, lay crumpled up close in his arms, and for a thrilling
+instant his face touched her rain-wet cheek.
+
+The miracle of their adventure was that neither spoke. To Kent the
+silence between them had become a thing which he had no desire to
+break. In that silence, excused and abetted by the tumult of the storm,
+he felt that a wonderful something was drawing them closer and closer
+together, and that words might spoil the indescribable magic of the
+thing that was happening. When he set Marette on her feet again, her
+hand accidentally fell upon his, and for a moment her fingers closed
+upon it in a soft pressure that meant more to him than a thousand words
+of gratitude.
+
+A quarter of a mile beyond the poplar thicket they came to the edge of
+the spruce and cedar timber, and Soon the thick walls of the forest
+shut them in, sheltering them from the wind, but the blackness was even
+more like that of a bottomless pit. Kent had noticed that the thunder
+and lightning were drifting steadily eastward, and now the occasional
+flashes of electrical fire scarcely illumined the trail ahead of them.
+The rain was not beating so fiercely. They could hear the wail of the
+spruce and cedar tops and the slush of their boots in mud and water. An
+interval came, where the spruce-tops met overhead, when it was almost
+calm. It was then that Kent threw out of him a great, deep breath and
+laughed joyously and exultantly.
+
+"Are you wet, little Gray Goose?"
+
+"Only outside, Big Otter. My feathers have kept me dry."
+
+Her voice had a trembling, half-sobbing, half-rejoicing note in it. It
+was not the voice of one who had recently killed a man. In it was a
+pathos which Kent knew she was trying to hide behind brave words. Her
+hands clung to the arm of his rubber slicker even as they stood there,
+close together, as if she was afraid something might drag them apart in
+that treacherous gloom. Kent, fumbling for a moment, drew from an inner
+pocket a dry handkerchief. Then he found her face, tilted it a bit
+upward, and wiped it dry. He might have done the same thing to a child
+who had been crying. After that he scrubbed his own, and they went on,
+his arm about her again.
+
+It was half a mile from the edge of the forest to the bayou, and half a
+dozen times in that distance Kent took the girl in his arms and carried
+her through water that almost reached his boot tops. The lightning no
+longer served them. The rain still fell steadily, but the wind had gone
+with the eastward sweep of the storm. Close-hung with the forest walls,
+the bayou itself was indiscernible in the blackness. Marette guided him
+now, though Kent walked ahead of her, holding firmly to her hand.
+Unless Fingers had changed its location, the scow should be somewhere
+within forty or fifty paces of the end of the trail. It was small, a
+two-man scow, with a tight little house built amidships. And it was
+tied close up against the shore. Marette told him this as they felt
+their way through brush and reeds. Then he stumbled against something
+taut and knee-high, and he found it was the tie-rope.
+
+Leaving Marette with her back to the anchor tree, he went aboard. The
+water was three or four inches deep in the bottom of the scow, but the
+cabin was built on a platform raised above the floor of the boat, and
+Kent hoped it was still dry. He groped until he found the twisted wire
+which held the door shut. Opening it, he ducked his head low and
+entered. The little room was not more than four feet high, and for
+greater convenience he fell upon his knees while fumbling under his
+slicker for his water-proof box of matches. The water had not yet risen
+above the floor.
+
+The first light he struck revealed the interior to him. It was a tiny
+cabin, scarcely larger than some boxes he had seen. It was about eight
+feet long by six in width, and the ceiling was so low that, even
+kneeling, his head touched it. His match burned out, and he lighted
+another. This time he saw a candle stuck in a bit of split birch that
+projected from the wall. He crept to it and lighted it. For a moment he
+looked about him, and again he blessed Fingers. The little scow was
+prepared for a voyage. Two narrow bunks were built at the far end, one
+so close above the other that Kent grinned as he thought of squeezing
+between. There were blankets. Within reach of his arm was a tiny stove,
+and close to the stove a supply of kindling and dry wood. The whole
+thing made him think of a child's playhouse. Yet there was still room
+for a wide, comfortable, cane-bottomed chair, a stool, and a
+smooth-planed board fastened under a window, so that it answered the
+purpose of a table. This table was piled with many packages.
+
+He stripped off his packs and returned for Marette. She had come to the
+edge of the scow and called to him softly as she heard him splashing
+through the water. Her arms were reaching toward him, to meet him in
+the darkness. He carried her through the shallow sea about his feet and
+laughed as he put her down on the edge of the platform at the door. It
+was a low, joyous laugh. The yellow light of the candle sputtered in
+their wet faces. Only dimly could he see her, but her eyes were shining.
+
+"Your nest, little Gray Goose," he cried gently.
+
+Her hand reached up and touched his face. "You have been good to me,
+Jeems," she said, a little tremble in her voice. "You may--kiss me."
+
+Out in the beat of the rain Kent's heart choked him with song. His soul
+swelled with the desire to shout forth a paean of joy and triumph at
+the world he was leaving this night for all time. With the warm thrill
+of Marette's lips he had become the superman, and as he leaped ashore
+in the darkness and cut the tie-rope with a single slash of his knife,
+he wanted to give voice to the thing that was in him as the rivermen
+had chanted in the glory of their freedom the day the big brigade
+started north. And he _did_ sing, under his laughing, sobbing breath.
+With a giant's strength he sent the scow out into the bayou, and then
+back and forth he swung the long one-man sweep, twisting the craft
+riverward with the force of two pairs of arms instead of one. Behind
+the closed door of the tiny cabin was all that the world now held worth
+fighting for. By turning his head he could see the faint illumination
+of the candle at the window. The light--the cabin--Marette!
+
+He laughed inanely, foolishly, like a boy. He began to hear a dull,
+droning murmur, a sound that with each stroke of the sweep grew into a
+more distinct, cataract-like roar. It was the river. Swollen by flood,
+it was a terrifying sound. But Kent did not dread it. It was _his_ river;
+it was his friend. It was the pulse and throb of life to him now. The
+growing tumult of it was not menace, but the joyous thunder of many
+voices calling to him, rejoicing at his coming. It grew in his ears.
+Over his head the black sky opened again, and a deluge of rain fell
+straight down. But above the sound of it the rush of the river drew
+nearer, and still nearer. He felt the first eddying swirl of it against
+the scow head, and powerful hands seemed to reach in out of the
+darkness. He knew that the nose of the current had caught him and was
+carrying him out on the breast of the stream. He shipped the sweep and
+straightened himself, facing the utter chaos of blackness ahead. He
+felt under him the slow and mighty pulse of the great flood as it swept
+toward the Slave, the Mackenzie, and the Arctic. And he cried out at
+last in the downpour of storm, a cry of joy, of exultation, of hope
+that reached beyond the laws of men--and then he turned toward the
+little cabin, where through the thickness of sodden night the tiny
+window was glowing yellow with candle-light.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+To the cabin Kent groped his way, and knocked, and it was Marette who
+opened the door for him and stepped back for him to enter. Like a great
+wet dog he came in, doubling until his hands almost touched the floor.
+He sensed the incongruity of it, the misplacement of his overgrown body
+in this playhouse thing, and he grinned through the trickles of wet
+that ran down his face, and tried to see. Marette had taken off her
+turban and rain-coat, and she, too, stooped low in the four-feet space
+of the cabin--but not so ridiculously low as Kent. He dropped on his
+knees again. And then he saw that in the tiny stove a fire was burning.
+The crackle of it rose above the beat of the rain on the roof, and the
+air was already mellowing with the warmth of it. He looked at Marette.
+Her wet hair was still clinging to her face, her feet and arms and part
+of her body were wet; but her eyes were shining, and she was smiling at
+him. She seemed to him, in this moment, like a child that was glad it
+had found refuge. He had thought that the terror of the night would
+show in her face, but it was gone. She was not thinking of the thunder
+and the lightning, the black trail, or of Kedsty lying dead in his
+bungalow. She was thinking of him.
+
+He laughed outright. It was a joyous, thrilling thing, this black night
+with the storm over their heads and the roll of the great river under
+them--they two--alone--in this cockleshell cabin that was not high
+enough to stand in and scarcely big enough in any direction to turn
+round in. The snug cheer of it, the warmth of the fire beginning to
+reach their chilled bodies, and the inspiring crackle of the birch in
+the little stove filled Kent, for a space, with other thoughts than
+those of the world they were leaving. And Marette, whose eyes and lips
+were smiling at him softly in the candle-glow, seemed also to have
+forgotten. It was the little window that brought them back to the
+tragedy of their flight. Kent visioned it as it must look from the
+shore--a telltale blotch of light traveling through the darkness. There
+were occasional cabins for several miles below the Landing, and eyes
+turned riverward in the storm might see it. He made his way to the
+window and fastened his slicker over it.
+
+"We're off, Gray Goose," he said then, rubbing his hands. "Would it
+seem more homelike if I smoked?"
+
+She nodded, her eyes on the slicker at the window.
+
+"It's pretty safe," said Kent, fishing out his pipe, and beginning to
+fill it. "Everybody asleep, probably. But we won't take any chances."
+The scow was swinging sideways in the current. Kent felt the change in
+its movement, and added: "No danger of being wrecked, either. There
+isn't a rock or rapids for thirty miles. River clear as a floor. If we
+bump ashore, don't get frightened."
+
+"I'm not afraid--of the river," she said. Then, with rather startling
+unexpectedness, she asked him, "Where will they look for us tomorrow?"
+
+Kent lighted his pipe, eyeing her a bit speculatively as she seated
+herself on the stool, leaning toward him as she waited for an answer to
+her question.
+
+"The woods, the river, everywhere," he said. "They'll look for a
+missing boat, of course. We've simply got to watch behind us and take
+advantage of a good start."
+
+"Will the rain wipe out our footprints, Jeems?"
+
+"Yes. Everything in the open."
+
+"But--perhaps--in a sheltered place--?"
+
+"We were in no sheltered place," he assured her. "Can you remember that
+we were, Gray Goose?"
+
+She shook her head slowly. "No. But there was Mooie, under the window."
+
+"His footprints will be wiped out."
+
+"I am glad. I would not have him, or M'sieu Fingers, or any of our
+friends brought into this trouble."
+
+She made no effort to hide the relief his words brought her. He was a
+little amazed that she should worry over Fingers and the old Indian in
+this hour of their own peril. That danger he had decided to keep as far
+from her mind as possible. But she could not help realizing the
+impending menace of it. She must know that within a few hours Kedsty
+would be found, and the long arm of the wilderness police would begin
+its work. And if it caught them--
+
+She had thrust her feet toward him and was wriggling them inside her
+boots, so that he heard the slushing sound of water. "Ugh, but they are
+wet!" she shivered. "Will you unlace them and pull them off for me,
+Jeems?"
+
+He laid his pipe aside and knelt close to her. It took him five minutes
+to get the boots off. Then he held one of her sodden little feet close
+between his two big hands.
+
+"Cold--cold as ice," he said. "You must take off your stockings,
+Marette. Please."
+
+He arranged a pile of wood in front of the stove and covered it with a
+blanket which he pulled from one of the bunks. Then, still on his
+knees, he drew the cane chair close to the fire and covered it with a
+second blanket. A few moments later Marette was tucked comfortably in
+this chair, with her bare feet on the blanketed pile of wood. Kent
+opened the stove door. Then he extinguished one of the smoking candles,
+and after that, the other. The flaming birch illumined the little cabin
+with a mellower light. It gave a subdued flush to the girl's face. Her
+eyes seemed to Kent wonderfully soft and beautiful in that changed
+light. And when he had finished, she reached out a hand, and for an
+instant it touched his face and his wet hair so lightly that he sensed
+the thrilling caress of it without feeling its weight.
+
+"You are so good to me, Jeems," she said, and he thought there was a
+little choking note in her throat.
+
+He had seated himself on the floor, close to her chair, with his back
+to the wall. "It is because I love you, Gray Goose," he replied
+quietly, looking straight into the fire.
+
+She was silent. She, too, was looking into the fire. Close over their
+heads they heard the beating of the rain, like a thousand soft little
+fists pounding the top of the cabin. Under them they could feel the
+slow swinging of the scow as it responded to the twists and vagaries of
+the current that was carrying them on. And Kent, unseen by the girl who
+was looking away from him, raised his eyes. The birch light was glowing
+in her hair; it trembled on her white throat; her long lashes were
+caught in the shimmer of it. And, looking at her, Kent thought of
+Kedsty lying back in his bungalow room, choked to death by a tress of
+that glorious hair, so near to him now that, by leaning a little
+forward, he might have touched it with his lips. The thought brought
+him no horror. For even as he looked, one of her hands crept up to her
+cheek--the small, soft hand that had touched his face and hair as
+lightly as a bit of thistle-down--and he knew that two hands like that
+could not have killed a man who was fighting for life when he died.
+
+And Kent reached up, and took the hand, and held it close in his own,
+as he said, "Little Gray Goose, please tell me now--what happened in
+Kedsty's room?"
+
+His voice thrilled with an immeasurable faith. He wanted her to know,
+no matter what had happened, that this faith and his love for her could
+not be shaken. He believed in her, and would always believe in her.
+
+Already he was sure that he knew how Kedsty had died. The picture of
+the tragedy had pieced itself together in his mind, bit by bit. While
+he slept, Marette and a man were down in the big room with the
+Inspector of Police. The climax had come, and Kedsty was struck a
+blow--in some unaccountable way--with his own gun. Then, just as Kedsty
+was recovering sufficiently from the shock of the blow to fight,
+Marette's companion had killed him. Horrified, dazed by what had
+already happened, perhaps unconscious, she had been powerless to
+prevent the use of a tress of her hair in the murderer's final work.
+Kent, in this picture, eliminated the boot-laces and the curtain cords.
+He knew that the unusual and the least expected happened frequently in
+crime. And Marette's long hair was flowing loose about her. To use it
+had simply been the first inspiration of the murderer. And Kent
+believed, as he waited for her answer now, that Marette would tell him
+this.
+
+And as he waited, he felt her fingers tighten in his hand.
+
+"Tell me, Gray Goose--what happened?"
+
+"I--don't--know--Jeems--"
+
+His eyes went to her suddenly from the fire, as if he was not quite
+sure he had heard what she had said. She did not move her head, but
+continued to gaze unseeingly into the flames. Inside his palm her
+fingers worked to his thumb and held it tightly again, as they had
+clung to it when she was frightened by the thunder and lightning.
+
+"I don't know what happened, Jeems."
+
+This time he did not feel the clinging thrill of her little fingers and
+soft palm. Deep within him he experienced something that was like a
+sudden and unexpected blow. He was ready to fight for her until his
+last breath was gone. He was ready to believe anything she told
+him--anything except this impossible thing which she had just spoken.
+For she did know what had happened in Kedsty's room. She knew--unless--
+
+Suddenly his heart leaped with joyous hope. "You mean--you were
+unconscious?" he cried in a low voice that trembled with his eagerness.
+"You fainted--and it happened then?"
+
+She shook her head. "No. I was asleep in my room. I didn't intend to
+sleep, but--I did. Something awakened me. I thought I had been
+dreaming. But something kept pulling me, pulling me downstairs. And
+when I went, I found Kedsty like that. He was dead. I was paralyzed,
+standing there, when you came."
+
+She drew her, hand away from him, gently, but significantly. "I know
+you can't believe me, Jeems. It is impossible for you to believe me."
+
+"And you don't want me to believe you, Marette."
+
+"Yes--I do. You must believe me."
+
+"But the tress of hair--your hair--round Kedsty's neck--"
+
+He stopped. His words, spoken gently as they were, seemed brutal to
+him. Yet he could not see that they affected her. She did not flinch.
+He saw no tremor of horror. Steadily she continued to look into the
+fire. And his brain grew confused. Never in all his experience had he
+seen such absolute and unaffected self-control. And somehow, it chilled
+him. It chilled him even as he wanted to reach out and gather her close
+in his arms, and pour his love into her ears, entreating her to tell
+him everything, to keep nothing back from him that might help in the
+fight he was going to make.
+
+And then she said, "Jeems, if we should be caught by the Police--it
+would probably be quite soon, wouldn't it?"
+
+"They won't catch us."
+
+"But our greatest danger of being caught is right now, isn't it?" she
+insisted.
+
+Kent took out his watch and leaned over to look at it in the fireglow.
+"It is three o'clock," he said. "Give me another day and night, Gray
+Goose, and the Police will never find us."
+
+For a moment or two more she was silent. Then her hand reached out, and
+her fingers twined softly round his thumb again. "Jeems--when we are
+safe--when we are sure the Police won't find us--I will tell you all
+that I know--about what happened in Kedsty's room. And I will tell
+you--about--the hair. I will tell you--everything." Her fingers
+tightened almost fiercely. "Everything," she repeated. "I will tell you
+about that in Kedsty's room--and I will tell you about myself--and
+after that--I am afraid--you won't like me."
+
+"I love you," he said, making no movement to touch her. "No matter what
+you tell me, Gray Goose, I shall love you."
+
+She gave a little cry, scarcely more than a broken note in her throat,
+and Kent--had her face been turned toward him then--would have seen the
+glory that came into it, and into her eyes, like a swift flash of
+light--and passed as swiftly away.
+
+What he did see, when she turned her head, were eyes caught suddenly by
+something at the cabin door. He looked. Water was trickling in slowly
+over the sill.
+
+"I expected that," he said cheerfully. "Our scow is turning into a
+rain-barrel, Marette. Unless I bail out, we'll soon be flooded."
+
+He reached for his slicker and put it on. "It won't take me long to
+throw the water overboard," he added. "And while I'm doing that I want
+you to take _off_ your wet things and tuck yourself into bed. Will you,
+Gray Goose?"
+
+"I'm not tired, but if you think it is best--" Her hand touched his arm.
+
+"It is best," he said, and for a moment he bent over her until his lips
+touched her hair.
+
+Then he seized a pail, and went out into the rain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+It was that hour when, with clear skies, the gray northern dawn would
+have been breaking faintly over the eastern forests. Kent found the
+darkness more fog-like; about him was a grayer, ghostlier sort of
+gloom. But he could not see the water under his feet. Nor could he see
+the rail of the scow, or the river. From the stern, ten feet from the
+cabin door, the cabin itself was swallowed up and invisible.
+
+With the steady, swinging motion of the riverman he began bailing. So
+regular became his movements that they ran in a sort of rhythmic
+accompaniment to his thoughts. The monotonous _splash, splash, splash_ of
+the outflung pails of water assumed, after a few minutes, the character
+of a mechanical thing. He could smell the nearness of the shore. Even
+in the rain the tang of cedar and balsam came to him faintly.
+
+But it was the river that impressed itself most upon his senses. It
+seemed to him, as the minutes passed, like a living thing. He could
+hear it gurgling and playing under the end of the scow. And with that
+sound there was another and more indescribable thing, the tremble of
+it, the pulse of it, the thrill of it in the impenetrable gloom, the
+life of it as it swept on in a slow and mighty flood between its
+wilderness walls. Kent had always said, "You can hear the river's heart
+beat--if you know how to listen for it." And he heard it now. He felt
+it. The rain could not beat it out, nor could the splash of the water
+he was throwing overboard drown it, and the darkness could not hide it
+from the vision that was burning like a living coal within him. Always
+it was the river that had given him consolation in times of loneliness.
+For him it had grown into a thing with a soul, a thing that personified
+hope, courage, comradeship, everything that was big and great in final
+achievement. And tonight--for he still thought of the darkness as
+night--the soul of it seemed whispering to him a sort of paean.
+
+He could not lose. That was the thought that filled him. Never had his
+pulse beat with greater assurance, never had a more positive sense of
+the inevitable possessed him. It was inconceivable, he thought, even to
+fear the possibility of being taken by the Police. He was more than a
+man fighting for his freedom alone, more than an individual struggling
+for the right to exist. A thing vastly more priceless than either
+freedom or life, if they were to be accepted alone, waited for him in
+the little cabin, shut in by its sea of darkness. And ahead of them lay
+their world. He emphasized that. _Their_ world--the world which, in an
+illusive and unreal sort of way, had been a part of his dreams all his
+life. In that world they would shut themselves in. No one would ever
+find them. And the glory of the sun and the stars and God's open
+country would be with them always.
+
+Marette was the very heart of that reality which impinged itself upon
+him now. He did not worry about what it was she would tell him
+tomorrow, or day after tomorrow. He believed that it was then--when she
+had told him what there was to tell, and he still reached, out his arms
+to her--that she would come into those arms. And he knew that nothing
+that might have happened in Kedsty's room would keep his arms from
+reaching, to her. Such was his faith, potent as the mighty flood hidden
+in the gray-ghost gloom of approaching dawn.
+
+Yet he did not expect to win easily. As he worked, his mind swept up
+and down the Three Rivers from the Landing to Fort Simpson, and
+mentally he pictured the situations that might arise, and how he would
+triumph over them. He figured that the men at Barracks would not enter
+Kedsty's bungalow until noon at the earliest. The Police gasoline
+launch would probably set out on a river search soon after. By
+mid-afternoon the scow would have a fifty-mile start.
+
+Before darkness came again they would be through the Death Chute, where
+Follette and Ladouceur swam their mad race for the love of a girl. And
+not many miles below the Chute was a swampy country where he could hide
+the scow. Then they would start overland, west and north. Given until
+another sunset, and they would be safe. This was what he expected. But
+if it came to fighting--he would fight.
+
+The rain had slackened to a thin drizzle by the time he finished his
+bailing. The aroma of cedar and balsam came to him more clearly, and he
+heard more distinctly the murmuring surge of the river. He tapped again
+at the door of the cabin, and Marette answered him.
+
+The fire had burned down to a bed of glowing coals when he entered.
+Again he fell on his knees, and took off his dripping slicker.
+
+The girl greeted him from the berth. "You look like a great bear,
+Jeems." There was a glad, welcoming note in her voice.
+
+He laughed, and drew the stool beside her, and managed to sit on it,
+the roof compelling him to bend his head over a little. "I feel like an
+elephant in a birdcage," he replied. "Are you comfortable, little Gray
+Goose?"
+
+"Yes. But you, Jeems? You are wet!"
+
+"But so happy that I don't feel it, Gray Goose."
+
+He could make her out only dimly there in the darkness of the berth.
+Her face was a pale shadow, and she had loosened her damp hair so that
+the warmth and dry air might reach it more easily. Kent wondered if she
+could hear the beating of his heart. He forgot the fire, and the
+darkness grew thicker. He could no longer see the pale outline of her
+face, and he drew back a little, possessed by the thought that it was
+sacrilegious to bend nearer to her, like a thief, in that gloom. She
+sensed his movement, and her hand reached to him and lay lightly with
+its fingertips touching his arm.
+
+"Jeems," she said softly. "I'm not sorry--now--that I came up to
+Cardigan's place that day--when you thought you were dying. I wasn't
+wrong. You are different. And I made fun of you then, and laughed at
+you, because I knew that you were not going to die. Will you forgive
+me?"
+
+He laughed happily. "It's funny how little things work out, sometimes,"
+he said. "Wasn't a kingdom lost once upon a time because some fellow
+didn't have a horseshoe? Anyway, I knew of a man whose life was saved
+because of a broken pipe-stem. And you came to me, and I'm here with
+you now, because--"
+
+"Of what?" she whispered.
+
+"Because of something that happened a long time ago," he said.
+"Something you wouldn't dream could have anything to do with you or
+with me. Shall I tell you about it, Marette?"
+
+Her fingers pressed slightly upon his arm. "Yes."
+
+"Of course, it's a story of the Police," he began. "And I won't mention
+this fellow's name. You may think of him as that red-headed O'Connor,
+if you want to. But I don't say that it was he. He was a constable in
+the Service and had been away North looking up some Indians who were
+brewing an intoxicating liquor from roots. That was six years ago. And
+he caught something. Le Mort Rouge, we sometimes call it--the Red
+Death--or smallpox. And he was alone when the fever knocked him down,
+three hundred miles from anywhere. His Indian ran away at the first
+sign of it, and he had just time to get up his tent before he was flat
+on his back. I won't try to tell you of the days he went through. It
+was a living death. And he would have died, there is no doubt of it, if
+it hadn't been for a stranger who came along. He was a white man.
+Marette, it doesn't take a great deal of nerve to go up against a man
+with a gun, when you've got a gun of your own; and it doesn't take such
+a lot of nerve to go into battle when a thousand others are going with
+you. But it does take nerve to face what that stranger faced. And the
+sick man was nothing to him. He went into that tent and nursed the
+other back to life. Then the sickness got him, and for ten weeks those
+two were together, each fighting to save the other's life, and they won
+out. But the glory of it was with the stranger. He was going west. The
+constable was going south. They shook hands and parted."
+
+Marette's fingers tightened on Kent's arm. And Kent went on.
+
+"And the constable never forgot, Gray Goose. He wanted the day to come
+when he might repay. And the time came. It was years later, and it
+worked out in a curious way. A man was murdered. And the constable, who
+had become a sergeant now, had talked with the dead man only a little
+while before he was killed. Returning for something he had forgotten,
+it was the sergeant who found him dead. Very shortly afterward a man
+was arrested. There was blood on his clothing. The evidence was
+convincing, deadly. And this man--"
+
+Kent paused, and in the darkness Marette's hand crept down his arm to
+his hand, and her fingers closed round it.
+
+"Was the man you lied to save," she whispered.
+
+"Yes. When the halfbreed's bullet got me, I thought it was a good
+chance to repay Sandy McTrigger for what he did for me in that tent
+years before. But it wasn't heroic. It wasn't even brave. I thought I
+was going to die and that I was risking nothing."
+
+And then there came a soft, joyous little laugh from where her head lay
+on the pillow. "And all the time you were lying so splendidly, Jeems--I
+KNEW," she cried. "I knew that you didn't kill Barkley, and I knew that
+you weren't going to die, and I knew what happened in that tent ten
+years ago. And--Jeems--Jeems--"
+
+She raised herself from the pillow. Her breath was coming a little
+excitedly. Both her hands, instead of one, were gripping his hand now.
+"I knew that you didn't kill John Barkley," she repeated. "And--_Sandy
+McTrigger didn't kill him_!"
+
+"But--"
+
+"He _didn't_," she interrupted him, almost fiercely. "He was innocent, as
+innocent as you were. Jeems--I Jeems--I know who killed Barkley. Oh, I
+_know_--I _know_!"
+
+A choking sob came into her throat, and then she added, in a voice
+which she was straining to make calm, "Don't think that I haven't faith
+in you because I can't tell you more now, Jeems," she said. "You will
+understand--quite soon. When we are safe from the Police, I shall tell
+you. I shall keep nothing from you then. I shall tell you about
+Barkley, and Kedsty--everything. But I can't now. It won't be long.
+When you tell me we are safe, I shall believe you. And then--" She
+withdrew her hands from his and dropped back on her pillow.
+
+"And then--what?" he asked, leaning far over.
+
+"You may not like me, Jeems."
+
+"I love you," he whispered. "Nothing in the world can stop my loving
+you."
+
+"Even if I tell you--soon--that I killed Barkley?"
+
+"No. You would be lying."
+
+"Or--if I told you--that I--killed--Kedsty?"
+
+"No matter what you said, or what proof there might be back there, I
+would not believe you."
+
+She was silent. And then, "Jeems--"
+
+"Yes, Niska, Little Goddess--?"
+
+"I'm going to tell you something--now!"
+
+He waited.
+
+"It is going to--shock you--Jeems."
+
+He felt her arms reaching up. Her two hands touched his shoulders.
+
+"Are you listening?"
+
+"Yes, I am listening."
+
+"Because I'm not going to say it very loud." And then she whispered,
+"Jeems--_I love you_!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+In the slowly breaking gloom of the cabin, with Marette's arms round
+his neck, her soft lips given him to kiss, Kent for many minutes was
+conscious of nothing but the thrill of his one great hope on earth come
+true. What he had prayed for was no longer a prayer, and what he had
+dreamed of was no longer a dream; yet for a space the reality of it
+seemed unreal. What he said in those first moments of his exaltation he
+would probably never remember.
+
+His own physical existence seemed a thing trivial and almost lost, a
+thing submerged and swallowed up by the warm beat and throb of that
+other life, a thousand times more precious than his own, which he held
+in his arms. Yet with the mad thrill that possessed him, in the embrace
+of his arms, there was an infinite tenderness, a gentleness, that drew
+from Marette's lips a low, glad whispering of his name. She drew his
+head down and kissed him, and Kent fell upon his knees at her side and
+crushed his face close down to her--while outside the patter of rain on
+the roof had ceased, and the fog-like darkness was breaking with gray
+dawn.
+
+In that dawn of the new day Kent came at last out of the cabin and
+looked upon a splendid world. In his breast was the glory of a thing
+new-born, and the world, like himself, was changed. Storm had passed.
+The gray river lay under his eyes. Shoreward he made out the dark
+outlines of the deep spruce and cedar and balsam forests. About him
+there was a great stillness, broken only by the murmur of the river and
+the ripple of water under the scow. Wind had gone with the black
+rainclouds, and Kent, as he looked about him, saw the swift dissolution
+of the last shadows of night, and the breaking in the East of a new
+paradise. In the East, as the minutes passed, there came a soft and
+luminous gray, and after that, swiftly, with the miracle of far
+Northern dawn, a vast, low-burning fire seemed to start far beyond the
+forests, tinting the sky with a delicate pink that crept higher and
+higher as Kent watched it. The river, all at once, came out of its last
+drifting haze of fog and night. The scow was about in the middle of the
+channel. Two hundred yards on either side were thick green walls of
+forest glistening fresh and cool with the wet of storm and breathing
+forth the perfume which Kent was drawing deep into his lungs.
+
+In the cabin he heard sound. Marette was up, and he was eager to have
+her come out and stand with him in this glory of their first day. He
+watched the smoke of the fire he had built, hardwood smoke that drifted
+up white and clean into the rain-washed air.
+
+The smell of it, like the smell of balsam and cedar, was to Kent the
+aroma of life. And then he began to clean out what was left of the
+water in the bottom of the scow, and as he worked he whistled. He
+wanted Marette to hear that whistle. He wanted her to know that day had
+brought with it no doubt for him. A great and glorious world was about
+them and ahead of them. And they were safe.
+
+As he worked, his mind became more than ever set upon the resolution to
+take no chances. He paused in his whistling for a moment to laugh
+softly and exultantly as he thought of the years of experience which
+were his surest safeguard now. He had become almost uncannily expert in
+all the finesse and trickery of his craft of hunting human game, and he
+knew what the man-hunters would do and what they would not do. He had
+them checkmated at the start. And, besides--with Kedsty, O'Connor, and
+himself gone--the Landing was short-handed just at present. There was
+an enormous satisfaction in that. But even with a score of men behind
+him Kent knew that he would beat them. His hazard, if there was peril
+at all, lay in this first day. Only the Police gasoline launch could
+possibly overtake them. And with the start they had, he was sure they
+would pass the Death Chute, conceal the scow, and take to the untracked
+forests north and west before the launch could menace them. After that
+he would keep always west and north, deeper and deeper into that wild
+and untraveled country which would be the last place in which the Law
+would seek for them. He straightened himself and looked at the smoke
+again, drifting like gray-white lace between him and the blue of the
+sky, and in that moment the sun capped the tall green tops of the
+highest cedars, and day broke gloriously over the earth.
+
+For a quarter of an hour longer Kent mopped at the floor of the scow,
+and then--with a suddenness that drew him up as if a whip-lash had
+snapped behind him--he caught another aroma in the clean,
+forest-scented air. It was bacon and coffee! He had believed that
+Marette was taking her time in putting on dry footwear and making some
+sort of morning toilet. Instead of that, she was getting breakfast. It
+was not an extraordinary thing to do. To fry bacon and make coffee was
+not, in any sense, a remarkable achievement. But at the present moment
+it was the crowning touch to Kent's paradise. She was getting HIS
+breakfast! And--coffee and bacon--To Kent those two things had always
+stood for home. They were intimate and companionable. Where there were
+coffee and bacon, he had known children who laughed, women who sang,
+and men with happy, welcoming faces. They were home-builders.
+
+"Whenever you smell coffee and bacon at a cabin," O'Connor had always
+said, "they'll ask you in to breakfast if you knock at the door."
+
+But Kent was not recalling his old trail mate's words. In the present
+moment all other thoughts were lost in the discovery that Marette was
+getting breakfast--for him.
+
+He went to the door and listened. Then he opened it and looked in.
+Marette was on her knees before the open door of the stove, toasting
+bread on two forks. Her face was flushed pink. She had not taken time
+to brush her hair, but had woven it carelessly into a thick braid that
+fell down her back. She gave a little exclamation of mock
+disappointment when she saw Kent.
+
+"Why didn't you wait?" she remonstrated. "I wanted to surprise you."
+
+"You have," he said. "And I couldn't wait. I had to come in and help."
+
+He was inside the door and on his knees beside her. As he reached for
+the two forks, his lips pressed against her hair. The pink deepened in
+Marette's face, and the soft little note that was like laughter came
+into her throat. Her hand caressed his cheek as she rose to her feet,
+and Kent laughed back. And after that, as she arranged things on the
+shelf table, her hand now and then touched his shoulder, or his hair,
+and two or three times he heard that wonderful little throat-note that
+sent through him a wild pulse of happiness. And then, he sitting in the
+low chair and she on the stool, they drew close together before the
+board that answered as a table, and ate their breakfast. Marette poured
+his coffee and stirred sugar and condensed milk in it, and so happy was
+Kent that he did not tell her he used neither milk nor sugar in his
+coffee. The morning sun burst through the little window, and through
+the open door Kent pointed to the glory of it on the river and in the
+shimmering green of the forests slipping away behind. When they had
+finished, Marette went outside with him.
+
+For a space she stood silent and without movement, looking upon the
+marvelous world that encompassed them. It seemed to Kent that for a few
+moments she did not breathe. With her head thrown back and her white
+throat bare to the soft, balsam-laden air she faced the forests. Her
+eyes became suddenly filled with the luminous glow of stars. Her face
+reflected the radiance of the rising sun, and Kent, looking at her,
+knew that he had never seen her so beautiful as in these wonderful
+moments. He held his own breath, for he also knew that Niska, his
+goddess, was looking upon her own world again after a long time away.
+
+Her world--and his. Different from all the other worlds God had ever
+made; different, even, from the world only a few miles behind them at
+the Landing. For here was no sound or whisper of destroying human life.
+They were in the embrace of the Great North, and it was drawing them
+closer, and with each minute nearer to the mighty, pulsing heart of it.
+
+The forests hung heavy and green and glistening with the wet of storm;
+out of them came the tremulous breath of life and the glory of living;
+they hugged the shores like watchful hosts guarding the river from
+civilization--and suddenly the girl held out her arms, and Kent heard
+the low, thrilling cry that came to her lips.
+
+She had forgotten him. She had forgotten everything but the river, the
+forests, and the untrod worlds beyond them, and he was glad. For this
+world that she was welcoming, that her soul was crying out to, was his
+world, for ever and ever. It held his dreams, his hopes, all the
+desires that he had in life. And when at last Marette turned toward him
+slowly, his arms were reaching out to her, and in his face she saw that
+same glory which filled her own.
+
+"I'm glad--glad," she cried softly. "Oh, Jeems--I'm glad!"
+
+She came into his arms without hesitation; her hands stroked his face;
+and then she stood with her head against his shoulder, looking ahead,
+breathing deeply now of the sweet, clear air filled with the elixir of
+the hovering forests. She did not speak, or move, and Kent remained
+quiet. The scow drifted around a bend. Shoreward a great moose splashed
+up out of the water, and they could hear him afterward, crashing
+through the forest. Her body tensed, but she did not speak. After a
+little he heard her whisper,
+
+"It has been a long time, Jeems. I have been away four years."
+
+"And now we are going home, little Gray Goose. You will not be lonely?"
+
+"No. I was lonely down there. There were so many people, and so many
+things, that I was homesick for the woods and mountains. I believe I
+would have died soon. There were only two things I loved, Jeems--"
+
+"What?" he asked.
+
+"Pretty dresses--and shoes."
+
+His arms closed about her a little more tightly. "I--I understand," he
+laughed softly. "That is why you came, that first time, with pretty
+high-heeled pumps."
+
+He bowed his head, and she turned her face to him. On her upturned
+mouth he kissed her.
+
+"More than any other man ever loved a woman I love you, Niska, little
+goddess," he cried.
+
+The minutes and the hours of that day stood out ever afterward in
+Kent's life as unforgettable memories. There were times when they
+seemed illusory and unreal, as though he lived and breathed in an
+insubstantial world made up of gossamer things which must be the fabric
+of dream. These were moments when the black shadow of the tragedy from
+which they were fleeing pressed upon him, when the thought came to him
+that they were criminals racing with the law; that they were not on
+enchanted ground, but in deadly peril; that it was all a fools'
+paradise from which some terrible shock would shortly awaken him. But
+these periods of apprehension were, in themselves, mere shadows thrown
+for a moment upon his happiness. Again and again the subconscious force
+within him pounded home to his physical brain the great truth, that it
+was all extraordinarily real.
+
+It was Marette who made him doubt himself at times. He could not, quite
+yet, comprehend the fulness of that love which she had given him. More
+than ever, in the glory of this love that had come to them she was like
+a child to him. It seemed to him in the first hours of the morning that
+she had forgotten yesterday, and the day before, and ill the days
+before that. She was going home. She whispered that to him so often
+that it became a little song in his brain. Yet she told him nothing of
+that home, and he waited, knowing that the fulfilment of her promise
+was not far away. And there was no embarrassment in the manner of her
+surrender when he held her in his arms, and she held her face up, so
+that he could kiss her mouth and look into her glowing, lovely eyes.
+What he saw was the flush of a great happiness, the almost childish
+confession of it along with the woman's joy of possession. And he
+thought of Kedsty, and of the Law that was rousing itself into life
+back at Athabasca Landing.
+
+And then she ran her fingers through his own and told him to wait, and
+ran into the cabin and came out a moment later with her brush; and
+after that she seated herself at the fulcrum of the big sweep and began
+to brush out her hair in the sun.
+
+"I'm glad you love it, Jeems," she said.
+
+She unbound the thick braid and let the silken strands of it run
+caressingly between her fingers. She smoothed it out, brushed it until
+it was more beautiful than he had ever seen it, in that glow of the
+sun. She held it up so that it rippled out in shimmering cascades about
+her--and then, suddenly, Kent saw the short tress from which had been
+clipped the rope of hair that he had taken from Kedsty's neck. And as
+his lips tightened, crushing fiercely the exclamation of his horror,
+there came a trembling happiness from Marette's lips, scarcely more
+than the whisper of a song, the low, thrilling melody of _Le Chaudiere_.
+
+Her arms reached up, and she drew his head down to her, so that for a
+time his visions were blinded in that sweet smother of her hair.
+
+The intimacy of that day was in itself like a dream. Hour after hour
+they drifted deeper into the great North. The sun shone. The
+forest-walled shores of the river grew mightier in their stillness and
+their grandeur, and the vast silence of unpeopled places brooded over
+the world. To Kent it was as if they were drifting through Paradise.
+Occasionally he found it necessary to work the big sweep, for still
+water was gradually giving way to a swifter current.
+
+Beyond that there was no labor for him to perform. It seemed to him
+that with each of these wonderful hours danger was being left farther
+and still farther behind them. Watching the shores, looking ahead,
+listening for sound that might come from behind--at times possessed of
+the exquisite thrills of children in their happiness--Kent and Marette
+found the gulf of strangeness passing swiftly away from between them.
+
+They did not speak of Kedsty, or the tragedy, or again of the death of
+John Barkley. But Kent told of his days in the North, of his aloneness,
+of the wild, weird love in his soul for the deepest wildernesses. And
+from that he went away back into dim and distant yesterdays, alive with
+mellowed memories of boyhood days spent on a farm. To all these things
+Marette listened with glowing eyes, with low laughter, or with breath
+that rose or fell with his own emotions.
+
+She told of her own days down at school and of their appalling
+loneliness; of childhood spent in the forests; of the desire to live
+there always. But she did not speak intimately of herself or her life
+in its more vital aspects; she said nothing of the home in the Valley
+of Silent Men, nothing of father or mother, sisters or brothers. There
+was no embarrassment in her omissions. And Kent did not question. He
+knew that those were among the things she would tell him when that
+promised hour came, the hour when he would tell her they were safe.
+
+There began to possess him now a growing eagerness for this hour, when
+they should leave the river and take to the forests. He explained to
+Marette why they could not float on indefinitely. The river was the one
+great artery through which ran the blood of all traffic to the far
+North. It was patrolled. Sooner or later they would be discovered. In
+the forests, with a thousand untrod trails to choose, they would be
+safe. He had only one reason for keeping to the river until they passed
+through the Death Chute. It would carry them beyond a great swampy
+region to the westward through which it would be impossible for them to
+make their way at this season of the year. Otherwise he would have gone
+ashore now. He loved the river, had faith in it, but he knew that not
+until the deep forests swallowed them, as a vast ocean swallows a ship,
+would they be beyond the peril that threatened them from the Landing.
+
+Three or four times between sunrise and noon they saw life ashore and
+on the stream; once a scow tied to a tree, then an Indian camp, and
+twice trappers' shacks built in the edge of little clearings. With the
+beginning of afternoon Kent felt growing within him something that was
+not altogether eagerness. It was, at times, a disturbing emotion, a
+foreshadowing of evil, a warning for him to be on his guard. He used
+the sweep more, to help their progress in the current, and he began to
+measure time and distance with painstaking care. He recognized many
+landmarks.
+
+By four o'clock, or five at the latest, they would strike the head of
+the Chute. Ten minutes of its thrilling passage and he would work the
+scow into the concealment he had in mind ashore, and no longer would he
+fear the arm of the law that reached out from the Landing. As he
+planned, he listened. From noon on he never ceased to listen for that
+distant _putt, putt, putt_, that would give them a mile's warning of the
+approach of the patrol launch.
+
+He did not keep his plans to himself. Marette sensed his growing
+uneasiness, and he made her a partner of his thoughts.
+
+"If we hear the patrol before we reach the Chute, we'll still have time
+to run ashore," he assured her. "And they won't catch us. We'll be
+harder to find than two needles in a haystack. But it's best to be
+prepared."
+
+So he brought out his pack and Marette's smaller bundle, and laid his
+rifle and pistol holster across them.
+
+It was three o'clock when the character of the river began to change,
+and Kent smiled happily. They were entering upon swifter waters. There
+were places where the channel narrowed, and they sped through rapids.
+Only where unbroken straight waters stretched out ahead of them did
+Kent give his arms a rest at the sweep. And through most of the
+straight water he added to the speed of the scow. Marette helped him.
+In him the exquisite thrill of watching her slender, glorious body as
+it worked with his own never grew old. She laughed at him over the big
+oar between them. The wind and sun played riot in her hair. Her parted
+lips were rose-red, her cheeks flushed, her eyes like sun-warmed rock
+violets. More than once, in the thrill of that afternoon flight, as he
+looked at the marvelous beauty of her, he asked himself if it could be
+anything but a dream. And more than once he laughed joyously, and
+paused in his swinging of the sweep, and proved that it was real and
+true. And Kent thanked God, and worked harder.
+
+Once, a long time ago, Marette told him, she had been through the
+Chute. It had horrified her then. She remembered it as a sort of death
+monster, roaring for its victims. As they drew nearer to it, Kent told
+her more about it. Only now and then was a life lost there now, he
+said. At the mouth of the Chute there was a great, knife-like rock,
+like a dragon's tooth, that cut the Chute into two roaring channels. If
+a scow kept to the left-hand channel it was safe. There would be a
+mighty roaring and thundering as it swept on its passage, but that
+roaring of the Chute, he told her, was like the barking of a harmless
+dog.
+
+Only when a scow became unmanageable, or hit the Dragon's Tooth, or
+made the right-hand channel instead of the left, was there tragedy.
+There was that delightful little note of laughter in Marette's throat
+when Kent told her that.
+
+"You mean, Jeems, that if one of three possible things doesn't happen,
+we'll get through safely?"
+
+"None of them is possible--with us," he corrected himself quickly.
+"We've a tight little scow, we're not going to hit the rock, and we'll
+make the left-hand channel so smoothly you won't know when it happens."
+He smiled at her with splendid confidence. "I've been through it a
+hundred times," he said.
+
+He listened. Then, suddenly, he drew out his watch. It was a quarter of
+four. Marette's ears caught what he heard. In the air was a low,
+trembling murmur. It was growing slowly but steadily. He nodded when
+she looked at him, the question in her eyes.
+
+"The rapids at the head of the Chute!" he cried, his voice vibrant with
+joy. "We've beat them out. _We're safe_!"
+
+They swung around a bend, and the white spume of the rapids lay half a
+mile ahead of them. The current began to race with them now. Kent put
+his whole weight on the sweep to keep the scow in mid-channel.
+
+"We're safe," he repeated. "Do you understand, Marette? _We're safe_!"
+
+He was speaking the words for which she had waited, was telling her
+that at last the hour had come when she could keep her promise to him.
+The words, as he gave them voice, thrilled him. He felt like shouting
+them. And then all at once he saw the change that had come into her
+face. Her wide, startled eyes were not looking at him, but beyond. She
+was looking back in the direction from which they had come, and even as
+he stared her face grew white.
+
+"_Listen_!"
+
+She was tense, rigid. He turned his head. And in that moment it came to
+him above the growing murmur of the river--the _putt, putt, putt_ of the
+Police patrol boat from Athabasca Landing!
+
+A deep breath came from between his lips. When Marette took her eyes
+from the river and looked at him, his face was like carven rock. He was
+staring dead ahead.
+
+"We can't make the Chute," he said, his voice sounding hard and unreal
+to her. "If we do, they'll be up with us before we can land at the
+other end. We must let this current drive us ashore--_now_."
+
+As he made his decision, he put the strength of his body into action.
+He knew there was not the hundredth part of a second to lose. The
+outreaching suction of the rapids was already gripping the scow, and
+with mighty strokes he fought to work the head of his craft toward the
+westward shore. With swift understanding Marette saw the priceless
+value of a few seconds of time. If they were caught in the stronger
+swirl of the rapids before the shore was reached, they would be forced
+to run the Chute, and in that event the launch would be upon them
+before they could make a landing farther on. She sprang to Kent's side
+and added her own strength in the working of the sweep. Foot by foot
+and yard by yard the scow made precious westing, and Kent's face
+lighted up with triumph as he nodded ahead to a timbered point that
+thrust itself out like a stubby thumb into the river. Beyond that point
+the rapids were frothing white, and they could see the first black
+walls of rock that marked the beginning of the Chute.
+
+"We'll make it," he smiled confidently. "We'll hit that timbered point
+close inshore. I don't see where the launch can make a landing anywhere
+within a mile of the Chute. And once ashore we'll make trail about five
+times as fast they can follow it." Marette's face was no longer pale,
+but flushed with excitement. He caught the white gleam of teeth between
+her parted lips. Her eyes shone gloriously, and he laughed.
+
+"You beautiful little fighter," he cried exultantly. "You--you--"
+
+His words were cut short by a snap that was like the report of a pistol
+close to his ears. He pitched forward and crashed to the bottom of the
+scow, Marette's slim body clutched in his arms as he fell. In a flash
+they were up, and mutely they stared where the sweep had been. The
+blade of it was gone. Kent was conscious of hearing a little cry from
+the girl at his side, and then her fingers were gripping tightly again
+about his thumb. No longer possessed of the power of guidance, the scow
+swung sideways. It swept past the wooded point. The white maelstrom of
+the lower rapids seized upon it. And Kent, looking ahead to the black
+maw of the death-trap that was waiting for them, drew Marette close in
+his arms and held her tight.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+For a brief space after the breaking of the scow-sweep Kent did not
+move. He felt Marette's arms closing tighter and tighter around his
+neck. He caught a flash of her upturned face, the flush of a few
+moments before replaced by a deathly pallor, and he knew that without
+explanation on his part she understood the almost hopeless situation
+they were in. He was glad of that. It gave him a sense of relief to
+know that she would not go into a panic, no matter what happened. He
+bowed his face to hers, so that he felt the velvety smoothness of her
+cheek. She turned her mouth to him, and they kissed. His embrace was
+crushing for a moment, fierce with his love for her, desperate with his
+determination to keep her from harm.
+
+His brain was working swiftly. There was possibly one chance in ten
+that the scow--rudderless and without human guidance--would sweep
+safely between the black walls and jagged teeth of the Chute. Even if
+the scow made this passage, they would be in the power of the Police,
+unless some splendid whimsicality of Fate sent it ashore before the
+launch came through.
+
+On the other hand, if it was carried far enough through the lower
+rapids, they might swim. And--there was the rifle laying across the
+pack. That, after all, was his greatest hope--if the scow made the
+passage of the Chute. The bulwarks of the scow would give them greater
+protection than the thinner walls of the launch would give to their
+pursuers. In his heart there raged suddenly a hatred for that Law of
+which he had been a part. It was running them to destruction, and he
+would fight. There would not be more than three men in the launch, and
+he would kill them, if killing became a necessity.
+
+They were speeding like an unbridled race-horse through the boiling
+rapids now. The clumsy craft under their feet twisted and turned. The
+dripping tops of great rocks shot past a little out of their channel.
+And Marette, with one arm still about his neck, was facing the peril
+ahead with him. They could see the Dragon's Tooth, black and grim,
+waiting squarely in their path. In another hundred and twenty seconds
+they would be upon it--or past it. There was no time for Kent to
+explain. He sprang to his pack, whipped a knife from his pocket, and
+cut the stout babiche rope that reenforced its straps. In another
+instant he was back at Marette's side, fastening the babiche about her
+waist. The other end he gave to her, and she tied it about his wrist.
+She smiled as she finished the knot. It was a strange, tense little
+smile, but it told him that she was not afraid, that she had great
+faith in him, and knew what the babiche meant.
+
+"I can swim, Jeems," she cried. "If we strike the rock."
+
+She did not finish because of the sudden cry that came to his lips. He
+had almost forgotten the most vital of all things. There was not time
+to unlace his boots. With his knife he cut the laces in a single
+downward thrust. Swiftly he freed his own feet, and Marette's. Even in
+this hour of their peril it thrilled him to see how quickly Marette
+responded to the thoughts that moved him. She tore at her outer
+garments and slipped them off as he wriggled out of his heavy shirt. A
+slim, white-underskirted little thing, her glorious hair flying in the
+wind that came through the Chute, her throat and arms bare, her eyes
+shining at Kent, she came again close within his arms, and her lips
+framed softly his name. And a moment later she turned her face up, and
+cried quickly,
+
+"Kiss me, Jeems--kiss me--"
+
+Her warm lips clung to his, and her bare arms encircled his neck with
+the choking grip of a child's. He looked ahead and braced himself on
+his feet, and after that he buried one of his hands in the soft mass of
+her hair and pressed her face against his naked breast.
+
+Ten seconds later the crash came. Squarely amidships the scow struck
+the Dragon's Tooth. Kent was prepared for the shock, but his attempt to
+hold his feet, with Marette in his arms, was futile. The bulwark saved
+them from crashing against the slippery face of the rock itself. Amid
+the roar of water that filled his ears he was conscious of the rending
+of timbers. The scow bulged up with the mighty force beneath, and for a
+second or two it seemed as though that force was going to overturn and
+submerge it. Then slowly it began to slip off the nose of the rock.
+
+Holding to the rail with one hand and clinging to Marette with his
+other arm, Kent was gripped in the horror of what was happening. The
+scow was slipping _into the right hand channel_! In that channel there
+as no hope--only death.
+
+Marette was squarely facing the thing ahead. In this hour when each
+second held a lifetime of suspense Kent saw that she understood. Yet
+she did not cry out. Her face was dead white. Her hair and arms and
+shoulders were dripping with the splash of water. But she was not
+terrified as he had seen terror. When she turned her eyes to him, he
+was amazed by the quiet, calm look that was in them. Her lips trembled.
+
+His soul expressed itself in a wordless cry that was drowned in another
+crash of timber as a jutting snag of the Tooth crumpled up the little
+cabin as if it had been pasteboard. He felt overwhelming him the surge
+of a thing mightier than the menace of the Chute. He could not lose! It
+was inconceivable. Impossible! With _her_ to fight for--this slim,
+wonderful creature who smiled at him even as she saw death.
+
+And then, as his arm closed still more tightly about her, the monsters
+of power and death gave him their answer. The scow swung free of the
+Dragon's Tooth, half-filled with water. Its cracked and broken carcass
+was caught in the rock jaws of the eastern channel. It ceased to be a
+floating thing. It was inundation, dissolution, utter obliteration
+almost without shock. And Kent found himself in the thundering rush of
+waters, holding to Marette.
+
+For a space they were under. Black water and white froth fumed and
+exploded over them. It seemed an age before fresh air filled Kent's
+nostrils. He thrust Marette upward and cried out to her. He heard her
+answer.
+
+"I'm all right--Jeems!"
+
+His swimming prowess was of little avail now. He was like a chip. All
+his effort was to make of himself a barrier between Marette's soft body
+and the rocks. It was not the water itself that he feared, but the
+rocks.
+
+There were scores and hundreds of them, like the teeth of a mighty
+grinding machine. And the jaw was a quarter of a mile in length. He
+felt the first shock, the second, the third. He was not thinking of
+time or distance, but was fighting solely to keep himself between
+Marette and death. The first time he failed, a blind sort of rage
+burned in his brain.
+
+He saw her white body strained over a slippery, deluge-worn rock. Her
+head was flung back, and he saw the long masses of her hair streaming
+out in the white froth, and he thought for an instant that her fragile
+body had been broken. He fought still more fiercely after that. And she
+knew for what he was fighting. Only in an unreal sort of way was he
+conscious of shock and hurt. It gave him no physical pain. Yet he
+sensed the growing dizziness in his head, an increasing lack of
+strength in his arms and body.
+
+They were halfway through the Chute when he shot against a rock with
+terrific force. The contact tore Marette from him. He plunged for her,
+missed his grip, and then saw her opposite him, clinging to the same
+rock. The babiche rope had saved her. Fastened about her waist and tied
+to his wrist, it still held them together--with the five feet of rock
+between them.
+
+Panting, their life half beaten out of them, their eyes met over that
+rock. Now that he was out of the water, the blood began streaming from
+Kent's arms and shoulders and face, but he smiled at her as a few
+moments before she had smiled at him. Her eyes were filled with the
+pain of his hurts. He nodded back in the direction from which they had
+come.
+
+"We're out of the worst of it," he tried to shout. "As soon as we've
+got our wind, I will climb over the rock to you. It won't take us
+longer than a couple of minutes, perhaps less, to make the quiet water
+at the end of the channel."
+
+She heard him and nodded her reply. He wanted to give her confidence.
+And he had no intention of resting, for her position filled him with a
+terror which he fought to hide. The babiche rope, not half as large
+around as his little finger, had swung her to the downstream side of
+the rock. It was the slender thread of buckskin and his own weight that
+were holding her. If the buckskin should break--
+
+He thanked God that it was the tough babiche that had been around his
+pack. An inch at a time he began to draw himself up on the rock. The
+undertow behind the rock had flung a mass of Marette's long hair toward
+him, so that it was a foot or two nearer to him than her clinging
+hands. He worked himself toward that, for he saw that he could reach it
+more quickly than he could reach her. At the same time he had to keep
+his end of the babiche taut. It was, from the beginning, an almost
+superhuman task. The rock was slippery as oil. Twice his eyes shot
+down-stream, with the thought that it might be better to cast himself
+bodily into the water, and after that draw Marette to him by means of
+the babiche. What he saw convinced him that such action would be fatal.
+He must have Marette in his arms. If he lost her--even for a few
+seconds--the life would be beaten from her body in that rock-strewn
+maelstrom below.
+
+And then, suddenly, the babiche cord about his wrist grew loose. The
+reaction almost threw him back. With the loosening of it a cry came
+from Marette. It all happened in an instant, in almost less time than
+his brain could seize upon the significance of it--the slipping of her
+hands from the rock, the shooting of her white body away from him in
+the still whiter spume of the rapids, The rock had cut the babiche, and
+she was gone! With a cry that was like the cry of a madman he plunged
+after her. The water engulfed him. He twisted himself up, freeing
+himself from the undertow. Twenty feet ahead of him--thirty--he caught
+a glimpse of a white arm and then of Marette's face, before she
+disappeared in a wall of froth.
+
+Into that froth he shot after her. He came out of it blinded, groping
+wildly for her, crying out her name. His fingers caught the end of the
+babiche that was fastened about his own wrist, and he clutched it
+savagely, believing for a moment that he had found her. Thicker and
+more deadly the rocks of the lower passage rose in his way. They seemed
+like living things, like devils filled with the desire to torture and
+destroy. They struck and beat at him. Their laughter was the roar of a
+Niagara. He no longer cried out. His brain grew heavy, and clubs were
+beating him--beating and breaking him into a formless thing. The
+rock-drifts of spume, lather-white, like the frosting of a monster
+cake, turned gray and then black.
+
+He did not know when he ceased fighting. The day went out. Night came.
+The world was oblivion. And for a space he ceased to live.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+
+An hour later the fighting forces in his body dragged Kent back into
+existence. He opened his eyes. The shock of what had happened did not
+at once fall upon him. His first sensation was of awakening from a
+sleep that had been filled with pain and horror.
+
+Then he saw a black rock wall opposite him; he heard the sullen roar of
+the stream; his eyes fell upon a vivid patch of light reflected from
+the setting sun. He dragged himself up until he was on his knees, and
+all at once a thing that was like an iron hoop--choking his
+senses--seemed to break in his head, and he staggered to his feet,
+crying out Marette's name. Understanding inundated him with its horror,
+deadening his tongue after that first cry, filling his throat with a
+moaning, sobbing agony. Marette was gone. She was lost. She was dead.
+
+Swiftly, as reason came, his eyes took in his environment. For a
+quarter of a mile above him he could see the white spume between the
+chasm walls, darkening with the approach of night. He could hear more
+clearly the roar of the death-floods. But close to him was smooth
+water, and he stood now on a shelving tongue of rock and shale, upon
+which the current had flung him. In front of him was a rock wall.
+Behind him was another. There was no footing except where he stood. And
+Marette was not with him.
+
+Only the truth could batter at his brain as he stood there. But his
+physical self refused to accept that truth. If he had lived, she must
+live! She was there--somewhere--along the shore--among the rocks--
+
+The moaning in his throat gave way to the voicing of her name. He
+shouted, and listened. He swayed back along the tongue of rock to the
+boulder-strewn edge of the chasm wall. A hundred yards farther on was
+the opening of the Chute. He came out of this, his clothes torn from
+him, his body bleeding, unrecognizable, half a madman,--shouting her
+name more and more loudly. The glow of the setting sun struck him at
+last. He was out from between the chasm walls, and it lighted up the
+green world for him. Ahead of him the river widened and swept on in
+tranquil quiet.
+
+And now it was no longer fear that possessed him. It was the horrible,
+overwhelming certainty of the thing. The years fell from him, and he
+sobbed--sobbed like a boy stricken by some great childish grief, as he
+searched along the edge of the shore. Over and over again he cried and
+whispered Marette's name.
+
+But he did not shout it again, for he knew that she was dead. She was
+gone from him forever. Yet he did not cease to search. The last of the
+sun went out. Twilight came, and then darkness. Even in that darkness
+he continued to search for a mile below the Chute, calling her name
+more loudly now, and listening always for the answer which he knew
+would never come. The moon came out after a time, and hour after hour
+he kept up his hopeless quest. He did not know how badly the rocks had
+battered and hurt him, and he scarcely knew when it was that exhaustion
+dropped him like a dead man in his tracks. When dawn came, it found him
+wandering away from the river, and toward noon of that day, he was
+found by Andre Boileau, the old white-haired half-breed who trapped on
+Burntwood Creek. Andre was shocked at the sight of his wounds and half
+dragged and half carried him to his shack hidden away in the forest.
+
+For six days thereafter Kent remained at old Andre's place, simply
+because he had neither the strength nor the reason to move. Andre
+wondered that there were no broken bones in him. But his head was
+terribly hurt, and it was that hurt that for three days and three
+nights made Kent hover with nerve-racking indecision between life and
+death. The fourth day reason came back to him, and Boileau fed him
+venison broth. The fifth day he stood up. The sixth he thanked Andre,
+and said that he was ready to go.
+
+Andre outfitted him with old clothes, gave him a supply of food and
+God's blessing. And Kent returned to the Chute, giving Andre to
+understand that his destination was Athabasca Landing.
+
+Kent knew that it was not wise for him to return to the river. He knew
+that it would have been better for him both in mind and body had he
+gone in the opposite direction. But he no longer had in him the desire
+to fight, even for himself. He followed the lines of least resistance,
+and these led him back to the scene of the tragedy. His grief, when he
+returned, was no longer the heartbreaking agony of that first night. It
+was a deep-seated, consuming fire that had already burned him out,
+heart and soul. Even caution was dead in him. He feared nothing,
+avoided nothing. Had the police boat been at the Chute, he would have
+revealed himself without any thought of self-preservation. A ray of
+hope would have been precious medicine to him. But there was no hope.
+Marette was dead. Her tender body was destroyed. And he was alone,
+unfathomably and hopelessly alone.
+
+And now, after he had reached the river again, something held him
+there. From the head of the Chute to a bend in the river two miles
+below, his feet wore a beaten trail. Three or four times a day he would
+make the trip, and along the path he set a few snares in which he
+caught rabbits for food. Each night he made his bed in a crevice among
+the rocks at the foot of the Chute. At the end of a week the old Jim
+Kent was dead. Even O'Connor would not have recognized him with his
+shaggy growth of beard, his hollow eyes, and the sunken cheeks which
+the beard failed to hide.
+
+And the fighting spirit in him also was dead. Once or twice there
+leaped up in him a sudden passion demanding vengeance upon the accursed
+Law that was accountable for the death of Marette, but even this flame
+snuffed itself out quickly.
+
+And then, on the eighth day, he saw the edge of a thing that was almost
+hidden under an overhanging bank. He fished it out. It was Marette's
+little pack, and for many minutes before he opened it Kent crushed the
+sodden treasure to his breast, staring with half-mad eyes down where he
+had found it, as if Marette must be there, too. Then he ran with it to
+an open space, where the sun fell warmly on a great, flat rock that was
+level with the ground, and with sobbing breath he opened it. It was
+filled with the things she had picked up quickly in her room the night
+of their flight from Kedsty's bungalow, and as he drew them out one by
+one and placed them in the sun on the rock, a new and sudden rush of
+life swept through his veins, and he sprang to his feet and faced the
+river again, as if at last a hope had come to him. Then he looked down
+again upon what she had treasured, and reaching out his arms to them,
+he whispered,
+
+"Marette--my little goddess--"
+
+Even in his grief the overwhelming mastery of his love for the one who
+was dead brought a smile to his haggard and bearded face. For Marette,
+in filling her little pack on that night of hurried flight, had chosen
+strange things. On the sunlit rock, where he had placed them, were a
+pair of the little pumps which he had fallen on his knees to worship in
+her room, and with these she had crowded into the pack one of the
+billowing, sweet-smelling dresses which had made his heart stand still
+for a moment when he first looked into their hiding-place. It was no
+longer soft and cobwebby as it had been then, like down fluttering
+against his cheeks, but sodden and discolored, as it lay on the rock
+with little rivulets of water running from it.
+
+With the shoes and the dress were the intimate necessities which
+Marette had taken with her. But it was one of the pumps that Kent
+picked up and crushed close to his ragged breast--one of the two she
+had worn that first wonderful day she had come to see him at Cardigan's
+place.
+
+This hour was the beginning of another change in Kent. It seemed to him
+that a message had come to him from Marette herself, that the spirit of
+her had returned to him and was with him now, stirring strange things
+in his soul and warming his blood with a new heat. She was gone
+forever, and yet she had come back to him, and the truth grew upon him
+that this spirit of her would never leave him again as long as he
+lived. He felt her nearness. Unconsciously he reached out his arms, and
+a strange happiness entered Into him to battle with grief and
+loneliness. His eyes shone with a new glow as they looked at her little
+belongings on the sunlit rock. It was as if they were flesh and blood
+of her, a part of her heart and soul. They were the voice of her faith
+in him, her promise that she would be with him always. For the first
+time in many days Kent felt a new force within him, and he knew that
+she was not quite gone, that he had something of her left to fight for.
+
+That night he made his bed for a last time in the crevice between the
+rocks, and his treasure was gathered within the protecting circle of
+his arms as he slept.
+
+The next day he struck out north and east. On the fifth day after he
+left the country of Andre Boileau he traded his watch to a half-breed
+for a cheap gun, ammunition, a blanket, flour, and a cooking outfit.
+After that he had no hesitation in burying himself still deeper into
+the forests.
+
+A month later no one would have recognized Kent as the one-time crack
+man of N Division. Bearded, ragged, long-haired, he wandered with no
+other purpose than to be alone and to get still farther away from the
+river. Occasionally he talked with an Indian or a half-breed. Each
+night, though the weather was very warm, he made himself a small
+camp-fire, for it was always in these hours, with the fire-light about
+him, that he felt Marette was very near. It was then that he took out
+one by one the precious things that were in Marette's little pack. He
+worshipped these things. The dress and each of the little shoes he had
+wrapped in the velvety inner bark of the birch tree. He protected them
+from wet and storm. Had emergency called for it, he would have fought
+for them. They became, after a time, more precious than his own life,
+and in a vague sort of way at first he began to thank God that the
+river had not robbed him of everything.
+
+Kent's inclination was not to fight himself into forgetfulness. He
+wanted to remember every act, every word, every treasured caress that
+chained him for all time to the love he had lost. Marette became more a
+part of him every day. Dead in the flesh, she was always at his side,
+nestling close in the shelter of his arms at night, walking with her
+hand in his during the day. And in this belief his grief was softened
+by the sweet and merciful comfort of a possession of which neither man
+nor fate could rob him--a beloved Presence always with him.
+
+It was this Presence that rebuilt Kent. It urged him to throw up his
+head again, to square his shoulders, to look life once more straight in
+the face. It was both inspiration and courage to him and grew nearer
+and dearer to him as time passed. Early Autumn found him in the Fond du
+Lac country, two hundred miles east of Fort Chippewyan. That Winter he
+joined a Frenchman, and until February they trapped along the edges of
+the lower fingers of the Barrens.
+
+He came to think a great deal of Picard, his comrade. But he revealed
+nothing of his secret to him, or of the new desire that was growing in
+him. And as the Winter lengthened this desire became a deep and abiding
+yearning. It was with him night and day. He dreamed of it when he
+slept, and it was never out of his thoughts when awake. He wanted to go
+HOME. And when he thought of home, it was not of the Landing, and not
+of the country south. For him home meant only one place in the world
+now--the place where Marette had lived. Somewhere, hidden in the
+mountains far north and west, was that mysterious Valley of Silent Men
+where they had been going when her body died. And the spirit of her
+wanted him to go to it now. It was like a voice pleading with him,
+urging him to go, to live there always where she had lived. He began to
+plan, and in this planning he found new joy and new life. He would find
+her home, her people, the valley that was to have been their paradise.
+So late in February, with his share of the Winter catch in his pack, he
+said good-by to Picard and faced the River again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+
+Kent had not forgotten that he was an outlaw, but he was not afraid.
+Now that he had something new and thrilling to fight for, he fell back
+again upon what he called "the finesse of the game." He approached
+Chippewyan cautiously, although he was sure that even his old friends
+at the Landing would fail to recognize him now. His beard was four or
+five inches long, and his hair was shaggy and uncut. Picard had made
+him a coat, that winter, of young caribou skin, and it was fringed like
+an Indian's. Kent chose his time and entered Chippewyan just before
+dusk.
+
+Oil lamps were burning in the Hudson's Bay Company's store when he went
+in with his furs. The place was empty, except for the factor's clerk,
+and for an hour he bartered. He bought a new outfit, a Winchester
+rifle, and all the supplies he could carry. He did not forget a razor
+and a pair of shears, and when he was done he still had the value of
+two silver fox skins in cash. He left Chippewyan that same night, and
+by the light of a Winter moon made his camp half a dozen miles
+northward toward Smith Landing.
+
+He was on the Slave River now and for weeks traveled slowly but
+steadily northward on snowshoes. He avoided Fort Smith and Smith
+Landing and struck westward before he came to Fort Resolution. It was
+in April that he struck Hay River Post, where the Hay River empties
+into Great Slave Lake. Until the ice broke up, Kent worked at Hay
+River. When it was safe, he started down the Mackenzie in a canoe. It
+was late in June when he turned up the Liard to the South Nahani.
+
+"You go straight through between the sources of the North and the South
+Nahani," Marette had told him. "It is there you find the Sulphur
+Country, and beyond the Sulphur Country is the Valley of Silent Men."
+
+At last he came to the edge of this country. He camped with the stink
+of it in his nostrils. The moon rose, and he saw that desolate world as
+through the fumes of a yellow smoke. With dawn he went on.
+
+He passed through broad, low morasses out of which rose sulphurous
+fogs. Mile after mile he buried himself deeper in it, and it became
+more and more a dead country, a lost hell. There were berry bushes on
+which there grew no berries. There were forests and swamps, but without
+a living creature to inhabit them.
+
+It was a country of water in which there were no fish, of air in which
+there were no birds, of plants without flowers--a reeking, stinking
+country still with the stillness of death. He began to turn yellow. His
+clothing, his canoe, his hands, face--everything turned yellow. He
+could not get the filthy taste of sulphur out of his mouth. Yet he kept
+on, straight west by the compass Gowen had given him at Hay River. Even
+this compass became yellow in his pocket. It was impossible for him to
+eat. Only twice that day did he drink from his flask of water.
+
+And Marette had made this journey! He kept telling himself that. It was
+the secret way in and out of their hidden world, a region accursed by
+devils, a forbidden country to both Indian and white man. It was hard
+for him to believe that she had come this way, that she had drunk in
+the air that was filling his own lungs, nauseating him a dozen times to
+the point of sickness. He worked desperately. He felt neither fatigue
+nor the heat of the warm water about him.
+
+Night came, and the moon rose, lighting up with a sickly glow the
+diseased world that had swallowed him. He lay in the bottom of his
+canoe, covering his face with his caribou coat, and tried to sleep. But
+sleep would not come. Before dawn he struck on, watching his compass by
+the light of matches. All that day he made no effort to swallow food.
+But with the coming of the second night he found the air easier to
+breathe. He fought his way on by the light of the moon which was
+clearer now. And at last, in a resting spell, he heard far ahead of him
+the howl of a wolf.
+
+In his joy he cried out. A western breeze brought him air that he drank
+in as a desert-stricken man drinks water. He did not look at his
+compass again, but worked steadily in the face of that fresh air. An
+hour later he found that he was paddling again a slow current, and when
+he tasted the water it was only slightly tainted with sulphur. By
+midnight the water was cool and clean. He landed on a shore of sand and
+pebbles, stripped to the skin, and gave himself such a scouring as he
+had never before experienced. He had worn his old trapping shirt and
+trousers, and after his bath he changed to the outfit which he had kept
+clean in his pack. Then he built a fire and ate his first meal in two
+days.
+
+The next morning he climbed a tall spruce and surveyed the country
+about him. Westward there was a broad low country shut in fifteen or
+twenty miles away by the foothills. Beyond these foothills rose the
+snow-capped peaks of the Rockies. He shaved himself, cut his hair, and
+went on. That night he camped only when he could drive his canoe no
+farther. The waterway had narrowed to a creek, and he was among the
+first green shoulders of the hills when he stopped. With another dawn
+he concealed his canoe in a sheltered place and went on with his pack.
+
+For a week he picked his way slowly westward. It was a splendid country
+into which he had come, and yet he found no sign of human life. The
+foothills changed to mountains, and he believed he was in the Campbell
+Range. Also he knew that he had followed the logical trail from the
+sulphur country. Yet it was the eighth day before he came upon a sign
+which told him that another living being had at some time passed that
+way. What he found were the charred remnants of an old camp-fire. It
+had been a white man's fire. He knew that by the size of it. It had
+been an all-night fire of green logs cut with an axe.
+
+On the tenth day he came to the westward slope of the first range and
+looked down upon one of the most wonderful valleys his eyes had ever
+beheld. It was more than a valley. It was a broad plain. Fifty miles
+across it rose the towering majesty of the mightiest of all the Yukon
+mountains.
+
+And now, though he saw a paradise about him, his heart began to sink
+within him. It seemed to him inconceivable that in a country so vast he
+could find the spot for which he was seeking. His one hope lay in
+finding white men or Indians, some one who might guide him.
+
+He traveled slowly over the fifty-mile plain rich with a verdure of
+green, covered with flowers, a game paradise. Few hunters had come so
+far out of the Yukon mountains, he told himself. And none had come from
+out of the sulphur country. It was a new and undiscovered world. On his
+map it was a blank space. And there were no signs of people. Ahead of
+him the Yukon mountains rose in an impenetrable wall, peak after peak,
+crested with snow, towering like mighty watchdogs above the clouds. He
+knew what lay beyond them--the great rivers of the Western slope,
+Dawson City, the gold country and its civilization. But those things
+were on the other side of the mountains. On his side there was only the
+vast and undisputed silence of a paradise as yet unclaimed by man.
+
+As he went on into this valley there grew upon him a strange and
+comforting peace. Yet with it there was a steadily increasing belief
+that he would not find that for which he had come in search. He did not
+attempt to analyze this belief. It became a part of him, just as his
+mental tranquillity had grown upon him. His one hope of success was
+that nearer the mountains he might find white men or Indians.
+
+He no longer used his compass, but guided himself by a cluster of three
+gigantic peaks. One of these was taller than the other two. As he
+journeyed, his eyes were always returning to it. It fascinated him,
+impinged itself upon him as the watcher of a million years, guarding
+the valley. He began to think of it as the Watcher. Each hour of his
+progress seemed to bring it a little more intimately to his vision.
+From his first night's camp in the valley he saw the moon sink behind
+it. Within him a voice that never died kept whispering to him that this
+mountain, greater than all the others, had been Marette's guardian. Ten
+thousand times she must have looked at it, as he had looked at it that
+day--if her home was anywhere this side of the Campbell Range. A
+hundred miles away she could have seen the Watcher on a clear day.
+
+On the second day the mountain continued to grow upon Kent. By
+mid-afternoon it began to take on a new character. The peak of it was
+in the form of a mighty castle that changed as he advanced. And the two
+lesser peaks were forming into definite contours. Before the haze of
+twilight dimmed his vision, he knew that what he had seen was not a
+whimsical invention of his imagination. The Watcher had grown into the
+shape of a mighty human head facing south. A restless excitement
+possessed him, and he traveled on long after dusk. At dawn he was on
+the trail again. Westward the sky cleared, and suddenly he stopped, and
+a cry came from him.
+
+The Watcher's head was there, as if chiseled by the hands of giants.
+The two smaller peaks had unveiled their mystery. Startling and weird,
+their crests had taken on the form of human heads. One of them was
+looking north. The other faced the valley. And Kent, his heart
+pounding, cried to himself,
+
+"The Silent Men!"
+
+He did not hear himself, but the thought itself was a tumultuous thing
+within him. It came upon him like an inundation, a sudden and thrilling
+inspiration backed by the forces of a visual truth. _The Valley of
+Silent Men_. He repeated the words, staring at the three colossal heads
+in the sky. Somewhere near them, under them,--one side or the
+other--was Marette's hidden valley!
+
+He went on. A strange joy consumed him. In it, at times, his grief was
+obliterated, and it seemed to him in these moments that Marette must
+surely be at the valley to greet him when he came to it. But always the
+tragedy of the Death Chute came back to him, and with it the thought
+that the three giant heads were watching--and would always watch--for a
+beloved lost one who would never return. As the sun went down that day,
+the face bowed to the valley seemed alive with the fire of a living
+question sent directly to Kent.
+
+"Where is she?" it asked. "Where is she? Where is she?"
+
+That night Kent did not sleep.
+
+The next day there lay ahead of him a low and broken range, the first
+of the deeper mountains. He climbed this steadily, and at noon had
+reached the crest. And he knew that at last he was looking down into
+the Valley of Silent Men. It was not a wide valley, like the other. On
+the far side of it, three or four miles away, rose the huge mountain
+whose face was looking down upon the green meadows at its foot.
+Southward Kent could see for a long distance, and in the vivid sunlight
+he saw the shimmer of creeks and little lakes, and the rich glow of
+thick patches of cedar and spruce and balsam, scattered like great rugs
+of velvety luster amid the flowering green of the valley. Northward,
+three or four miles away the range which he had climbed made a sharp
+twist to the east, and that part of the valley--following the swing of
+the range--was lost to him. He turned in this direction after he had
+rested. It was four o'clock when he came to the elbow in the valley,
+and could look down into the hidden part of it.
+
+What he saw at first was a giant cup hollowed out of the surrounding
+mountains, a cup two miles from brim to brim, the end of the valley
+itself. It took him a few moments to focus his vision so that it would
+pick up the smaller and more intimate things half a mile under him, and
+yet, before he had done this, a sound came up to him that set aquiver
+every nerve in his body. It was the far-down, hollow-sounding barking
+of a dog.
+
+The warm, golden haze that precedes sunset in the mountains, was
+gathering between him and the valley, but through this he made out
+after a time evidences of human habitation almost straight under him.
+There was a small lake out of which ran a shimmering creek, and close
+to this lake, yet equally near to the base of the mountain on which he
+was standing, were a number of buildings and a stockade which looked
+like a toy. He could see no animals, no movement of any kind.
+
+Without seeking for a downward trail he began to descend. Again he did
+not question himself. An overwhelming certainty possessed him. Of all
+places in the world this must be the Valley of Silent Men.
+
+And below him, flooded and half-hidden in the illusive sun-mist, was
+Marette's old home. It seemed to him now that it belonged to him, that
+he was a part of it, that in going to it he was achieving his last
+great resting place, his final refuge, his own home. And the thought
+became strangely a part of him that a welcome must be waiting for him
+there. He hurried until his breath came pantingly between his lips and
+he was forced to rest. And at last he found himself where his progress
+was made a foot at a time, and again and again he was forced to climb
+back and detour around treacherous slides and precipitous breaks which
+left sheer falls at his feet. The mist thickened in the valley. The sun
+sank behind the western peaks, and swiftly after that the gloom of
+twilight deepened. It was seven o'clock when he came to the edge of the
+plain, at least a mile below the elbow which shut out the cup in the
+valley. He was exhausted. His hands were bruised and bleeding. Darkness
+shut him in when he went on.
+
+When he rounded the elbow of the mountain, he did not try to keep back
+the joyous cry that came to his lips. Ahead of him there were lights. A
+few of them were scattered, but nearest to him he saw a cluster of
+them, like the glow that comes from a number of illumined windows. He
+quickened his pace as he drew nearer to them, and at last he wanted to
+run. And then something stopped him, and it seemed to him that his
+heart had risen into his throat and was choking him until he could not
+breathe.
+
+It was a man's voice he heard, calling through the twilight gloom a
+name. "Marette--Marette--Marette--"
+
+Kent tried to cry out, but his breath came only in a gasp. He felt
+himself trembling. He reached out his arms, and a strange madness
+rushed like fire into his brain.
+
+Again the voice called, "Marette--Marette--Marette--"
+
+The cup in the valley echoed the name. It rolled softly up the
+mountainside. The air trembled with it, whispered it, passed it on--and
+suddenly the madness in Kent found voice, and he shouted,
+
+"Marette--Marette--"
+
+He ran on. His knees felt weak. He shouted the name again, and the
+other voice was silent. Things loomed up out of the mist ahead of him,
+between him and the glowing windows. Some one--two people--were
+advancing to meet him, doubtfully, wonderingly. Kent was staggering,
+but he cried the name again, and this time it was a woman's cry that
+answered, and one of the two came toward him swift as a flash of light.
+
+Three paces apart they stood, and in that gloom of the after-twilight
+their burning eyes looked at each other, while for a space their bodies
+remained stricken in the face of this miracle of a great and merciful
+God.
+
+The dead had risen. By a mighty effort Kent reached out his arms, and
+Marette swayed to him. When the other man came up, he found them
+crumpled to their knees on the earth, clasped like children in each
+other's arms. And as Kent raised his face, he saw that it was Sandy
+McTrigger who was looking down at him, the man whose life he had saved
+at Athabasca Landing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+
+How long it was before his brain cleared, Kent never could have told.
+It might have been a minute or an hour. Every vital force that was in
+him had concentrated into a single consciousness--that the dead had
+come to life, that it was Marette Radisson, the flesh and blood and
+living warmth of her, he held in his arms. Like the flash of a picture
+on a screen he had seen McTrigger's face close to him, and then his own
+head was crushed down again, and if the valley had been filled with the
+roar of cannon, he would have heard only one sound, a sobbing voice
+crying over and over again, "Jeems--Jeems--Jeems--"
+
+It was McTrigger, in the beginning of the starlight, who alone looked
+with clear vision upon the wonder of the thing that was happening.
+After a little Kent realized that McTrigger was talking, that a hand
+was on his shoulder, that the voice was both joyous and insistent. He
+rose to his feet, still holding Marette, her arms clinging to him. Her
+breath was sobbing and broken. And it was impossible for Kent to speak.
+He seemed to stumble over the distance between them and the lights,
+with McTrigger on the other side of Marette. It was McTrigger who
+opened a door, and they came into a glow of lamplight. It was a great,
+strange-looking room they entered. And over the threshold Marette's
+hands dropped from Kent, and Kent stepped back, so that in the light
+they faced each other, and in that moment came the marvelous
+readjustment from shock and disbelief to a glorious certainty.
+
+Again Kent's brain was as clear as the day he faced death at the head
+of the Chute. And swift as a hot barb a fear leaped into him as his
+eyes met the eyes of the girl. She was terribly changed. Her face was
+white with a whiteness that startled him. It was thin. Her eyes were
+great, slumbering pools of violet, almost black in the lamp glow, and
+her hair--piled high on her head as he had seen it that first day at
+Cardigan's--added to the telltale pallor in her cheeks. A hand trembled
+at her throat, and its thinness frightened him. For a space--a flash of
+seconds--she looked at him as if possessed of the subconscious fear
+that he was not Jim Kent, and then slowly her arms opened, and she
+reached them out to him. She did not smile, she did not cry out, she
+did not speak his name now; but her arms went round his neck as he took
+her to him, and her face dropped on his breast. He looked at McTrigger.
+A woman was standing beside him, a dark-haired, dark-eyed woman, and
+she had laid a hand on McTrigger's arm, Kent, looking at them,
+understood.
+
+The woman came to him. "I had better take her now, m'sieu," she said.
+"Malcolm--will tell you. And a little later,--you may see her again."
+
+Her voice was low and soft. At the sound of it Marette raised her head,
+and her two hands stole to Kent's cheeks in their old sweet way, and
+she whispered,
+
+"Kiss me, Jeems--my Jeems--kiss me--"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+
+A little later, clasping hands in the lamp glow, Kent and Sandy
+McTrigger stood alone in the big room. In their handclasp was the warm
+thrill of strong men met in an immutable brotherhood. Each had faced
+death for the other. Yet this thought, subconsciously and forever a
+part of them, expressed itself only in the grip of their fingers and in
+the understanding that lay deep in their eyes.
+
+In Kent's face the great question was of Marette. McTrigger saw the
+fear of it, and slowly he smiled, a glad and yet an anxious smile, as
+he looked toward the door through which Marette and the older woman had
+gone.
+
+"Thank God you have come in time!" he said, still holding Kent's hand.
+"She thought you were dead. And I know, Kent, that it was killing her.
+We had to watch her at night. Sometimes she would wander out into the
+valley. She said she was looking for you. It was that way tonight."
+
+Kent gulped hard. "I understand now," he said. "It was the living soul
+of her that was pulling me here. I--"
+
+He took his pack with its precious contents from his shoulders,
+listening to McTrigger. They sat down. What McTrigger was saying seemed
+of trifling consequence beside the fact that Marette was somewhere
+beyond the other door, alive, and that he would see her again very
+soon. He did not see why McTrigger should tell him that the older woman
+was his wife. Even the fact that a splendid chance had thrown Marette
+upon a log wedged between two rocks in the Chute, and that this log,
+breaking away, had carried her to the opposite side of the river miles
+below, was trivial with the thought that only a door separated them
+now. But he listened. He heard McTrigger tell how Marette had searched
+for him those days when he was lost in fever at Andre Boileau's cabin,
+how she had given him up for dead, and how in those same days Laselle's
+brigade had floated down, and she had come north with it. Later he
+would marvel over these things, but now he listened, and his eyes
+turned toward the door. It was then that McTrigger drove something
+home. It was like a shot piercing Kent's brain. McTrigger was speaking
+quietly of O'Connor. He said:
+
+"But you probably came by way of Fort Simpson, Kent, and O'Connor has
+told you all this. It was he who brought Marette back home through the
+Sulphur Country."
+
+"O'Connor!"
+
+Kent sprang to his feet. It took McTrigger but a moment to read the
+truth in his face.
+
+"Good God, do you mean to tell me you don't know, Kent?" he whispered
+tensely, rising in front of the other. "Haven't you seen O'Connor?
+Haven't you come in touch with the Police anywhere within the last
+year? Don't you know--?"
+
+"I know nothing," breathed Kent.
+
+For a space McTrigger stared at him in amazement
+
+"I have been in hiding," said Kent. "All this time I have been keeping
+away from the Police."
+
+McTrigger drew a deep breath. Again his hands gripped Kent's, and his
+voice was incredulous, filled with a great wonder. "And you have come
+to her, to her old home, believing that Marette killed Kedsty! It is
+hard to believe. And yet--" Into his face came suddenly a look of
+grief, almost of pain, and Kent, following his eyes, saw that he was
+looking at a big stone fireplace in the end of the room.
+
+"It was O'Connor who worked the thing out last Winter," he said,
+speaking with, an effort. "I must tell you before you see her again.
+You must understand everything. It will not do to have her tell you.
+See--"
+
+Kent followed him to the fireplace. From the shelf over the stonework
+McTrigger took a picture and gave it to him. It was a snapshot, the
+picture of a bare-headed man standing in the open with the sun shining
+on him.
+
+A low cry broke from Kent's lips. It was the great, gray ghost of a man
+he had seen in the lightning flare that night from the window of his
+hiding-place in Kedsty's bungalow.
+
+"My brother," said McTrigger chokingly. "I loved him. For forty years
+we were comrades. And Marette belonged to us, half and half. It was
+he--who killed--John Barkley." And then, after a moment in which
+McTrigger fought to speak steadily, he added, "And it was he--my
+brother--who also killed Inspector Kedsty."
+
+For a matter of seconds there was a dead silence between them.
+McTrigger looked into the fireplace instead of at Kent. Then he said:
+
+"He killed those men, but he didn't murder them, Kent. It couldn't be
+called that. It was justice, single-man justice, without going to law.
+If it wasn't for Marette, I wouldn't tell you about it--not the
+horrible part of it. I don't like to bring it up in my memory. ... It
+happened years ago. I was not married then, but my brother was ten
+years older than I and had a wife. I think that Marette loves you as
+Marie loved Donald. And Donald's love was more than that. It was
+worship. We came into the new mountain country, the three of us, even
+before the big strikes at Dawson and Bonanza. It was a wild country, a
+savage country, and there were few women in it, but Marie came with
+Donald. She was beautiful, with hair and eyes like Marette's. That was
+the tragedy of it.
+
+"I won't tell you the details. They were terrible. It happened while
+Donald and I were out on a hunt. Three men--white men--remember that,
+Kent; WHITE MEN--came out of the North and stopped at the cabin. When
+we returned, what we found there drove us mad. Marie died in Donald's
+arms. And leaving her there, alone, we set out after the white-skinned
+brutes who had destroyed her. Only a blizzard saved them, Kent. Their
+trail was fresh when the storm came. Had it held off another two hours,
+I, too, would have killed.
+
+"From that day Donald and I became man-hunters. We traced the back
+trail of the three fiends and discovered who they were. Two years later
+Donald found one of the three on the Yukon, and before he killed him he
+made him verify the names of the other two. It was a long search after
+that, Kent. It has covered thirty years. Donald grew old faster than I,
+and I knew, after a time, that he was strangely mad. He would be gone
+for months at a time, always searching for the two men. Ten years
+passed, and then, one day, in the deep of Winter, we came on a cabin
+home that had been stricken with the plague--the smallpox. It was the
+home of Pierre Radisson and his wife Andrea. Both were dead. But there
+was a little child still living, almost a babe in arms. We took her,
+Donald and I. The child was--Marette."
+
+McTrigger had spoken almost in a monotone. He had not raised his eyes
+from the ash of the fireplace. But now he looked up suddenly at Kent.
+
+"We worshipped her from the beginning," he said, his voice a bit husky.
+"I hoped that love for her would save Donald. It did, in a way. But it
+did not cure his madness, his desire for vengeance. We came farther
+east. We found this marvelous valley, and gold in the mountains,
+untouched by other men. We built here, and I hoped even more that the
+glory of this new world we had discovered would help Donald to forget.
+I married, and my wife loved Marette. We had a child, and then another,
+and both died. We loved Marette more than ever after that. Anne, my
+wife, was the daughter of a missioner and capable of educating Marette
+up to a certain point. You will find this place filled with all kinds
+of books, and reading, and music. But the time came when we thought we
+must send Marette to Montreal. It broke her heart. And then--a long
+time after--"
+
+McTrigger paused a moment, looking into Kent's eyes. "And then--one day
+Donald came in from Dawson City, terrible in his madness, and told us
+that he had found his men. One of them was John Barkley, the rich
+timber man, and the other was Kedsty, Inspector of Police at Athabasca
+Landing."
+
+Kent made no effort to speak. His amazement, as McTrigger had gone on,
+was beyond the expression of words. The night held for him a cumulative
+shock--the discovery that Marette was not dead, but alive, and now the
+discovery that he, Jim Kent, was no longer a hunted man, and that it
+was O'Connor, his old comrade, who had run the truth down. With dry
+lips he simply nodded, urging McTrigger to continue.
+
+"I knew what would happen if Donald went after Barkley and Kedsty,"
+said the older man. "And it was impossible to hold him back. He was
+mad, clean mad. There was just one thing for me to do. I left here
+first, with the intention of warning the two brutes who had killed
+Donald's wife. I knew, with the evidence in our hands, they could do
+nothing but make a getaway. No matter how rich or powerful they were,
+our evidence was complete, and through many years we had kept track of
+the movements of our witnesses. I tried to explain to Donald that we
+could send them to prison, but there was but one thought in his poor
+sick mind--to kill. I was younger and beat him south. And after that I
+made my fatal mistake. I thought I was far enough ahead of him to get
+down to the line of rail and back before he arrived. You see, I figured
+his love for Marette would take him to Montreal first, and I had made
+up my mind to tell her everything so that she might understand the
+necessity of holding him if he went to her. I wrote everything to her
+and told her to remain in Montreal. How she did that, you know. She set
+out for the North as soon as she received my letter."
+
+McTrigger's shoulders hunched lower. "Well, you know what happened,
+Kent. Donald got ahead of me, after all. I came the day after Barkley
+was killed. I took it as a kind fate that the day preceding the killing
+I shot a grouse for my dinner, and as the bird was only wounded when I
+picked it up, I got blood on the sleeves of my coat. I was arrested.
+Kedsty, every one, was sure they had the real man. And I kept quiet,
+except to maintain my innocence. I could say nothing that would turn
+the law on Donald's trail.
+
+"After that, things happened quickly. You, my friend, made your false
+confession to save one who had done you a poor service years ago.
+Almost simultaneously with that, Marette had come. She came quietly, in
+the night, and went straight to Kedsty. She told him everything, showed
+him the written evidence, telling him this evidence was in the hands of
+others and would be used if anything happened to her. Her power over
+him was complete. As the price of her secrecy she demanded my release,
+and in that black hour your confession gave Kedsty his opportunity.
+
+"He knew you were lying. He knew it was Donald who had killed Barkley.
+Yet he was willing to sacrifice you to save himself. And Marette
+remained in his house, waiting and watching for Donald, while I
+searched for him on the trails. That is why she secretly lived in
+Kedsty's house. She knew that Donald would come there sooner or later,
+if I did not find him and get him away. And she was plotting how to
+save you.
+
+"She loved you, Kent--from that first hour she came to you in the
+hospital. And she tried to exact your freedom also as an added price
+for her secrecy. But Kedsty had become like a cornered tiger. If he
+freed you, he saw his whole world crumbling under his feet. He, too,
+went a little mad, I think. He told Marette that he would not free you,
+that he would go to the hangman first. Then, Kent, came the night of
+your freedom, and a little later--Donald came to Kedsty's home. It was
+he whom you saw that night out in the storm. He entered and killed
+Kedsty.
+
+"Something dragged Marette down to the room that night. She found
+Kedsty in his chair--dead. Donald was gone. It was then that you found
+her there. Kent, she loved you--and you will never know how her heart
+bled when she let you think she had killed Kedsty. She has told me
+everything. It was her fear for Donald, her desire to keep all possible
+suspicion from him until he was safe, that compelled her not to confide
+even in you. Later, when she knew that Donald must be safe, she was
+going to tell you. And then--you were separated at the Chute."
+McTrigger paused, and Kent saw him choke back a grief that was still
+like the fresh cut of a knife in his heart.
+
+"And O'Connor found out all this?"
+
+McTrigger nodded. "Yes. He defied Kedsty's command to go to Fort
+Simpson and was on his way back to Athabasca Landing when he found my
+brother. It is strange how all things happened, Kent. But I guess God
+must have meant it that way. Donald was dying. And in dying, for a
+space, his old reason returned to him. It was from him, before he died,
+that O'Connor learned everything. The story is known everywhere now. It
+is marvelous that you did not hear--"
+
+There came an interruption, the opening of a door. Anne McTrigger stood
+looking at them where a little time before she had disappeared with
+Marette. There was a glad smile in her face. Her dark eyes were glowing
+with a new happiness. First they rested on McTrigger's face, and then
+on Kent's.
+
+"Marette is much better," she said in her soft voice. "She is waiting
+to see you, M'sieu Kent. Will you come now?"
+
+Like one in a dream Kent went toward her. He picked up his pack, for
+with its precious contents it had become to him like his own flesh and
+blood. And as the woman led the way and Kent followed her, McTrigger
+did not move from the fireplace. In a little while Anne McTrigger came
+back into the room. Her beautiful eyes were aglow. She was smiling
+softly, and putting her arms about the shoulders of the man at the
+fireplace, she whispered:
+
+"I have looked at the night through the window, Malcolm. I think that
+the stars are bigger and brighter than they have been in a long time.
+And the Watcher seems like a living god up in the sky. Come, please."
+
+She took his hand, and Malcolm went with her. Over their heads burned a
+glory of stars. The wind came gently up the valley, cool with the
+freshness of the mountain-tops, sweet with the smell of meadow and
+flowers. And when the woman pointed through the glow, Malcolm McTrigger
+looked up at the Watcher, and for an instant he fancied that he saw
+what she had seen--something that was life instead of death, a glow of
+understanding and of triumph in the mighty face of stone above the lace
+mists of the clouds. For a long time they walked on, and deep in the
+heart of the woman a voice cried out again and again that the Watcher
+knew, and that it was a living joy she saw up there, for up to that
+unmoving and voiceless god of the mountains she had cried and laughed
+and sung--and even prayed; and with her Marette had also done these
+things, until at last the pulse and beat of women's souls had given a
+spirit to a form of rock.
+
+Back in the chateau which Malcolm McTrigger and his brother Donald had
+built of logs, in a room whose windows faced the Watcher himself,
+Marette was unveiling the last of mystery for Jim Kent. And this, too,
+was her hour of triumph. Her lips were red and warm with the flush
+brought there by Kent's love.
+
+Her face was like the wild roses he had crushed under his feet all that
+day. For in this hour the world had come to her, and had prostrated
+itself at her feet. The sacred contents of the pack were in her lap as
+she leaned back in the great blanketed and pillowed chair that had been
+her invalid's nest for many days. But it was an invalid's nest no
+longer. The floods of life were pounding through her body again, and in
+that hour when Malcolm McTrigger and his wife were gone, Kent looked
+upon the miracle of its change. And now Marette gave to him a little
+packet, and while Kent opened it she raised both hands to her head and
+unbound her hair so that it fell about her in shining and glorious
+confusion.
+
+Kent, unwrapping a last bit of tissue-paper, found in his hands a long
+tress of hair.
+
+"See, Jeems, it has grown fast since I cut it that night."
+
+She leaned a little toward him, parting her hair with slim, white
+fingers so that he saw again where the hair had been clipped the night
+of Kedsty's death.
+
+And then she said: "You may keep it always if you want to, Jeems, for I
+cut it from my head when I left you in the room below, and when
+you--almost--believed I had killed Kedsty. It was this--"
+
+She gave him another packet, and her lips tightened a little as Kent
+unwrapped it, and another tress of hair shimmered in the lamp glow.
+
+"That was father Donald's," she whispered.
+
+"It--it was all he had left of Marie, his wife. And that night--when
+Kedsty died--"
+
+"I understand," cried Kent, stopping her. "He choked Kedsty with it
+until he was dead. And when I found it around Kedsty's neck--you--you
+let me think it was yours--to save father Donald!"
+
+She nodded. "Yes, Jeems. If the police had come, they would have
+thought I was guilty. I planned to let them think so until father
+Donald was safe. But all the time I had here in my breast this other
+tress, which would prove that I was innocent--when the time came. And
+now, Jeems--"
+
+She smiled at him again and reached out her hands. "Oh, I feel so
+strong! And I want to take you out now--and show you my
+valley--Jeems--our valley--yours and mine--in the starlight. Not
+tomorrow, Jeems. But tonight. Now."
+
+A little later the Watcher looked down on them, even as it had looked
+down on another man and another woman who had preceded them. But the
+stars were bigger and brighter, and the white cap of snow that rested
+on the Watcher's head like a crown caught the faint gleam of a far-away
+light; and after that, slowly and wonderfully, other snow-crested
+mountain-tops caught that greeting radiance of the moon. But it was the
+Watcher who stood out like a mighty god among them all, and when they
+came to the elbow in the plain, Marette drew Kent down beside her on a
+great flat rock and laughed softly as she held his hand tightly in her
+lap.
+
+"Always, from a little child, I have sat and played on this rock, with
+the Watcher looking, like that," she said in a low voice. "I have grown
+to love him, Jeems. And I have always believed that he was gazing off
+there, night and day, into the east, watching for something that was
+coming to me. Now I know. It was you, Jeems. And, Jeems, when I was
+away--down there in the big city--"
+
+Her fingers gripped his thumb in their old way, and Kent waited.
+
+"It was the Watcher that made me want to come home most of all," she
+went on, a bit of tremble in her voice. "Oh, I grew lonely for him, and
+I could see him in my dreams at night, watching, watching, watching,
+and sometimes even calling me. Jeems, do you see that hump on his left
+shoulder, like a great epaulet?"
+
+"Yes, I see," said Kent.
+
+"Beyond that, on a straight line from here--hundreds of miles away--are
+Dawson City, the Yukon, the big gold country, men, women, civilization.
+Father Malcolm and father Donald have never found but one trail to this
+side of the mountains, and I have been over it three times--to Dawson.
+But the Watcher's back is on those things. Sometimes I imagine it was
+he who built those great ramparts through which few men come. He wants
+this valley alone. And so do I. Alone--with you, and with my people."
+
+Kent drew her close in his arms. "When you are stronger," he whispered,
+"we will go over that hidden trail together, past the Watcher, toward
+Dawson. For it must be that over there--we will find--a missioner--" He
+paused.
+
+"Please go on, Jeems."
+
+"And you will be--my wife."
+
+"Yes, yes, Jeems--forever and ever. But, Jeems"--her arms crept up
+about his neck--"very soon it will be the first of August."
+
+"Yes--?"
+
+"And in that month there come through the mountains, each year, a man
+and a woman to visit us--mother Anne's father and mother. And mother
+Anne's father--"
+
+"Yes--?"
+
+"Is a missioner, Jeems."
+
+And Kent, looking up in this hour of his triumph and joy, believed that
+in the Watcher's face he caught for an instant the passing radiance of
+a smile.
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Valley of Silent Men, by James Oliver Curwood
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